Skip to main content

Ohio awards roads advisory contract to KPMG

KPMG, LLP is to advise Ohio on how best to use funds from the Ohio Turnpike to offset shrinking funds to maintain and expand the state's highways. This contract was awarded jointly by the Ohio Office of Budget and Management (OBM) and Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT).
April 27, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
4137 KPMG, LLP is to advise Ohio on how best to use funds from the Ohio Turnpike to offset shrinking funds to maintain and expand the state’s highways. This contract was awarded jointly by the Ohio Office of Budget and Management (OBM) and Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT). “Our highway system is the lifeline for Ohio’s manufacturing and agricultural jobs,” said ODOT director Jerry Wray. “But the cost of repairing and expanding Ohio’s highways is outpacing funding, while the availability of federal highway funds is increasingly unpredictable. Without new funds, highway projects we thought would start in the next few years could be pushed off for two decades. Ohio can’t let that happen. We must be innovative about meeting our highway needs. The Turnpike is a hugely valuable untapped asset, and while it’s the property of Ohio and would never be sold, there are different ways that it could be leveraged to generate needed funds, so our highways can keep supporting job creation and economic growth,” Wray said. KPMG was selected from a list of 14 original applicants and five short-listed applicants. Now that a team has been selected, OBM and ODOT will enter into final negotiations with KPMG and anticipate having a contract finalised by the end of the year. KPMG will help Ohio consider all aspects of the Turnpike to analyse various options, determine which course of action is in the best interest of the state and make recommendations on how to proceed. “Selection of an advisory team is the first step in our process to develop and evaluate options to make the best economic use of the Ohio Turnpike as a state asset,” said OBM director Tim Keen. “Because this is a very complex issue, we’re turning to a team of experienced professionals to help us make the best decision and to proceed with the option that’s most appropriate for Ohio’s transportation system and our economy as a whole,” Keen said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • New report lays out concrete steps toward safer roads
    July 31, 2023
    Countries can reduce deaths and injuries from road traffic crashes by flipping the traditional mobility hierarchy and adopting the Safe System approach. That is the finding of a new report from the Sustainable Mobility for All Initiative (SuM4All) presented at a press event of the ITF Summit held in Leipzig.
  • Buying bitumen: do you know enough?
    December 2, 2014
    Changes to the way bitumen is produced and traded mean that traditional ways of specifying – and buying - it may not be enough - Frank Albrecht, MD of Albr3cht Supply Concepts, explained why to Kristina Smith Traditionally, we have specified bitumen using two values: the penetration (pen) and ring and ball figures which define the hardness of the bitumen and its softening point respectively. Taking that approach today is risky, warns Frank Albrecht, managing director of Albr3cht Supply Concepts. “It’s not
  • New version of world’s longest floating bridge
    August 12, 2014
    The creation of a new version of the world’s longest floating bridge in Seattle, in the US state of Washington, is among the world’s most eye-catching current bridge engineering projects. It is an impressive example of the health of the bridge replacement sector, particularly in the US, leaving it well placed for growth. Guy Woodford reports Already the world’s longest floating bridge at over 2,310m long, the Governor Albert D Rosellini-Evergreen Point Floating Bridge in Seattle in the United States is g
  • Speakers for CONEXPO-CON/AGG technology talks
    February 9, 2017
    CONEXPO-CON/AGG has revealed its list of speakers for its Tech Talks forum. The speakers will focus on the growing opportunities for innovation in infrastructure projects and construction jobsites. The line-up includes some of the world’s leading innovators. These are: Wayne Rapp, director of manufacturing, Hyperloop One; D'Arcy Salzmann, senior director, strategy, Microsoft HoloLens and studio manager, Future Bureau, Microsoft; Captains Mark and Scott Kelly, former NASA astronauts; Scott Brusaw, co-founder