Skip to main content

Ohio looks to Turnpike options

A newly commissioned study by consulting firm KPMG should answer many Ohio Turnpike questions and help to provide guidance for deciding the future of the link.
April 25, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
A newly commissioned study by consulting firm 4137 KPMG should answer many Ohio Turnpike questions and help to provide guidance for deciding the future of the link.

KPMG will analyse the data from last year for the Ohio Turnpike, when 1,040 people were employed by the operation, 49 million vehicles traveled the road, and tolls totaled US$232 million. With declining state revenues from fuel taxes and license plate fees, and the skyrocketing costs of materials and an ageing Ohio infrastructure badly in need of repairs, especially for bridges, the state has few options left on how to fund its needs.

The sale or leasing of the Ohio Turnpike is not a new idea. Some believe that the 385.6km James W. Shocknessy Ohio Turnpike could bring in new revenues for local infrastructure repair. Governor John Kasich and Jerry Wray, director of the Ohio Department of Transportation, are now researching options to help fund infrastructure works in the state that have not so far been fully considered.

In other US states, toll road deals have helped deliver funds for other transport infrastructure improvements. The Indiana East-West Toll Road was leased to an Australian-Spanish consortium for a $3.8 billion upfront payment. That same international consortium paid the city of Chicago $1.83 billion to lease the Chicago Skyway.

“Ohioans probably are not going to support higher taxes, and we probably cannot expect any additional federal dollars from Washington. We should all welcome the (Turnpike) study and then see where its conclusions will take us. It’s in the best interest of the citizens of Ohio to at least get all the facts to make an informed decision,” said Fredrick Pausch, executive director of the County Engineers Association of Ohio.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • EU governments make surplus from road taxes, a FIA study finds
    November 9, 2016
    European Union governments took in €286.3 billion in road taxes during 2013 but re-invested only €178 billion back into highways, according to a new study.
  • AEM proposes highway funding solutions
    February 15, 2012
    The Association of Equipment Manufacturers (AEM) is offering a novel solution to funding sources for the US Highway Bill.
  • By invitation: Africa’s road funds are under pressure
    November 8, 2021
    Ali Ipinge is CEO of the Road Fund Administration (RFA) of Namibia and, since early 2021, presides over the 35-member African Roads Maintenance Funds Association (ARMFA). Ahead of the 18th IRF World Meeting & Exhibition which he will be keynoting, Ipinge highlighted developments in the quest for sustainable road maintenance funding in the African continent
  • Melbourne link: Hyder and Parsons Brinckerhoff to be design team
    October 22, 2014
    Hyder and Parsons Brinckerhoff have been appointed as the design team for the US$5.97 billion East West Link in Melbourne, Australia. The two engineering and management consultancies are in a 50/50 joint venture to provide detailed design and construction support services for the 6.6km Stage 1 work, which is the eastern section, of the project. Together with the proposed western section, the completed East West Link will cost around $7 billion. The toll road will form an 18km cross-city connection ext