Skip to main content

US state of Ohio investigates road fund alternatives

The authorities in the US state of Ohio continue to investigate new methods of generating revenue for highway investment. The state is facing a funding shortfall of up to US$1.6 billion on its highway maintenance and expansion plans to meet traffic volume needs. As a result, the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) is moving forward with a plan to explore the commercial development of certain state-owned rest areas. The state is pursuing the conversion to service plazas of five of the state’s 59 non-int
June 15, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The authorities in the US state of Ohio continue to investigate new methods of generating revenue for highway investment. The state is facing a funding shortfall of up to US$1.6 billion on its highway maintenance and expansion plans to meet traffic volume needs. As a result, the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) is moving forward with a plan to explore the commercial development of certain state-owned rest areas. The state is pursuing the conversion to service plazas of five of the state’s 59 non-interstate rest areas. “Rest areas are expensive to operate and maintain, and in some cases, they have become safety hazards to motorists travelling in our state,” said ODOT director Jerry Wray. “If we can generate enough money to offset the costs and improve safety, Ohioans will be better off. Plus, generating much-needed new money will allow us to get shovels in the ground and begin construction much sooner on some of the major transportation projects that will help drive our state’s economy into the future.”

Currently, ODOT spends almost $50 million/year to maintain all 104 rest areas in Ohio. Rest area maintenance costs include paying utility bills, as well as resurfacing parking lots, improving buildings and paying for general services. In January, ODOT announced its $1.6 billion budget hole that forced the department to push back by decades some of the state’s largest construction projects. Since then, the agency has initiated a complete review of all current and future transportation projects to identify those that could be candidates for public-private partnerships. It has also sought to identify additional resources to aid in the funding of major transportation projects throughout the state.

Related Content

  • IRF launches Contract Maintenance & Asset Management Seminar
    July 11, 2012
    Ever since the first wheel travelled along its first path, roads have needed regular maintenance in order to provide the safest route possible to one's desired destination. For today's roads, the maintenance activities that must be performed, their scheduling and the methods of execution are in a continuing state of evolution. And this requires a significant amount of planning by those who operate and manage the road systems.
  • Paying for road development
    April 21, 2016
    All around the world, road expansion and maintenance is both necessary and ongoing. In the developed nations the focus is more on road maintenance and widening, while developing nations are concentrating on new road construction. Road networks are crucial to economic development as well as political stability, which often go hand in hand. The massive growth in the US economy from the 1950s onwards was boosted strongly by the development of the country’s interstate network. But in recent times, funding
  • Infrastructure spending aids economic growth
    March 14, 2012
    AT THE TIME of year it is worth considering how strong the construction market will be towards the end of 2010 and on into 2011.
  • Infrastructure spending aids economic growth
    February 21, 2012
    AT THE TIME of year it is worth considering how strong the construction market will be towards the end of 2010 and on into 2011. The build-up to the Bauma construction equipment exhibition in Munich, the world's largest exhibition, has helped fuel new product introductions from manufacturers, attracted contractors to visit the event and brought healthy interest to the construction sector as a whole.