For Whom the Bridge Tolls
Searching for new funds for roads and transit, DFL leaders are eyeing tolls for the future St. Croix River bridge between Minnesota and Wisconsin.Charging drivers as much as $3 to cross the bridge could raise enough money to pay for roughly half the construction cost.
"It's a potentially important source of revenue," said Rep. Frank Hornstein, DFL-Minneapolis, chairman of the House transportation finance committee.
"I'm very open to it," said Charlie Zelle, Gov. Mark Dayton's transportation commissioner. "I think it needs to be explored."
A few predictions:
- If the bridge has a $3 toll, a lot less people are going to use it. For Minneapolis politicians, that's not a bug, it's a feature.
- The revenue that is projected from such a toll will be, like electronic pull tabs, surprisingly disappointing, at least to people like Hornstein, who is to Minneapolis what Michael Paymar is to St. Paul -- a guy who can propose pretty much anything because he doesn't have to worry about reelection.
- Wisconsin won't cooperate.
No worries -- the DFL has a backup plan:
Raising the gasoline tax -- the traditional source of highway funding -- is another option favored by key lawmakers, including Sen. Scott Dibble, DFL-Minneapolis, chairman of the Senate transportation and public safety committee.
Dibble was on a governor's task force that recommended raising the gas tax by 40 cents a gallon over 20 years. Dayton declined to embrace the proposal, but he hasn't ruled out supporting some kind of gas-tax increase if the DFL-controlled Legislature passes one."He has not said ... 'I won't sign it,'" Zelle said.
Dibble said the Legislature should pass a gas-tax hike this session.
"What's politically possible is something we'll have to figure out," he said.
Gotta find some way to pay for all those choo-choos, people.
Cross-posted and comments welcome at Mr. Dilettante's Neighborhood.
