PhillyDeals: Builders extolling private highway projects

February 20, 2011|By Joseph N. DiStefano, Inquirer Staff Writer
  • In July, Gov. Ed Rendell talked about proposed changes to the I-95 bridge over the Delaware at Scudder Falls. He and Gov. Christie called for a private toll bridge to replace the existing free span. No decision has been made.

Private construction companies hope to slap tolls on I-95, U.S. 422, and other crowded freeways.

They're using the antitax, spending-cut mood gripping voters and state capitals, after three years of recession, to push for private highway, bridge, and building projects. Companies would replace governments in financing these projects up front, and collecting tolls from users, to reap future profits.

A proposal gaining steam in Harrisburg would set up a "Public-Private Transportation Partnership Board," appointed by the governor and state legislators, to decide what to build and which builders to hire.

Advocates acknowledge this could cost more, over time, than having the government borrow the money and build the projects through tax-free bonds.

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But since the driving public, not the cash-strapped government, pays tolls, they're betting Gov. Corbett will join California, Virginia, Florida, and others ceding public roads to private builder-operators.

Members of the proposed project-picking board "are supposed to have professional experience in transportation, finance, or law, to get away from cronyism," says lawyer Frank Rapoport, partner at McKenna, Long & Aldridge L.L.P. and a backer of the proposal.

But an amendment by Senate Transportation Committee Chairman John C. Rafferty Jr. (R., Montgomery) would allow him, his committee's top Democrat, and their House counterparts to sit on the board even if they aren't experts.

Won't that make it look as if politicians are picking projects they personally like?

"That's the general belief," Rafferty agreed. "But there will be experts on that board, from the governor's appointees." The amended bill was passed by Rafferty's committee last week. A House version gets a committee vote March 3.

Ex-Gov. Ed Rendell and New Jersey Gov. Christie last year called for private owners and tolls to replace the free I-95 bridge over the Delaware at Scudder Falls. The Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission is expected to choose whether (and whom) to hire later this year, says Bijan Pashanamaei, Scudder Falls project manager for AECOM, a California engineering firm doing preliminary work at the site. Rendell is now a part-time investment banker pushing similar projects.

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