Current:Home > NewsFastexy:Oregon governor wants tolling plan on 2 Portland-area freeways scrapped -FutureWise Finance
Fastexy:Oregon governor wants tolling plan on 2 Portland-area freeways scrapped
Rekubit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-08 10:40:34
PORTLAND,Fastexy Ore. (AP) — Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek wants to scrap a plan to implement tolls on large sections of two Portland-area interstates, she said Monday.
Kotek sent a letter to the Oregon Transportation Commission on Monday saying the Regional Mobility Pricing Project for Interstate 5 and Interstate 205 should be halted, KGW-TV reported.
Kotek said in the letter that the “state’s path toward implementing tolling in the Portland metro area is uncertain, at best,” and that the challenges associated with the plan “have grown larger than the anticipated benefits.”
“Therefore, I believe it is time to bring the agency’s work on RMPP to an end,” she wrote.
In 2017, the state Legislature directed the Oregon Department of Transportation to start exploring tolling as a traffic congestion management tool that could be part of a major transportation funding package, but the plans have drawn increasing criticism as they’ve become clearer.
Kotek’s letter came a few weeks after a survey found a majority of Oregon voters opposed the Regional Mobility Pricing Project tolls, KOIN-TV reported.
The move also came after the Oregon Department of Transportation produced a report on the equity impacts of tolling and the agency’s plan to mitigate the impacts on low-income Portlanders. Kotek wrote in her letter that the report showed “a toll program which keeps toll rates low enough for working families and raises enough funding for major projects would fail to meet expectations for local project funding and revenue sharing.”
The state transportation agency is facing funding challenges because of a projected decline in revenue from the state’s gas tax, and Kotek said she expects the Legislature to tackle that issue in the 2025 session.
The governor said in the letter she is “confident that a more robust conversation on funding options will yield greater understanding and direction for our future moving forward.”
Oregon Transportation Commission Chair Julie Brown and Vice Chair Lee Beyer, as well as Oregon Department of Transportation Director Kris Strickler, all released statements later Monday suggesting they agree with Kotek.
Beyer said “metro leadership views on tolling have changed” and “local and regional opposition to tolling makes clear that Oregon is not ready for regional tolling.” Strickler said “it is clear the toll program cannot be designed in a way that meets the needs expressed by our local partners while also meeting the needs of Oregonians statewide.”
Brown said she looked forward to conversations about other funding sources but added that while she didn’t believe tolling should be the only tool to solve challenges, “as a steward of our state’s transportation system, I believe it should be one of our tools.”
Kotek said this move should not impact the planned collection of toll revenue on the interstate highway bridge between Oregon and Washington that’s set to be replaced as part of a multibillion-dollar project supported by federal funding.
veryGood! (592)
Related
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Former residents of a New Hampshire youth center demand federal investigation into abuse claims
- FIFA opens case against Spanish soccer official who kissed a player on the lips at Women’s World Cup
- Skipping GOP debate, Trump speaks with Tucker Carlson
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Former Indiana postal manager gets 40 months for stealing hundreds of checks worth at least $1.7M
- Inmates death at Missouri prison is the third this month, eighth this year
- ‘Dune: Part 2' release postponed to 2024 as actors strike lingers
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Transgender adults are worried about finding welcoming spaces to live in their later years
Ranking
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg stamp to be unveiled at U.S. Postal Service ceremony
- Jailed WSJ reporter Evan Gershkovich arrives at a hearing on extending his detention
- Police arrest two men in suspected torching of British pub cherished for its lopsided walls
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- U.S. job growth wasn't quite as strong as it appeared last year after government revision
- Lawsuit over deadly seaplane crash in Washington state targets aircraft operator and manufacturer
- Takeaways from first GOP debate, Prigozhin presumed dead after plane crash: 5 Things podcast
Recommendation
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
Massachusetts man gets lengthy sentence for repeated sexual abuse of girl
Kroy Biermann Files for Divorce From Kim Zolciak Less Than 2 Months After Reconciling
Washington OKs killing 2 wolves in southeastern part of state after cattle attacks
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
Climate change hits emperor penguins: Chicks are dying and extinction looms, study finds
How does Mercury retrograde affect us? Here's an astrologer's guide to survival.
The downed Russian jet carried Wagner’s hierarchy, from Prigozhin’s No. 2 to his bodyguards