When
are we finally going to do something about our transportation crisis?
That
question has been asked for decades… but never answered, or more importantly,
acted upon.
I
remember back in 2001 when then-Speaker of the CT House Moira Lyons held a news
conference about our state’s transportation mess. The six-term Stamford Democrat, who was long
on power by short in stature, stood next to a stack of consultant studies and reports
almost as tall as she was. Enough with
the studies, she said. Let’s fix it!
One
of the best things to come out of that call to action was creation of the
Transportation Strategy Board. It had
representatives from business, labor, commuters, academics and planners. They had a one year deadline to come up with
a 20 year plan
for Connecticut’s transportation future and how to pay for it. And they did.
Chairman
of the TSB was Oz Griebel. Yes, the same
Oz Griebel who ran unsuccessfully for Governor last fall.
One
of the TSB’s top recommendations was ordering new railcars for Metro-North,
which finally happened under Governor Rell.
But they also recommended highly unpopular funding mechanisms: a gasoline tax increase, sales tax surcharge
and, yes, tolls.
What
have we done since? More studies making
consultants rich but never persuading lawmakers to do something. When our elected officials have no political
will, they just suggest another study, board or commission.
Former
Governor Dannel Malloy had ideas. His $100 billion, 30 year “Let’s Go CT” plan had something for everyone in every corner of the
state. It was ambitious, but it wasn’t
really a plan, just a laundry list of projects without priorities or funding.
Politicians
love to take credit for the ideas but never want their finger prints on the
nasty business of paying for them.
That’s why Malloy created… you guessed it… a blue ribbon panel: The
Transportation Finance. Among its members… Oz Griebel.
“It
was like that movie ‘Groundhog Day’,” Griebel recently told me. “It was the same people we saw at the TSB debating
the same issues” ten years later.
And
what did Malloy’s Transportation
Finance Panel recommend to pay for his $100
billion “plan”? A gasoline tax increase,
a sales tax surcharge, fare hikes and, you guessed it, highway tolls.
Of
course, none of those came to pass. It
was an election year and who wants to run for a job in Hartford explaining to
constituents that they have to pay more, especially when the Republicans mischaracterized
such funding as “taxes” instead of user fees.
Along
the way then-Governor Malloy abolished the TSB, ‘lest it should suggest one
project had priority over another. He
wanted it all, but got none, because he couldn’t sell the plan to pay for it.
But
now we have the Special Transportation Fund Lockbox, right? Any money that goes in can only be spent on
transportation. Or so we were told. But as one sage observer of the transportation
scene for decades recently told me, “The lockbox has more backdoors than a hot-sheets
motel on the Berlin Turnpike”. We’ll
see.
Will
the new legislature have the guts to finally raise the funding we need to fix
our roads and rails? Or will I be re-writing
this column again in another decade, like “déjà vu all over again”?
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media
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