RI lawmakers propose sequester to replace Sakonnet tolls


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Sakonnet River BridgeThere’s a new plan out to replace the Sakonnet River Bridge Tolls.  For the next six years, discretionary spending will be slashed in every department by 0.25%, until the total cut is 1.5%.  Funneled into a transportation infrastructure trust fund, those dollars will hopefully eliminate the need for tolls on the Sakonnet River Bridge.

If this sounds familiar, it’s because it is.  Known as a “sequester,” this tactic of across-the-board cuts was controversially implemented at the federal level as a Democratic concession in the 2011 debt ceiling standoff.

Given that I’ve staked out a pretty solid position on the Democratic side of public policy debates, you might be surprised to hear that I’m not calling on legislators to vote down this bill.  That’s because I consider tolls a really bad idea.  They’re , hitting the lower middle class especially hard.  Although it’s difficult to properly assess, tolls do economic damage as well–possibly almost as much as sequesters.  So I can’t blame a legislator who votes for this bill.

But we should not forget the pain these austerity policies are causing our state.  Few states have caught austerity fever as aggressively as Rhode Island.  Slashing jobs to the point where we have the second fewest per capita public sector employees in the country, Rhode Island has gone all in on the budget cut strategy.  (And somehow, we still found the money to give the wealthy big tax cuts.)

Part of the goal of sequesters is to spread the pain so thin no that one will be too upset.  Instead of directly slashing one program, the state will be asking every department to squeeze things just a little bit harder, cutting a few jobs in each department instead of concentrating the cuts in one specific area.  The hope is that this will reduce the political opposition.  As Rep. Jay Edwards, chief bill sponsor, put it on Newsmakers:

If a department can’t cut their own budget by a quarter percent every year and look forward to it, then they are not doing a good enough job.

This is the kind of thinking we must avoid.  It probably is true that distributing the cuts like this makes the damage less visible, but it doesn’t make it any less real.  This sequester will cost our state jobs.  And of course it’s much better policy to direct the cuts towards less important programs than to take this meat-axe approach.

Michael Lewis, the Director of the Rhode Island Department of Transportation, expressed similar concerns.  Explaining that his “concern with the plan is that it doesn’t contain new revenue,”  Director Lewis cautioned that, “somewhere in the state budget, something is going to suffer,” and we “have to think about what kind of impact that’s going to have on the overall state budget.”  He’s right.  We can’t forget the pain these cuts will inflict.

What makes this story so tragic is that there is a really easy free lunch solution to our infrastructure crisis.  In America, states traditionally finance infrastructure with cheap general obligation bonds.  Underfunding infrastructure maintenance can often lead to a higher effective interest rate than you would pay on bonds, since replacing unmaintained bridges is much more expensive than just maintaining them properly.  That’s exactly what happened with the old Sakonnet River Bridge.

Given record low interest rates, now would be the fiscally responsible time to take out the infrastructure bonds we know we’re going to have to do, and with the Fed already tightening, this next bonding cycle may well be our last chance to access rock-bottom interest rates.  Curiously, our state government has spurned this incredible opportunity.  There were no transportation bonds on the 2012 ballot.  When we take out those inevitable bonds, we’ll be paying much higher rates, and our roads and bridges will have continued to crumble, bringing the bill even higher than it would be today.  Plus, we will have missed out on all the jobs we could have created.

Hundreds protest Sakonnet River Bridge toll


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Protest organizer John Vitkevich in front of the toll gantry at the Sakonnet River Bridge.
Protest organizer John Vitkevich in front of the toll gantry at the Sakonnet River Bridge. Photo: Jack McDaid.

“This bridge should not have a toll on it, it’s that simple,”

John Vitkevich stood near the toll gantry on the bike path leading to the Sakonnet River Bridge, as more than 250 local residents assembled for the 5pm protest Sunday night, some waving flags, many carrying signs, and all receiving encouraging honks from the passing traffic on Route 24.

“We knew this in 2002,” Vitkevich told RI Future. Because of significant public opposition at that time, he said, tolling had been eliminated from consideration by RIDOT and the Federal Highway Administration. “Wouldn’t you think that the opposition from 2012 and 2013 was louder, stronger, and more organized than we were ten years ago?”

Apparently so, if last night’s event was any guide. Vitkevich, with his friend Alan Silvia, rallied the crowd through a portable generator and speakers, and the protesters   responded with cheers and applause for nearly an hour as speaker after speaker hammered on themes of double-dealing at the general assembly and anger that the East Bay was being unfairly targeted.

“This bridge was free from a toll for 55 years,” Vitkevich told the crowd. “Because it was not maintained, they want us to pay for the new bridge.”

And on this, the toll opponents have a point. The original Sakonnet River Bridge opened on Sept 12, 1956 (at a cost of just $9M). But early in the new century, deterioration began overtake maintenance and by 2007, weight limits were put in place and progressively lowered, while a series of emergency fixes kept the span operational. The new $160M structure opened to traffic late last year, and while construction was managed by RIDOT, operation and maintenance was turned over to the RI Turnpike and Bridge Authority, and that’s where the tolls come in.

“Five million, 176 thousand dollars is what the RI Turnpike and Bridge Authority wants to charge to maintain a brand new bridge,” he said. “Why does Mr. Darlington and Mr. Croft and the RI Turnpike and Bridge Authority need to charge five million dollars? Because they can.”

13aug18_srb_toll_crowd
Protesters listen to anti-toll speakers.

Not if those assembled had any say about it. In addition to the approaches described on the DontToll.com web site (refuse to use your EZ-Pass, make RITBA send you a bill, and pay with a check) Viktevich also suggested the power of the phone call. “Contact them on Tuesday, contact them on Wednesday, get their number and put it in your speed dial. Harass them. They need to be harassed. Keep harassing them.”

Vitkevich advocated “financial disobedience in a civil way,” but he took care to distance himself from the arsonists who had targeted the toll infrastructure the previous night. “Anything I can do to cost the RITBA legally and ethically, I will do. But I’m not running around with gasoline and matches.”

Only one the East Bay’s representatives was spotted in the crowd, Ray Gallison  (D-69 Bristol, Portsmouth). “I agree with everyone that there should not be tolls here” Gallison told RI Future. “The I-Way bridge is maintained by taxpayers, Henderson bridge is being maintained by taxpayers, all of the other bridges all over the state.”

About a dozen attendees took turns at the mic to at attack RITBA, the Governor, and the 11th hour reversal of the toll decision at the general assembly. On June 26, the budget, including a toll deferral and the first-years’s bond payments for 38 Studios, squeaked through the House, supported by votes of East Bay legislators. Then, on July 2nd, just before recess, a rider was introduced that reversed course and instituted the ten-cent toll as a placeholder pending the recommendation of a study commission. Opinion in the crowd was that local legislators had been duped.  “Once the 38 Studios vote came in I said, whoops, that’s it, slippery slope, we’re done,” Portsmouth resident Kathy Melvin told RI Future. “I’m amazed that the legislators didn’t know they were cooked.”

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Tiverton’s Denise Lach and Rosemary DeMello carry anti-toll signs on the Sakonnet River bridge. Photo: Jack McDaid.

Listening in the crowd, carrying hand-made signs, Tiverton residents Rosemary DeMello and Denise Lach had walked over the bridge to join to protest. “This is not right,” DeMello said. “This has never been a toll bridge, and now they’re going to put a toll on it to pay for the other bridges in Rhode Island,”

“Local people should certainly be exempt from the tolls,” said Lach. “I travel to the Island a lot. We’re always over there.”

As protestors began to drift off and the organizers were wrapping cables and packing up speakers, Vitkevich evaluated the impact of the event. “What happened here today,” said Vitkevich, “was the start of taking this down.”

With tolls, tea party got the government they demanded


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newport bridge tokenWhen I was a cub reporter I subsidized my habit of writing for the Jamestown Press by working as an arborist on Aquidneck Island. To do so, I had to pay a lot of tolls going over the Newport Bridge. And not the ten cent kind like those crossing over the brand new Sakonnet River Bridge this morning. To get to Newport back then it was shell out 10 bucks for 11 tokens or pay 2 bucks each way.

So I can certainly sympathize with the folks who live in Tiverton and Little Compton – as well as Fall River and Westport – and need to get to Aquidneck Island, or vice versa. It adds up, I know. (On some days I would toss as many as six tokens in that blight at the bottom of the bridge!)

In political theory, too, I support this cause. Bridges, like buses, have a value to users and non-users alike and – in a perfect progressive world – both should be paid for communally through taxes not user fees.

But paying for anything, especially something as expensive as a bridge over Narragansett Bay, with such a simple solution is not so easy in Rhode Island in no small part because of the same conservatives fighting against the tolls.

Justin Katz, one of the most outspoken Tivertonians on tolling, says the expense should be borne by taxpayers. Meanwhile, his day job is to advocate against taxes. WPRO made the Providence Journal last week when fictional small government hero John Galt call into the Matt Allen Show to advocate against tolls. The yellow “don’t tread on me” snake shirt that graced yesterday’s protest is an iconic emblem of the tea party movement.

WPRO, Allen, Katz and the tea party are among the most vocal critics of government spending in Rhode Island politics. It stinks that people have to pay a user fee to cross the Sakonnet River Bridge but it stinks because of what small government and austerity actually look like when not fictionalized in novel or talk radio or blog post.

This isn’t big government sticking it to John Galt, Matt Allen and Justin Katz. This is what small government looks like.

The whole thing reminds me of the HL Mencken quote: “Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.”

Picture of old Newport Bridge token:

newport bridge token

 

Arson is an extreme reaction to a 10 cent toll


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Location of fire at Sakonnet River BridgeA ten cent user fee on the new Sakonnet River Bridge has seemingly inspired political sabotage as authorities say an arsonist targeted the tolls Saturday morning.

The alleged act of extremism hopefully says less about how opposed community members are about paying a dime to cross the new bridge than about the consequences – good, bad or indifferent and intended or not – of radical rhetoric in political debate.

“Rhode Island’s government is now engendering such hopelessness and distrust of the system that people are resorting to criminal activity to push back against it,” writes Justin Katz, in response, this morning. Or someone got a little over-inspired by the grandiose tactics implemented by a vocal minority of influential conservatives who have exploited this issue to further their ideological assault on Rhode Island.

In either case, the right should be cautious of crying wolf. Paying a dime to be able to drive over Narragansett Bay is a flimsy reason to declare a revolution.

John Galt vs. ALEC in East Bay toll debate


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John GaltThere’s an ideological battle going on in the Ocean State concerning the new toll bridge connecting Tiverton to Aquidneck Island. But it isn’t between the left and the right. It’s between the right and itself.

The rest of Rhode Island has moved on; the state said it won’t even collect the toll. But the same folks who once protested the user fee on the basis of it being an economic hardship for the minions of struggling Tiverton and Little Compton residents who need to go to Portsmouth are now protesting it on principle.

Even John Galt himself, the fantasy hero of Ayn Rand’s science fiction novel/small government manifesto, has joined the fray, calling in to one of the local talk radio shows, reports the Providence Journal.

Yes, paper of record in Rhode Island reports on fictional philosophers calling into talk radio shows. I somehow doubt the ProJo would report it if Tom Joad started commenting on RI Future. Nor is it necessarily news if a fake person calls into talk radio. Indeed that may be the only kind of person who has called into talk radio in recent years!

It’s also noteworthy because while the East Bay Galtstapo may hate the idea of toll roads, their ideological kinfolk at ALEC loves them. Here’s the preamble from ALEC’s 2009 Statement of Principles on Toll Roads:

The Department of Transportation projects traffic congestion is costing the U.S. economy as much as $200 billion a year. Because of future deficits in the Federal Transportation Trust Fund, the federal government will be unable to adequately fund needed improvements for our roads. In fact, beginning in 2009 the Transportation Trust Fund is facing a $4-5 billion deficit. Hence, innovative financing methods, such as public-private partnerships, have a vital role to play in solving our current transportation problems. Government policy should encourage a market-driven highway system, one that responds to the needs of users, on a user-pays basis. Private investment in highway projects generates new sources of money, ideas, and efficiency.

And PR Watch reports ALEC this summer is looking at “privatization and outsourcing of toll roads.”

It seems to me that the real John Galt would prefer this solution to sharing the cost of maintenance with his neighbors who don’t use the bridge. But I guess that ignores what objectivism is really all about: doing whatever is in one’s own selfish interest.

Why the Sakonnet River Bridge tolls matter

Sakonnet River BridgeIt’s not often that I disagree with Bob Plain, but I think he underestimates the importance of the battle over the Sakonnet River Bridge tolls.

There are three important things going on here:
First, as progressives, we should oppose tolls as a matter of principle.  Because everybody pays the same rate no matter how much you make, tolls are one of the most regressive taxes out there, hitting those who can least afford to pay the hardest.  They also waste a ton of time.  By sending people way out of their way to avoid them, tolls waste a lot of gas, which is bad for the environment.  Unlike income taxes, they do do serious damage to the economy.  Oh, and they’re quite expensive to collect.  Ending the income tax cuts for the rich makes more sense.  Even raising regressive property and sales taxes makes more sense.

Secondly, this is yet another example of House leadership breaking promises.  After having put in a compromise on the tolls to secure the East Bay representatives’ votes on the budget–votes necessary for the budget’s passage–Fox changed course and added the 10-cent toll.  Although just the latest example of House leadership going back on its word, this time it put real fury on the floor.  That night, the ranks of the anti-Fox caucus swelled considerably.

If leadership keeps this up, progressives should have the votes to block another right-wing budget come this time next year.

Finally, and most importantly, this battle is about how we plan on paying for the delayed maintenance on our infrastructure.  Traditionally, infrastructure is funded through bonds, but for reasons that remain unclear to me, we have decided not to fully fund maintenance when we do our infrastructure bonds.  As a result, we have to spend quite a bit more money replacing bridges.  The obvious thing to do would be to do a simple deferred maintenance bond and start a practice of pre-funding maintenance in the original infrastructure bond issues.  Because the Fed has given us a one-time opportunity to borrow at very low interest rates–and because deferring maintenance usually winds up costing more later–we are wasting tons of taxpayer money by not floating a huge infrastructure maintenance bond before interest rates rise.  That’s before you even get into all the jobs an infrastructure bond would create.  (I know Keynesianism is a hard sell on Smith Hill, but that doesn’t make it any less correct.)

But that’s not what the General Assembly is planning on doing.  In her floor speech on the tolls, conservative Senate President Paiva-Weed did not mince her words about where the right-wing leadership is heading on this issue.  “The fact is, we need to start looking at user fees,” she declared.  Translation:  Instead of taking advantage of a free lunch on maintenance bonds, we will be funding repairs on the backs of those who can least afford to pay.

So no, the toll battle is not a bunch of meaningless whining about ten cents.  It is about progressive taxation, it is about a breach of trust, and it is about Keynes.