House Minority Leader Patricia Morgan to Submit Legislation to Repeal Truck Tolls in Rhode Island

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STATE HOUSE — On Tuesday, April 11, 2017, House Minority Leader Patricia Morgan
(R-District 26 Coventry, Warwick, West Warwick) will submit legislation to repeal
the Rhode Works toll law.

Rep. Morgan’s bill would repeal the provisions of the general laws which created the
«Rhode Island Bridge Replacement, Reconstruction, and Maintenance Fund Act of 2016»,
also known as «Rhode Works», which will impose tolls on large commercial trucks.

«The Rhode Works bill is irresponsible and should never have passed last year. It
is a $45 million albatross around the necks of Rhode Island consumers. It will add
to our already high cost of living, making it more difficult for average Rhode
Islanders to keep their head above water. It will undoubtedly hurt our small
businesses who are struggling to remain competitive with rivals in other states not
burdened with the extra shipping costs. In other words it will had more weight to an
economy that is already dead last.»

«In addition, truck tolls are most likely unconstitutional. The American Truckers
Association and its lawyers have conducted extensive research and are prepared to
submit compelling arguments in court that tolling one class of vehicle is
discriminatory and, therefore, unconstitutional. Despite our many requests,
Governor Raimondo has failed to produce any legal justification to the contrary.
This leads us to the uncomfortable conclusion that her rationale is poorly
supported.» Rep. Morgan said.

«Representative Quattrocchi submitted legislation (H-5334) that would require the
Governor to install only one tolling gantry to trigger the litigation. It would
prevent the state from spending unnecessary millions on gantries until all legal
questions are resolved. Despite the protective reasoning behind this common sense
measure, she has ignored the suggestion and is proceeding full steam ahead.»

«That aggressive approach may force Rhode Islanders into a deep and expensive hole.
The Rhode Island Department of Transportation bragged at the recent one year
anniversary of the Rhode Works law that it has already signed contracts to spend
$174 million, with an additional $200 million by July 2017. Another $400 million
for the 6/10 highway is being finalized plus spending for a train station, gantries
and transit centers. By the end of the year over $1 billion in signed contracts is
anticipated. All of this spending is happening before we collect one dime from
tolls. Is the plan to dig such a deep budget chasm that the Administration can use
it to justify tolling all vehicles to pay off the debt?» Morgan questioned.

«I also have serious concerns about how the money is being spent. The Governor
forced through tolls on the premise that our bridges are the worst in the country
and they are dangerous. And yet, from some projects we observe, bridge repair is
not the priority.»

«I have mentioned the Slatersville Bridge repeatedly. This is a tiny bridge, just
107 feet long. The original repair was listed as $9.1 million. Over the past 2
months that amount has risen nearly 50% and is now $13.5 million. Worse the spending
includes a park and garden and scenic amenities. Please don’t tell me that we
passed the law that will harm consumers, businesses, job seekers and the trucking
industry so the Town of Slatersville could have a nice place to grow flowers.
Either the claims of imminent bridge collapse were false or the Governor and her
team are spending tolls wastefully. Both scenarios are wrong and we should call a
halt until we get truthful answers.»

«I also have concerns that the cost of construction is being inflated to make the
‘little blue campaign’ signs always indicate on time and on schedule. We need
answers and without a halt I fear we will not get them until it is too late.»

«Last year the Governor said Rhode Island was too broke to come up with the $45
million to avoid tolls. Yet this year she has proposed eliminating car taxes,
starting a new entitlement program to pay college tuition, and now buy a stadium.
Clearly, she was not being forthright with us. There never was a need to toll our
highways.»

«It’s not too late. We can still pay for bridge repair from our current budget.
But we must stop this detrimental law now before the debt it creates gets
unmanageable.»


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