You get the flavor...we are a city-state or a regional-state...the optics of a locally. We don’t belong to a greater state or nation. It is advertisement, newspaper and media fixation on all profits are local. Screw the greater good.
And so the fixation on the fuel tax and casino...it is the political ideological wars. It is a fixation of just thinking up any old excuse to obstruct government until my local ideological needs are met. I got to fee.
This is how our nation is going to collapse.
Contractors: Money is needed to fix N.H. highways
By NORMA LOVE
The Associated Press
Sunday, November 3, 2013
(Published in print: Monday, November 4, 2013)
(Published in print: Monday, November 4, 2013)
A legislative stalemate over raising the gas tax and
legalizing a casino could jeopardize the state’s biggest transportation
priority and drive highway contractors out of New Hampshire to look for work in
nearby states willing to fund infrastructure improvements.
The New Hampshire House passed a gas tax this year that
the Senate killed, while the Senate passed a casino bill that the House
rejected. Transportation Commissioner Chris Clement said this week that he’s
worried funding won’t be available to finish expanding Interstate 93 – the top
priority – as well as make other highway improvements.
“They’ve got to follow the work,” Clement said.
Lawmakers hoping to keep the I-93 project alive say
funding must be in place next year to keep contractors from seeking guaranteed
work elsewhere. They point to Massachusetts, which has just begun an effort to
pump billions of dollars into its transportation network over the next decade.
They’ll try to break the stalemate next year with bills
to raise the state’s 18-cent gas and diesel tax and to legalize casino
gambling. Some money from a casino could be used for highway projects. The
Senate rejected a phased-in, 12-cent increase this year to the tax, which
hasn’t been raised since 1991. Details have not been released on the Senate
proposal for next year, but its prime sponsor said it won’t be as big of an
increase.
“It’s not an exaggeration to say we have a catastrophic situation with
our infrastructure,” said House Public Works Chairman David Campbell, who
sponsored this year’s defeated gas tax bill.
Campbell and other supporters of increasing funding for
roads and bridges are adopting a new tactic for next year. They’re gambling
that the House can be swayed to pass a casino bill and that the Senate can be
persuaded to increase the gas and diesel tax.
The risk is high that each chamber will stick to its
established position and no revenue bill will pass.
That keeps Clement awake at night. The expansion of I-93
from four lanes to six lanes – and potentially eight – from the Massachusetts
border to Manchester to ease traffic congestion and spur economic growth will
stop, and even if the $250 million needed is later approved, construction won’t
be done before the state’s environmental permit expires in 2020, which would
lead to further delays and higher costs, he said. Design work on the remaining
I-93 sections is being done in hopes money will be available within the next
year to begin work in 2015.
The department also will begin running a deficit starting
in mid-2015 that could force Clement to lay off up to 600 of his 1,600 workers
and reduce services, including how often snowplow trucks complete circuits
during storms.
More money is needed – and soon – to keep contractors
from migrating to other jobs and to keep the department operating smoothly,
Clement said.
“I am revenue agnostic. It doesn’t matter where the
revenue comes from,” he said.
Contractors working on I-93 say that whether or when they
pull out depends on if there’s money to do the work without leaving them idle
waiting. Taxpayers will pay more if the job stalls, contractors said.
If a company already has its heavy equipment at the
interstate, it costs less to move the machinery to a new site a few miles away,
said Ryan Audley, vice president of R.S., Audley Inc., which is working on the
Exit 4 interchange. If the equipment is moved to a new job location and later
brought back, the costs for a contract can be hundreds of thousands of dollars
higher, he said.
“We will have to go out of New Hampshire to bid
projects,” he said.
If lawmakers don’t break the stalemate, Clement says he
won’t pour all the state’s limited resources into finishing I-93 when there are
so many roads and bridges in need of repair elsewhere.
More than 350 municipal bridges are on the state’s “red
list” of structures badly in need of repair or replacement. An additional 140
bridges owned by the state are also on the list. The state has roughly 1,600
miles of state roads in poor condition, 1,900 miles in fair condition and 800
in good condition.
“We cannot let the rest of the state starve on the back
of I-93,” he said.
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