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Tolls proposed for I-95 work
by Staff report

RALEIGH — Mitigated tolling is best way to pay for an estimated $4.5 billion in repairs and new construction to Interstate 95 passing through North Carolina, according to an economic study released Monday. The study calls for two toll sites in Robeson County.

The study is a recommendation to the General Assembly, which will make the final decision.

The study calls for a 50 percent discounted toll for North Carolina residents. It’s estimated that tolls for traveling the entire 182 miles of interstate passing through North Carolina from the South Carolina border to Virginia would be $20 for motorists who do not live in North Carolina.

For Robeson County, the study calls for two tolling sites, at mile marker 12 near U.S. 74 and between mile markers 28 and 31 at St. Pauls.

A state study released last year said that tolling is the best way to pay for widening, rebuilding or raising overpasses, and making safety improvements to the aging interstate. A plan introduced by the state Department of Transportation called for tolls to be collected from travelers every 10 miles along the state’s 182 miles of the highway.

The economic study released Monday began last October at the direction of the N.C. General Assembly. The original study recommending tolling as the best means of generating the revenue needed to maintain the interstate was strongly opposed by many residents, businesses and local governments along the I-95 corridor, including in Robeson County.

The I-95 Economic Assessment was prepared by Cambridge Systematics of Atlanta for $1.6 million. Assisting in the study was an advisory council made up of leaders from key industry associations, economic development and tourism groups, the North Carolina Chamber of Commerce and the No Tolls I-95 Coalition.

Out of five alternatives studied — business as usual; build with no specific funding; tolls; mitigated tolls; and alternative funding — the study says that “mitigated tolls gives rise to the greatest economic benefit locally and statewide.”

According to the study, mitigated tolling would raise an estimated $5.1 billion while decreasing transportation costs by $62.3 billion and adding about 17,000 jobs annually through 2050.

The Lumberton Tourism Development Authority is one of the groups that last year strongly opposed any tolling of the interstate. Opposition centered around the negative impact tolls would have on local businesses and the residents that regularly use the interstate.

Supporters of tolling contend that the revenue collected is the only way that long-overdue repairs and widening can be made in a reasonable time to the highway that was built between 1956 and 1980. They say that widening the highway will allow quicker commuting times and less travel costs.

Included in the study was a look at alternative funding, including increasing a number of taxes to pay for the project. Tax increases examined included a 10-year dedicated sales tax; personal income tax; motor fuels tax; and the state’s revenue package, including sales tax, highway-use tax and vehicle registration fee.

The DOT is now holding a series of meetings along the I-95 corridor to review the study results with residents, local officials and business and community leaders. A meeting is scheduled in Lumberton at Robeson Community College Workforce Development Center on Monday from 4 to 7 p.m.

Comments
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Lookhigher
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May 16, 2013
How to Kill a Town – 101

Higher Taxes – Check

Over Burdensome Utilities – Check

Make it as unappealing to outside businesses – Check

Poor Educational System – Check

Incompetent Political Figures - Check

Make the towns and businesses up and down I-95 as costly and unappealing as possible – coming soon

If this was an actual course, Lumberton and Robeson County would get an A . Unfortunately, this would be about the only good grade this area can get from its educational system.

ROSSisRIGHT
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May 15, 2013
Just another way the obama administration is trying to get their hands on our money. They know the less money we have in our pockets to spend the less self reliant we are. Everything the democrats do costs somebody some of their hard earned money.

Keep voting for the ones who are taking what little money you poor people have. Keep voting democrat...Forward! As in "lean forward" this wont hurt...
BBBD
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May 14, 2013
Yet another terrible idea hatched by pinheads in government.

The second to last paragraph makes me want to vomit. Rather than revamp their plans to fall in line with current funds if their dream of stealing from us daily via tolls falls through, they're dreaming of as many different ways to steal our money as possible.

I believe the fix is in, and this tolling scheme is going to go through no matter what we do. Of course Rob Co is going to be hurt the worst of all by this stupidity.
alton
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May 14, 2013
The new welcome sign in South Carolina." We have no tolls and cheap gas come back soon."
onetwenty
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May 14, 2013
I thought there was a fund for this already? where's that money? or just like orighawk said, where's the money from all the taxes on the gas we buy from this state? this would kill travels through nc, this county can't take much more down fall. this is the worse thing you could do. there has to be a better way.
orighawk
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May 14, 2013
Who's going to pay for the road improvements for st pauls due to increase in traffic? I drive to Fayetteville 6-7 days a week to work and can't afford to pay a toll considering I'm paying one of the highest gas taxes to the state of NC. Wheres that money?
TripHazard
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May 14, 2013
Seriously. I drive it also and this amounts to another major tax increase just because we live near 95 and have to use it. Highway 301 will be a bottle necked nightmare with folks opting to take it to avoid tolls. Not to mention more than double the number of tractor trailers that will use 301 to both avoid the weigh station and now avoid tolls. The county will need to locate an ambulance every 5 miles. A toll booth every 10 miles???? They aren't that money hungry on the Jersey turnpike folks....come on! Why not a toll at the borders? The tolling idea almost sounds like a drug gone viral to the supporters. Its the only way and we have to sap every dollar from each vehicle that we can. Once you open this pandora's box there is no putting the lid back on.
butterflywmn
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May 15, 2013
Check the news about the legislators from our state capitol for the past ten years or more and see where our leaders started the years with a budget greater than it's funds, "borrowed"DOT funds and put them in the "GENERAL FUND", and then had a "surplus"at the end of the year and gave themselves a pay raise. This money has gone for special interest projects and pay raises, and never got repaid to repair our highways and state roads. That's where the money went. Kind of like what they are also doing with lottery money, putting it in the general fund instead of directly to Education. Slick, and now the residents are footing the bill once again, in addition to the higher sales tax about to pass, and the taxing for Obamacare. We are one of the poorest counties with one of the highest unemployment rates. How do you squeeze blood from a turnip? You can't.
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