Tollways’ boards told to make choice
Alicia Robinson
Toll road governing board members may be at an impasse once again
since the agency that insures its bonds said it won’t back an
alternative plan.
An ad hoc committee of the toll roads’ governing boards on
Wednesday discarded six new proposals to bail out the failing San
Joaquin Hills Toll Road because the bond insurance agency involved
wouldn’t back the new plans.
On March 17, the committee will look at two versions of an earlier
$3.9-billion bond proposal to merge operations of the San Joaquin
Hills Toll Road and the Foothill and Eastern toll roads.
After the boards twice postponed a vote on the merger and asked
for alternative proposals, it’s hard to say whether they will approve
a merger plan this time around, said Gary Adams, a Newport Beach city
councilman and member of the toll roads’ governing boards.
“Clearly some people will need to change their minds for it to
pass, and I don’t know what’s going to happen,” he said.
Representatives for MBIA Inc., the agency that insures the
existing bonds for the toll roads’ boards, said they would be unable
to insure any of the plans other than the original merger, said Peter
Herzog, chairman of the Foothill and Eastern toll roads’ board.
MBIA, the world’s largest credit insurer, wanted a long-term
solution to the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road’s financial problems, and
the merger plan was the one that provided it, said Clare Climaco,
toll roads agency spokeswoman. Toll road boards and staff members
have considered hundreds of plans over the two years they’ve been
mulling the merger, she said.
The boards will consider the $3.9-billion bond plan for the merger
in two variations. One would include all the bonds being at fixed
interest rate bonds, and the other would issue some bonds at fixed
rates and some at variable rates, lowering the overall cost to pay
off the debt.
Adams and Costa Mesa Mayor Gary Monahan, who is on San Joaquin
Hills Toll Road board, said they are willing to back some form of the
original merger plan.
But a dissenting vote is expected to come from Orange County
Supervisor Bill Campbell.
“I have no idea [how others will vote], but I, for one, don’t
intend to vote for either one because I saw better proposals
[Wednesday], in my opinion,” Campbell said. “But unless these fail,
those other proposals will never be considered.”
MBIA prefers the merger proposal because it would be the most
lucrative and would relieve the insurer of its current obligations
for toll road debts, Campbell said.
Some board members are concerned about the San Joaquin Hills Toll
Road’s future if a solution is not approved soon. Because of
overestimated revenues, the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road faces
financial default as soon as 2005. Officials have said financial
default means MBIA will take control of the toll road, so tolls will
increase, toll collection will last longer and some traffic might
avoid the toll roads and instead clog surface streets.
“I don’t think there are any other financial options,” Adams said.
“I think that’s abundantly clear at this point.”
Herzog said if the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road goes into default,
it will be the second largest default by a municipal agency in U.S.
history.
“We have a plan in front of us that has market ratings, that is
insured and that can be done, and it would be a true failure in
leadership if something isn’t done in looking at these two remaining
plans,” he said.
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