New toll road merger plans OKd
Alicia Robinson
Board members will consider four options next week to help bail out
the financially ailing San Joaquin Hills toll road, but two couldn’t
immediately be put in place and the others are versions of an already
considered $3.9-billion bond proposal that would merge the two
agencies that currently govern the toll road system.
An ad hoc committee of the toll roads governing boards’ members
voted unanimously Wednesday to bring four proposals back to the full
board at its April 8 meeting, said Lisa Telles, a spokeswoman for the
Transportation Corridor Agencies, the toll roads’ administrative
agency.
“It will be indicated that only two can be done at this time,”
said Peter Herzog, chairman of the Foothill and Eastern toll roads
board. “The other two will take a lot of work.”
For two years, that board, along with the one governing the San
Joaquin Hills toll road, have been mulling how to save the San
Joaquin Hills toll road from financial collapse. The road is
financially insolvent because of inaccurate revenue projections.
Members of the two boards will consider a proposal from Orange
County Supervisor Chris Norby under which the Foothill and Eastern
toll roads’ governing agency would purchase the assets and pay the
debts of the San Joaquin Hills toll road.
Norby projected the plan would save drivers $3.6 billion in future
tolls and would not require issuing any bonds.
County Treasurer-Tax Collector John Moorlach’s proposal also will
be given to the toll roads’ oversight committee. He suggested the
Foothill and Eastern toll roads agency purchase a 10-year option to
buy the San Joaquin Hills toll road with a provision to extend the
option.
The other two proposals the board will consider are versions of
the original merger plan that board members twice delayed voting on
because some questioned its cost and wanted to see other options.
The earlier proposal would sell $3.9 billion in bonds, consolidate
the two agencies’ operations and restructure debts at low interest
rates. This plan will be considered with either all fixed-interest
rate bonds or some at fixed and some at variable rates.
The already-vetted merger proposals have an advantage because
they’ve been checked out by bond rating agencies and can be insured,
Herzog said.
Norby’s and Moorlach’s plans could have tax consequences or
require changes in tax law, so they would have to be studied further
to see if they are feasible, he said.
“We have two plans that meet all the goals and objectives that the
board set out,” Herzog said. “They’ve been fully reviewed and
analyzed, they’re rated, they’re insured and they’re marketable, so
it seems like one of those two should be chosen.”
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