By Ben Wear and David Doerr Cox News Service
http://www.wacotrib.com/news/content/news/stories/2008/02/06/02062008wactxdothearing.html
The Texas Department of Transportation
made a billion-dollar error, officials with the agency admitted
Tuesday under stern questioning from legislators, a mistake
they said contributed significantly to the department’s sudden cash
crunch.
Transportation department officials say agency
planners inadvertently counted $1.1 billion of revenue twice, a
mistake that caused them to commit to more road projects than the
agency could handle. And about $225 million of the resulting
cuts came from projects in the transportation department’s Waco
district, said state Sen. Kip Averitt, R-Waco, who attended the
hearing.
The Waco district, encompassing eight
Central Texas counties, received a greater
proportion of the cuts “by far” compared
with the transportation department’s 24 other districts,
he said.
“We can’t let stand having Waco take the brunt of
the process,” Averitt said in a Tribune-Herald phone
interview after the hearing. “The folks in Central Texas are
paying their fair share of the taxes and we are due our fair share
of the road improvements.”
Independent audit sought
Lawmakers, always skeptical and often openly
hostile during a lengthy Senate committee hearing, let
transportation department officials know they remain suspicious
about the fiscal crisis’ legitimacy.
Texas Transportation Commission members,
said state Sen. Kirk Watson, D-Austin, “have an agenda. And
that’s to privatize the second largest (highway) system in the
world. And you are hell-bent-for-leather to do that.”
State Sen. Tommy Williams, R-The
Woodlands, suggested that a third party needs to take a hard look at
the department’s books.
“It’s important to me that we get the state
auditor’s office in there as quickly as possible,” said Williams,
who carried legislation last year that substantially curtailed the
department’s authority to agree to long-term leases with private
companies to build and run tollways.
Amadeo Saenz,
TxDOT’s executive director, said he would
welcome an audit. Saenz and
chief financial officer James Bass, along
with three transportation commissioners,
spent three hours answering questions
in an unusual, out-of-session joint meeting of the Senate
Finance Committee and the Senate Transportation and Homeland
Security Committee.
Money counted twice
Department officials
first announced a money shortage in November,
ascribing it to a number of factors: inflation, reduced
federal transportation grants, the need to spend much more on road
maintenance and, most tellingly to legislators, the loss of revenue
from those private toll road leases. Until Tuesday,
top department officials had said nothing
publicly about having made a serious bureaucratic error.
According to Saenz and Bass, the
$1.1 billion it counted twice was
money borrowed through selling bonds. As a
consequence, top agency officials told their various
divisions and districts that they had $4.2 billion to spend this
fiscal year.
“As soon as I heard that number,” Bass said, “I
knew it was an overestimate.”
Soon after, with projects for 2008 now
trimmed to $3.1 billion, officials announced huge
cuts in spending on right of way and project design and a freeze on
starting many road projects that were ready to go. That
sudden halt to projects got legislators’ attention and their goat.
The Legislature and voters last year gave the agency
authorization to borrow an additional $8
billion — though $5 billion of that will require further
legislative action in 2009 — so legislators aren’t happy that
critical road projects are suddenly up on blocks.
Saenz said he has brought the planning function,
along with project procurement, under Bass’ control to avoid the
sort of left hand-right hand problem that caused the error.
The so-called
transportation funding crisis was one of the factors local
officials considered when they approved
amendments to the Waco Metropolitan Planning Organization’s
five-year planning documents that would
finance the expansion of Interstate 35 through the city
by adding two toll lanes.
Averitt said he believes the MPO’s policy board made the right
decision to keep the toll option in the plan so the transportation
department wouldn’t stop its surveying work during the time it takes
for lawmakers to solve the problem.
“It is not going to happen overnight, but we do
expect to make progress,” he said. “I think if we can all understand
the direction we are finally headed that we can make those kinds of
decisions.”
In the meantime, Averitt said he will continue to
fight to get funding for projects in the Waco area restored.
“There are ways to fund those projects that they
have delayed, and we want to get them back on track,” he said. “It
would be my intention to help get them back on track for those
projects, particularly in the Waco district.”