Funding for transportation remains a significant challenge in the Dallas-Fort Worth region as well as across the state and nation.
In Texas, transportation is funded through a combination of federal and state taxes on gasoline and diesel fuel, statewide registration fees and local initiatives such as bond elections, sales tax, concession payments and tolls.
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Federal and state
motor-fuels taxes, which are assessed on a
per-gallon basis, have not been raised since the early 1990s.
Since then, construction costs have risen dramatically, meaning the purchasing power of the tax dollars has not kept pace with inflation. In essence, the region isn’t able to build as many projects with the same level of taxation.
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During the same time period, vehicles have become more fuel efficient, meaning motorists can travel farther while buying less fuel and ultimately paying less in fuel taxes.
The Dallas-Fort Worth region has been able to continue building transportation projects despite these funding challenges by using innovative finance such as toll roads and managed lanes, and utilizing public-private partnerships to leverage scarce resources.
The funding shortfall has resulted in the new long-range transportation plan, Mobility 2035, estimating nearly $45 billion less funding being available than what was projected under the previous plan. Mobility 2035 defers more transportation projects and could lead to higher congestion throughout the region as the population and, therefore, demand for the transportation system, continue to increase.
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