Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Massachusetts Robs Peter to Pay Paul

What happens when there is no more money to borrow?

"Agencies agree to aid T, Turnpike; Proposal calls for pooling resources" by Noah Bierman, Globe Staff | August 12, 2008

Governor Deval Patrick's administration - increasingly desperate to avoid turnpike toll hikes and fare increases on buses, subways, and trains over the next 18 months - announced a plan yesterday to pool resources from the state's transportation bureaucracies in hope of finding money.

The plan, still in its formative stages and only tentatively described, would take money from the state Highway Department and the Massachusetts Port Authority and divert it to the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority MBTA and the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority.

Please see: On Borrowed T and The Big Pit

But it is far from clear that any cost-sharing plan would raise enough to avoid hitting up commuters for more cash over the next two years.

Leaders of all four transportation agencies met with state Transportation Secretary Bernard Cohen behind closed doors for about 90 minutes yesterday and agreed they would try to find money to channel to the Turnpike Authority and the MBTA and identify services they might be able to perform for them, Cohen said after the meeting.

Yeah, so they can pay off banks!!!!

"Perhaps they can pull a rabbit out of the hat, but I'm skeptical," said Michael Widmer, president of the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation and a member of a bipartisan commission that documented the financial problems of the state's transportation system last year.

What, this guy in the paper AGAIN!!!

That is TWO ARTICLES he is quoted in today!!!!

The agencies that have been tapped to help the Turnpike Authority and the T have their own financial issues. The Massachusetts Highway Department already uses borrowed money to pay 78 percent of its payroll costs.

The Massachusetts Port Authority, which runs the airport and the seaport, is financially the state's healthiest transportation agency. But it also faces problems as the airlines it serves struggle with rising gas prices and dwindling passenger loads. Massport's chief executive, Thomas J. Kinton Jr., recently asked his staff to find cuts in their budgets in response to the crisis in the industry.

One area where MassPort may be able to help: It controls the Tobin Bridge, projected to net about $280 million in tolls over the next 20 years. The Transportation Finance Commission recommended that the bridge be turned over the Turnpike Authority.

Still, most insiders say the state will have to come up with another source of revenue for the T and the Turnpike Authority soon. An increase in the gas tax, proposed by the commission, is not considered politically viable. Leaders of the Legislature's Transportation Committee said yesterday the measure would not pass if proposed under the current conditions.

Yeah, but they will sneak it through somehow!!!

--more--"

This fucking state!

Passes out the cash to rich corporations and fat-cat friends, and yet the only taxes it boosts are cigarettes and gas!

How's that butt-hole feeling, Mass. taxpayers?

A bit wide after the incessant reaming, isn't it?