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View Full Version : New toll road, first in my state



sunshine05
6th March 2011, 08:46 AM
So it's going to cost 15-24 cents/mile and there will not be toll booths. They are going to ask people to get transponders and if you don't get one they are going to take a photo of every car's license plate and send you a bill at a higher rate. I don't live close to it but wouldn't ever drive on it if I did. People are pissed.




Toll road to cost 15 to 24 cents a mile to drive


Morrisville, N.C. — State transportation officials on Thursday told drivers how much they will have to pay to drive on North Carolina's first toll road when it opens later this year.

When it's complete, the Triangle Expressway will run 18.8 miles from Durham to Holly Springs, and the North Carolina Turnpike Authority has designed it so that all tolls will be handled electronically so drivers never have to stop at a booth to fish for change.

There will be two ways to pay for using the highway:

* The N.C. Quick Pass, which involves sticking a transponder on a vehicle's windshield and having the system deduct money from a prepaid account, will cost 15 to 16 cents a mile.
* For vehicles without a transponder, roadside cameras will snap pictures of their license plates as they pass, and the Turnpike Authority will send them a bill in the mail at a rate of 23 to 24 cents a mile. People who ignore the bill will have a hold placed on their annual vehicle registration.

"The fact of the matter is this is the only way we can pay for these tremendously expensive roads," said David Joyner, executive director of the Turnpike Authority.

The Turnpike Authority expects rates to increase about 5 percent a year through 2015. Money collected from the tolls will pay off about 70 percent of the construction costs on the road.

"We owe the bank $1 billion, and we've got to repay it," Joyner said.

Some drivers consider the tolls a waste of money.

"I pretty much know how to get around and can probably go places without using a toll road, and I'd probably prefer that," driver Andrew Leliever said.

When they hear that the road could save them up to 20 minutes on a trip through western Wake County, others said they would use the toll road.

"I'd definitely consider it, definitely consider it because being stuck in that traffic when it's really bad is brutal," driver Brinson Taylor said.

"Time is money, and money is time. I think that right there sums it up," driver Lamont Middleton said.

Toll collection will begin when the 3.4-mile stretch called the Triangle Parkway opens later this year between N.C. Highway 147 in Durham and N.C. Highway 540 in Morrisville. At that time, the existing portion of N.C. 540 between N.C. Highway 54 and N.C. 55 will also be converted to a toll road.

The 12.6-mile Western Wake Freeway should open in 2012 between N.C. Highway 55 in Cary and N.C. 55 in Holly Springs.

Transponders will go on sale this fall, before the highway opens. Officials say the units also will work on the E-Z Pass system in the Northeast and on toll roads in Florida.

Twisted Titan
6th March 2011, 08:54 AM
THEY MAKE YOUR PERSONAL VEHICLE THEIR FRICKEN TAXI.....

WHATS NOT TO LOVE.


T

dys
6th March 2011, 08:56 AM
I wonder how much money the company that makes the transponders bribed (euphemism='donated') elected official with.

dys

iOWNme
6th March 2011, 08:58 AM
(From the Communist Manifesto, Marx 1848)

6th Plank: Centralization of the means of communication and transport in the hands of the State.

sunshine05
6th March 2011, 09:10 AM
Nice resume.



David W. Joyner, Executive Director
Email: david.joyner@ncdot.gov

David W. Joyner was appointed as the first executive director of the NCTA in June 2005.

Joyner's career spans nearly 30 years of experience in federal, state and local government, with assignments as an Intergovernmental and Congressional Relations Officer and as Special Assistant to the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Transportation. He was also the first person to be named Vice-President of State Government Affairs for Burson-Marsteller, the nation's largest public relations/public affairs firm. As such, he managed a nationwide corps of lobbyists and oversaw state public affairs strategies for many of the nation's Fortune 500 companies.

In 1994, Joyner moved to Raleigh and co-founded State Capitol Strategies, a fifty-state legislative bill tracking and issue analysis company that was later sold to The Washington Post. Most recently, Joyner served as a consultant to Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice Administration Services.

Joyner is a native of Rocky Mount and a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Ponce
6th March 2011, 09:34 AM
I believe that in this new world a road that's build with the intention of making it into a toll road is ok...but.. an existing highway should not be because we already paid for it.

First post of the day.............good morning to one and all.