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Failed toll road privatization leaves Indiana in driver's seat



 
 
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Old March 4th 15, 12:17 AM posted to in.general, rec.autos.driving, sac.politics,alt.politics.usa.republican, alt.politics.economics
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Default Failed toll road privatization leaves Indiana in driver's seat

For once, it may be taxpayers who get away with highway robbery.

Less than a decade after a foreign consortium paid Indiana $3.8
billion for the 75-year rights to collect tolls along the
Hoosier State's 157-mile Indiana Toll Road, the private firm is
bankrupt and looking to unload the contract. But the deal,
signed under the administration of former Gov. Mitch Daniels,
who once headed the federal Office of Management and Budget, is
being praised for protecting Indiana from exposure, unlike other
privatization pacts that stung taxpayers.

“The state is protected,” Leonard Gilroy, director of government
reform at the nonprofit research institution Reason Foundation,
told FoxNews.com. “And they get to keep all the money they
earned in the deal. They have invested already somewhere towards
90 different highway projects throughout the state.”

“The investors were looking to make a splash.”
- Leonard Gilroy, Reason Foundation

Known as the Major Moves Plan, the deal with a group comprised
of Spain-based infrastructure firm Cintra and Macquarie Bank in
Australia, was announced with fanfare in 2006 by Daniels.
Operating as the ITR Concession Company, the private firm would
collect maintain the road and collect tolls until 2081 for the
billion-dollar upfront payment. The state would invest the funds
in an interest-bearing account and use the proceeds to fund road
nearly 100 projects elsewhere in the state. It was the classic
deal that so often prompts politicians to pronounce it a "win-
win."

Except it now it is clear ITRCC lost.

“The investors were looking to make a splash,” Gilroy, who has
followed the deal closely, told FoxNews.com. “This was an
aggressive deal. They bid high to make an impact. To kick start
interest in the U.S.

“You probably won’t see a lot of similar blockbuster
transactions in the future,” he added.

Toll revenues, which were supposed to be used to pay back
lenders who gave ITRCC money to sign the deal, didn't meet
projections. Last year alone, the ITRCC took in $196 million in
tolls and owed $193 million in debt service, leaving a scant $3
million to cover salaries for nearly 250 employees, maintenance,
upgrades and other expenses.

Late last month, the company submitted its filing in federal
bankruptcy court, acknowledging that it missed a June $102
million interest payment.

Current Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, who, like Daniels, is a
Republican, said drivers and taxpayers don't need to worry about
the toll operator's problems.

“Hoosiers can expect business as usual on the Indiana Toll
Road,” Pence said.

For now, three possible outcomes await: Either someone else will
step in and buy - for perhaps pennies on the dollar - the
rights to collect tolls for the next seven decades, the ITRCC
will renegotiate its deals with lenders or the toll road's
operation will revert to the state.

“The deal was designed to protect the state of Indiana,” Michael
LaFaive, director of fiscal policy for Michigan-based Mackinac
Center for Public Policy said to FoxNews.com. “If they go belly
up, the state could get it back if it’s not sold to another
group. The worst case scenario would be that creditors would get
control.”

According to the National Bridge Inventory, a database compiled
by the Federal Highway Administration lists about 2,200
privately-owned highways across 41 states and the commonwealth
of Puerto Rico.

Cintra also runs operations for a swath of State Highway 130 in
Texas as well as the Chicago Skyway, but those deals are not
affected by the Indiana bankruptcy. But Maquarie Bank has been
burned before in bids to run private toll roads in the U.S.,
according to a 2007 report. Two of the bank's major projects,
including the South Bay Expressway in San Diego, went bankrupt
and another two were bought back at discounts by local
government jurisdictions.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2014/10/05/failed-toll-road-
privatization-leaves-indiana-in-driver-seat/

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