JEFFERSON CITY — The Missouri Department of Transportation proposed to maintain less than 25 percent of Missouri’s roadways due to diminishing revenue.
Both MoDOT officials and members of the Department of Transportation said fewer funds will contribute to crumbling roadways and bridges statewide.
“Ultimately, roads and bridges are going to continue to deteriorate with the revenue we have now,” MoDOT Director Dave Nichols said.
MoDOT’s current budget will only allow it to maintain 8,000 miles of the state’s 34,000 miles of roads. Its construction budget will be limited to $325 million. The department’s proposed plan has labeled the 8,000 miles as primary roadways, while the remaining 26,000 miles are considered supplementary roadways. Primary roadways include Interstate 70 and make up 73 percent of statewide vehicle traffic.
“(Primary roads) are all we can commit to with $325 million,” Nichols said.
Some of the supplementary roadways include Lindbergh Boulevard and Olive Street in St. Louis, Bruce Watkins Drive and Blue Parkway in Kansas City and Missouri Boulevard in Jefferson City.
“We’re attempting to spread, I call it the pain, but we will spread the fiscal responsibility throughout the state as equitably as we can,” Missouri Transportation Committee Chairman Steven Miller said.
Bridges across the state will take a hit because of this plan. In 2014, 483 bridges were classified as being in poor or serious condition by the department. In 2024, that number is projected to increase by nearly 1,000.
Rural communities will also face downgraded services under this proposed plan.
“Those rural roads, they will begin to go back to what they originally were, over time, back to a gravel road,” Miller said.
Although he acknowledges the department’s funding problem, House Transportation Committee Chairman Glen Kolkmeyer, R-Odessa, called the plan “devastating.”
“One of the things that bothers me is there are a lot of well-traveled routes that are not on the primary plan, it’s devastating,” Kolkmeyer said.
The department cannot rely on national funds to pay for construction projects. MoDOT will soon be unable to use federal funds for these because it will not have enough money to match what it takes from the federal government. Instead, that money will be distributed to other states who can match the funds.
The majority of MoDOT’s financial woes can be traced to voters’ rejection of Amendment 7 in August.
Had Amendment 7 been approved, it would have raised sales taxes that the department could have used to fund these projects. More fuel-efficient vehicles have undercut gasoline tax revenues while maintenance and construction costs have risen.
The Legislature could raise the state’s gas tax by 2 percent without voter approval, but, according to MoDOT, that would not solve all revenue issues.