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Public Hearing on Tolls – Friday, January 31, at 1pm

Posted on January 29, 2020

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If you oppose tolls, NOW is the time to make your voice heard loud and clear.

On Friday January 31, 2020, at 1:00 pm in Hartford, CT Democrats are rushing to hold a public hearing on their latest tolls proposal before forcing a vote early next week. You can read more about the bill by clicking here.

Your voice matters. Please testify. You can do so in-person by coming to Hartford on Friday to testify OR, if your schedule does not allow, you may submit your testimony online. Even if you’re going to testify live, it is also a good idea to submit a written version electronically. It’s easy! Here’s how:

To speak out in Hartford:

  • Come to the Legislative Office Building on Friday, January 31, 2020
  • Signups for the lottery will be held from 9:30am-11:30am to testify later at the 1:00 pm hearing in Room 1E.
  • Tips and FAQs about testifying are available on the CGA website by clicking here.

To submit testimony online:

  • Send a brief email ASAP to TRAtestimony@cga.ct.gov.
  • Put “NO to Draft Bill LCO #373. No to tolls” in the subject line.
  • Include your name and town.
  • Copy me on the email at Mitch.Bolinsky@housegop.ct.gov.
  • Feel free to attend the hearing on Friday, January 31, 2020, at 1:00 pm in Hearing Room 1E.

What’s in the Democrats’ latest proposal?

What we do know:

  • Tolls would be built in at least 12 locations throughout the state, including on the Rochambeau Bridge in Newtown. Nothing in the bill stops the state from building additional toll locations in the future.
  • Trucks will have to pay right away.
  • Cars will be next. The protections in the bill are not even close to sufficient to stop future car tolling.
  • It puts CT taxpayers at risk of lawsuits from the trucking industry and legal challenges from the State of NY.
  • It is bought and paid for using taxpayer dollars. The governor is breaking his ‘debt diet’ to increase borrowing to buy votes.
  • It borrows more than the Republican no-tolls transportation plan, putting more debt on future generations, and still requires tolls.
  • Lawmakers will not have to hold a vote to increase toll rates and answer to taxpayers. The ability to raise rates will be entirely in the hands of a new state transportation council. And there’s nothing taxpayers or lawmakers can do to stop them.

What we don’t know:

  • No details on the numbers.
  • No details on which transportation projects will be funded, and which projects included in earlier proposals got cut.
  • No evidence to show how much revenue tolls will bring in.
  • No analysis of how toll avoidance would impact local roadways.
  • No explanation of, if, and how the Special Transportation Fund would remain in balance.
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