Many speakers said the addition of tolls will harm small businesses and truckers who, to manage costs, will travel on smaller roads and create congestion. Other critics raised concerns about the impact on families of modest means.
“These citizens really are unable to accommodate even a minimal increase in their monthly budgets,” said Gale Gallo, council president of Lemoyne. She said people in her community frequently travel across one of the proposed toll bridges, the John Harris Memorial Bridge, to access food and medical care.
PennDOT says it does not need the General Assembly’s approval to pursue the major bridge plan. In 2012, the state passed a law that allows PennDOT to create long-running partnerships with private companies to build and maintain parts of the transportation system. In November of 2020, the board tasked with oversight of those partnerships unanimously approved the idea of hiring an outside team to design, rebuild, and oversee the bridge repairs. One of the first major uses of the law, to replace more than 500 smaller bridges throughout the state, was largely hailed as a success. Tolls were not added to those bridges.
The 2012 legislation also allows PennDOT to charge “user fees” — tolls — but Republican Rep. Doyle Heffley said he thinks the agency is stretching the law’s intent.
The tolls were to be charged for “new construction, it wasn’t going to be existing construction,” said Heffley. “That was expressed to us when we voted [on] the bill.”
A number of legislators asked why PennDOT couldn’t wait for passage of a federal infrastructure bill that could send billions of dollars to Pennsylvania, or use money provided by President Biden’s COVID aid package, the American Rescue Plan.