Chapter 004 |
2016 -- S 2246 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED Enacted 02/11/2016 |
A N A C T |
RELATING TO STATE AFFAIRS AND GOVERNMENT -- RHODE ISLAND BRIDGE REPLACEMENT, RECONSTRUCTION AND MAINTENANCE FUND -- TOLLS |
Introduced By: Senators Ruggerio, Paiva Weed, Goodwin, DiPalma, and McCaffrey |
Date Introduced: January 28, 2016 |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
SECTION 1. Section 24-12-9 of the General Laws in Chapter 24-12 entitled "Rhode |
Island Turnpike and Bridge Authority" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
24-12-9. Powers of authority. -- (a) The authority is hereby authorized and empowered: |
(1) To adopt bylaws for the regulation of its affairs and the conduct of its business; |
(2) To adopt an official seal and alter it at pleasure; |
(3) To maintain an office at such place or places within the state as it may designate; |
(4) To sue and be sued in its own name, plead, and be impleaded; provided, however, |
that any and all actions at law or in equity against the authority shall be brought only in the |
county in which the principal office of the authority shall be located; |
(5) To determine, subject to the approval of the director of transportation, the location |
and the design standards of the Newport Bridge, the turnpike, and any additional new facility to |
be constructed; |
(6) To issue bonds of the authority for any of its purposes and to refund its bonds, all as |
provided in this chapter; |
(7) To combine for financing purposes the Newport Bridge, the Mount Hope Bridge, the |
Sakonnet River Bridge, the Jamestown Verrazzano Bridge, the turnpike, and any additional |
facility or facilities, or any two (2) or more of such projects; |
(8) To borrow money in anticipation of the issuance of bonds for any of its purposes and |
to issue notes, certificates, or other evidences of borrowing in form as may be authorized by |
resolution of the authority, the notes, certificates, or other evidence of borrowing to be payable in |
the first instance from the proceeds of any bonds issued under the provisions of this chapter and |
to contain on their face a statement to the effect that neither the state, the authority, nor any |
municipality or other political subdivision of the state shall be obligated to pay the same or the |
interest thereon except from the proceeds of bonds in anticipation of the issuance of which the |
notes, certificates, or other evidences of borrowing shall have been issued, or from revenues; |
(9) To fix and revise, from time to time, subject to the provisions of this chapter, and to |
charge and collect tolls for transit over the turnpike and the several parts or sections thereof, and |
for the use of the Newport Bridge, the Mount Hope Bridge, the Sakonnet River Bridge, the |
Jamestown Verrazzano Bridge, and any additional facility acquired, financed, or leased under the |
provisions of this chapter; |
(10) To acquire, hold, and dispose of real and personal property in the exercise of its |
powers and the performance of its duties; |
(11) To acquire in the name of the authority, by purchase or otherwise, on such terms |
and conditions and in such manner as it may deem proper, or by the exercise of the rights of |
condemnation in the manner as provided by this chapter, public or private lands, including public |
parks, playgrounds, or reservations, or parts thereof or rights therein, rights-of-way, property, |
rights, easements, and interests as it may deem necessary for carrying out the provisions of this |
chapter; provided, however, that all public property damaged in carrying out the powers granted |
by this chapter shall be restored or repaired and placed in its original condition as nearly as |
practicable; |
(12) To designate the locations, with the approval of the director of transportation, and |
establish, limit, and control the points of ingress to and egress from the turnpike and any |
additional facility as may be necessary or desirable in the judgment of the authority to insure |
ensure the proper operation and maintenance thereof, and to prohibit entrance to and exit from |
any point or points not so designated; |
(13) To employ, in its discretion, consulting engineers, attorneys, accountants, |
construction and financial experts, superintendents, managers, and such other employees and |
agents as may be necessary in its judgment, and to fix their compensation; |
(14) To apply for, receive, and accept from any federal agency aid and/or grants for or in |
aid of the repair, maintenance, and/or construction of the turnpike, the Newport Bridge, the |
Sakonnet River Bridge, the Mount Hope Bridge, the Jamestown Verrazzano Bridge, or any |
additional facility, and to receive and accept from the state, from any municipality, or other |
political subdivision thereof and from any other source aid or contributions of either money, |
property, labor, or other things of value, to be held, used and applied only for the purposes for |
which the grants and contributions may be made; |
(15) To construct grade separations at intersections of the turnpike, the approaches, and |
highway connections of the Newport Bridge, the Sakonnet River Bridge, the Mount Hope Bridge, |
the Jamestown Verrazzano Bridge, and any additional facility with public highways, streets, or |
other public ways or places, and to change and adjust the lines and grades thereof so as to |
accommodate the same to the design of the grade separation; the cost of the grade separations and |
any damage incurred in changing and adjusting the lines and grades of the highways, streets, |
ways, and places shall be ascertained and paid by the authority as a part of the cost of the project; |
(16) To vacate or change the location of any portion of any public highway, street, or |
other public way or place, sewer, pipe, main, conduit, cable, wire, tower, pole, and other |
equipment and appliance of the state or of any municipality or other political subdivision of the |
state and to reconstruct the same at such new location as the authority shall deem most favorable |
for the project and of substantially the same type and in as good condition as the original |
highway, street, way, place, sewer, pipe, main, conduit, cable, wire, tower, pole, equipment, or |
appliance, and the cost of the reconstruction and any damage incurred in vacating or changing the |
location thereof shall be ascertained and paid by the authority as a part of the cost of the project; |
any public highway, street, or other public way or place vacated or relocated by the authority |
shall be vacated or relocated in the manner provided by law for the vacation or relocation of |
public roads, and any damages awarded on account thereof shall be paid by the authority as a part |
of the cost of the project; |
(17) The authority shall also have the power to make reasonable regulations, subject to |
the approval of the public utility administrator, for the installation, construction, maintenance, |
repair, renewal, relocation and removal of tracks, pipes, mains, conduits, cables, wires, towers, |
poles, and other equipment and appliances (herein called "public utility facilities") of any public |
utility as defined in § 39-1-2, in, on, along, over, or under any project. Whenever the authority |
shall determine that it is necessary that any public facilities which that now are, or hereafter may |
be, located in, on, along, over, or under any project should be relocated in the project, or should |
be removed from the project, the public utility owning or operating the facilities shall relocate or |
remove the facilities in accordance with the order of the authority; provided, however, that the |
cost and expenses of the relocation or removal, including the cost of installing the facilities in a |
new location, or new locations, and the cost of any lands, or any rights or interests in lands, and |
any other rights acquired to accomplish the relocation or removal, less the cost of any lands or |
any rights or interests in lands or any other rights of the public utility paid to the public utility in |
connection with the relocation or removal of the property, shall be ascertained and paid by the |
authority as a part of the cost of the project. In case of any relocation or removal of facilities, the |
public utility owning or operating the facilities, its successors or assigns, may maintain and |
operate the facilities, with the necessary appurtenances, in the new location or new locations, for |
as long a period, and upon the same terms and conditions, as it had the right to maintain and |
operate the facilities in their former location or locations; |
(18) To make reasonable regulations and to grant easements for the installation, |
construction, maintenance, repair, renewal, relocation, and removal of pipelines, other equipment, |
and appliances of any corporation or person owning or operating pipelines in, on, along, over, or |
under the turnpike, whenever the authority shall determine that it is necessary that any facilities |
which now are, or hereafter may be located in, on, along, over or under the turnpike should be |
relocated in the turnpike, or should be removed from the turnpike, the corporation or person |
owning or operating the facilities shall relocate or remove the facilities in accordance with the |
order of the authority; provided, however, that the cost and expense of the relocation or removal, |
including the cost of installing the facilities in a new location, or new locations, and the cost of |
any lands, or any rights or interests in lands, and any other rights acquired to accomplish the |
relocation or removal, less the cost of any lands or any rights or interests in lands or any other |
rights of any corporation or person paid to any corporation or person in connection with the |
relocation or removal of the property, shall be ascertained and paid by the authority as a part of |
the cost of the project. In case of any relocation or removal of facilities, the corporation or person |
owning or operating the facilities, its successors or assigns, may maintain and operate the |
facilities, with the necessary appurtenances, in the new location or new locations, for as long a |
period, and upon the same terms and conditions, as it had the right to maintain and operate the |
facilities in their former location or locations; |
(19) To enter upon any lands, waters, and premises for the purpose of making such |
surveys, soundings, borings, and examinations as the authority may deem necessary or |
convenient for its purposes, and the entry shall not be deemed a trespass, nor shall an entry for |
such purposes be deemed an entry under any condemnation proceedings; provided, however, the |
authority shall pay any actual damage resulting to the lands, water, and premises as a result of the |
entry and activities as a part of the cost of the project; |
(20) To enter into contracts or agreements with any board, commission, public |
instrumentality of another state or the federal government or with any political subdivision of |
another state relating to the connection or connections to be established between the turnpike or |
any additional facility with any public highway or turnpike now in existence or hereafter to be |
constructed in another state, and with respect to the construction, maintenance, and operation of |
interstate turnpikes or expressways; |
(21) To enter into contracts with the department of transportation with respect to the |
construction, reconstruction, renovation, acquisition, maintenance, repair, operation, or |
management of any project and with the Rhode Island state police with respect to the policing of |
any project; |
(22) To make and enter into all contracts and agreements necessary or incidental to the |
performance of its duties and the execution of its powers under this chapter; and |
(23) To do all other acts and things necessary or convenient to carry out the powers |
expressly granted in this chapter. |
(24) To grant and/or contract, through the transfer of funds of the authority to the |
department of transportation, for the construction, reconstruction, acquisition, maintenance, |
repair, operation, or management by the department of transportation of any project or projects |
authorized by this chapter, and the department of transportation is authorized to accept any such |
grant or transfer of funds. |
(b) Provided, the authority, in carrying out the provisions of this section, shall hold |
public hearings prior to the finalization of any specifications or the awarding of any contracts for |
any project. Provided, further, that any revenue generated by facilities under the control of the |
authority shall only be used for the purposes of the authority. |
(c) The authority is authorized to enter into contracts with the state, or any department of |
the state, to operate and/or manage toll facilities on state roads or bridges not owned, leased by, or |
under the control of the authority, and to collect tolls from such facilities on behalf of the |
department of transportation, provided such tolls shall be set by the state acting through the |
department of transportation pursuant to chapter 13.1 of title 42. |
SECTION 2. Title 42 of the General Laws entitled "STATE AFFAIRS AND |
GOVERNMENT" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
CHAPTER 13.1 |
THE RHODE ISLAND BRIDGE REPLACEMENT, RECONSTRUCTION, AND |
MAINTENANCE FUND |
42-13.1-1. Short title. -- This chapter shall be known and may be cited as "The Rhode |
Island Bridge Replacement, Reconstruction, and Maintenance Fund Act of 2016". |
42-13.1-2. Legislative findings. -- The general assembly finds that: |
(1) The state of Rhode Island, through the Rhode Island department of transportation |
("the department"), funds the reconstruction, replacement, and maintenance of all bridges in |
Rhode Island, except the Newport Bridge, the Mount Hope Bridge, the Jamestown-Verrazano |
Bridge, and the Sakonnet River Bridge. |
(2) According to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) 2015 National Bridge |
Inventory (NBI) data, there are seven hundred sixty-four (764) bridges in Rhode Island greater |
than twenty feet (20') in length. Of these NBI bridges, one hundred seventy-seven (177) bridges, |
or twenty-three percent (23%), are classified as structurally deficient. |
(3) For the past several decades, Rhode Island has depended on three (3) primary sources |
for funding all transportation infrastructure construction, maintenance, and operations: federal |
funds, state bond funds, and motor fuel tax revenue. Of these sources, two (2), federal funds and |
motor fuel tax revenue, are mutable. |
(4) The 2008 governor's blue ribbon panel on transportation funding, the 2011 senate |
special commission on sustainable transportation funding, and the 2013 special legislative |
commission to study the funding for East Bay bridges determined that there is insufficient |
revenue available from all existing sources to fund the maintenance and improvement of Rhode |
Island transportation infrastructure. |
(5) In 2011, the general assembly adopted a component of the recommended systemic |
change to transportation funding by dedicating increased resources from the Rhode Island capital |
plan fund and creating the Rhode Island highway maintenance account, to be funded by an |
increase in license and registration fees, beginning in FY2014. |
(6) In 2014, the general assembly adopted changes to the Rhode Island highway |
maintenance account to provide additional state revenue for transportation infrastructure in future |
years. |
(7) Although the state is shifting from long-term borrowing to reliance upon annual |
revenues to fund transportation infrastructure on a pay-as-you go basis, and although a recurring |
state source of capital funds has been established, there is still a funding gap between the revenue |
needed to maintain all bridges in structurally sound and good condition and the annual amounts |
generated by current dedicated revenue sources. |
(8) According to the U.S. General Accounting Office, just one, fully-loaded five-axle (5) |
tractor trailer has the same impact on the interstate as nine thousand six hundred (9,600) |
automobiles. The department estimates that tractor trailers cause in excess of seventy percent |
(70%) of the damage to the state's transportation infrastructure, including Rhode Island bridges, |
on an annual basis. However, revenue contributions attributable to tractor trailers account for less |
than twenty percent (20%) of the state's total annual revenues to fund transportation |
infrastructure. |
(9) The United States Congress, consistent with its power to regulate interstate commerce |
and pursuant to 23 USC §129, has authorized states to implement reconstruction or replacement |
of a toll-free bridge and conversion of the bridge to a toll facility, provided that the state: |
(i) Has in effect a law that permits tolling on a bridge prior to commencing any such |
activity; and |
(ii) Otherwise complies with the requirements of 23 USC §129. |
42-13.1-3. Definitions. -- As used in this chapter, the following words and terms shall |
have the following meanings, unless the context shall indicate another or different meaning: |
(1) "Availability payment" means a payment by the department under a contract for a toll |
facility or any other facility that is based on the availability of the facility at a specified |
performance level and may include, without limitation, compensation for operations, |
maintenance, and financing of the facility. |
(2) "Department" means the department of transportation, or, if the department shall be |
abolished, the board, body, or commission succeeding to the principal functions thereof or upon |
whom the powers given by chapter 5 of title 37 to the department shall be given by law. |
(3) "Large commercial truck" shall be defined pursuant to the Federal Highway |
Administration (FHWA) vehicle classification schedule as any vehicle within Class 8 - single |
trailer, three (3) or four (4) axles, up to and including Class 13 - seven (7) or more axle multi- |
trailer trucks, as such classifications may be revised from time to time by the FHWA. |
(4) "Other vehicle" means any vehicle that has not been defined pursuant to this chapter |
as a large commercial truck. |
(5) "Passenger vehicle" shall be defined pursuant to the Federal Highway Administration |
(FHWA) vehicle classification schedule as any vehicle within Class 1, 2, and 3 as such |
classifications may be revised from time to time by the FHWA. |
(6) "Radio frequency identification transponder" or "RFID" means a toll collection |
system approved by the department that may consist of a toll tag placed inside the vehicle and an |
overhead antenna that reads the toll tag and collects the toll. |
(7) "Toll evader" means, for the purposes of this chapter, any registered owner of any |
large commercial truck that passes through any electronic tolling location as authorized pursuant |
to §42-13.1-4 and who does not pay the required toll and/or fees, fines, or penalties within the |
maximum allowable period specified under §42-13.1-11. |
(8) "Toll facility" means equipment or capital improvements funded in whole or in part |
by toll revenue, or required to effectuate toll collection. |
(9) "Turnpike and bridge authority" means the Rhode Island turnpike and bridge |
authority (RITBA), a public instrumentality of the state of Rhode Island, created by the general |
assembly pursuant to chapter 12 of title 24. |
42-13.1-4. Authority to collect tolls on large commercial trucks only. -- (a) The |
department is hereby authorized to fix, revise, charge, and collect tolls for the privilege of |
traveling on Rhode Island bridges to provide for replacement, reconstruction, maintenance, and |
operation of Rhode Island bridges. The tolls shall be fixed after conducting a cost-benefit analysis |
and providing an opportunity for public comment. The tolls shall be collected on large |
commercial trucks only and shall not be collected on any other vehicle; provided, however, no |
vehicle shall be tolled other than a tractor or truck tractor as defined in 23 CFR 658.5, pulling a |
trailer or trailers. No act authorizing tolls on passenger vehicles pursuant to this chapter shall take |
effect until it has been approved by the majority of those electors voting in a statewide |
referendum. The secretary of state shall certify the results of the statewide referendum. Tolls on |
large commercial trucks may be implemented utilizing all-electric toll collection methodologies |
on a cash-less basis, or utilizing any other methodologies determined by the department. |
(b) Subject to §42-13.1-14, the department will establish a program to limit the |
assessment of the tolls upon the same individual large commercial truck using a RFID to once per |
toll facility, per day in each direction, or an equivalent frequency use program based upon |
individual large commercial truck use. |
(c) Subject to §42-13.1-14, the total amount of tolls imposed upon the same individual |
large commercial truck using a RFID for making a border-to-border through trip on Route 95 |
Connecticut to Route 95 Massachusetts, or the reverse, shall not exceed twenty dollars ($20.00). |
(d) Subject to §42-13.1-14, the daily maximum amount of the tolls collected upon the |
same individual large commercial truck using a RFID shall not exceed forty dollars ($40.00). |
(e) Tolls shall not be subject to supervision or regulation by any commission, board, |
bureau, agency, or official of the state or any municipality or other political subdivision of the |
state except the department. |
42-13.1-5. Collection of tolls on passenger cars and other vehicles expressly |
prohibited. -- Notwithstanding any other provisions of this statute, the department is expressly |
prohibited from collecting tolls hereunder on other vehicles, herein defined to include |
motorcycles, passenger cars, and all other vehicles classed one through seven (7) pursuant to the |
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) vehicle classification schedule. |
42-13.1-6. Rhode Island bridge replacement, reconstruction and maintenance fund |
established. -- (a) There is hereby created a special account in the intermodal surface |
transportation fund, as established in §31-36-20, to be known as the Rhode Island bridge |
replacement, reconstruction, and maintenance fund ("the fund"). |
(b) The fund shall consist of all those monies received by the department under this |
chapter, including: |
(1) The monies received through the collection of tolls on bridges in Rhode Island; |
(2) Any fees, fines, or penalties collected pursuant to this chapter; and |
(3) Investment earnings on amounts credited to the fund. |
(c) Unexpended balances and any earnings thereon shall not revert to the general fund but |
shall remain in the Rhode Island bridge replacement, reconstruction, and maintenance fund. |
There shall be no requirement that monies received into the fund during any given calendar year |
or fiscal year be expended during the same calendar year or fiscal year. |
42-13.1-7. Designation of toll bridges. -- The director of the department may designate |
any Rhode Island bridge on the National Highway System as a toll bridge in order to facilitate the |
financing of replacement, reconstruction, and maintenance of Rhode Island's system of bridges. |
42-13.1-8. Amount of tolls. -- The department's authority to fix and adjust the amount of |
tolls shall be determined by the costs of replacement, reconstruction, maintenance, and operation |
of Rhode Island's system of bridges and/or any portion or portions thereof, including costs |
associated with the acquisition, construction, operation, and maintenance of the toll facilities and |
administrative costs in connection therewith. |
42-13.1-9. Limitations on use of revenue. -- All revenue collected pursuant to this |
chapter and deposited to the Rhode Island bridge replacement, reconstruction, and maintenance |
fund shall be used to pay the costs associated with the operation and maintenance of the toll |
facility, and the replacement, reconstruction, maintenance, and operation of Rhode Island bridges |
on the National Highway System or any other use permitted under 23 USC §129. |
42-13.1-10. Procurement of toll facilities. -- Without limiting any right of the |
department to award contracts under any other law, the department shall have the right to procure |
toll facilities through contracts aggregating the services of design, engineering, construction, |
finance, operations, maintenance, or any combination of the foregoing. Notwithstanding any |
requirement of law to the contrary, the department may award such contracts on the basis of |
competitive negotiation in accordance with §37-2-19. Such contracts may include availability |
payments or any other compensation structure determined appropriate by the department to |
further the objectives of this chapter. |
42-13.1-11. Penalty for nonpayment of toll. -- (a) The department shall have the |
authority to establish and collect fees, fines, and penalties from registered owners of large |
commercial trucks who use, or attempt to use, any toll facility established under §42-13.1-4, |
without paying the toll at the rate then in force for such use. |
(b) Any fee, fine, or penalty shall be in addition to the toll or tolls initially incurred and |
shall be no less than an amount sufficient to cover the cost of administration and collection of |
said fines, fees, and penalties. |
(c) The registered owner of the large commercial truck subject to toll shall be primarily |
responsible for all tolls, fees, fines, and penalties assessed pursuant to the provisions of this |
chapter. |
(d) Prior to the collection of any toll on large commercial trucks, the department shall |
establish a maximum allowable period for the payment of tolls and any subsequent fees, fines, |
and penalties assessed. |
42-13.1-12. Additional penalties -- Toll evasion. -- Any toll evader who fails or refuses |
to pay or prepay the required toll and such fees, fines, and penalties as assessed under §42-13.1- |
11 and within the maximum allowable period specified therein, shall be required to pay a fine not |
to exceed three thousand dollars ($3,000) and shall pay the toll amount due and any |
administrative costs, or shall have their registration suspended until payment is made in full for |
the violation. A toll evader under this section shall receive a traffic violation summons which |
shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the traffic tribunal. All amounts due under this section shall |
be remitted to the Rhode Island bridge replacement, reconstruction, and maintenance fund. |
42-13.1-13. Conformance to statute, rules, and regulations. -- All programs and |
funding proposals shall conform to applicable federal law, rules, and regulations. The department |
shall promulgate state rules and regulations to carry out the purposes of this chapter. Included |
within said rules and regulations shall be a provision requiring any public comment period to |
continue for at least thirty (30) days and a provision requiring advance notification to be provided |
to the governor, speaker of the house of representatives, and president of the senate prior to any |
announcement of public hearing or public comment period establishing or modifying the amount |
of tolls to be collected. In promulgating these rules and regulations, the department shall establish |
policies and procedures that promote procedural transparency. |
42-13.1-14. Severability. -- If a part of this chapter is held unconstitutional or invalid, all |
valid parts that are severable from the invalid or unconstitutional part remain in effect. If a part of |
this chapter is held unconstitutional or invalid in one or more of its applications, the part remains |
in effect in all constitutional and valid applications that are severable from the invalid |
applications. This severability clause shall be applicable to each provision of this chapter, |
regardless of whether or not any particular provision references this section. |
42-13.1-15. Bridge preservation and salt mitigation. -- (a) In any fiscal year when the |
department fails to complete appropriate bridge maintenance, no new construction and design |
contracts subject to reporting under §42-13.1-16 shall be awarded for the subsequent year or until |
proof of appropriate bridge maintenance is provided. |
(b) The director must submit detailed information regarding bridge maintenance activities |
undertaken during the fiscal year to the governor, office of management and budget, the speaker |
of the house, and the president of the senate no later than thirty (30) days after the fiscal year |
ends, beginning with fiscal year 2017. The information shall also be posted on the department's |
website. |
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of §42-13.1-16, bridge maintenance requirements may |
be waived if the director certifies that: |
(1) Certain bridges are in a state of disrepair such that maintenance activities will not |
forestall further deterioration; or |
(2) Certain bridges have a maintenance plan that does not require any activities during |
any given calendar year; or |
(3) Certain bridges have been modified such that maintenance to prevent salt erosion and |
deterioration is no longer required; or |
(4) The department has not used salt on certain bridges or has stopped using salt for |
winter maintenance as a long-term change in practice; or |
(5) Other specific circumstances exist to eliminate the need for maintenance activities in |
any given calendar year. |
(d) Failure to comply is subject to the penalties contained in §35-3-24. |
42-13.1-16. Reporting. -- The department shall submit to the office of management and |
budget, the house fiscal advisor, and the senate fiscal advisor, a report on the progress of |
implementation of this chapter within thirty (30) days of the close of each of the fiscal quarters of |
each year. The reports shall also be posted on the department’s website. The reports shall include, |
at a minimum: |
(1) Construction and design contracts of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or |
greater planned to be advertised in the upcoming federal fiscal year, their value, and expected |
award date; |
(2) Construction and design contracts of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or |
greater awarded in the prior federal fiscal year, date of award, value, and expected substantial |
completion date; |
(3) Expected final cost of: |
(i) Any construction contracts of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or greater that |
reached substantial completion in the prior federal fiscal year; and |
(ii) Any design contracts of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) or greater |
completed in the prior federal fiscal year; and |
(4) Total number of workers employed through the contract and the number of the |
workers in that total with a Rhode Island address. |
42-13.1-17. Equality of opportunity. -- No bid under this chapter shall be deemed |
complete nor awarded if the bid fails to include a specific written plan for the bidder to be in |
conformity with §37-14.1-6, ensuring that minority business enterprises reach a minimum of ten |
percent (10%) of the dollar value of the bid. Pursuant to §§37-14.1-1 and 37-14.1-3, for the |
purposes of chapter 13.1 of title 42, women shall be included in the definition of "minority |
business enterprise." The aforementioned written plan should be submitted on forms created and |
distributed by the director of administration. |
SECTION 3. Section 42-13-2 of the General Laws in Chapter 42-13 entitled "Department |
of Transportation" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
42-13-2. Organization and functions of the department. -- (a) The department shall be |
organized in accordance with a project management-based program and shall utilize an asset |
management system. |
(1) A project management-based program, manages the delivery of the department's |
portfolio of transportation improvement projects from project conception to the project |
completion. Project management activities include: |
(i) Managing and reporting on the delivery status of portfolio projects; |
(ii) Developing overall workload and budget for the portfolio; |
(iii) Developing and implementing the tools to estimate the resources necessary to |
deliver the projects; and |
(iv) Developing and implementing processes and tools to improve the management of |
the projects. |
(2) Asset management is the process used for managing transportation infrastructure by |
improving decision making for resource allocation. Asset management activities include a |
systemic process based on economic, engineering, and business principles which includes the |
following functions: |
(i) Completing a comprehensive inventory of system assets; |
(ii) Monitoring system performance; and |
(iii) Performing analysis utilizing accurate data for managing various assets within the |
transportation network. |
(b) The director of transportation shall appoint a chief operating officer to oversee the |
day-to-day operations of the department. |
(c) The department shall be organized into such divisions as are described in this section |
and such other divisions, subdivisions, and agencies as the director shall find are necessary to |
carry out the responsibilities of the department, including: office of audit; division of finance; |
division of planning; division of project management; division of operations and maintenance; |
office of civil rights; office of safety; office of external affairs; office of legal; office of personnel; |
office of information services. |
(d) The director may assign such other responsibilities as he or she shall find appropriate |
and may reassign functions other than as set out in this section if he or she finds the reassignment |
necessary to the proper and efficient functioning of the department or of the state's transportation |
system. |
(e) The department shall submit a report annually no later than March 31 to the speaker |
of the house, the president of the senate, and the house and senate fiscal advisors concerning the |
status of the ten (10) year ten-year (10) transportation plan. |
(f) Any functions, duties, and staff relating to the Rhode Island department of |
transportation's external audit section shall be transferred to the Rhode Island department of |
administration's bureau of audits, or its successor, upon passage. |
(1) The chief of the bureau of audits, or its successor, who shall be the administrative |
head of the bureau of audits, or its successor, shall supervise, coordinate, and/or conduct audits, |
civil and administrative investigations, and inspections or oversight reviews, when necessary, |
relating to programs and operations listed in §42-13-2. |
(2) The bureau of audits' (or its successor’s) authorization shall include, but not be |
limited to, evaluating the efficiency of operations and internal controls, preventing and detecting |
fraud, waste, abuse or mismanagement in the expenditure of public funds, whether state, federal |
or those revenues collected by the use of tolls and related to any and all transportation-related |
programs and operations as well as the procurement of any supplies, services, or construction, by |
the department of transportation or related institutions of the department of transportation. |
Investigations may include the expenditures by nongovernmental agencies of federal, state, and |
local public funds. As deemed necessary or expedient by the bureau of audits, or its successor, |
audits may be made relative to the financial affairs or the economy and efficiency of management |
of the department of transportation or related institutions. |
SECTION 4. This section consists of a Joint Resolution submitted pursuant to chapter 18 |
of title 35. |
WHEREAS, The Rhode Island Department of Transportation ("RIDOT") has undertaken |
five (5) major transportation projects, and these projects were either substantially completed or |
nearing completion in the year 2016; and |
WHEREAS, The construction of these projects was deemed critical in order to preserve |
and maintain the public safety and continued economic success and viability of the State of |
Rhode Island, its ports and infrastructure; and |
WHEREAS, RIDOT explored various options to finance the costs of the five (5) major |
transportation projects and determined that the federal-aid financing program authorized in |
federal law by Section 311 of the National Highway System Designation Act of 1995 and |
commonly referred to as the Grant Anticipation Revenue Vehicle Program ("GARVEE |
Program") represented the best financing mechanism for the State of Rhode Island inasmuch as |
the GARVEE Program accelerated the funding and construction of the five (5) major |
transportation projects; and |
WHEREAS, The General Assembly, in Chapter 376, Article 36, Section 8 of the Rhode |
Island Public Laws of 2003, authorized the Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation, |
now the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation ("Commerce Corporation"), to issue bonds |
("GARVEE Bonds") or other debt instruments on behalf of RIDOT and such GARVEE Bonds |
are secured by future appropriations for federal-aid transportation projects whereby such amounts |
are used to cover an assortment of bond-related costs, including principal and interest payments, |
issuance costs, insurance, and other costs incidental to financing; and |
WHEREAS, GARVEE Bonds may be issued as special, limited obligations payable |
solely from federal transportation funds, subject to annual appropriation by the State, without a |
full faith and credit pledge by the State; and the holders of the GARVEE Bonds may not look to |
any other revenues of the Commerce Corporation, the State or RIDOT for the payment of the |
GARVEE Bonds; and |
WHEREAS, The original Public Corporation Debt Management authorization in Article |
36 of the FY 2003 Budget as Enacted included a total of $709.6 million in GARVEE funding to |
be distributed across five (5) projects, as follows: $126.2 million for the Sakonnet River Bridge; |
$348.3 million for the Route I-195 Relocation; $85.4 million for the Washington Bridge; $42.5 |
million for the Freight Rail Improvement Program (FRIP); and $107.2 million for Route 403; and |
WHEREAS, Interest rates are at historical lows and the existing revenue available to |
RIDOT is insufficient to fund the necessary program to replace, reconstruct, and maintain Rhode |
Island's bridges and otherwise bring the State's transportation infrastructure into a state of good |
repair; and |
WHEREAS, It would be in the best interests of the State to maximize all potential |
sources of revenue to provide a more robust infrastructure program; now, therefore be it |
RESOLVED AND ENACTED, That the Governor of the State of Rhode Island or the |
Director of the Rhode Island Department of Transportation or the Director of the Rhode Island |
Department of Administration or the Chief Executive Officer or the Chief Operating Officer of |
the Commerce Corporation each be and each hereafter are, acting singly, authorized and |
empowered by the Rhode Island General Assembly to enter into a financing lease, guarantee, loan |
and trust agreement, indenture or other obligations or contracts or agreements and to take such |
other actions as such official shall deem necessary or appropriate in order to issue or facilitate the |
refinancing and restructuring by the Commerce Corporation of the previously issued GARVEE |
Bonds pursuant to the authorization granted in Chapter 376, Article 36, Section 8 of the Rhode |
Island Public Laws of 2003; and be it further |
RESOLVED, That the Commerce Corporation or any subsidiary thereof or other |
instrumentality, agency or quasi-public corporation otherwise authorized and empowered to |
refinance and restructure the bonds specified in this Joint Resolution each be and each hereafter |
are, acting singly, authorized and empowered by the Rhode Island General Assembly to provide |
for the necessary security for such bonds consistent with the provisions of this Joint Resolution |
and Act, including any action to pledge, assign or otherwise transfer the right to receive all or any |
portion of future Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) appropriations for federal-aid |
transportation projects or other revenues permitted by the laws of the State of Rhode Island to |
secure or provide for the payment of any such GARVEE or other bonds; and be it further |
RESOLVED, That notwithstanding the amount of total debt service referenced in |
Chapter 376, Article 36, Section 8 of the Rhode Island Public Laws of 2003 and Chapter 241, |
Article 7, Section 5 of the Rhode Island Public Laws of 2012, any refinancing and restructuring |
may be structured to provide a net benefit to RIDOT with the approval of the Governor; and be it |
further |
RESOLVED, That no other changes in allocations or expenditure are authorized beyond |
the amendments included in this Joint Resolution; and be it further |
RESOLVED, That this General Assembly hereby approves refinancing and restructuring |
of the existing GARVEE bonds in order to provide funding for critical and immediate |
transportation infrastructure needs; and be it further |
RESOLVED, That this Joint Resolution shall take effect immediately upon its passage by |
the General Assembly. |
SECTION 5. This section consists of a Joint Resolution submitted pursuant to chapter 18 |
of title 35. |
WHEREAS, The Rhode Island Department of Transportation ("the Department") has |
completed a detailed review of available funding sources for transportation reconstruction, |
maintenance, and repair and has determined that the funding available to carry out an immediate |
program of bridge reconstruction and preventative maintenance (the "program") is insufficient; |
and |
WHEREAS, The limitation in funding has occurred, in part, due to the absence of a state- |
funded capital investment program in transportation infrastructure, and the level funding of |
federal appropriations to the state, along with a reduction in federal funding through the |
elimination of federal earmarks and expiration of additional special federal funds; and |
WHEREAS, Congress has enacted the Fixing America's Surface Transportation (FAST) |
Act, which provides an increase in available federal funding; and |
WHEREAS, The Department has explored various options to finance the costs of a |
robust infrastructure program and concluded that the federal-aid financing program authorized in |
federal law by Section 311 of the National Highway System Designation Act of 1995 and |
commonly referred to as the Grant Anticipation Revenue Vehicle Program ("GARVEE |
Program") represents the best financing mechanism for the State of Rhode Island inasmuch as the |
GARVEE Program accelerates the funding available to ensure that more Rhode Island bridges do |
not become structurally deficient; and |
WHEREAS, The GARVEE Program allows a state to issue bonds ("GARVEE Bonds") |
or other debt instruments backed by future appropriations for federal-aid transportation projects |
whereby such amounts are used to cover an assortment of bond-related costs, including principal |
and interest payments, issuance costs, insurance, and other costs incidental to financing; and |
WHEREAS, Among other advantages, GARVEE Bonds may be issued as special |
revenue bonds without a full faith and credit pledge by the State of Rhode Island; and |
WHEREAS, This General Assembly finds that the reconstruction, maintenance, and |
repair of the transportation infrastructure of the state is critical for economic development and the |
general welfare of both businesses and residents; and |
WHEREAS, The General Assembly has studied the issue of sustainable transportation |
funding and has determined that no single approach, instrument or method is able to provide |
sufficient revenue to maintain the state transportation system in a state of good repair; and |
WHEREAS, The Department has determined that GARVEE bonds should be utilized to |
fund the bridge replacement, reconstruction, and maintenance component of the ten-year capital |
program known as RhodeWorks; and |
WHEREAS, In connection with the issuance of GARVEE Bonds, the State of Rhode |
Island, acting by and through RIDOT, may elect to receive in lieu of certain monies which would |
otherwise have been received as reimbursement from FHWA for project costs for bridges in the |
RhodeWorks program, debt service payments to repay indebtedness in the form of bonds or notes |
issued to finance the costs of the construction and financing bridges in the RhodeWorks program; |
and |
WHEREAS, The Rhode Island Public Corporation Debt Management Act (R.I. General |
Laws §35-18-1, et seq.) requires the General Assembly to provide its consent to the issuance of |
certain obligations for essential public facilities of the type referenced herein; and |
WHEREAS, The design, construction, equipping and completion of these improvements |
will be financed in whole or in part through revenue bonds issued pursuant to the GARVEE |
Program by the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation ("Commerce Corporation") or through |
revenue bonds issued pursuant to the GARVEE Program by another agency, instrumentality or |
quasi-public corporation established by the State of Rhode Island now or hereafter and otherwise |
authorized and empowered pursuant to law to issue bonds of the type referenced herein for the |
types of projects enumerated herein, with such issuance having an expected term of fifteen (15) |
years, and annual revenues for the operation and maintenance of the bridges to be included in the |
annual operating budget of RIDOT; and |
WHEREAS, The capital costs and anticipated bond issuance amounts associated with |
these projects are estimated to be three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000); now, therefore, |
be it |
RESOLVED AND ENACTED, That the bridges in the RhodeWorks program are each |
essential public facilities and critical to ensure the economic viability of the citizens, businesses, |
transportation, marine trades and port facilities of the State of Rhode Island and otherwise in the |
best interests of the State of Rhode Island, and that this General Assembly hereby approves |
financing not to exceed three hundred million dollars ($300,000,000) in principal amount of |
GARVEE Bonds, the repayment of which shall be derived from and supported by FHWA funds |
due the State of Rhode Island. The term of the GARVEE bonds shall not exceed fifteen (15) years |
and the total debt service on the GARVEE bonds shall not exceed four hundred ninety million |
dollars ($490,000,000); and be it further |
RESOLVED, That the Governor of the State of Rhode Island or the Director of the |
Rhode Island Department of Transportation or the Director of the Rhode Island Department of |
Administration or the Chief Executive Officer or the Chief Operating Officer of the Commerce |
Corporation each be and each hereafter are, acting singly, authorized and empowered by the |
Rhode Island General Assembly to enter into a financing lease, guarantee, loan and trust |
agreement, indenture or other obligations or contracts or agreements and to take such other |
actions as such official shall deem necessary or appropriate in order to issue or facilitate the |
issuance of the GARVEE Bonds and to provide the Commerce Corporation or any subsidiary |
thereof or other instrumentality, agency or quasi-public corporation otherwise authorized and |
empowered to issue the bonds specified in this Joint Resolution for the RhodeWorks program |
with the necessary debt service payments up to the amount specified above and the necessary |
security for such bonds consistent with the provisions of this Joint Resolution, including any |
action to pledge, assign or otherwise transfer the right to receive all or any portion of future |
FHWA appropriations for federal-aid transportation projects or other revenues permitted by the |
laws of the State of Rhode Island to secure or provide for the payment of any such GARVEE |
Bonds; and be it further |
RESOLVED, That this Joint Resolution shall take effect immediately upon its passage. |
SECTION 6. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC004381/SUB A |
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