1 / 22

Public Private Partnerships

Public Private Partnerships. Indiana Perspective. FHWA Northern Borders Conference Chicago, Illinois May 15, 2007. Ryan A. Hoff May 15, 2007. Our Industry. Capital Intensive $75 Billion in 2005 Insatiable appetite for $ Often Taken for Granted?. Setting the Stage - Nationally.

Download Presentation

Public Private Partnerships

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Public Private Partnerships Indiana Perspective FHWA Northern Borders Conference Chicago, Illinois May 15, 2007 Ryan A. Hoff May 15, 2007

  2. Our Industry • Capital Intensive • $75 Billion in 2005 • Insatiable appetite for $ • Often Taken for Granted?

  3. Setting the Stage - Nationally • VMT: 100% 1980-2004 • Ton-miles Freight: 50% 1990-2003 • NAFTA Surface Trade: 80% 1994-2004 • US Population: 30% 1980-2004 • # Registered Drivers:  39% 1980- 2005 • # Vehicles:  55% 1980-2005

  4. Setting the Stage - Nationally VMT: 100% 1980-2004 Ton-miles Freight: 50% 1990-2003 NAFTA Surface Trade: 80% 1994-2004 US Population: 30% 1980-2004 # Registered Drivers:  39% 1980- 2005 # Vehicles:  55% 1980-2005 Highway Inventory Increased... only 3%!

  5. Traditional Funding • Motor Fuel Taxation • Department of Treasury: • 18.4¢/gal of gasoline • 24.4¢/gal of diesel • 8.0¢/gal of gasohol • Department of Revenue: • 18.0¢/gal of gasoline • 16.0¢/gal of diesel • Gasoline Range: • Georgia low at 7¢ • Wisconsin high at 28.5¢

  6. Funding History • US Department of Treasury: • Last increase: 1993. • Indiana Department of Revenue: • Last Increase: 2003. • 3.0¢/gal of gasoline but only 1¢ went to Highway Fund • Before 2003:Last Increase: 1984 • 1988: 1¢/gal of diesel • 1983: 1¢/gal of gasoline

  7. Remedies? • Timely Fuel Tax Increases/Indexing? • Pay by the mile??? • GPS • Annual plate registration with true-up at title transfer • Other fees (ie. Taxes, Permits, Tolls)? • Public Private Partnerships

  8. Public Private Partnerships • A Delivery Model which: • Allows Private investment in the public sector • Allocates risk and responsibility in new ways • Uses other peoples’ money, other peoples’ equity • Provides opportunities otherwise unavailable

  9. The Common Thread Flow of Money, and The Allocation and Assumption of Risk Drives the Relationship… .. all defined in a long term lease agreement!

  10. Major Risk Elements $ $ $ $ Project Value $ $ $ $ Controlling Agencies Preliminary Feasibility Legislative Approval Environmental Permitting ROW Construction Long Term O&M, Etc. Traffic & Revenue Risks Removed

  11. Indiana’s Experience • Indiana Toll Road (Asset Lease) • I80/I90 Northern Indiana. 152 Miles from OH to IL. • 75 year term, $3.8B up-front payment to Indiana • Modernized toll rates established prior to closing • Rate escalation limited over term • Concessionaire’s ability to isolate risk • 50 years of operating history • Limited Construction Risk • Benefit: Fully funded 10 year transportation plan

  12. Indiana’s Experience Interstate 69 Indianapolis to Evansville (Once considered as P3, now a freeway) • NEPA Tier I: non-tolled version issued 2004 • Revised to include tolling option • Advisors engaged to assist in RFP development • Decided to revert to the freeway model • NEPA Law suit filed 10-2-2006 • Tier 2 permitting process underway • Construction to begin June 2008 • $700M “in the bank”

  13. Indiana’s Experience • Illiana Expressway • Joint project with IDOT • 70 Mile beltway around Chicago & NW Indiana • Congestion Relief • Economic Development • Development efforts on portion East of I65 suspended 3/24/07 due to public opposition

  14. Indiana’s Experience • Indiana Commerce Connector • 85 mile - partial outer beltway • Up to 75,000 vehicles/day • Economic development • Congestion relief • Development efforts suspended 3/24/07 due to public opposition

  15. What We’ve Learned - Mechanics • Do not underestimate effort required to create a P3 project • The path from point A to point B looks perfectly straight from 30,000 feet • A multi-disciplined approach. Seek help. • Financial decisions trump technical merits

  16. What We’ve Learned – Political • Do not assume authority is forthcoming • Education is key to, but not a guarantee of, success • Project by project approvals difficult to obtain • Project must be a solution to an identifiable problem • Solid project information essential to convince public and decision makers of need and benefits

  17. What We’ve Learned - Public • Respect the Internet. Grass roots resistance mounts quickly. • There is no limit to what the opposition will say in order to support their case. • Supporters are intimidated at large public meetings. • Opponents will offer any and all project alternatives to discredit your proposals. • Elected and local leaders’ support often bends under constituent pressure.

  18. Indiana – Supporting Information • Information = Knowledge = Power • Compile information and project estimates before unveiling your proposal • Research in support of new highways • Prepare to Debate - Never assume the obvious • Interrelationship between economy & highways obvious to industry, but not to motoring public

  19. Indiana – Economic Development • 2005-2006: IEDC closed on 327 new deals • Represents $11B of new investment in Indiana • 37,000 new jobs • 80% located in counties with Interstate access • Top 15 projects totaled $5.8B. Communities within 20 mi of Interstate received $5.0B of that investment

  20. Interstates as Economic Catalysts • Counties with Interstate access (51/41): • 2004 Per capita personal income 12% higher • 85% with PCPI over $30,000 have access • Median household income 10% higher • Assessed property value grew 4X faster • Property value increased 2,000% or more • Sales tax revenue 6x greater growth • Poverty lower • Unemployment lower

  21. Indiana – Growth Projections • By 2025, Central Indiana will add 300 sq. mi. of new urban area • In 20 years, population in Central Indiana will increase by the equivalent of three counties • Traffic has doubled on many of our major highways and Interstates

  22. Public Private Partnerships FHWA Northern Borders Conference Chicago, Illinois May 15, 2007 Contact: Ryan A. Hoff Legislative Director Indiana Department of Transportation (317) 232-5475 rhoff@indot.in.gov

More Related