PA Turnpike OKs Six Percent Toll Increase for 2020
Increase is set to start next year at
12:01 a.m. on Jan. 5.
HARRISBURG, PA… The Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission (PTC) has approved a six percent toll increase for 2020 for both E-ZPass and cash customers. The increase is set to start at 12:01 a.m. on Jan. 5, 2020 on all sections and extensions excluding three western PA “cashless” toll facilities.
Because of today’s action, the most-common toll for a
passenger vehicle next year will increase from $1.40 to $1.50 for E-ZPass
customers and from $2.30 to $2.50 for cash customers. The most common toll for
a Class-5 tractor trailer will increase from $3.70 to $4.00 for E-ZPass and
from $16.30 to $17.30 for cash. The cashless toll at the westbound Delaware
River Bridge will increase from $5.30 to $5.70 for E-ZPass customers and from
$7.20 to $7.70 for those who use PA Turnpike TOLL BY PLATE.
Tolls will
not rise on Jan. 5, 2020 at three western PA highways as these locations will
see increases Oct. 27, 2019. They are: PA Turnpike 376, (Beaver Valley
Expressway); PA Turnpike 66 (Greensburg Bypass or Amos K. Hutchinson Bypass);
and the Gateway tolling point (milepost 2 near Ohio on I-76).
The toll
increase — like previous annual increases — is required to meet escalating
debt-service costs associated with the PTC’s annual Act 44/Act 89 contributions
to the Commonwealth of PA for transit operations and funding for the PTC’s
10-year capital program.
“Since
2007, the commission has increased tolls annually to maintain its aging roads
and make good on a funding obligation required by two state laws, Act 44 of
2007 and Act 89 of 2013,” Compton said. “As a result, the commission has
delivered $6.6 billion in toll-backed funding to PennDOT in the last dozen
years.”
Last
month, the PA Turnpike issued $800 million in subordinate municipal bonds to
help fund $900 million in payments to the commonwealth for the 2019 and 2020
fiscal years. A $450 payment was made June 27 for the commonwealth’s fiscal
year ended June 30. By law, these payments support mass transit statewide, with
the bulk of funding supporting transit in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.
“Due to this
onerous funding requirement, nearly half of the PA Turnpike’s FY 2020 toll
revenue will go to pay debt service alone,” Compton said. “Anticipated toll
revenue is estimated at $1.4 billion for the fiscal year, and our debt-service
payments are roughly $700 million for the year.”
Compton
said the increases will also support the PTC’s 10-year plan to preserve the
Turnpike.
“Parts of
our tollway turn 79 years old on Oct. 1, and we must continue to invest in our
road to make it safer, smoother and wider for customers,” Compton said.
The PTC has reconstructed more than 140 miles of its
system, with another 11 miles of roadway being rebuilt and widened and more
than 82 miles in planning and design phases. (The PTC does not receive taxpayer
appropriations to operate or maintain its roadways.)
As part of
ongoing efforts to control costs, Compton noted that the PTC has seen success
in limiting the growth in the operating budget and reducing spending in the
10-year capital plan by about $1 billion.
“We are
doing what we can to mind our shop and manage costs as we deal with our
economic realities,” Compton said. “For the 2019 fiscal year ending May 31st,
we're projecting operating expenses to come in almost $40 million under budget
while actual expense growth over the 2018 fiscal year is projected to be less
than 1 percent.”
The PTC will post a 2020 trip calculator and toll schedule online this fall. Visit https://www.paturnpike.com/toll/tollmileage.aspx.