Taxpayers Outside Maryland Shouldn't Pay To Rebuild a Toll Bridge Inside Maryland
Part of the 1,500-page spending bill Congress is expected to pass this week would obligate federal taxpayers to fund the Key Bridge replacement.

Federal taxpayers will cover the full cost of rebuilding Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge if Congress approves a major spending bill this week.
The toll bridge, which carried Interstate 695 across the entrance to Baltimore's harbor, was destroyed in March when a container ship collided with one of its supports. Rebuilding the bridge will cost an estimated $1.9 billion.*
Funding for the bridge is included in the 1,500-page stopgap spending bill that will avert a government shutdown and keep federal programs running until March. The package is expected to pass before the end of the week.
Maryland lawmakers and other public officials had been lobbying heavily for the federal government to pick up the tab for a new bridge. In a joint statement issued on Tuesday, Sens. Ben Cardin (D–Md.) and Chris Van Hollen (D–Md.) said the federal funds will allow the bridge "to be built as quickly as possible"
They also promised that federal taxpayers would be "reimbursed through proceeds from insurance payments and litigation" against the company that owns the ship that collided with the bridge.
Hopefully, that works out, but it would have been better not to ask federal taxpayers—many of whom will never use the bridge—to pay for this in the first place.
As noted above, the old Key Bridge was a toll bridge, and the replacement is likely to be tolled as well. Indeed, Maryland officials have been complaining about how the loss of toll revenue from the bridge has affected other projects in the state.
That should raise an obvious question: Why can't the future toll revenue from the Key Bridge pay for the rebuilding of the Key Bridge?
"Those tolls were paid by Key Bridge users presumably for the capital and operating costs of that bridge," wrote Robert Poole, director of transportation policy for the Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that funds this publication) in September. "Using tolls to finance some or all of the $1.9 billion cost of the replacement bridge would continue the users-pay/users-benefit principle."
As Poole also noted, Congress authorized the use of tolls to pay for bridge replacement projects on Interstate highways in 1991, and several such projects have been completed—for example, the new Calcasieu River bridge on Interstate 10 in Louisiana.
Officials could also have considered letting a private company rebuild the Key Bridge and collect tolls to cover the project's cost. It may have been necessary to use some state or federal funds to underwrite the cost or keep tolls at the same level as were charged on the old bridge, but at least taxpayers would have been asked to cover only a portion of the full cost.
At the very least, Congress could have cut some other part of the federal budget to offset the $1.9 billion for the Key Bridge.* Budgeting is, after all, mostly an exercise in setting priorities. If this rates as a priority, something else must be less important.
Congress seemingly lacks the ability to understand that such trade-offs are essential to effective budgeting. Instead, all taxpayers will be obligated to pay for the full rebuilding cost on top of everything else the government is doing.
The Key Bridge project is just one small part of an emergency spending bill that will add an estimated $300 billion to the budget deficit over 10 years. Still, it is a useful illustration of why the federal government runs such massive deficits every year. Even when given the opportunity to choose more cost-effective ways of accomplishing important goals—like quickly rebuilding a vital bit of transportation infrastructure—Congress is unable to fight the urge to spend recklessly.
*CORRECTION: An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated the cost of the bridge.
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"Congress seemingly lacks the ability [whatever you put here would be true and correct]"
For the record, the bridge is a Federal interstate highway. But as is usual with politicians, the Federal interstate highway system was built so politicians could pose for pictures cutting the ribbons at the grand opening ceremonies while kicking the can down the street for later generations to try to cope with maintenance, repair and replacement costs.
The original bridge was financed using only bonds and no other state or federal money. There is no reason this can’t be done again.
My point was that since that bridge was built "using only bonds" a dozen or a hundred other bridges have also been built; and a dozen or a hundred other bridges have been decaying for lack of enough "bond" money to go around to maintain, repair or replace them all. Taking one example out of the larger context and pretending that it proves the general case is an unfair and misleading way to argue.
Plenty of bridges have been built using only private capital too.
The Federal interstate highway system was created, for among other reasons, to facilitate the growth of the use of automobiles. Otherwise, most of us would still use trains as our primary form of long distance transport, just as it still is in Europe. Of course the rail lines were also built as a result of Federal land use regulations.
Wait a second, i am mistaken, aviation has become a primary choice for long distance transportation. But then, the majority of the airports (& I think ALL of the major ones) were also paid for by tax dollars.
Railroads in the East were built with huge subsidies from state governments. Sometimes the state owned an equity interest. Virginia only divested its last railroad in the 1990s. Socialist Alaska still owns a railroad.
Hey, Boehm, is that $1.9 trillion or $1.9 billion? Your editing leaves much to be reluctantly and strategically desired. (BTW, the actual number is $1.9 billion.)
I thought 1.9 trillion seemed a little high. Must be from writing all those budget articles.
He's only off by a factor of 1000, leave him be
What's a few orders of magnitude here and there between friends?
Proof readers don't work for free. Hopefully the Reason fund raiser will allow for new hiring to solve this ongoing problem. Alternately Boehm could actually read his own shit before he emails it in.
Yeah... I was just going to comment how the F a bridge could cost $1.9 trillion.
I was wondering how any bridge gets built if that’s what they cost!!
Glad somebody pointed out the mistake. I was gob smacked. I couldn’t figure out how that could be thecorrect amount.
Billion.
https://apnews.com/article/baltimore-bridge-collapse-body-found-cdd8441c5dff48028d1e141b943ca31e
Why isn't the shipping company that broke it paying for it?
All that sweet money is tied up in insurance claims and lawsuits...who knows if they will ever get any of that back once the lawyers take a good chunk fighting over the corpse of the shipping company that might declare bankruptcy or have a good shell game covering their liability that will go bankrupt.
Liability is limited by a 19th century federal law. Corporate Welfare.
Then why even have a Navy?
I'm with Bob. But this is probably the least offensive part of the entire bill, being a constitutionally enumerated power.
Also seeing that country still owes the Greatest State for the eminent domain seizure of the District of Columbia, can we call it a wash.
Seriously this probably a waste. It isn't like Bmore is still a large volume Harbor and the bridge is mostly used now just to cut down on commutes.
What part of the US Constitution calls for building state bridges?
The bridge is part of an interstate highway. Congress first funded an Interstate highway in 1811. Later it subsidized transcontinental railroads.
It's actually not part of an interstate highway.
It is indeed part of an interstate highway. It's a 3-digit loop, I-695.
So your reasoning is the US Constitution was already VOIDED?
You'd be far less of idiot to argue it is used as a Postal Route.
Taking for granite you could find that excuse legitimate.
Label it a "post road" and building it falls under an enumerated power. I'm sure Postal Service vehicles will use the bridge.
To get pizza?
Baltimore is still a large volume port, particularly for imports and exports of vehicles.
It cuts down on commutes, but not drastically. Commuters can still go through the McHenry and Harbor tunnels. It cut down drastically on the time it takes for hazmat vehicles to get to the other side of the harbor. They are not allowed through the tunnels, so they have to go all the way around the beltway in the other direction. But they're doing it now and the city is surviving, so the bridge is not strictly necessary.
hey hey I agree with your 24-point bold headline Merry Christmas.
>>Congress seemingly lacks the ability to understand
bullshit. Congress knows exactly dafuq it is doing. I'd like you 4% more if you stood on a cliff with a bullhorn instead of whatever seemingly lacks the ability to understand is
Seriously, let's wait the 20-30 years that it will take for the lawsuits to work their way through the courts so that the folks really at fault can declare bankruptcy & avoid paying for the damages that they created. In the meantime, the country can get along just fine without Baltimore's interstate highway.
Liability is limited by a 19th century FEDERAL law. Otherwise Maryland would not need the aid.
Cite missing and since you commonly peddle lefty bullshit, cite required.
Along with a cite regarding limits on corporate liability; you are, more often than not:
Full.
Of.
Shit.
No real difference in this and allowing SALT deductions.
Make out of state citizens pay for benefits to in state citizens.
The lefts So[zi]al[ism] has to be [Na]tional!! /s
And once that fails it'll have to be Global!!! /s
And once that fails it'll have to be ... um ... population elimination?
Checks notes on Bernie Sanders ... Yep; State is UN-acceptable even for Universal Healthcare because it might not work this time.
Then Maryland taxpayers shouldn't pay to help hurricane victims in North Carolina or Florida.
You're right, they shouldn't. All disaster spending for private property should come from private sources. Much of our government is aimed as "socializing" costs. We know where that road leads.
+10000000 Dido.
Ironically the only 'smart' from Charlie and Sarc is when they think they're being sarcastic.
Are we pretending that congress never votes to kick back federal tax dollars to everyone and everything for who knows what to who knows who. It starts with this spending bill - bahahahahaha. Money Printer is hungry and burning with desire.
The uni-swamp is at it again!
1.9 trillion can't be correct. 1.9 billion is believable.
Oh yeah? See California bullet train.
I vote we shut down the government to about, say, January 20 and start with a blank slate.
One very simple solution: get rid of the federal government's borrowing authority. You'd be amazed at how economically conservative people would become if they had to pay for every penny of spending.
Also, one year of funding the federal government with a head tax.
Another simple solution; abolish withholding.
How you going to do that when the federal government won't even follow THE SUPREME LAW of the land that makes 87% of it's current spending ILLEGAL by "The People's" law over them.
I'd say the simplest solution is to get Voter Support for "The People's" own LAW over their government. To support a *Constitutional* Republic instead of a Al'Capone Corrupt 'democratic' [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire revolution where the biggest [WE] gang RULES absolutely.
If we all fund it, do we all get a piece of the tolls collected?
I think the larger issue here is how this tragedy has affected the critical food truck commerce in the great city of Baltimore. If these industrious immigrants are forced to use distant bypass routes will the city have a sufficient supply of cheap tasty chalupas? Can anyone put a price on this disruption of civic order?
Is ther anything dumber than complaining abut an expense without knowing is benefits. So how do we cut something in order pay for a new expense? I suggest we cut all federal funds for the roads which Eric Boehm uses. I do not use them so why should I pay for me. Yep, that's a good philosophy -- I will only pay for what I personally use
"...Yep, that's a good philosophy -- I will only pay for what I personally use..."
Unless you can convince me otherwise, that's a good start. Other than that, what's the limit? Anything you want?
Gee, Rick, you seem to be non-responsive. Are we surprised?
If the USA is ever to be restored from it's Nazi-Revolution of the 1900s I'd imagine it will consist of Patriotic Citizens refusing to be Taxed for Socialism. Exactly how the US claimed Independence at the Boston Tea Party.
It's really sad the USA has failed to keep the socialist disease out and will probably end up in another Civil War that is just a repeat of its Revolutionary war.
Fine. But from now on, nobody but Maryland residents can benefit from the shipping traffic that the bridge and shipping lane facilitates. Order a package on Amazon that could have been cheaper or arrived faster because of that bridge or lane, no f you - pay more and wait longer for it to be rerouted through Norfolk or Philadelphia.
Any shipping not directly intended for Maryland has to use another route.
DERP. DERP DERP DERP DERP ERIC BOEHM YOU DERPING DERPING RETARDED DERP.
I almost think Basic Economics is unknown at Reason. Esp under Biden and Pelosi there is NO connection between how many is raised and how it is spent. So we do this bridge thing on EVERYTHING. Under any actual impletmentation eg the tuition forgiveness will be paid by everyone except the original receivers of the tuition. Yes, they will still pay taxes but on balance they get a break and everyone else actually pays. That tuition bill is still paid, you know that , right ?
I quick Google of the world’s most expensive bridge reveals it to be the span of the Oakland Bay Bridge that was completed in 2016 at a cost of $6.4 billion. This bridge is estimated at $1.9 trillion?! What makes it cost almost 300 times as much as the most expensive bridge ever built? Is nobody questioning this?
Taxpayers Outside Maryland Shouldn't Pay To Rebuild a Toll Bridge Inside Maryland
I agree with the sentiment, but isn't this the nature of the beast? It taxes everyone all over the country and redistributes it all over the country.
The designation I[nterstate]-695 makes it a federal responsibility to provide about 95% of the construction cost. Interstate and other Federal highways are said to be justified under the "post road" instruction in the COTUS as well as national defense needs (Eisenhower perceived the need for a national road network for national defense after he accompanied the 1919 Motor Transport Corps convoy across the country). I leave the legitimacy of constitutional claims re:federal highway aid and the basis of it to constitutional scholars, but so far, it appears, no one has challenged it. Whether there is a case for liability of any other parties is a separate issue. The need to replace the bridge and restoring is an urgent matter and has to be dealt with now. Who will get reimbursed when liability is established will be decided then.