Expectations Lowered for Toll Road’s Refinancing
The agency operating the San Joaquin Hills toll road approved a $1.4-billion refinancing plan Thursday based on more modest ridership projections.
The 11-member Transportation Corridor Agencies voted unanimously--with Vice Chairman Patricia C. Bates absent--to replace the road’s funding package with one that promises a lower interest rate and lessens annual debt payments through 2012. The new bonds would be paid off by 2038.
Giving the new toll road a financial breather should provide a more friendly climate for eventually dropping the road’s $2 toll during off-peak hours, said County Supervisor Todd Spitzer, an agency director.
Such “congestion pricing†would increase the number of cars that use the road, particularly during non-commute hours, he said.
The San Joaquin Hills toll road, which opened 10 months ago, is handling about 55,000 cars a day, compared to estimates from 1992 that it would be handling 94,500 cars daily.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.