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Pa. Turnpike tolls to climb 6%, to $53.50

Published December 27. 2019 03:00PM

 

HARRISBURG (AP) — Tolls on the Pennsylvania Turnpike will rise for the 12th straight year, with a trip across the state costing as much as $53.50.

The 6% hikes take effect on Jan. 5. They are part of a 2007 law designed to raise more than $10 billion for infrastructure improvements and debt service.

The cash rate to travel from the Ohio Border to the Delaware River crossing near Levittown will rise by $3.10 to $53.50. The EZ Pass rate will climb by $2.20 to $38.40.

The current toll to travel from the Mahoning Valley Interchage to Lehigh Valley is $3.60 cash of $2.30 for E-ZPass.

On Jan. 5, 2020, the amount will be $3.90 for cash and $2.50 for E-ZPass.

Mark Compton, chief executive officer of the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, has said that about $700 million — nearly half the agency’s revenue — will go toward debt service next year because of the plan to fund infrastructure improvements through turnpike tolls.

Auditor General Eugene DePasquale fears the toll hikes will lead people to find other routes and further stress the commission’s finances and ability to help fund the state Department of Transportation.

“The turnpike simply cannot continue to raise tolls to cover the legally mandated payments to PennDOT,” DePasquale said in March.

 

Comments
Collect the outstanding tolls, and stop punishing those who actually pay. Don’t allow people to register their cars, if they have unpaid tolls.
The commission may think they can just increase rates, but what they will find is less people will use the road. It's absurd for a car driver to pay $53.50 to drive across PA. The siphoning off of toll funds to pay the state police has to stop - they should be paid from a source other than that which is to fund fixing our roads. This state is out to lunch.

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