News
Articles
Case Histories
White Papers
Buyer's Guide
Career Center
August 2010
Industry Links
July 2010
June 2010
TM&E July Spotlight
Asphalt Roads
Bridges
Concrete Roads
Safety
Software
Traffic Management
Click here for a subscription to
Roads & Bridges
Give us your feedback on our site.
Change your subscription info
Subscribe to our
Executive News Summary e-Newsletter.
INDUSTRY NEWS
  RSS: Roads & Bridges News

 Subscribe
Get the latest industry headlines conveniently in our email newsletter! Click here to subscribe.
 
 Share It
"../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=rb&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=16889&linkLabel=N%2EC%2E%20highway%20spending%20cut%20by%20%2450%20million" target="_new">   "../popup_app/index.cfm?fuseaction=showEmailPageToAFriendForm&appDirectory=rb&linkQueryString=fuseaction=showNewsItem*amp*newsItemId=16889&linkLabel=N%2EC%2E%20highway%20spending%20cut%20by%20%2450%20million" target="_new">Email this page to a friend
 
 More News
  • Are roads and bridges in the U.S. actually improving?
  • Former chief economist says Congress, Obama need to pass more economic stimulus
  • Highway spending takes a fall
  • TM&E NEWS: Dallas may allow single passengers to pay for HOV use
  • TM&E NEWS: Dallas may allow single passengers to pay for HOV use
  • Winning transportation projects save lives, time and money
  • Rural transportation continues to be ignored
  • Cracks found in Del.’s Indian River Inlet Bridge
  • U.S. DOT grants $11.6 million for DBEs
  • Collapsed pavement on Mo.’s I-470 reopens 19 days ahead of schedule
  • Expert panel to review Seattle I-405 express toll lanes
  • RTD groundbreaking to be webcast live
  • Sales tax, highway bonds unpopular with Arkansas public
  • URS Corp. settles claim, but does not take blame for I-35W collapse
  • Illinois Tollway to remedy late violation notices
  • Is the Big Green another Big Dig?
  • Upcoming elections not stopping Pa. governor from pushing state legislators to act
  • W.Va. must fix turnpike cracks
  • WSDOT to test solar-powered road reflectors
  • Wireless sensors to monitor bridge structural integrity
  • PCA revises 2010 cement forecast down
  • MnDOT expects early completion of U.S. Highway 2
  • 511NJ begins providing travel times to Jersey Shore
  • Arkansas’s Bella Vista Bypass receives grant to proceed
  • Caltrans may suspend hundreds of ongoing road, bridge projects
  • I-5 bridge owners settle on 10-lane design
  • U.S. DOT boosts plans to divert traffic to waterways
  • Air-pollutant standard may cripple cement industry
  • Excavation begins in Calif. on Caldecott Tunnel's fourth bore
  • FHWA breaks ground on SH 550 in Brownsville
  • Senate bill takes $2.2B away from transportation to help Medicaid, education
  • Some Ohio counties short on funds return to gravel
  • WSDOT closes U.S. 101 Simpson Avenue Bridge
  • Transportation funding a hot topic in gubernatorial races
  • 520 Bridge faces Wash. highway fund shortfall
  • Denver completes milestone in FasTracks transit expansion
  • N.J. issues the last of its bonds to keep trust fund alive until March 2011
  • WSDOT installs active traffic management on I-5
  • Atkins to acquire PBSJ

  • All Current News
  • Archived News
  • N.C. highway spending cut by $50 million

    Cuts could grow to $200 million for the year, transportation secretary said.
    October 17, 2008

    North Carolina state officials, reacting to declining tax revenue, are cutting the state’s transportation and road-building budget by $50 million, but they said that number could rise to $200 million for the year.

    Last week, Lyndo Tippett, the state’s transportation secretary, cut spending by 6%. The reductions have not caused delays on highway construction projects, but Tippett told the Charlotte Observer “in the long term, it will.”

    The cuts include a continued hiring freeze that Tippett first ordered last month in response to a temporary delay in federal funding. The department is also eliminating travel and training expenses and holding off on equipment purchases.

    “We’re shooting the birds on the ground that are already sitting there,” Tippett told the Charlotte Observer.

    Earlier in the week, department officials announced the cutting of overtime for Division of Motor Vehicle offices.

    The state’s gas tax collections have declined as people drive less because of rising gas prices. The gas tax used to rise with the price of gas, but it was capped at 29.9 cents per gallon two years ago by legislators.

    Highway construction costs have doubled since 2002.



    Source: Charlotte Observer   October 17, 2008


    Home   |   Advertising   |   News Search   |   Articles   |   Buyer's Guide   |   Career Center   |   Case Histories   |   Top of Page