Commission plans to make Missouri DOT smaller

June 9, 2011

The Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission on June 8 adopted a plan that will make the Missouri Department of Transportation a smaller agency so more funding can be directed to needed road and bridge projects.

In a resolution, the six commission members adopted a plan that calls for reducing MoDOT’s staff size by 1,200, closing 131 facilities and selling more than 740 pieces of equipment. By 2015, the plan, called the Bolder Five-Year Direction, will save $512 million that will be used for vital road and bridge projects.

The Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission on June 8 adopted a plan that will make the Missouri Department of Transportation a smaller agency so more funding can be directed to needed road and bridge projects.

In a resolution, the six commission members adopted a plan that calls for reducing MoDOT’s staff size by 1,200, closing 131 facilities and selling more than 740 pieces of equipment. By 2015, the plan, called the Bolder Five-Year Direction, will save $512 million that will be used for vital road and bridge projects.

“I want to commend the commission for taking thoughtful and decisive action on our plan to become a smaller agency,” said MoDOT Director Kevin Keith. “The process hasn’t been easy, and their decision was a difficult one. But it’s a step that must be taken. We owe it to Missourians to make the best use of the resources we’re given, and this plan puts us on the right path to do just that.”

The final plan calls for MoDOT to retain a significant presence in the three areas where the department will close district offices: Macon, Joplin and Willow Springs. About 70 to 80 employees will remain in each of those areas under the direction of an area engineer who will lead a team of engineering, operations, maintenance and support staff. The remaining complexes in the three locations will be called district regional offices.

Other changes to the plan include:

  • Extending the date to make staffing changes by three months from Dec. 31, 2012, to March 31, 2013, to allow more time for attrition and transfers to achieve employee reductions;
  • Adjusting the boundaries of the new seven districts to better balance MoDOT’s workload and coordinate with regional planning commission boundaries. There are 23 regional planning commissions in Missouri that coordinate local issues related to regional planning and development;
  • Keeping open maintenance facilities in New Cambria, Nashua, Seymour, Ellsinore and Puxico and closing a maintenance facility in Fordland; and
  • Moving the St. Clair area engineer office to Festus and merging the Camdenton area engineer office with the maintenance and traffic facility in Osage Beach.

“We held 115 community briefings on the Bolder Five-Year Direction throughout the state in the last month and thousands of Missourians voiced their opinions on our plan of action,” said Commission Chair Grace Nichols. “We considered each and every comment and recommendation and incorporated the changes we believed improved the plan. But we felt strongly that the move to make MoDOT smaller was the right direction to head.”

The plan will begin to be implemented immediately with full implementation by March 2013.

For the past several years, state transportation officials have been warning that Missouri was headed for a transportation funding crisis. Faced with a construction program that has been cut in half and the inability to match federal funds in the future, the commission asked Keith to develop a plan to become the right size to serve customers.

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