Ohio
Department of Transportation...
ODOT
Launches Program Aimed at Generating Millions in New Revenue
COLUMBUS
(Monday, May 21, 2012) – The Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT)
is hoping
to generate millions of dollars in new money by launching a program
that will
permit advertising and sponsorship opportunities at interstate rest
areas and
welcome centers throughout Ohio. Beginning today, the department is
seeking
competitive bids for the Sponsorship, Maintenance, and Advertising
Revenue
Tartgeted (SMART) program.
Money
generated from the SMART program will help ODOT offset a portion of the
$30 to
$50 million the agency spends each year to maintain the state’s 101
rest areas.
Annual rest area maintenance costs include paying gas, water, electric
and
sewage bills, as well as mowing grass, resurfacing parking lots,
improving
buildings and paying for janitorial and housekeeping services.
“This new
program will help do two things: reduce the amount of money ODOT spends
on rest
area maintenance and generate new money we can use to pay for some of
the major
construction projects communities have told us they want,” said ODOT
Director
Jerry Wray. “Launching the SMART program demonstrates that ODOT is
serious
about thinking outside the box and seeking innovative and alternative
funding
sources to pay for road construction in Ohio.”
This is the
first major initiative ODOT has announced since it launched the
Division of
Innovative Delivery earlier this year. The department is exploring
options to
unlock the revenue potential of the Ohio Turnpike and non-interstate
rest
areas, in addition to developing a program to generate millions of
dollars for
the sponsorship and naming rights of certain state-owned assets such as
bridges, interchanges and sections of highway.
The
division is also exploring public-private partnerships (P3’s) to
expedite the
construction of some of the state’s largest construction projects,
including:
The second
Innerbelt Bridge in Cleveland
The Brent
Spence Bridge in Cincinnati
The
Portsmouth Bypass in Scioto County
An
interchange for U.S. Route 36 and SR 37 on I-71 in Delaware County
In
January, ODOT announced a $1.6 billion budget
hole that forced the department to push back by decades some of the state’s
largest construction projects. Since then, the agency has initiated a
complete
review of all current and future transportation projects to identify
those that
could be excellent candidates for P3’s, and has sought to identify
additional
sources of revenue to aid in the funding of major transportation
projects
throughout the state. Details of the review are expected later this
year.
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