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July 27, 2021 <br /> <br />- New Business - <br /> <br />21 - 232 - Boards and Commissions <br /> <br />21 - 233 - Items Submitted by Council Members <br /> <br />a) Adoption of a resolution urging the General Assembly to commit funding to <br />substantially reduce the burden of tolls on Hampton Roads residents by either <br />buying back the ERC contract or otherwise significantly and permanently lowering <br />tolls for the Downtown and Midtown tunnels. <br /> <br />1. Jo Ann Clark, 4717 Thornwood Street, spoke in support of this item. <br /> <br />Motion by Mr. Moody, and seconded by Mr. Woodard, to adopt the following <br />resolution, and was adopted by the following vote: <br /> <br />“RESOLUTION URGING THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO COMMIT FUNDING TO <br />SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCE THE BURDEN OF TOLLS ON HAMPTON ROADS <br />RESIDENTS BY EITHER BUYING BACK THE ERC CONTRACT OR OTHERWISE <br />SIGNIFICANTLY AND PERMANENTLY LOWERING TOLLS FOR THE DOWNTOWN <br />AND MIDTOWN TUNNELS. <br /> <br />WHEREAS <br /> , in 2011, using the provisions of the Public–Private Transportation Act, <br />the Commonwealth of Virginia entered into a 58-year contract with Elizabeth River <br />Crossings OPCO, LLC (ERC) to make certain improvements to increase the capacity of <br />the Midtown and Downtown Tunnels and their attendant bridges and roadways; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS <br /> , the ERC contract granted the contractor authority to construct, <br />maintain, and operate the tunnel facilities for a 58-year period, deriving its revenue from <br />the imposition of tunnel tolls for an average annual profit of 13.5 percent with annual <br />increases of at least 3.5 percent; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS <br /> , the tunnel tolls impose severe economic hardship on the citizens of <br />Hampton Roads, including the members of the military stationed in the region and their <br />families, and the economies of the region and the Commonwealth as a whole; and <br /> <br /> WHEREAS, <br />studies have shown that the Midtown and Downtown Tunnel tolls <br />disproportionately impact the population of Portsmouth, which has the lowest median <br />income and highest percentage of minority residents in the region; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, <br /> the ERC contract further contains anti-competitive provisions that may <br />require the Commonwealth to pay compensation as a result of the construction of other <br />crucial transportation improvements, such as the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel <br />Expansion and the I-64 Southside Widening/High Rise Bridge project; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, <br /> the operation of a toll system at the Downtown and Midtown Tunnels <br />independently of the rest of the regional transportation network hampers transportation <br />policy and the development of efficient regional strategies; and <br /> <br />WHEREAS, <br /> the City of Portsmouth appreciates the efforts of the General <br />Assembly and of current and prior gubernatorial administrations to partially mitigate the <br />impact of the ERC contract and the tolls through buy-down, relief and other programs; <br />and <br /> <br />WHEREAS <br /> , as appreciated and necessary as those measures have been, they <br />have served only as temporary fixes, and they do not address the fundamental problems <br />that the ERC contract has created and will continue to create for the next half century; <br />and <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />