FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE    
Thursday, April 27, 2017        
Report available at: tripnet.org                                                                           

Contact: Rocky Moretti 202.262.0714 (cell)
Carolyn Bonifas Kelly 703.801.9212 (cell)
TRIP office 202.466.6706

JOHNSON/WYANDOTTE COUNTY MOTORISTS LOSE NEARLY $1,600 PER YEAR ON ROADS THAT ARE ROUGH, CONGESTED & LACK SOME SAFETY FEATURES –$2.7 BILLION STATEWIDE. KANSAS’ ABILITY TO REPAIR AND IMPROVE TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM HAMPERED BY $2.4 BILLION TRANSFER OF HIGHWAY FUNDS TO STATE GENERAL FUND FROM 2011 TO 2017.
Eds.: The report includes regional pavement conditions, congestion levels, highway safety data, and cost breakdowns for the Johnson/Wyandotte County, Topeka and Wichita urban areas.

Overland Park, KS – Roads and bridges that are deteriorated, congested or lack some desirable safety features cost Kansas motorists a total of $2.7 billion statewide annually – $1,596 per driver in Johnson and Wyandotte Counties – due to higher vehicle operating costs, traffic crashes and congestion-related delays. The ability of the Kansas Department of Transportation to repair and improve the state’s transportation system has been hampered by the transfer of $2.4 billion in state highway funds to state general funds between FY2011 and FY2017, according to a new report released today by TRIP, a Washington, DC based national transportation organization. Governor Sam Brownback’s FY 2018/FY 2019 budget proposal would increase transfers of state highway funds to state general funds and other state agencies to $3.4 billion from FY 2011 to FY 2019.

The TRIP report, Kansas Transportation by the Numbers: Meeting the State’s Need for Safe, Smooth and Efficient Mobility,” finds that throughout Kansas, more than one-third of major, locally and state-maintained urban roads are in poor or mediocre condition and nine percent of Kansas’s locally and state-maintained bridges are structurally deficient. The state’s major urban roads are becoming increasingly congested, with drivers wasting significant amounts of time and fuel each year. Kansas’ rural roads have a traffic fatality rate four-and-a-half times higher than on all other roads.

Driving on Johnson and Wyandotte County roads costs the average driver $1,596 per year in the form of extra vehicle operating costs (VOC) as a result of driving on roads in need of repair, lost time and fuel due to congestion-related delays, and the costs of traffic crashes in which the lack of adequate roadway safety features likely were a contributing factor. The TRIP report calculates the cost to motorists of insufficient roads in the Johnson/Wyandotte County, Topeka and Wichita urban areas. A breakdown of the costs per motorist in each area along with a statewide total is below.

  VOC Congestion Safety Total
Johnson/Wyandotte $510 $933 $153 $1,596
Topeka $819 $388 $246 $1,453
Wichita $508 $837 $252 $1,597
Kansas Statewide $1 Billion $1 Billion $730 Million $2.7 Billion

The TRIP report finds that 48 percent of major locally and state-maintained roads in Johnson and Wyandotte Counties are in poor or mediocre condition, costing the average motorist an additional $510 each year in extra vehicle operating costs, including accelerated vehicle depreciation, additional repair costs, and increased fuel consumption and tire wear. The report found that deferring maintenance on roads and highways can greatly increase long-term repair costs, with each dollar of deferred maintenance on roads and bridges being found to cost an additional $4 to $5 in needed future repairs.

“Our Chamber members and Johnson County voters recognize the importance of a quality, well-maintained, comprehensive transportation network of highways, roads and bridges throughout the state of Kansas,” said Tracey Osborne, president of the Overland Park Chamber of Commerce. “They understand that the speed, reliability, capacity and overall effectiveness of the state’s transportation system are crucial not only for quality of life for our residents, but also for job creation, economic development, and business retention and expansion in Kansas. We are all concerned with delays in previously approved projects as well as significant curtailment of regular maintenance of highways and bridges throughout the state as a result of the diversion of funds from the Kansas Highway Fund and the deterioration of the quality of our highways and bridges. This work will only become more expensive with time, costing us more the longer it is put off; thus, we strongly support protecting existing transportation funding sources at the state level and a federal multi-year funding plan for the nation’s surface transportation infrastructure.”

Traffic congestion in Johnson and Wyandotte Counties area is worsening, causing 39 annual hours of delay for the average motorist and costing each driver $933 annually in lost time and wasted fuel.

Nine percent of Kansas’s bridges are structurally deficient, with significant deterioration to the bridge deck, supports or other major components. In Johnson and Wyandotte Counties, two percent of bridges are structurally deficient.

Traffic crashes in Kansas claimed the lives of 1,881 people between 2011 and 2015, an average of 376 fatalities per year. Kansas’s overall traffic fatality rate of 1.13 fatalities per 100 million vehicle miles of travel is the same as the national average. In Johnson and Wyandotte Counties, on average, 39 people were killed in traffic crashes in each of the last three years.

The efficiency and condition of Kansas’s transportation system, particularly its highways, is critical to the health of the state’s economy.  Annually, $395 billion in goods are shipped to and from sites in Kansas, mostly by truck. Eighty-two percent of the goods shipped annually to and from sites in Kansas are carried by trucks and another 12 percent are carried by courier services or multiple mode deliveries, which include trucking.

“The condition of Kansas’s transportation system will worsen in the future as additional monies are diverted away from the highway fund, leading to even higher costs for drivers,” said Will Wilkins, TRIP’s executive director. “In order to promote economic growth, foster quality of life and get drivers safety and efficiently to their destination, Kansas will need to make transportation funding a top priority.”