Pritzker Announces $21.3 Billion
Roads and Bridges Improvement Plan Funded by Rebuild Illinois
FY2021-26 Multi-Year Plan Will Improve
3,356 Miles of Roads and 8.4 Million Square Feet of Bridge Deck
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[July 23, 2020]
Gov. JB Pritzker joined the Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT)
today to announce the release of a $21.3 billion plan to improve
Illinois roads and bridges over the next six years. The critical
investment in communities throughout the state is made possible by
the Governor’s historic and bipartisan Rebuild Illinois capital
plan, the first in nearly a decade. The full plan is available here.
“Illinois remains a hub for commerce and transit – and not just for
this nation, but for the entire global economy. We are the 5th
largest economy in the United States, and the crossroads for
national and international companies who need our roads and airports
and rail and rivers and people to move their products,” said
Governor Pritzker. “Even in a pandemic – especially in a pandemic –
our transportation systems connect the lives of our residents and
our communities. Our roads and bridges deliver Illinoisans to work
and home again, to school, to the pharmacy, to the doctor’s office.
The Multi-Year Plan we’re announcing today provides funding to
reconstruct over 3,300 miles of roads and over 8 million square feet
of bridges – and, more importantly, create and support hundreds of
thousands of jobs over the next 6 years for hardworking Illinoisans
across our state.”
Last year, Gov. Pritzker announced the first Multi-Year Plan under
Rebuild Illinois. Since then, IDOT began multiple construction
projects including the ongoing $67 million Interstate 255 (I-255)
rehabilitation project in St. Clair and Madison counties.
Construction, which began in February of this year, will fix one of
the worst roads in the state. By closing I-255 completely, IDOT will
be able to complete the work in one construction season instead of
several, saving an anticipated $14 million that can be reinvested in
other projects. The administration will look to replicate that
approach in other parts of the state.
“Under the leadership of Gov. Pritzker, IDOT throughout the COVID-19
pandemic, has focused on continued investments in infrastructure to
keep people safe and the economy moving,” said Acting Illinois
Transportation Secretary Omer Osman. “The multi-year plan keeps us
on task during these uncertain times. While we are not cutting or
delaying projects, we will continue monitoring the impacts on future
revenues to ensure we are investing taxpayer resources wisely.”
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Based on current funding levels, the FY2021-26 Proposed Highway Improvement
Program will improve 3,356 miles of roads and 8.4 million square feet of bridge
deck. Of the total $21.3 billion included in the six-year program, $3.15 billion
has been identified for the current fiscal year.
The program will create and support hundreds of thousands of earning
opportunities over the next six years for Illinois residents in communities
across the state. As the Illinois economy begins to recover from the COVID-19
crisis, these jobs will be a critical resource for families working to get back
on their feet.
Projects included in the program were selected based on objective criteria, such
as pavement conditions, traffic volumes, and crash history. Over the next six
years, $6.1 billion of the funding will go toward highway reconstruction and
preservation, $4.7 billion towards bridge improvements, $2.6 billion for
strategic expansion, $1.8 billion for system support like engineering and land
acquisition, and $1.4 billion for safety and system modernizations.
The Pritzker administration will continue to prioritize repairing and replacing
the state’s infrastructure before it deteriorates, a practice not followed by
previous administrations. Through this approach, the administration aims to
extend the life of Illinois roads and bridges, improve public safety, and
operate transparently while saving taxpayers billions of dollars in the long
run.
Passed in 2019, Governor Pritzker’s historic and bipartisan Rebuild Illinois is
investing a total $33.2 billion into the state’s aging transportation system,
creating jobs and promoting economic growth. Rebuild Illinois is not only the
largest capital program in state history, but also the first one that touches
all modes of Illinois transportation: roads and bridges, transit, waterways,
freight and passenger rail, aviation, and bicycle and pedestrian accommodations.
[Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |