IDOT unveils 6-year, $41 billion plan for infrastructure projects
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[July 08, 2023]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois Department of Transportation unveiled a plan
on Friday for spending nearly $41 billion in federal, state and local
funds over the next six years to repair and upgrade roads, bridges,
airports, rail lines and other infrastructure throughout the state.
The latest version of the plan, which IDOT updates annually, is the
largest multiyear plan in state history. It’s driven by the state’s 2019
Rebuild Illinois capital infrastructure program. The initial six-year
Rebuild Illinois plan included $33.2 billion for transportation, funded
largely by annualized increases to the state’s motor fuel tax and
increases to driving-related licensing fees that took effect in 2020.
“Over the next six years, we're investing over $40 billion to improve
all modes of transportation across our great state,” Gov. JB Pritzker
said at a news conference in Springfield. “And that means better roads
and bridges, modernized transit and aviation, and expanded and faster
passenger rail service. It even extends to improved river ports, new
sewers and water infrastructure and a huge upgrade to bicycle and
pedestrian accommodations.”
More than half of the plan, $27 billion, will go toward road and bridge
projects, including $4.6 billion in the current fiscal year. That will
fund repair and reconstruction of 2,866 miles of roadway and 9.8 million
square feet of bridge deck on the state highway system, along with
another 738 miles of roadway and 1.1 million square feet of bridge deck
in systems maintained by local governments.
The project list includes $611.5 million for reconstruction and
improvements to portions of Interstate 90 in Cook County that will
include improving safety and access to O’Hare International Airport in
Chicago. The plan also calls for spending $135.1 million to expand
portions of U.S. Highway 24 to four lanes in Peoria and Fulton counties;
$156 million to replace a bridge over the Mississippi River in Quincy;
and $116 million to replace a bridge over the Ohio River at Cairo.
The multiyear plan also earmarks $13.96 billion for other modes of
transportation, including $9.85 billion for transit systems, $2.67
billion for freight and passenger rail, $1.25 billion for aviation
projects, and $190 million for ports and waterways.
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Illinois Department of Transportation
Secretary Omer Osman is pictured at a news conference in Springfield
Friday. He unveiled the state's latest six-year plan for
infrastructure improvements. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry
Nowicki)
Among the intermodal projects in the plan are $100 million for safety
and reliability improvements on Amtrak’s Saluki service between Chicago
and Carbondale and runway improvements at municipal airports in
Litchfield and Pontiac.
Transportation Secretary Omer Osman said the $41 billion six-year plan
represents a 10 percent increase over the previous multiyear plan, and
the money earmarked for the current fiscal year represents a 25 percent
increase over the previous fiscal year.
“But that is due in large part to the engineering and planning effort in
the early years of capital program (which) is starting to result in more
construction activity on work on the street,” he said.
Pritzker and other officials at the news conference emphasized that the
Rebuild Illinois program is meant to do more than improve safety and
efficiency in transportation. The program is also supporting thousands
of high-paying jobs in construction, engineering and other fields.
“This is more than just new rail. This is more than a runway at an
airport,” said Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea. “This is about
opportunities. We can see all those physical infrastructure
improvements, but what we don’t really see is the opportunities that
this program creates for a diverse workforce with high wages, middle
class wages, health care, and retirement security.”
Through four years of the Rebuild Illinois program, IDOT has completed
$12.1 billion of improvements statewide, including 5,339 miles of
highway, 533 bridges, and 762 other safety improvements.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of
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Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along
with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and
Southern Illinois Editorial Association.
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