Minnesota Senate approves comprehensive transportation plan that heavily invests in roads and bridges without a gas tax increase or new mileage tax

The Minnesota Senate on Thursday approved a comprehensive, bipartisan transportation budget that invests billions over the next two years in the state’s transportation infrastructure without a gas tax, mileage tax, sales tax, or license tab fee increase. 

“Roads and bridges. That has been the top Republican transportation priority from day one, and that’s what we are reemphasizing with this bill,” said Senator Scott Newman (R-Hutchinson), chairman of the Transportation Committee. “This state burns millions of transportation dollars every year on things that are of zero benefit to most Minnesotans. Republicans are focused on putting those dollars back where they belong: roads and bridges. There is absolutely no need to raise gas taxes, license tab fees, sales taxes or add an unpopular new mileage tax.”

The Republican transportation budget provides $3.03 billion for state road construction, development, and maintenance; $2.25 billion for County and Municipal State Aid Roads; and $334 million for Corridors of Commerce. The bill also provides $60 million for local and small bridges and $18.5 million for the Local Road Improvement Program. The bill also provides unprecedented levels of new, ongoing funding for small city and township roads.

The bill boosts funding for roads and bridges by increasing the share of dedicated existing revenue from the auto parts sales tax, with additional dedicated funding for small cities and townships.

Less stress, more convenience for drivers

The Republican transportation budget will improve convenience and ease stress for Minnesota drivers by allowing Minnesotans to purchase their license tabs and replacement license plates from fully-automated kiosks; by allowing third-party locations to offer road tests in order to clear out the backlog of students waiting to take their driver’s test; by permitting driver’s education students to take the classroom portion of their instruction online; and by creating a pilot program where Minnesotans could receive their standard driver’s license card the same day they renew their license or pass their driving test.

Roads, not bike paths

The bill would prohibit MnDOT from converting car lanes on trunk highways to bike paths or bike routes, or from using gas tax revenue to build bike paths. The bill also prohibits local governments from unilaterally creating bike paths in areas that would eliminate or relocate disability parking spaces.

Cleaning up illegal and unconstitutional MnDOT spending

The bill cleans up illegal and unconstitutional MnDOT spending. The Constitution mandates Minnesota’s gas tax, motor vehicle sales taxes, tab fees, and auto parts sales tax be used strictly for “highway purposes,” yet each year the state spends about $232 million from these accounts on programs unrelated to roads. The bill cancels funding for unnecessary items, like tourist information centers or bike paths, and shifts essential programs, such as emergency 9-1-1 radio communications, to the general fund.

Keeping kids safe while en route to school

The bill includes $35 million to protect children at school bus stops by equipping every school bus in Minnesota with cameras to catch stop-arm violators. Minnesota would likely be the first state in the nation to achieve that mark. The bill also provides $1 million dollars for the successful Safe Routes to Schools program, which aims to improve student safety and reduce traffic near schools.

Protecting state taxpayers from wasteful rail spending

The bill suspends funding for the heavily subsidized North Star passenger rail, pending federal approval. The bill also protects statewide taxpayers by shifting the responsibility for funding current and future light rail development to counties instead of the state of Minnesota.

Supporting law enforcement
The bill keeps the state’s commitment to law enforcement by providing $267 million over the next two years for the state patrol, including $9.1 million to hire 25 new troopers and $6.3 million to meet their request for body cameras.