Oklahoma
Related: About this forumShould hundreds of Oklahoma families be forced from homes for sake of toll roads?
Oklahoma, you have a turnpike problem. It is not a partisan problem. It affects residents of all political affiliations. It is not a NIMBY (Not-In-My-Back-Yard) problem. The state Turnpike Authority puts all Oklahomans in harms way, not just those who live in the proposed path of the planned Access Oklahoma highway extensions.
The heart of the problem is that the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority is allowed to use government power to seize private property for private gain. The agency does not receive state or federal money to operate turnpikes, which means it can avoid federal highway regulations, sidestep rigorous environmental impact assessments, and keep many of its records hidden from view. But OTA is also part of state government and is planning to use its powers of eminent domain to seize hundreds of family homes and thousands of acres of scenic rural land to build new highways.
Unlike other public agencies, OTA operates without public input and has no mandate to create public good. In its current configuration, the OTA answers only to the governor, a small group of businessmen appointed by the governor, and the undisclosed investors who purchase its bonds.
The highways constructed by the Turnpike Authority are toll roads, and all Oklahomans pay to use them. Most states use public funds to build free roads. But Oklahoma makes its residents pay many times over for the privilege of driving from point A to point B. The state now has the second-highest number of toll roads in the country and is planning to build many more. Some of these roads do not earn enough in revenue to recover the costs of construction.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/viewpoint-hundreds-oklahoma-families-forced-100037057.html
2naSalit
(93,115 posts)Some federal agencies should be getting involved in.
The Unmitigated Gall
(4,577 posts)But then again, I imagine those terrifying words of Saint Ronnie:
Im from the government and Im here to help
Probably pull a lot of weight in Oklahoma.
Jim__
(14,487 posts)Off the top of my head, I can see a short-term benefit for Oklahomaans in that they don't pay current taxes for these roads - they pay tolls, but that may seem incidental. However, it seems like its disastrous for residents in the long-term as the state is accruing debts that it won't be able to pay. It may actually be more complicated than that; but I do believe that people are often willing to push taxes off through government borrowing and ignore the long-term consequences.
AllaN01Bear
(23,202 posts)entitiy , no.
2naSalit
(93,115 posts)And probably going to start harassing the Tribes and their land too.