Toll road merger likely dead
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Alicia Robinson
Foothill and Eastern toll road officials voted Thursday to pursue a
loan proposal crafted by Orange County Supervisor Bill Campbell
despite an independent financial advisor’s contention that the plan
is unworkable.
Members of the Foothill and Eastern and San Joaquin Hills toll
roads’ governing boards have been considering a merger of toll road
operations and a $3.9-billion bond sale to rescue the San Joaquin
Hills toll road from financial default, which could happen as soon as
2005. Thursday’s decision by Foothill and Eastern board members to
explore Campbell’s plan makes the proposed merger moot.
Campbell’s plan has the financially healthy Foothill and Eastern
toll roads compensating the cash-strapped San Joaquin Hills toll road
with $120 million for taking some of its traffic by opening the
Foothill South extension in 2008 or 2009. The Foothill and Eastern
toll roads also would lend $1 billion to keep San Joaquin Hills from
defaulting on its construction debts, which could also happen as soon
as 2005.
“It lets us do all the projects we want to do in Foothill South
and it keeps San Joaquin from going into technical and cash default,”
Campbell said. “My calculations showed that this can be done. The
financial advisor ... got up and said they can’t make it work, and I
pointed out one thing that he hadn’t considered.”
The financial advisor didn’t take into account development impact
fees that will offset the cost of building the Foothill South
extension, Campbell said.
But Mark Young, a principal for financial advisory firm Gardner,
Underwood & Bacon LLC, said the Foothill and Eastern toll roads won’t
generate enough revenue to manage their current debts, add new debt
to build the Foothill South extension and pay the promised funds to
the San Joaquin Hills toll road.
“I was not comfortable coming to a conclusion that it was viable,”
Young said.
The merger proposal, on the other hand, can be insured and has
already been checked out by bond-rating agencies, he said.
One local representative agreed that Campbell’s plan seemed iffy.
“I’m a little disappointed that they didn’t go ahead with the
merger,” said Costa Mesa City Councilman Mike Scheafer, who was
representing the city on the San Joaquin Hills board. “His plan is
looking at something that they’re not even sure is feasible to do.”
Costa Mesa Mayor Gary Monahan and Newport Beach City Councilman
Gary Adams have said they support the merger plan.
Campbell said he objected to the merger because the commission
fees and other costs would be unnecessarily high, and any action
would require the vote of a supermajority of board members, which
would be difficult to get.
The boards are scheduled to meet June 10, but toll roads
spokeswoman Clare Climaco said it’s unclear what the next step is.
Campbell maintains he’s proposed a plan that’s superior to the
merger, but Scheafer and Young said they got the sense that the
board’s vote was political rather than financial.
“It obviously had nothing to do with numbers,” Young said.
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