The D.C. Department of Transportation’s road construction coffers will be drained within two years, a new report shows, and critical projects may need to be put off unless new revenue sources are found.
The department’s Highway Trust Fund is expected to run a $3.1 million deficit in fiscal 2010 and a $180,000 deficit in fiscal 2011, according to an annual forecast conducted by the Office of the Inspector General.
The gap, a result of DDOT’s plan to spend more than it collects, would occur despite projected increases in local gas and parking tax revenues and right of way rental fees — the main sources of revenue dedicated to the trust fund.
“If no new funding sources are available, DDOT will modify the spending plan by postponing the start of projects,” auditors wrote in the report.
In fiscal 2010, the balance of the fund is projected at $68.2 million, while DDOT is looking to spend $71.3 million, according to the inspector general. In 2011, the fund balance is projected to drop to $62.3 million, while spending is forecast at $62.5 million. By law, expenditures cannot exceed appropriations.
DDOT spokeswoman Karyn LeBlanc said the shortfall threatens investments in transportation infrastructure, including bridges and tunnels, reconstruction of streets, traffic signals, lighting, safety initiatives and other capital projects. She declined to say what specific projects might be at risk.
“We are aware of the impact should the trust fund be depleted and we are discussing ways in which to provide for the shortfall,” LeBlanc said in an e-mail.
Ward 1 D.C. Councilman Jim Graham, who has oversight of transportation matters, said the shortfall was “news to me.” That said, a gap of only a few million dollars can be easily covered just by moving dollars around.
“A shortfall of $3 million ought to be something we can take of within the confines of the existing commitment,” he said. “If there was a great deal more than that, it would be a matter of great concern.”
Jim Segar, a senior auditor with the inspector general’s office, said the forecast is a planning “tool” for DDOT to “decide whether they need additional revenue sources, or else scale back on the projects that are not immediately necessary.”
