Report reveals 9 highway boondoggle projects slated to cost $25 billion

Highway expansion projects too often come with big price tags and paltry benefits. Yet at least nine new expansions are planned across the country, including one in Michigan.

Highway expansion projects too often come with big price tags and paltry benefits. Yet at least nine new expansions are planned across the country, including one in Michigan.

On June 18, U.S. PIRG released our national network’s fifth edition “Highway Boondoggles” report, which profiles these projects. In Michigan, the proposed I-75 widening is expected to cost $1 billion, exacerbating sprawl in an area that has experienced little population growth while harming the communities it runs through. Collectively, the nine projects examined are slated to cost at least $25 billion.

In addition to the cost, the report demonstrates that boondoggle projects like these often fail to reduce congestion but do increase asthma-inducing air pollution and divert funding from road repair and public transit priorities.
 
“To solve our transportation problems—from potholes to pollution to global warming—we need to put outdated highway projects in our rearview mirror,” said Matt Casale, director of our national network’s Highway Boondoggles campaign and co-author of the report.
 
Read the report.
 
Photo: U.S. PIRG Education Fund’s latest “Highway Boondoggles” report covers nine new budget-eating highway projects including the proposed widening of I-75 (pictured above), which is slated to cost a total of $1 billion. Credit: Fox 2 Detroit News

staff | TPIN

This Earth Day, put our planet over plastic

We are working to move our country beyond plastic — and we need your help. Will you make a gift in honor of Earth Day to help us keep making progress?

Donate