Toll road merger alternatives pitched
Alicia Robinson
Seven new proposals to save the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road from
financial collapse were proposed this week, but most of those include
ideas already considered by the toll road’s governing board.
The boards that govern the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road and the
Foothill and Eastern toll roads agreed last week to look at
alternatives to merging the two toll roads to rescue the San Joaquin
Hills Toll Road from defaulting on its debts. They have twice
postponed voting on a merger between the two agencies that would sell
$3.9 billion in bonds and restructure the agencies’ debts.
Local representatives on the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road’s board
said they haven’t seen the new proposals but they will consider all
the options.
“I’m willing to consider any of them,” Newport Beach City
Councilman Gary Adams said.
But the proposals are based on ideas that toll road agency staff
members already considered and dismissed in favor of the $3.9 billion
bond sale and merger plan, he said.
“It doesn’t seem like any of them are going to pass muster, but
you never know,” Adams said.
Paris-based Cofiroute Global Mobility laid out a plan that
wouldn’t require a merger or the issuance of new bonds. Cofiroute
would operate both toll road systems for at least 15 years but would
guarantee the financial stability of the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road
during that time.
Orange County Supervisor Chris Norby proposed that, rather than a
merger, the Foothill and Eastern toll roads’ governing agency should
purchase the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road’s assets and pay its
$1.9-billion existing bond debt. The plan would not require any
additional bonds and would save drivers $3.6 billion in future tolls
when compared with the earlier $3.9 billion bond proposal, according
to Norby’s projections.
Other proposals came from Orange County Treasurer John Moorlach
and investment banking firms Morgan Stanley and Kinsell, Newcomb &
DeDios, and two from investment bank Merrill Lynch.
Foothill and Eastern toll roads board chairman Peter Herzog, who
is on the ad hoc committee that accepted the new proposals Thursday,
said in earlier deliberations the merger was the one plan that met
board members’ objectives, which include providing financial
stability and lowering debt service for the San Joaquin Hills Toll
Road and funding completion of the Foothill-South Toll Road.
“The thing that we’re focused on is making sure that the toll
payers of the San Joaquin Hills corridor don’t end up paying tolls
for an additional 18 years,” Herzog said.
It’s too early to say whether the new proposals will meet those
objectives, Herzog said. The ad hoc committee will hear presentations
Wednesday from those who submitted new proposals.
Costa Mesa Mayor Gary Monahan said he’s looking for whichever plan
is best for the toll roads.
“I felt comfortable with [the merger proposal] but if there’s
better ideas out there I’m more than happy to look at them,” he said.
The boards are under the gun to make a decision at their April
meeting after hearing Tuesday that Moody’s Investors Service could
downgrade the rating of the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road’s $1.9
billion in construction debt.
The possible downgrade would leave the bonds with a “noninvestment
grade,” or junk, status, Herzog said.
“I think what this shows is that the information we’ve been
receiving is accurate, that this is a serious situation, that it
needs a long-term fix and it’s one that needs to be resolved now,” he
said.
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