Lease bid would pay off toll road
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Andrew Edwards
Officials overseeing the San Joaquin Hills (73) Toll Road have
received an offer from a company with a headquarters in Australia
interested in leasing the cash-strapped road.
In a letter dated March 31, Murray Bleach, the executive director
of Macquarie Securities (USA) Inc., proposed a deal to the
Transportation Corridors Agencies in which his company would pay off
outstanding bond debt on the 15-mile toll road with a 50-year lease.
The road connects Newport Coast to San Juan Capistrano.
Macquarie Securities’ portfolio includes a toll road in San Diego
County, the Sydney airport and the Rome airport. Company spokeswoman
Monica Zaied said the firm made the offer to find out if toll road
officials would be interested in talking about a deal.
The deal would be about $1.9 billion, said Bert Hack, who chairs
the board in charge of the toll road.
Hack said he was skeptical of the deal, since a lease would likely
reduce the board’s authority over tolls if revenues did not reach
projections.
“They would be able to impose tolls on us and we would have to
acquiesce,” Hack said.
Newport Beach Councilman Don Webb, who is also a member of the
toll road board, said that under a lease, Macquarie Securities would
receive all toll revenues from the road but would also assume all the
risks.
Webb said the proposal should not be ruled out, though he has not
yet taken a position on the idea.
“I think it’s a little too early to have an opinion one way or the
other,” Webb said.
Another board member, third district county Supervisor Bill
Campbell, also said it was too early to decide if the proposal made
sense.
A key issue would likely be the length of the lease. Under a
worst-case scenario, Campbell said toll road bonds would not be paid
off for 39 years, though a lease would prolong tolls for 50 years.
“I think it’s still important to make those freeways -- quote --
as soon as possible,” Campbell said.
Campbell said the road is in financial trouble because toll
revenues have not increased at the same pace as bond payments.
About one year ago, talks of a merger between the San Joaquin
Hills Toll Road board and the Foothill (241) and Eastern (261) toll
roads boards broke down. The merger was proposed to prevent the San
Joaquin Hills toll road from defaulting on construction debts.
Campbell said traffic increases and a 10% toll hike have slightly
bettered the road’s fiscal situation since merger talks stopped.
A lease is not the only solution on the table for the toll road’s
problems. Campbell said his board has proposed a settlement agreement
with the Foothill and Eastern toll roads’ boards to recover
anticipated lost revenues related to the planned expansion of the
Foothill Toll Road into San Clemente. Under that proposal, Campbell
said his board could receive a $1-billion loan and funds to account
for lost revenues. Details of that proposal, Campbell said, have been
discussed in closed session meetings and aren’t available in writing.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at andrew.edwards
@latimes.com.
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