Democrats hold road press conference in Charleston

CHARLESTON, W.Va. – Democrats in the West Virginia House of Delegates and State Senate say that Governor Jim Justice and Republican legislative leadership need to show a greater commitment to funding road maintenance and future infrastructure needs. The calls following a Democrat-requested audit that showed the Division of Highways districts have spent well below the required 70% of their budgets for road maintenance.

“We were reminded last week that our infrastructure is badly in need of attention; first a section of I-70 in Wheeling was shut down to work on 26 bridges and ramps, then a massive pothole closed a bridge on I-68 near Morgantown,” said Senator Rich Lindsay (D-Kanawha). “To finish the week of infrastructure failures, bolts broke on an expansion joint on the I-64 bridge at Nitro, which caused traffic to be rerouted for two days.”

In 2015 a Blue Ribbon Commission on Highways determined West Virginia needed $750 million a year just to keep up with repairs. In 2017 a report by the National Transportation Research Group found West Virginians spend as much as $1,439 per year in additional vehicle maintenance and fuel costs due to poor roads.

“West Virginia has the 8th most dangerous roads in the nation, largely because 63% of fatal crashes happen on our rural roads,” said Delegate Danielle Walker (D-Monongalia). “Our rate of fatalities is 4 points higher than the national average, due to speeding, weather, safety belt usage and the condition of our secondary roads.”

Democrats said that the poor condition of state roads has led to job losses, property damage, and accidents for state drivers, and is greatly damaging the state economy.

“An independent audit found that the Division of Highways has no formula to effectively distribute road funds among the districts and counties,” said Delegate John Williams (D-Monongalia). “Our bipartisan House Bill 4120 says that we should look at several factors, including population served and growth, condition of lane miles, vehicle miles traveled, heavy truck miles traveled, and the condition of bridges.”

Similar bipartisan legislation (House Bill 3044) was vetoed by Governor Justice last year. They support transparency in spending on infrastructure across the state to restore the trust of citizens. Without well-understood accountability, Democrats said state leaders will fail to put West Virginians first.