Gov. Greg Abbott delivering his State of the State speech on Feb. 17, 2015.
Gov. Greg Abbott delivering his State of the State speech on Feb. 17, 2015. Bob Daemmrich

The day before Texas lawmakers begin consideringย a major transportation bill, state leaders made a concerted push for the measure as part of a larger effort toย boost much-needed highway funding.

At a speech before state transportation groups on Tuesday, Gov. Greg Abbottย touted his $4 billion transportation plan as aย โ€œhistoric and unwavering commitmentโ€ to improving Texas roads. Abbottย called his proposed budget โ€”ย which wouldย dedicate half the revenue from the state’sย vehicle sales tax to transportation, and end diversions of gas tax revenue to purposes other than transportation โ€” a โ€œno-brainer.โ€ย 

โ€œEveryone agrees that money that was raised for roads should be spent on building roads,โ€ he said.ย 

On Wednesday, the Senate Transportation Committee will consider a bill authoredย by committee Chairmanย Robert Nicholsย and backed by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrickย that mostly mirrors Abbott’s proposal.

Soon after Abbott ended his speech on Tuesday, Nichols and Patrickย held their own press conference with a group of state business leaders.

Patrick said he viewed Nicholsโ€™ proposal as a priority for the session and predicted lawmakers on the committee will overwhelmingly vote to move it to the Senate floor.

โ€œItโ€™s my plan if we have the votes next week to bring it to the [Senate] floor and pass it,โ€ Patrick said.

Nichols said he was tweaking his original proposal, which would have dedicated any vehicle sales tax revenue beyond $2.5 billion annually to the state’s highway fund.ย Currently, all of the vehicle sales tax collected โ€” about $4 billion annually โ€” goes into the state’s all-purpose general revenue fund.

Under his new version, the first $2.5 billion in car sales tax revenue would still go to the stateโ€™s general fund. The next $2.5 billion collected would go to the state highway fund. And any revenue collected beyond $5 billion a year would be split evenly between the general fund and the highway fund.

Nichols said the change is to ensure both that general revenue continues to grow and that if car sales tax revenue drops, transportation funding would be impacted first.

โ€œWe can delay the construction of a bridge or a road a year or two, but kids still have to go to school each year,โ€ Nichols said.

Earlier this month, Abbott named transportation one of five emergency items to be fast-tracked by the Legislature. He has previously proposed dedicating two-thirds of the car sales tax, or more than $2 billion a year, to the highway fund.

Abbott said his transportation plan โ€œfits neatly within the budgetโ€ he laid out last week.

โ€œThe budget can sustain dedication of one half of the motor vehicle sales tax to building roads. Not only can it โ€” it must,โ€ he said. โ€œBuilding roads is something that Texans have been clear that they are demanding.”

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Ryan McCrimmon was a reporting intern for The Texas Tribune in 2015. A graduate of Northwestern University, Ryan previously covered national politics and foreign affairs for the Medill News Service in...

Aman Batheja was a political reporter and editor for the Tribune from 2012 to 2019. Previously he worked for eight years at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, most of that time covering state and local politics....