Connecticut 2023 2023 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00904 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 04/05/2023

                    OFFICE OF FISCAL ANALYSIS 
Legislative Office Building, Room 5200 
Hartford, CT 06106  (860) 240-0200 
http://www.cga.ct.gov/ofa 
sSB-904 
AN ACT CONCERNING THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE 
OFFICE OF THE STATE TRAFFIC ADMINISTRATION AND THE 
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, THE DISSOLUTION OF 
THE NORWALK TRANSIT DISTRICT AND ROUTE SHIELD 
PAVEMENT MARKINGS.  
 
Primary Analyst: PM 	4/4/23 
Contributing Analyst(s): DD, LG, EMG   
Reviewer: MM 
 
 
 
OFA Fiscal Note  
 
State Impact: 
Agency Affected Fund-Effect FY 24 $ FY 25 $ 
Department of Transportation TF - Cost 1.55 million 3 million 
Treasurer, Debt Serv. GF&TF - Savings Potential Potential 
Note: GF&TF=General Fund & Transportation Fund 
  
Municipal Impact: 
Municipalities Effect FY 24 $ FY 25 $ 
Norwalk; Westport; Wilton Savings 620,000 1.28 million 
Various Municipalities Revenue 
Loss/ Gain 
Potential Potential 
Various Municipalities Cost Potential Potential 
  
Explanation 
Section 1 could result in a decreased or slower use of previously-
authorized bond funds for various bond-funded competitive grants 
programs administered by DOT or OPM. Future debt service costs may 
be incurred later or to a lesser extent under the section to the degree that 
it causes authorized bond funds to not be expended or to be expended 
more slowly than they otherwise would have been. 
To the extent municipalities are ineligible for transportation-related 
competitive grants because of the provisions of the bill, the ineligible 
municipalities would potentially receive less revenue from the state  2023SB-00904-R000437-FN.DOCX 	Page 2 of 3 
 
 
than they otherwise would. If competitive awards are shifted from 
ineligible municipalities to eligible municipalities, the eligible 
municipalities would potentially receive more revenue from the state 
than they otherwise would.  
There may also be a potential cost to municipalities to remedy a 
violation of the Office of the State Traffic Administration orders or 
regulations. 
Section 6 requires the University of Connecticut's Connecticut 
Training and Technical Assistance Center to conduct mandatory 
training for traffic authorities. The center currently provides such 
training to municipalities at a cost of $100 per participant and this 
section results in a cost for traffic authorities to the extent that they are 
not currently participating in this program.  
Sections 8 and 9 add requirements for DOT regarding the 
Connecticut Public Transportation Council (currently the Connecticut 
Commuter Rail Council). Specifically, these sections require DOT to 
maintain records of requests received by the council, provide monthly 
on-time performance and ridership reports, and make quarterly 
presentations at council meetings. This is not expected to result in 
additional costs to DOT because the department already tracks the 
relevant data and regularly attends and presents at current Connecticut 
Commuter Rail Council meetings.  
Section 14 dissolves the Norwalk Transit District (NTD) on January 
1, 2024, and transfers all NTD funds, property, debt, and obligations to 
DOT, and requires DOT to continue to provide comparable transit 
services. Under current agreements, NTD is more than 90% subsidized 
by DOT, with the remaining subsidy primarily coming from local 
contributions. In FY 22, these contributions totaled $945,493 and 
included $629,414 from Norwalk, $308,952 from Westport, and $7,127 
from Wilton. This section is expected to result in a savings to those 
municipalities and a cost to DOT of a greater amount.  
Under current projections, the municipal contributions to NTD are  2023SB-00904-R000437-FN.DOCX 	Page 3 of 3 
 
 
anticipated to be $1.24 million in FY 24 and $1.28 million in FY 25, 
resulting in municipal savings under the bill of $620,000 in FY 24 (half-
year savings) and $1.28 million in FY 25. The cost to DOT is anticipated 
to be $1.35 million in FY 24 (half-year costs) and $2.8 million in FY 25. 
These amounts assume DOT provides the former local contributions 
and incurs additional costs associated with managing the services. 
These additional costs reflect conforming the services provided by NTD 
to DOT's existing state-owned services (i.e., CTtransit) which include, 
for example, higher driver wages and contractual management services 
over operations, as DOT does not have existing expertise in this area.  
Funding for capital projects is not expected to change as NTD's capital 
program is currently funded with a mix of federal and state dollars. 
Section 15 requires DOT to paint and maintain "route shield 
pavement markers" at the intersections of I-91/I-95 in New Haven and 
I-91/I-84 in Hartford. The cost for installing a single route shield is 
estimated at $10,000, inclusive of the materials, equipment, and labor 
associated with installation and related lane closures. These markings 
are expected to need replacement every two years. While the full cost of 
this section is unknown pending a determination by DOT on the 
number of locations (lanes) where route shields would be required, it is 
expected to be less than $200,000 annually. This assumes that DOT 
phases installation of route shield markings over a two-year period and 
these markings are replaced on a two-year cycle.   
The Out Years 
The annualized ongoing fiscal impact identified above would 
continue into the future subject to inflation, the number of route shield 
markings installed and replaced, and the terms of any bonds issued.