The toll from last year's political standoff that shut down state government is still rising on Minnesota's highways.
The cost of settling the claims of contractors for road work that was suspended last summer has doubled in the last few months and will climb much higher.
Motorists, too, are about to pay a heavy price this summer from the added hassle of dealing with highway work left over from 2011 to new construction scheduled for this year.
Cleaning up the unprecedented mess has occupied much of the time for dozens of engineers and others at the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT), who have been working on settling contractor claims involving 77 projects.
They've paid out over $4 million, with other claims still pending.
"The big ones haven't been settled," said Mike Leegard, who is overseeing the chore for MnDOT. Six of the biggest projects have claims totaling more than $5 million and their tallies will climb as additional costs become known.
The projects include the reconstruction of the Lafayette Bridge, repaving I-94 between St. Paul and Minneapolis, the Hwy. 169/Interstate 494 interchange and overhauling Interstate 35 in Duluth.
The cost of settling all remaining claims is on track to far exceed the $5 million the state saved during the three-week government shutdown that took place last summer when Republicans and Gov. Mark Dayton couldn't agree on a budget.