More than 2,200 miles of state roads and 330 bridges would be repaired, replaced or expanded over the next decade in a controversial transportation funding plan Gov. Mark Dayton proposed Tuesday.
The $6 billion, 10-year overhaul of the state's basic transportation infrastructure includes more than 600 projects across the state — from Aitkin to Yellow Medicine counties — paid for in part by an increase in license tab fees and an additional gas tax that would have drivers paying an extra 16 cents a gallon at current prices.
"Doing nothing or next to nothing is not an option," Dayton said at a news conference.
Top Republicans quickly cried foul, saying the release of such a hefty list of transportation fixes smacked of political earmarking.
Seventy-two percent of the projects pitched by Dayton are located in outstate Minnesota, while the rest would be in the seven-county metro area.
Charles Zelle, commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Transportation, said roughly half of Minnesota's roads are now more than 50 years old, and 40 percent of the states' bridges are over 40 years old. In the next three years, one in five Minnesota roads will surpass their useful life, he noted.
"We've been called upon to be efficient and prudent, and these projects are just that," he said. "The abundance of these projects are in greater Minnesota."
One of the biggest projects involves reconstructing Interstate 94 between Minneapolis and St. Paul, a massive overhaul that would involve widening the bridge over the Mississippi River and perhaps adding a MnPass lane. Other big items include widening Hwy. 14 in Mankato to four lanes and modernizing six bridges; solving the bottleneck at Interstates 35W and 494; and widening I-94 between St. Michael and Albertville.