Sunday, August 19, 2018

Zoo Interchange's costs go up due to Walker/WisGOP delays

This article kind of flew under the radar last week, but new reports show the North End of the Milwaukee area's Zoo Interchange is going to cost $30 million more.
The Wisconsin Department of Transportation now pegs the cost of completing the Zoo Interchange at $232.6 million, which is up from an estimate of $202.2 million issued in 2017. Critics had warned that a delay could drive up the project’s costs when Republicans were busy adopting a provision barring work on the north leg of the Zoo Interchange during the 2017-2019 biennium.

Michael Pyritz, WisDOT spokesman, said in an email that the higher estimates are the result of inflation and design-cost predictions. He noted that the project is now scheduled to be let in 2021, rather than 2018. He cautioned, however, that the project’s final cost won’t be known until the state receives bids for the work.

“Until the bids are received it is premature to make a statement saying it is higher or lower than estimated,” he wrote.

Most of WisDOT’s increased estimate for the Zoo Interchange is the result of $21.6 million worth of contingency costs. Without those, the agency estimates that the project would cost $211 million, $7.7 million of which would result from expected inflation and $3.1 million from design costs. Pyritz declined to provide details about the cost estimate, saying that such information could influence bid results. He said the latest estimate takes into account seven components of the Zoo Interchange’s north leg.


This is a direct effect of the Walker Administration and WisGOP Legislature refusing to raise enough revenue to finish the Zoo project and other road work in the state. And this decision isn't just extending the time it takes to pay for these projects, but it’ll cost us $30 million more along the way.

As these costs of doing future Wisconsin road projects go up, the money we have available to pay for it continues to stagnate. And WisGOP's costs of inaction continue to hurt our state, and our economic competitiveness.

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