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Don’t Privatize Interstate Rest Areas

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Like many states recovering from the Great Recession, New Jersey is being forced to make the tough decisions about how to balance its budget. But one idea we hope the state ignores is the privatization of its interstate rest areas.

New Jersey state lawmakers are recommending the state be allowed to add commercial services like food and fuel to Interstate rest areas, a practice currently illegal under Federal Law.

While this may sound like a convenient way to generate revenue for the state, the hidden truth is it comes at the expense of small town businesses, jobs, local communities and truck parking.

Congress enacted the law prohibiting commercial services at rest areas when the interstate system was new to encourage commercial development along the Interstate and revitalize communities. Congress recognized that businesses at the exits would find it difficult to compete with government-run businesses at rest areas located along the Interstate right-of-way.

As a result of this foresight, today some 97,000 businesses thrive near the Interstate exits, employing more than 2.2 million Americans. New Jersey is home to 1,867 exit-based businesses, which employ more than 19,500 people and contribute more than $14 million in local property taxes, used to support schools and other public services.

But they undoubtedly will flounder if the state gains prime access to Interstate motorists. 

What’s more, if New Jersey was truly concerned about improving highway safety and increasing truck parking, it would cease calls for commercial rest areas. 

Contrary to statements made by New Jersey Transportation Commission James Simpson in a recent letter to Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, commercial rest areas radically reduce the number of available truck parking spaces along the nation’s highways.

Studies show that truck parking is significantly greater on the stretches of the Interstate Highway where commercial rest areas are prohibited, because businesses designed to accommodate the trucking community can flourish.

In New Jersey, there are 3.5 times more truck parking spaces along the interstate routes where commercialized rest areas are prohibited.  Because of the rest area’s position on the interstate median or right of way, the ability to expand truck parking is severely limited.  Currently, more than 90 percent of overnight truck parking spaces in the United States are provided by travel plazas and truckstops. These truckstops compete for business from truck drivers by providing secure parking, showers and other services that are essential to keeping drivers rested and refreshed.

Government-run rest areas operate under a business model based on constant customer turnover, making it unlikely they would invest in catering to the needs of the nation’s professional truck drivers. 

The fact is, New Jersey already operates at an advantage that many other states don’t have.  Toll roads in New Jersey like the Turnpike and the Parkway were grandfathered into the current law and are allowed to operate commercial rest areas. The New Jersey Turnpike Authority earned $14.79 million in concession revenues for the first six months of 2010. It’s hard to understand why the state can’t utilize some of the revenue generated from those facilities to maintain other rest areas across the state.

 

ADOT and AASHTO Propose Siphoning Jobs and Customers From Small Town Business to Fix State Budget

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

 

In a recent video press release issued by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, the Arizona Department of Transportation proposes that states should compete with small-town businesses, siphoning jobs and customers to fix state budget shortfalls, by establishing commercial rest areas along the Interstate right-of-way.

 

Congress outlawed commercial activities at interstate rest areas to foster competition and the growth of local communities near the Interstate Highway System. Today, this policy continues to promote a vigorous competitive environment. In Arizona alone, nearly 1,200 businesses are located within a quarter mile of an interstate highway, employing more than 31,000 people.  Nationally, 97,000 businesses, including truckstops, gas stations, convenience stores and restaurants, thrive along the Interstate Highway System, employing 2.2 million Americans.

 

ADOT’s plan to overturn this law and allow commercial rest areas would drain local businesses of customers, jobs and local tax revenues by putting established businesses in direct competition with the state. At the same time, it would give the state an unfair competitive advantage by granting the state direct access to highway motorists.

 

Arizona’s plan represents a deliberate attempt to set up businesses on the Interstate right-of-way with full awareness that there are no new dollars or new traffic on the Interstate Highway System.

 

State budgets nationwide are stressed because of the economic downturn. But addressing those budget problems by adopting measures harmful to small town businesses and local communities is counterproductive and stands to create more problems in the long-term than they solve.

 

State financial budget problems are not a burden that should be handed to local business owners and local communities. Now is not the time to threaten businesses that will suffer in the form of lost jobs and property taxes used to support schools, police, fire and other public services.

 

Despite claims that commercial rest areas represent a positive public-private partnership, the reality is they represent state-controlled monopolies on travelers’ food, beverage, retail and fuel purchases because they alone will enjoy the best, easiest-to-access locations. Well-established local businesses that rely on motorists exiting the interstates will no longer be able to compete.

 

What’s more, while nearby businesses are left to flounder, consumers will pay hidden taxes in the form of higher costs for goods and services at commercialized rest areas as the large multi-national corporations contracted to run them seek to recoup investments and turn a profit for shareholders and the state.

 

 

Coalition Warns Arizona Governor of Dangers of Rest Area Commercialization

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Adding commercial services to state-run rest areas threatens Arizona jobs and will cripple critical public services like schools, fire and police departments, the Partnership to Save Highway Communities warned Arizona Gov. Janice Brewer.

Responding to Arizona’s call to “reform” highway rest areas, the Coalition of highway-based businesses warned Gov. Brewer that adding fuel, food and other retail services to the Interstate right-of-way will radically alter the competitive landscape, devastating nearby businesses and communities by granting the state direct access to highway motorists.

“As a coalition of business owners who rely upon interstate highway traffic, we strongly oppose rest area commercialization, as it would enable state governments and their hand-picked vendors to unfairly compete with private businesses located at interstate highway exits” the coalition said in a letter to Gov. Brewer  June 10.  “At a time when our economy is slowly emerging from the depths of a crippling recession, permitting such unfair competition will endanger any economic recovery and will result in a loss of thousands of jobs in Arizona …seeking the opportunity to engage in direct competition with private businesses is not solution to these [budgetary] problems. ”

The Coalition to Save Highway Communities encouraged Gov. Brewer to seek alternative solutions to solving any budgetary crisis caused by the recession, including innovative ideas that allow the state to partner with businesses to help meet the safety needs of the traveling public without threatening the livelihood of thousands of people.

“In these challenging times, we hope that you will seek to work with our coalition to develop long-term approaches to ensuring the safety of the traveling public and the economic viability of our businesses.  Such solutions will benefit everyone and will lead to future growth for Arizona’s economy,” the letter concludes.

Click here to read the letter

Industry Experts Debate Commercial Rest Areas

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Over the last year, states such as Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Maine and Vermont have shuttered their state-run highway rest areas to help close budget deficits. Virginia closed 19 rest stops in 2009 under then-Gov. Tim Kaine (D) but has reopened them since Gov. Bob McDonnell (R) took office in January.

Kaine also worked with the state’s congressional delegation in a failed attempt to allow Virginia to commercialize its rest stops. The current surface transportation law bans interstate rest areas built after 1960 from offering commercial services like food and fuel. In February, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) wrote to Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood urging that the commercialization ban be dropped. Other states, including Georgia and New Jersey, have also been pushing the idea recently.

States argue that commercializing rest stops would allow them to raise revenues while keeping open rest areas that drivers and long-haul truckers depend on. Communities and businesses located off the interstate that serve highway motorists respond that food and fuel operations at rest stops constitute unfair competition and would cause them significant economic losses.

As part of the upcoming surface transportation reauthorization, should the law be amended to allow states to offer commercial services at highway rest areas? Which approach — current law or commercialization — best serves highway users?

State-Enabled Monopolies

By Lisa Mullings

President and CEO, NATSO

If the government is allowed to compete unfairly with private-sector businesses, shutting down existing businesses and putting people out of work, there should be a compelling reason. Rest area costs don’t provide such a reason.

Imagine this scenario: A governor inks a deal with a multinational corporation, granting an exclusive right that will close small businesses and send thousands of pink slips to state citizens.

It sounds like something that would never happen, yet that’s exactly what expanding rest area commercialization would do. You don’t have to take my word for it, though. If you examine those states with commercialized rest areas, you could not help but notice what a harsh environment they create for any potential competition. In those counties with commercialized rest areas, there are half as many travel centers, truckstops, convenience stores and restaurants (according to a University of Maryland study).

Rest area commercialization has attracted the buzzword “privatization,” suggesting that it is good for business. Nothing could be further from the truth. Ask a small business owner if he wants to bid on a state lease at a rest area. First, that business owner most likely has invested everything in his restaurant or travel plaza, so it would be impossible for him to abandon such an investment for a leased property. Second, it is naïve to expect that a small business would win the bid. The only entities to hold commercialized rest area leases are multinational companies, such as HMS Host, who control all of a state’s rest areas.

If the government is allowed to compete unfairly with private-sector businesses, shutting down existing businesses and putting people out of work, there should be a compelling reason. Rest area costs don’t provide such a reason. Rest area maintenance costs a fraction of a percent of a state’s transportation budgets. For example, the annual cost of maintaining those rest areas closed by Virginia (later reopened) costs the same as paving a half-mile of roadway.

Rest areas selling food, fuel and other services shut down competition because they are state-enabled monopolies on the shoulder of the road. Interstate travelers will pay a surcharge, with fewer choices, higher prices and less parking. Thousands of state citizens will be in danger of losing their jobs. Businesses that must close will deprive local governments of tax revenue that is critical to funding a community’s schools, police and fire protection.

It is easy to understand the panic many state officials are feeling because of the effects of the recession. Reversing sound public policy by expanding rest area commercialization is no solution.

But road safety is of vital concern

By Gabriel Roth

Research Fellow, The Independent Institute

Because tired drivers can cause fatal accidents, the federal government has a compelling — indeed a vital — interest in ensuring the availability of convenient rest areas on inter-state highways. So a federal ban on selling fuel and food at rest stops seems to make no sense.

New or improved roads can make some locations more (or less) profitable for business, and such changes are part and parcel of any dynamic economy. Should not road owners — even when the owners are states — have the right to enhance their facilities?

Whether commercialized rest areas can constitute “unfair competition” would seem to depend on the circumstances. They certainly need not be subsidized, nor be “state-enabled monopolies”, except in the sense that every facility is a monopoly in its own location. Commerce, which should be encouraged by the federal government, is in some respects still regulated by the states concerned.

Should not legal facilities that improve road safety merit government encouragement rather than government bans?

A Rest Stop on the Road to the Future

By Geoffrey S. Yarema

Member of the National Surface Transportation Infrastructure Financing Commission, Nossaman Infrastructure Practice Group Chair, Nossaman LLP

This is no longer a question of who gets to sell fast food to weary travelers. The question is: how will we maintain our interstates to serve motorists’ changing needs when funding shortfalls and liability concerns are causing states to close existing rest areas in unprecedented numbers?

The upcoming reauthorization will present an excellent opportunity for Congress to rethink its outdated blanket prohibition on the commercialization of state-owned safety rest stops. This is no longer simply a question of who gets to sell fast food to weary travelers. The question is: how will we maintain our interstates to truly serve motorists’ changing needs at a time when increasing funding shortfalls and skyrocketing liability concerns are causing states to close existing rest areas in unprecedented numbers? A more nuanced balancing of interests seems overdue.

As just one example of how these rest stops might be valuably utilized without impinging on off-right of way private sector services, the Pacific Coast states (California, Oregon, and Washington) are trying to ensure the availability of alternative fuels along the I-5 corridor from British Columbia to Baja California, one of USDOT-designated critical “corridors of the future”. A backbone like this would serve to jumpstart the development of a wider distribution network essential to spur a wider acceptance of alternative fuels vehicles in passenger and freight fleets and consequently substnatially reduce emissions. Private fuel distribution networks will be less likely to make this investment in advance of a large customer base demanding the service.

There are other examples of how the use of rest areas within the interstate system should be allowed, while at the same time protecting the many excellent and important businesses off-right of way currently serving the traveling public. It is increasingly clear that a black and white policy, based upon 1950’s definitions of commercial activity, no longer reflects an optimal transportation policy combination of technology. In key areas policy appears to be unnecessarily protecting businesses at the expense of innovative and integrated ideas for the future of our transportation infrastructure.

False Choices

By Lisa Mullings

President and CEO, NATSO

Do you oppose commercial activity at rest areas, or do you support roadway safety? This is the false choice posed by Mr. Roth.

Drivers have access to fewer spaces on commercialized Interstates, not more. This is undeniable fact, not baseless conjecture. There are 33 percent fewer spaces, mile for mile, on commercialized Interstates. So if you agree that the federal government should support pro-safety initiatives, and you believe parking will further that worthy goal, then commercializing rest areas might be the last thing you’d want to do. (Furthermore, if we want to encourage rest area parking from a public policy perspective, perhaps states should keep them open regardless of whether they turn a profit.)

I must admit I am confused about Mr. Roth’s second argument, that “new or improved roads can make some locations more (or less) profitable.” Highway investments put people to work, reduce congestion and support America’s competitive standing in the world economy. Unquestionably, these are all worthy public policy goals that benefit American businesses and its citizens collectively. On the other hand, rest area commercialization benefits one state-enabled monopoly at the expense of many.

As for Mr. Roth’s final point that the government should encourage commerce, I wholeheartedly agree. Unfortunately, rest area commercialization has the opposite effect, which is why so many businesses oppose it.

No false choices

By Gabriel Roth

Research Fellow, The Independent Institute

I offered no “false choice”. I support both road safety and the commercialization of rest areas.

Lisa Mullings is sure to know more than I do about rest areas, but even her eloquence has not convinced me that a federal ban on commercial activities in rest areas is in the public interest.

Ms. Mullings asks why “new or improved roads can make some locations less profitable.” Here is an example: A new by-pass can attract traffic from other routes and thus make locations on the old routes less commercially attractive.

Let’s Right the Distortions

By Lisa Mullings

President and CEO, NATSO

The mistruths and tactics used to discredit the federal law on commercialization distract us from the real issues. Let’s right some of the distortions.

Mr. Yarema, whose firm has represented clients seeking to privatize public assets, dismisses federal commercialization policy. He implies that it is some anachronism that’s gone unnoticed for 50 years until someone dusted off the statute books. Yes, it was drafted and originally passed in 1956 — but Congress has revisited and reaffirmed this policy on many occasions, most recently last year. The law continues to survive because it encourages the growth of businesses, jobs and communities all across the nation.

This law protects competition, not individual competitors. Unlike the few companies with an exclusive right to sell in rest areas, my members do not want any elite protection. They simply want to continue competing with other businesses on the basis of offerings, service and price.

Commercialized rest areas, which have existed before the Interstate system in a dozen or so states, were considered and rejected by the visionaries who created the Interstate Highway System. Reversing this law in favor of a model discarded by Congress in the 1950s hardly offers an innovative, bold vision for the future that our nation’s infrastructure challenges demand.

Renewed efforts to commercialize rest areas involve aligning the issue with environmentalism. However, rest area commercialization might slow business investment in alternative fuels infrastructure, but in no case would it encourage it.Mr. Yarema says California and others want to commercialize to lead the way for businesses to sell alternative fuel. Private businesses are loathe to make the needed investments, he says, because there are few customers who want this fuel. If so, isn’t it logical to say that demand will take far longer to reach a critical mass for the private sector if states siphon it off?

Posing the reversal of this law as a means of promoting cleaner vehicles only deflects the real issues. Don’t want to see your state get into the travel plaza business? What, don’t you care about the environment and cutting pollution?” It’s a sustainable red herring. The fact is, officials in California have a long history of attempts to commercialize rest areas using various tactics.

In fact, an application submitted to the U.S. Department of Transportation (with assistance from Mr. Yarema’s firm) in the final months of the Bush administration sought an exemption to federal law for this West Coast project. Far from a “balanced approach,” this request was made with no public discussion or even public notice. Our requests to review the submission were denied until we submitted a Freedom of Information Act request.

Privatization is more often a land-grab than the best way of delivering public services. As we’ve seen with the opening of privatized toll roads, the process often provides a license to overcharge Interstate travelers without the motivation to provide a level of service to justify the arbitrary price. The power of a state monopoly allows short-sighted profit plays that distort the natural dynamics of supply and demand.

Rest Area “Expert” Misses Big Picture

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

Dr. Ronald Utt, Senior Research Fellow with the Heritage Foundation, continues to hold himself up as an expert on the subject of rest area commercialization despite that he repeatedly illustrates just how little he knows about the subject. In several newspaper articles and internet blogs, Dr. Utt repeatedly called the law preventing commercial rest areas “stupid” and has openly suggested that state governors ignore Federal law.

Dr. Utt’s misinformed viewpoints about why states should rent their highway parcels and provide commercial services as a means of generating state revenue have been published by newspapers and other media outlets nationwide. And virtually all of them have been uncontested.

The most recent offender was the website examiner.com.

In an April 11 article titled “Heritage Foundation’s Ronald Utt Discusses Commercialization of Highway Rest Areas,” Utt shockingly declares that most of the businesses the Federal ban on commercialized rest areas was designed to protect are no longer in operation.

The fact of the matter is, the law has encouraged highway competition, not restricted it. Some 60,000 businesses operate off the nation’s Interstate Highway exits today because of this Federal law. In areas permitted to offer such services, half as many businesses operate near Interstate highways.

Read the fine print and you’ll understand Dr. Utt is really suggesting that hard-working Americans who invested millions to operate businesses near the Interstate — and who depend on motorists exiting the Interstate – should simply hand them over to the state. Such a move defies all economic logic.

That’s exactly what would happen if the government created rest area monopolies. Small town businesses would be destroyed. Local communities would lose jobs as well as the tax revenues that support schools, fire departments, police protection and a host of other community services.

Dr. Utt should know that national corporations historically win the government contracts to run commercialized rest areas. If Dr. Utt’s proposed ideas take hold, big corporations will win at the expense of scores of locally-owned businesses, pulling the rug out from small towns across America.

We hope the next time a story is run on commercializing rest areas, reporters will take a look at both sides of the story, and not rely solely on the opinions of a so-called “expert.”

Georgia’s Rest Area Sledgehammer

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

The Georgia state government is proposing to take a sledgehammer to business and jobs at a time when its bankruptcy and unemployment rates are among the Nation’s highest.

The Georgia Department of Transportation this week said it aims to bolster state budgets by renting some of its right-of-way parcels and adding gas stations and restaurants to its highway rest areas – a practice currently banned under Federal law.

If Georgia succeeds, this ill-conceived idea will devastate local businesses whose survival depends on motorists exiting the Interstate.

Government-run rest areas offering food and fuel and other retail services will alter the competitive landscape. The Government gets the advantage by owning prime real estate directly along the Interstate — locations most easily accessed by motorists.

A University of Maryland study confirms this. The state kills the local businesses due to its competitive advantage of being located on the right-of-way as opposed to the exit.  The study found that state-run commercialized rest areas resulted in 50 percent fewer businesses along those corridors.

Allowing Georgia to overturn this ban is a sure-fire way to make a weak economy worse. Georgia already boasts the third-highest business bankruptcy rate in the nation and double-digit unemployment figures. It can ill-afford to further depress its local economies.

The Federal Government barred states from operating retail services in rest areas more than five decades ago precisely to spur local business development. Today, more than 60,000 businesses operate along the interstate system.

Lifting the ban is a short-sighted solution to the short-term hurdle of a down economy.

Commercialization Threats Emerge Across the Country

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

With state governments still struggling to balance their budgets, several state lawmakers have eyed rest areas as a potential revenue stream.  In at least four states, legislators have introduced bills examining the possibility of commercializing rest areas, signaling a heightened interest in this issue.  Let’s hope these lawmakers consider the impact of such a policy on local communities and businesses, which would suffer tremendously if commercialization were allowed.

So far in 2010, commercialization bills have been introduced in:

  • Virginia – a state which attracted widespread criticism in 2009 for shutting down 23 rest areas. State representative David Nutter introduced legislation (HJ 126) that, if approved, would study the feasibility of rest area commercialization.
  • Mississippi - similar legislation has been introduced by state Representative John Mayo (HB 374), calling on Mississippi to investigate the prospects of commercialization.
  • Washington - five state senators introduced a bill (SB 6465) allowing full-scale commercialization of rest areas if approved by the federal government.
  • Georgia – six state senators introduced legislation (SR 822) urging the Georgia Department of Transportation to seek a waiver from the Federal Highway Administration allowing retail developments at Interstate highway rest areas. The Chair of the Georgia State Transportation Committee has even said he supports a “yard sale” for the state, selling off any land possible.

We recognize that these are tough economic times. But the ban on commercialized rest areas has been good public policy for over 50 years, fostering intense competition among businesses for the services of interstate motorists. Changing this policy now would serve as an act of desperation to combat the short-term challenges of a down economy.

Arizona Closes Rest Areas, But Resists Calls for Commercialization

Friday, October 16th, 2009

The Arizona Department of Transportation (ADOT) last week announced it was closing 13 of the state’s 18 rest areas, citing budget difficulties. ADOT officials called the closures temporary, and said they will look into reopening the facilities next summer when the state’s new fiscal year starts.

On the surface, ADOT’s decision to close rest areas to meet budgetary shortfalls resembles Virginia’s decision to close 19 rest areas in the state earlier this summer. But unlike Virginia, Arizona has resisted the urge to call for an end to the prohibition of commercial activity at rest areas to solve this problem. Virginia used its budget woes as a political maneuver to push for a repeal of the commercialization ban, opening up rest areas to unfair competition against private businesses.

Arizona is taking a more prudent approach. So far, the state appears to be working toward local business partnerships to meet motorists’ needs.

Using the model known as the Interstate Oasis program allows state departments of transportation to work with existing businesses to ensure that motorists have a safe and convenient place to rest while on the highway. A successful implementation of this program will benefit local businesses while allowing the state to direct funds for more critical projects. It’s a winning solution for the state, its taxpayers and Arizona businesses.

This editorial in Arizona’s East Valley Tribune makes an effective case for an Interstate Oasis-style approach for handling the rest area closures. We hope the state will follow through on this concept.

LA Times Discusses Commercialization Issue

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

The Los Angeles Times ran this story yesterday regarding the issue of rest area commercialization and its potential impacts on highway-based communities and the motorists they serve. The story presents arguments both for and against commercialization, but ultimately frames the issue by suggesting that commercialization is the only option for keeping rest areas open.

As we have discussed before, even in these difficult economic times, commercialization isn’t the only way to preserve rest areas. Texas for example, is planning to spend $30 million to upgrade their rest areas to make them more attractive to motorists. Texas offers free Wi-Fi hotspots and kiosks that enable local businesses to advertise their services – a win-win for both the state and local communities.

In Virginia, the current epicenter of debate regarding rest areas and commercialization, lawmakers have tried on several occasions to keep the rest areas open, but Virginia Department of Transportation Officials have repeatedly closed the door on any attempts to save them.

The role of highway rest areas in state’s transportation strategy should focus solely on a state’s commitment to the safety of travelers in the state. In the case of Virginia, the commonwealth decided that the 18 closed rest areas were not worth the $9 million it would allegedly cost to keep them open.

The prospects of commercial rest areas are not an either/or proposition. There are plenty of ways to operate these facilities without seeking to unfairly compete with existing businesses that have invested heavily to meet the needs of highway motorists.

Calls for Commercialization in Georgia Should Go Unanswered

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Recently, the Georgia Department of Transportation announced plans to close two rest areas along I-85. The rest areas are the oldest and most expensive to maintain, according to Georgia officials. What’s more, they said, criminal activity is rising at these locations and private development now provides the services once offered at them.

To its credit, Georgia has resisted the urge to turn these closures into a political statement by proposing to commercialize the facilities, unlike the Commonwealth of Virginia.

While Georgia’s public officials have avoided making this a political issue, the same can’t be said of the Georgian press, who are using the closures as a platform to call for an end to the ban on rest area commercialization.

A recent editorial in the Athens Banner-Herald calls for rest area commercialization as a government money maker, despite recognizing that existing businesses would suffer tremendously as a result. What’s more, the editorial suggests two impractical policies to mitigate the damages. The July 30 article proposes that the state offer businesses near the rest areas the opportunity to relocate while also limiting commercial development along the Interstate.

Neither of these are realistic solutions to the state’s budget crisis. In fact, they only serve to hurt the local business community and the motoring public.

The editorial’s premise supposes that it’s easy for a business owner to walk away from a long-term lease or mortgage, while at the same time raising the necessary funds for a new venture. In reality, such a proposal would significantly increase costs for a business owner who already has paid a premium – in many cases millions of dollars — for a location close to an Interstate exit. The costs to leave that establishment will be even higher.

Furthermore, limiting commercial development on the Interstate would grant a virtual monopoly to those who win the lucrative state contracts. Such deals shut out all other investors. This game of winners and losers for control of the right of way will only lessen motorists’ choices.

The best solution is to keep all businesses off the Interstate and let the state focus on constructing, maintaining and operating the highway system. Thousands of businesses nationwide already are available to help meet the commercial needs of highway motorists.