HCS HJR 7 -- POWERS AND DUTIES OF THE TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION (Koller) This proposed constitutional amendment establishes a Secretary of Transportation, who will be in charge of the Department of Transportation. The secretary will be appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. The Highways and Transportation Commission will become the Transportation Commission. The commission membership consists of one member appointed by the Governor from each of the state's congressional districts. Commissioners will be appointed to 6-year terms with no more than a majority of one of the members from the same political party. The following people will serve as nonvoting ex officio members of the commission: Commissioner of the Office of Administration; Director of the Department of Economic Development; Director of the Department of Agriculture; and Director of the Department of Natural Resources. The secretary must annually submit to the commission a statewide transportation improvement plan. The program will stand as approved by the commission unless rejected by a vote of at least two-thirds of the commission members. The amendment also eliminates the cost of fuel tax collections and the cost of administering and enforcing state motor vehicle and traffic laws from the list of eligible uses of transportation funds. The cost of Department of Transportation employee fringe benefit programs may be paid from transportation funds. The Transportation Commission is given the authority to conduct feasibility studies about toll facilities and to fund, design, acquire, construct, maintain, reconstruct, and operate toll facilities. The amendment establishes the procedure and limitations for the issuance, collection, and distribution of toll facility revenue bonds or revenue refunding bonds for toll facilities. When toll facilities have been paid for, all bonds retired, and all transfers from the State Road Fund repaid with interest, the facilities will become a part of the state highway system. State toll facility revenue bond and refunding bond proceeds, tolls, and other revenues derived from the establishment or operation of toll facilities will not be considered part of total state revenue, and the expenditure of the revenues will not be considered an expense of state government. FISCAL NOTE: Estimated Net Savings to Highway and Transportation Department Fund of $0 in FY 2002, $92,741,400 in FY 2003, and $158,985,300 in FY 2004. Estimated Net Cost to General Revenue Fund of $0 in FY 2002, $92,925,000 in FY 2003, and $159,000,000 in FY 2004.Copyright (c) Missouri House of Representatives