© 2024 St. Louis Public Radio
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

I-70 widening moves forward in House, Senate wants to expand it to include the whole road

Lawmakers walk up the steps of the Missouri State Capitol on Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2023, in Jefferson City.
Brian Munoz
/
St. Louis Public Radio
The Missouri House and Senate differ on how much money they want to allocate toward widening Interstate 70. While Missouri House members gave initial approval to nearly $860 million on Tuesday, the Senate Appropriations chair wants to spend almost $2.8 billion.

The Missouri House gave first-round approval Tuesday to an $860 million plan to widen parts of Interstate 70 while a Senate proposal would spend nearly $3 billion to expand the entire road.

Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Lincoln Hough presented the much larger road improvement plan Tuesday.

“The intent is to put $1.4 billion in an I-70 construction fund, and then bond the other half of the cost of this project at the maximum 15 years, with an annual payment roughly of $132/135 million a year,” Hough said.

Hough also hopes that while that work is happening on I-70, there can also be an environmental study on improvements to Interstate 44.

House Budget Chair Cody Smith, R-Carthage, initially removed I-70 funding from the operating budget weeks ago but said he intended to add it back through a different bill.

Speaking on the legislation on Tuesday, Smith said not only does the bill contain Gov. Mike Parson’s recommendation to expand I-70 in St. Louis, Columbia and Kansas City, it also uses the state’s general revenue for other road improvements in the state.

“We're doing a lot of good things here with this bill, Mr. Speaker, investing heavily into our infrastructure and getting local participation in many cases,” Smith said.

While the House bills need another vote before they make their way to the Senate, the I-70 improvement plan could immediately face a snag in that it’ll already have been appropriated in a different budget bill.

Construction workers in 2022 haul limestone quarried from the river bluff to the construction site of a new Interstate 70 Missouri River bridge connecting Boone and Cooper counties.
Don Shrubshell
/
Columbia Daily Tribune
Construction workers in 2022 haul limestone quarried from the river bluff to the construction site of a new Interstate 70 Missouri River bridge connecting Boone and Cooper counties.

The expanded I-70 plan marks just one of the major changes made so far to the House-approved budget by the Senate committee.

Additionally, the Senate committee also restored funding requested for pre-kindergarten programs. That amounts to almost $82 million, with $55.8 million of that going toward expanded pre-K.

The House had previously removed that item and instead left money within the foundation formula for pre-K, if the legislature decided to pass the program separately from the budget.

The Senate Appropriations Committee, which is scheduled to meet again Wednesday, has not gotten to the bill that contains state funding for public libraries, nor has it addressed the added language blocking state spending from going toward anything associated with diversity, equity and inclusion.

Hough has previously said he intends to restore the library funding and remove the DEI language.

Sarah Kellogg is a Missouri Statehouse and Politics Reporter for St. Louis Public Radio and other public radio stations across the state.