Better pavement on state highways, safer bridges and advanced traffic signals to ease congestion are some of the projects in Hawaii that could get a boost thanks to the $1.2 trillion bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act that passed last fall.
Hawaii is expected to receive about $2.5 billion from that act spread out over the next five years. The largest share, about $1.2 billion, will go to improvements on state highways.
Much of that highway money will go toward funding a long list of improvement projects that already have been approved by the federal government and the state Department of Transportation Highways Division.
The DOT already has set aside $67 million in infrastructure act funds to help pay for ongoing roadwork, analysis of bridge repairs, new traffic signals and crash analysis systems.
“We didn’t take this as a boon to change directions,” Sniffen said. “We made sure to focus on projects already in the program, already being worked on.”
Some of those projects include repaving sections of the H-1 and other Oahu highways with material that could last almost three times as long as normal asphalt, according to Sniffen.
Also on the list are safety upgrades including new rumble strips and a high friction surface treatment at various locations on Oahu to prevent severe car crashes. The DOT project list indicates those could be installed on highway ramps selected on the basis of crash statistics and along parts of the Likelike Highway.
The DOT is also putting about $245,000 in IIJA funds toward a new crash analysis system that could collect real-time data from police departments.
Improved traffic signals on Oahu that could react to changes in traffic patterns to help reduce congestion could also receive $3 million in IIJA funds.
The $67 million set aside for ongoing highway projects comes from a disbursement of $224 million from the IIJA. The DOT needs to come up with a plan to spend the rest of those funds by the end of September.
Deadlines on when exactly the states need to actually spend all their infrastructure act dollars varies by program. Disbursements for highway funds will be made in October of each year to coincide with the start of the new federal fiscal year, according to the White House.
In 2021, before the IIJA went into effect, the state received $185 million in federal highway funds.
“It’s a great step up, but it’s not life changing,” Sniffen said of the increased funds. “We will soak up those funds into needs immediately.”
Reports in years past have put the cost of fixing Hawaii’s infrastructure and retirement systems at upwards of $88 billion. The DOT has estimated that the cost of protecting seaside highways from coastal erosion could put the state back $15 billion.
The state also is expected to get $67 million this year for bridge repairs in the islands, which is separate from those highway funds. Sniffen said those would likely be spent on fixing the Kolekole, Nanue, Hakalua and Wailuku Bridges along with the four bridges along the Big Island’s Hamakua coast.
Here’s a look at how the DOT spent its infrastructure act dollars so far.
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Blaze Lovell is spending a year as a local investigations fellow with The New York Times. He was previously a reporter for Civil Beat. Born and raised on Oahu, Lovell is a graduate of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. You can reach him at blaze.lovell@nytimes.com.