East Oregonian Round-Up Souvenir Edition Pendleton, Oregon, Thursday, September 20, 1917 Twenty-Eight Pages The Permanent Highway as An Investment to The State Page Six (By Dr. K I. Hpwm, IMstriot Engineer Ignited 8ate office Pnblic Koads and Rural KntClneerinR. It In of considerable assistance In eur study of a problnm to approach It from a new direction. In ordinary affaJra the word "investment" Is well understood, and Is associated with a complementary term, "income." Your attention is invited at this point on the program to the meaning which must b iclven to the turm investment nm applied to public htKhway erpen d it urea. It will then be necessary to consider th question of highway in come and we shall try and arrive ut at aome agreement as to the relation of these two term. At first thought a wide difference appears between public expenditures for highways and the idea of invest ment. By an examination of the evo lution of h iff h way disbursements we are led to ask the questions: What has been the evolution of highway ex penditures? Are not modern high ways performing larger services than formerly? Are they not positive in struments of commercal and social de velopment? Do they not require fi nancing of a more intelligent and able type than ever before? Early in our history h Ik h ways were crude. They served as stage routes. Incomplete and abhorrent. When the railroad came it was a relief to aban don them to local service. For half a century the financing of highway construction and intermittent repair was a matter of local taxation, and Irksome as the device of statue labor indicates. The stagre of disintegration of the highways was the principal stimulus for action. There was almost no attempt to fix a highway stand ard and then to create a public fund for keeping to that standard. Hand to Mouth Finance. This method of hand-to-mouth fi nancing had by 1891 begun to reach the limit of public endurance. Pos sibly to the League of American Whee'men belongs the credit of first rousing the state of New Jersey to Improve road conditions. There were no first-class roads in this country at that time. County officials were con scious of the Inadequacy of the fi nances, but less willing to admit de fects in the organization. The state of New Jersey, however, wisely offered engineering advice and at the same time aid from the state treasury. The important point for this discussion is the fact thafc then for the first time city taxes were made available for countv highways. But this was not all. The New Jersey plan carried with it the inducement to builr roads that were not merelv casual attempts to move mud and fill chuck holes, but real engineering structures. Massachusetts immediately adopt ed a similar plan, and insured the construction of roads to a uniform standard by increasing the control of the state over state-financed high ways. The lesson was soon apparent. By concentrating funds, by the adoption of sound methods of construction, and by the employment of skilled highway engineers good roads could be had. And every, mile of good road built in a community which had up to then been lacking adequate roads created an insistent demand for more miles. In 1S94 Massachusetts issued $300,000 three-and -one-half -per-cent. twenty-six-year sinking-fund bonds for high wuys. This was a distinctly new step in road financing, and may be said to mark the beginning of an ephoc. since that time through the state highway departments of fourty-four states thr had been expended for highways a total of $265.350. S24 to January 1. 1916. More than fiO.402 miles of road have resulted, of which approximate ly 40,000 miles are hard-surfaced. By the year 1900 several of our 3. 000 counties had issued highway bonds for county roads, and thus a second period of highway financing began. By January 1. 1914. 123J counties had issued highway bonds to ' n tnt.il amount rtt 1 2 S fi fi R 7. 0 7 3 We do not know the resulting mileage. These figures show that highway disbursements for twenty years have rapidly increased. But as yet no ac count has been taken of local expen ditures other than from bond issues. The first count of all annual highway expenditures including the local ex penuditures. was made in 1904 by the office of public roads, and showed a total of $80,000,000 for that year, one-fourth of which was the value of statute labor. The same count in 1909 showed a corresponding figure of $160,000,000. The last count was taken for 1915, and the total annual expenditure was found to be approx imately $282,000,000. of which prob ably not over $15,000,000 was in stat ute labor. Two significant facts stand out from these figures: First, the great increase in highway expenditures; sec ond, the relative increase of state control. Roads received eighty million in 190 4 and two hundred and eighty two million in 1915. State controlled less than six per cent of the expendi tures in 1904. and more than thirty per cent in 1915. What is the limit of this increasing expenditure ? How much money ought a given community to expend for roads? There are certain checks on highway expenditures. First on alt is the valuation of taxable proper ty as an index of current public wealth. This limitation has no fixed value for any extended period. Valu ations in any given area almost al ways increase. State highway ap propriations have supplemented the :an local valuations by introducing a redistribution of the tax revenues. Public credit has been called upon in the form of state and municipal road bonds. The federal government has recently again supplemented both lo cal and state funds with funds from the I'nited States treasury totaling $85,000,000 for the next five years. There is. however, a second check ond at the same time a stimulus for highway expenditures, and that is the I service which the highways must per form. The Duty of Road. This service or duty of the roads has not received sufficient attention There have arisen in the past, broadly speaking, two divisions of highway enthusiasts, one called for strictly ra dial market roads, and the other for through highways. As usual, both schools are right in part, and a work able basis has been found by a judi cious compromise. The throuph rouds must begin at centers of population. When these radial sections are com pleted they may then be connected to form the through roads of greatest necessity. But a more precise measure of the duty of highways is desirnble. The term "market road." "trunk high way." "light traveled road," and "heavy traveled road" are relative terms, and often misleading. The true measure of the service performed by a highway is found only by actually counting the traffic. This taking of traffic census is becoming more and more frequent. It has been accom plished on a statewide basis in Massa chusetts on three occasions. Illinot has made a partial count on a state wide scale. New York took a second state wide census last fall. Traffic counts have also been made in Cali fornia and Maine. The results are very Instructive The general traffic is heavier than is supposed. No nu emricai guess of highway travel is ever reliable. The figures show that traffic Is immediately attracted to better roads, even at a sacrifice in distance. Perhaps the greatest lesson is the rapid increase on the same roads from year to year. Next is the 'ncreasing percentage of motor-driven vehicles and the relatively larger number of trucks. New York and Maine figures show r. surprising traf fic in foreign cars. Equally enlightening is economic saving which good roads permit. It is commonly accepted that it costs between twenty and thirty cents o haul a ton one mile on an average unimproved earth road. On hard snrfaced modern state highways the enst is seldom above fifteen cents. Your attention is invited then to th saving in commercial hauling on a road that carries 100 to 10no tons daily. Is not such a road earning a daily invisible income of $10 or $100 respectively ? Motor vehicles occupy a most in teresting and important place in modern highway traffic. In 100 there were practically no automobiles: today there are over three million ma chines. They paid license fees to the states in 1901 amounting to $954; year before last the revenue from li censes, etc., was $1 $.24 5.7 13 und near ly all this money was applied to the construction and maintenance of public roads. Over seventy per cent of it was under the control and super vision of stoat e highway departments. Briefly then recent highway expen ditures have ceased to be strictly lo cal in character, have enormously in creased, have tended to become more and more controlled by the state, have by virtue of the increase and state control enabled the construc tion of more than twice the mileage of the famous national roads of France, have secured nearly seven per cent of their funds in 19 15 from motor ve hicle revenues, and have eben accom panied by a constantly accelerated growth in traffic, which traffic moves at a markedly reduced cost per ton mile. What then should be the basis of planning for the future'.' Three years ago the office of public roads point ed out that highway expenditures for all future construction should be re garded as money to be invested and not merely spent. Before fixing the amount of money to be made avail nble for a mad there should be a careful study of the traffic needs. The width, type and extent of eacn highway should be governed by pres ent traffic data and a large factor of safety should be allowed for the fu ture. The commonly regarded permanent features of all first-class highways should always include the grade and alignment which in the east is about forty per cent of the total cost. That is to say. such work should he well done for all time, if you please. The width, depth and type of surfacing should be carefully studied with ref erence to traffic needs and mainten ance, and should be so selected that the service will be most economically satisfied. The selection of surface t pe for economy of construction and maintenance Is of utmost Importance, Maintenance Needed. No type of road surface yet devis ed will serve without maintenance It is true that some types have a higher traffic endurance than others and that some types will enable the post ponement of upkeep charges longer t ha n ot hers, but all surfaces wear with traffic and disintegrate from weather. I'sually the higher-cost sur faces, such as brick and concrete, will, if successfully ,ald. present very low annual charges for continuous maintenane. but even they are not ab solutely permanent and when repairs do become needed they w ll doubtles. be heavy. To safeguard the investment in highways it must be realized that alt the avai'able road money cannot bo spent for construction. The charges for continuous maintenance and pe riodic repairs must be faced from the outset. The adjustment then of the relation of first cost and probable cost of maintenance is of great im portance and requires experienced Judgment. Too frequently highways are pro jected without the services of men of suffic ent skill. Highway engineer ing has had a great development even during the past ten years. The men of most experience are most careful in their recommendations They know the changing cond:tions. In planing highway investments that this advice Is indispensable. For example, a county bond Issue lor highways should not be made without complete report from a thor oughly competent highway engineer. County highway bond issues in the county probably total today nearly half a billion dollars. Burly in the (Continued on 1'fge l.f 3 . . -ft . ... -f ' ".-... f t? In i' if Hi--' i lir -in ir ' D I nt if Wr n i n in I I H 11 1 rmf HI l' infnfii KEPPO TUBES A medicated foot powdor put up in tubt-H for tender, mr.artlriK nwouty feet. 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