Ideas of increasing road tolls and the gas tax in New Hampshire were floated at a public hearing Thursday night to move highway safety projects forward, which have been stalled due to funding constraints.ย
One of the projects most affected by the delays is the long-awaited $370 million expansion of Interstates 93 and 89 through Concord and Bow โ a plan that has been in the making for decades. The areaโs on- and off-ramps have been the site of numerous crashes, including several fatal ones.
Eleana Colby, a Bow resident, called the decision to delay safety enhancements on I-93 and I-89 because of funding issues a โserious disserviceโ to all New Hampshire residents and visitors at a Governorโs Advisory Commission on Intermodal Transportation meeting in Concord.
โThis situation suggests that the only construction Bow residents will see in the near future will be the installation of more memorial crosses along our roads,โ said Colby, who is a state representative and a selectboard member in Bow.
While the Bow-Concord project still has only its construction phase defunded, many other projects โ such as Allenstownโs Main Street, Dunbartonโs Pages Corner and Hopkintonโs Fountain Square โ have been removed entirely from New Hampshireโs 10-year Department of Transportation plan.
Most of these projects rely on Federal Highway and Turnpike Toll revenues, yet statewide toll rates havenโt been raised since 2007.
Tobey Reynolds, assistant director of project development for the state transportation agency, noted that New Hampshire currently has the โlowest cost per mileโ for tolls in the country. Even a modest $1 increase at major toll plazas would still leave the state ranked 26th out of 32 for toll rates per mileโand could provide much-needed funding to move stalled projects forward.
Increasing tolls to fund safer roadways received strong support from many attendees.
Tim Blagdon of Warner said he backs raising the gas tax and road tolls if it means improving New Hampshireโs transportation network.
โWe need to keep this state flowing. While that may be a tax, a great percentage is paid by out-of-state people coming up here for weekends or driving through to other states,โ Blagdon said. โSo we need to keep our network in good shape, and to not fund both Concord and 293 would be a real safety tragedy for everybody.โ
Raising tolls isnโt something the legislature can just decide like the gas tax. It has to go through the Executive Council and the governor.
โEverything in the world has gone up since 2007 except the tolls in New Hampshire,โ said Pat Levy, manager of the Bureau of Turnpikes at the state agency. โSo it seems ludicrous to me that there hasn’t been an increase in all this time and there should really be no reason why there isn’t.โ
Like the Bow-Concord project, Boscawenโs King Street project has also had its construction funding removed. King Street, where US 4 East/West and US 3 North converge, is a critical part of the townโs commercial district.

Lorrie Carey, a Boscawen selectboard member, said the delays on King Street โ the heart of the townโs commercial district, where most local accidents occur โ need to be addressed quickly.ย
She said that school buses also stop on the street to pick up children, highlighting the safety risks.
โPlease, please find funding. It’s not an expensive project,โ Carey said. โIt’s not your fault, DOT. We know that our road tolls are the lowest in New England. We’ve underfunded you.โ
