• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Contact Us

Agency Checklists

Massachusetts Insurance News & Job Opportunities

You are here: Home / Legislative & Economic News / Road Funding Bill Could Be on Fast Track to House

Road Funding Bill Could Be on Fast Track to House

July 21, 2025 by Owen Gallagher

$100 Million in Chapter 90 Money Aimed at Rural Communities

JULY 21, 2025…..A $1.185 billion borrowing bill to fund local infrastructure maintenance cleared another legislative hurdle Monday and might be on track to emerge for a House vote as soon as Wednesday.

Hours after hosting a public hearing to review the measure, the Joint Committee on Bonding, Capital Expenditures and State Assets advanced the bill (H 4257) combining the latest annual authorization for the Chapter 90 program with hundreds of millions of dollars in additional grant funding.

Rep. Michael Finn, who co-chairs the panel, praised the measure as a way to balance the long-expressed local desire for more road and bridge maintenance funding with fiscal caution in the face of federal funding cuts.

“There’s not a day that goes by without a headline talking about how there’s reductions to federal funding,” Finn said at the hearing. “It’s just across the spectrum, the potential hits to our economy. So when I looked at this bill … I thought it was a positive and it recognizes the need of the municipality to have increased funding, but it also has some balance to it for the unknown.”

The committee opened a poll on the bill shortly after the hearing wrapped up, and by 5 p.m., its members had voted in favor of moving it forward to the House Ways and Means Committee.

The bill would allot $300 million to the Chapter 90 program, an increase over the traditional $200 million per year that Beacon Hill has favored for most of the last decade-plus. The additional $100 million would be carved up based on road mileage, which backers say would better support rural communities less favored by the traditional formula.

It also includes $885 million in borrowing to fund programs beyond Chapter 90, including $500 million for the Department of Transportation’s lifecycle asset management program, $200 million for culvert replacement and $185 million to tackle “congestion hotspots.”

Gov. Maura Healey’s original version of the bill (H 53), filed in January, would have authorized $1.5 billion in Chapter 90 funding over five years — the same $300 million per year level and distribution formula, but over a longer period of time — in addition to the $885 million in other grants.

The Transportation Committee rewrote the bill to pare back the Chapter 90 approach to a single year.

Lawmakers from both parties on Monday focused much of their attention on the extra $100 million in Chapter 90 money aimed at rural communities, praising it as a way to support cities and towns that historically have not benefited much from the program.

“That $100 million means a lot to communities who really have no other options for paying for road upkeep,” said Rep. Aaron Saunders, a Belchertown Democrat.

Republican Rep. Joseph McKenna of Sutton added, “The road mileage piece that was added is phenomenal. I think it’s a great piece to bring some equity in road funding to rural communities that have been lagging for years.”

They also tossed around the question of whether leaning on revenue from the surtax on high earners to expand state borrowing capacity — which Healey has proposed doing for both transportation and for higher education infrastructure — meshes with the intent of the voter-approved law.

Kaitlyn Connors, assistant secretary for capital in the Executive Office for Administration and Finance, likened borrowing against surtax funds to “expanding the pie for how much capital resources we have to address these needs” as the state approaches its statutory debt limit.

Finn said he had been debating whether the approach matched the “spirit” of the new levy, which is designed to fund additional investments in education and transportation.

“I think the answer is yes, right? Because at the end of the day being able to leverage some of this money, this dedicated revenue stream, at a very good bond rate would probably be more beneficial to all of the residents,” Finn said.

The House has a formal session planned for Wednesday. Top Democrats have not yet signaled what legislation they plan to bring forward, and the bond bill — a version of which the Legislature typically approves every spring or summer — might emerge for action.

Primary Sidebar

MA Division of Insurance Advertisement

New Episode

MA Insurance Lawyers

SPONSORED

Interviews

From Nuptials, Tickets, and Taxes to Trusted Advisor: One Agency’s Unique Path to P&C Success

A Conversation with Evan Silverio, President & CEO of Silverio Insurance Group

Deland, Gibson Celebrates 125 Years: A Conversation with CEO Chip Gibson

The Fourth-Generation Family-Owned Agency is Based in Wellesley

Talking with Richard Welch: Growth and Innovation at Hospitality Mutual | Agency Checklists

Talking with Richard Welch: Growth and Innovation at Hospitality Mutual

Mr. Welch is CEO of Massachusetts-based Hospitality Insurance Group

A Conversation with Daniel C. Bridge – The 2023 Insurance Professional of the Year

Daniel Bridge is Board Chair, President, and CEO of Vermont Mutual Insurance Group

Making The Leap From Corporate to Entrepreneur: Nadeen Vella On Building NaVella Insurance From Scratch

Making The Leap From Corporate to Entrepreneur: Nadeen Vella On Building NaVella Insurance From Scratch

Our latest Agency Interview is with Nadeen Vella, the founder and owner of a virtual scratch independent agency.

A North Shore Success Story: The $40 Million And Growing Duffy Family of Insurance Agencies

Our latest Agency Interview with Duffy Insurance’s Marc Duffy

More Posts from this Category

InsurOp-Eds

Passing of the Torch: Becoming Arbella’s Next CEO

Passing of the Torch: Becoming Arbella’s Next CEO

By Paul Brady

Uninsurable Risk? Maybe Parametric Insurance Is The Answer

By Owen Gallagher

InsurOpEd: Starting A New Chapter in My Life

By Tara Philbin

InsurOp-Ed: Shrinkflation and Insurance

InsurOp-Ed: Shrinkflation and Insurance

By Bill Wilson

More InsurOp-Eds

Career News

MountainOne Insurance Promotes Lianne Kudlate to Senior Personal Lines Account Manager

Brown & Brown Integrates Risk Strategies Talent to its Team

Allstate Shakes Up Its Senior Leadership Team

SAN Group Announces Promotion of Lisa Paese to Agency Onboarding Specialist

View More Career News

In Memoriam

In Memoriam: Roy Corso: 1943-2025

In Memoriam: Kevin Hugh Kelley, 1950-2025

In Memoriam: Kevin Hugh Kelley, 1950-2025

In Memoriam: Stephen Lee Brown, 1937-2025

In Memoriam: Stephen Lee Brown, 1937-2025

Company News

Fundación MAPFRE Celebrates 50 Years of Impact at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Agency Checklists, Mass. Insurance News

MAPFRE, MassDOT Offer Tips To Share During Pedestrian Safety Month

Union Mutual Raises Over $147,000 for the Kelly Brush Foundation

SIAA Hosts IA Evolve, a Virtual Innovation Event to Empower Independent Insurance Agents

SIAA Hosts IA Evolve, a Virtual Innovation Event to Empower Independent Insurance Agents

Footer

Agency Checklists

Contact us

We offer a variety of ways to get help promote your company or product.

Announcements
Email Sponsorships
Partnerships
Custom Collaborations

*Affiliate Disclosure

Please note that any of Agency Checklists’ articles might contain one or more affiliate links. This means that any subsequent purchase resulting from these links may result in a commission for us, but at no additional cost to you. For example, as an Amazon Associate, Agency Checklists earns a commission from all qualifying purchases. By working with affiliates we can continue to keep Agency Checklists subscription free. Thank you for your support.

Explore Our Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Agency Checklists · All rights reserved.

 

Loading Comments...