Subcommittee advances bill to make DOT secretary a governor-appointed cabinet post and expand funding tools

House Ways and Means Committee (Revenue Subcommittee) · March 26, 2026

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Summary

The House Ways and Means revenue subcommittee gave a favorable report to HB5071 as amended, moving to make the DOT secretary a governor-appointed cabinet position, broaden DOT funding options including tolling and public–private partnerships, and streamline certain environmental reviews; the subcommittee also amended the parallel Senate vehicle the same way.

Representative Crawford told the subcommittee that HB5071 makes the Department of Transportation (DOT) secretary a governor-appointed cabinet position and shifts responsibility for the statewide transportation plan from the commission to DOT while broadening DOT’s funding, tolling, procurement and public–private partnership tools. “This bill makes the DOT secretary a cabinet position appointed by the governor,” Crawford said.

The bill as amended would remove the commission’s direction to approve DOT’s budget streamlining operations, reassign parts of the NEPA and certain environmental reviews to expedite project reviews, add residency and basic ethics requirements for county transportation committee (CTC) members, and allow voluntary transfer of local roads to local jurisdictions. Crawford emphasized the amendment does not raise fees beyond EV registration and “does not allow for the taking of any existing roads for toll roads.”

Committee members adopted the sponsor’s amendment by voice vote, then completed a roll call on the amended bill; the subcommittee reported HB5071 favorably (recorded as a 4–0 vote). The sponsor also asked that the identical language be added to the Senate vehicle (SB 831); members adopted that amendment and gave SB 831 a favorable report as well. Representative Hewitt moved and the subcommittee approved an instruction allowing staff to make technical corrections as needed.

Supporters framed the changes as modernization and administrative streamlining. The measure would centralize certain decision authority at DOT and expand financing and procurement options; opponents did not appear in the record for this subcommittee excerpt. The favorable report advances the measures to the next committee stage of the legislative process.

The subcommittee took the votes and reported the bills favorably; further floor or committee action was not recorded in this transcript excerpt.