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Montgomery County Toll Road Authority

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Montgomery County Toll Road Authority
Authority overview
FormedNovember 2005 (2005-11) as MCTP,[1]
August 2006 (2006-08) as MCTRA
JurisdictionMontgomery County, Texas
HeadquartersMontgomery County Commissioners Court
WebsiteMCTRA

The Montgomery County Toll Road Authority (MCTRA), formerly the Montgomery County Transportation Program (MCTP), is a government agency created on August 24, 2006 by Montgomery County to oversee all future toll road projects within the county. MCTRA operates one toll road: the MCTRA 249 Tollway, which serves as the tolled mainlines of SH 249 (Tomball Parkway). This toll projects are located inside of Montgomery County, in the U.S. state of Texas.

History

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In 2005, Montgomery County created the Montgomery County Transportation Program (MCTP) to oversee various pass through toll,[2] called a shadow toll in other countries, financing projects for the state of Texas, located within Montgomery County.

On August 24, 2006, Montgomery County created the Montgomery County Toll Road Authority (MCTRA) to oversee all future toll road projects, located within Montgomery County.

When the MCTRA began collecting tolls from the tolling facilities, it used the EZ TAG system along with the two Texas interoperable tags used in the state; Texas Department of Transportation's TxTag and the North Texas Tollway Authority's TollTag as well as any other state tags that Texas becomes interoperable with.

Roadway system

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Roads built by the MCTP

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Name Starting location Ending location
FM 1314[a] Fatheree Drive 1 mile (1.6 km) south of SH 242
FM 1484[a] FM 3083 FM 2432
FM 1485[a] Loop 494 Kidd Cemetery Road
FM 1488[a] I-45 FM 2978
FM 1488[a] FM 2978 Mostyn Road
Direct connector[b] SH 242 W I-45 S
Direct connector[b] I-45 N SH 242 W

Roads operated by the MCTRA

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Toll road entrance to MCTRA 249 Tollway northbound
Number Length (mi) Length (km) Southern or western terminus Northern or eastern terminus Formed Removed Notes
SH 242 Toll .14 0.23 0.1 miles (0.16 km) west of I-45 0.1 miles (0.16 km) south of SH 242 02015-01-012015 02019-01-012019 One-way direct connector exit ramp from I-45 northbound onto SH 242 westbound. Opened on May 11, 2015; toll collection began on July 6, 2015. The Harris County Toll Road Authority (HCTRA) was the collecting agency for the MCTRA. The tolls were removed on May 28, 2019.[3]
SH 242 Toll .14 0.23 0.1 miles (0.16 km) south of SH 242 0.1 miles (0.16 km) east of I-45 02015-01-012015 02019-01-012019 One-way direct connector exit ramp from SH 242 westbound onto I-45 southbound. Opened on May 11, 2015; toll collection began on July 6, 2015. The Harris County Toll Road Authority (HCTRA) was the collecting agency for the MCTRA. The tolls were removed on May 28, 2019.[3]
SH 249 Toll 3.2 5.1 Harris County line at Spring Creek Woodtrace Boulevard in Pinehurst 02019-01-012019 current Signed as MCTRA 249 Tollway. The southern continuation of the toll road into Harris County is Tomball Tollway (maintained by HCTRA) to Spring Cypress Road; SH 249 continues as a freeway down to Beltway 8/Sam Houston Tollway, then as a surface road down to Interstate 45 in Houston. Toll road (as of October 28, 2022) continues as the Aggie Expressway (maintained by TxDOT) from FM 1774 in Pinehurst to SH 105 near Navasota in Grimes County. The segment north of FM 1774 near Todd Mission is a two-lane freeway without tolls.[4][5]
This list does not include the Grand Parkway (SH 99 Toll) within Montgomery County. That toll road, along with Aggie Expressway portion of SH 249 is maintained by TxDOT.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e These are pass through financing projects (shadow toll), where the state of Texas is repaying Montgomery County back over time based on number of vehicles that travel these sections of the road each year.
  2. ^ a b These direct connectors were built by the MCTP and were operated by the MCTRA (with HCTRA collecting tolls for MCTRA) from 2015 to 2019.

References

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  1. ^ "What is MCTP?". Montgomery County Transportation Program. Archived from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved December 2, 2014.
  2. ^ TxDot's Pass-Through Financing Program
  3. ^ a b Jules Rogers (May 28, 2019), "Montgomery County Commissioners unanimously remove tolls along Hwy. 242 flyovers", Community Impact Newspaper, retrieved May 30, 2019
  4. ^ Falls, Clay (April 12, 2019). "Grimes Co. leaders pleased with changes coming to Hwy. 249 extension". KBTX-TV.
  5. ^ Surette, Rusty (2022-10-28). "SH 249 is now open to all traffic in Grimes County". KBTX-TV. Retrieved 2022-10-28.
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