Frequently Asked Questions
What is the current situation with ODOT’s funding and HB 3991?
The Oregon Legislature passed House Bill 3991 in September 2025 to provide transportation funding needed to support ODOT operations, cancel planned layoffs, and maintain winter service levels. Petitioners have since submitted signatures to refer portions of HB 3991 to voters. As a result, most of the bill’s new revenue is delayed pending a statewide vote.
Without that new revenue, a significant funding gap remains for the 2025–2027 biennium. ODOT currently faces a projected funding gap of approximately $242 million for the 2025–2027 budget cycle.
On Jan. 7, Gov. Tina Kotek called for lawmakers to address ODOT’s funding gap in the upcoming session, repeal House Bill 3991, and provide comprehensive, long-term solutions for ODOT’s funding challenges in the 2027 legislative session.
Why has the budget gap changed from $350 million?
Several factors have reduced the gap from our earlier estimations.
- The Oregon Legislature approved a budget in June 2025 that lowered ODOT’s expenditures by $46 million.
- Higher-than-projected revenue.
- Higher-than-expected savings due to voluntary spending reductions and higher vacancy rates following employee departures.
Could the funding gap change?
Yes. The final size of the funding gap depends in part on legislative action during the upcoming session. There are options that could reduce or eliminate the gap.
What caused ODOT’s maintenance funding crisis?
The crisis is driven by flattening gas tax revenues as vehicles become more fuel-efficient, legal restrictions on how transportation funds can be used, rising costs and inflation. These structural issues have persisted despite years of cost-cutting.
What would a full repeal of HB3991 mean for ODOT?
Without a full repeal, the remaining parts of HB 3991 would increase costs and workload while reducing revenue in the short term. The law leaves several costs in place, including annual transfers of $3 million for rest areas and $500,000 for the Small Cities program. There are also costs of implementing the expanded road usage charge program (RUC), truck taxation modernization and accountability provisions. Together, these costs are estimated at about $12 million in the current budget cycle, with only limited new revenue to offset them.
Implementing these requirements requires significant staff time across the agency. If ODOT is also facing staffing reductions, completing this work would be difficult and could require service cuts elsewhere.
A full repeal of HB 3991 would remove some currently unfunded efforts being undertaken by ODOT including changes to the existing weight/mile tax structure and the development of a mandatory road usage charge program. The provisions of HB 3991 that were referred to voters were never implemented.
As laws change or if HB 3991 is fully repealed, ODOT will adjust accordingly.
When would the repeal take effect?
A repeal would only take effect if approved by the legislature and signed by the governor. Until then, current law remains in place.
Would this change the projected gap of $242 million?
We would conduct an analysis once legislative proposals are clear.
Have new positions created by the bill been filled?
ODOT has not yet hired any new positions to implement HB 3991.
Do you have any details on what projects or program funding could be redirected to maintenance and operations? Do you know what those impacts would be?
ODOT is working with the Governor’s Office and the Legislature on what project and program dollars are available to be redirected to maintenance and operations, if the law changes, in light of Governor Kotek’s direction. In the meantime, the Governor’s Office presented on this during the special legislative session. You can find that video online:
Oregon Legislative Video. The relevant portion begins around 10 minutes. Legislative Fiscal Officer Amanda Beitel also presented a document to the Legislature with more detail:
Dedicated Transportation Funds.
What funding scenarios is ODOT planning for?
ODOT is planning for two possible outcomes: One in which resources are made available to cover our priority service needs for this budget cycle and another in which we must make reductions that would include future layoffs.
Is ODOT planning layoffs right now?
The agency does not plan to send any layoff notices unless funding decisions are finalized and layoffs become unavoidable.
If reductions become necessary, what services would ODOT prioritize?
If reductions become necessary, ODOT would focus first on protecting services that directly affect public safety and daily travel. This includes road maintenance and winter operations, emergency/incident response and direct customer service functions such as DMV services.
The goal would be to preserve frontline work that Oregonians rely on most, limiting impacts to those services as much as possible.
Has ODOT already taken reductions?
The agency continues to operate under an austerity budget that limits travel, purchases and more. ODOT has made substantial cuts since 2019. In the 2023-2025 budget cycle, ODOT voluntarily reduced its budget by more than $170 million. This biennium, the agency already took three major reductions totaling more than $150 million:
Spending that was phased out last biennium due to cash constraints is no longer budgeted, saving about $69 million this biennium.
Funding for rehabilitating and replacing maintenance stations was removed from the budget, saving about $38 million compared to last biennium.
The Legislature reduced the budget by about $46 million, primarily by reducing vacant positions.
Why is ODOT continuing to hire while facing a shortfall?
At Governor Kotek’s direction, ODOT has continued hiring for critical winter maintenance positions to protect public safety and ensure essential services during severe weather. A small number of other critical positions, primarily in DMV customer service, are also being filled to maintain basic service levels. Recruitment for most other positions remains paused, and hundreds of vacancies continue to be held open to manage costs.
Why can’t ODOT use federal funds or shift money from projects?
Federal funds are largely restricted to capital projects and cannot be used for maintenance or operations. Oregon law also limits ODOT’s ability to shift funding between categories without legislative action.