W. Va. DOT Secretary: High construction costs raise issues for Roads to Prosperity View Larger Image W. Va. DOT Secretary: High construction costs raise issues for Roads to Prosperity » West Virginia’s top transportation official says that his department is concerned about a reported 8.8 percent inflation rate for construction costs as the state embarks on its $2.8 billion “Roads to Prosperity” initiative. Among the reasons for the sharp price hike: higher prices on asphalt and tariffs that imported steel. Michelle2018-08-08T11:55:45-08:00July 30th, 2018|Highways, West Virginia| Share This Story, Choose Your Platform! FacebookTwitterEmail Related Posts ‘A fiasco from the beginning’ — Caltrans’ costs soar on $1.1 billion San Francisco tunnels April 10th, 2019 Getting There: Congestion pricing isn’t coming to Spokane, but these roads aren’t free and never were April 8th, 2019 Multi-billion, decade-long toll road plan gets green light, but bottlenecks loom March 12th, 2019 Northam announces selection of firms to build $3.3 billion tunnel project February 16th, 2019 Iowa drivers, rejoice: 60 years later, northern Iowa’s Highway 20 expansion is finally done October 16th, 2018 What’s Colorado Proposition 110: Sales tax increase for transportation October 12th, 2018 Transportation officials work to connect I-10 and I-19 south of Tucson October 12th, 2018 USDOT providing nearly $64B for transportation investments October 12th, 2018 Candidates for governor eye Georgia’s transportation needs October 11th, 2018