The Delaware River Joint Toll Bridge Commission (DRJTBC) has posted the Zoom meeting sign-up-form links and teleconferencing phone numbers for the three virtual hearings the agency plans to conduct next week on a series of proposed toll increases that – if approved — would take effect in 2026.

People must pre-register in order to speak at one of the three hearings, which will be conducted through the Zoom public meeting online platform and teleconferencing.

Individuals seeking to comment online at a virtual toll hearing should go to www.drjtbc.org/tollcomments, scroll down to the hearing registration section and click on the registration from link for the hearing at which they want to submit comment. After filling out the respective form, they must click the form’s submit button.

Information also is posted at www.drjtbc.org/tollcomments for individuals who would prefer to comment through the hearing’s teleconferencing connection.

Hearing registrants must provide their first and last names and their municipality and state of residence.  Individuals who plan to speak online through Zoom also must provide their email address.  Individuals planning to speak via teleconferencing also need to provide the last four digits of the phone line they will use to comment at the hearings.

Registration is first-come, first-served until all available slots at each respective hearing are filled.  Virtual hearing registrations will be accepted until 4 p.m. MONDAY, October 6.

The hearing dates and times are as follows:

  • October 7 – 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 a.m.
  • October 7 – 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
  • October 9 – 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Individuals will be restricted to speaking up to three minutes at one hearing only. Hearing comments must be declarative; the hearings will not be question and answer sessions.  Comments will be restricted to the proposed toll adjustments posted at https://www.drjtbc.org/proposednewtolls and the public notice published in various Commission-jurisdiction daily news outlets on Sept. 26 and 28. Anonymous comments will not be accepted.

The Commission initiated a 30-day public comment period on the proposed toll changes Sept. 18. The comment period is scheduled to end 4 p.m. October 17.

Other Comment Submission Methods

Under Commission policy, additional comment methods are available for the public:

  • Online: Click on the button for the toll-comment form that has been posted at https://www.drjtbc.org/proposednewtolls.
  • US Mail: address to Director of Community Affairs Jodee Inscho, DRJTBC Administration Building, 1199 Woodside Road, Yardley, PA. 19067 (Must be postmarked by Oct. 17 to be part of the official record.)
  • E-mail – messages can be sent to tollcomments@drjtbc.org.

To be included in the official record, individuals must provide their first and last names, municipality of residence, and state of residence. E-mail addresses and phone numbers are requested for confirmation purposes, but will not be included in the official record that gets presented to Commissioners and later released to the public. Anonymous submissions will not be included in the official record and will be discarded.

All eligible comments will be presented to DRJTBC Commissioners prior to consideration and action (approve, modify-approve, or reject) on the proposed toll adjustments. Commissioners are expected to vote on the proposed toll adjustments at their monthly meeting scheduled for 10:30 a.m. Nov. 24. Members of the public would have one final opportunity to comment on the proposed toll rate changes during the portion of the meeting designated for comments on listed agenda items.

Proposed toll-rate changes

The proposed toll-rate changes would be uniformly applied to the Commission’s eight toll bridges: Trenton-Morrisville (Route 1), Scudder Falls (I-295), New Hope-Lambertville (Route 202), I-78, Easton-Phillipsburg (Route 22), Portland-Columbia (Routes 611, 46, and 94), Delaware Water Gap (I-80), and Milford-Montague (Route 206).

The proposed 2026 toll rate changes are:

  • Raise the $1.50 E-ZPass toll for Class 1 passenger vehicles (two axles and less than 8 feet high) by 50 cents to a $2 rate;
  • Raise the $3 TOLL BY PLATE toll for Class 1 passenger vehicles (two axles and less than 8 feet high) by $2 to a $5 rate;
  • Maintain the current $2 surcharge for Class 1 vehicles with a bumper-hitch trailer or vehicle in tow, resulting in a respective $4 E-ZPass toll or a respective $7 TOLL BY PLATE toll.
  • Raise the $4.50 per-axle E-ZPass rate for Class 2 vehicles and above (trucks, buses, and other non-Class 1 vehicles and combinations with two or more axles and 8 feet and above in height) by $2 to a $6.50 rate.
  • Raise the $5 per-axle TOLL BY PLATE rate for Class 2 vehicles and above (trucks, buses, and other non-Class 1 vehicles and combinations with two or more axles and 8 feet and above in height) by $3 to an $8 rate. The new non-Class 1 tolls would be:
    • Class 2 — 2 axles — $13 E-ZPass; $16 TOLL BY PLATE
    • Class 3 — 3 axles — $19.50 E-ZPass; $24 TOLL BY PLATE
    • Class 4 — 4 axles — $26 E-ZPass; $32 TOLL BY PLATE
    • Class 5 — 5 axles — $32.50 E-ZPass; $40 TOLL BY PLATE
    • Class 6 — 6 axles — $39 E-ZPass; $48 TOLL BY PLATE
    • Class 7 — 7 axles — $45.50 E-ZPass; $56 TOLL BY PLATE

All Commission tolling points now operate with cashless all-electronic toll collections systems involving E-ZPass and TOLL BY PLATE (license plate billing). Tolls are collected only in the Pennsylvania-bound direction.

The Commission charges higher rates to TOLL BY PLATE customers because that payment method involves higher costs for identifying vehicle owners and mailing billings. E-ZPass is the most frequently used toll payment method at Commission tolling points.

If the proposed toll adjustments were to be approved, the Commission’s toll rates for passenger vehicles would still remain lower than – or at least competitive with – the rates of other public toll agencies in the region. Comparison tables are posted at www.drjtbc.org/tollcomments.

The proposed toll changes are being considered in the wake of recent financial-metric-projections that show the Commission risks falling short in two key areas – General Fund Reserve Balance and Debt Service Coverage Ratio – in future years. Bond-rating firms regularly use these indices to determine the stability and credit worthiness of public agencies. Unlike some other toll agencies, the DRJTBC does not automatically increase tolls based on index-based criteria or other economic formulas.

The Commission is funded strictly by the tolls it collects at its eight toll bridges.  It does not receive state or federal subsidies to run its transportation system and services.  The Commission is unique among other toll agencies in the region because it is legally obligated – under identical statutes enacted by both states and ratified by Congress under the Compact Clause of the U.S. Constitution — to use a share of its tolls to operate and maintain 10 older low-capacity non-highway vehicular bridges and two other pedestrian-only crossings along the river.  The Commission refers to these 12 spans as “toll-supported bridges.” Many of these bridges substructures date to the early 19th century and many of their superstructures date to late 19th and early 20th centuries

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