ap

Skip to content
PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...
Cars drive northbound on Interstate 25 with the new express toll lane, indicated by the double white line, on April 1 in Northglenn.
Anya Semenoff, Denver Post file
Cars drive northbound on Interstate 25 with the new express toll lane, indicated by the double white line, on April 1 in Northglenn.

I drive for a living, mostly a very congested stretch of Interstate 25 between 120th and the Interstate 76 interchange. I was thrilled to see flowing traffic during the period when new lanes were finally opened up last year, before the toll lanes were actually put into place. As soon as the tolls went into effect the congestion resumed. The tolls range from $1 to $6.98 depending on the type of transponder used and the time of day. The stretch of road that is “express” only extends for about 6 miles.

Ridiculously inflated tolls do nothing to encourage drivers to use them, thus negating the purpose of high-occupancy vehicles to relieve traffic and reduce emissions. These highways are funded by our taxes, so what do these tolls fund and why are these lanes benefiting the wealthy commuters while the rest of us sit in traffic watching mostly empty express lanes go unused?

Paul Altman, Northglenn

Submit a letter to the editor via or check out our for how to submit by e-mail or mail.

RevContent Feed

More in Letters