
After years of back and forth debate over design, intent, and scope of Portland’s Interstate 5 expansion project in the Rose Quarter, an impactful state transportation committee wants to know: Who’s paying for it?
On Thursday, commissioners on the Oregon Transportation Commission (OTC)โthe governing body of Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT)โgave conditional approval to a design for a freeway cover included in the I-5 expansion plan. The approved cover design, called โHybrid 3,โ is a continuous cover that will dome over the freeway just north of the Rose Quarter, reconnecting the street grid above the thoroughfare and add 4 acres of land to the Albina neighborhoodโthe historically Black neighborhood that was bulldozed and bisected by the original construction of the I-5 corridor in the early 1960s. The land on top of the cover is intended to return land taken away from the neighborhood by the freeway.
But the proposed design comes with a big price tag, raising the projectโs estimated maximum costs from $795 million to $1.25 billion.
Thereโs no clear funding source. The Oregon Legislature has committed $30 million per year for the project starting in 2022 and ODOT plans to introduce tolling on the freeway that would help pay for the construction costs, but no other agencies have offered to foot the bill.
This caused concern among OTC members Thursday.
โItโs great that weโre going to do restorative justice to this community and I get the whole idea behind the cover,โ said OTC Commissioner Julie Brown. โWith that said, itโs now probably one of the biggest costs of a transportation project in the history of Oregon and I would be remiss if I didnโt put the brakes on a little bit and push back and say, โThis is great, but we need to find a way to pay for this.โโ
Thatโs why the OTC approved the Hybrid 3 cover design with a condition: ODOT must make a plan to pay for the cover by the end of the year. The conditional approval gives ODOT until December 2021 to develop a funding plan that will further specify the project costs and detail potential funding streams. The โconditionalโ vote gives the commissioners the right to rescind their approval of the freeway cover design if they arenโt satisfied with ODOTโs funding plan.
In addition to securing funding from federal infrastructure programs, the commissioners believe the City of Portland, Metro, Multnomah County, and TriMet have a responsibility to contribute to the project, implying that if local governments and agencies are unwilling to contribute to the costs, then they donโt actually believe in restorative justice for the Albina community.
โIf [local agencies] are going to be this adamant about doing the right thing and making investments in restorative justice, then I want to hear from them about how much they actually care about restorative justice themselves and how much they are willing to invest in restorative justice,โ said OTC Vice-Chair Alando Simpson. โItโs time for those agencies to step up and say, โThis is what weโre willing to put on the table.โโ
OTC Commissioner Sharon Smith also questioned whether the Albina community believes the cost of the cover is worth the benefit.
โI donโt presume to tell the [Albina] community what they should want, but does it make sense for ODOTโand the rest of the jurisdictions because we canโt do it by ourselvesโto spend $400 million to $500 million for 1.73 acres of a highway cap?โ Smith said, referencing the acreage increase between the original cover designs that couldnโt support buildings and the Hybrid 3 design. โCould we spend that kind of money on other things and do more for the community?โ
Albina Vision Trust (AVT), an organization advocating for the revitalization of the Albina neighborhood, has long fought for the inclusion of highway covers in the I-5 project. ODOT had planned to include highway covers in the project since at least 2012โbefore restorative justice was included in the project goals. AVT saw an opportunity to expand and use the highway covers to return land to the neighborhood and partnered with ODOT in 2019 to advocate for covers strong enough to support a city block over the freeway. When ODOT debuted a design with two overpass-like covers that couldnโt support any buildings in early 2020, AVT ended its partnership with ODOT.
Yet AVT has expressed its support in the Hybrid 3 cover design.
โNow we can move forward with a project that will provide good jobs, create community wealth building opportunities and repair the urban fabric in the heart of the city,โ said AVT Director Winta Yohannes after Gov. Kate Brown endorsed the Hybrid 3 design in August.
Itโs unclear how the project would be impacted if the OTC chose to rescind its approval of the cover design after reviewing the funding plan. AVT declined to comment on the OTCโs cover decision Friday.
Metro President Lynn Peterson is disappointed with the OTCโs decision, according to Metro spokesperson Nick Christensen.
โReally, this is a state responsibility to mitigate the harms that have been caused by the construction of I-5 through the Albina neighborhood,โ Christensen said. โChair Peterson thinks that Metro should play a role in that, but the primary funding has got to come from the state and federal government.โ
Christensen said the OTC is aware of the limited financial resources Metro and the City of Portland have in comparison to major transportation projects like the Rose Quarter project.
โIt raises the question: Where do they think those resources should come from?โ Christensen said.
Mayor Ted Wheeler declined to comment on the OTCโs decision Friday. Multnomah County did not respond to the Mercuryโs requests for comment. A TriMet spokesperson confirmed the agency has not dedicated funding to the I-5 project, but did not comment on the OTCโs conditions.
The OTC will hold a meeting in December or January to review ODOTโs funding plan and determine the viability of the Hybrid 3 cover design.

“OTC Vice-Chair Alando Simpson. โItโs time for those agencies to step up and say, โThis is what weโre willing to put on the table.โ”
This asshole has some nerve.
The agencies he’s casually slamming are the same ones that put a $5 BILLION(!) transportation bond in front of Portland-region voters just a year ago. A huge portion of that bond would have funded deferred maintenance on ODOT’s highways in the region.
So local taxpayers here would have paid a second time to repair 82nd Avenue, Powell Blvd, Lombard St, Barbur Blvd, TV Highway and others –letting ODOT off the hook on costs they should have been paying all along if they hadn’t spent our tax money on fuck-knows-what.
Vice-Chair Simpson: Your agency is a basket case. Fix your own shit before slamming anybody else, you fucking fuckhead.
Yay for performative justice!