03/27/2024
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Bladen County towns will receive more than $260,000 in State Street Aid funds to assist with street and sidewalk construction and repair, the N.C. Department of Transportation announced Thursday.

Bladen County’s share of the $147 million statewide allocation, also known as the Powell Bill Fund, comes from revenues generated by North Carolina’s gas tax and other highway user fees. Since the program began in 1951, more than $4.2 billion has been allocated to municipalities.

Here is a breakdown of Bladen County’s share of the fund:
Bladenboro: $58,049.15
Clarkton: $34,480.57
Dublin: $12,192.79
East Arcadia: $13,131.33
Elizabethtown: $112,331.05
Tar Heel: $6,176.34
White Lake: $24,458.35
Total: $260,819.58

Half of funds were sent to towns in late September with the rest expected to paid by the end of the year, according to NCDOT.

“I am pleased that these funds will help hundreds of communities upgrade or repair their transportation systems and fulfill our goal of better connecting North Carolinians to jobs, education, healthcare, recreation and each other,” Gov. Pat McCrory said in a news release. “These improvements will benefit residents and visitors through safety upgrades, increased connectivity and new economic opportunities.”

The fund is named for Junius K. Powell, a former state senator and mayor of Whiteville, whose name led a list of legislators sponsoring a 1951 bill to help the state’s cities with urban road problems. The first allocation of Powell Bill funds was in 1951 for $4.5 million and was distributed to 386 cities and towns.

The amount each municipality gets is based on a formula set by the N.C. General Assembly. Seventy-five percent of the funds are awarded based on population, while the remaining 25 percent are based on the number of street miles each municipality maintains. This year that broke down to $110.5 million on population and $36.8 million on street miles. Each community determines how to spend its money, as long as it is on qualified projects.

Charlotte received the highest amount at $20.4 million. That was based on its estimated population of 818,480 and its 2,461 miles of city-maintained streets. In all, 22 cities received at least $1 million to assist with their transportation projects.

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