Where Does Your Dime Go?

McAlester shoppers pay 10 cents in sales tax on every dollar. It's easy to assume that money stays here and fixes our streets. The truth is more complicated — and more urgent — than most people think.

Scroll to see the numbers

Your dime, divided.

Of every 10¢ you pay in McAlester sales tax, here's who gets what.

4.5¢
1.5¢
½¢
½¢
State of Oklahoma 4.5¢
Pittsburg County 1.5¢
City Operations (police, fire, etc.)
City Bond Debt Repayment
Infrastructure & Water Projects ½¢
Schools & Cancer Center ½¢
6 cents leave town before McAlester sees a penny. Of the 4 cents the city keeps, a full 25% goes to paying off decades-old bond debt. That leaves roughly half a cent on every dollar for the actual work of maintaining streets and underground infrastructure.

We're still paying for yesterday.

A significant portion of McAlester's city sales tax goes to bond debt service — obligations taken on years ago that today's taxpayers are still paying down.

That 1¢ of your dime going to bond repayment? It adds up to nearly $5 million this year alone — spread across notes and bonds dating back over a decade. That's money that can't touch a single pothole, water line, or foot of new pavement.

The good news: most of this regular debt retires by 2029. Annual payments drop from $4.8 million to under $500,000 — a dramatic cliff. The bad news: large balloon payments on deferred debt come due in the early 2030s, which the city will need to plan for.

Annual debt payments (millions)

This is the reality McAlester is operating in. The city's share of sales tax revenue is largely spoken for — servicing debt from past decisions while current infrastructure continues to age. At this rate, we're always borrowing to fix what breaks rather than investing to prevent it from breaking in the first place.

The scale of the problem.

McAlester has more road than money. A lot more.

166
lane miles
to maintain
$1.5M
cost to reconstruct
one lane mile
$249M
total reconstruction
cost (streets only)
~$1.5M
current annual
infrastructure budget

At $1.5 million a year and $1.5 million per lane mile, we can reconstruct about one lane mile of street per year. At that pace, it would take over 160 years to address all 166 lane miles.

The proposed 1% tax has a 10-year sunset. It's not forever. So the real question is simple: how much do we get done in those 10 years?

Without the tax (~$1.5M/yr)
With the proposed 1% tax (~$4.5M/yr)

An additional 1% sales tax would generate an estimated $3–5 million per year — roughly tripling the city's infrastructure capacity. Over 10 years, that's the difference between fixing 10 lane miles and fixing 30 lane miles at current surface reconstruction costs. But the real question isn't just how many miles we fix — it's how well we fix them.

What's under the road matters more.

The most expensive mistake is fixing the surface without fixing what's below it.

🛣️ Concrete & Asphalt Surface What you see
Gravel & Aggregate Base Foundation
💧 Water Lines 30–100+ years old
Sewer Lines Often original to the street
Drainage & Earth Groundwork

Across America, cities face a $452 billion bill for water mains alone that have exceeded their useful life. McAlester is no exception. Aging water and sewer lines sit beneath our streets — and when they fail, the new pavement above them gets torn up to make repairs.

Surface Only
$1.5M
per lane mile
Looks great for a year or two. Then a water main breaks. Tear it up, fix the pipe, repave. Pay twice.
Dig Once, Fix It All
$3–5M
per lane mile
Assess and repair water, sewer, and drainage before resurfacing. One disruption. One bill. Done right.

It costs more upfront. But it costs far less over the life of the road. Every dollar spent paving over a failing pipe is a dollar wasted. The principle is simple: never open the ground without fixing what's underneath.

The ballot measure already allows for this.

Ordinance No. 2863 doesn't just fund streets — it funds "city infrastructure, including but not limited to, capital improvements to streets and related utility and drainage needs." The legal authority to fix what's underground is written into the measure. The question is whether we use it.

Know What You're Voting On.

On April 7, McAlester voters will decide whether to approve a new 1% sales tax dedicated to infrastructure. Whatever you decide, make it an informed decision.

If this measure passes, how the money is spent will matter as much as having it. That's where the real work begins.

The "Dig Once" Principle

The newly created Citizens Street Improvement Commission will guide how this money is spent and develop a five-year master streets plan. We believe that before any street is resurfaced, the water and sewer infrastructure underneath should be assessed — and repaired if needed. Tearing up a road you just fixed is the most expensive mistake a city can make. We'll be following the commission's work and advocating for this principle. Check back here after the election for updates and information on how to engage with the commission.

APR
7
Election Day
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Polls open 7:00 AM – 7:00 PM

Remind Me to Vote

Sources & Documents

  1. Ordinance No. 2863, 2026 Infrastructure Improvement Sales Tax [PDF]
  2. Division 8, Citizens Street Improvement Commission ordinance — McAlester City Council Special Meeting, January 28, 2026 [Agenda PDF]; full packet available at mcalesterok.portal.civicclerk.com
  3. McAlester Public Works Authority debt payment cash flow report [PDF]
  4. City of McAlester Mid-Year Budget FY2025-26 presentation, January 27, 2026 — available in the council meeting packet archive
  5. City of McAlester, "April 7 Propositions" transparency page — cityofmcalester.com
  6. McAlester City Council Special Meeting minutes, January 13, 2026 — available at mcalesterok.portal.civicclerk.com
  7. FHWA, Status of the Nation's Highways, Bridges, and Transit (23rd Edition), Appendix A-3; Strong Towns, "How Much Does a Mile of Road Actually Cost?" (2020)
  8. Utah State University / ASCE, "Water Main Break Rates in the USA and Canada: A Comprehensive Study" (2023)
  9. Oklahoma Tax Commission, county and city sales tax rate charts, Q1 2026