Feb 28, 2013
Executives
Jacque Fourchy James H. Roberts - Chief Executive Officer, President, Director, Member of Executive Committee and Member of Strategic Planning Committee Laurel J.
Krzeminski - Chief Financial Officer, Principal Accounting Officer and Vice President
Analysts
John B. Rogers - D.A.
Davidson & Co., Research Division John F. Kasprzak - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division Nicholas A.
Coppola - Thompson Research Group, LLC Alexander J. Rygiel - FBR Capital Markets & Co., Research Division Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC Lucia Marquez - Macquarie Research
Operator
Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Granite Construction Incorporated Fourth Quarter 2012 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this call may be recorded.
I would now like to introduce your host for today's conference, Vice President of Investor Relations, Jacque Fourchy. You may begin.
Jacque Fourchy
Good morning, and thank you for joining our call. I am here today with our President and CEO, Jim Roberts; and our Senior Vice President and CFO, Laurel Krzeminski.
Following this call, each of us will be available throughout the day to answer any follow-up questions you may have. Also, as a reminder, any forward-looking statements that are made this morning are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements and which are further described in our most recent SEC filings.
Granite assumes no obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements or other information. With that, I'll turn the call over to Jim.
Jim?
James H. Roberts
Thank you, Jacque, and good morning, everyone. During today's call, I will present an overview of the quarter and spend a few minutes summarizing the year, and then Laurel will walk you through the fourth quarter numbers, and then I will wrap up with some comments around our outlook for 2013.
Overall, we finished the year strong, as our team successfully worked to complete several Large Projects throughout the country, as well as secured 2 megaprojects, the Tappan Zee Bridge project in New York and the IH-35E highway project in Texas. Offsetting that positive impact are the challenges we continue to face in the West, as reflected in our Construction and Construction Materials gross margins.
The traditional public sector work remains very competitive, especially in California. In alignment with our stated strategic plan, we are also actively pursuing work in the federal, the mining, oil and gas, and power-end markets.
Our teams are also successfully securing work in the local, commercial and industrial markets. While encouraged by the positive indicators as they relate to the residential market, we are cautiously optimistic that we will see a benefit to our business in late 2013 or early 2014.
Additionally, we are continuing to grow our Large Projects business across the country, as shown by our recent bid success announcements. As I've noted before, these projects tend to have shorter bid lists due to their complexity and balance sheet requirements.
Once again, we have a strong backlog of quality projects to bid in 2013. Of the Large Projects on our radar screen, we are committed and have teaming arrangements to build over $13 billion with the work during the next 12 months, of which Granite's portion is about $6 billion.
A sample of the projects bidding this year include the Goethals and Bayonne bridges in New York, the South Capitol Street Bridge and Dulles Metrorail extension in Washington D.C., and the I-4 ULTIMATE highway project in Orlando. We have excellent teams assembled on each of these projects and continue to be very confident that we will get our share of the work.
We recently turned in our bids for the next phase of the Folsom Dam Project in California, the second phase of the US 36 project in Colorado, first package of the California High-Speed Rail, as well as the I-440 rehabilitation project in North Carolina. We intend to bid 3 more packages of the California High-Speed Rail project before the end of this year.
The successful bidder is typically informed within about 120 days of the proposal date, so we look forward to hearing bid results on Folsom, US 36, I-440 and California High-Speed Rail, no later than June of this year. On December 31, we acquired Kenny Construction Company, making Kenny a wholly-owned subsidiary of Granite.
This was an exciting step in our strategic diversification effort, as well as in our plan to grow our Large Projects business. Together with Kenny, our plan is to expand our presence into targeted end-markets, such as power, delivery, and water and wastewater infrastructure, both of which have attractive long-term fundamentals.
Additionally, the combined company has the balance sheet, bonding capacity and expertise to pursue larger and typically more profitable projects in all markets. There are also opportunities for Kenny to self perform more heavy civil work in the power sector or utilize one of Granite's heavy civil units to perform this work, which Kenny has historically subcontracted.
Also compelling is the opportunity to expand the existing underground Inliner business beyond its current Midwest and Mountain region presence, especially in the geographic markets where Granite currently operates. Another element of the strategic rationale is the expansion of the combined companies' heavy civil business and attractive Large Project opportunities in the Midwest.
Pursuing larger projects in the broader geographic area will allow us to leverage existing relationships with contractors and engineers, and increase the margin potential of the civil portfolio. In fact, the Kenny team was a low bidder around its first civil projects since the combination of the firms, an $18.5 million grade separation and railroad bridge for the Illinois Department of Transportation, as well as an $18 million sewer construction project for the City of Chicago.
Okay. Let's shift gears a bit here and address the current infrastructure funding situation.
We continue to see fiscal constraints at the state and local levels driving increased interest into alternative project delivery, such as public private partnerships or better known PPP. Underpinning this interest is the increase in TIFIA funds, which were authorizing the recent Federal Highway Bill, MAP-21, and will serve as a critical source of sub-debt.
Given the fact that historically, these loans have outpaced supply nearly 107 to 1, we are quite confident that TIFIA loans will provide a meaningful benefit to our business over both the short and long-term and conceivably free up additional funds for traditional projects. With regard to state budgets, while our revenues across the country have been improving, funding levels remain relatively low.
As evidenced from recent budget proposals, states are looking at ways to either maintain their existing transportation budgets or raise taxes and/or fees to fund much-needed improvements. The need for infrastructure investment continues to outpace funding in all parts of the country and at all levels of government.
We will continue to work closely with our representatives in Washington and in our local states to close this huge gap, by increasing revenue, as well as through the use of innovative financing to support public private partnerships. With that, let me turn the call over to Laurel.
Laurel?
Laurel J. Krzeminski
Thank you, Jim, and good morning, everyone. Let me begin with the review of the results for the total company this quarter.
Earnings per share were $0.46 compared with $0.48 per share last year. Fourth quarter revenue was $505 million compared with $540 million last year.
Gross profit margin for the quarter decreased to 11% from 15% in the fourth quarter last year. Total contract backlog at the end of the year was $1.7 billion compared with $2 billion last year, and includes $357 million from Kenny.
As Jim noted, we're very pleased to secure both the Tappan Zee Bridge and IH-35E projects at the end of 2012. We've signed the contract with the Tappan Zee Bridge project and will book our approximately $730 million portion into first quarter backlog.
We will book our approximately $300 million share of the IH-35E project once we have final award and a notice to proceed has been issued, which we anticipate in the second quarter. SG&A expenses in the fourth quarter totaled $57 million compared to $43 million a year ago.
The quarter-over-quarter increase is primarily attributable to increased costs of $5 million related to our pursuit of Large Projects and $4 million in acquisition-related costs. Construction segment revenue was $235 million compared with $250 million -- $259 million last year.
Gross profit margin was 8% compared to 14% for the same period a year ago, due to the continued competitive environment and higher-than-expected costs on several projects. Construction segment backlog at the end of the year was $630 million compared with $514 million last year.
Moving to the Large Project Construction segment. Revenues were $215 million during the quarter, up slightly from the fourth quarter last year.
Gross profit margin was 19% compared to 16% the prior year. The overall margin expansion was driven by ongoing strong performance on several projects.
Revenue for the Construction Materials segment was $55 million compared with $56 million last year. Gross loss on Materials for the quarter was $1.5 million compared with a gross profit of $6 million last year.
In addition to a wet December in California, fourth quarter margins were impacted by an inventory write-down as the result of slow economic conditions in certain markets. Gain on sales of property and equipment increased to $21 million compared with $4 million last year.
Included in the fourth quarter 2012 is an $18 million gain on the sale of a quarry investment. Other income for the quarter includes a $2 million gain from the sale of gold, a by-product of one of our aggregate production facilities.
Our effective tax rate was 24% for the quarter and 26% for the year. Lastly, we once again ended the year in excellent financial position, with $433 million in cash and marketable securities, which includes $106 million in cash associated with our consolidated joint ventures.
With that, I'll turn the call back to Jim.
James H. Roberts
Thank you, Laurel. As we enter 2013, we continue to see excellent opportunities in the Large Projects business, we see a healthy bidding environment for all of the new Kenny group markets, coupled with a continued difficult environment for our Construction and Construction Materials business.
We remain focused on increasing our SG&A efficiencies, especially with the completion of our new enterprise business system, and we are also laser-focused on increasing efficiencies in all of our core business segments. In addition to our ongoing focus on efficiencies, we are continuing to ramp up our growth expectations through both organic growth and acquisitions.
We believe the timing is right to aggressively pursue all components of our strategic plan. With that, we will open it up for questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question is from John Rogers of D.A. Davidson.
John B. Rogers - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
A couple of things. I guess, first of all, in terms of the Construction segment, margins declined substantially year-over-year.
Is it -- how much of that -- I mean, Laurel, you cited weather, but I'm just trying to understand what's going on in that market and especially the fall-off in revenue.
James H. Roberts
Well, a couple of things, John. The beginning part of it is -- pardon?
John B. Rogers - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Jim -- I'm sorry. One of the -- pardon for that.
Is there -- Kenny is all in Large Projects?
Laurel J. Krzeminski
No.
James H. Roberts
No. Kenny actually is -- majority of it would be probably in Construction.
John B. Rogers - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Yes, okay. I'm sorry -- and I'm trying -- how much was that in the quarter?
Sorry.
Laurel J. Krzeminski
I think in the P&L in the quarter, just balance sheet, we closed on the 31st, so we have a closing balance sheet, and then we have added to the backlog. So there's $139 million in Construction backlog and $218 million in Large Project backlog.
That's included in the numbers we've reported.
James H. Roberts
Okay. John, you -- let me see if I can address the question around Construction.
So for us, last year, we had several jobs in the Construction segment that continued to deteriorate starting in the middle of the year and then worked away all the way through the end of the year. So they did -- we had 3 to 4 fairly Large Projects in the Construction segment that we continued to write-down last year.
So that was one of the components to draw down. And in addition, it is competitive in the California market still.
The margin expectations in the market have come down. Now hopefully, with some opportunities in the residential and things, we'll see a turnaround here this year.
But when they came down, so did the pricing and then we had a couple of problem jobs on top of that.
John B. Rogers - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
So -- and I know you typically give us some guidance as we get further into the year, but I mean, are we ever going to see margins get back in that business? Or is it -- I mean, what do we need, housing?
Or I'm just trying to understand what's -- if there's any hope there.
James H. Roberts
Well, I think there is hope. And I say that because as we see the residential, little flickers of residential light at the end of the tunnel, so to speak, John, we're also seeing a little industrial and commercial investment here as well.
So the -- what we've been saying over the last year is that we would have anticipated some of the private sector to move up at the tail end of 2013, always questionable whether or not it would have a positive effect in 2013. But I think the business will be back to some nice healthy margins.
It's just a matter of the balance you have to have, the private sector and the public sector both at the same time.
John B. Rogers - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Okay, and one other -- just quick follow-up, if I could. In the Large Project work, was there any significant 25% hurdle benefits in the quarter?
James H. Roberts
I think there was...
Laurel J. Krzeminski
There were 3, but they weren't terribly significant, Chisholm trail, Guam and Miramar, all reached profit recognition threshold. And I'll add to you, John, I think what's important on the Construction side to think about is, where the recovery is going to come from is probably not from some of the traditional work that we've been doing.
It's more in some of the markets that we're pursuing, in oil and gas, power, federal, underground and mining. All areas that we're pursuing more now than we ever have before.
James H. Roberts
And a lot of those are -- would fall into our Construction segment, based on the size of the project. So it's a very good point.
Operator
Our next question is from Jack Kasprzak of BB&T.
John F. Kasprzak - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
The $13 billion of work you're bidding over the next 12 months, does that include Kenny?
James H. Roberts
Yes. It -- well, I would say, yes and no.
Yes, over -- as far as megaprojects go because they really don't get involved in the large Large Projects. But there will be some additional projects that are not on that list that will come on board because of Kenny.
But it could still be very close, Jack.
John F. Kasprzak - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
Okay, got it. And with regard to formal guidance, you didn't give it this quarter.
Is it just -- I mean, would you describe that as your normal practice because it's early in the year and you like to get into the Construction season before you offer a formal guidance? I just want to make sure there's not really a change to policy.
James H. Roberts
No, you're right, Jack. It's not a changed policy.
We want to get a little more organized relative to seeing some line of sight for the 12-month period, and another couple of months would make a really nice opportunity for that. So typically, we would give some preliminary guidance on the Q1 call.
John F. Kasprzak - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
Right. Because we know the fourth -- I'm sorry, the first quarter is tougher typically, the loss quarter, winter quarter for you guys, so we get through that and get to the Q1 call and have a better view.
So that makes sense, okay. And just on residential outlook, Construction, I appreciate your comments with regard to timing, I think it makes certain -- it certainly makes sense that with the back half of this year into next year, to get projects going, but the caution on the trend or impact there, if I'm hearing you right, why wouldn't we be more optimistic about it eventually coming, given that -- I mean, most homebuilders are talking about higher subdivision count and it sure seems like the investment activity for residential development is going to pick up in a major way.
James H. Roberts
E I think that we agree with you, Jack. The question we've always said is we didn't want to move that timetable too far up.
So we've always -- over the last year or so, said, push it to the back of 2013, it could have an effect on 2013 or 2014, but I don't think that we've shied away from suggesting that there will be a good comeback in that market.
John F. Kasprzak - BB&T Capital Markets, Research Division
Okay, that's fair enough. And then just a couple of housekeeping items for Laurel, I guess.
CapEx for this year and tax rate, if you care to give some guidance, that would be appreciated.
Laurel J. Krzeminski
Okay. We're looking at somewhere between $40 million to $60 million in CapEx, and around $29 million to $33 million for our tax rate.
Operator
Our next question is from Nick Coppola of Thompson Research Group.
Nicholas A. Coppola - Thompson Research Group, LLC
First question, on Large Projects, particularly revenue in Q4, it was a little below what we expected. Is that kind of some lumpiness in that business?
Because I was going to say that you had a pretty good visibility on Large Project that you're working through, so any color on kind of whether or not that missed your expectations?
James H. Roberts
Nick, it did a little bit, but not significant. It's awful hard on those projects to kind of forecast exactly where you're going to be at the end of the year.
Obviously, we're very excited about the quality of the work. Gross margins are up nicely.
No real apparent reason, kind of accumulation, to give the miss on the revenue side. But no significant events.
Nicholas A. Coppola - Thompson Research Group, LLC
Okay. And thinking about Tappan Zee and IH-35 East, and kind of how those projects -- how we should expect those projects to progress in '13 and '14?
Can you give us any color on kind of how we should think about potential margin drag in, and I guess, the -- and maybe that they need to be spoken about separately, but what kind of margin drag would you -- should you expect in the back half of '13, as kind of revenue is kind of produced at no margin? And then kind of -- into '14, how quickly those projects will be constructed over a number of years?
James H. Roberts
Yes, we can get into more detail on some of those projects if that's needed, Nick. Every one of them is significantly different to whether they're design build, bid build, depending on the timeframe for the revenue of the cost and the margin projections.
So we'd be happy to discuss the big ones individually, but I think that it's a pretty detailed subject matter for this call.
Nicholas A. Coppola - Thompson Research Group, LLC
Okay. We can talk off-line on that.
James H. Roberts
Yes, you bet. We would be happy to, Nick.
Nicholas A. Coppola - Thompson Research Group, LLC
Okay, so last question, are there any, I guess, pretty simply, are there any of the Large Projects expected to hit key milestones in, I guess, Q1 of this year, I guess, already 2 months through?
James H. Roberts
Not at this time. Nothing in the first quarter.
Operator
Our next question is from Alex Rygiel of FBR.
Alexander J. Rygiel - FBR Capital Markets & Co., Research Division
Two questions. First, can you comment on what your view is on margin in your backlog today?
And then secondly, can you talk a little bit more about Kenny, for a couple of months, maybe some positives, maybe some negatives that you've noticed, and talk a little bit about sort of what they see in oil and gas and power?
James H. Roberts
Okay. Let me address the margin issue first in the backlog.
So most of our backlog typically resides over in the Large Projects side. The margins side in the backlog is high quality.
It should be in alignment with what we continue to always say, it's mid-teens, so very good work there. I would suggest that our backlog quality is as strong today or stronger than it was 12 months ago.
Now, is that -- you want me to go into a little more detail there, Alex?
Alexander J. Rygiel - FBR Capital Markets & Co., Research Division
No, that's very helpful.
James H. Roberts
Okay. And so on the Kenny side, 2 months into the acquisition, a very happy buyer, really high-quality people.
We have been working on strategic and operational plans. We've developed an integration charter.
We've really had some great introductions of the 2 business units, the Granite civil side, coupled with some of the end market-driven programs at Kenny, the power specifically and the underground. So, so far excellent.
We're going to have a large working program with them over the next several months to really share more information. But I couldn't be happier.
The management team and the people have been first-class the whole way.
Operator
Our next question is from Brian Rafn of Morgan Dempsey Capital Management.
Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC
Give me a sense -- on Kenny, is that business -- I think you make a good point, you've been a little lighter in the Midwest there. Is Kenny -- do they do the type of team design build, or is it more a standalone business?
And is their business more heavy civil or is it more of a turn business?
James H. Roberts
Okay. A couple of things, Brian.
They have several business lines, and let's just kind of look at 3 of them. Tunnel, and then look at the underground Inliner business and then the power business.
The tunnel business is very similar to what I would call our Large Projects business. So that is a public sector-funded work.
And it is -- it should be equivalent kind of returns, as I said, in our Large Projects business. The power business is substantially different.
They are mostly a construction management firm, logistics firm. They physically don't do a lot of the construction itself.
They have subs or joint venture partners that do that part of the work. That's different.
That delivery method is different than what Granite is typically used to. And it's a very interesting program model they have and they do very, very well.
And then the other one is the Inliner business, and I would call that very similar to our Construction business. Typically, worth $50 million or less, in a local municipality, upgrading streets.
The difference there and the positive part there, is that most of that funding for sewer water jobs is done by rate payers, although quasi municipal, it really isn't a public funding stream requirement. So that's a real positive.
And then the other one, the tunnel I'll go back on. A lot of the tunnel projects, Brian, are done in a Large Project environment with joint venture partners, and that's very typical in the tunnel environment, more risk, more partnerships and a larger portfolio of work to do.
Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC
Okay. Is there any ability and as you guys have -- you talked about mobility of moving crews around, does Kenny give you any ability to bundle or put a turnkey with some of your design build, and maybe capture on an infrastructure project, not just the surface, but some of the undergone utilities where you capture more of a project?
James H. Roberts
Brian, that is part of the plan itself right there, that the coupling of the 2 together, we're working on projects right now, putting bids together, where the Granite, Kenny or Kenny/Granite, well, whoever the lead is, that the 2 of them work together on projects where we could not have before. So that is part of the plan.
Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC
Okay, okay. The -- on the kind of the quarry, the aggregate side, what kind of capacity that you guys are kind of running at, and obviously somewhat subdued, what would be kind of your internal versus external mix?
James H. Roberts
Well, we're still pretty close to the 50-50 which we've been for quite a while. But we're probably going more towards actually the external, the internal slowdown this last year.
But I think that that business is going to come back with the private sector. And it is starting to see some light at the end of the tunnel, and it's a very heavy asset business, and it's -- the assets are frozen in one geographic spot.
So that is a little more market-driven and there's -- but I do see opportunities there, really, on the tail end of this year.
Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC
Okay, okay. I missed -- I was running fast, could you kind of talk or you'd talked about the $6 billion component of the $13 billion in some of the larger -- the design build work, what were some of those projects again?
James H. Roberts
Okay. A whole host of them.
I think I mentioned Brian, the ones in New York where the Goethals Bridge and the Bayonne Bridge. And those are 2 very large jobs.
And both of those look like they're bidding on the first half of the year. So -- and their estimated to be all -- a little bit less than $1 billion each.
So these are big jobs.
Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC
Okay, okay. What's on bid day?
What are you kind of seeing, bid quotes, how many bidders, what -- any change in build markets as we've gone to 2012 on some of the heavy civil stuff? Are you still 2 or 3 or 4 bidders, are there more or less, or I'm just kind of wondering what the competition is.
James H. Roberts
Yes, on the Large Projects, Brian, it's pretty well-ironed out that there's probably going to be somewhere between 3 to 7, the way I look at it. It's been nice that a lot of the owners have been really getting into a preferential treatment where they were pull, based on scoring systems, they'll pull only 3 or 4 and limited numbers of bidders.
But that's been nice to see because of the cost of literally pursuing these jobs has gone up. So really on the Large side, I really don't feel a lot of difference in the competition at all.
And then on a smaller work, it is still fiercely competitive, it continues to have 5 to 10 bidders on most all on the jobs with the smaller stuff.
Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC
Okay, okay. What are you seeing, if you go up, you're certainly that -- the proc, I think, Jim, about the private residential, what are you seeing in some of that local road work, county road work, maybe small state under $50 million to $100 million, which can be kind of a turn business.
How was that -- for a better vernacular, we could call it middle market business, what is that like? Smaller than the heavy civil, but obviously not doing some guy's driveway.
What's that kind of tone of work?
James H. Roberts
Well, that's the typical work that we've done in our vertically integrated businesses for years. That's the $500,000 street job, ripping it out, putting new curb, gutter, sidewalk in, or doing something in a municipality of overlaying a street.
So we do that all the time. That's probably the most competitive market today there is, the $50 million and under road proc-type of project.
So that's the part that worries me the most, Brian, is those jobs right here. And although I do think that most of the municipalities that we've seen today are looking for alternative funding mechanisms.
They're trying to figure out ways to the be able pay for the work that they haven't been doing, so we see a lot of backlog, we're just still struggling seeing the actual funding. And that's got to happen, coupled with the private sector, for that level of market to kind of even out a little bit.
Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC
Okay, all right. Are you seeing anything -- kind of you talked a little bit about state budgets.
Are you seeing any differences between regional players? And we certainly have seen as you go with across the political mosaic, California versus Texas, you're up in the Midwest, Wisconsin versus Indiana, it's truly a state-by-state relative to budgets and surpluses and deficits.
Are you seeing any pockets of strength regionally amongst state DOTs?
James H. Roberts
Yes. You bet, Brian, they are all going, I think, substantially different.
Some of them have actually balanced their budgets quite nicely and others of them are behind. You saw what happened in Virginia in the Senate just this week.
They're passing a gas tax, a sales-tax combination. I've seen Florida moving its way up the ladder on a lot of funding.
Texas has always been healthy. So every state is different, and they're all looking for different ways to fund the work that they needed to be done at their level.
And it's starting to be creative, and actually, I think they're going to see a lot of different ways over the next 12 months to get that work caught up. But in the last 2 years, Brian, that's been the toughest market right there.
Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC
Yes, okay. It's certainly fair enough.
Give me your sense, Jim, relative to -- we had looked at this, the Highway Bill which had, I don't know -- 11, 12, 13, 14 extensions, 3 months, now you've got a 2 to 3-year bill. There was some talk about it, being at some point $500 billion, $600 billion.
The Army Corps of Engineers has its report card and the infrastructure either always gets a D or an F. It's kind of been -- it's been certainly significant in less than that's, how has that Highway Bill, has that done anything from the federal level to stabilize highway construction at all?
Or is that a pretty limp bill?
James H. Roberts
Well, I think it was a little bit slight to begin with. I think it has stabilized things, Brian, at a $40 billion to $41 billion level annually.
I think the local entities were happy to see some form of knowing what their opportunities were. It is underfunded dramatically at $41 billion.
So the good part is stability for 2 years, people know where they're at, and it expires September of 2014. The other good news is that if we continue to get these report cards, continue to accumulate a huge backlog of infrastructure and improvement work, that's good news.
But fortunately, the question is, it's going to be when. But these states -- there are certain states today that I can tell you are doing a really nice job.
And they're also diving into the alternative funding market as well. So every state is different, and we certainly focus on the states that have the attitude, where they want to grow their investment in the state over a long period of time.
Brian Gary Rafn - Morgan Dempsey Capital Management, LLC
Okay. And then how was kind of your crew, your mobility of moving guys around the country.
You guys have been in that now a little more than a year. How has that played out relative to the rank and file guy.
How was -- kind of the -- has it kind of impacted your culture?
James H. Roberts
I think it's getting better and better everyday. I'll give you an example, Brian.
We bid -- I say the IH-35 job in Texas. Well, we did that job with people from Florida, from people from Seattle, people from the Central Coast of Washington, and then our the main team located in Louisville, Texas itself.
So -- and then, now that we have the job, there will be people moving in to help build that job from all over the country. So people realize today that mobility is part of the construction industry.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our next question is from Lucia Marquez of Macquarie.
Lucia Marquez - Macquarie Research
Sameer is on the road today. For the projects that you mentioned, where you expect decisions by June, what is the Granite portion of these projects?
James H. Roberts
I don't have it off the top of my head, but I can do it very quickly for you.
Lucia Marquez - Macquarie Research
Okay, just an estimate.
James H. Roberts
Well, I'd say the total of all of them has got to be close to $0.75 billion, our share, somewhere in that neighborhood.
Lucia Marquez - Macquarie Research
Okay, excellent. And then my second question is, if you could give us a sense for when the Tappan Zee project, where it is in the funding process, and maybe when TIFIA funding decision is expected, and how long does it usually take?
James H. Roberts
Well, I can't really answer just when on the TIFIA funding question. But I can tell you that the job -- the state of the job is well-funded at this point in time, so there is no issue with the project contract relative to funds from the owner at this time.
The job is in the design phases, so that means that a job like this, since we're the design build contractor, our team is still finalizing the design. And then we will start towards the middle, to the end of the year, driving what we call piles to help start to build the superstructure of the bridge.
So most of this year will be design and then in the tail end, we'll get into some of the Construction.
Operator
Our next question is from John Rogers of D.A. Davidson.
John B. Rogers - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Just a couple of quick follow-ups. The lower minority interest in the quarter, is that related to the project in Washington where you took the charge?
Laurel J. Krzeminski
Yes.
John B. Rogers - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Okay. And secondly, Laurel, do you know -- or can you tell us what your expectations for the D&A run rate is now?
It looks like it dropped down quite a bit in the quarter, but I assume with Kenny, it picks up again?
Laurel J. Krzeminski
Yes. We expect an increase of around $25 million associated with Kenny.
John B. Rogers - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
$25 million.
Laurel J. Krzeminski
And other new than that, the run rate should be in the range it's been in the last couple of years.
John B. Rogers - D.A. Davidson & Co., Research Division
Okay. So $25 million on top of the $50 million, $56 million run rate that you had this past...
Laurel J. Krzeminski
Yes, or $60 million, around that.
Operator
Thank you. I'm not showing any further questions in the queue.
I'd like to turn the call back over to management.
James H. Roberts
Okay. Well, thank you, everyone, for your questions.
I would like to once again thank all of our employees for their tireless effort this past year and their remarkable commitment to Granite. To our investors, we thank you for your continued interest in Granite.
If you have any additional questions, please don't hesitate to get in touch with us. Thank you, everybody.
Have a good day.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today's conference. This concludes today's program.
You may all disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.