Minister: "We need to take up the tax"Groucho: "I'd like to take up the carpet."Minister: "I still insist we take up the tax."Groucho: "He's right - you've gotta take up the tacks before you can take up the carpet."
10/30/2013 11:59:16 AM
11/5/2013 10:11:02 AM
I think the small vs large vehicle component of this is a bit misguided.It is true that passenger vehicles have virtually no impact on pavement design/life span/etc. In fact, pavement design is based on semi-trucks almost exclusively (speaking of highways). So from that aspect, passenger vehicles contribute very little to the cost of transportation infrastructure, while semi-trucks contribute almost all. Even large pick-up trucks contribute very little, so no need to single those out.However, what I think some people fail to consider is that passenger vehicles contribute heavily to the capacity demand of a roadway, most notably, the number of lanes/road widening/etc.Both semi-trucks and passenger vehicles place demands on locations/destinations of roadways. In conclusion, it is a bit foolish to assign a heavy cost to semi-trucks/diesel fuel because they do the most damage, while ignoring passenger vehicles. One must also consider the impact of passenger vehicles on the capacity and destinations of roads.I don't care for government tracking. I think fuel taxes still work best for funding transportation needs, especially with a tiered system: since there are many more passenger vehicles than semi-trucks, regular fuels can be taxed at a lower rate, yet high enough to account for costs associated with their demands, while diesel is taxed at a higher rate to account for road damage by semi-trucks (major cost) and the far fewer number of these trucks on the road.
11/5/2013 2:33:37 PM
Again, fuel taxes and either personal property taxes or registration fees based on mileage driven to supplement. I think it's also much more efficient as the infrastructure for enforcing it is already in place, and you don't deal with the privacy concerns and sheer system complexity of trying to geographically track millions of vehicles.
11/5/2013 3:49:54 PM
11/5/2013 4:35:13 PM
Its a great idea; we need the revenue obviously.
11/5/2013 4:44:15 PM
But mrfrog, the revenue is clearly needed. I think it is better to tax congestion, which the poor can get out of paying entirely by changing their shift times, or tax gasoline, which it seems only the rich are able to get out of paying by going electric.
11/6/2013 10:59:30 AM
I can't tell if "we need the revenue" is some kind of sarcastic Republican meme or not.
11/6/2013 12:00:49 PM
Hmm...society must pay for roads. As such, revenue is necessary. we have currently decided to pay for it by taxing everyone whenever they use gasoline. I think it would be nice to shift that to be a bit less regressive. I don't see what team coke/team pepsi has to do with it.
11/6/2013 1:04:31 PM
I think all the solutions proposed so far are more regressive than the current system.
11/6/2013 2:37:47 PM
Is public road mileage in that above graph strictly road mileage; or is it lane mileage, accounting for road width... ie, will two lanes in each direction count double the mileage as a one lane each direction?
11/6/2013 10:35:13 PM
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/policyinformation/pubs/hf/pl11028/chapter1.cfmIt seems to be lane miles. If they were counting "centerline" miles, then it would be almost flat.In fact, it seems clear that the length of roads in general has increased less than 25% since 1923. So much for the idea that we need to "build new roads".[Edited on November 7, 2013 at 11:11 AM. Reason : ]EDIT:eergh, no waithttp://www.fhwa.dot.gov/policyinformation/statistics/2008/vmt421.cfmIt might be centerline miles in the previous graph. Can't really tell the difference, because the bottom of the y-axis is set to a weird value. Not to mention, this is done against a secondary y-axis which is scaled to zero.[Edited on November 7, 2013 at 11:16 AM. Reason : ]
11/7/2013 11:11:23 AM
Whatever the history, we need to build more roads.
11/8/2013 12:18:13 PM
11/8/2013 12:33:46 PM
^yeah I don't really follow that either.
11/8/2013 2:27:57 PM
more flexible than what? A rubber band? Point is they have more incentive to avoid costs which are a larger portion of their income. As such, low-skill employers which offer shift times which allow their employees to avoid such massive costs will find it easier to hire and keep employees at lower wages.
11/8/2013 3:37:15 PM
you still aren't making sense
11/8/2013 4:12:30 PM
Someone will put forth more effort to avoid an expense that is 10% of their income than someone else will avoid that same expense if it only constitutes 1% of their income.
11/8/2013 4:18:44 PM
how can poor people avoid congestion taxes? not all, or most, poor people can work off-peak hours. most low-wage jobs occur during regular hours.
11/8/2013 4:25:12 PM
Many low-wage employers are already switching to a 25 hour week to avoid the ACA, producing fairly non-standard work shifts. Certainly the morning shift will fight traffic and pay the congestion pricing. but the later shifts won't.
11/8/2013 4:46:17 PM
^ which is fine, if that employer is able to handle the lower quality work from having lesser paid shorter hours employees.
11/8/2013 4:59:38 PM
Its a small percentage that can do that, proposing it as a solution doesn't make sense
11/8/2013 5:42:22 PM
Who are these magical low income people switching to 25 hour weeks bc of the ACA?I call bs.
11/8/2013 6:20:39 PM
Magical Negroes?
11/8/2013 6:47:26 PM
I'm ok with this
11/8/2013 7:54:14 PM
You would be ok with this
11/8/2013 8:24:45 PM
11/10/2013 5:18:42 PM
we dont need the extra revenue, then
11/10/2013 10:27:23 PM