The National Surface Transportation Infrastructure Financing Commission released a report today on how to get federal transportation funding back into the black. Guess what they decided?! Instead of figuring it out with increased efficiency, innovation, and cuts else where the government decided that the best way to solve this problem is with, of course, charging us more money! See the below chart for a grab bag of what they're proposing.Of course, even with these measures they still predict to lose money. Damn this sucksfeel free to see the attached links. One of them itself has a link to the actual report. Its a quick download, but the damn thing is about 250 pages long so I haven't made my way through it yet.http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123562023540279271.htmlhttp://www.junkscience.com/blog1/
2/26/2009 11:18:34 PM
I'm not sure why taxing per-mile is a bad idea. It really is the epitome of a user fee.To wit: if you drive more miles, you're using the roads more. If you're using the roads more, you should pay for the roads more.I mean, no question we should be taking politics out of transportation allocations, and streamlining where we can - but the fact is, if we do raise fleet fuel economy, you're going to produce shortages in funding.
2/26/2009 11:42:39 PM
^ Then raise the gas tax. Why institute another far more complicated taxing mechanism which imposes exactly the same incentives as the old tax? SO, please, why is a higher gas tax not as good as slapping a $200 GPS tracking system on every vehicle? A gas tax is perfect: a hummer causes more damage to the roads than a Mini, but a per-mile tax would tax them exactly the same. However, a gasoline tax would tax the hummer dramatically more than the Mini (almost three times more). And I think that is quite reasonable. A gas tax is ideal; it taxes those that drive more, more. it taxes those in the heaviest vehicles more. it is fairly easy to collect, all you need to keep track of is 10 or so oil companies. A perfect use tax. Brilliant. The only benefit to a per-mile tax is you can tax some miles more than others, specifically highways during rush hour. But that is far easier done with EZ pass systems.
2/26/2009 11:55:45 PM
The last thing I want is the government tracking my damn car when I'm driving around., they probably already can.
2/26/2009 11:58:04 PM
2/27/2009 12:03:28 AM
Please, just STFU with your tired song and dance about partisanship. Its pretty clear that both sides of the fucking aisle have no problem with this sort of things. What do you want to argue, that they won't do this b/c it would hurt the economy? Obama (and plenty of others) want to blow ahead with carbon cap and trade which will kill the economy as well. They don't seem to care.How do you block certain posters? My head hurts from reading this idiocy.
2/27/2009 12:09:46 AM
2/27/2009 12:10:27 AM
2/27/2009 12:12:41 AM
The heavy transportation industry needs to shift more business back to railroads. They actually already are as its a much, much, much more efficient way to transport goods. This heavy transportation industry punishes the roadways the most, not private automobiles.
2/27/2009 12:14:44 AM
2/27/2009 12:20:39 AM
2/27/2009 12:25:28 AM
^^ Yes HUR. The payroll tax takes 12.4% of a poor persons entire income. Meanwhile, anyone earning over $102k pays a flat fee of $12,648 (2008). So, someone earning $1 million will pay 1.26% of their income to the SS payroll tax. Meanwhile, I forgot where I was reading it earlier today, but the numbers looked something like this: the bottom 50% of the population spends 4-6% of their income on fuel, while the top 50% spend 1-2% of their income on fuel. As such, if you double the price of gasoline you will tax the bottom 50% at 4-6% and the top 50% at 1-2%.[Edited on February 27, 2009 at 12:31 AM. Reason : .,.]
2/27/2009 12:31:20 AM
2/27/2009 12:41:36 AM
2/27/2009 12:48:00 AM
2/27/2009 12:55:13 AM
2/27/2009 12:57:45 AM
^^ I would like to break it to you: to many folks in Europe automobiles are a virtual necessity. Single family homes are not unusual in Europe. Yes, Europe is different from America, but it is only by degrees. $7 gas has not rendered Europe unrecognizable to the average American.[Edited on February 27, 2009 at 1:02 AM. Reason : ^]
2/27/2009 1:01:11 AM
2/27/2009 7:42:46 AM
if people are being charged and tracked per mile then there will be less incentive for them to drive places, as compared to if it was already wrapped into the price of gasoline which they would have to pay regardless. This lack of travel would cause negative economic impacts as people would not drive places and then spend money. The result would be revenue decay in other areas.Gas tax is superior.
2/27/2009 9:48:31 AM
2/27/2009 9:52:48 AM
2/27/2009 10:00:14 AM
2/27/2009 10:41:43 AM
I thought Obama wasn't going to raise my taxes? Wtf!
2/27/2009 11:00:33 AM
Obama be tukken yer monies
2/27/2009 11:09:54 AM
^^^ tire considerations go WAY beyond the scope of this thread. that's a thread for the Garage. I, with some other MEs and car nuts will help you out there if you want.
2/27/2009 11:18:29 AM
tax per mile? this is one of the stupidest ideas out there
2/27/2009 11:24:49 AM
how in the hell are you going to calculate how many miles people drive on state/federal roads
2/27/2009 9:33:01 PM
As someone who drives nearly 100 miles a day for work, I clearly oppose this tax (or set of taxes and levies).
2/27/2009 9:36:37 PM
2/28/2009 1:42:17 AM
a per mile tax with the rate based on weight is what i'd vote for
2/28/2009 9:57:02 AM
^ yes, great, and how are you going to calculate this while figuring in the amount people drive on private roads/parking lots/driveways/off-road/state,federal maintained roads on land that is already taxed or paid for by use
2/28/2009 10:04:08 AM
Isn't this proposed tax going to slaughter the trucking industry?
2/28/2009 10:14:13 AM
2/28/2009 11:35:16 AM
2/28/2009 11:44:27 AM
2/28/2009 11:54:48 AM
2/28/2009 11:56:36 AM
2/28/2009 2:24:34 PM
2/28/2009 2:55:10 PM
2/28/2009 3:07:54 PM
If you're intent on implementing a tax-by-mile scheme:The state already has car registration information that could be used as a reasonable proxy for vehicles in use in a particular area (for passenger vehicles, at least).Using vehicle registration information and EPA mileage estimates, an average MPG for an area (e.g. state or county) can be calculated. Miles driven and road usage would be estimated from the amount of gas purchased, and the applicable fee added to the fuel cost.If an average weighted by number of vehicles is used, this method would favor efficient vehicles over non-efficient one; i.e., efficient (high MPG) vehicles would effectively pay less per mile than less efficient vehicles.[Edited on February 28, 2009 at 4:31 PM. Reason : ]
2/28/2009 4:26:55 PM
2/28/2009 4:52:38 PM
didn't want to make a new thread for this... i think it would be a great idea if a few people from here got this book and then discussed it:http://www.greenhellbook.com/offers/offer.php?id=GHL002
4/5/2009 7:37:23 PM
4/5/2009 8:32:51 PM
If some politician would just propose shifting some existing tax to a resource tax (mainly gas tax), then it would have my resounding support. For instance, attach a guaranteed decrease in the income tax for the levy of a new gas tax.It drives me nuts that they can continuously propose new taxes as if everything is hunky-doorie with it just becoming a new revenue stream for the government. It won't be. The government is running close to 33% of GDP right now, and anyone who thinks that can be done (or increased) without strangling the free market that it rides on is a numskull.We need new taxes to wean people off fossil fuels, not to counter the monumental force of the federal budget shortfall.---And this idea of charging cars by anything other than gas usage also require about 70 IQ points to come up with.Dur hur, this is a great way to accomplish our objectives... those SUV drivers certainly deserve to have a lighter tax leveraged per gas used.
4/5/2009 8:45:43 PM
yah i really don't understand this tax/mile deal. You'd think a gas tax pretty much encompasses this....
4/5/2009 8:58:27 PM
it's those darn efficient cars using less gas, alternative cars, and electric cars getting around the gas tax.
4/5/2009 9:04:26 PM
^^^^ Fine, let me fix that for you:Why institute another complicated taxing mechanism which imposes exactly the same incentives as the old tax? But I would still maintain that it is more complicated, since before all they had to monitor and police were a few dozen wholesale gasoline distributors to enforce the gasoline tax. Now, every single one of the nation's ten thousand inspection stations (which currently work for the state, not the Federal Government) would need to be monitored and policed to collect the mileage tax. And while it is very hard to refine and distribute your own gasoline in an effort to avoid the tax, finding a creative way to retard your odometer would be relatively simple. And, again, it would tax heavy vehicles less than they otherwise would be taxed with a normal jump in the gasoline tax.[Edited on April 5, 2009 at 9:07 PM. Reason : ^]
4/5/2009 9:06:33 PM
so would the government tax me on miles that i drive on my own property?
4/5/2009 9:37:14 PM
so i can leave my car running in my drive way until it runs out of gas and not pay a cent of taxes on gasor i can sit in traffic with my AC running for an hour and travel a total of 5 miles and only pay 5 miles of taxor i can travel 20 miles in 30 minutes and pay 20 miles of tax?if you want to charge people to use the roads, use toll boothsor just keep the goddamn system we got. if it aint broke, dont fix it
4/5/2009 10:02:12 PM
^ I have fucking had it with you. damnit, STOP MAKING SENSE
4/5/2009 10:07:01 PM