Posted on 04/07/2007 7:00:29 PM PDT by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
The growing traffic congestion in Texas is a multipronged problem that cannot be solved by one policy.
At a time when toll roads appear to be state leadership's primary answer to the dilemma, a bill proposed by Sen. John Carona, R-Dallas, has merit.
The legislation would index the gas tax to the Highway Cost Index, or the cost of highway construction over time.
According to Carona's office, the bill by 2030 would generate about $16 billion in gas tax revenue or 31/2 times more than the current gas tax would.
Not only would more money be available for transportation infrastructure, consumers would pay less over time, according to Carona's office.
The cost to the typical driver in 2030 would be an additional $21 per month, compared to an additional $100 in toll and additional fuel costs if the gas tax remains static.
Texas drivers have gotten a cheaper-than-warranted ride for too long. The gas tax, a pairing of 18.4 cents in federal taxes and 20 cents in state taxes, has not been raised since 1991.
Tax bills must originate in the House. Rep. Mike Krusee, R-Round Rock, has proposed a similar bill that indexes the tax to the Consumer Price Index, which rises more slowly than the HCI.
Both Carona and Krusee chair their respective transportation committees.
Lawmakers should seriously consider pursuing legislation that indexes the gas tax to the highway index rather than the consumer index.
Something must be done about the growing congestion on Texas roadways.
Toll roads are one of the cornerstones of Gov. Rick Perry's Trans-Texas Corridor, a web of roads, railroads and communications and utilities lines scrawled across the state.
In some cases, privatized toll roads make sense. They provide upfront funding to build the necessary infrastructure. The speed this method can bring to launching a project is a crucial asset as the state falls farther behind its roadways needs.
But toll roads should by no means be the only tool the state uses to relieve pressure on state highways and byways.
An indexed gas tax should receive a fair trial.
Trans-Texas Corridor PING
Oh yes, we all know how much good comes from tax hikes. Not!
Holy crap! They need to raise that tax just on principle! You can't have a tax stay static for that long! /s
But who’s going to trust a hike in the gas tax for road construction when only 55 percent of the present Texas gas tax is used for that?
Yep. Politicans: can’t trust them any farther than you can throw them...
We do need a lot of new roads, and widening of the roads we have. We don't, IMHO need that stupid Trans-Texas corridor, though.
I hope everyone realizes that this makes no sense whatsoever. If all the government needs is an extra 21 dollar per months, why would that have to charge you and extra $100 per month if the method of raising that money is different?
Also, the theory here is that only a gas tax will reduce consumption. Yet, congestion is a cost too, and thus congestion ought to reduce consumption as well.
I’ve been in San Antonio since Thursday and have never been so miserable trafficwise as I’ve been here.
Even non-rush hour looks like rush hour. Every place is clogged.
On the plus side, the “Mexican-Americans” here are actually Americans. My wife noticed we have more signs in Spanish in Orlando than we’ve seen here. More people also speak English. And *everyone* has been very polite.
I can’t believe we have more illegals in Orlando than there are in San Antonio. Come to think of it, I don’t think I’ve even seen a Mexican flag since I’ve been here!
Politicians are so crooked that they make Al Capone look like a Telli Tubby!!!!!
toll roads also leave an electronic trail.
A major problem is that not all the money goes for roads. A huge chunk goes to the public schools, which insist on an increasing amount of funding.
Actually, Govenor Ann Richards raised the gas tax by a nickel per gallon, in her last year or two in office.....it may have been around 1994, I think.
The Ann Richards 5 cent tax increase was done the last time gas was under a dollar a gallon in Texas...I do remember that.
It’s been proven time and time again, that state based levies (taxes) for roads don’t work. What happens is there’s some (made up) crisis for which the state needs to tap into the funds, they get the money for whatever they want and the roads or whatever the levy was for remains underfunded.
The best way of improving roads is by local taxes, it requires a larger amount of money in taxes, since the taxes are based on a smaller area. In the end the funds are not going to the states coffers and can’t be used for other purposes.
This wouldn’t be a such “problem”, if the government hadn’t mandated higher milage standards.
“Texas drivers have gotten a cheaper-than-warranted ride for too long. The gas tax, a pairing of 18.4 cents in federal taxes and 20 cents in state taxes, has not been raised since 1991.”
And let’s not forget, those big, bad oil companies are making an unconscionable 10 - 13 cents per gallon in profit (oh, that awful concept). Gee, the government tax is ONLY three to four times bigger!!
No it wouldn't be fine. Every time there is a shortfall, South Texas gets screwed. Taxes are collected throughout the state, but expeditures are concentrated mostly in and near large cities. Corpus Christi didn't get connected to the Interstate Highway System until 1981 which was a full ten years after the orginal Interstate system was supposed to be finished. Corpus Christi didn't even get four lane divided highways all the way to Houston till 1988. Supposedly the Interstate system was to connect over 95% of the cities with over 50,000 population. Corpus Christi had over 200,000 in 1970 and has almost 300,000 now. A toll road system connecting the whole state together is a lot fairer than the current system that taxes everyone but allocates funding to the biggest cites with the most representation in the legislature.
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