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Cars getting too fuel efficient....tax on driving

Discussion in 'Environmental Discussion' started by JC91006, May 7, 2014.

  1. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    I just read in CA they want to start taxing drivers based on the miles they drive. Apparently the tax on fuel now isn't working because of all the gas sippers out there. They want to start taxing based on miles driven. I'm not sure how they would be able to implement the tax...... A yearly fee??

    Sick of the gas tax?
    What about a tax on every mile you drive?
    A new bill going through Sacramento would tax drivers for every mile they are on the road.
    The state gasoline tax of 52.9 cents per gallon could be replaced with a "miles driven fee" of $0.05 cents or so per mile driven, under state legislation proposed by a Bay Area lawmaker.
    State transit officials note that there's not nearly enough money available to fix the many bridges and roads in California that are in desperate need of repair.
    A federal highway fund, based on taxes on fuel, is expected to run dry this summer.
    “We've got to figure out how to pay for infrastructure,” state Sen. Mark DeSaulnier (D-Concord) said. “One philosophy is, if you use it, you should pay for it.”
    Under SB 1077, introduced by DeSaulnier, a still-to-be-determined California city would begin taxing motorists in January 2016. The longer your commute, the more you would pay.
    That may yet be a tough sell, but a $0.05 per mile fee could raise over $100 billion for roads in some parts of the state, the San Gabriel Valley Tribune reported.
    DeSaulnier, who chairs the Senate Transportation Committee, says with more and more people driving fuel-efficient cars, gas tax dollars just aren't coming in like they used to.
    It seems, what's good for the environment is not so good for the upkeep of our roads.
    “You still have to pay for infrastructure,” DeSaulnier said. “The car isn't worth much if you're stuck in traffic.”
    The mileage tax approach is already being tested out in Washington and Oregon, and if California lawmakers sign on, a "pilot program designed ... to replace the state’s existing fuel excise tax" could be in place by 2016.
    Fernando Valdez drives 200 miles a day to get to his landscaping jobs all over the Bay Area.
    “I think it would kill me. Too many miles,” Valdez said.
    “I think they're probably going to make more people move and leave the state," motorist David Jones said.
    While state transportation agencies are in favor of the tax, the Association of California Car Clubs opposes it, saying the tax is actually a fee that "can be raised anytime with a majority vote in the legislature and not with a 2/3’s vote as with a tax."
    The bill would require state transportation officials to report their findings from the pilot program by mid-2017. From there, the state legislature would have to approve a separate bill before the mileage tax would be applied statewide.
     
  2. bedrock8x

    bedrock8x Senior Member

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    The Smog check in CA will report the ODO reading to DMV. All they have to do is to change the Smog check to annually instead of bi-annually.
     
  3. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    There is no Smog check in California for the prius. Also I'm sure people that drive 30000 miles a year will not have $1500 readily available to pay a tax

    SM-N900P ?
     
  4. Okinawa

    Okinawa Senior Member

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    Every now and then a rumor will surface that the federal government is planning to do that as well.
     
  5. Okinawa

    Okinawa Senior Member

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  6. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    Make no mistake, this tax will be added to the gas tax. Then get ready for a special electric vehicle tax. Meanwhile, the billions obtained by the gas tax are being spend on exactly what? Few question whether the decaying highway is a lack of funds overall or due to non-transportation expenses taking away all the money from transportation infrastructure.
     
  7. Okinawa

    Okinawa Senior Member

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    I sure think you are right. They are going to tax the hell out of us no matter what we do. We are in a no win situation anyway we go.
     
  8. KennyGS

    KennyGS Senior Member

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    So they'll tax residents to pay for the miles they drive, but not other people driving from out of state?
     
  9. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    It's the American way

    SM-N900P ?
     
  10. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    Only for lack of an presently enforceable way of doing so. We can be sure that CA gvmt. minds are focused on getting a "fair" tax on those freeloaders. FL figured out how to get into the pockets of out of staters with a "bed tax".
     
  11. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    If it is odometer based then CA-registered vehicles would also be taxed for out of state miles driven.

    If we generally move towards road-use based fees, how to avoid facing the fact that vehicle weight really matters? I have read that road damage scales to the fourth power of weight, but that sounds kinda high.
     
  12. orenji

    orenji Senior Member

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    So if you can't afford a new car and are driving an old pick up truck that gets 10 miles to the gallon, they would get taxed the same as a Hybrid/Electric vehicle. Better watch out for some pretty unhappy California residents .
     
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  13. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    Especially in Texas...where their wallet might be recovering
     
  14. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    I would be ok with the miles driven tax if they included a multiplier for the weight of the vehicle,i.e. miles driven * weight in tons = tax
     
  15. JPTuck

    JPTuck Member

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    It should be a tax based on what you drive vs what you could drive. If someone wants to drive a huge Dodge pickup that never used it as a pickup vs a smaller more fuel efficient one then they should be taxed on the difference in mileage. If the larger vehicle gets 14mpg and the smaller gets 20mpg then tax them on the difference-$500/year x mpg difference. If they are driving something that large that means disposable income and they can afford it.
     
  16. ItsNotAboutTheMoney

    ItsNotAboutTheMoney EditProfOptInfoCustomUser Title

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    Then pay it monthly, or weekly as you would do now with fuel excise. They can add it to whatever system is used to pay tolls. Use an attached account to pay the fee. All easy, electronic processing already dealing with large amounts of money.

    Odometer-based billing would be easy. It's not perfect, but it's better than fuel taxation and once it's in the hand-wringing about fuel efficiency and plug-ins can stop. In the short term it would make hybrids and PEVs less economical, but I think the ugly truth ultimately produces better results.
     
  17. ItsNotAboutTheMoney

    ItsNotAboutTheMoney EditProfOptInfoCustomUser Title

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    I believe that it's relative to the construction of the road and the fourth power really comes in when you are driving in excess of the designed supported weight. So a semi driving on the Interstate does a lot less damage than one driving on a residential street, but on the other hand the Interstate costs a lot more per mile to build and maintain than does a residential street. In many cases the effective cost difference between a 2,500lb subcompact and a 4,000lb minivan or SUV would be negligible. And in states with harsh winter climates a lot of damage is caused simply by freeze and thaw.

    To be completely accurate you'd need detailed GPS tracking so you can price each section of road driven. Lots of data there, but the pricing math would be relatively simple.
     
  18. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    I've heard the same, all the way back of a freshman engineering overview. But not having taken the mechanical or civil engineering path, I can't verify it.

    Note that this function is so strong that, compared to heavy trucks, even the heaviest passenger cars and SUVs cause negligible roadbed damage. But they still require lane space, so a flat per-mile congestion charge should be sufficient.
     
  19. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    It is just mind boggling to me why something so naturally simple and effective must be made so incredibly and destructively convoluted.

    Charge the tax on the fuel. Physics dictates that big heavy things are going to take more fuel than lightweight things. Likewise, inefficient vehicles are going to take more fuel than efficient things. All incentives are to be efficient and the max payoff goes to those making the best decisions. Make sure the tax is for all fuels (electric, gas, H2, squirrels in cages, etc.). Balance for pollution contribution and energy content as determined by legislative priorities. Adjust the tax to meet the revenue requirements. Since it is a point of sale, enforcement and fairness are straightforward. Done.
     
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  20. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    Taking a look at the proposed 5 cents/mile in CA:
    EPA says average car goes 15,000 miles/yr (why they say this, I do not know - real number is about 11,500 per yr per UMich).
    But OK take EPA number, and say 15000 mi per year at avg. 25 MPG in CA that's $315/yr gas tax.
    But the proposed $0.05/mile is $750/yr for 15,000 miles, so these guys actually want to double it....sort of like going to $1/gallon state gaso tax in CA.

    Go for it CA: PA and some other states will catch up to you unless you increase tax. Seriously, my state VA would go to per mile rate if other states go that way too...voters here hate the thought of Prii escaping $20/yr bucks gaso tax (we only have 11 cents/gallon tax). VA just reduced gaso tax to make sure high MPG cars were not cheating the system.