How LONG R WE gonna put UP with this SHIT , Folks----Tax,Tax! TAX! ...This shit in D.C. (degenerate city) ...THEY r pissing away Billions ? trillions of OUR $$$$ ... enough is ENOUGH ! ....R we gonna just wait until 100 % or MORE of what WE earn is gonna go 2 this scum !!! ....just gonna B happy being an slave huh......OUR Fore Fathers ...bet we ' s make in em Proud ,that WE came from their loins ! yup real proud they must B . http://autos.yahoo.com/blogs/motoramic/why-americans-soon-pay-more-drive-every-mile-235604924.html
The financial lookouts who toil in America's
transportation departments have been waving red flags for years that
there wasn't enough money to keep the nation's 4 million miles of roads
and bridges drivable. Now the federal government's top accountant has
told Congress it should experiment with taxing drivers by the mile to
make up billions of dollars in shortfalls. The debate isn't whether
you'll pay more to drive in the future, but how you'll pay — and how
much.
For decades, federal and state governments
have relied on gasoline and diesel taxes to pay for road building and
maintenance. By one industry group estimate, the nation needs a minimum of $123 billion a year just to resurface roads and shore up the bridges it has, let alone build anything new.
But the tax side of that equation hasn't
kept pace with those needs. The federal tax of 18.4 cents a gallon on
gasoline was last raised in 1993. State taxes add on an average of 22
cents a gallon, and many of those haven't been raised in several years
as well; Georgia charges the same 7.5 cents a gallon in taxes it did in
1971. (In Europe and Japan, fuel taxes for roads are 10 times higher.)
And as new, more efficient vehicles hit the road — along with electric
cars and plug-in hybrids like the Chevy Volt, whose owners may buy a
tank of gas every few months — road-building taxes will soon start
falling.
Since 2008, Congress has been forced to kick
in $52.8 billion to patch the sinkhole in the federal highway building
fund; states have been forced to spend money from other sources or even
turned rural roads from pavement back to gravel
to keep maintenance costs down. The U.S. Government Accounting Office
says over the next 10 years, the federal road jar will run $110 billion
short without changes.
The favored answer of road engineers? Taxing
by the mile driven. A handful of states — Oregon, Minnesota and Nevada —
have already tested ways to use GPS and other electronics to adjust
taxes. In the Nevada and Oregon tests, drivers had devices installed on
their cars that sent data to special fuel pumps; those pumps
automatically adjusted their fees based on how far the vehicles had
driven, without revealing data that would amount to tracking drivers.
The GAO told Congress this week
it should allow a similar test on electric vehicles and commercial
trucks, and estimated that a pay-by-the-mile tax of 0.9 cents to 2.2
cents per mile designed to replace fuel taxes would raise a typical
driver's costs from $98 to between $108 to $248.
But it's not the only answer to filling this
financial sinkhole. Washington state lawmakers have put a flat fee of
$100 a year on electric vehicles to make up for the gas taxes they don't
generate, and Oregon lawmakers may follow suit. In Virgina, Gov. Bob
McDonald has proposed abolishing the gas tax entirely, replacing it with
a sales tax and a new $100 fee on "alternative fuel" cars and trucks.
That idea has already drawn fire from critics who point out that it
would make Virginians who never drive pay for roads while letting people
who travel through the state do so for free.
Congress would need to act to create such a
test, and there's many concerns about the privacy of giving the
government unfettered access to drivers' odometers. But there's no signs
on this highway to higher taxes of any off-ramp.
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