TIP: Click on subject to list as thread! ANSI
echo: old_engine
to: All
from: Jack Yates
date: 2003-01-04 23:50:52
subject: News: 01-03

I found this while chasing down news items for another echo.  Things to come..



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* From : Jack Yates, 1:3613/1275 (03 Jan 03 09:23)
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* Subj : News: 01-03
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                  --===State News - StatesmanJournal.com===--
  Oregon drivers may pay more
A panel will consider a mileage tax for the state’s motorists.
The Associated Press
December 31, 2002



The Road User Fee Task Force set up by the 2001 Legislature plans to ask the
2003 session to authorize testing the feasibility of a vehicle mileage tax.
Oregon was the first state to adopt a gas tax, in 1919, and could become the
first to collect road fees via space technology.
Jim Whitty, the task force administrator, says Oregon relies on the gas tax to
pay for its road system and gas tax revenues are expected to flatten as gas
mileage improves and more hybrid cars come on line.

Whitty said the task force at this point wants a charge per mile. To be
equivalent to the gas tax now, the substitute fee would have to be 1.25 cents
per mile.

Whitty said it would be slightly higher to make up for additional
administrative costs.

“We also have to have a way to track mileage only within the state,” Whitty
said. This rules out basing the fee on odometer readings, which would include
out-of-state driving.

“Technology has improved to the degree that this can be done, with an
electronic device,” he said. The device, in a car, would be linked to the
Global Positioning Satellite or GPS system, which allows pinpoint navigation
by bouncing signals off satellites.

The task force hopes to organize a test of this system if the Legislature
approves.

First it would test whether the idea works.

Then a small fleet of cars would be equipped with the system and evaluated for
a year or so.

Whitty said there are several options for collecting fees. One is to send
vehicle owners a monthly bill.

Another is to outfit gas stations so they can read the vehicle transponders
and collect the tax at fueling stops.

The gas tax would remain in effect. In paying the new tax, drivers would get
credit for gas tax paid.


{The next paragraph has me doubled over with laughter, folks}


To protect drivers’ privacy, using the system to track cars in real time would
be illegal. New cars would be required to have the GPS technology. Owners of
older cars would be allowed to take part by retrofitting them.

The task force is thinking of the change in terms of several years away. A
decision might not come until the 2005 or 2007 legislative session.

This coming session, though, the task force will submit a bill authorizing a
fee for the use of studded tires to help collect for road damage done by the
studs.

Whitty said the group wants a two-region approach because most of the damage —
estimated at $11 million a year — is done in the Willamette Valley.


  Copyright 2003 Statesman Journal, Salem, Oregon





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