Planning a Road Trip? Get Ready to Bend Over!

wayoflife

Administrator
Staff member
For those of you who've missed it, the White House just proposed a new transportation bill designed to reverse an existing federal prohibition that has allowed you to use a vast majority of this country's 46,876 miles of interstate highways, toll free. The purpose of the bill is to give states the opportunity to now charge tolls with the hopes of raising money to help pay for highway maintenance. Needless to say, if you like to go on road trips like we do, get ready to bend over cause it may just get a lot more expensive and real soon.

See article below...

White House opens door to tolls on interstate highways, removing long-standing prohibition
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With pressure mounting to avert a transportation funding crisis this summer, the Obama administration Tuesday opened the door for states to collect tolls on interstate highways to raise revenue for roadway repairs.

The proposal, contained in a four-year, $302 billion White House transportation bill, would reverse a long-standing federal prohibition on most interstate tolling.

Though some older segments of the network — notably the Pennsylvania and New Jersey turnpikes and Interstate 95 in Maryland and Interstate 495 in Virginia — are toll roads, most of the 46,876-mile system has been toll-free.

“We believe that this is an area where the states have to make their own decisions,” said Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx. “We want to open the aperture, if you will, to allow more states to choose to make broader use of tolling, to have that option available.”

The question of how to pay to repair roadways and transit systems built in the heady era of post-World War II expansion is demanding center stage this spring, with projections that traditional funding can no longer meet the need.

That source, the Highway Trust Fund, relies on the 18.4-cent federal gas tax, which has eroded steadily as vehicles have become more energy efficient.

“The proposal comes at the crucial moment for transportation in the last several years,” Foxx said. “As soon as August, the Highway Trust Fund could run dry. States are already canceling or delaying projects because of the uncertainty.”

While providing tolling as an option to states, the White House proposal relies on funding from a series of corporate tax reforms, most of them one-time revenue streams that would provide a four-year bridge to close the trust-fund deficit and permit $150 billion more in spending than the gas tax will bring in.

The corporate tax reform proposal has gotten a lukewarm reception even from Democrats in Congress, and Foxx emphasized that the administration is open to any counterproposal that wins bipartisan support.

With the trust fund about to run into the red and the current federal highway bill set to expire Sept. 30, Congress cannot — as its members often note — keep “kicking the can down the road.”

Even a temporary extension of the current bill would require them to authorize a transfer of money from the general fund.

Details of the president’s proposal, which he first outlined almost two months ago, were welcomed as a sign of growing momentum toward a resolution, even by those who couldn’t fully embrace his plan.

“While we may not agree with all aspects of the administration’s proposal, we look forward to the continuing dialogue with Congress and the administration on charting America’s transportation future,” said Bud Wright, executive director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.

Terry O’Sullivan, president of the Laborers’ International Union of North America, said the bill helped “advance the discussion” but said a federal gas tax increase should be used to fund it.

“The gas tax remains the most tested and logical way of meeting our critical investment needs,” O’Sullivan said.

“For too long, Congress’s duct-tape approach has made our roads and bridges unsafe, destabilized the construction industry and slowed our economy.”

The federal tax last was raised in 1993 and has not been adjusted for inflation.

Another advocacy group, the nonprofit Transportation for America, spelled out its concerns Tuesday in a report, “The looming financial disaster for transportation.”

The report provided a state-by-state accounting of the percentage of transportation funding that came from Washington. In most cases, it amounted to about half, though some states were far more dependent on federal dollars. (Federal funds accounted for 52 percent of the District’s funding, 49 percent of Maryland’s and almost 59 percent of Virginia’s.)

It also broke down the funding that would be lost by each major metropolitan area without federal revenue, pegging the Washington region’s loss at $424 million.

“Congress has an opportunity to not only save the transportation program, but to recommit to investing in the repairs and improvements our communities and businesses need,” said James Corless, the group’s director.

Corless predicted that most Americans would accept tax increases to fund transportation.

“When people understand where the dollars are being spent, the direct impact to their lives, they support paying their fair share,” he said.

Foxx said the highway trust fund would face a $63 billion shortfall over the next four years.

“What our proposal would do is [use] pro-growth business tax reform to backfill in the highway trust fund,” Foxx said. “We would put that $63 billion back in place to stabilize the highway trust fund, and then the additional $90 billion would be spent on new programs.”

He said the $302 billion bottom line for the proposal would be reached “through a combination of existing taxes that go to the highway trust fund that would equate to $152 billion on their own, and then $150 billion in transitional revenues from pro-growth tax reform.”

The proposal emphasizes a fix-it-first approach that would give funding priority to existing roads, bridges and transit systems rather than expanding their network.

It would expand reforms intended to streamline environmental reviews and project delivery that were begun in the current federal highway bill.

It also would expand popular loan-guarantee programs that have been used by state and local governments to fund projects. The White House plan would almost double funding — from $12.3 billion to $22.3 billion — for transit systems and intercity passenger rail.

In addition, the plan would increase the fine an automaker could face for a safety violation from the current $35 million to $300 million.

Though that proposal is not new, it takes on greater significance amid the debate over General Motors’s delayed recall of 2 million cars with faulty ignition switches that are alleged to have led to at least 13 deaths.

Article source:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/local...2b9f30-cfac-11e3-b812-0c92213941f4_story.html
 
well im screwed. I use 95 all the time. if they toll 95 in PA im sure tons of people will be pissed! :mad::mad:
 
I think this is a bunch of Horse shit, why do we pay so much in INCOME, Property and GAS taxes etc. I want to say more but I can't!!!:9lame::tantrum::misery:
 
Unconstitutional... we have the right to travel unmolested and now we have to pay for traveling?! This is bs, but I'm calm cause I know that it will be very difficult that this will become real
 
Whats next tax the amount of air i breath, all this money for the road and i bet they will be just as bad!
 
Not to mention that whats left of the US trucking life would be taking a huge hit, shipping on everything would go up!
 
Unconstitutional... we have the right to travel unmolested and now we have to pay for traveling?! This is bs, but I'm calm cause I know that it will be very difficult that this will become real

Oh young grasshopper...you have much to learn of how our beloved government oversteps its bounds and violates their very own laws on a regular basis. The moment that they need the upper hand on their citizens, the law changes to benefit the government. We are and always will be under their thumb!
 
Roads....we don't need no stinkin roads!!! I never understood the whole "let me charge you to drive on the road" deal anyways! Tax, tax and more tax....F this!


2010 MANGO TANGO SPORT JKU🇺🇸
 
Roads....we don't need no stinkin roads!!! I never understood the whole "let me charge you to drive on the road" deal anyways! Tax, tax and more tax....F this!


2010 MANGO TANGO SPORT JKU


:clap2::clap2: That sum's it up! Nice job!:clap2::clap2::thumb::thumb:
 
They say the gas tax isn't enough? Funny they don't mention the "PER MILE" road use tax I have to pay on top of that as an owner operator trucker.
 
what I find interesting is many people complain that the Feds are in states business to much. All they are doing now is giving the states more control.

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what I find interesting is many people complain that the Feds are in states business to much. All they are doing now is giving the states more control.

:cheesy: You'll forgive me but the feds will still continue to charge you fuel taxes. The only control they will be giving to states is the ability to charge you even MORE money than they already collect through fuel taxes as well.
 
This is just another way that this piece of shit administration will tax people who work to give handouts to the deadbeats. Everyone needs to get out and vote correctly next time.
 
This is all a load of crap! They take enough taxes from all of us as it is plus the fuel tax is for road maintenance well that's what they say.. Hell the road out here are not the best! This is just another way to screw all of use tax payers...
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Some states just need to get their shit together. South Dakota, which isn't a small state by any means, has miles of interstate roadways that are in great condition. They have terrible winters and tons of truck traffic, a very low population to pay taxes, one of the lowest tax rates in the US, A budget that is close to balanced, and still have very well maintained roadways. I somehow get the feeling that this is really just a way to provide for other things. Illinois already has tollbooths everywhere around the greater Chicago area and their roads blow.
 
Isn't there also a tax for the roadways included in our vehicle registration as well? Not sure how it is in the rest of the country or even southern Ca...but here in the Bay Area they charge you now on sections of highway to travel in the commute lane if you are a solo passenger and that I believe has some road tax in it as well. Not to mention the Golden Gate Bridge going up to $7 per car per trip. Also road tax included. Criminal...considering we have some of the shittiest roads in the country and pay some of the highest gas prices as well!
 
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