Frozen gas tax leads to toll roads
May
20, 2007
By JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press
Writer
WASHINGTON - A cash crunch is fast
approaching for the government trust
fund that pays to build and repair
highways and bridges.
The federal tax on a gallon of gas
has not risen in 14 years and Congress
is reluctant to increase it. People are
demanding more fuel-efficient vehicles —
less gasoline used, fewer dollars for
the fund.
States already are looking for other
places for road-building money — toll
road and consumption-based sales taxes,
for example. They worry that the fund's
looming shortage could hurt their
efforts to address traffic congestion as
well as environmental and safety
problems caused by inadequate roads.
The situation can only get worse in
2009, when revenues for the Federal
Highway Trust Fund begin falling short
of planned federal spending.
The fund provides the overwhelming
bulk of federal dollars spent on
highways. It gets its money mainly from
the 18.4 cents-a-gallon excise tax that
drivers pay at the pump.
Self-service regular now tops $3 a
gallon. There is concern the price will
reach a price at which people will get
serious about cutting back on driving —
sending less money into the fund. Fuel
tax receipts did dip last summer when
there was a spike in pump prices.
About 45 percent of all highway
spending comes from the trust fund. With
less money available from the fund,
states must turn elsewhere for money to
expand their highways and fill their
potholes. That prospect is making lots
of people unhappy.
-
Indiana, facing a $1.8 billion gap
in money needed for road improvements,
negotiated a $3.85 billion deal with an
Australian-Spanish consortium to lease
and operate the Indiana Turnpike for 75
years. Voters expressed their
displeasure, electing Democrats to
replace a Republican-run House that
signed off on the deal.
-
In Florida, with federal aid
declining, more than 90 percent of new
roads since the early 1990s have been
toll roads, state Transportation
Department spokesman Dick Kane said.
-
Voters in Washington state approved
a 14.5-cent increase in state gasoline
taxes over a five-year period.
-
In California, voters decided to
borrow the money, approving bond issues
totaling $19.9 billion to be used for
highway and transit projects over the
next 10 years.
-
Georgia increased its construction
program from $911 million to $2 billion,
largely through a sales tax on gasoline
that rises with fuel prices, unlike the
frozen federal levy.
The American Association of State
Highway and Transportation Officials
says at least six states have adopted
variable fuel taxes that are pegged to
inflation.
-
Oregon is experimenting with a
voluntary system where drivers pay a
user fee based on miles driven rather
than gas consumed. Some
environmentalists say this approach
negates the benefits of buying
fuel-efficient cars.
-
Texas, Virginia and Minnesota are
among states that have built or are
building high-occupancy toll lanes where
drivers can pay to have a
congestion-free path before them.
With the population of Texas
increasing by 1,000 people a day, "we as
a state don't really feel like we have
an option to shelve projects or sit on
our hands as the problems with the
highway trust fund loom larger and come
closer on the horizon," said Christopher
Lippincott, a Texas Transportation
Department spokesman.
Revenues from tolls, bonds, federal
loans and local contributions allowed
most of a new turnpike around Austin to
be completed more than 20 years sooner
than if the state had relied solely on
state and federal taxes.
The Texas Legislature is trying to
satisfy concerns of Gov. Rick Perry over
a bill that includes a two-year freeze
on most new privately financed toll
roads. The freeze reflects opposition to
the Trans Texas Corridor, a combined
toll road and rail system from Mexico to
the Oklahoma line.
Of the 18.4 cents a gallon in federal
excise taxes, about 15.44 cents goes to
the highway trust fund, 2.86 cents to
mass transit programs and one-tenth of a
center to a leaking underground storage
tank fund. The tax on diesel fuel is
slightly higher.
Close to two-thirds of the trust
fund's $40 billion in receipts last year
came from the gasoline tax.
Gasoline was only 30 cents a gallon
and the excise tax on it was just 3
cents in 1956 when Congress created the
highway trust fund. As gasoline prices
rose, so did the tax. But a tax-adverse
Congress has kept it at 18.4 cents a
gallon since 1993, when gasoline prices
were about $1.10 a gallon.
Two years ago, lawmakers proposed a
4-cent-per gallon boost in the fuel tax
to finance a $375 billion highway bill.
They backed off when President Bush pledged to veto any road legislation with a tax increase. In the end, the spending plan came to $286 billion.
At the end of 2000, the highway trust fund had a balance of almost $23 billion. By the end of 2006, that balance had fallen to $9 billion.
The Congressional Budget Office predicts the fund will run a deficit of $1.7 billion at the end of 2009 and $8.1 billion by the end of 2010, when the current highway program expires and Congress will write a new one.
"This crisis will be thrown in their lap right as they are rewriting the program," said Jeff Shoaf, senior executive director of Associated General Contractors of America.
Because investment in new projects is spread over a number of years, every dollar of shortfall translates into a $4 drop in highway spending, he said.
Thus in 2010, the government will have only $20 billion to invest on highways, half the current spending level and less than one-third of the $70 billion that Shoaf said is needed for real road improvements.
"A drastic cut in federal highway and transit funding will result unless Congress steps in," John Horsley, executive director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, said in a report.
Horsley's group said the fuel tax would have to be increased by 10 cents per gallon through 2015 to restore the purchasing power of the program.
The Senate Finance Committee is looking into temporary ways to refinance the trust fund, including redirecting some transportation-related taxes that now go into the government's general account and clamping down on gas tax fraud. A Transportation Department commission also plans to issue recommendations by the end of this year.
By the middle of the next decade, the highway trust fund will be providing $100 billion to $150 billion below real needs for building highways and bridges, predicted Rep. Peter DeFazio (news, bio, voting record), chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure subcommittee on highways and transit.
"In the long run we've either got to admit we are going to underinvest and accept more gridlock and congestion" or find new revenue sources, said DeFazio, D-Ore.
What is clear to him is that raising taxes of any kind for the highway trust fund is possible only if people are convinced that more spending will mean less congestion, safer roads and a cleaner environment.
The public will not support new taxes "just to throw money in the maw of the federal government," DeFazio said.