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Oregon to Test
Taxing Motorists by the Mile
By Craig Westover
Several states are
considering shifting from per-gallon fuel taxes
to mile-based tax systems, none more seriously
than Oregon. The Oregon Department of
Transportation (ODOT) is preparing to test a
global positioning system capable of tracking a
vehicle's location, recording in-state miles
driven, and calculating a mileage-based tax
payable at the gas pump.
The six-year
project, launched in 2001, is being funded with
a $2.1 million grant from the Federal Highway
Administration and $771,000 in state funds.
Highway testing could begin this fall. A vehicle
miles traveled (VMT) fee could be implemented in
2007, according to ODOT officials.
The
ODOT is currently recruiting drivers and service
stations to participate in the test.
State fuel taxes calculated on a per-gallon
basis are currently the primary source of
funding for state road maintenance and
construction. On average, fuel taxes cover 65 to
85 percent of road use costs, according to the
ODOT.
Included at the pump in the price
per gallon, fuel taxes are easy to collect and
virtually fraud-free. The more miles one drives,
the more gasoline one uses, the more tax one
pays.
However, as increasingly
fuel-efficient vehicles and gas-electric hybrids
hit the highways, more miles per gallon means
less revenue for state governments.
Gas
Tax Revenues Flattening
Although more
drivers are on the road than ever before and
more miles are being driven, increased fuel
efficiency of vehicles has virtually flattened
fuel tax revenues. As more alternative-fuel
vehicles are added to the current mix of better
fuel efficiency of standard vehicles and market
penetration by hybrid vehicles, Oregon officials
predict fuel tax revenues will begin declining
by 2014.
Oregon's current tax, 24 cents
per gallon, funds about 70 percent of its road
maintenance and construction costs. The tax rate
hasn't changed since 1991. As in other states,
Oregon lawmakers are reluctant to incur the
wrath of taxpayers by raising the gas tax,
especially given the recent run-up in prices at
the pump.
Less revenue and reluctance to
raise the fuel tax change the fuel-tax equation
further. More miles driven means more wear and
tear on the roads, which leaves states looking
at more costs and less revenue, even without
taking into account inflationary pressures.
The Oregon Road User Fee Task Force, created
by legislation in 2001, looked at some two dozen
proposals for increasing revenue before deciding
a VMT system would provide sufficient additional
revenue and was technologically feasible.
"The VMT fee is a replacement tax," said
Jack Svadlenak, transportation economist with
the ODOT. "If a VMT fee is implemented, drivers
paying the fee would not pay the per-gallon
tax."
Fuel Efficiency Avoids Taxes
Before high-mileage imports made a
significant and lasting impact on the domestic
auto market, average fuel efficiency was
approximately 12 miles per gallon. Today, the
average mileage is almost 20 miles per gallon.
Not all vehicles get "average" mileage. At
the suggested tax rate of 1.25 cents per mile, a
vehicle averaging 20 miles per gallon would pay
roughly the same amount in tax in a
mileage-based system as under the current fuel
tax system at 24 cents per gallon.
A
Toyota Prius, which combines electric and
gasoline power for maximum fuel efficiency, has
an EPA mileage rating of 55 miles per gallon,
whereas a Chevy Suburban logs in at about 12
miles per gallon. Under the current
tax-per-gallon system, a 1,000-mile trip in the
Suburban produces about $20 in tax revenue,
compared to roughly $4.36 for the Prius.
In a VMT fee system, both drivers would pay a
tax of $12.50, reflecting equal use of the
roads. If gas prices motivate consumers to
purchase higher-mileage vehicles, the state can
only maintain its tax revenue stream by
switching to a system in which taxes are based
on miles of travel.
Many people have
questioned whether a VMT fee would be a
disincentive to the buying of fuel-efficient
cars. Betsy Imholt, alternative funding
administrator with the ODOT, said a flat-rate
fee is only one alternative.
"The
technology allows setting different fees for
different vehicles," Imholt said. "It's possible
to set a higher rate per mile for a heavier
vehicle. The final rate is a policy decision,
not a technical limitation."
Breaking the
link between fuel purchases and tax revenues
with a mileage-based system would ensure the
state a steady if not increasing revenue stream.
Technology Is Being Developed
Oregon
is now working on developing the technology
required to implement a VMT fee system, in
conjunction with Oregon State University. Two
systems are being tested. One is a simple global
positioning system (GPS); the other involves an
electronic sensor connected to a vehicle's
odometer.
Either device would eliminate
out-of-state mileage when calculating the tax.
It works as follows. When a driver pulls in
to a service station to purchase fuel, mileage
data is wirelessly downloaded to a reader on or
near the station pump. Current plans call for
the tax to be calculated and the driver to pay
at the pump.
Implementation Will Be
Costly
Eventually, of course, all cars
would have to be equipped with GPS devices and
gas pumps with the ability to read mileage data
and transmit the information to a central
database, where the tax would be recorded and
calculated.
Oregon officials estimate
providing the onboard devices could cost as much
as $225 per vehicle. In addition, oil companies
are not thrilled about using their gas station
computer systems to collect state taxes. Custom
equipment for the Oregon test costs about $300
per vehicle.
Imholt noted, though, that
implementation of a VMT fee would not occur
before 2007 and "there's no telling how
technology will develop by then."
Retrofitting all vehicles is likely to be
impractical, and the system also will have to
allow for out-of-state cars. A dual tax system
will be required unless and until some
multistate or national standardization is
achieved.
The current timetable calls for
a 400-vehicle/five service station technology
test to be conducted in Eugene beginning this
fall.
System Could Undermine Privacy
For the pilot program, each vehicle will be
equipped with a digital readout device that
shows miles driven in four categories: in-state
miles, out-of-state miles, congestion-rated
miles (some participants), and no signal.
Drivers will pay a 1.2-cent VMT fee for all
in-state miles driven. "No signal" miles are an
error rate test of the system and will not be
charged.
In the congestion rate model,
specific high-traffic zones at specific
high-traffic times will be designated
"congestion areas" and a higher VMT fee will be
charged.
Initially, the GPS devices will
only store the number of miles traveled, and
they will only register whether a vehicle is
inside or outside Oregon or in a congestion
zone. Authorities will not be able to track in
real time where a vehicle is or reconstruct
where it has been.
Those limitations
provide little reassurance, however, to privacy
advocates such as David Sobel of the Electronic
Privacy Information Center (EPIC), a public
interest research center in Washington, DC.
"Once technology is in place," he said, "it's
virtually impossible to resist finding ways to
use it."
The idea of "congestion
pricing"--charging drivers a higher mileage fee
during peak travel times or when driving through
high-traffic areas--is a part of the test plans.
Congestion pricing necessarily requires narrow
location tracking correlated with time of day.
Invasive Potential Worrisome
Sobel
cites some possible concerns.
Once the
technology is in place, he noted, law
enforcement officers will want to use it. "There
are some real privacy issues when government has
the ability to track where people go," Sobel
said. Sobel cautions that however the system
plays out, the individual should always be in
control of his or her data. For example, in a
pay-at-the-pump model, if the individual accepts
the tax calculation as correct, he or she should
have the option of purging the record from the
system.
Source: Heartland Institute.
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