-----------------------
4/3/14, "North Carolina drivers to be charged by the mile?" abclocal.go.com/wtvd, Raleigh
"Big changes could be just down the road for North Carolina drivers. A proposal is in the works that would change the state tax system to charge drivers by the mile, and at the gas pump.
The proposal would be to charge a half cent per mile for cars, which would generate almost $500 million in annual state revenue. A driver who travelled 15,000 miles in a year would pay about $75.
"Basically you pay per the mile. It's treating transportation as a utility, much like your water and sewer," said Larry Goode, with the Institute of Transportation Research and Education.
North Carolina currently tacks on an additional 37.6 cents gas tax at the pump. The vehicle mileage tax, or VMT, would not replace the gasoline tax. It would be an additional fee.
Lawmakers are looking at making changes because of falling state gas tax revenues - in part because of more fuel-efficient cars requiring less gas. North Carolina drivers currently pay one of the highest gas taxes in the nation.
Some state leaders say the more drivers use their car, the more they should pay , because more cars rolling cause more wear and tear on the state's roads.
"There are a lot of potholes, and to raise more taxes could be beneficial, but at the same time, we are already paying so many taxes for so many other things, we don't exactly know where that money goes," commuter Katherine Gerstel said.
North Carolina's Board of Transportation Funding Committee heard more about the proposal during a meeting Wednesday. A study completed by North Carolina State University was presented, explaining in part how such a plan would work.
The Chief Deputy Secretary of North Carolina's Department of Transportation has emphasized that state leaders are just reviewing options to raise more revenues to cover escalating costs for road construction, repairs, and expansion with a growing population.
However, cost already has many vehicle owners in North Carolina slamming on their brakes.
Bill Heckstall, who lives 10 miles from the Tennessee border, says he crosses the border to fill up there instead.
"Let's put it this way, I can put in three more gallons in my car there compared to here, because of the gas tax," he said.
"I'm open to it, but I'd like to make sure it's just and doesn't affect people with less resources more," Durham resident Bobi Gallagher said.
The board has plenty of its own concerns, one of which is privacy. Tracking drivers' mileage could mean the state installs a GPS device on your car.
"I don't think everybody should know where I'm going, I mean that's my business," Greensboro resident Annie Corpening said.
There are other proposals on the table, such as lifting the cap on gas taxes. The board stressed these are all just proposals. There was no vote Wednesday." via Lucianne
=============================
=============================
The GOP squandered the supermajority it was given in North Carolina:
3/26/14, "What the GOP Does with a Supermajority," American Thinker, Dr. Marguerite Creel
.
"The ultimate party litmus test: given a veto-proof legislature, will Republicans finally start to reduce the scope and size of government? It looks like the answer is no.
"The ultimate party litmus test: given a veto-proof legislature, will Republicans finally start to reduce the scope and size of government? It looks like the answer is no.
In
2013, North Carolina was just one of 25 states where Republican
governors were given historic opportunity to govern alongside
Republican-controlled legislatures. Despite conservative voters’ best hopes,
any sensible mandate to restore individual and economic freedom flew
out the window when the FY 2013-14 budget was approved, reauthorizing
the formerly Democratic state’s blueprint budget with a tragic 2.0-percent increase in general fund appropriations.
North Carolina’s state spending is increasing
at a record pace, on both a per-capita and an inflation-adjusted
basis. The total budget peaked in 2012 at $51.7 billion, and, according
to Sarah Curry, director of fiscal policy studies at the John Locke
foundation, this represents a per-capita financial
obligation of $5,348. Incredibly, another compounding 2-percent
increase was approved for FY 2014-15 in the biennial budget by a
Republican government.
Lack of Fortitude
The
inability of a state legislature to exercise self-discipline in
budgetary matters is not a new phenomenon. However, if the NC GOP is
not willing to buck special interest groups now, when they control all
three branches of government, when will they have the fortitude?
North
Carolina, like other red states, is awash in risk-averse career
politicians who fear negative publicity. Legislators are not seriously
motivated to reduce the public footprint, enabled by business leaders’
cowardly refusal to publicly call a spade a spade. Fear of attracting
the big, bad liberal press is rampant.
Electing
a majority of Republican state representatives does not necessarily
equate to a vanquished Democratic agenda. Moreover, falsely claiming a
conservative victory in North Carolina is dangerous.
In
the twenty-first century, sheer fictional trumpeting of conservative
stars from Texas, Massachusetts, and Florida led to a Republican
president who facilitated a federal takeover of K-12 education, a Republican presidential nominee who abetted his state’s seizure of its health care industry, and a Republican senator who naively and egocentrically stumps for amnesty for illegal aliens.
The
national congratulatory tone of the press heralding the economic
reforms ushered in by North Carolina Republicans is disconcerting.
National Journal exults that the North Carolina GOP's wonderland is real. The American Legislative Exchange Council provides kudos for choosing more economic freedom through lower taxes. Civitas highlights a modest spending increase, and Townhall praises North Carolina for trying to get taxes down.
Tax Reform ?
Do
Republican leaders actually believe that a reduction in North
Carolina’s state income tax from 6.0% to 5.8% is going to change
behavior? Alongside new sales taxes, gas taxes, and fees?
A
bold retreat from the socialist cliff politicians seem to approach like
lemmings requires meaningful tax reform, not a slow abatement to ensure
a North Carolina jobs program consisting of state government employees
and private-sector contractors.
A
truly conservative approach requires real guts. Why not a minimal flat
tax? A readable bill that could fit on two pages – a 2-percent tax on
all revenue $1,000 or more from any single source, with zero
exemptions. Imagine how that would revolutionize the IRS, with
commensurate savings in compliance, enforcement, and education. Imagine
a Republican Party with the integrity and political nerve to adopt this
very reasonable and conservative approach.
Instead,
the current approach is designed to restructure tax burdens so that
future income tax reductions are predicated on future revenue
increases. Economic growth, sales tax, and fees are intended to
increase proportionately.
In
his press conferences and releases, North Carolina Governor McCrory
underscored his treatment of the budget and tax rates as economic tools
to attract new business. However, the state budget and tax rates, more
importantly, represent the hard-earned money of the citizens – not
plunder for government agencies
to exact “reasonable revenue growth every year to meet the state’s budget needs.”
The paramount needs
of North Carolinians are restoration of individual freedom and respect
for property rights. What do Republicans stand for if not limited
government? If not equal protection?
Public-Sector Gains
Economic
freedom is inextricably linked to the balance of wealth distributed
between the public and private sectors. Likewise, its link to the
culture, now deeply ingrained by the educational establishment, quite
obviously and relentlessly supports socialist redistribution of wealth
between the sectors.
Not
only has the new North Carolina Republican majority not reined in the
statist culture uniformly reinforced by educators, but these putative
freedom-fighters have inarguably and perplexingly rewarded the education
monopoly with more than half of all state general fund appropriations (56 percent),
while exposing further socialistic support for the knowingly defective
Common Core program. This left the Justice & Public Safety
function, tasked with the protection of citizens’ personal and economic
freedoms, with 12 percent, and Statewide Reserves at a paltry 1 percent.
What
is the perennial excuse for states’ lack of budget cuts? Public
pensions and Medicaid, as if legislators lack the authority to control
this forever expanding claim on taxpayers’ earnings.
Is
it really that difficult to see that Medicaid alone could be
dramatically cut by decreasing the illegal alien population that feeds
off North Carolina’s social services? If there were serious attempts to
deny access to state-funded educational and social service benefits for
illegal aliens, coupled with real deportation enforcement, the
resultant diminishing presence of illegal aliens would be felt on a
diminishing Medicaid budget.
Instead,
the North Carolina GOP provided tacit support for illegal immigration
when it approved the issuance of driver’s licenses for undocumented immigrants in spring 2013.
Citizens are getting slaughtered financially by Affordable Healthcare Act premiums, 37.6-cents-per-gallon gas taxes, absurdly skyrocketing college tuition, and inflationary food prices.
The North Carolina GOP surely has some moral obligation at this
juncture in U.S. history to step up with creative reforms that encourage
real economic growth.
Squandered Opportunity
Competent,
focused government in limited areas of action is required. However,
the current North Carolina Republican ruling majority appears quite
comfortable managing existing liberal programs in an over-taxed and high-unemployment state.
Given
the incredible fortune of having the Republican Party in control of all
branches of government, the NC GOP has chosen to squander its power.
Back-to-back annual increases in the state budget, following record
spending in 2012, make for a straightforward capitulation to interest
groups, state employees, and private contractors, at the expense of
North Carolina's citizens.
North
Carolinians can no longer continue the ghastly charade that citizens
are gaining, not losing their freedom of choice in how they work, live,
and play.
States
with Republican-controlled executive and legislative branches, like
North Carolina, must counter the national trend toward from entrenched
socialistic policies. This trend will not reverse if conservative
organizations remain complacent."
"Dr.
Marguerite Creel teaches public administration at UNC School of
Government. She is the former political science coordinator for Peace
College in downtown Raleigh, NC."
==============================
No comments:
Post a Comment