Sen. Tommie Williams and the Georgia
Senate are moving in the right direction for funding for Georgia's
transportation needs and I thank them for their approach. They need to look at
spending cuts first and adding more transparency and accountability in how the
new funding is spent. The corporate subsidies need to be looked at and reformed
and that money should also be used for transportation needs. There also should
be no tax dollars used to build sports stadium without approval from the
voters. I like giving the counties more control..
Part of the reason for Atlanta's
transportation woes is the large amount of development in already congested
areas. Many developers receive tax payer funded huge subsidies in the form of
property tax exemptions when they build new developments . I like the approach
of developers having to contribute to transportation needs.
If the Transportation Infrastructure
Bank is funded, then changes should take place before it is funded to ensure
more accountability and transparency.
I plan on reaching out to members of
the Senate Transportation Committee with suggestions and encourage other
conservatives to do the same. Many of the ideas the members of the Senate
Transportation Committee were ideas we supported in 2012. I look forward to
reading their bill when they present it.
Florida funding idea
Transportation panel looks to raise $1
billion for Georgia’s needs.
By Kristina Torres ktorres@ajc.com
State senators continued Wednesday to dip into the conversation about how to raise at least $1 billion for Georgia’s transportation needs, as a former Florida transportation official testified about what some members think may be a model for the state.
State senators continued Wednesday to dip into the conversation about how to raise at least $1 billion for Georgia’s transportation needs, as a former Florida transportation official testified about what some members think may be a model for the state.
Surcharges on rental cars and real
estate transactions were among the ideas that seemed to interest the Senate
Transportation Committee, which also heard a presentation on one of Chairman
Tommie Williams’ favorite proposals: allowing two or more counties to band
together to pass a 1 percent sales tax to pay for local transportation
projects. The discussion came a day ahead of an expected House committee vote
Thursday on House Bill 170, which is the official solution by the House on how
to solve the state’s transportation funding woes.
HB 170 would consolidate state and
local sales taxes on motor fuel into one state excise tax of 29.2 cents per
gallon. The bill would phase out almost all local sales taxes on gas, add a new
annual user fee for drivers of electric vehicles and end a $5,000 tax credit
for buying those zero-emission cars.
It does not suggest some of the extra
fees used by Florida, nor does it allow the range of local revenues used to pay
for projects. It also does not touch on some of the ways Georgia already tries
to pay for infrastructure, such as tolls.
Former Florida Department of
Transportation CFO Lowell Clary said tolls are the second-largest revenue
source for Florida, fueled by both growth and a booming tourist industry. But
the state’s $2-a-day fee on rental cars also raises $100 million to $150
million for the state annually, a key contribution.
The state additionally uses a “pay as
you grow” funding program for transportation, schools and water, begun in 2005
and fueled in large part by a tax on real estate and other related activity
usually associated with development and growth. It raises about $750 million a
year for local and regional projects.
One idea Williams has already made his
support clear for are multijurisdictional sales taxes — another idea not in HB
170.
The Lyons Republican lives in one of
the three districts in the state that passed a special local option sales tax
for transportation in 2012 and said it’s worked well. Voters in metro Atlanta
rejected a similar tax that year, in large part because voters in DeKalb
County, for example, had different needs and wants than voters in Cobb County.
Williams said the plan would allow
small but like-minded areas — think DeKalb and Fulton counties, or Cherokee and
Forsyth counties — to band together on a smaller, more feasible scale to pay
for things local residents want, including roads and transit.
Source: Debbie Dooley, Tea Party Patriots
Leader, posted on New Republican Leadership for Principles above Politicians
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