Thursday, March 19, 2015

State Roads & Bridges Bill

Night of the Living TSPLOST, just when you thought it was dead…
Georgia Senate looking to revisit TSPLOST, Mar 18, 2015, Jacques Couret, Dave Williams Atlanta Business Chronicle
Georgia Senate leaders are pushing a plan to revisit the regional transportation sales tax votes that failed three years ago in most of Georgia, including metro Atlanta.
Legislation approved by the Senate Transportation Committee Wednesday would give local elected officials in the regions where voters rejected the TSPLOST in 2012 until January 2017 to schedule a new referendum on a 1-cent sales tax increase to pay for transportation projects inside those regions. The tax would be collected over 10 years.
In regions that don't take the state up on that option, smaller groups of counties would be free to band together to offer voters a sales hike of up to a penny that would run for five years. The 2012 TSPLOSTs did not offer such a fractional sales tax increase.
The bill the committee voted on Wednesday is separate from comprehensive transportation funding legislation the same panel approved on Tuesday, a measure aimed at raising about $1 billion a year for transportation improvements across Georgia that has received extensive debate during this year's General Assembly session.
"Most of the money [from the transportation funding bill] will be spent on state roads and bridges," said Sen. Tommie Williams, R-Lyons, the committee's chairman. "[The new TSPLOST bill] would let the locals raise a good deal of money for their own projects ... and is the only way we can raise money for transit."
The Senate committee's version of the transportation funding bill calls for an excise tax on gasoline of 24 cents per gallon, down from the 29.2 cents-a-gallon rate set in legislation the state House of Representatives passed early this month.
To make up the revenue that would be lost by a lower excise tax, the Senate bill would impose an annual highway user fee of $25 a year on all cars registered in Georgia, $50 on trucks and $10 on motorcycles. It also would slap a daily fee of $5 on rental cars.
Both the House and Senate transportation funding bills would go after electric vehicles by imposing an annual fee of $200 on non-commercial EVs and eliminating a $5,000 state tax credit on leases and purchases of electric vehicles.
The Senate bill would allow local governments to collect sales taxes on gasoline priced at up to $3.39 a gallon but not beyond.
"We don't want to have the highest gas prices in the Southeast," Williams said.
The full Senate is expected to take up the transportation funding bill on Friday.
Dave Williams covers Government
Comments
Repeal Regionalism. We don’t want unelected, appointed regional governance at all.  Just repeal HB 277 and HB 1216. Dissolve all regional offices and put that money into more concrete lanes to fix the congestion on interstate highways. $1 billion going to “state roads and bridges” doesn’t do it.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

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