WASHINGTON(AP)
The political vision of a summer gas tax holiday died a quick
death in Congress, losing to a view that federal excise taxes on
gasoline and diesel fuel will have to go up if they go
anywhere.
Despite calls from the presidential campaign trail for a
Memorial Day-to-Labor Day tax freeze, lawmakers quickly concluded _
with a prod from the construction industry _ that having $9 billion
less to spend on highways could create a pre-election specter of
thousands of lost jobs.
Now, lawmakers quietly are talking about raising fuel taxes by a
dime from the current 18.4 cents a gallon on gasoline and 24.3
cents on diesel fuel.
With gas prices setting records daily, Republican presidential
hopeful John McCain and former Democratic candidate Hillary Rodham
Clinton called for a 90-day suspension of the federal fuel tax to
give drivers a little relief at the pump. The fuel taxes go into
the Highway Trust Fund, which is used for road construction and
repair and mass transit.
Clinton suggested making up for the loss by imposing a windfall
profit tax on oil companies, an idea that Republicans rejected.
McCain said the money could come out of the general Treasury fund,
in effect adding to the federal deficit, and is still getting
mileage from the idea.
"Some economists don't think much of my gas tax
holiday," he said in a speech this month. "But the
American people like it, and so do small business owners."
Barack Obama, the likely Democratic nominee, opposed the idea
from the beginning and the White House gave it a cold shoulder.
Depriving the 52-year-old Highway Trust Fund of $9 billion at a
time when it is heading into the red doomed the notion of a gas tax
holiday in Congress.
The chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure
Committee, Rep. James Oberstar, and the chairman of the highway
subcommittee, Rep. Peter DeFazio, presented fellow lawmakers with a
list of how many jobs and how much money each state would lose. It
ranged from $30 million and 1,000 jobs in Vermont to $664 million
and 23,000 jobs in California.
"Because the trust fund is already looking at a looming
shortfall, it would have moved project cancellations into the
construction season," DeFazio, D-Ore., said in an interview.
He said it was "highly unlikely" that oil companies would
have passed savings along to consumers.
Just three years ago, that trust fund enjoyed a surplus of $10
billion. Even without a tax freeze, the fund is projected to finish
2009 with a deficit of $3 billion. That that could grow as
Americans drive less and buy less gas because of higher pump
prices.
The consequence is that only about $27 billion in federal money
will be available next year to states and local governments for new
infrastructure investment even though the current highway act calls
for spending $41 billion a year. For many, the solution is to raise
rather than suspend or cut federal fuel taxes, which haven't
changed since 1993.
The Transportation Construction Coalition, a group of industry
companies and unions, said that if Congress does not do something
about the shortfall, states will lose about one-third of their road
and bridge money in the budget year starting Oct. 1. That would put
485,000 more jobs at risk.
That message carried the day this summer. But now Congress has
the bigger task of dealing with the short-term deficit crisis in
the fund and coming up with a new spending plan, including
revisiting the gas tax issue, when the current six-year, $286
billion highway-transit act expires in September 2009.
Senate Democrats in May tried to add $5 billion to an aviation
overhaul bill to replenish the highway trust fund next year;
Republicans objected. Democrats tried again in June, but this time
for $8 billion; Republicans objected to that, too.
Congress should first reduce spending on pet projects, known as
earmarks, argued Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C. "I'm not going to
let the Senate spend all this money when nobody is looking,
especially when we refuse to stop wasting billions of taxpayer
dollars on earmarks."
Oberstar, D-Minn., said his committee is working on the next
long-term highway bill. He estimated it will take between $450
billion and $500 billion over six years to address safety and
congestion issues with highways, bridges and transit systems.
"We'll put all things on the table," Oberstar
said, but the gas tax "is the cornerstone. Nothing else will
work without the underpinning of the higher user fee gas
tax."
At the very least, the gas tax should be indexed to construction
cost inflation, DeFazio said.
The nonpartisan National Surface Transportation Policy and
Revenue Study Commission concluded in a report this year that the
U.S. needs to spend $225 billion annually over the next 50 years to
create a highway and transit system capable of sustaining strong
economic growth. Current spending, at federal, state and local
levels, is about $90 billion a year.
Among other revenue-raising possibilities, the commission
recommended gradually increasing the current federal fuel taxes to
40 cents a gallon.
The American Road & Transportation Builders Association is
calling for a 10-cent-a-gallon raise and indexing the tax to
inflation. With construction costs soaring because of competition
for building materials from China and other developing nations, the
tax rate would have to be about 29 cents a gallon to achieve the
same purchasing power as the 18.4-cent rate imposed in 1993, the
association says.
Including state and local levies, people in the U.S. pay about
47 cents on average in taxes for a gallon of gasoline. Fuel in many
European countries costs $8 to $9 a gallon, with half or more of
that going to taxes.
Other ideas that will be on the table when lawmakers write a
bill next year including more toll roads and public-private
partnerships, congestion pricing and user fees where drivers pay a
tax based on how many miles they drive.
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On the Net:
American Road & Transportation Builders Association:
http://www.artba.org
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