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Your State is Next: Oregon Becomes First State to Try Taxing Drivers By Miles They Drive
Jul 12, 2015 17:54:07   #
Doc110 Loc: York PA
 
7/7/15 Oregon Becomes First State to Try Taxing Drivers By Miles They Drive
http://dailysignal.com/2015/07/07/oregon-becomes-first-state-to-try-taxing-drivers-by-miles-they-drive/
http://www.oregon.gov/odot/hwy/rufpp/pages/index.aspx
http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2015/07/oregon_program_will_tax_drivers_by_the_mile.html

Last week, Oregon became the first state in the U.S. to give drivers the option to be taxed by the mile instead of by the fuel they use.

The idea is that as cars become more fuel efficient, drivers spend less money on gas, resulting in less money for the Oregon Department of T***sportation to spend on improvements for roads and bridges.

This new tax treats all cars the same, regardless of their fuel efficiency, and charges drivers based on the wear and tear they put on the road.
Under the new program, called OReGO, drivers will only pay for the miles they drive.

“It’s a fair and sustainable way to fund road maintenance, preservation and improvements for all Oregonians,” according to a statement on the OReGO program website.


Oregon’s new pay-per-mile roads fee requires volunteers to install a device on their car that collects data on how much they drive.

Using OReGO, drivers will pay one-and-a-half cents per mile they drive. Then, drivers will receive a credit to offset the 30 cents per gallon gas taxes they pay at the pump.

The state is in the trial phases of this voluntary tax initiative and the t***sportation department has recruited 5,000 volunteer drivers to try the program.

Oregon aims to eventually replace gasoline gallon taxes with per-mile taxes.

“If you look at your water, power and other utility bills, you pay by how much you use. T***sportation funding should operate the same way,” Art James, a volunteer in the program testified on the OReGO website.



Oregonians can use the OReGO calculator to discover if this new tax would save or cost them money. For example, a driver who drives 700 miles a month with a car that receives 25 miles per gallon would see a monthly increase of $2.10 with OReGO compared to the state gasoline tax.

“It’s not necessarily designed to save people money,” explained Michael Sargent, a research associate at The Heritage Foundation who specializes in t***sportation and infrastructure.

Rather, Oregon is trying out a new method to see if there is a better way to tax everybody who uses the road.

“Each state has their own unique needs and they should be able to experiment with ways to fund their own t***sportation systems free from burdensome federal mandates,” Sargent said.

While the new tax aims to implement a more equitable method of collecting taxpayer dollars for roads based on usage, it comes with some privacy and security concerns.

Two of the three devices that t***sportation department offers to drivers, made by Verizon and Azuga, are GPS systems and have the ability to track a car’s location and a driver’s exact movements. The third option, the ODOT Account Manager, only tracks miles driven and fuel consumed.

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Jul 12, 2015 21:01:40   #
Coos Bay Tom Loc: coos bay oregon
 
Doc110 wrote:
7/7/15 Oregon Becomes First State to Try Taxing Drivers By Miles They Drive
http://dailysignal.com/2015/07/07/oregon-becomes-first-state-to-try-taxing-drivers-by-miles-they-drive/
http://www.oregon.gov/odot/hwy/rufpp/pages/index.aspx
http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2015/07/oregon_program_will_tax_drivers_by_the_mile.html

Last week, Oregon became the first state in the U.S. to give drivers the option to be taxed by the mile instead of by the fuel they use.

The idea is that as cars become more fuel efficient, drivers spend less money on gas, resulting in less money for the Oregon Department of T***sportation to spend on improvements for roads and bridges.

This new tax treats all cars the same, regardless of their fuel efficiency, and charges drivers based on the wear and tear they put on the road.
Under the new program, called OReGO, drivers will only pay for the miles they drive.

“It’s a fair and sustainable way to fund road maintenance, preservation and improvements for all Oregonians,” according to a statement on the OReGO program website.


Oregon’s new pay-per-mile roads fee requires volunteers to install a device on their car that collects data on how much they drive.

Using OReGO, drivers will pay one-and-a-half cents per mile they drive. Then, drivers will receive a credit to offset the 30 cents per gallon gas taxes they pay at the pump.

The state is in the trial phases of this voluntary tax initiative and the t***sportation department has recruited 5,000 volunteer drivers to try the program.

Oregon aims to eventually replace gasoline gallon taxes with per-mile taxes.

“If you look at your water, power and other utility bills, you pay by how much you use. T***sportation funding should operate the same way,” Art James, a volunteer in the program testified on the OReGO website.



Oregonians can use the OReGO calculator to discover if this new tax would save or cost them money. For example, a driver who drives 700 miles a month with a car that receives 25 miles per gallon would see a monthly increase of $2.10 with OReGO compared to the state gasoline tax.

“It’s not necessarily designed to save people money,” explained Michael Sargent, a research associate at The Heritage Foundation who specializes in t***sportation and infrastructure.

Rather, Oregon is trying out a new method to see if there is a better way to tax everybody who uses the road.

“Each state has their own unique needs and they should be able to experiment with ways to fund their own t***sportation systems free from burdensome federal mandates,” Sargent said.

While the new tax aims to implement a more equitable method of collecting taxpayer dollars for roads based on usage, it comes with some privacy and security concerns.

Two of the three devices that t***sportation department offers to drivers, made by Verizon and Azuga, are GPS systems and have the ability to track a car’s location and a driver’s exact movements. The third option, the ODOT Account Manager, only tracks miles driven and fuel consumed.
7/7/15 Oregon Becomes First State to Try Taxing Dr... (show quote)
A trade off. one tax for another. I'll pay a bundle because I put 30,000 miles a year on my pickup.

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Jul 12, 2015 21:12:16   #
righty Loc: Tenn
 
To heck with it all. I am moving to Gilligan's Island.

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Jul 12, 2015 21:23:53   #
Coos Bay Tom Loc: coos bay oregon
 
righty wrote:
To heck with it all. I am moving to Gilligan's Island.
Then we would know where you were

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :thumbup:

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Jul 13, 2015 00:54:52   #
Doc110 Loc: York PA
 
Their going after the hybrid cars and other bio-fuel's because they are loosing all that 30 cent Federal tax and that 20 cents State tax on fuels.

Income revenue and at the ability to track you.

We know whereby ou are and where you live.



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Jul 13, 2015 05:58:03   #
silvereagle
 
The thing is . Here in S. C. we pay a gas tax. a road fee[tax] a new penny tax for the roads and now they want mile you drive tax. Cheaper to stay at home.

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Jul 13, 2015 11:20:44   #
kburns50
 
Freakin rediculous...

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