I'd hoped that my last article about funding road
repair in Michigan had exhaustively covered the subject. It was time
to move on and discuss other attributes of our current one term
governor. Little did I know there was more to the story than I
covered and thanks to the additional information from many of you, I
offer up more information about our roads, our taxes, and our
wallets. Fear not, with one year remaining until One Term's
un-coronation, there is sufficient time to examine his record
burdening the middle class at length.
As
I pointed out a few weeks ago, over 99.9% of the damage done to
Michigan roads (state motto: Carry Two Spares) is done by trucks, the
ratio being calculated as one semi truck and trailer damaging
the roads equivalent to 9,600 passenger cars. I took it a step
further and took a trip down Grand River and deduced that most of us
don't drive trucks, at least not trucks that weigh in the five figure
range. I then further deduced that large heavy trucks must be owned
primarily by businesses.
So you might guess which lobbying group jumped on
One Term Rick's bandwagon immediately after he proposed fixing the
roads primarily by taxing and feeing the very people who don't own
the trucks that wrecked our damn roads. If you said the business
lobby, you win the prize.
Now I certainly understand why the business lobby
thinks they can get One Term to make us pay for their problems: they
own him. They convinced him that Michigan is a dung heap and any
business looking to move or relocate to Michigan would have selected
it by the blindfold-dart-throwing-at-the-map method. So One Term,
fresh from the business paradise that is South Dakota (state motto:
Where Is Everybody?) decided that most businesses shouldn't pay any
taxes at all in the state. He wiped out most corporate taxes, wants
to dump the personal property taxes, (and totally screw the towns and
villages who depend on personal property tax collection) and now he
wants us to fix the roads that his buddies' trucks ruined to attract
more truck traffic to our Water/Winter Wonderland.
Now, come to find out, all that money we pay in
taxes and fees doesn't even end up in the “fix the roads funds”.
An example as to how this occurs can be found in this
article from 2001 showing how that master of innovation, Little
Johnny Engler, decided that grabbing $63 million from the Michigan
Transportation Fund to balance the budget made perfect sense. To wit;
“Because state government
is now facing a budget deficit, Governor Engler recently issued an
executive order which takes $63 million from the Transportation Fund
and uses it to fund other non-road related activities,”.
Pretty cool, eh?
But of course it wasn't a one time grab. There's
actually a bill (senate Bill 6) under consideration that would
mandate that some of the funds collected by taxing gasoline and
licensing vehicles must
be used for transportation related matters. What a concept! “But
the 40 percent that's not constitutionally mandated elsewhere should
go to transportation.” So if you
think you're already paying to maintain the roads, think again
because the constitution applies 60% of those monies to other things.
Another ruse is that they will tax the people that
can't afford lobbyists schmoozing for their behalf (ie:us) and hope
forgetfulness reigns every November in even numbered years. For
instance, the tax
on diesel fuel hasn't been raised since 1984 according to this 2012
study (page 16). Meanwhile, as of last year,
our gas taxes were already fifth highest in the nation..
Lobbyists 1, Citizens 0.
And for some reason that I don't understand, the GOP
is afraid of alternate energy and they're considering using this
road repair issue as a weapon against these relatively new
transportation modes. They see hybrids
and electrics as taxable targets because they use little to no
gasoline. Never known as the party of the future, they should realize
today's young people expect and want to be driving hybrids and
electrics in their future according
to this
2012 article and this
one from 2013. But hey, the Republicans know their target
demographic better than me, I suppose, and conventional energy
companies are very generous to elected officials. And if they pull
out the “fairness” principle on me (“well, they use the roads
just like regular cars”) we're right back to the fact that trucks
destroy the roads not cars, gasoline, electric or both.
It bothers me that just as One Term's
repeal of most business taxes is kicking in to the tune of around
$1.7 billion per year, he's in my face because he
needs $1.2 billion to fix the roads. Does anyone else see the
irony here?
Sorry, I'm not rich enough to be able to afford One
Term's vision for Michigan.
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Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Dear One Term: Quit Playing Politics with Potholes!
Labels:
Michigan pot holes
,
one term Rick Snyder
,
tax electric cars
,
tax hybrids
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