Last
weekend I was honored to be a judge at the National History Day
competition. Why is it that Middle School
kids understand what adults don’t: that you
can learn from history and, hopefully, not repeat the same mistakes? Case in point, the tax on gasoline.
As
gas prices push toward the $5 per gallon mark, politicians are trying to give
the impression of doing something they cannot do: get prices back down. Politicians
don’t set gas prices, the free market does.
But sometimes, in their haste to appear engaged, the pols do more harm
than good.
Obama
speaks in Oklahoma, saying he’ll fast-track the southern portion of the
Keystone pipeline, even though the White House has no say on the already approved
project. It’s political grandstanding, but harmless enough.
But
in Hartford when the D’s and R’s get together and agree to mess with gas taxes,
watch out. This is no more than
bipartisan pandering to motorists, which will end up hurting both drivers and
the users of mass transit. Here’s
the story.
In
Connecticut we pay about 49 cents a gallon in taxes… 25 cents in regular taxes
and the balance in the Gross Receipts Tax paid by wholesalers and passed along
to us at the pump.
The
lawmakers want to put a cap on the Gross Receipts Tax for about a year, savings
us about 1.7 cents a gallon. That’s
right… less than two cents.
Pennies
in savings, but at what cost? Do
lawmakers forget where the gas taxes go… and what happened the last time they
cut gas taxes when Rowland was in office?
Here’s
the math: for every penny a gallon collected
in gas taxes, $15 million goes into the Special Transportation Fund to pay for highway
and bridge repairs, salt for winter roads and subsidies for mass transit,
taking cars off the road.
That
fund is already in trouble and could run out of money in two years, leading to
talk about finding new sources of revenue… like tolls. A political stunt like this gas-tax cap will
save the average motorist pennies, but leave our highways in disrepair and push
bus and train fares ever higher.
Even
at $5 a gallon, gas
in the US is cheap compared to the rest of the world. Yet, we drive the biggest and least fuel
efficient cars and moan at the cost. Why
do Americans think they have a God-given right to cheap gas?
Sure,
gas in New Jersey is cheaper. But they
have tolls on their roads. Pick your
poison… taxes or tolls… because there is no free ride.
What’s
driving gas prices higher is not state taxes but Wall Street speculation and
geopolitics. Why not do something to regulate
investors betting gas prices will go higher and, in effect, making them do just
that?
And
when (not if) Israel attacks Iran and the Straits of Hormuz are closed, choking
oil deliveries and sending gas to $8
to $10 a gallon, do lawmakers really think that a two cents a gallon saving
in state gas taxes will mean anything except for less spending on our roads and
rails?
Next
time you’re driving on I-95 and wonder why the potholes aren’t filled or worry
if the bridge you’re on might collapse, thank your elected officials in
Hartford for their short-sighted penny pinching.