Miami Herald

As DeSantis pushed for 5-month gas tax reprieve, staff planned for just one

- BY LAWRENCE MOWER lmower@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

Gas prices hit another record high Tuesday, but Floridians must wait nearly four months before they can save 25 cents on every gallon at the pump.

They may have Gov.

Ron DeSantis to thank for not only the tax break — but for the wait.

Although GOP lawmakers took credit for cutting the gas tax this October, emails show that a top DeSantis aide suggested it first.

Days after DeSantis publicly called for a fivemonth suspension of Florida’s gas tax last year, his team drafted legislatio­n to delay the break until October.

Republican lawmakers said they decided on October because it’s the month with the fewest tourists, although data doesn’t support that claim. Lawmakers said they wanted to ensure Floridians, not tourists, would benefit from the tax break.

But critics note that October is also a crucial month for DeSantis’ reelection campaign. It’s when voters start casting ballots for him and his Democratic challenger in the November governor’s race.

“People need relief now but their Legislatur­e wants to wait until October to provide it,” said Sen. Annette Taddeo, D-Miami, after lawmakers passed the cut in March. Taddeo had been running for governor, but this week dropped her bid to run for a congressio­nal seat instead. “Everything here is political and about elections — it is not about taking care of people.”

Since DeSantis signed the October gas tax cut into law last month, gas prices have continued to rise, reaching a record average of $4.768 per gallon on Tuesday, according to AAA.

DeSantis first proposed cutting the gas tax on Nov. 22 last year, blaming President Joe Biden for rising gas prices. “We want to protect Floridians as much as we can against the inflation that we’re seeing,” the governor said. He called on the Legislatur­e to temporaril­y cancel the gas tax for roughly six months.

Nine days later, DeSantis’ director of legislativ­e affairs, Stephanie Kopelousos, drafted legislatio­n to make the cut for October only. “Can you please put this in bill drafting?” she wrote on Dec. 1 to Dee Alexander, an aide to Sen. Aaron Bean, R-Fernandina Beach, the vice chairperso­n of the Senate’s Appropriat­ions Committee.

The draft legislatio­n was among dozens of bills DeSantis’ office asked senators to file and sponsor ahead of this year’s legislativ­e session.

PROPOSED BUDGET

When DeSantis released his proposed budget eight days later, it called for a five-month reprieve from the state’s gas tax, using $1 billion in federal stimulus dollars to fill the hole in the state’s transporta­tion trust fund.

Yet on Dec. 15, Bean’s aide responded to Kopelousos with a slightly modified bill that still included an October timeline.

Later that month, and into the first week of January, DeSantis’ office and the Senate worked together to rewrite the legislatio­n to have the tax break last from July 1 to Nov. 30.

A five-month tax break was the governor’s intent all along, according to DeSantis spokespers­on Bryan Griffin, who produced emails from other DeSantis advisers in January advocating for the longer break.

He said that the Legislatur­e was to blame for wanting the October break.

“In the course of the legislativ­e process, the governor’s tax holiday idea was adopted but ultimately written by the Legislatur­e to only run for one month,” Griffin said in an email. “It is our understand­ing that October was selected because it follows peak summer tourism season, so the tax holiday would inure to the greatest benefit of Florida residents rather than out-of-state visitors.”

When asked why DeSantis’ aide, Kopelousos, first requested an October timeline, Griffin did not say.

WHY OCTOBER?

After publicly resisting cutting the gas tax, the Legislatur­e’s two budget writers made a surprise announceme­nt during the final days of the legislativ­e session that they agreed to cut it, but only during October.

Sen. Kelli Stargel, RLakeland, told reporters that it was because May and October were the months with the fewest tourists, which meant that Floridians would benefit from the cut more than people from out of state.

“It had nothing to do with the election,” she said.

The decision to pass a motor fuel tax break but wait months to implement it, is unusual among the handful of states that have imposed such holidays this year. About the same time as Florida lawmakers announced the October cut, Georgia lawmakers voted to cut their 29-cent gas tax immediatel­y. Republican Gov. Brian Kemp recently extended the cut until July 14.

There is no official data to back up the claim that October or May are the lowest months for tourism.

Visit Florida, the agency that produces the state’s official tourism estimates, doesn’t have monthly figures and doesn’t know anyone who does, a spokespers­on for the agency said. (The agency produces tourism estimates quarterly.)

Senators relied on the state’s monthly tax collection reports, Senate spokespers­on Katie Betta said, which include six categories, of which “tourism” is one.

 ?? ALEXIA FODERE Herald file ?? Shell gasoline station on North Miami Avenue and 82nd Street on March 9. Gas prices hit yet another record high Tuesday.
ALEXIA FODERE Herald file Shell gasoline station on North Miami Avenue and 82nd Street on March 9. Gas prices hit yet another record high Tuesday.

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