Porterville Recorder

State gas tax rises 12 cents to pay for road repairs

- By JONATHAN J. COOPER

SACRAMENTO — California gas prices are about to go up.

Gasoline taxes will rise by 12 cents per gallon Wednesday — and diesel taxes by even more — to raise money for fixing roads and highways.

It’s the first of several tax and fee hikes that will take effect after Democratic lawmakers approved them earlier this year, a vote that Republican­s see as a key issue in the 2018 election.

The price increase for gasoline will be mitigated because it coincides with the annual shift to a winter blend of gasoline, which generally reduces prices by about 6 cents per gallon, said Marie Montgomery, a spokeswoma­n for AAA of Southern California.

It’s tough to predict how much prices will rise overnight, Montgomery said, but past gas tax increases have generally led to gradual price increases.

“We don’t know. We’ve seen gas prices increase in the last week, so they could be already building that increase in,” Montgomery said. “Or we may see a sizeable hike on Wednesday.”

Diesel taxes will go up by 20 cents a gallon and diesel sales taxes will rise by 4 points to 13 percent.

California­ns will also have to pay a fee of $25 to $175, depending on the value of their vehicle, when they renew their registrati­on next year. Zero-emission vehicle owners will pay $100 per year starting in 2020 since they don’t pay gas taxes.

The gas tax increase passed with support from nearly all legislativ­e Democrats and one Republican, capping a yearslong effort by Gov. Jerry Brown to line up support for a dedicated source of road maintenanc­e dollars.

The measure has emboldened Republican­s, who have watched their influence diminish as California tilts increasing­ly to the left. They see higher gas taxes as a winning election issue that could motivate their base and win over voters frustrated with California's high cost of living.

Republican­s put the gas tax at the center of a campaign to recall Sen. John Newman, a Fullerton Democrat who narrowly won his seat last year. Republican candidates for governor and

for Congress are backing competing initiative­s to repeal the gas tax, one of which would also require voter approval for any future increases.

California­ns already pay some of the highest gas prices in the country. On Tuesday, California's statewide average of $3.04 per gallon was about 57 cents higher than the national average and the highest in

the continenta­l U.S., according to AAA.

Assemblyma­n Travis Allen, a Huntington Beach Republican who has made opposition to the gas tax a centerpiec­e of his campaign for governor, said the money won't widen or extend freeways to relieve traffic.

“California­ns will still be stuck in the worst-inthe-nation traffic. We'll

just be paying a lot more for it,” Allen said.

The taxes are projected to raise about $5 billion a year to be split between state and local government­s. Much

of it will pay for fixing potholes and rebuilding crumbling roads and bridges. Some will also pay for public transporta­tion, biking and walking trails, and other

projects.

Wednesday's increase will put the state gasoline tax at 41.7 cents on top of the unchanged federal gas tax of 18.3 cents.

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