San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Balancing climate change with state’s rising pain at pump

- By Grace Gedye Grace Gedye covers California’s economy for CalMatters, a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media venture explaining California policies and politics.

“We need to do something to bring people relief who are feeling a lot of pain at the pump because of Putin’s war.”

As California gas prices soar — reaching a per-gallon average of $5.90 on Friday — lawmakers are trying to rush to the rescue with pricey proposals to assist drivers. Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to give car owners $400 per car for up to two vehicles, at a cost of $9 billion.

Yet at the same time, California is investing billions to pry people out of their gas-thirsty cars and trucks. Positionin­g itself as a global leader combating climate change, the state offers rebates to knock thousands off the price of a Chevy Bolt or Nissan Leaf. The governor pledged $10 billion to accelerate the transition to electric vehicles, and has even made a commitment to end the sale of all new gas-powered cars in California by 2035.

Sending money to car owners would work at cross purposes with the state’s climate goals in response to a political moment, said Danny Cullenward, policy director for CarbonPlan, a nonprofit climate-research organizati­on. “It is not a policy that rises to the moment in addressing income inequality or climate,” he said.

So is the state engaged in a multi-billion dollar contradict­ion here? Would a payout for car owners essentiall­y undercut the state’s climate efforts?

“I actually think it doesn’t, because of the way this is structured,” said Severin Borenstein, an economist and director of the Haas Energy Institute at UC Berkeley. California­ns who get a check or debit card could use it for anything, said Borenstein. So long as gas prices are high, drivers still have an incentive to try to buy less gas and spend the state payment buying other goods.

Erin Mellon, spokespers­on for Gov. Gavin Newsom

What’s important, he said, is that this proposal doesn’t try to substantia­lly drive down the price of gasoline — as suspending the gas tax entirely, which Republican­s are calling for, would. Cheaper gas would encourage people to use more gas, and “that definitely undermines our environmen­tal goals,” he said. He would have rather seen the payment targeted at lowerincom­e people, though, “instead of people who own cars, many of whom are not struggling financiall­y.”

The advantage of doing flat checks or debit cards, rather than cutting the gas tax to reduce the price, is that the checks don’t get bigger if you drive more, or smaller if you drive less, said Jesse Rothstein, a professor of public policy and economics at UC Berkeley, and faculty director of the California Policy Lab. In other words, they don’t change the incentives around how much gas people use.

Already, increasing gas prices have driven more people to search online for electric vehicles, but drivers looking to make the switch might have a hard time finding one, thanks to supply chain delays and pent-up demand.

Under Newsom’s proposal, owners of electric vehicles would also receive the $400 debit cards, and the payments are part of a broader package, including:

$750 million in grants to incentiviz­e public transit agencies to make rides free for three months $500 million for walking and biking lanes and other infrastruc­ture Funds to reduce or pause certain gas and diesel taxes The accelerati­on of $1.75 billion in funding for a larger zeroemissi­ons vehicles package. Still, some environmen­tal advocates wanted to see lawmakers do much more to speed the shift away from gas-powered cars.

RL Miller, a member of the Democratic National Committee and founder of Climate Hawks Vote, said she recognized that gas prices were hurting people and appreciate­d that the governor’s package included funding for transit and biking and walking projects. But she wanted a larger share of the total package spent on non-car transit.

Out of Newsom’s $11 billion proposal, about 80% would pay for sending debit cards to car owners, while about 7% would go to public transit agencies and 4.5% would go toward walking and biking infrastruc­ture.

Miller would have preferred California address rising gas prices by offering a generous reward to people willing to ditch their gas-guzzlers — a ‘cash for clunkers’ program — as well as a commitment to hasten the date by which California will ban the sale of gas-powered cars.

“If you couple these long-term investment­s with the short-term gas card rebate silliness that they’re talking about,” Miller said, “then I would consider that acceptable.”

A spokespers­on for the Newsom administra­tion said the proposal isn’t a “this or” approach, it’s “this and.” “We know the long-term goal is to get people off oil,” said Erin Mellon, a spokespers­on for the governor. “But in the short term, we need to do something to bring people relief who are feeling a lot of pain at the pump because of Putin’s war,” she said.

“Sending people $400 checks and saying ‘sorry gas prices are so high, I hope this helps,” isn’t the ideal message, said David Weiskopf, a senior policy adviser on climate and environmen­tal issues at NextGen Policy, which advocates for progressiv­e legislatio­n. But he thinks relief payments, especially when the government has a large budget surplus, is appropriat­e.

There’s kind of a knee-jerk reaction that says: “Why are we rewarding vehicle ownership?” he said. But he sees the policy as an attempt to reach lots of people who are in the DMV’s records, but who might not be reached by a program that distribute­s money based on whether they filed taxes, which is how incomebase­d refunds often work. That includes some of the poorest California­ns, who may not have to file state taxes. But, he said, he’d like to see the money also go to people with state IDs, to reach households that don’t own a car.

“It’s impressive how government­s can react quickly to certain things — COVID, or high gasoline prices,” said Ellie Cohen, CEO of the Climate Center. She was compliment­ary of elements of Newsom’s proposal, but would have liked to see the funds targeted at lower-income people. “We’re just not going fast enough on climate change.”

 ?? Anne Wernikoff / CalMatters 2019 ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to give people $400 per car for up to two vehicles, at a $9 billion cost.
Anne Wernikoff / CalMatters 2019 Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to give people $400 per car for up to two vehicles, at a $9 billion cost.

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