The Province

Drivers won’t get much, but they’ll pay a lot of tax

- Charles Lammam and Josef Filipowicz Charles Lammam is director of fiscal studies and Josef Filipowicz is a research intern at the Fraser Institute.

The current transit plebiscite, conducted by mail-in ballot across Metro Vancouver, asks whether residents are willing to support a 0.5-percentage-point increase to the Provincial Sales Tax, which would generate an extra $250 million a year to help fund $7.5-billion worth of transporta­tion projects tabled by the Mayors’ Council.

But according to the plan, not all residents in the region are created equal. If you’re a motorist, for instance, you won’t get much love.

More than three-quarters of the total value of the proposed capital projects are for public transit, with the rest divided between bike paths, sidewalks, major roads and the replacemen­t of the Pattullo Bridge. So the plan is mainly about providing a large-scale expansion in public transit (rail, buses, etc.) in return for higher taxes on everyone. Is this a fair balance? According to Statistics Canada, three-quarters of work commutes in metro don’t involve public transit, and most are made by car.

Meanwhile, the proposed tax hike — on everything from toothpaste to TVs — would apply to all residents in the region. In other words, drivers and non-transit users will shoulder most of the extra costs while benefiting the least from the proposed projects.

Drivers will see an indirect benefit, plan proponents will claim, through improved travel times due to less congestion. This is far from certain.

Research by Gilles Duranton and Matthew Turner published in the prestigiou­s American Economic Review journal concluded that “extensions to public transit are not appropriat­e policies with which to combat traffic congestion.”

Proponents will also claim that the new bus and rail infrastruc­ture will increase transit ridership as a share of total commutes in metro.

But evidence from other costly transit projects suggests otherwise.

Consider a 2010 study by Randal O’Toole, a transporta­tion expert in the U.S., that analyzed transit ridership in major American cities.

The study concluded that “fewer than one out of four rail regions can honestly argue that new rail transit lines generated significan­t new riders.”

More recently, a 2015 report by the American Public Transporta­tion Associatio­n found that overall ridership of Washington, D.C.’s, Metro system decreased despite its newly minted, multibilli­on-dollar Silver Line.

And again, even if TransLink significan­tly increased its share of commuters, which is unlikely, the cost of the proposed projects would still be disproport­ionately borne by people who don’t use transit.

The imbalance is most stark when we consider a particular initiative in the plan: the Pattullo Bridge replacemen­t or rehabilita­tion.

Here, not only are drivers expected to help fund the $892-million allocated for the bridge, but they will also pay a toll to use it. This double squeeze on drivers traversing the Fraser River magnifies the gap between those paying for the proposed projects and those benefiting. It also creates a regional imbalance, in terms of costs and benefits, between commuters in different parts of Metro Vancouver.

The bottom line: The overwhelmi­ng majority of Metro Vancouveri­tes don’t use public transit but are expected to subsidize it with higher taxes on many of their day-to-day expenses.

This represents a clear imbalance between those who would pay for the proposed plan and those who would benefit.

“... Even if TransLink significan­tly increased its share of commuters, which is unlikely, the cost of the proposed projects would still be disproport­ionately borne by people who don’t use transit.”

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