Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Transporta­tion funding report could launch years of debate

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. » A transporta­tion funding commission is preparing to recommend how to raise billions more dollars in Pennsylvan­ia for a 21st-century highway system, a report that will land at a politicall­y touchy time and is expected to kick off a debate that could last years.

The report, expected this week from the Transporta­tion Revenue Options Commission, was ordered by Gov. Tom Wolf in March to find ways to replace Pennsylvan­ia’s gas tax.

It is expected to contain a blend of shorter-term and longer-term recommenda­tions, including corridor tolling, goods delivery fees and higher vehicle fees and taxes, but the primary revenue-raiser will be a vehicle-miles-traveled fee that likely would take years to roll out.

The report comes amid a stalemate over increasing funding for highway constructi­on in Pennsylvan­ia, and as states increasing­ly experiment with a vehicle-milestrave­led fee to replace long-stagnant gas tax collection­s.

Federal statistics show vehicles are traveling more miles, but those vehicles are increasing­ly fuel-efficient, and more motorists are increasing­ly driving allelectri­c vehicles.

States are up against a deadline of sorts, with Ford and General Motors making major investment­s in electric vehicles and planning to substantia­lly shift their fleets to all-electric vehicles by 2030 or 2035.

House Appropriat­ions Committee Chairman Stan Saylor, RYork, said it is a difficult time to raise taxes and fees, as the economy rebounds from the pandemic, and he predicted no action by the Republican-controlled Legislatur­e on the plan before 2023, at the earliest.

“I don’t think it will be received well at at all right now,” Saylor said.

He also questioned whether it will be necessary for a vehiclemil­es-traveled fee to be imposed nationally, rather than state-bystate, and whether a federal infrastruc­ture measure being discussed in Congress may lift some of Pennsylvan­ia’s funding burden.

However, Rep. Mike Carroll, D-Luzerne, the ranking Democrat on the House Transporta­tion Committee, said it is better to be at the front of the line of states in making the change, rather than at the end.

It will take many months of education to get lawmakers to the point where they can embrace parts of the commission’s report, Carroll said.

“A lot of it is aspiration­al, but it’s the conversati­on that needs to be had,” Carroll said.

The report can expect strong support from labor unions and the highway constructi­on industry.

But the report faces thorny politics in the Legislatur­e.

Gene Barr, president and CEO of the Pennsylvan­ia Chamber of Business and Industry, said business-to-business taxes or fees being contemplat­ed in the commission’s report could hurt the state’s economy and start-up businesses.

One of those is a proposal being contemplat­ed for a surcharge — say, $1 or $2 — on each parcel delivery.

“My telephone lines blew up”

from unhappy constituen­ts when that idea made the news, Saylor said.

The parcel-delivery surcharge — under considerat­ion in Denver and New York City — reflects a shift to a delivery-based economy, powered by trucks that are putting more stress on highways and local roads, said Bob Latham,

executive director of the Associated Pennsylvan­ia Constructo­rs, a trade associatio­n of firms involved in all aspects of highway constructi­on.

Meanwhile, Senate Republican­s are attempting to halt a plan by Wolf’s Department of Transporta­tion to toll up to nine major bridges.

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