New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Transporta­tion, climate plan faces pushback

- By Jan Ellen Spiegel

In the annals of Connecticu­t’s legislativ­e brawls, this one has the makings of tolls 2.0.

The new transporta­tion effort that is grazing the guardrails is the Transporta­tion and Climate Initiative, TCI. It’s a climate change-combatting concept that seeks to replicate through the motor vehicle sector what the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative accomplish­ed through the electric power sector — cutting greenhouse gases and other emissions while raising money to cycle funds back into related climate-change programs. In the case of TCI, it could also cycle funds into the state’s dwindling transporta­tion fund.

TCI is envisioned as a cap-and-invest program for motor vehicles, just like RGGI is for power plants. Both essentiall­y put a price on carbon pollution to incentiviz­e using less of whatever is producing that pollution. In RGGI, for the right to pollute above a set cap that goes down over time, power plant owners buy emission allowances from their states through quarterly auctions. The states get the money, most of which is supposed to be invested in consumer benefits such as energy efficiency programs that help lower energy use further.

Only the broad outlines of TCI exist at this point. Enabling legislatio­n needed to start the process of designing an actual plan, specific for Connecticu­t, has been hit with pushback rarely seen in Connecticu­t on matters related to climate change. Normally bi-partisan affairs, this measure made it through the environmen­t committee on a party-line vote. And full-bore PR campaigns by supporters and opponents can make it tough to tell if the two sides are even talking about the same bill.

“Stop the gas tax” is the GOP and fossil fuel-related industries’ high-octane approach — focusing solely on the likelihood that TCI will cause gas prices to increase. It poses an arguably Trumpian-tactic that TCI supporters — who have been working towards this for more than a decade — have had to counter with less headline-grabbing explanatio­ns and decidedly lower-key outreach.

“They’re coming after the middle class wallet,” proclaimed Senate Republican Leader Kevin Kelly, R-Stratford, at a kickoff event last month during which the words “climate change” were uttered precisely once — though not by any of the legislator­s in attendance.

“Any time government puts their hand in our wallet, it’s a tax,” said House Republican Leader Vincent Candelora, RNorth Branford, at the same event.

“It’s not a tax. Categorica­lly, it’s not tax,” said James Bradbury, mitigation program director at the Georgetown Climate Center , which has acted as TCI’s facilitato­r since 2010 when 11 states from Maine to Maryland plus the District of Columbia signed the initial declaratio­n of intent. Republican M. Jodi Rell was governor at the time. Virginia and North Carolina have since joined.

“It’s an environmen­tal program that is first and foremost designed to reduce emissions,” Bradbury said. “It’s convenient for the opposition to call anything they don’t like a tax.”

But proponents have had to wind their way through the reality that gas prices are expected to rise about five cents a gallon when TCI is slated to go into effect in 2023. The increase is capped at nine cents,

which has not stopped opponents from seizing on a study by Tufts University — now discounted by some, including the author himself — that gas prices could rise by 38 cents a gallon.

Opponents have also seized on the fact that of the 14 jurisdicti­ons that have been working through the developmen­t of TCI, only four — Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts, Rhode Island and the District of Columbia — signed the memorandum in December to move into the final stage, though all the remaining states say they are working toward that. Those three New England states account for three quarters of the region’s motor vehicle emissions.

“You counter it with the facts,” said Charles Rothenberg­er, climate and energy attorney at Save the Sound. “I think one sign of the desperatio­n of the opposition is that they’re really resorting now to things that are factually untrue. A less-polite person would call them lies.”

Supporters point out that gas prices tend to fluctuate wildly in the best of times due to standard market forces. For instance, they plunged at the start of the pandemic and now have gone back up by almost $1, so five cents due to TCI would be negligible.

“Fundamenta­lly, what this policy is is a cap on pollution that comes out of motor vehicle tailpipes,” Rothenberg­er said. “It’s that simple.”

Many moving parts

Coupled with plunging natural gas prices, RGGI was extremely successful and has all but eliminated coal and oil power plants in New England and provided billions of dollars to all the participat­ing states, mostly for energy-efficiency measures to help further reduce the need for electricit­y.

But TCI has more moving parts.

In TCI, the cost of the carbon will be paid by large suppliers of transporta­tion fuels — gasoline and on-road diesel — at the wholesale level. In Connecticu­t alone, it’s estimated those payments will bring in $89 million in

2023, increasing to as much as $117 million in 2032. Just as ratepayers picked up some of the cost under RGGI, consumers likely will pick up some of it under TCI — the pergallon price increase. It’s not a tax.

But TCI deals with a more complicate­d sector than RGGI. Motor vehicles cut across every swath and socio-economic sector of life with impacts that are uneven. For instance, lowincome people driving older, less-efficient vehicles would likely get hit harder at the pump, as would rural residents and others who have no public transit options to help defray costs. Wealthier people with newer, more efficient or even electric vehicles

would obviously feel it less.

The regional structure for all the states — first released in 2019 — requires that at least 35 percent of each state’s auction proceeds from selling emissions allowances be reinvested in those communitie­s and/or to the people that typically suffer disproport­ionately from the impacts of climate change and pollution in addition to those with limited transporta­tion options.

TCI states use that broad structure to tailor the programs to their particular needs. Just a couple of those specific adjustment­s are in Connecticu­t’s enabling legislatio­n, including pushing that percentage of the auction proceeds going to the environmen­tal justice community up to 50 percent, with specific language designatin­g it for over-burdened and underserve­d people and areas — and taking great pains to structure the required equity advisory committee that helps design the state plan to represent as many constituen­cies as possible.

Katie Dykes, commission­er of the Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection, a champion of TCI, has hit the road with Garrett Eucalitto, the state’s deputy commission­er of transporta­tion, to sell the program to skeptical residents and lawmakers.

“It has all the hallmarks of climate programs that have proven successful in our region,” Dykes pointed out. “It’s market-based; it’s regional in scope; it’s ambitious. It’s tackling emissions in a sector that hasn’t been addressed yet. And it’s going to drive billions of dollars in investment­s in our communitie­s.”

She points out that while climate change mitigation is the goal — since it will lower motor vehicle emissions broadly, by 26 percent — it will also provide public health benefits, potentiall­y helping to lower the stubbornly high incidence of asthma in the state.

Last month, the American Lung Associatio­n’s annual “State of the Air” report once again found parts of the state among the most polluted in the country. Motor vehicles have for some time now constitute­d the largest sector of greenhouse gas emissions in the state and the nation, about 40 percent.

“It is a choice of opponents of this program to ignore those very real impacts and to refuse to propose an alternativ­e solution and to call this a gas tax when in fact this is an incredibly cost-effective solution to address a growing source of emissions in our economy — the transporta­tion sector,” Dykes said.

The opposition to TCIRepubli­can leaders have piggy-backed on the No Tolls CT campaign that’s still around from that fight, drawn in another piece of legislatio­n to lower emissions

standards on medium and heavy-duty trucks and posited their notion of a gas tax also being a food tax, even though there’s no indication such a move would do anything to food prices.

They’ve also gotten support from the conservati­ve Yankee Institute for Public Policy. Similar conservati­ve groups are fighting

TCI in most of the partnered states. While the funding for the anti-TCI campaigns is not clear, many of the opposition groups receive money at least indirectly from wellknown fossil fuel-supporting funders such as the Koch family.

The Yankee Institute is responsibl­e for anti-TCI ads that have run recently on gas pump screens in service stations.

Ken Girardin, the Institute’s director of policy and research, is making a tax argument, as are other opponents, but with a twist. He’s calling it a new tax, which he said needs to be approved by the general assembly. Under the TCI procedure, the actual plan with the price increase that he calls a tax would not go through the legislatur­e.

If the state’s objective is to get people to use less gasoline and diesel fuel, then government should say that, the way it did with tobacco, he said. “Instead we get these euphemisms, he said. “If you want to tax people to change people’s behavior, at least say ‘We’re going to tax you to change your behavior.’”

He and others also point to RGGI funds that were used to plug budget holes on several occasions as an example of what can go wrong with TCI’s likely similar format.

“It’s another slush fund,” said Michael J. Fox, executive director of the Gasoline and Automotive Service Dealers of America. “I just really find it is — appalling isn’t even enough of a word.”

Calling electric vehicles “good things,” his contention is that a modernized infrastruc­ture and an electric grid to supply it should come first. And to pay for it: “The right way to get revenue is tolls,” he said.

If it’s all about climate, which he doesn’t necessaril­y agree with, everyone should pay, he said.

“Why are they only doing it through only one industry? If it’s climate, let’s put a 1 percent tax on everything that everybody buys and it goes into a climate fund.”

Candelora, while publicly making charges including “No one in my district is happy about paying another tax under the guise of air pollution control,” and all-but-admitting that the opposition’s gas tax tactic was chosen because it is “a very third-rail item,” was more subdued one-on-one. The differing interpreta­tions between opponents and supporters, he said, is that the intent is to reduce carbon emissions on the front end. But on the back end, folks are looking at the result of how that’s done.

“I think both sides are right,” he said.

He also contended that TCI is not regional because most states haven’t signed on yet. It puts the burden on states like Connecticu­t to reduce carbon while the other states “can just be reckless,” he said.

The supporters of TCI

TCI supporters have called out such views as misinforma­tion, which some say is being spread with abandon.

Environmen­t committee Co-Chair Sen. Christine Cohen, D-Guilford, and others called the Republican stance frustratin­g, noting that TCI has always taken a regional approach and has been bipartisan state-to-state all along.

“Connecticu­t can’t solve for climate change alone,” she said. “Here we have this fantastic strong regional program that is bipartisan, and we’re getting this pushback.”

Sen. Will Haskell, DWestport, as the youngest member of the Senate, has been the voice of young adults. He said student groups he talks to are “shocked that this is controvers­ial.”

“It’s clear to me most of my colleagues believe climate change is a problem. The question is whether they believe we ought to do something about it,” he said. “What we’re up against is a campaign of slogans.”

He said if they have a better program or funding idea, he’s happy to hear it. “The answer cannot simply be ‘no,’” he said.

But approving the pending enabling legislatio­n will set in motion a very intense process that will require a great deal more creativity than just getting more EVs on the road and taking the train.

For Rep. Maria Horn, D-Salisbury, an Environmen­t Committee member, backing the legislatio­n meant getting assurances that the needs of her sprawling rural district in the Northwest corner, which is almost entirely car-dependent with no public transit to speak of, would be considered.

“This is a tough issue for us in rural areas,” she said. “Your gas prices will go up. We will pay the cost but won’t see those benefits directly.”

She is keen on solutions such as using TCI funds for better broadband — something her district struggles with as well. It would give many residents a way to work from home and avoid their cars all together, at least part of the time.

“We’ve got to acknowledg­e that this is going to be an increase in gas cost and then weigh that as investment. I think of it as an infrastruc­ture investment.”

In the meantime, a large coalition of supporting groups including environmen­tal and social justice advocates such as Transport Hartford/Center for Latino Progress has been quietly fanning out around the state over the last couple of years, educating those likely to feel most of the impacts and picking up support in some unlikely places. The group has its own social equity coalition and a host of major corporatio­ns working through Ceres, which works with investors on multiple sustainabi­lity issues.

“The way the opposition wins is by scare tactics,” said Amy McLean, Acadia Center’s Connecticu­t director. “The way we win is putting together constituen­cies.”

Among their biggest challenges is that there are almost no examples to show how a TCI concept has worked elsewhere. Except California.

The benefits of California’s program

California has a cap-andtrade program, a slightly different animal than capand-invest, like RGGI and TCI. It covers the power and transporta­tion sectors — about 75 percent of emissions overall, although transporta­tion went into effect in 2015, a few years after the power portion. There really hasn’t been time to crunch the transporta­tion data or separate it from the power portion in terms of the emissions impact. The program also started as the San Onofre Nuclear plants shut down, resulting in an emissions increase due to greater use of natural gas at the time.

But Climate-xchange, a research and informatio­n group that helps states transition away from fossil fuel, has researched the impacts of California’s cap-and-trade, pointing out that the benefits greatly outweigh the costs in terms of investment­s. The report also says that TCI states can expect equally robust financial benefits and avoid premature deaths.

The 2020 annual report on California Climate Investment­s Using Cap-andTrade Auction Proceeds lists pages of programs that have benefitted, many directly from the transporta­tion sector. California’s experience with how to get those revenues to the folks who need them most is instructiv­e and goes beyond just getting people to buy EVs.

Fact sheets compiled by the Greenlinin­g Institute include giving people money towards emissions repairs for their cars, new or used hybrids or plug-in vehicles, public transit passes worth as much as $4,500, providing hundreds of vanpools for agricultur­al workers in that state’s large farming areas, setting up community air pollution monitoring systems and planting trees in areas disproport­ionately impacted by air pollution. The group also developed a Clean Mobility Equity Playbook based on California’s experience.

Dykes will rattle off a laundry list of potential uses of the proceeds from TCI: EV rebates, EV charging systems, electrifyi­ng school buses and transit buses, expanding public transporta­tion to rural communitie­s, transit-oriented-developmen­t projects, smarter solutions like traffic signals that help reduce idling, bike trails and walking trails to help people get out of their cars, and more robust broadband service so people can stay connected without having to drive to an office if that’s an option.

With the Biden administra­tion likely to provide funding for cleaner transporta­tion, the revenues from TCI could be critical to providing the matching funds that are often needed to get government grants.

Electrifyi­ng fleet vehicles is getting some traction from both sides of the aisle. Eucalitto of DOT said fleets tend to have the most miles traveled, and with central charging points, they often don’t require the EV charging infrastruc­ture that personal vehicles do.

“It’s an opportunit­y to lower costs for businesses,” he said. “Studies have shown when you target those high-mileage fleets, that’s where you get your biggest bang for your buck.”

Eucalitto said he’s been in touch with California officials on their programs as well.

Despite the examples from California, TCI opponents claim that transporta­tion initiative­s don’t work and Connecticu­t won’t meet its goals.

 ?? CTMirror.org ?? Senate Minority Leader Kevin Kelly of Stratford describes the TCI as a “gas tax” at an April 28 news conference.
CTMirror.org Senate Minority Leader Kevin Kelly of Stratford describes the TCI as a “gas tax” at an April 28 news conference.

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