SALEM, Oregon — Evan Burroughs plopped into his 1996 Subaru Outback and pointed to a green plastic box tucked below the steering column. It blinked once. As Burroughs eased the car out of the parking lot and drove toward the highway, the box kept track of his speed and braking, but most importantly, of how many miles he drove.
The green box, part of a pilot program, sends the data to a private contractor like a GPS device manufacturer, which reports the miles to Oregon, which calculates Burroughs’ tax bill—1.5 cents per mile.
As revenue from the standard per gallon gas tax diminishes, states are looking for other ways to pay for the construction and maintenance of roads and bridges. California recently authorized its own mileage tax pilot project. Between 2008 and 2014, at least 19 states considered 55 measures related to mileage-based fees, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Vermont and Washington enacted bills to study per-mile fees in 2012.
But Oregon is leading the way. Its experiment, OreGO, is the first that involves ordinary citizens. Other states have been watching closely since the program began July 1.
“It’s kind of like playing a computer game, but with real stuff,” said Burroughs, 56, who obviously gets a kick out of seeing data detailing his driving habits.
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Pretty soon they'll be double taxing you...by the gallon and the mile.
ReplyDeleteIf they don't repeal all of the taxes on gasoline when they enact this crap - we'll pay twice!
sooner or later....mmmmm....Ka-pow ...right n the kisser
ReplyDeletebwahahahaha...repeal a tax? You don't know how gov't works, do you?
ReplyDeleteNO What is even more sad is that people actually want this in their car....
ReplyDelete