America's gasoline tax system is already pretty badly broken. When the 18.4¢ federal rate was established in 1993 total gasoline taxes amounted to between 25% and 33% of the total purchase. In 1993 the national average price per gallon was $1.11. Today fuel taxes are ranging between 10%-15% of the total purchase. Oklahoma has some of the cheapest gasoline in the nation, some stations here in Lawton have 87 octane gasoline at $2.67 per gallon currently. The price per gallon is considerably higher in other states. The cost of building and maintaining roads is far greater now than 1993 cost levels.
Matters are made worse by lawmakers at varying levels re-directing fuel tax revenue into other not-roads places. When Oklahoma raised its fuel tax by 3¢ per gallon the extra funds were slated to go into public schools for several years and then phased back to road funding later. Oklahoma still has school teachers leaving the state in droves (or refusing to come here in the first place).
Something has to change with how streets and highways are funded. Americans aren't going to give up their vehicles. Most Americans live in locations where they can't do without a motor vehicle. "New Urbanists" have promoted a city planning ideology where everyone should move to the city core and simply walk and ride bicycles everywhere. That whole idea is a freaking utopian pipe dream.
The cores of most American cities have turned into extreme high cost of living zones only for the richest few people. In the trendy "Bricktown" section of Downtown Oklahoma City most of the people waiting tables at restaurants, cooking food or doing other service industry jobs have to commute considerable distances to work those low pay jobs. Meanwhile all the high priced condos built up in that downtown area are either owned by people who also have much bigger primary homes in the suburbs or the condos are owned by institutional investors. New Urbanism will always be a bullshit idea as long as the working class is price-excluded from participation.
That underscores the fact that America's need for highways and personal vehicles isn't going to go away any time soon. If most people are driving electric vehicles then some other method for funding road building and maintenance will be required.
Matters are made worse by lawmakers at varying levels re-directing fuel tax revenue into other not-roads places. When Oklahoma raised its fuel tax by 3¢ per gallon the extra funds were slated to go into public schools for several years and then phased back to road funding later. Oklahoma still has school teachers leaving the state in droves (or refusing to come here in the first place).
Something has to change with how streets and highways are funded. Americans aren't going to give up their vehicles. Most Americans live in locations where they can't do without a motor vehicle. "New Urbanists" have promoted a city planning ideology where everyone should move to the city core and simply walk and ride bicycles everywhere. That whole idea is a freaking utopian pipe dream.
The cores of most American cities have turned into extreme high cost of living zones only for the richest few people. In the trendy "Bricktown" section of Downtown Oklahoma City most of the people waiting tables at restaurants, cooking food or doing other service industry jobs have to commute considerable distances to work those low pay jobs. Meanwhile all the high priced condos built up in that downtown area are either owned by people who also have much bigger primary homes in the suburbs or the condos are owned by institutional investors. New Urbanism will always be a bullshit idea as long as the working class is price-excluded from participation.
That underscores the fact that America's need for highways and personal vehicles isn't going to go away any time soon. If most people are driving electric vehicles then some other method for funding road building and maintenance will be required.
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