Originally posted by QuarterMillionMan
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Economic state of your State or City?
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It'll be a double whammy for ICE drivers having to continue buying gasoline w/the high gas tax in addition to the .03 cents per mile tax until ICE cars gets phased out. My livelihood requires driving and I drive 300 miles round trip for personal driving every week and sometimes 2x's a week. My annual driving is about 25,000 miles so double your estimate.
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Originally posted by QuarterMillionMan View PostIt'll be a double whammy for ICE drivers having to continue buying gasoline w/the high gas tax in addition to the .03 cents per mile tax until ICE cars gets phased out. My livelihood requires driving and I drive 300 miles round trip for personal driving every week and sometimes 2x's a week. My annual driving is about 25,000 miles so double your estimate.
It's not a bad proposal at face value.History will judge the complicit.
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Originally posted by myrdale View PostThe Port of Savannah seems to be doing just fine.
https://www.fox5atlanta.com/news/por...ous-milestones
From the article:
- The Port of Savannah achieved record-breaking growth in March, handling 534,000 TEUs, a 22.5% increase from the previous year, driven by cargo shifts from the West Coast and preemptive ordering to avoid tariffs.
History will judge the complicit.
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Originally posted by ua_guy View Post
The proposal is to eliminate the gas tax and replace it with the Road Charge program for all vehicles, ICE and EV. The average ICE owner spends about $300/year in CA fuel taxes, so the Road Charge per miles driven would roughly replace this, and it's equitable based on propulsion choice and annual miles driven.
It's not a bad proposal at face value.
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Originally posted by myrdale View PostWhat if I drive on private property?
For everything else, my guess is self-certification regarding mileage and time spent in/out of state on an annual basis when renewing the vehicle's registration. Mileage is already tracked via state DMV's when purchasing and selling for the first 10 or 20 years depending on the state and I'm sure California would have no problem extending that. I kind of think it should be anyway...remember vehicles with only 5-digit odometers? Does that car have 49,000 miles, or is it a very well cared-for 149k?
History will judge the complicit.
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