Obama White House Wants To Track And Tax Your Mileage

Discussion in 'Politics' started by rc8222, May 6, 2011.

  1. rc8222

    rc8222

    http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/gas-tax-tracking-obama/2011/05/05/id/395346


    White House Wants to Track and Tax Your Mileage

    Thursday, 05 May 2011 05:43 PM

    By David A. Patten

    Conservative economists, commentators, and politicians are blasting a draft Obama administration plan that envisions using Big Brother-like tracking devices on private cars to tax drivers on how many miles they travel.

    The new tax scheme, designed to help fund transportation spending, would determine your mileage by installing electronic equipment on your car. This would involve monitoring your location and how far you’ve traveled.

    Fox host Lou Dobbs offered this reaction to the trial balloon on his radio show Thursday: “We’ve got an effective unemployment rate of nearly 17 percent in this country, and these idiots want to tax car mileage. It’s nuts, what they want to do,” he said.

    Cato economist Chris Edwards tells Newsmax that the proposal, which he considers “a terrible idea,” is part of the reauthorization of U.S. transportation programs that is expected to occur sometime in the next 12 months.

    “There is a high degree of risk that there’s going to be all kinds of big government, intrusive stuff in this bill,” he warns.

    The administration, stung by rising gas prices and an 8-month high in jobless claims Thursday, is backing away from the draft proposal Thursday.

    White House spokesperson Jennifer Psaki called the proposed tax “an early working draft proposal that was never formally circulated within the administration.”

    The 498-page draft of the administration’s Transportation Opportunities Act was obtained and published by Transportation Weekly.

    Psaki told TheHill.com that the draft plan “does not take into account the advice of the president’s senior advisers, economic team or Cabinet officials, and does not represent the views of the president.”

    There has been growing momentum in recent months to find a new way to finance transportation spending.

    In March, the Congressional Budget Office offered support for taxing drivers based on how many miles they travel. Payment, it suggested, could be collected automatically at service stations.

    Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad, D-N.D., also has voiced support for taxing mileage.

    The draft of the transportation proposal, which reportedly has been circulated within the Department of Transportation and the Office of Management and Budget, would create a $300 million office within the Federal Highway Administration to be called the “Surface Transportation Revenue Alternatives Office.”

    The office would be tasked with defining “the functionality of a mileage based user fee system and other systems,” according to the draft.

    One Republican quick to criticize the mileage tax on Thursday: Former GOP Sen. George Allen.

    Allen, who is campaigning to represent the Old Dominion in the U.S. Senate, released a statement that: “In our struggling economy, the worst thing Washington can do is raise taxes on middle-class families and small businesses. Yet that is exactly what the latest scheme being floated by Washington Democrats calls for.”

    Concerned that increasingly fuel-efficient vehicles will reduce revenue from current gasoline taxes, state officials in Oregon, Iowa, Nevada, and Texas already are considering tax proposals based on mileage driven.

    In Minnesota, the state department of transportation is conducting a research project that would use smart phones with a GPS application to monitor mileage. Critics point out, however, that taxing drivers based on miles driven rather than gallons consumed would decrease their incentive to purchase more fuel-efficient vehicles.

    Quite apart from the economic issues are the privacy concerns. Allen labeled the tax an “onerous, big brother proposal.”

    Edwards, the editor of DownsizingGovernment.org, tells Newsmax: “There’s clearly a potential for privacy abuses with such a system, government tracking American citizens driving around in their cars. These government data bases have often been hacked and leaked. So there’s a big privacy concern here.”

    The draft proposal calls for field trials to test the feasibility of the mileage tax, but does not specify when or where those trials would occur.



    *** Obama illegally orders you to buy health insurance, and now his administration and Demo'craps' wants to place devices on your car to track your mileage so you can pay taxes on it.
     
  2. Lucrum

    Lucrum

    What's next, a sex tax?
     
  3. They could tax our balls. Obama would get a "waiver".:cool:
     
  4. Wallet

    Wallet

    They all ready tax the miles we drive via gasoline tax.
     
  5. [​IMG]
     
  6. Mercor

    Mercor

    The Goverment makes about 10 times more revenue per gallon then the oil companies. Time to tax the Goverment.

    Long term issue are electric cars and how they affect the gasoline tax revenues.
     
  7. One point that concerns me: Probably insurance cos will adjust policies for miles driven (although they do offer discounts for low miles). They'll find a way to monetize this in their favor.

    Secondly, what happens to car pools? (Assuming you know someone who has a job {:>)) Some sucker is going to get nailed for the mileage tax, when everyone else coughs up a few bucks for gas.
     
  8. Dont worry Lucrum,thats a tax you'll never pay
     
  9. This makes sense which infuriates those with the walnut sized gland in their brain that is the source of their malfunctioning cranial unit.

    If you drive an electric car or a natural gas powered car, you're not paying any tax that goes toward maintaining the roads. Free rider problem.
     
    #10     May 6, 2011