Posted: 02/15/08 02:18, Edited: 02/15/08 02:20
by Dave Mindeman
When the legislature takes up a transportation bill that includes a gas tax, KSTP News can be counted on to commission a poll. And predictably, a solid majority don't want the tax.
But we have moved way beyond the point where we have a lot of choices involving transportation issues. We have a backlog of projects a mile long and revenue sources that are exhausted and inadequate.
We have no choice about the need. Roads and bridges and the flow of transporation is an absolute government responsibility. There is no alternative. We can't pick a mile of road and lay our own asphalt. It is a collective need that must be paid for collectively.
No poll is going to show a public desire to pay more taxes.... but no poll is going to say we can do without roads and bridges either. Gas taxes and license fees are the most appropriate method to pay for this responsibility. We buy the gas to operate our vehicles....those vehicles produce the wear and tear on the highways.. so drivers should pay.
Because we have neglected to raise the tax over the last two decades, even current proposals are not going to be enough. During those two decades we could have raised revenue to develop more mass transit, but we didn't. We could have built and modernized the highway bottlenecks that lengthen our commutes, but we said, not now. And we could have built a funding mechanism that could have moved us forward with a transportation plan strong enough to encompass the next generation, but we had no vision.
Instead, we have acted like the homeowner who ignored the roof leaks, bypassed the cracked windows, and neglected the flaws in the foundation.... only to find that because of inflation and deepening deterioration, that homeowner lost his investment.
Polls on our personal preferences don't have much meaning. Kids would rather have extra candy than another dentist appointment, but parents know better.
We can say what our preferences are when the pollster calls... but, in the end, I think we all know better about that, too.



