NCDOT transportation board to hear proposal on mileage tax

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NCDOT transportation board to hear proposal on mileage tax | www.wsoctv.com

Updated: 9:45 a.m. Wednesday, April 2, 2014 | Posted: 12:56 p.m. Tuesday, April 1, 2014

NCDOT transportation board to hear proposal on mileage tax

By Tenikka Smith
RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina Department of Transportation board members will hear a presentation Wednesday on a proposal to tax people based on the number of miles they drive.

It's an idea that didn't sit well with Henry Martin.

"Everything is taxed. Most of the highway belongs to me anyway, all the taxes I done paid in these years," he said.

Angela Vogel-Daley with AAA Carolinas thinks a mileage tax will be complicated to implement and costly.

"You'd either need to track your car where you drove, where would those miles go towards?" she said. "Would they go toward state, local, or federal government? If you do an odometer reading it's simpler but it could still be complicated and more of the revenue may go to administrative costs rather than funding the roads."

Vogel-Daley thinks increasing the gas tax would be the simplest alternative to generate funds.

Currently North Carolina drivers pay one of the highest rates in the country at just over 37 cents per gallon at the pump.

NCDOT said the proposed mileage tax would generate around $500 million a year, charging drivers a half cent per mile.

It pales in comparison to the $2.8 billion in state and federal dollars currently generated from the gas tax.

As cars become more fuel-efficient and driving habits change, money generated from the gas tax will likely decrease by 2018.

"The gas tax is not the vehicle that is the right tool for the job going forward," NCDOT Chief Financial Officer Mark Foster said.

Foster said regardless of what the NCDOT decides, transportation is a huge part of the economy and ultimately the state will need several tools to fund it into the future.

Click here to look at the Enhancement Revenue Study the NCDOT board will hear about tomorrow that explores the impact of a proposed state mileage tax.
 
I can hear my dad replying to this- "The hell they pull!" :lol: How will they enforce it if it is up to the taxpayer to state their mileage totals? You guys are taxed to the heaps in Asheville! Enough! Don't ya think?
 
I'm closer to Charlotte than Asheville ... but yes taxed enough as it is ...they could do it during the yearly safety/emission inspections the mileage is recorded during that anyway. Or require a device similar to Onstar that could send the vehicle mileage. State Farm in NC recently started a program to install a device on the vehicles connection under the dash that transmits mileage and driving habits saying if a person didn't rack up many miles and was a good driver they get discounts.

Taxing someone for how many miles they drive is just retarded anyway.
 
LOL I know, mentioned Asheville for its elevation. But on top of also paying for the emissions inspection?
Never heard of that device, I'm covered by Allstate though. You know what? I think this will work better in FL to discourage certain ,*ahem* undesireable drivers off the road!
 
What government needs to do is stop pushing for higher taxes and start cutting their budget!

They are too quick to go to higher taxes instead of thinking of what they can do to cut budget like most Americans have to do when money is tight.
 
What government needs to do is stop pushing for higher taxes and start cutting their budget!

They are too quick to go to higher taxes instead of thinking of what they can do to cut budget like most Americans have to do when money is tight.

:topic:

Unfortunately they HAD to raise the debt ceiling and opted to borrow more from China. We're coming off the oil standard, I wonder what will be propping up the greenbacks next?
 
LOL I know, mentioned Asheville for its elevation. But on top of also paying for the emissions inspection?
Never heard of that device, I'm covered by Allstate though. You know what? I think this will work better in FL to discourage certain ,*ahem* undesireable drivers off the road!

No the inspection fees are set by the state of NC ... I forget exactly I'll look on my sheet tomorrow but its $30 something a year for safety.emission inspection and around $10 or $12 for older cars that don't require emissions stuff to pass ... just another way for the state to get money its a PIA ...

And the thing is called In-drive ... State Farm contracted with a 3rd party company to make, distribute and monitor the devices and you'd have to pay a monthly fee for it but technically if someone don't drive much or drive crazy the insurance discount should be more than the service fee .... BUT I went in and talked to my insurance agent about it they said it could also make a persons insurance rise if they drive a lot or have bad driving habits ... here's a link to the State Farm page on it.
https://www.statefarm.com/insurance/auto/discounts/drive-safe-save/indrive

I think a nice little gonad field goal would discourage bad driving better ;)
 
Not something I'd be interested in since some things I do on the road would be misinterpreted, SO not telling you what! LOL
 
Not something I'd be interested in since some things I do on the road would be misinterpreted, SO not telling you what! LOL

That's ok your silence is incriminating and says enough ;)
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On and Jessica, you should call your mother more often she misses you terribly ;)
 
Will be interesting to see what NC does. I'm in the process of switching to NC license, insurance and plates (waiting on eye doctor letter for license- I have to have that anyway- years of experience tell me so lol). Good thing my car is an old one (12 year old by end of the year- owned for 11). I will however miss the cheaper gas prices in SC and no inspections lol.
 
including military spending cut?

The welfare programs got a lot of cut in recent years.

I don't support mileage tax - it will make more bureaucracy, also I want to repeal the state income tax and replace with small increase in sale tax (bump 4% to 6%), also cap the sale tax at 8% to 10% (that means local can't levy tax more than 2% or 4%).

I know that tax preparers and local hate my idea because local want to jacking the sale tax to fund their interest.

All across the board. It is time for USA to stop playing police for the world and start taking care of it own country and paying down the debt. USA needs to stop giving money we don't have to others country and take care of its own.

Sent from my Nexus 5 using AllDeaf App mobile app
 
Speaking of inspections and such, when I get back to Virginia later this month, I have to get my car and bike inspected and renew my bike's plates.. UGH!

As bad as it is, you guys just reminded me of this. Going to hope a cop doesn't notice my expired inspection sticker once I hit the Virginia state line..lol
 
Thank God I no longer live in North Carolina.

BUT.... Damn it! I am paying more on taxes up here anyway.
 
Will be interesting to see what NC does. I'm in the process of switching to NC license, insurance and plates (waiting on eye doctor letter for license- I have to have that anyway- years of experience tell me so lol). Good thing my car is an old one (12 year old by end of the year- owned for 11). I will however miss the cheaper gas prices in SC and no inspections lol.

Not 100% sure if it would be different to register/transfer an out of state car ... BUT ... 12 year old car still has to have the safety/emissions inspection yearly and they won't renew the registration until its done ... any vehicle 1996 or newer is required to have safety/emissions inspection 1995 or older just the safety inspection ... if a car is 35 years old or older its not required to have any inspection at all ... the stations that do the inspections are tied to the NCDMV database so they know when you do it and will renew the tag ... example is I usually have my truck inspected and renew the tag the same day and when I renew it at the DMV they already have it that its passed inspection ... and if a car isn't transferred over within 30 days they charge a penalty for that ... renewing my tag is $39 (specialized tag plain tag is $29 a year I think) and yearly inspection is $30 something ...
 
Speaking of inspections and such, when I get back to Virginia later this month, I have to get my car and bike inspected and renew my bike's plates.. UGH!

As bad as it is, you guys just reminded me of this. Going to hope a cop doesn't notice my expired inspection sticker once I hit the Virginia state line..lol

Maybe they'll change it like NC did ... they did away with the windshield inspection sticker years ago and just do electronically with the DMV and switched it around where the inspections are due at the same time tag renewal is due. So if the tag is expired chances are the inspection is expired too.
 
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