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More on Oregon and GPS-tracked Gas Taxes

An anonymous reader writes "Wired has an update on Oregon's proposed replacement for their gas tax. Currently two candidates are in development, the first a GPS based system that tracks where a car goes to determine the number of miles driven. The other is a odometer-like device. Both would transmit the data to base stations periodically to determine the tax on a vehicle. There was a previous slashdot article."

45 of 773 comments (clear)

  1. Doesn't make sense to me by (54)T-Dub · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't get it.

    A more important reason is that GPS, which can monitor exactly where a car goes within the state and at what times, eventually could be used to implement different tax rates, according to Whitty.

    Followed by:

    Whitty said there will be no privacy issues because the machines are being designed to store only the number of miles traveled, not the exact locations visited.

    The whole thing sound ludicrous to me. I think people would complain more about getting another bill every month more than raising the gas tax a few cents. I understand that voters have turned down an increase in the tax over the past few years, but this seems like a very stupid way to get around it. Every gas station is going to have to have one of these devices installed. Then the pump will have to be changed so that it will give the user a different price depending on if he has a device or not.

    Seems like a high cost plan with lower voter approval to me.

    --

    "I can not bring myself to believe that if knowledge presents danger, the solution is ignorance" - Isaac Asimov
    1. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by rmadmin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree with that. I'd rather pay the tax on the gas. Plus, someone that drives around a small town for 4 hours isn't going to get taxed very much (if at all? How delicate is this system), whereas someone driving on the highway for 4 hours will get raped (compared to the person in town). Plus their will be no reason to buy a car that gets great gas millage over one that gets very poor millage. Great.. more reason for soccer moms to buy SUV's. :-(

    2. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by Alan+Cox · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Its ludicrous for a different reason. A tax on fuel punishes the people who burn it all, a tax on distance is an invitation to people to generate more pollution.

    3. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by BigBir3d · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Apparently SUV's are not as evil as you think.

      However, the tax rate hasn't changed since 1991, and the more fuel-efficient cars on the highways are sucking down far less fuel. The result, according to Whitty, is that tax income hasn't been able to keep pace with inflation, or with the need for additional road repairs due to increased traffic.


      Gas guzzlers indeed.

      Also, more cars on the road = more gas burned, but not enough to counter inflation combined with better fuel economy for the other classes of vehicles.
    4. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by haystor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or if he fills up (4 times) with a Geo and siphons it to his SUV. The Geo never being driven but using up tons of gas anyway.

      --
      t
    5. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by luzrek · · Score: 5, Insightful
      On top of all that you said, the suposed reason for gas taxes is to support the highway infrastructure. Road use is just about proportional to the fourth power of a vehicle's axle weight. This means that my wife's 240DL, which weights about 2500 lbs and has two axles, is doing about 1/167th the damage as a 9000lb. Expedition or other monstrous vehicle. That is a huge subsidy to the SUV owner. SUVs are already getting a subsidy under the gas tax system, because they burn about 3 times as much fuel as a smaller car, but weight much more.

      point is, if they go with a milage based system, the darn well better take vehicle weight into consideration.

      --

      Galium Arsenide is the material of the future, and always will be.

    6. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by fishbowl · · Score: 4, Informative

      "Then the pump will have to be changed so that it will give the user a different price depending on if he has a device or not."

      That's a bit easier in Oregon than you might think. Oregon gas stations are all full service. You do not pump your own gas there. Anywhere in the whole State.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    7. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by joggle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      GPS is accurate enough to gage distance, esp. if they base their estimate off of the vehicle's velocity rather than absolute position. However, it would be trivial to tamper with the system (put a piece of wood over the antenna). I don't know how they are going to prevent people from simply disabling the GPS device and simply claim "Oh, I leave my car parked in a garage all of the time." I think this one is a non-starter.

    8. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by cayenne8 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Yeah...I see this being hacked rather quickly...

      Wonder what the new laws and penalties will be that will have to be put in place to 'prevent' this?

      That and as another poster mentioned, all the cars will have to have these devices installed, the pumps at the stations will have to be severely modified/replaced....and a whole new section of the government (a new dept?) will have to be formed and paid for to monitor this...and pursure those suspected of hacking their systems...

      And finally...sure enough, if there can be potential for abuse in this system...eventually there will be. Privacy could easily be infringed upon in the future as new government gets into power there years from now, that might not be as sensistive to privacy concerns as the ones in power now claim to be. Once everyone has these...not much of a step to require the units to be 'upgraded' to where they can track you better...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    9. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by antis0c · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But they don't get a bill every month. If you read the whole article, the "tax" is charged electronically whenever you fill up. So if I drived 100 miles, then stop at a gas station, the car transmits the distance since my last fillup to the gas terminal, and that adds to tax to my gas charge.

      I think the whole idea is still insane too. First off to enforce something like that, you'd have to manufacture those devices for what, a million cars? Then you'd have to make sure they were included in all new cars, not to mention tamper proofing, etc. THEN they'd have to have the reading devices installed into all of the gas stations.

      I'd also like to know what they plan to do on non-state roads? Yes they do exist, if I own a 20 acre farm, and I drive my truck around it all day, I'm not driving on state roads, but I'd still be taxed for it. Sure, I would have still paid a tax for the gas itself, but who's to say it's not more than before?

      It just, I don't know I'm not city planner or anything, but the whole idea just doesn't seem like it's going to make a difference in the amount of tax revenue the state will get. When you consider the cost of putting the system in place, the cost of enforcing it, the public outcry when everyone and their mother has to take their car in to get a device installed. Then you weigh in they'd either have to allow people from outside of the state purchase non-taxed gas, or have two different rates for gas at the gas station, you end up confusing the consumer and causing even more public outcry about the system.

      Okay, so sure, maybe after 20 years the system would actually pay off. Let me ask you this, in 20 years do we still want to having gasoline cars as the primary mode of transportation? What about these hydrogen cars GM is promising, and electric cars and hybrid cars. What if in 4 years I can actually drive a car powered completely off of hydrogen I make in my garage? How are they going to tax me then? And enforce it?

      Then as they point out, what if the system is wrong? What if it breaks and suddenly I get a 5,000 dollar charge? Granted, that's probably more rare, it's the smaller inconsistancies that scare me the most. What if charges incorrectly every 3rd time, by 20 cents. I wouldn't realize that. Even if it did tell me how many miles it was taxing me for. I'd have to stop and think "Did I really drive that much?" instead of just looking at how much gas I purchased.

      Then yes, the whole privacy issues. Sure, their intentions seem pretty good right now, but the path to hell is paved in Gold, or whatever that saying is. I'm sure if a system like that was in place, after 5, maybe 10 years, someone decides, "let's flip a switch so we can start tracking people." What if I live on the border, and device to go to the next state over to fill my gas all the time. Does the state really know down to the meter where it's border is around the entire state using GPS?

      This really sounds like a nightmare to me and I'm pretty sure that the test run will fail misteribly, and if it doesn't, the production run of it most definitely will. And whoever attempts to promote, or sign that into law, can kiss their political career goodbye.

      --

      ..There's a-dooin's a-transpirin'
    10. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by miu · · Score: 3, Funny
      That's a bit easier in Oregon than you might think. Oregon gas stations are all full service. You do not pump your own gas there. Anywhere in the whole State.

      There's an old joke that when a baby is born in Oregon the doctor whispers "no sales tax, no self serve gas" in the newborn's ear before handing the child to the mother.

      --

      [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
    11. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by damiangerous · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I'd also like to know where you get that crazy RW=AW^4 formula.

      Well, let's see. The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO), New Zealand, South Africa and the United Kingdom, for starters.

      What does more damage, 167 Volvos or 1 Expedition? Hmm, going to have to say the Volvos...

      And according to experts around the world, you'd be wrong.

    12. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful
      SUVs are MORE evil than you think. Not only do they get consistently bad gas mileage due to a wide variety of factors including their profile to the wind and sloppy, inefficient drivetrains, but you can't see under, around, over, or through them, making them a hazard to other drivers. They also have poor stopping distances and are heavy, making them still more dangerous. While they are safer for the occupants in a multiple-car crash, they are far more dangerous for whoever is struck by them, AND they are more likely to be in a single-car accident, more likely to cause fatalities in a single-car accident, and cost more to repair after any accident. (That last one is just thrown in there to point out the general stupidity of buying them.)

      I understand that someone (Kia? Daewoo? Hyundai? One of those) has a V8 SUV which is around $25k. This can only make things worse but it illustrates the stupidity of paying $45k for a truck with a permanent camper shell.

      In any case, SUVs get bad gas mileage, worse than modern sports cars. The only vehicles which get worse mileage than SUVs these days are sports trucks like the Lightning. I dunno about the new one but a couple years back the F150 Lightning was THE vehicle with the worst mileage in the US. The second? Ferrari 355. (The Ferrari is a supercar, not just a sports car, and as such is exempt from my statement about efficiency.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    13. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by Cruciform · · Score: 3, Funny

      So if you try to pump your own gas, he tickets you, and then if you can't pay right away goes postal?

    14. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by Zeinfeld · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I agree with that. I'd rather pay the tax on the gas

      That is almost certainly the point. Voters won't raise existing taxes so the way to get them to do that is to propose something they are going to like even less.

      This tax makes no sense at all, the cost of retrofitting cars with the GPS systems will be horrendous, remember that they will have to be fraud proofed GPS systems that have yet to be invented, using expensive wireless data connections that probably don't exist in much of the state. Oregon is not California, it is not big enough for state adoption to drive economies of scale.

      They will be lucky to get the meters for less than $400 per vehicle. So how long does it take to get that back in taxes? I spend about $35 buying a tank of gas every other week, or about $900 a year. That is for the state, federal tax and the cost of delivering the gas. Say the state tax is $200, that means it will be two years before I pay them the cost of the stupid meter.

      When politicians propose something that does not add up they have a hidden agenda. The trick is you give them a choice between your preferred policy and eating broken glass. So Clinton gave the country a choice between tax cuts and 'saving social security' guess who won? The Bush plan is to give the country a choice between continuing deficits and eliminating social security.

      People don't like paying taxes, but see what happens if they are told the consequences. We keep being told that the voters are not going to allow the Bush tax cuts to be repealled, lets see what happens when the Baby Boomers are living off social security. The inheritance taxes will be back sooner than you can say 'Enron' - BTW isn't it nice to see Martha Stewart taking the rap for the Enron mess?

      So tell your SUV driver that they have a choice of a new tax plus a spy in the cab reporting their movements to John Ashcroft and slightly higher rates for an existing tax and you will get the answer higher taxes. Ask them the question higher taxes or crappy roads and they will say 'oh I'll take the crappy roads so I can use my four wheel drive'.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
    15. Re:Doesn't make sense to me by Granular · · Score: 4, Informative
      What does more damage, 167 Volvos or 1 Expedition? Hmm, going to have to say the Volvos...

      And according to experts around the world, you'd be wrong.

      Actually, when designing a roadway, both of these vehicles would be neglected, as their axle weights will cause an insignificant amout of roadway damage when compared to heavy trucks.

      But, if we really wanted to take these vehicles into account...

      Ford Expedition - Axle weight: 2634 lbs
      Volvo S40/V40 - Axle weight: 1615 lbs

      For simplicity, let's round these numbers to make the Expedition heavier (r 3000lbs), and the Volvo lighter (r 1000lbs).

      Using the Asphalt Institute's (AASHTO uses AI EALFs) Equivalent Axle Load Factors (EALF, damage caused to an asphalt roadway, compared to that caused by a single 18,000lb axle), we can determine the Equivalent Single Axle Loads (ESALs).

      1000 lbs - 0.00002 EALF
      3000 lbs - 0.00018 EALF

      Thus, 167 Volvos would cause 0.00668 ESALs worth of damage (167 Volvos * 2 Axles each * 0.00002 EALF), while the one Expedition would cause 0.00036 ESALs worth (1 Expedition * 2 Axles * 0.00018 EALF).

      Thus the age old question is answered, even while skewing the problem against the Expedition, 167 Volvos are more damaging to roadways then a single Expedition. (Concrete roadways will reflect similar, but not the same, damge trends.)

      BTW, IAATE (Transportation Engineer).

      --
      "Suspicion Breeds Confidence"
  2. This is Crap by mgrassi99 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd never want to "be tracked" by anyone when I drive. When do they start sending me speeding tickets because I travelled too many miles in too short a time??

  3. annual inspections by kilonad · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why not just record the odometer reading during the annual inspection, compare it to last year's reading, and charge accordingly? No violations of privacy and it's a HELL of a lot cheaper than installing GPS in hundreds of thousands of automobiles or retrofitting yet another odometer.

    1. Re:annual inspections by krisp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because this tax is for Oregon only. You can't tell by looking at the odometer if the driver left the state for six weeks on a cross-country journey.

  4. If this happened in my state... by Demon-Xanth · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'd gladly mount the thing inside of a cast-iron safe with an extra layer of Mu-metal to make sure it's safe from any "damage" or "tampering".

    --
    If you think education is expensive, you should try ignorance -- Derek Bok, president of Harvard
  5. Environment by cmjensen · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Taxing miles driven? Heck no! Tax the gas used so that a person who drives a fuel efficient hybrid gets an INCENTIVE versus folks (like me) who drive gas guzzling Suburbans.

  6. Out of state drivers by krisp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So what happens when someone from northern california, who is not GPS equipped, routienly crosses the boarder to get gas for 20-30 cents cheaper? This seems like it could be a large problem if neighboring states don't implement a similar system as well.

  7. Re:Give me the gas tax by Sc00ter · · Score: 4, Insightful
    That is exactly what they want. They want the tax, but they know it won't pass, so they make up something that sounds much worse so they won't give you the tax.. We're gonna cut off you legs. NO DON'T DO THAT! Okay, we'll shoot you dead.. Please, please, cut off my legs..

  8. I got an idea ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Drop the "gas tax".

    It's already expensive enough and this will do nothing more than just piss off state residents. Every state is in financial dire straits right now and every state is trying to come up with lame brain ideas on how to keep the beloved status-quo safe.

    Time to tighten the belts and do what everyone else on the face of the earth does when the money is less than the year before. Time for cuts in either pay or in the entire employment pool itself. No one is garunteed job security, so why does uncle sam try so damned hard to never fire anyone? Ohhh yeah I forgot ... uncle sam is the only stupid employer to still over pention plans.

    Lay um off, change hiring practices, or whatever just quit trying to raise my damned taxes.

    --
    Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    1. Re:I got an idea ... by chundo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Absolutely agree! Giving our government proper funding is bad for the economy! Cutting budgets to all public programs promotes Jobs and Growth(tm)!

      -j

    2. Re:I got an idea ... by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Funny
      > It's overfunding that's the problem. Giving money to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to an adolescent.

      Not quite. The adolescent tends to stop when he wraps his first two or three cars around trees.

  9. Rube Goldberg by rot26 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, as I commented at 9am when I submitted this story myself (which was rejected) the only FAIR way to do this is to take the mileage calculated by GPS, then multiply by a surcharge based on the EPA estimated fuel economy of the vehicle it's registered to, and calculate the gallons of fuel used. Which gets you EXACTLY back to just adding a per-gallon tax in the first place. How farging stupid IS this idea anyway?

    --



    To ensure perfect aim, shoot first and call whatever you hit the target
  10. What will REALLY happen by doublem · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You WILL get speeding tickets once this system has been 100% deployed.

    You WILL face severe jail time for tampering with such devices.

    There WILL be mischarges. Some people will be charged for fewer miles than they drove, some for more.

    Challenging the "system" will result in being charged with Odometer tampering, as it will be your only evidence against the charges.

    Of course, all this assumes they can manage to get all the cars in the state fitted with these devices.

    Something tells me the voters of Oregon will be less than happy, and anyone running on a "Stop tracking where I drive" platform will get elected in a landslide.

    This whole thing is either political suicide for the people responsible, or a bait and switch so the voters swallow a tax hike without complaining.

    --
    "Live Free or Die." Don't like it? Then keep out of the USA
  11. What is this supposed to accomplish? by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Interesting
    They say the problem is that as vehicles become more fuel-efficient, the amount of money raised by taxing fuel goes down, rather than going up as population rises and more cars hit the road. So now they're going to lower the gas tax, meaning that the less fuel-efficient vehicles will get a break. The taxes will be based solely on mileage, not on the amount of fuel consumed. This effectively penalizes those with efficient cars, which also tend to be lighter cars, and rewards those with heavy gas guzzlers, who spend more gallons per mile and do more damage to the road in the process. Older, heavier, less-efficient vehicles also tend to leak more oil, further contributing to road damage.

    If you want to reduce emissions and raise tax income, you're simply going to have to raise gas taxes. Tracking drivers like this is not only a potential invasion of privacy (there are other situations in which an odometer reading is significant) but also not infallible, especially if you use the odometer method. It's not like someone isn't going to figure out how to cheat the damn odometer.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  12. Oh, that's just the beginning... by dcavanaugh · · Score: 4, Funny
    • Speeding: $50 surcharge
    • Driving in high-traffic area: $1/mi. surcharge
    • Driving during "peak" hours: $1/mi. surcharge
    • Parking: $2/hr. surcharge (varies by location)

    The look on driver's face when whacked with insurance surcharges for all of the above: Priceless

  13. Exactly. by sulli · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The GPS scheme, in addition to being a massive affront to the privacy of every Oregonian, is a big sloppy blowjob for SUV owners who burn vastly more gallons-per-mile than do users of small cars. It does provide an incentive to reduce traffic, but a gas tax does that as well, and more simply.

    This needs to be defeated, soundly.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
    1. Re:Exactly. by jdray · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As a resident of Portland, Oregon, I suspect that it will be defeated. We tend to be progressive here, but not idiotic (as a trend, not a rule).

      Even though I drive a full-sized Chevy pickup that (unfortunately) drinks pretty heavily at the pump, I'd vote for a higher gas tax if its needed. I think that people who drive heavy, inefficient vehicles, which are most detrimental to roads, should pay a higher tax. Those who drive compact, fuel-efficient cars should be rewarded, not only for their lessened impact on the environment but their reduced impact on the road infrastructure.

      --
      The Spoon
      Updated 6/28/2011
  14. Why not just tax gas??? by 73939133 · · Score: 3, Redundant

    If you want a gas tax, why not just tax the gas? That has the additional benefit of taxing people more who drive less efficient vehicles. If Oregon wants to impose additional taxes on gas guzzlers, they can do that by a premium on the vehicle tax. And if they want to give certain classes of vehicles a tax break on gas, they can do that via gas deductions (keep the receipts, submit them).

    The traditional solution has simply been to raise the [gas] tax rate, but that approach is always unpopular with voters.

    Well, and do they suppose voters are going to be overjoyed by not only being charged lots of taxes for driving, but also to have their every move tracked by GPS? The money comes out of their wallet either way.

  15. Could be interesting, or a disaster by Kirby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If it's just a straight mileage tax, it's pretty dumb. It's just like the gas tax, but as the article points out, without the incentives to have a fuel efficient car.

    To make any sense at all, they'll have to acknowledge that Portland Transportation is VASTLY different than the rest of the state, particularly outside the Willamette Valley. Portland is a city, and has public transportation (not a great system, but it's at least there.) People have alternatives. And it's got a complex city road system.

    The rest of the state is mostly rural, with long highway stretches that aren't nearly as expensive to maintain. There aren't bus alternatives most places. Driving 10 miles a day in Baker City is incomparable to driving 10 miles a day in Portland, in terms of impact on the roads.

    They allude in the article of having the ability to tell where you are, so charge more for being part of the downtown rush hour vs. on a logging road that sees 10 cars per day. If they use it, they can possibly have the semblance of a fair system. If not, it's business as usual, where the rest of the state pays for things that mostly benefit Portland.

    (I grew up in Corvallis. There's real traffic during home OSU games, for the 4th of July fireworks, and when the Jehovah's Witness convention is in town. That's it. And that's the 4th largest city in the State.)

    Oregon's in such a financial free-fall right now, though, that anyone that can come through with a way to generate revenue, quickly, will get seriously listened to. So, I wouldn't be surprised to see a badly written new tax fly through without being scrutinzed.

    --
    -- Kate
  16. They're taxing the wrong comodity!! by gtrotsky · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's ridiculous to tax the number of miles traveled and not the amount of gas consumed. It's the gas that causes the environmental damage and the huge cost to society. If a massive SUV which guzzles gas and a small fuel efficient car traveled the same distance they would be taxed equally, basically penalizing the person who bought the more environmentally friendly car! This is definitely a bad idea because the idea of a gas tax is to curb excessive gas consumption.

  17. Ticket System Relies on Selective Enforcement by Greyfox · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The who reason the public puts up with the current system, particularly the often ridiculously low posted speed limits is because the limits are selectively enforced. If you run 10-15 miles over on any stretch of road, you're usually the slowest vehicle on the road. If every person who was speeding got a ticket for it, the public revolt against the system would take about 14 minutes. The reasons municipalities haven't implemented non-arbitrary ticketing is because they know that they'll be killing the goose that laid the golden egg if they did. Most counties/states aren't allowed to raise taxes without public referendums which never pass, so the only way they can make ends meet is with ticket revenue.

    So to review: Traffic Tickets are a selectively enforced tax which will die if they're enforced uniformly against the entire population.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  18. GPS Sheild by dfn5 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just make an aluminum-foil hat for your car. Seems easy enough to me. :-)

    --
    -- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
  19. Truly Dumb Idea - Techno-Overkill. by nightwing2000 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why? If you want to collect taxes based on miles driven, do the "odometer reading at license renewal" thing. Better yet, pick a substance like say, gasoline, that is roughly proportional to distnace driven and tax it. Wow! Why use a techincal solution when a simple one works? "We don't want to raise gasoline taxes by 2 cents - the voters might get angry! No,wait, let's make them all install $100 devices with a $100 install fee and annual certification fee instead!" What happens if the power to the device dies? Would a simple blown fuse or snipped wire save you hundreds of dollars? (What about out-of-state drivers?) Will it be a criminal charge to be driving with a blown accessories fuse? Will my pocket GPS scrambler save me hundreds of dollars? Maybe that'll be an add-on feature of new radar detectors... Will the petroleum consumption police require you to fill out a form if you fail to use your car in any 3-month period, certifying that you did in fact park it? Better yet, would the GPS prove you were driving on municipal roads so Oregon has to share these revenues with the appropriate city and county governments? Can I open a shortcut across my property and get a state subsidy for it? My driveway needs repaving... maybe I can set up GPS braodcast simulator that tells any nearby vehicles they drove on my private road. Truly a "Galactically stupid" idea.

  20. The Most Important Issue by rossz · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The people of Oregon, in their infinite wisdom, have repeatedly rejected a gas tax increase. The government tries various methods to get around this rejection.

    Let's put it another way. The people have decided the government already has enough money and refuse to give them more. The government thinking up new and innovative ways to screw citizens out of their hard earned money ignores the basic fact that they were already told no.

    No means no, damn it!

    Make sure taxes collected for a specific reason are spent for that reason and not put into the general fund. I bet the gasoline tax was implemented to provide the funds to maintain the roads and highways. How much is collected? How much is actually spent on road maintanence? Ask your elected officials to account for the missing money.

    --
    -- Will program for bandwidth
    1. Re:The Most Important Issue by theghost · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree that this is a stupid idea, but looking at it from the other side...

      The government of Oregon has told people that they need more money to pay for public services such as upkeep on roads. They repeatedly offered a fair and balanced gas tax to help make up the difference, but the greedy, short-sighted, freeloading citizens rejected it and yet continued to complain about the state of the roads and other services. This forced the government to come up with crazy, lame-brained schemes that would serve the same purpose in an obfuscated way.

      Taxes are what we pay for public service. Don't complain about the lack of services and cheer the tax cuts. (Unless you sincerely believe the money is being spent inefficiently, in which case you have a whole other problem.)

      --
      The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.
  21. Fuel Economy has Dropped, Not Risen! by tbmaddux · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From the original article:
    However, the tax rate hasn't changed since 1991, and the more fuel-efficient cars on the highways are sucking down far less fuel.
    This is false. The yearly average of the fuel economy of all vehicles purchased each year has declined since 1988, according to the EPA. While both cars and trucks have gotten faster, heavier, and more powerful since 1986 the average mpg of cars has remained around 24mpg and the average mpg of trucks has remained around 18mpg. Since Americans (and presumably Oregonians) have purchased increasing fractions of light trucks every year and decreasing fractions of cars, the overall average has declined. Any fool can see this from looking at the huge vehicles on the road now compared to the mid-80s. Doesn't anyone remember the song about getting in a wreck in a Japanese car?

    Furthermore, removing the gas tax will lower the price of gas, which will encourage more consumption. Which means more trucks and further reductions in average efficiency of vehicles purchased each year. Trucks are heavier, and create more wear per mile driven on the roads when compared to lighter, more fuel-efficient cars.

    Why would you create an incentive for people to drive more in heavier vehicles if you are having problems keeping roads repaired? It just makes no sense.

    --
    Can't you see that everyone is buying station wagons?
  22. The idea cannot work. So why do they propose it? by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 4, Interesting


    It seems to me that the GPS idea is part of Oregon government corruption. The idea cannot work for the reasons mentioned at the end of this article: Airplanes are safe, but laws often crash. Why are they proposing something that cannot work? Probably someone is using the idea to make money.

    For more about problems in the government of Oregon, see this: Complicated methods corrupt Oregon government. Basically, people who want to use government to make money have found the perfect way to prevent negative court judgements: The Judiciary in Oregon is not allowed enough money to do its job. Try calling the Oregon Court of Appeals in Oregon on any Friday and you will find that they are closed because they don't have enough money to stay open 5 days a week. With a limited Judiciary, those who want corruption can accomplish almost anything.

    The corruption uses other methods, some of which are mentioned in the articles.

  23. You have to realize this about Oregon by MerlynEmrys67 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    This is the state that at one time had the highest gas prices in the country. They wouldn't admit to having high gas taxes (I don't know what they are, but gas sure is cheaper across the border in Washington) and assume that the cost to have someone pump your gas is 0.00.

    Yes it is illegal in Oregon for the average consumer to pump their own gas, because they might spill a little as opposed to the highly trained pumping engineer that you meet at your gas station every fillup (who loves spilling gas down the side of my car)

    Lets see, adding custom hardware into my car (500 dollars) adding a reading mechanism to each pump (500 dollars). Ammount that I pay in gas taxes every year (10K miles, 50/MPG, 200 gallons) probably about $70. So it will take about 10 years for them to even break even (or maybe worse, make me pay for the upfront costs through higher car/gas prices)

    --
    I have mod points and I am not afraid to use them
  24. Re:Too easy to cheat by tomhudson · · Score: 3, Informative
    Tthey don't remove the panel. they use dental drills and tools</quote>

    The do not. On the Taurus, for example, pulling the whole unit out is no big job. And most chrysler vehicles can have the odometer set to any value you want with a laptop, a DOS program, and a conector.

    There's a place 5 blocks from where I live, that's all they do all day. Strange thing, in Canada, it's a weights-and-measures act offense ($50.00 fine, no criminal record), not a criminal code offense. Fucking stooopid uf you ask me.

  25. Yes by mindstrm · · Score: 3, Informative

    A cheap handheld consumer GPS has an accuracy of about 15 feet... but will show movement even smaller than that. Meaning: You can't trust the exact coordinates more than 15 feet, but relative to each other in an area, the coordinates are more accurate.. if you move 5 feet west, the gps will usually show yuo 5 feet west of wherever it said you were the previous time... it's not like the numbers jump around a 15 foot radius while yuo stand still.

    As the other poster said, you can see which lane you used on the highway. I can tell if I'm in my front or back yard.