As we reported in Wednesday's Daily, local residents going to renew registrations or purchase new license plates are in for a bit of a shock. ( Read story here.) Effective July 1, Colorado has hiked the cost of such fees to help pay for road and bridge construction. While such specific fees targeted at users who stand to benefit from such fees may make sense on the surface, the reality is the fees represent a regressive tax that all too often hits hardest on those who can least afford it. Fees on an individual vehicle registration don't at all reflect the impact that vehicle may have on the roads: A car or light truck that travels 10- or 15,000 miles annually on state roads is nothing compared to the over-the-road trucks that do the most damage.
The simple truth is, large trucks are not paying their fair share for highway maintenance. Commercial semi-trucks damage highways to a degree far in excess of their numbers. If you don't believe this, travel most any interstate highway, and you will find that the right side “truck lane” is in far worse condition than the left.
We all benefit from over-the-road trucking, without which we in Summit County would not be able to survive, given our current dependence on goods shipped in from around the world. Yes we should be paying more for goods delivered by truck, to compensate for the added cost in terms of highway damage and the many hidden costs of cheap fuel. But in the real world this won't happen. The trucking lobby is much too strong and none of us want to pay more for a tomato, a board or a child's toy than we have to. So, we raise the fees on trailers and on ordinary vehicles (many owed by people who don't have lot of money), while exempting the vehicles that do by far the most damage — commercial trucks and trailers.
This kind of tax policy stinks, and speaks volumes about the lack of resolve on the part of our legislators. Far better than these regressive fees would be an increase in the fuel tax — and yes, it would have to be justified and voted on, but that would be far better than something simply established by executive fiat. If the state needs the money, it should be able to make the case.
The fact is, the state is never going to be able to make up these transportation-needs shortfalls by upping fees year after year, which begs the question of when we will have some real leadership on the transportation issue. If we don't see that leadership soon, our highway system will be in shambles in 20 years or so, if not sooner. The route we're taking is simply not sustainable.
— The Summit Daily Editorial Board consists of Jim Morgan, Alex Miller, Ryan Wondercheck, Matt Sandberg, Morgan Liddick and Howard Hallman.
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