When the Interstate Highway
System was first started naturally Congress funded road building for
themselves, and so one of the first major projects was the Washington Beltway. That road completely circles the city, and it
is absolutely critical to how the city and its booming, highly populated suburbs
conducts transportation. But like the
government itself, the
Beltway is falling apart.
The Washington Beltway - Imagine This With a Lane Shut Down for Many Months |
The
Capital Beltway, a politically iconic and locally vital highway, is dying
beneath your turning wheels.
Under the
surface of all but some recently restored segments, fissures are spreading,
cracks are widening and the once-solid road bed that carries about a
quarter-million cars a day is turning to mush.
The challenges are two fold.
One is how to fix a road when you cannot shut it down
In a perfect world, it would be torn up — the
asphalt and concrete, and the bed of crushed stone below — right down to the
bare earth. From that fresh start a new and stable highway would grow. But this
is the Beltway, and closing down whole sections of it would tie one of the most
congested regions in the nation into a Gordian knot.
And the second is where the money comes from to do
the fix.
If bad roads cause sticker creep at the checkout aisle, the cost
of fixing them is about to cause sticker shock at the gas pump.
Aware that they
can’t rely on austerity-minded Congress to triple spending for roadways, states
have begun to step in with tax increases.
Uh oh, Conservatives won’t like that. But while Democrats and some Republican
governors are facing up to the fact that tax increases will be needed,
With a push from Republican Gov. Robert F. McDonnell, Virginia overhauled the
way it pays for transportation programs. A $1.4 billion plan replaces a
17.5-cents-per-gallon tax on gasoline with a 3.5 percent wholesale tax on motor
fuels that will keep pace with economic growth and inflation.
It’s a complex stew
of new taxes that tacks about 11.5 cents on to the current cost of a gallon of
gas, according to industry estimates.
Drivers in Maryland will be paying pennies more
per gallon by summer under a bill thatpassed the Maryland Senate on
Friday and will now go
to Gov. Martin O’Malley (D), who has promised to sign the measure. Within three
years, the new sales tax would rise until it reaches 13 to 20 cents per gallon,
according to legislative analysts. It is expected to raise $4.4 billion for roads
and transit over six years.
we can all count on
Conservatives to engage in some budgetary flim flam to avoid raising
taxes.
In Wisconsin, Gov. Scott Walker (R) wants to
sell off dozens of power and heating plants that supply universities and
prisons to win bond market support for a two-year $6.4 billion
transportation plan.
Yes, the Wisconsin plan
is just a scheme to borrow money, but it allows radical conservative Gov.
Scott Walker to say he didn’t raise taxes.
He just mortgaged and sold the state’s assets, leaving the problem for
the future. Gosh, remember when
Conservatives used to be against that sort of thing.
No comments:
Post a Comment