County Commissioners Vote to
Increase Gas Tax
Clark County Commissioners voted
Tuesday to increase the fuel tax rate to pay for infrastructure improvements
around the county.
Under the plan, fuel taxes will go up 3 cents per-gallon, per-year, which
will fund up to $700 million in projects, including the Boulder City Bypass and
the plan to make the 215 beltway into a complete
freeway.
During the first year,
which starts in January, the Regional Transportation
Commission says motorists can expect to pay an average of $16 more at the pump.
In the second year, which is expected to
start next summer, drivers can expect to pay $30 more.
By the third year, drivers can expect to pay approximately
$50 more.
Commissioner Steve Sisolak was the lone vote against
the increase.
"I have advocated and
argued all along that I think all taxes need to be fair, stable, and
broad-cased, and I don't think this tax is any of the three," he
said.
Sisolak believes
taxpayers are getting a bad deal, but his colleague Larry
Brown looks at it
differently.
"You take the average
driver, right now, congestion is costing them between $800 and $900 a year,"
Brown, who also chairs the Regional Transportation Committee,
said.
Several citizens
expressed their opposition to the increase at the commission meeting. Most who
opposed the idea did not want to pay more for gas, and they were worried about
government waste.
"As we are now, we're
pinching pennies to make it. So a dime a day is a little bit too much to me,"
driver Michelle Brown said.
Union members wore orange to the
commission meeting to show their solidarity for the
tax.
"It was the right thing
to do. There is no question the only way out of this recession is to put people
back to work," executive secretary-treasurer with the Nevada AFL-CIO Danny
Thompson said.
Supporters of the
proposal feel it will increase construction jobs. The RTC says the tax will
create between 8,900 and 9,400 jobs.
The southern Nevada business community also backed the tax
because it will improve traffic flows.
"Infrastructure
is investment. Investment is what creates jobs and what maintains commerce in
our community," Tim Cashman with the Las Vegas Metro Chamber
of Commerce said.
The tax may not last
forever.
Voters will be able to
say yes or no to the gas
tax in 2016.
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