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By MICHAEL D. KLEMENS Highways, bridges and mass transit: Does Illinois need a tax increase?
This is a big year for excise taxes in Illinois and elsewhere. Gov. James R. Thompson has proposed an increase in the cigarette tax; Secy. of Transportation Gregory Baise has promised a gasoline tax hike proposal. The proposed and the promised taxes mirror those elsewhere. Many other states have cigarette tax increases under consideration, and by the end of March gasoline taxes had been increased in West Virginia, a proposal had been sent to voters in Louisiana and gasoline tax increase bills had been introduced in at least a dozen other states. More are expected. If Baise's promised proposal is not unique, neither is it new. In 1987 Gov. Thompson proposed a gasoline tax hike package that would have boosted the motor fuel tax from 13 to 22.5 cents per gallon over five years. It died with the rest of Thompson's tax hikes. Last year Baise tried with no more success to push a 5-cent-a-gallon gasoline tax hike. Like many states Illinois pays much of the cost of building and maintaining roads with gasoline taxes. It has a lot of roads to maintain. The 137,000 miles of public highways in Illinois surpass all states except Texas and California. And it has a lot of traffic on those roads. Illinois' 71 billion annual vehicle miles of travel is exceeded only, in order, by California, Texas, New York, Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Less than 15 percent of the roads in Illinois are the state's responsibility, but the state shares a portion of the gasoline tax revenues with cities, villages, counties and townships to spend on their roads. Overseeing roads and divvying up gasoline taxes and federal aid is the Illinois Department of Transportation, whose $3.9 billion appropriation is the largest in state government this year. The transportation department's 7,582 employees were exceeded only by those in the three departments, Corrections, Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities, and Public Aid. "Our road program is high compared to other states. We don't apologize," says Dale A. Janik, chief of the Department of Transportation's bureau of statewide program planning. Paying for highways with gasoline taxes presents a problem because the new cars that people are buying are more fuel efficient than the ones that they are trading in. That means fewer trips to the gasoline pump, fewer gallons of gasoline sold and less paid in motor fuel taxes. One solution to the dilemma would be to raise gasoline tax rates. Illinois' gasoline taxes are low. As of the beginning of February only 12 states had lower gasoline tax rates than Illinois, one of them neighboring Missouri. It is not that simple. Illinois is one of 10 states that also imposes a sales tax on gasoline. That means that state taxes add to the price of a 75-cent gallon of gasoline 16.8 cents (13 cents and motor fuel tax and 3.8 cents and sales tax). Of neighboring states only Indiana and Michigan also impose the state sales tax on gasoline, at 5 and 4 percent respectively. And then there are local sales taxes and local motor fuel taxes. When all are taken into account, the current tax on a 75-cent (pre-Exxon Valdez spill) gallon of gas ranges from 28.7 cents in Chicago to 17.4 cents in downstate non-home-rule communities. The Chicago per gallon state and local tax is among the highest in the country. Other sources of highway funds are motor vehicle and driver's license fees. The state population is stable and families are not buying second and third cars as they were 15 to 20 years ago. That means that fewer license plates are sold. And the state's fees for license plates are already among the highest in the country. In short, state gasoline taxes are low, and both the total state May 1989 | Illinois Issues | 16
and local taxes on gasoline and the charges for license plates are high. But the absence of a state personal property tax, a tax on the value of autos, offers Illinois' motorists a break that their neighbors in Indiana, for example, do not get. And when you add together all taxes on ownership and operation of a vehicle, the annual state taxes paid in Illinois are $147.30 per vehicle. That is less than in all but 17 states, including neighboring Wisconsin, where taxes are $146.43 per year. Another source that Illinois and all states use for highways is federal aid. The Illinois Department of Transportation received an average of $536 million per year in federal funds for fiscal years 1984 through 1989. For fiscal years 1990 through 1994 the department projects those receipts to drop to $415 million. Illinois has also sold bonds to finance highway work. Over the last 10 years the state has spent an average of $103.2 million per year in Transportation "A" (highway) bond funds. All of the $1.7 billion in authorized highway bonds have been sold and committed to specific projects, and the department cannot issue more without legislative authority. Nor will the department seek that authority without new revenues to retire the bonds. Build Illinois bond funds have paid for nearly half a billion dollars in highway improvements. The state committed $355 million to build I-39/US 51 from LaSalle-Peru to Bloomington and the Central Illinois Expressway from Jacksonville to Quincy. Another $69 million was allocated to begin the extension of Thorndale Avenue to ease traffic congestion around O'Hare Airport. And $40 million went to make access improvements that attracted economic development, the largest being the $25 million spent to provide access to Interstates 55 and 74 for the Diamond Star Motors plant in Bloomington-Normal. The Build Illinois money, too, is committed. The take from the gasoline tax and license fees is flat. The bond funds have been committed or spent. And federal deficits force reductions in federal spending. To that bleak picture you can add the specter of inflation. A dollar in 1984 was worth 84 cents in 1989 and is projected to be worth 66 cents in 1994. As a result a highway spending program would have to grow by half between 1984 and 1994 to offset inflation. Nearly all state money that the Department of Transportation spends comes from user fees, be they gasoline taxes or motor vehicle and driver's license fees. In fiscal year 1988 only $28 million of the $1.9 billion spent by the department came from the state's general funds. And that spending was for waterways and aeronautics and public transportation not roads. Some of those user fees pay road-related non-Department of Transporation costs. The secretary of state's office pays the costs of its motor vehicle and drivers' licensing operations from those fees; that spending totalled $96 million in the 1988 fiscal year. A portion of the Department of State Police highway patrol costs, totaling $42 million in 1988, was paid by these user fees. Such "diversions" from Road Funds are targeted by opponents of a gasoline tax increase. The petroleum industry also claims that too much Road Fund money is spent for administration of the Department of Transportation. The Highway Users Federation for Safety and Mobility studied the protection that state constitutions and statutes provide for motor fuel taxes and motor vehicle registration fees. The study says that money spent to build highways, acquire rights-of-way and plow roads is legitimate; money for mass transit would not be. Illinois was one of nine states judged to have no constitutional protection and little statutory protection for highway funds. Illinois' standing was somewhat better than eight other states that have laws that provide for diversion of money, but worse than 33 other states. Among the weaknesses in protection cited in the report were Illinois laws allowing counties and municipalities to use motor fuel tax money for mass transit and off-street parking and Cook County to pay court costs with it. May 1989 | Illinois Issues | 17
Randy Vereen, the Department of Transportation's deputy director for finance, disputes the contention that gasoline tax money should go only for road building. He claims that plowing, putting up signs and designing roads items that come from operations costs are every bit as important. "If these are not appropriate things for user fees to pay for, then I've missed the whole point over what we're about," Vereen says. Besides arguments over what it is appropriate to spend gasoline taxes for, there is dispute over how much needs to be spent and how efficiently present money is being spent. A major criticism of the failed 1987 tax hike package was the lack of specifics for use of the new money. This spring the Department of Transportation has produced a projection of its needs for the years 1990 through 1994, "Lifelines to the Economy, the Illinois Surface Transportation Network." "Lifelines" begins with a pitch for investment in infrastructure and tries to tie that spending to increased productivity. It contains all the needs that the transportation department can justify, and more than it expects to be funded. The report identifies $19.97 billion in needs over the half decade period, for which current funding will support spending of $5.4 billion. Highlights include:
May 1989 | Illinois Issues | 18
The department acknowledges that it does not expect to get full funding for the $14.5 billion total shortfall pointed to in the "Lifelines" report. Officials insist the needs are legitimate. They get no argument from Rep. Alfred G. Ronan (D-12, Chicago), chairman of the Transportation & Motor Vehicles Committee. Ronan says that hearings he held last year convinced him that there are needs in highway and bridge funding and in capital money for mass transit. Ronan tried unsuccessfully to find support for a gasoline tax increase last year and blames its nonconsideration on the politics of the General Assembly versus the governor. The department will get an argument from gasoline station owners. William Deutsch, executive vice-president of the Illinois Petroleum Marketers' Association, says his members suffer from competition with neighboring states when gasoline taxes are increased. Deutsch claims that his station owners are just now seeing business pick up as neighboring states have caught up to Illinois' gasoline taxes. "We just think that they ought to sit tight for at least a year. If they get out in front again, we'll be right back where we were." Also counseling delay is Douglas L. Whitley, president of the Taxpayers' Federation of Illinois, who says the day that gasoline taxes must be hiked is coming but is not yet here. Whitley says that the unstated policy of spending $1 billion a year on roads can be maintained until 1990 or 1991 without higher taxes: "The Department of Transportation tends to ask for too much, too soon." And Whitley would like to see the formula under which motor fuel tax money is distributed to counties, cities, villages and townships simplified. There are presently two formulas in effect: one for the taxes in place before the 1983 increase and another for the new taxes imposed in 1983. In 1987 the Department of Transporation proposal would have created a third formula. "We think that simplicity and accountability are pretty key factors," Whitley says. The Department of Transportation may not yet be pressed to maintain roads, but some townships are. Jim Ping of Effingham, president of the East Central Illinois Highway Commissioners' Association, says that townships were hurt by the loss of federal revenue sharing. Then farmland assessment freezes caused property assessments to drop as much as 50 percent, Ping says. That put heavy pressure on rural townships that depend on farmland for their budgets. And Ping says that townships got hurt by the 1983 revisions in the motor fuel tax distribution formula that reduced townships' share of the total pie; the pie got bigger but their share got smaller. Meanwhile, DuPage and other counties have sought authority to raise their gasoline taxes by up to 4 cents to provide money for county roads. Rep. Ronan says he admires DuPage County's recognition of its problems and willingness to raise taxes to deal with them. But a multiplicity of local taxes works against a statewide policy and makes the state tax harder to pass, Ronan says. Gasoline tax increases will be considered in Illinois and in many other states this spring. Proponents can argue that the current per gallon tax means a declining revenue source when inflation is taken into account. They can also point to work that needs to be done on roads and bridges. Opponents will demand more accountability from the Department of Transportation. Randy Vereen, the department's deputy director for finance, says that is fine with him: "Taxes should be a political problem." They will be. May 1989 | Illinois Issues | 19
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