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Published byMonica Joseph Modified over 9 years ago
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Oregon’s Road User Fee Pilot Program Presented to NEACT LaGrande, Oregon August 4, 2005 James Whitty, Manager Office of Innovative Partnerships and Alternative Funding
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Road User Fee Task Force Legislative Mandate: “To develop a design for revenue collection for Oregon’s roads and highways that will replace the current system for revenue collection.”
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Oregon Road Revenue Sources FY 2005 (bonding excluded) Source: 2005-2007 Governor's Recommended Budget
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Effect of New Technology Vehicles on Highway Fund Revenue
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Conclusion In the future, gas tax revenue will not be the primary source for funding our roads.
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A per-mile charge based on Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT) within a state Replaces fuel tax for participating motorists A Solution: The Mileage Fee
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Policy Requirements Affordable…............................... System is accurate and reliable.. Differentiation of boundaries...... Technology Feasible.............................. Reliable……………….……. Secure…………………..….. Protects privacy of motorists……. Minimal evasion potential………... Minimal burden on private sector.. Seamless transition………………
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Collection Possibilities Human Data Gathering Centralized Electronic Collection Toll way-Style Collection
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Oregon’s Mileage Fee Concept
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A per-mile charge based on miles driven within Oregon by zone. Zone 1 = in state Zone 2 = out of state Optional Zone 3 = rush hour The Concept
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How it Works One way signal received by car to switch mileage counter between in-state and out-of-state zones. Mileage totals counted for in-state and out-of-state. No location information is recorded. Mileage read wirelessly at fueling stations. Gas tax deducted from gas purchase price (24 cents/gallon) and mileage fee added.
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Fuel tax maintained for non- equipped vehicles Mileage fee integrates with fuel tax collection system Oregon’s weight-mile tax retained for heavy trucks Also testing “rush hour” pricing How it Works
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No vehicle location data stored in vehicle No data transferred except mileage totals within zones Data transferred only at time of fueling via short range radio frequency Privacy
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Vehicles No retrofitting Components installed during vehicle manufacture Service Stations Capital costs (Oregon): $33 million Annual operating costs (Oregon): $1.6 million Cost
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Less risky – Bulk of revenue stream remains at distributor level (fewer taxpayers) Mileage fee gradually becomes predominant System Integration Retain current multi-state anti-evasion processes Fuel tax retained as redundant system to guard against system failure and tampering
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May 14, 2004 Public Demonstration of Mileage Fee Technology Oregon State University Corvallis, Oregon Zone switching … Successful VMT data transmission … Successful Electronic calculation of fee … Successful Gas tax deducted … Successful Receipt presented … Successful
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Policy Requirements - All Met! Affordable…............................... System is accurate and reliable.... Differentiation of boundaries..... Technology Feasible.............................. Reliable…………………….. Secure……………………… Protects privacy of motorists……… Minimal evasion potential…………. Minimal burden on private sector… Seamless transition…………………
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1.Retrofitting cost versus long phase-in 2.Setting the mileage fee rate 3.Requirements on vehicle manufacturers and fuel distribution industry 4.Interstate system standardization and revenue allocation 5.Integration with federal solution Policy Issues Remaining
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Oregon’s Pilot Program Time Line: March 2006 – March 2007 Pre-Pilot: 20-vehicle preliminary control start Full Pilot: 280 vehicles from one community paying mileage fee in lieu of gas tax; service stations with integrated point- of-sale systems Rush Hour: Some pilot volunteers participating in Rush Hour Pricing Group
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RUFTF Website www.oregon.gov/ODOT/HWY/OIPP/ruftf.shtml
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