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Cascade CounterPoint
Cascade Policy Institute
297 episodes
1 day ago
Sit back and listen to Cascade Policy Institute explain the latest research on Oregon's important issues. Cascade advances public policy ideas that foster individual liberty, personal responsibility, and market-based economic opportunity. Visit us at www.cascadepolicy.org
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All content for Cascade CounterPoint is the property of Cascade Policy Institute and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Sit back and listen to Cascade Policy Institute explain the latest research on Oregon's important issues. Cascade advances public policy ideas that foster individual liberty, personal responsibility, and market-based economic opportunity. Visit us at www.cascadepolicy.org
Show more...
Politics
News
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QP: Voters Aren't Interested in New Transportation Taxes
Cascade CounterPoint
1 minute 31 seconds
4 months ago
QP: Voters Aren't Interested in New Transportation Taxes

The Oregon legislature ended on June 27 without addressing the deterioration of Oregon’s road system. This turned out to be a stunning defeat for the Democratic majority on House Bill 2025-B, also known as the Transportation Reinvestment Package (TRIP).

For more than a year, Democrats held several hearings promising to address the problem with a “transportation package” of reforms. They never introduced their proposal, however, until June 9, less than three weeks before the close of the legislative session. The $12 billion (official revenue impact) transportation funding proposal included a dozen new taxes and fees on everything from personal income to car tires. Not only did every Republican legislator oppose it, but key Democrats did as well. The bill never had a chance.

As time ran out, Democrats introduced a different bill HB3402, generating even more opposition. Before the legislature adjourned, not a single floor vote had been taken on the transportation package.

If Democrats want to solve the transportation finance problem, they should return to the user-pay system which has served the state well for decades. In a user-pay philosophy, transportation users pay a fee in proportion to the cost they impose on the system. If it is fair to all users, they will find political support. Voters aren’t interested in unfair and heavy-handed new transportation taxes.

Cascade CounterPoint
Sit back and listen to Cascade Policy Institute explain the latest research on Oregon's important issues. Cascade advances public policy ideas that foster individual liberty, personal responsibility, and market-based economic opportunity. Visit us at www.cascadepolicy.org