BC Premier Christy Clark at Port Mann Bridge opening |
Bill Tieleman’s 24 Hours Vancouver / The Tyee column
Tuesday April 26 2016
By Bill Tieleman
"He who does evil that good may come, pays a toll to the
devil to let him into heaven."
- A.W. and J.C. Hare, English
clergymen
It's time to terminate toll bridges -- and stop screwing Surrey,
Langley and Maple Ridge residents with an unfair, regressive tax on travel that
costs hundreds to thousands of dollars a year.
Yet the BC Liberal government is the devil that wants still more
tolls, in addition to those already on the Port Mann Bridge and the Golden Ears
Bridge.
That's the plan
for the new $3.5-billion George Massey Tunnel replacement bridge between Delta
and Richmond. And for the replacement
Pattullo Bridge between New Westminster and Surrey.
Tolls on bridges are a regressive, annoying and unnecessary tax
that hurts lower-income working people the most.
And toll bridges totally discriminate based on where someone
lives -- many Metro Vancouver residents can drive endlessly without seeing one,
while others have to cross twice or more a day.
You can drive to ski at Whistler on the $600-million Sea To Sky
highway for free -- but cross the Port Mann or Golden Ears to work and you pay,
for decades to come.
And yet both are losing money.
So why do we tolerate tolls when there's an easy solution to
take the tolls off existing bridges and keep them off future projects?
It's called the provincial budget, and it pays for all our
health care, education, social programs and more.
The government collects revenue from progressive income taxes,
among other sources, which means that the more money you make, the more tax you
pay as your fair share in our provincial expenses.
Try the 'Port Mann Porsche payment'
It's time to stop forcing people in Surrey to pay $3.15 to $5.45 to
cross the Port Mann Bridge in a car or SUV, or Langley and Maple Ridge
residents to pay
$3.10 to $4.35 per trip to go over the Golden Ears Bridge.
UPDATE - as of July 15, the toll goes up on the Golden Ears Bridge by 5 cents.
UPDATE - as of July 15, the toll goes up on the Golden Ears Bridge by 5 cents.
Instead, our tax system should simply include the cost of
building and maintaining the bridges in the $48-billion annual budget.
That way we can eliminate not just the tolls, but all the
expensive equipment and administration needed to take a photo of your license
plate or use a transponder to tax you every time a bridge is crossed.
Paying for the bridges would require a very minor personal
income tax increase -- and how about a luxury vehicle surtax and other measures
aimed at making sure those doing very well pay a little more than those
struggling from paycheque to paycheque?
Call it the Port Mann Porsche payment. Or the Golden Ears
Lamborghini levy.
Tolls on the $3.3-billion Port Mann Bridge are scheduled
to continue until 2050 or it is paid off.
The Golden Ears Bridge cost $808 million to build in 2009 and
will be tolled
until most of us are in our golden years, through to 2041.
Even worse, the bridge needs a new tolling system upgrade
for a mere $5 million, despite the structure being only seven years old.
And guess what? It is losing a lot of gold each month. It lost
about $38 million
in 2014, with no end in sight.
So is the Port Mann Bridge, estimated to lose $309 million
over the next three years.
The reasons are obvious -- drivers are toll adverse. As a
result, we have massive traffic congestion in New Westminster and elsewhere as
cars and trucks try to avoid the tax.
Texas toll testing
Unlike the BC Liberals, legislators in Texas are currently looking
at eliminating toll roads, another form of unfair taxation.
"Paying eight dollars a day adds up," Texas Democratic
Representative Celia Israel reportedly said. "In an economy that isn't
helping working class families, that's a big chunk of their family budget over
time."
Added Democratic Representative Joe Pickett: "I would like
to see us actually remove some [tolls], especially if they make no sense
monetarily, if they make no sense in safety and congestion. I can prove that
today, right now, with some of them."
And once upon a time, even B.C. Transportation Minister Todd
Stone seemed to be concerned about the unfair impact of tolls, telling the
Surrey Board of Trade in November 2013 that it was a serious issue.
"You start looking at the crossings at that point that
potentially could have tolls on, and to me this then becomes an issue of
fairness and equity for the hard-working people of South of the Fraser,"
Stone said
then -- but now plans yet more tolls instead.
Lastly, some environmentalists will scream at this idea -- they
want tolls because they think financial penalties reduce vehicle use and cut
pollution.
But what has clearly happened is that drivers take even longer
and more exhaust-fume producing detours to avoid a toll, not park their cars.
Plus, drivers need an accessible, fast and affordable public
transit choice if they are to leave their vehicles at home, and that simply
isn't available to most car commuters.
Can tolls really be terminated? You bet.
Thanks to public pressure, former premier Gordon Campbell was
forced to drop
the Coquihalla Highway toll in the Okanagan after trying to privatize it but
keep it tolled.
It's time to stop tolerating tolls.
.
1 comment:
And for those using Translink via the Sea Bus we have to pay an extra $1 to go from one zone to another zone whereas motorists traveling between zones don't.
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