Press Releases and Newsletters
NCDOT leader promises fewer politics, more results (Mooresville Tribune)
DOT leader promises fewer politics, more results (Mooresville Tribune)
A top official of the N.C. Department of Transportation says Gov. Beverly Perdue has successfully taken the “politics out of transportation” in an effort to make the agency more effective.
Jim Trogdon, a retired brigadier general and chief operating officer for DOT, spoke to the Lake Norman Chamber of Commerce last week during its Power Luncheon for state and local officials.
“As the (COO) in the very large business of state government, we are facing the same challenges in this economy that many of you in this room are in your various industries,” Trogdon told the business and government leaders.
“Our department has gone from 14,000 employees to 12,500 over the last year and in this economic climate, we’re doing a lot more work with a lot less to do it with.”
Trogdon said Perdue has instituted a major overhaul in the last two years, which has “been instrumental in changing the way our department does business.”
“She said she wanted to ‘take the politics out of transportation,’” he said. “Our department is now working with community leaders to plan and organize. It’s a data driven system that delivers hard analysis. The direction our funds are going in is extremely critical when the department is dealing with a shortage in money. With our growing population, we have $54 billion dollars worth of critical transportation needs projected for 2015 through 2020 and about $10.5 billion in anticipated revenue.”
NCDOT has a new formula and criteria for prioritizing projects based on numbers derived from crash statistics, congestion and travel time, he said.
“We’re applying the data to 1,100 projects across the state, and evaluating non-highway projects like ferries, railway, bicycles and pedestrians based on the scoring,” Trogdon said.
“Some people aren’t satisfied with the new system, but critics said they wanted data provided and that’s what we’re doing, and we’re giving a realistic picture. Our goal is to deliver 90 to 95 percent of the projects on time and on budget, as opposed to the 50 percent in our previous history.”
Over the next nine months, DOT will be seeking public comment about what communities like and disapprove of so the department can consider it in their upcoming plans, Trogdon said.
“We need to know the best way to spend the money we do have and meet the needs of the citizens,” he said.
As for the Lake Norman area, Trogdon acknowledged its rapid growth.
“The money is just not keeping pace, (but) we are taking strides and making progress,” he said.
“For example the Brawley School Road project. When that two-lane road was built, it was designed for 10,000 cars a day. Now, it’s at over 30,000, and thanks to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the project will be completed by 2013.”
He added that NCDOT is relying on innovative and creative ways to raise the money needed for other projects, such as finishing I-485. Trogdon mentioned that they are looking into toll roads for the state to make up for shortfalls in funding.
“The state’s first toll road is under construction at the Triangle Expressway and it’s a $1 billion dollar project,” he said. “Another is the Monroe bypass in East Mecklenburg with 74 and 485, which if it stays on schedule, will begin construction in December of this year and will open in 2014.”
In the future, Trogdon said alternate means of transportation, such as buses, trains, bikes and pedestrians will be looked at with more consideration and “it’s all about choice.”
“We will be evaluating alternate forms with the same formula,” he said. “Is there space for a bus pullout? Is there room for a sidewalk? Can we add a bike lane? Cars are an important means of transportation but it’s not the only way. We want to make a comprehensive transit system that accommodates diverse needs without negatively impacting the environment or the community.”
Published: September 03, 2010
By Megan Sprague | Mooresville Tribune
College crowd smokes ‘spice’ that imitates pot (News and Observer)
College crowd smokes ‘spice’ that imitates pot (News and Observer)
As college students return to the Triangle, some are cracking open lip balm-size jars and plastic bags of a legal herb product that mimics the effects of marijuana.
K2, or Spice, is a lab-made leafy green drug that looks and smells like oregano, with hints of blueberry, citrus and other flavors. The designer drug is showing up at tobacco and head shops, misleadingly labeled as “incense.” The labels also inform buyers that the contents are not fit for human consumption, but behind closed doors the “incense” is being puffed as a legal alternative to marijuana.
K2 and similar products have been outlawed in six states this year, including Tennessee, and six other states are considering banning the products. The U.S. Marine Corps has asked shops near its North Carolina bases not to sell the product to their troops, and the man who created the drug in a research lab warns of such side effects as increased heart rate and blood pressure and unpredictable effects on mood.
The synthetic drug was created in the early 1990s, but started showing up in tobacco and convenience stores in the United States late last year.
Bert Wood, chief executive officer of the N.C. Partnership for a Drug Free North Carolina, had to Google “K2” when he was asked about his organization’s stand on the product.
“I have never heard of it,” Wood said. “But here’s the big picture: Since cave people hit two sticks together to get sparks, we have looked at ways to feel different. If K2 mimics the effects of getting stoned, then we are not encouraging young people to use it.”
At least one state lawmaker says he intends to introduce legislation early next year to ban the product.
Sen. William Purcell of Laurinburg sponsored a bill in 2009 that outlawed salvia, another herbal product, with hallucinogenic effects comparable to those of LSD and psilocybin.
Purcell said he heard about K2 a couple of months ago. He says if he’s re-elected this fall, he will investigate K2.
“I’ll probably take a look at it and get more information,” he said from his Scotland County home. “Then we will see if something needs to be done about it.”
‘Selling like crazy’
In the meantime, the drug is flying off the shelves of Triangle stores that carry it.
“It’s selling like crazy,” said R.J. Crumpler, an employee at the Hazmat shop on Franklin Street, near UNC-Chapel Hill “More than cigarettes, more than pipe tobacco, posters or T-shirts.”
The prices vary, depending on the potency of the product, but K2 usually sells for $20 to $40 a gram.
Crumpler figures the store sells at least 20 grams a day. “It’s more than that on some days,” he said.
Blake Tippett, 26, is one of Hazmat’s regular K2 customers. Blake is back in school at UNC-Chapel Hill this semester after leaving in 2007 when he hurt his back and underwent two surgeries.
Puffing for pain relief
Tippett said he finds it “rather interesting” that K2 is legal but thinks that will change quickly. Last week, he purchased about 6 grams of “Black Mamba,” another powerful herb product.
Tippett, who wants to work as a journalist when he graduates, said he’s not happy about the prospect of K2 being outlawed.
He said he smokes synthetic weed because it helps relieve the pain from back injuries that ruptured one disc and herniated another.
“I’m in the category of those people who smoke because it has helped to make me a healthy, 200-pound person able to walk around without wearing a back brace,” he said.
Tippett said K2 and synthetic marijuana products like Black Mamba have helped his back pain “more than any other opiate under the sun.”
A potent, brief high
N.C. State University sophomores Ethan Haynes and Kevin Catts haven’t given much thought to the potential medical benefits of synthetic marijuana. They say they puff on K2 because it’s fun.
Haynes and Catts strolled into the Kitsch smoke shop off Hillsborough Street last week and went straight to the front counter where the shop features a full line of the herbal incense products. They pored over the K2 offerings: Standard, Spice, Blueberry, Blonde and Funky Monkey, before choosing the Summit brand, which sells for $30 a gram.
Haynes says that students allover NCSU’s campus are puffing on K2 and that he smokes it about once a week. He said the high kicks in about a minute after a couple of puffs. The high, although more potent than marijuana’s, is short-lived – about 30 minutes to an hour.
The substance in K2 that mimics the effects of marijuana is known as JWH-018. It was first developed in the summer of 1993 by John W. Huffman, an organic chemist at Clemson University.
From JWH-018 to K2
Huffman developed the substance while looking for new pharmaceutical products similar to tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, the active ingredient in marijuana. The J, W, and H in the substance’s name are Huffman’s initials. The “018” acknowledges that the compound was the 18th cannabinoid that the lab developed. (Cannabinoid refers to the organic chemical substances in cannabis, or marijuana.)
Last week, Huffman said his work did not lead to the development of any new legal medications. He did not receive a patent for his invention, and he did not sell the formula, which creates “a pale amber goo.”
So how did the compound wind up being sprayed as a light mist on dried leaves and sold as synthetic weed on the Internet and in head shops and tobacco stores across the country?
“I assume that someone with some scientific knowledge found it in a publication in a scientific journal,” Huffman said in an e-mail message last week. “It is inevitable that psychotropic compounds will find their way into commerce. There are greedy and irresponsible individuals worldwide. This is just another example.”
Huffman added that he receives no royalties from the sales of K2 or any other product that uses his formula.
Terrie Sonya of Granite City, Ill., offers K2 for sale at her website, K24Sale.com. Sonya, who also sells the product out of a liquor store she owns, claims that she did not know people were smoking it as an alternative to marijuana.
“I really don’t know what people are doing with it when they take it out of the door,” Sonya said. “We market it as incense and sell it as incense.”
Sonya said she started selling K2 in October and the product quickly outpaced her store’s alcohol sales. She thinks pending legislation in Illinois to ban K2 would shut her business down.
Huffman described the effects of the substance he developed as “considerably more potent” than marijuana. He warned that the product increases users’ heart rate and blood pressure and has unpredictable effects on one’s mood.
So far, there has been no research to determine the long-term effects of smoking K2.
Side effects reported
But last month a New York Times blog fielded comments from readers who reported experiencing seizures, paranoia and heart problems after smoking the fake weed. The blog writer, Malcolm Gay, stated that the comments “are likely representative of the over 500 reports made to poison control centers across the country this year.”
Not every tobacco or head shop near a Triangle college campus sells K2. Smoke Rings, just across the street from Hazmat on Franklin Street, doesn’t sell the stuff. Neither does Sam’s Quik Shop on Ninth Street, near Duke University in Durham.
Many of the head shops on Hillsborough Street carry the product, but their employees and managers declined to comment.
After Catts and Haynes, the NCSU students, bought that bag of K2 last week, they mulled the possibilities of their next legal weed purchase.
“Funky Monkey,” Haynes suggested to Catts. “We should try that the next time.”
BY THOMASI MCDONALD – Staff Writer
Read more: http://www.newsobserver.com/2010/08/29/653430/college-crowd-smokes-spice-that.html#storylink=misearch#ixzz0y6kilqK4
Panel slot ‘can’t hurt’ (Womble Committee Appointment on NCBOT) (Winston Salem Journal)
Panel slot ‘can’t hurt’ (Womble Committee Appointment on NCBOT) (Winston Salem Journal)
It’s not a magic bullet, but it can’t hurt.
That’s what some transportation insiders are saying in light of Ralph Womble’s recent appointment as chairman of a state highway subcommittee dealing with traffic improvements.
Womble is the area’s representative on the N.C. Board of Transportation. He has also been active among local officials who are trying to sway the N.C. Department of Transportation to give higher priority to the Winston-Salem beltway.
Womble is now chairman of the Transportation Improvement Program Subcommittee, which is composed of six of the 19 members of the transportation board. The Transportation Improvement Program is a massive document that says which highways will be designed, which will be built, and which ones will be left without funding.
The subcommittee is under the board’s financing and programming committee.
Nancy Dunn, who preceded Womble on the DOT board, said she was never a member of the subcommittee that Womble now chairs, but she learned that she needed to be at its meetings “to look after our interests.”
“No committee makes the decisions,” Dunn said. “They bring things to the board. We all have to keep pressure on our legislators and the governor and make them understand what the situation was here.”
The hot-button issue for local transportation is the state’s recent ranking of urban-loop projects. Among 21 projects considered in the ranking, the eastern leg of the proposed Winston-Salem Northern Beltway came in dead last. Neither the eastern nor western segments ranked high enough to be considered for funding.
The ranking and funding decisions are only in draft form, but local officials will have to work to get the priorities changed before next summer, when the state is expected to officially adopt the priority list.
Womble said that the appointment was not one that he sought, and that all the board members were appointed to various committees. Womble was also named vice chairman of the audit and contract committee, which meets quarterly, and is a member of various other panels, including one on toll roads.
Womble said that the appointment “can’t hurt” as he tries to make the area’s road needs known.
Pat Ivey, the division engineer for Forsyth and other counties nearby, said that though it is routine for members of the transportation board to fill various committee slots, “it is always good to have a board member be a representative” on the Transportation Improvement Program Subcommittee.
“The committee’s job is to look at specific issues,” Ivey said. “The chairman of the board will assign this issue or that issue for them to investigate.”
By Wesley Young | Journal Reporter
727-7369
Conti: Garden Parkway still on table (Charlotte Observer)
Conti: Garden Parkway still on table (Charlotte Observer)
The state’s top road-building official said today that the federal government will decide in two or three months whether Gaston County’s Garden Parkway can be built, and that construction on the toll road could begin in a year.
N.C. Transportation Secretary Gene Conti said at the Regional Roads Conference at Carowinds that all or part of the $1 billion highway could open for traffic by 2014.
The 20-mile toll road from Charlotte to western Gaston County has been discussed for decades, and some Gaston residents have wondered whether it would ever be built. Last year, Conti said he was concerned whether the road would generate enough toll revenue to be financed, but he said Friday he thinks it will move forward.
“Our financial advisors have put together a good package,” Conti said.
The Garden Parkway would begin at Interstate 485, just south of Charlotte/Douglas International Airport. It would cross the Catawba River and then cut through south Gaston County, a mostly rural area. It will then turn north southwest of Gastonia and connect with I-85 west of the city.
The N.C. Turnpike Authority has scaled back parts of the project to save money.
The toll road was originally supposed to have six lanes total across the Catawba River, but it has been reduced to four lanes total. The footprint of intersections has shrunk, and one intersection at Bud Wilson Road has been eliminated. West of U.S. 321, the highway will shrink from four lanes to two lanes but it will still be a limited-access highway.
The Turnpike Authority had considered building the toll road in phases, and stopping at U.S. 321. But Gaston residents said they worried that would dump truck traffic on U.S. 321.
Reid Simons of the N.C. Turnpike Authority said the changes have saved $300 million.
The Garden Parkway is controversial. Some Gaston residents worry that it will destroy a mostly rural area, some transportation experts have questioned whether it’s the best use of $1 billion.
Promoters say the toll road will take traffic from I-85 and open up south Gaston for development.
In addition to the Garden Parkway, there are several other Charlotte-area highway projects slated to be built in the two or three years. The N.C. Department of Transportation plans to finish I-485 in northeast Charlotte; widen I-85 in Cabarrus County; and build a toll road in Union County, the Monroe Connector/Bypass.
The state is also replacing the I-85 Yadkin River bridge, about 45 miles northeast of Charlotte.
By Steve Harrison
[email protected]
Posted: Friday, Aug. 27, 2010
Read more: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2010/08/27/1647334/conti-garden-parway-still-on-table.html#ixzz0y5uy5qSO
If voters approve, streets would get bulk of Charlotte bond money (Charlotte Observer)
If voters approve, streets would get bulk of Charlotte bond money (Charlotte Observer)
Despite the recession, the city of Charlotte will ask voters to approve $204 million in bonds on Nov. 2, mostly for transportation.
The city said it has already budgeted money to pay for the debt, and that the property tax rate won’t increase to pay off the bonds. The city, however, said that the poor economy means it’s unlikely to have enough money to ask voters to approve bonds in 2012.
The city usually asks voters to approve bonds every two years.
More than 75 percent of the money is for transportation, mostly road improvements. If passed, it would be the 19th transportation bond city voters have approved since 1961.
The city said the 2010 and 2008 bonds will plan or build 8 miles of roads, 10 intersections, 29 miles of sidewalks, 10 miles of bike lanes each year and will better synchronize 200 traffic lights each year.
If the bonds are passed, $15 million would go into the city’s Housing Trust Fund to help build affordable housing. And $32 million would be set aside for neighborhood improvements.
Here is a list of what the city said the bonds would pay for:
Transportation: $157 million
Sidewalk construction: $15 million
Pedestrian and traffic safety: $2 million
Traffic calming: $3 million
Area plan projects: $5 million
Bridges: $2 million
Farm-to-market road improvements:
Oakdale Road: $8 million
Johnston-Oehler Road: $14.3 million
Minor roadway improvements: $1.5 million
Intersection improvements:
Ballantyne Commons/Elm Lane: $7.2 million
Scaleybark/South Boulevard: $2 million
McKee Road/Providence Road: $7 million
Arrowood Road/Nations Ford Road: $2 million
Public-private participation program: $3 million. (When a developer has a project that requires road improvements, the city may choose to partner with the builder to make transportation improvements beyond what the developer has to do.)
Thoroughfare and street projects:
Beatties Ford Road (Capps Hill Mine to Sunset): $13 million
Brevard and Eighth Street: $5.5 million
Idlewild Road (Piney Grove to Margaret Wallace): $8 million
State highway participation program: $3 million. (This improves some state road projects by bringing them up to city standards. For instance, the N.C. Department of Transportation doesn’t put sidewalks on both sides of a road.)
Street connectivity program: $4 million. (This provides money to make small connections between neighborhoods, to increase traffic flow).
Traffic control devices upgrades: $4 million
Bicycle program: $2 million
City center transportation implementation: $4 million
Northeast corridor access improvements: $20 million. (This would improve the areas around planned light-rail stations for the Lynx Blue Line extension, including lighting and landscaping.)
North Tryon redevelopment: $9.5 million
Business corridor/pedestrian scape infrastructure: $4.6 million. (This funds sidewalks, new curbs and gutters, on-street parking and landscaping, among other improvements.)
Neighborhood improvements – $32 million
$15 million would be set aside for general improvements.
$7 million would help rebuild Boulevard Homes, one of the city’s oldest public housing complexes, in west Charlotte.
Affordable housing – $15 million
This money would go into the city’s Housing Trust Fund, which could be used by groups such as the Charlotte Housing Authority or Charlotte-Mecklenburg Housing Partnership to build low-income housing throughout the city. City staff originally budgeted $10 million for housing, but the City Council added $5 million during its budget workshops. Affordable-housing advocates had pushed for $30 million total.
By Steve Harrison
[email protected]
Posted: Monday, Aug. 30, 2010
Salisbury to test fiber-optic cable system (WCNC)
Salisbury to test fiber-optic cable system (WCNC)
SALISBURY, N.C. — One local on-ramp to the Internet just got a lot bigger and lightning fast.
The city of Salisbury begins beta testing of a brand new fiber-optic cable system next month.
Salisbury and North Carolina’s Municipal League have overcome strong objections from a powerful state senator, Sen. David Hoyle of Gaston County, who supports the cable companies who say local government competition is unfair.
After the implosion of the textile industry, Salisbury is trying to weave a new future with new fibers; fiber-optic cable.
The town has spent $50 million in bond money to string 250 miles of fiber, 50 miles of it underground.
The city will provide television, telephone and Internet service at speeds ten times faster than Time Warner’s Roadrunner Internet service and AT&T’s U-verse.
But Senator Hoyle is not a fan.
“They’ve been sold a bill of goods by a crowd of consultants who say this is the best thing since sliced bread and mayonnaise,” says Hoyle.
The veteran state senator says cities should leave broadband to the cable companies.
“It’s not fair for any government unit to compete with private enterprise,” he says.
In the last legislative session Sen. Hoyle tried to put a moratorium on any more local governments expanding into municipal broadband.
When the I-Team asked him if the cable industry drew up the bill, Senator Hoyle responded, “Yes, along with my help.”
When asked about criticism that he was “carrying water” for the cable companies, Hoyle replied, “I’ve carried more water than Gunga Din for the business community – the people who pay the taxes.”
Senator Hoyle says local governments have an unfair advantage over cable companies because towns and cities do not pay taxes on their cable systems.
But Salisbury and other North Carolina cities have their own powerful ally in Raleigh: the Municipal League, which supports the expansion of fiber-optic cable.
“It’s the next modern infrastructure,” says lobbyist Paul Meyer. “If we’re wrong, the rest of the world is wrong.”
Opponents of municipal broadband point to the towns of Cornelius, Davidson and Mooresville which took over a failed cable system, MI Connection, and have lost millions of dollars on it.
But proponents of fiber-optic cable say there’s no comparison in bandwidth and service.
“I think this is a different kettle of fish,” says Meyer.
Broadband backers won a round in the last legislative session, blocking Hoyle’s ban on more municipal broadband while taxes could be studied.
So Salisbury is expected to take its new system, called Fibrant, for a test run next month and roll it out sometime this fall.
The town promises basic Internet service at 15MB per second at rates ten percent lower than competitors.
by STUART WATSON / NewsChannel 36
Posted on August 24, 2010 at 6:00 PM
Updated Tuesday, Aug 24 at 6:00 PM
N.C. faces $3B hole (Winston Salem Journal)
N.C. faces $3B hole (Winston Salem Journal)
A looming $3 billion hole in the state budget could mean that temporary tax increases put in place last year won’t be so temporary after all.
State legislators haven’t said yet whether they will extend the taxes as they try to balance a budget without the benefit of federal stimulus money that is set to run out next year. But it’s a political strategy that has worked in the past. How to balance the budget — with spending cuts, taxes or both — is sure to be a major issue in the coming election season.
The current budget, which takes the state through June 30 of next year, relies on roughly $1.6 billion in one-time stimulus money, plus another $1 billion or so from temporary taxes put in place in 2009 and set to expire next year.
Simply re-upping those increases — an extra penny-on-the-dollar in sales taxes and 2-to-3 percent income-tax surcharges on people making more than $100,000 a year — would make it a lot easier for legislators and the governor to balance next year’s budget.
“That’s one way of doing it,” said state Rep. Henry Michaux, the Durham Democrat who is the chairman of the House’s budget-writing Appropriations Committee.
But Michaux said the idea hasn’t been discussed, and he doesn’t “think it’s even on anybody’s radar at this point.” Asked about the possibility this week, Gov. Bev Perdue didn’t answer “yes” or “no,” but spoke instead of a general plan to make cuts, “re-create what government is about” and “shed things that are antiquated.”
But cuts on this level would be difficult, particularly with Democrats and Republicans alike eager to protect education funding, which makes up about 60 percent of the state’s general fund. Altogether, the expiring stimulus money, temporary tax revenues and other one-time changes add up to more than $3 billion, or roughly 14 percent of this year’s budget.
Holding on to temporary tax increases has been a way out for legislators faced with an economic slump in recent years. In 2001, the General Assembly bumped the state sales tax up half a penny, an increase that was supposed to be rolled back two years later. But that increase stayed on the books until 2006, when it was cut in half.
The fourth-of-a penny increase that remained is still in place.
State Sen. Peter Brunstetter, R-Forsyth, said he thinks that “privately a number of (leading Democrats) have already conceded that that’s what their intention is” this time. But every seat in the General Assembly is up for re-election this November, and Democrats may not retain the healthy majorities they’ve built in both the House and Senate.
Calls for cuts and a hard-line on tax increases will be part of the GOP mantra this election season. Republican legislators called for the state to overhaul its budget and prepare for next year repeatedly during the last legislative session, which ended in July.
But big-dollar specifics were hard to come by. Even the conservative John Locke Foundation, which published its “obligatory list of bad and pointless spending” in North Carolina last month, recommended only about $130 million in cuts to the state budget. It targeted food banks, a dropout prevention program, several economic development programs and various energy-research programs for cuts.
Whether those are good cuts or not “just kind of depends what you think government’s core function is,” Brunstetter said.
The state’s budget picture won’t really begin to coalesce until early next year, when Perdue rolls out her budget recommendations and the General Assembly returns to work in Raleigh. But next month will be key, as the state’s official economists are expected to release a report on revenue collections.
If those numbers, or future ones, don’t show a significant uptick in tax collections, “you really are going to be in sort of a bind,” Michaux said.
Some parts of the budgeting process are already under way. Perdue said she told her cabinet this week to “begin to figure out what it is that they can get rid of.” She reiterated a desire to privatize many of the state’s technology functions, and some parts of the prison system, in an effort to save money.
Michaux said he sees “what appear to be duplicative programs” the state could cut, particularly in the education, health and human services and economic development departments.
“We may be able to shrink that budget by another billion,” Michaux said. “After that, it gets dicey.”
By Travis Fain
SPECIAL TO THE JOURNAL
Published: August 23, 2010
RALEIGH
Seattle may create transportation taxing district (Seattle Times)
Seattle may create transportation taxing district (Seattle Times)
Facing a long list of pricey transportation projects, the Seattle City Council may create a new citywide transportation taxing district that could lead to higher property and sales taxes, higher car-tab fees and someday maybe even local toll roads.
The new taxing district, which would follow city boundary lines, could generate millions of dollars in new taxing authority.
Creating the district wouldn’t require public approval, but raising sales and property taxes would.
Once a transportation district is in place, the council could raise car-tab fees by up to $20 without a public vote to fund bike and pedestrian improvements and to pay for road maintenance.
The council already is considering raising existing parking taxes to design and pay for major projects like the sea-wall replacement.
“I’d like to look at all of the options and see what the implications are,” said Councilmember Tom Rasmussen, Transportation Committee chairman.
As for tolling city streets, Rasmussen said, there are no specific proposals. He acknowledged the subject would be “very, very controversial.”
The Legislature passed a law in 2008 allowing cities to set up “transportation benefit districts.”
Edmonds, Des Moines, Lake Forest Park, Olympia and Shoreline are among the cities that already have done so.
“What I hear from people in the community … is that everyone wants more sidewalks, more crosswalks, greater safety. And people also say the public will pay for it,” Rasmussen said.
“We’re in the middle of a deep recession, and I don’t know whether the voters would be willing to tax themselves … That’s why we want to have a review,” he said.
The proposed Seattle taxing district would be governed by the City Council and overseen by an advisory committee.
The tax proposals are a variation on taxes Mayor Mike McGinn proposed in July.
The mayor wanted to raise car-tab fees by $20 and increase the parking tax from 10 percent to 15 to 20 percent.
The council’s proposal would raise the parking tax to 12.5 percent.
Tuesday, the mayor was supportive of using a new district to raise taxes.
“The broad outline of what Rasmussen is talking about — there’s alignment here,” said McGinn. “What I hear in the community is that it’s a governmental basic: We should take care of our streets and bridges.
“It’s the big projects that gather a lot of attention, … but we have to make sure we are taking care of the basics. That’s what this is about,” McGinn said.
Seattle has several big, unfunded transportation expenses coming up. This year alone, the city’s Department of Transportation is facing an $8 million shortfall.
The city also needs to come up with $235 million to replace the city’s crumbling downtown sea wall; $57 million for its portion of the Mercer Street West construction project; and $122 million for waterfront improvements related to the Alaskan Way Viaduct replacement.
Plus, the city promised King County this summer it would contribute $15 million toward a new South Park Bridge, and it has big gaps in funding its pedestrian and bicycle master plans.
Rasmussen’s proposal also would postpone for at least a year a public vote on a property-tax increase to pay for the sea wall.
McGinn proposed in January asking voters to pay more property taxes to jump-start sea-wall replacement.
The council says it can use parking-tax revenue for design work on the sea wall, delaying the ballot measure.
Seattle’s new tax proposals come four years after voters approved a $365 million, nine-year “Bridging the Gap” property-tax levy for street maintenance, sidewalks, traffic signals and trails.
Emily Heffter: 206-464-8246 or [email protected]
By Emily Heffter
Seattle Times staff reporter
Two Promising New Proposals For Solving the Fiscal Shortfall (Innovation News Briefs)
Two Promising New Proposals For Solving the Fiscal Shortfall (Innovation News Briefs)
Two new attempts to redefine the federal responsibility for surface transportation are attracting growing attention and provoking lively discussion within the transportation community. Both proposals stem from a conclusion that the obstacles standing in the way of enacting a new multi-year federal surface transportation program are of a long-term nature and will not be overcome any time soon. These obstacles include the inability of Congress to come up with a meaningful way to pay for the program; the increasingly shaky and uncertain status of the Highway Trust Fund; the pressure for deficit reduction in the fiscal and budgetary actions of the next Congress, especially in the likely event of a Republican takeover; the shattered hopes for a climate change legislation and its potential revenue contribution to transportation; and a low priority given to the reauthorization by the Obama White House (see our NewsBrief of July 16, “New Political Realities May Sidetrack the Transportation Reauthorization”).
The Los Angeles 30/10 Initiative
The first attempt to redefine the federal responsibility is seen in a proposal embodied in the Los Angeles County Measure R and the so-called “30/10 plan” advocated by Los Angeles’ Mayor Villaraigosa. Measure R, a dedicated half-cent local sales tax, is expected to generate up to $40 billion for local transportation projects over 30-years. By using the sales tax revenue as collateral for long-term bonds and a federal loan, Los Angeles could accelerate completion of 12 key transportation projects in just 10 years rather than the projected 30 years (hence the “30/10” moniker). Local authorities would repay the federal loan over 20 years with a portion of the proceeds from the sales tax.
The 30/10 plan is not just a job-creation initiative and an antidote to the current recession, as some advocates have portrayed it. It is a fundamentally fresh attempt to make states more independent of the increasingly unreliable federal aid and the problematic reliance on the gas tax. Already today, 60 percent of spending on transportation comes from state, county and local governments. The question before the states and local governments is whether they should continue to rely for the remaining 40 percent on the increasingly uncertain federal largesse or whether they should free themselves from federal dependence and embark on a more independent course of action that would offer more control over their own transportation destiny.
Mayor Villaraigosa’s initiative would have the city of Los Angeles take a first step toward that fiscal independence. His proposal could be a harbinger of new thinking of how states and local governments could be empowered to fund local transportation infrastructure. If widely adopted, this approach would shift the federal role from one of directly funding local transportation infrastructure to one of merely facilitating its financing (it would also provide a powerful argument for a well-financed National Infrastructure Bank or a large expansion of the federal TIFIA loan program). We think the Villaraigosa initiative is a fiscal policy innovation of potentially far-reaching significance –and one that U.S. DOT officials and the Congress must not ignore as they ponder how to address the long-term shortfall in highway investment.
The Reason Foundation Proposal
The second proposal comes from the Reason Foundation, always a source of bold and innovative thinking. The authors of that proposal (Robert Poole and Adrian Moore) think that we should confine the future federal responsibility to funding programs that are of the greatest federal interest and refocus the Highway Trust Fund on expanding, modernizing, and rebuilding the Interstate Highway System.
The report makes the point that American taxpayers “have lost trust in the Trust Fund” as an instrument of maintaining and preserving a nationwide super-highway system. Instead, the Trust Fund has turned into “a kind of all-purpose public works program that now funds sidewalks, bike paths, recreational trails, museums, and streetcars—with ever-larger chunks of the money earmarked for pet projects unlikely to pass any sensible benefit/cost test.”
The report recommends greatly narrowing the focus of the Trust Fund to something that people could see as directly benefitting them, such as relieving urban traffic congestion and improving long-distance freight delivery. Specifically, the refocused Interstate-oriented program (which the authors have dubbed “Interstate 2.0”) would include adding selected routes to the Interstate map to reflect 21st-century America (vs. 1940s America, on which the system’s map was based), adding capacity to key long-haul routes, some of it in the form of dedicated truck lanes, redesigning and rebuilding the 200-odd interchange bottlenecks across the country, and adding networks of priced express lanes on major urban freeway systems. A tangible results-oriented program, the Reason analysts argue, could rebuild support for federal transportation investment.
The alternative of expanding the focus of the federal program to all modes (mass transit, streetcars, high-speed passenger rail, “livability,” etc) is untenable, the report contends. First, with essentially zero likelihood of a federal fuel tax increase in the foreseeable future (read, before the 2012 presidential election), there is hardly enough money in the Trust Fund to meet even basic highway investment needs, let alone support the ever-larger array of non-highway programs. Secondly, all the money in the Trust Fund comes from highway users, from what are still naively, or misleadingly, called “highway user fees.” The report authors recommend restoring the users-pay/users-benefit principle by safeguarding the monies generated by highway users for investment in the highway system.
What about streetcars, bikeways, sidewalks and that rhetorical abstraction known as “livable communities”? There is no good reason why these should not be funded out of general revenues, the report argues— assuming there is a reason to support them with federal funds at all. They typically are the kind of social infrastructure that is supported locally by general taxation. What is more, over the past two years Congress has shown ample willingness to put general fund money into transit, high speed rail and “livability” projects. Why not let Congress continue doing so and leave the Highway Trust Fund to its original purpose of funding and preserving highways, the report asks.
The authors estimate that by refocusing the Trust Fund in this manner, an additional $10 billion per year could be freed up for highway investments, to be supplemented by toll financing where appropriate.
The Reason proposal may be expected to meet with opposition and disapproval, even outrage, from advocacy-oriented public interest groups for whom “multi-modalism” has come to mean the right of equal access to the Highway Trust Fund. However, they need to be reminded that the federal gas tax was sold to the public as a means of funding the construction and preservation of the Interstate Highway system. Those who urge restoring the Trust Fund to its original purpose are not necessarily against streetcars, bicycles or “walkable communities.” They may even see some merit in the “livability” program, amorphous and ambiguous as that concept is. But let those amenities be funded by state and local governments, they say, or by general revenues, as are a host of other social programs that are deemed worthy of federal support. We agree with the authors of the Reason Foundation report that making this change is probably the best hope we have for preserving, improving and expanding the nation’s vitally important highway infrastructure.
Note: You can find the executive summary of the Reason Foundation report, “Restoring Trust in the Highway Trust Fund,” at http://reason.org/news/show/highway-trust-fund-summary and the full study report at http://reason.org//files/restoring_highway_trust_fund.pdf.
August 9, 2010
Wilmington sued by sweepstakes game makers (Wilmington Star News)
Wilmington sued by sweepstakes game makers (Wilmington Star News)
Wilmington is one of five cities named in a lawsuit aiming to abolish local privilege fees on sweepstakes businesses and machines.
Two out-of-state software companies filed the suit in Burke County Superior Court late last week seeking to prohibit cities from charging fees on sweepstakes parlors. They also seek an injunction to prohibit the cities from collecting privilege fees currently owed by the businesses.
The other defendants are the cities of Fayetteville, Lumberton, Pembroke and Morganton.
Each city charges privilege fees for businesses that operate sweepstakes games. Wilmington charges a semi-annual fee of $1,500 per machine, or $1,000 per machine for parlors that close between 11 p.m. and 8 a.m., said Carolyn Johnson, Wilmington city attorney.
City Council decided to enact the fees earlier this year as the businesses began to spread rapidly throughout the city.
According to the suit, the tax “schemes” enacted by Wilmington and the other cities are invalid and should be struck down because a federal law, the Internet Tax Freedom Act, doesn’t allow taxes on any means of Internet access.
The plaintiffs are International Internet Technologies, of Oklahoma, and Hest Technologies, of Texas. Both license software for use at Internet cafes, business centers and other locations in North Carolina and other states. Customers use Internet cafes, or sweepstakes parlors, to buy Internet time, through which they can play sweepstakes games for cash or prizes.
Johnson said Tuesday morning that the city received the lawsuit on Friday and that she is still reviewing it.
“We will discuss it with the attorneys for the other names co-defendants and will respond accordingly,” she said.
Included in the lawsuit is an affidavit from Anthony Parker, a Florida resident and president of Cyber World Inc., which provides equipment for Internet cafes in locations throughout North Carolina, including Cyberspot on Van Campen Boulevard in Wilmington.
Cyber World uses software licensed from International Internet Technologies to allow Cyberspot to sell Internet access and conduct sweepstakes games, according to the affidavit.
Wilmington is requiring Cyberspot to pay a semi-annual tax of $1,500 per computer terminal in the café, which amounts to $75,000.
But if required to pay the tax, Cyberspot couldn’t stay in business “because the semi-annual tax is excessively high in proportion to its revenue from Internet café customers,” the affidavit states.
Read the complaint. Read a brief in support of the motion.
by Pat Gannon
August 10th, 2010 11:24am