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Tax Increase for Roads Funding Appears Doomed

House Republicans, led by Soliday and Speaker Brian Bosma, have argued for a long-term roads financing plan that includes the tax increases.

Thu April 21, 2016 - Midwest Edition
Brian Slodysko - ASSOCIATED PRESS


Valparaiso Republican and House Roads Committee chairman Rep. Ed Soliday said March 7 that no final agreement on roads funding has been reached, but that he was open to the idea of raising state taxes in a future session.
Valparaiso Republican and House Roads Committee chairman Rep. Ed Soliday said March 7 that no final agreement on roads funding has been reached, but that he was open to the idea of raising state taxes in a future session.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Cigarette and gas tax increases proposed by Indiana House Republicans to finance infrastructure improvements appear increasingly doomed as negotiations on a road funding plan continue in the waning days of this year's legislative session.

Valparaiso Republican and House Roads Committee chairman Rep. Ed Soliday said March 7 that no final agreement on roads funding has been reached, but that he was open to the idea of raising state taxes in a future session.

House Republicans have insisted for weeks that the tax on a pack of cigarettes should be increased by $1 and the state's 18-cent per gallon gas tax should increase by four pennies — a plan that Republican Gov. Mike Pence and the GOP-controlled Senate vehemently oppose.

“Eventually, we have to deal with the issue,' said Soliday. “Whether that's going to be this year or not' is still being negotiated.

House Republicans, led by Soliday and Speaker Brian Bosma, have argued for a long-term roads financing plan that includes the tax increases, under a broad package that would create a dedicated revenue stream for infrastructure while pumping an estimated $714 million into state roads spending in 2017 alone. It also would direct about $130 million to local roads projects, with more to come in future years, according to projections from the Association of Indiana Counties.

Their plan is supported by labor unions, local governments, the Indiana Chamber of Commerce and other key interest groups.

But Pence and his Senate allies are adamant that they do not want to raise taxes in an election year. They have called for a short-term solution that would draw down the state's $2 billion budget reserves to pump an estimated $470 million into state roads spending in 2017, while also handing local income taxes held in reserve back to local government for projects. Senate leaders also want to conduct a study before entertaining the possibility of tax increases, even though officials have studied the state's transportation needs multiple times in recent years.

“Our caucus feels pretty strongly that you need to prove to the taxpayer that you've exhausted every other resource first,' said Noblesville Sen. Luke Kenley, who is chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee.

Soliday has said Indiana's infrastructure ranks in the bottom third of U.S. states. Without additional funding, he said, the state's roads can't improve because gas tax revenues have declined as cars become more fuel efficient.

Both the Senate and the House agree that local governments should be empowered to raise their own vehicle registration taxes.


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