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Gas Tax Sunset
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Gas Tax Sunset
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Last modified
5/11/2010 9:58:12 AM
Creation date
10/10/2008 1:13:19 PM
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PW_Exec
PW_Division_Exec
Administration
PWA_Project_Area
Road Repair
PW_Subject
Gas Tax Sunset
Document_Date
1/28/2008
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Proposed Uses of Funds, Legal Analyses and Implementation Issues <br />Repealing or extending the sunset provision would effectively continue collection of the local motor <br />vehicle fuel tax ("gas tax") at the ftve-cent per gallon level, thereby preserving nearly $1.4 million in <br />annual street funding revenue. <br />Capital Pavement Preservation Needs - <br />The current 5-cent gas tax has allowed the city to complete nearly $16.5 million in street preservation <br />project work since 2003, with additional contracts in progress. This past year, more than 17.4 lane miles <br />of slurry seal projects and 20.5 lane miles of rehabilitation projects were completed, including the <br />overlay of portions of 18th Avenue, Chambers Street and Bailey Hill Road. Project plans for 2008 <br />include portions of East 13th Avenue, Barger Drive, Chambers Street and Roosevelt Boulevard. In spite <br />of these accomplishments, the backlog of needed repair work continues to grow in the face of rapidly <br />rising construction costs and insufficient revenues. In late 2001, the city was facing an estimated $67 <br />million backlog in pavement preservation work. By spring of 2007, the estimated cost of that backlog <br />had grown to nearly $170 million and, with no new funding, is projected to grow to $282 million within <br />the next 10 years. With the impending loss of the additional two-cent tax, which provides 40% of the <br />current fuel tax proceeds, the growth in the backlog of street repairs would accelerate even more rapidly. <br />According to the American Public Works Association, the cost of reconstructing a road on which <br />maintenance has been defened is five times as much as the cost to perform a timely overlay on the same <br />road several years earlier. This is borne out by the Eugene's own experience in recent years, which <br />shows that it costs approximately four times as much to reconstruct a road as it would to overlay the <br />road and extend its life for 20 years. One of the most cost-effective uses of pavement preservation <br />dollars is to perform overlays on roads which are identified as likely to fall into the much more <br />expensive "reconstruct" category if the overlay treatment is not performed in the upcoming year. <br />The nearly $1.4 million of of annual gas tax proceeds at stake in this decision would help fund the <br />pavement preservation overlay program and leverage those community dollars to avoid many times <br />those repair costs in future years. One of the primary goals of the pavement preservation program is to <br />rehabilitate streets with an overlay before they require the most expensive level of repair, a <br />reconstruction. Additionally, when streets go through reconstruction, the community and adjacent <br />property owners are subject to considerable delay and inconvenience. With the funding provided by the <br />additional two-cent gas tax over a three-year period, the city would be able to fund an estimated $4 <br />million worth of overlay projects that are otherwise at risk of falling into the expensive reconstruction <br />category. This is the same strategy followed by the Eugene Budget Committee when they allocated $1. <br />million to help fund the pavement overlay program in FY08. This funding would allow an estimated <br />additiona1201ane-miles of street to be overlayed over three years, which would prevent these streets <br />from further deterioration, thereby avoiding expensive reconstruction. The nearly $4 million generated <br />by the additional two-cent gas tax over the next three year period would save an estimated $16-20 <br />million (today's dollars) in future reconstruction costs. <br />Legal Uses of Revenue - The restrictions on the use of local fuel tax revenues for street system <br />operations, maintenance and preservation is provided in Eugene City Code 3.489 (2): "The net revenue <br />shall be used only for the reconstruction, repair, maintenance, operation and preservation of city-owned <br />roads and streets within the city, roads and streets for which the city is contractually or legally obligated <br />
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