New Search
My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
New Search
Gas Tax Sunset
COE
>
PW
>
Admin
>
Execs
>
Executive non-confidential
>
Historical
>
Gas Tax Sunset
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
5/11/2010 9:58:12 AM
Creation date
10/10/2008 1:13:19 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
PW_Exec
PW_Division_Exec
Administration
PWA_Project_Area
Road Repair
PW_Subject
Gas Tax Sunset
Document_Date
1/28/2008
External_View
No
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
58
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
j ~; <br />ATTACHMENT C- Draft Minutes from Public Hearing Held January 14, 2008 <br />6. PUBLIC HEARING: <br />An Ordinance Concerning Motor Vehicle Fuel Dealer's Business License Tax and <br />Repealing Section 3 of Ordinance No. 20337 <br />Ms. Jones asked Director of the Public Works Department, Kurt Corey, to introduce the item. <br />Mr. Corey explained that the hearing sought to solicit public input on whether or not to maintain <br />the status quo with regard to the Eugene gas tax, presently set at 5 cents per gallon. He reviewed <br />the timeline to present; the first 3 cent component of the gas tax was implemented in January, <br />2003, and an additional2 cents was added in January, 2005, the latter planned to sunset after <br />three years. He underscored that the backlog of street maintenance was now in excess of $170 <br />million. He said after three years there were no additional state, county, or regional solutions at <br />this point. He noted that the committee convened by the Mayor had confirmed that a gas tax was <br />a fair and equitable component of a comprehensive package of funding solutions. He stated that <br />action on this item was scheduled for January 28. He listed the potential actions the council could <br />take, which ranged from reinstituting the gas tax to taking no action with the 2 cent component <br />subsequently sunsetting. <br />Mayor Piercy opened the public hearing. <br />William Ivanoff, 1810 Harris Street, #336, noted that fuel stations had indicated a move to rid <br />the City of the tax. He believed the City should save legal and ballot costs by repealing the tax <br />when it sunsets. He averred that automobiles were becoming more fuel efficient while wear and <br />tear of the streets increased. He said every time the City annexed more lane miles for public use <br />the maintenance costs for the City increased while funds did not increase commensurately. He <br />asked if the City Council was willing to "starve" the rest of the City to insure that the people who <br />lived on the edges of the City or outside of it could drive on smooth roads. He asserted that the <br />only people who used roads on the outsides of the City were the people who lived there and their <br />guests. He felt the streets that were closer to the core of the City were used by everyone. He <br />suggested that the City allow the people who lived on the periphery of the City to maintain their <br />own roads as private streets. He said if that was not an option, the City should tax each square <br />foot of parking area and remove minimum parking standards. <br />Zachary Vishanoff, Patterson Street, questioned whether there was truly a$170 million backlog. <br />He wondered if a consultant was saying that because he or she wanted money and suggested that <br />the City get a second opinion. He added that turning the cameras on for all city meetings would <br />bring "light to all fiscal issues." He thought the Council Committee on Intergovernmental <br />Relations (CCIGR) had "all sorts of pork barrel spending that happens." He felt that it was easy <br />to turn the switch on for the cameras in the McNutt Room. He asserted that the reason the City <br />had a backlog of street repairs was that it had "handed out premiums to developers." He opined <br />that selling off the parking garages would bring in income to counteract the backlog. He also <br />thought the "nest egg" set aside for a future City. Hall should be applied to the backlog. He said <br />the taxpayers would then say "oh gee we're not hiding money anymore" and they would be more <br />likely support a City Hall project in the future because they perceived that the government was <br />"willing to be straight." He added that if the backlog of projects was addressed as part of the <br />regular city budget then the City would not "do the Olympics first and then the potholes." He <br />likened this to "eating dessert before having dinner." <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.