GAS TAX GETTING OUT OF GAS? WASHINGTON STATE ROAD USAGE CHARGE Pilot Project. Paul Parker Deputy Director Washington State Transportation Commission

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Transcription:

GAS TAX GETTING OUT OF GAS? WASHINGTON STATE ROAD USAGE CHARGE Pilot Project Paul Parker Deputy Director Washington State Transportation Commission

Problem Future funding gap TODAY S PRESENTATION Potential solution Road usage charge Key Findings What we have learned from our research to date Pilot project Help us design a solution 2

PROBLEM Gas tax won t fund future needs

GAS TAX BREAKDOWN * Of the 9.5, 8.5 is used by the state for highway projects, 1 goes to cities and counties for street and road improvements. ** The 11.9 gas tax increase was phased in over two years - a 7 cent increase on 8/1/2015, and a 4.9 increase on 7/1/2016. 4

BY 2027, 70% OF STATE GAS TAX REVENUES WILL GO TO DEBT SERVICE PAYMENTS* WA STATE PORTION ($) OF NET FUEL TAX % DEBT SERVICE OF WA NET FUEL TAX HISTORICAL FORECAST 100% 1,400,000,000 90% 1,200,000,000 1,000,000,000 69% 70% 80% 70% 60% 800,000,000 600,000,000 39% 50% 40% 400,000,000 30% 20% 200,000,000 10% - 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 0% *Based on Net Fuel Tax Revenue and Debt Service projections per the Nov 2016 Forecast. - Debt service only includes debt first payable by the fuel tax. This excludes SR 520 corridor debt service (first payable by tolls), but includes Tacoma Narrows Bridge debt service (reimbursed by tolls). - WA state s portion of fuel tax revenue does not include all fuel tax revenue pledged for debt service. For example, revenue distributed to cities and counties is also pledged for debt service, and beginning in FY 2019, revenue from select vehicle fees (for selected projects). 5

THE FUEL EFFICIENCY BAR CONTINUES TO RISE Current federal CAFE Standards: 54.5 MPG by 2025 Washington state s current average: 20.5 MPG The Federal Energy Information Administration conservatively predicts: All NEW cars by 2040 = 48 MPG All cars (new and old) by 2040 = 37 MPG 6

AUTO MANUFACTURERS SET THE PACE Volvo plans to produce only hybrid and electric cars starting in 2019 Toyota 2017 Mirai - powered by hydrogen fuel cell with an EPA rated 312-mile range. Plans to shift to hydrogen fuel cell fleet in the next 15+ years Ford is investing $4.5 B to transition to hydrogen fuel cell and other alternative fuels over the next 15+ years Nearly 400,000 people put down a $1,000 deposit for Tesla s all electric Model 3 7

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POTENTIAL SOLUTION Road usage charge (RUC)

THE ROAD USAGE CHARGE EMERGES A road usage charge is a per mile charge drivers would pay for the use of the roads, rather than paying by the gallon of gas Similar to how we pay for utilities, such as electricity or water Identified as a viable future funding source in need of further exploration 10

ROAD USAGE CHARGE A POTENTIAL SOLUTION Washington is not alone: 14 western states are involved in research, testing, or legislatively enacted programs Remaining task: let the public (volunteer participants) test drive RUC through a live pilot test On August 28, 2016, FHWA awarded Washington a $3.847 million grant to prepare for a live pilot test Source: RUC West 11

ROAD USAGE CHARGE ASSESSMENT Since 2012, the Washington State Transportation Commission has led this work with a 25-member steering committee comprised of diverse stakeholders Three Commissioners One serves as Chair Eight Legislators four Senators and four Representatives Representatives from: Auto and light truck manufacturers Ports Environmental Counties Trucking industry Cities Public transportation Consumer/Public WSDOT Department of Licensing Motoring public Business User fee technology Treasurer s Office 12

THE BASIS OF THE ASSESSMENT Identify a sustainable, long-term revenue source for Washington State s transportation system, and transition from the current gas tax. Ensure there is consumer choice on how mileage information can be collected and paid for During the transition period of moving from the gas tax to a road usage charge, drivers would pay one or the other, but never both For purposes of assessing the gas tax against a road usage charge, we have assumed revenue neutrality and focused on net revenue potential for both 13

FOUR OPTIONS FOR YOU TO TEST AND PROVIDE FEEDBACK Mileage Permit: Pre-select a block of miles you anticipate using in three-month increments Odometer Readings: Miles reported quarterly, either electronically or in person Plug and Play: Automated mileage meter with GPS and non-gps options, plugged into your car s OBD-II port Smartphone App: Record your miles using your smartphone No-tech Low-tech Higher-tech High-tech 14

NEW TECHNOLOGIES ENHANCE PRIVACY AND INCREASE CONVENIENCE Emerging technologies show potential for reliably and easily collecting mileage data while protecting drivers privacy. Mobile phone app-based solutions are emerging works for every vehicle Rely on consumers own mobile phone and vehicle odometer VIN and odometer photo captured and transmitted with driver s phone Data is extracted and validated using photo recognition technology, algorithms, and databases System can detect fraud 15

SMARTPHONE INNOVATION CHALLENGE Can IT engineers, software developers and designers create a prototype solution (software or device) for mileage reporting by smartphone? Allows drivers to use their own smartphone to record and report mileage Allows drivers to decide whether or when to enable location-based services (GPS) CoMotion (UW organization that matches private industry with public research) helped support four research teams from the following departments: 16

APPS AT A GLANCE UW information school (ischool) team: https://youtu.be/z49jwjyzac0 Developed an ios app: WARUC, now available in Apple s App Store Simple, no-look swipe on the smartphone screen to activate or deactivate mileage recording UW electrical engineering department team: Toggle on/off location-based (GPS) mileage recording, to ensure out-ofstate miles are deducted from a drivers RUC account Border Proximity Detection, where an audible sound reminds drivers to activate the out-of-state mileage deduction feature as the vehicle approaches a state border 17

APPS AT A GLANCE UW human centered design engineering (two teams): Team 1: Focused on smartphone app design that appeals to the average driver Clever explainer video to help drivers learn the primary reason for RUC, and how the smartphone app is used Team 2: https://youtu.be/0asxelgh8g8 https://youtu.be/okmhzurvve4 Drivers can choose to categorize their trips to self-analyze (and economize) their driving habits Drivers can quickly and easily Contest this Trip through a drop-down menu, requesting their RUC account manager fix any incorrect mileage 18

KEY FINDINGS TO DATE

TAXING GALLONS HAS REAL FAIRNESS AND EQUITY CHALLENGES 10 Per-mile revenue from 49.4 cents/gallon fuel tax by vehicle MPG 8 Cents per mile 6 4 2 0 Vehicles below average MPG pay more fuel tax per mile driven At 20.5 MPG, the average Washington driver pays 2.4 cents/mile in state fuel tax Vehicles above average MPG pay less fuel tax per mile driven 5 20 35 50 65 MPG 20

EVEN WITH ANNUAL GAS TAX INCREASES REVENUE WILL NOT KEEP UP WITH NEEDS The gas tax would have to be raised about 1.5 cents per gallon, per year on all vehicles from 2019-2043 in order to equal net revenues from a road usage charge of 2.4 cents per mile This would not address growing needs for improvements or maintenance it would keep funding at status quo levels 21

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OUT OF STATE DRIVERS Need to be able to charge people from out of state for use of roads. Keep the gas tax in place as a parallel system to the road usage charge Drivers will pay either the gas tax or the road usage charge but not both To distinguish between travel on Washington public roads and other roads (e.g., outside the state and private roads), location based technology will likely be needed. 24

PILOT PROJECT Inform design of a fair-share approach

STATEWIDE PILOT TEST, WITH RECRUITING FOCUSED IN 5 REGIONS Up to 2,000 vehicles from anywhere in Washington may participate Outreach efforts and participant support will be focused in five regions, to ensure geographic diversity in the Washington pilot test A small pool of participants from Surrey, BC will test the international border crossing A small pool from Vancouver, WA who commute into Portland, OR will test interoperability between the two states Four payment options will be tested from no-tech to high-tech 26

PILOT PROJECT TIMELINE 27

RECRUITING PARTICIPANTS Unique opportunity to shape future funding options Help us explore what works and what doesn t Need up to 2,000 volunteers throughout Washington no cost to participate You can help by: Signing up to participate Encouraging your friends and neighbors to sign up 28

Sign up today! Be a part of shaping our state s future. www.waroadusagecharge.org Questions? info@waroadusagecharge.org Want to talk? (833) WASH-RUC

CONTACT INFORMATION Paul Parker, Deputy Director Washington State Transportation Commission parkerp@wstc.wa.gov 360-705-7070 Consultant support provided by: 30