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Virginia: New Year Brings New Motorist Taxes |
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Northern Virginia motorists will now pay an extra $300 million in taxes imposed by an unelected regional authority.
As
of yesterday, Northern Virginia motorists began paying $300 million in
new taxes designed to allow the legislature to increase spending on
social projects. Last year, the same bipartisan legislative compromise
that created the unpopular civil remedial fees
also created the Northern Virginia Transportation Authority (NVTA).
This unelected body was handed the authority to raise taxes on drivers
without involving elected lawmakers. State Delegate Robert Marshall
(R-Prince William) lambasted the bill that created the taxing authority
on the House floor just prior to its adoption because it allowed NVTA
members to impose new taxes after an election.
"I cannot
vote for this bill because there are too many subterfuges in here
trying to avoid responsibility and accountability," Marshall said.
"Members of these regional governments -- and they are regional
governments -- don't even have to vote on this until December. What's
interesting about December? It's a month and a half after the election.
They can all promise 'I'm not going to vote to raise any taxes' and
then afterward they can vote to do it."
The authority did vote
to hike taxes, adding an extra 2 percent tax on the cost of renting a
car; an extra $10 fee added to the cost of annual car inspections; a 5
percent tax on the cost of repairing an automobile; an extra $10 fee to
register a car; and a fee equal to 1 percent of a car's value the first
time it is registered. Non-motorist fees include a tax on the sale of
homes of $400 for every $100,000 of the home's value and a 2 percent
tax hike on hotel rooms.
Although the NVTA also allocates money
to regional transportation projects, the legislature routinely takes
money out of transportation funds so that much of the money raised in
the name of transportation is actually used to shore up spending on
social projects. Marshall has proposed a constitutional amendment to prohibit the practice
of "treating taxpayers as bottomless ATM machines" by raiding
transportation funds. Thus far, the amendment has failed to achieve the
full support of lawmakers.
That has not stopped Delegate
Marshall and other NVTA opponents like Loudoun County from acting to
stop the legislature's taxpayer-funded spending spree. On January 8,
the state supreme court will hear arguments against the taxing
authority likely to focus on a state constitutional provision that bars
unelected bodies from imposing taxes.
"No ordinance or
resolution... imposing taxes, or authorizing the borrowing of money
shall be passed except by a recorded affirmative vote of a majority of
all members elected to the governing body," Article 7, Section 7 states.
The
new taxes apply in Alexandria, Arlington, Fairfax County, Falls Church,
Loudoun County, Manassas, Manassas Park and Prince William County.
Source: http://www.thenewspaper.com/news/21/2152.asp
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