The Santa Barbara County Association of Governments
agreed June 18 to draft a resolution opposing a recommendation by the state to
siphon off gas taxes to help pay for state debt service costs.
The state Budget Conference Committee recommended June 11
that the state take two years of the local portion of gas taxes that come from
the Highway Users Tax Account (HUTA). The proposal would take away 100 percent
of local gas tax revenue in fiscal year 2009–10 and 75 percent the following
year.
This would amount to about $1.7 billion in lost revenue,
with Santa Barbara County, including the incorporated cities, sharing $21
million in lost revenue. Santa Ynez Valley alone could lose about $900,000.
Scott McGolpin, director of the
county’s Public Works Department, warned SBCAG members that a diversion of
these tax dollars would be “devastating.” The gutting of his department — which
gets 30 percent of its revenue from the gas tax — and those of its city
counterparts would cut off many vital services to the public, he said, adding
that about 38 positions would be lost.
The county’s Public Works Department maintains about
1,667 miles of roadway and more than 100 bridges. This includes pot hole
patching, tree trimming, traffic signs and signal operation maintenance, center
and edge striping, and 24-hour call out requests from public safety personnel.
“The question we and other agencies up and down the state have to ask is Can we
really afford the loss of these services?” McGolpin
told the board. “Our customers really take them for granted, and they don’t
think about them, and if this funding were to go away, I think our customers
would be thinking a lot more about the services we weren’t providing and
wondering why we aren’t providing them.”
At the behest of 5th District Supervisor Joseph Centeno, SBCAG unanimously voted to draft a resolution to
tell the state Legislature to “leave our money alone.”
Steve Wagner, director of public works for the city of
Goleta, applauded the board’s motion and said local jurisdictions across the
state must mount a rear-guard campaign to keep the state’s hands off their gas
tax revenue.
“When the state legislature heard the cacophony of local
interests on Proposition 1A raid, I think that really helped,” he said. “And
while we can breathe a sigh of relief that that may not happen this year, the
state’s going to continue to look for pots of money to solve their problems.”
SBCAG wasn’t the only regional planning agency that
adamantly opposes the recommendation.
During a special meeting of the California State
Association of Counties June 17, the board unanimously voted to oppose the
tax-take proposal. Also, a group called Coalition Against
Fiscally Reckless Diversion of Gas Tax Funds, was quickly formed by a broad
number of public and private organizations to galvanize protest against the proposal.
The League of California Cities is talking about
challenging the take-away in court, should the Legislature approve it.
Supervisor Centeno advised
SBCAG’s counsel to work in concert with other jurisdictions to assess any legal
options the county may have to stop the proposal.
“The league did promulgate a legal
opinion from expert attorneys as to the Legislature’s taking the HUTA,
and it was favorable in terms of our being able to stop it,” Santa Barbara City
Councilwoman Iya Falcone
said. “But I think the unanimity of all of the jurisdictions getting together
and standing up to the Legislature and the Governor at this point is incredibly
powerful.”
McGolpin, in
an interview June 19, said the plan to take gas taxes from local municipalities
is a short-sighted, irresponsible maneuver that does nothing to solve the
state’s long-term budget issues. “I understand that the state is proposing this
to help shore up its budget, but specifically what will the saved revenue, if
this goes through, go toward in helping the state achieve that end?” he asked.
The recommendation to take local gas taxes, he explained, is an attempt by the
state Legislature to pay off transportation debt bonds. During the February
budget negotiations, there was agreement between Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and
all caucuses to increase the gas tax by 12-cents a gallon to pay down these
bonds, but the measure ultimately failed.
Californians currently pay 18 cents on every gallon they
charge at the pump, with 6 cents divvied up equally to counties and cities.
“Now the state Legislature wants to take that money from
us, yet they only maintain 18 percent of the lane miles,” McGolpin
said. “Does that make any sense? This is their problem, so why are they making
it our problem? Local agencies have done a great job with our pavements, and
now Sacramento is threatening to take it away.”
Public Works departments across the county are scrambling
to find ways to shore up their services, if the state is successful in taking
local gas taxes. McGolpin told SBCAG members that
they could tap Proposition 1B, but not for very long because the state may cut
off funding after the next fiscal year.
That measure — the Highway Safety, Traffic Reduction, Air
Quality and Port Security Bond Act of 2006 — was approved by California voters
on Nov. 7, 2006.
Consequently, the county would have to dip into Measure
D, the half-cent transportation sales tax Santa Barbara County voters passed in
1989, and its sister, Measure A, which sunsets in 2010.
McGolpin said
the loss of the gas tax over the next seven years would undue all of the gains
the county was able to achieve with Measure D.
The measure would wallop the county in other ways:
federal economic stimulus money at the local level would be erased, and money
that could have been used to leverage federal grant money would be lost, McGolpin said. There is also discussion, he said, about the
state taking local gas taxes in perpetuity.
“It would absolutely kill our roads,” he said.
Reach Jeremy Foster at jfoster@syvjournal.com.