ASHBURN, Va. (AP) — Gov. Tim Kaine knows this movie by heart: Virginia lawmakers fight over funding for new roads on and off for months before calling it quits and heading home frustrated and empty-handed.
He didn’t enjoy the way the long-running legislative melodrama ended in 2006, and he’s not sure the 2008 remake will be any better, but the governor is nothing if not an optimist.
Mr. Kaine, a Democrat, will propose legislation soon that not only restores two regional transportation funding districts voided by the state Supreme Court but also covers growing cost overruns for highway maintenance statewide.
In an Associated Press interview last week, he said he will reconvene the House and Senate in May or June to consider it, and he won’t settle for anything that doesn’t include enough money to keep pace with increasing road repair and upkeep costs.
It needs to be simple, it needs to fix statewide problems and it needs to be sufficient, and that’s kind of where I was when I started this in ’06, he said.
Mr. Kaine said he might revive an idea he offered two years ago: boosting the sales tax on automobiles from 3 percent to 5 percent to match the tax on all other retail purchases.
I’ve always thought equalizing the sales tax on autos is the way to go, Mr. Kaine said.
He would not commit to a veto if the General Assembly restructures the defunct Hampton Roads and Northern Virginia authorities and stops there.
Regional-only is not sufficient, he said emphatically and repeatedly during a trip to a town hall meeting Monday in Loudoun County.
I’m not going to be part of a kind of ’we’ve-done-it-halfway’ approach, trying to stretch a little bit over a lot. We did that and it didn’t work, he said.
That puts him at odds with Republican legislative leaders who want to restructure regional taxing authorities in Hampton Roads and Northern Virginia created to generate money exclusively for highway projects in those areas.
Together, the two regional taxing authorities oversaw a menu of taxes and fees designed to generate about $640 million annually. They were at the heart of the 2007 transportation law, the first major boost in road funding in a generation. In February, the court ruled the regional arrangements unconstitutional because unelected boards collected the levies.
Mr. Kaine said he agrees with Republican House Speaker William J. Howell, Stafford Republican, that there is urgency to devising new, constitutional regional funding systems, but Mr. Kaine and his Democratic allies and the Republicans differ on how.
The Republicans prefer that local governments within a transportation region impose the taxes. The Democrats say the legislature should use its taxing authority and not shift the political burden of raising taxes onto city and county governments. But if the state imposes the taxes, Republican lawmakers note, it can reroute the money as the legislature has done with other transportation revenues to keep the state budget balanced.
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