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09:39 AM PDT on Monday, April 25, 2005
OLYMPIA, Wash. - The state House passed an $8.5 billion transportation
package Sunday, a day after Republicans derailed it.
The measure, which includes a 9.5 cent gas tax hike, passed on a 54-43
vote. It was defeated Saturday when leaders could only muster 45 votes,
five shy of the bare minimum needed for passage.
A revote was taken Sunday, and applause broke out on the floor after it
was approved.
The package passed through the Senate earlier in the week with modest
bipartisan support, but it melted down in rancor in the House on
Saturday.
THE BOTTOM LINE: $8.5 billion will be generated over the
next 16 years. Money will go for safety projects, roads, bridges,
ferries, transit, rail and other transportation programs. Local
government gets a cut.
Democratic leaders have been saying for weeks that the plan would either
pass with bipartisan support or not at all. Partisan control of both
chambers has flipped back and forth between the two parties in recent
years and Democrats fear being targeted in the next election if the
gas-tax plan gets labeled a Democratic tax.
Opponents of the bill say the tax increase is too steep, and
unsuccessfully demanded a smaller tax hike for transportation.
Earlier the GOP had offered to supply a more generous bloc of votes if
the Democrats would give up their plan for a state operating budget that
requires about $500 million in new revenue.
The Democrats flatly rejected the offer and said transportation
historically has been treated in a bipartisan fashion.
Opponents of the bill say the tax increase is too steep, and
unsuccessfully demanded a smaller tax hike for transportation.
The gas tax increase would be phased in over four years, beginning with
a 3-cent boost in July. The tax now is 28 cents a gallon.
Tolls, local taxes and weight fees on cars, light trucks and SUVs also
are planned. The full gas tax hike and weight fee would cost motorists
between $67 and $172 a year, depending on vehicle size.
"This package is just too much for the people of Washington state, when
you consider the price of gas and what's going on in Washington state
with the economy," Rep. Doug Ericksen, R-Bellingham said during floor
debate Saturday. He voted no again on Sunday.
Supporters said the transportation package pays for essential safety
improvements, such as replacing the crumbling Alaskan Way Viaduct on
Seattle's waterfront.
"We face a challenge as to how we're going to fix our aging
infrastructure," House Transportation Chairman Ed Murray, D-Seattle,
said Saturday. "We have a chance here to save lives, move people and
deliver goods." Gov. Christine Gregoire worked behind the scenes to keep
the measure on track. On Sunday, she visited leaders in the House and
Senate.
The proposed 16-year transportation plan would help finance
"mega-projects" such as the viaduct replacement, a new state Route 520
bridge across Lake Washington and improvements on Interstates 405 and
90. It also would finance hundreds of highway and bridge projects, rail,
ferries and other improvements.
TRANSPORTATION TAXES: Gas
tax, now 28 cents, will rise 9.5 cents over four years - 3 cents
this summer, another 3 cents next summer, 2 cents the following
year and 1.5 cents in 2008. Package also includes new weight fees
on cars and passenger trucks, higher driver's license fees, and
tolls. Motorists in congested King, Snohomish and Pierce counties
would be asked to pay more to finance mega-projects.
THE
PRICETAG: The full gas tax increase is estimated at $57 a year
more for most motorists, and a new vehicle weight extra gas taxes
and $20 or $30 in weight fees.
BY THE VOTE: Senate,
26-22. House, 54-43.
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