This is not a post about being polite and making a purchase when you take advantage of a convenience store's restroom. It's about paying for the roads we commute on, and this post will barely scratch the surface.
There are two popular patterns for funding highways. The argument for building and maintaining them out of general taxes and gasoline taxes is that the benefits are general; and to the extent that road costs are incurred without general benefit, a tax on fuel restores the balance. The arguments for toll roads are a little more complicated: one idea is that roads should be paid for directly by those who derive immediate gain; another is that costs can be reduced by financing construction based on future direct cash revenue rather than on the public credit.
These patterns are not opposites. In fact, they are very close to the same thing. Each assumes the economic value of road construction, an assumption more than borne out by the experience of the last 60 years. Both recognize the long-term benefits of road investment, so that costs are amortized over 30, 40, even 50 years.
There is one important distinction obvious to most of us every day: The public road philosophy is, at least insofar as general taxes, is "whether or not you pay, you go." The toll road mantra is "pay or don't go." We feel that distinction to a degree that exceeds its practical importance. A consequence of the first is that a slacker will take advantage. A consequence of the second is that a larger public gain will be lost because someone can't afford a 50-cent toll. Probably neither consequence is significant.
That's not to say there are not long-term effects of how we fund (or perhaps do not fund) roads. I'll talk about some of those effects in future posts.
Monday, April 30, 2007
Sunday, April 29, 2007
TX-Double-Tagging
I received my TXTag statement by email today. I don't take the tollways much (nor does anyone else, as far as I can tell, but that's a subject for another post), so the obvious errors on the statement stood out.
On April 19 and April 23, I was northbound on SH-130 in the evening. In both cases, the transponder on my tag was read and I was correctly billed for the toll at Mustang Creek Plaza. For some reason, the toll authority didn't notice that charge and also billed me based on the photograph of my license plates. I was charged twice for going past the same point, in the same direction, at the same time.
It wasn't too much trouble to get the mistake corrected. I was on hold for about 20 minutes, but the customer service rep acknowledged the error and said it would be fixed.
I don't think there is anything special about my case. If you take 130 north, you may want to take a close look at your April statement.
On April 19 and April 23, I was northbound on SH-130 in the evening. In both cases, the transponder on my tag was read and I was correctly billed for the toll at Mustang Creek Plaza. For some reason, the toll authority didn't notice that charge and also billed me based on the photograph of my license plates. I was charged twice for going past the same point, in the same direction, at the same time.
It wasn't too much trouble to get the mistake corrected. I was on hold for about 20 minutes, but the customer service rep acknowledged the error and said it would be fixed.
I don't think there is anything special about my case. If you take 130 north, you may want to take a close look at your April statement.
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