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Next year will mark the 100th anniversary of the Minnesota gas tax, which, since its inception, has been constitutionally dedicated to funding the state's system of roads and bridges through a trust fund. Road finance has always been walled off from the state general fund budget because its revenue sources were respected as dedicated user fees. The gas tax long enjoyed broad bipartisan support and was regularly increased because it honored the "user pays" principle.
We used to treat our roadway system as a public utility like water, sewer or energy. Both fairness and efficiency dictated that it be funded by the people who use it in proportion to their usage. The idea is that when people pay for what they use, they use the resource more judiciously.
We don't bundle the cost of our water, sewers or energy into our property tax bills, because we understand it's important to incentivize their wise use by pricing them appropriately and charging separately for their consumption. If we paid a flat rate for all the water or energy we used, there would be no incentive to conserve, and consumption would increase dramatically.
We shouldn't be bundling the cost of roads into our property taxes, either, but that's what's been happening since the gas tax was last increased in 2008. More than half of our statewide spending on roads and bridges now comes from local property taxes, and less than a quarter comes from the state gas tax. About 20% of the typical Minnesota local government budget is now spent building and maintaining city streets and county roads, and more than half of that is financed from local taxes. If the gas tax were increased, almost 40% of the added revenue would automatically go to our cities and counties to relieve this pressure.
Yes, the gas tax is regressive, costing lower-income drivers more as a portion of their incomes. But the same is true of the property taxes we're paying instead. The gas tax's regressivity is offset by the sales tax on new cars and our steeply progressive vehicle registration fees, each of which now provides almost as much highway trust fund revenue as the gas tax itself. The owner of a new $50,000 vehicle will pay $652 in tab fees, while the owner of an 11-year-old used car pays only $35.
Why, one might ask, would we consider raising any tax when the state is enjoying a huge budget surplus? First, most of that surplus is "one-time" money left over from federal COVID relief and previous legislative gridlock. Close to a billion dollars of this money will be used to fund our one-time match to obtain our share of federal infrastructure act dollars and fund other one-time transportation projects. The ongoing "structural surplus" is about $2.75 billion per year, and these funds are being allocated largely to tax relief, education, health and human services, such as increased pay to lure workers into direct care professions.