The resistance to a proposed mileage-based tax in San Diego County highlights the challenges of passing road usage fees.

Opposition to a proposed road usage fee in a San Diego suburb reflects reluctance on the part of the public to support mileage-based taxes, writes Justin Worland in Time, despite arguments that such policies are necessary to maintain transportation budgets. The proposal was "part of a $160 billion plan to restructure San Diego County’s transportation system, spearheaded by the regional planning authority, the San Diego Association of Governments, also known as SANDAG."
According to the article, "The idea is straightforward: by levying a small fee on miles driven, state and local governments can recoup some of the revenue lost in gas taxes, which are declining as more cars go electric, while simultaneously pushing people to use cleaner methods of getting around, like public transit or rideshares."
Thanks in part to the campaign waged by a La Mesa council member, the road usage tax became a lightning rod for hostility, causing policymakers to backtrack on the proposal.
The political drama playing out in this sunny Southern California outpost is in many ways a microcosm of what’s happening both nationally and globally. As energy prices rise at the same time that many governments are finally getting serious about climate change, lawmakers are facing an inescapable dilemma: effective climate policy requires raising the price of fossil fuels—and, by extension, the price of high-carbon products and services. But raising prices is deeply unpopular among voters, especially when energy costs are already high, and especially during periods of rapid inflation.
Worland paints La Mesa's story as indicative of the challenges faced by 'climate-minded' policymakers who want to reduce carbon emissions and dependence on fossil fuels. While the idea has gained some traction, a tax based on vehicle miles driven (VMT) remains controversial in the U.S.
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