John A. Charles, Jr.QuickPoint!

Portland City Commissioner Sam Adams and Multnomah County Chair Ted Wheeler have proposed a 3-cent-per-gallon tax increase and a monthly fee for homeowners and businesses in order to generate roughly $485 million over 10 years that would be used for local street maintenance, safety programs, and Willamette River bridge repairs. However, before this concept is approved, the two politicians have some explaining to do about current priorities.

According to a city auditor’s report published in December 2006, the total amount of money spent by Portland each year on transportation over the past decade increased by 61% (after accounting for inflation), yet the backlog of under-maintained street miles went up from 494 in 1996 to 627 in 2006. Funds spent on street maintenance actually declined during that period, while expenditures on new capital projects such as the Portland streetcar tripled.

Capital spending per capita, after accounting for inflation, went up from $33 to $126 during the 10-year period, while operating expenditures (used for basic street maintenance) declined from $170 to $166.

Most of these capital projects were built as part of the city’s misguided campaign to “get people out of their cars,” but the City Auditor reports that Portland commuters increased their level of single-occupant driving by one percent over the ten-year period, while transit use remained flat and walking declined by two percent. As a consequence, Portland traffic congestion steadily worsened, imposing large delay costs on motorists.

Portland certainly needs new investments in local bridges, and the street maintenance backlog is an embarrassment. But we should not adopt new transportation taxes until local politicians agree to stop wasting the money they already have.

John A. Charles, Jr. is president and CEO at Cascade Policy Institute, a Portland, Oregon-based think tank.

© 2007, Cascade Policy Institute. All rights reserved. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided the author and Cascade Policy Institute are cited. Contact Cascade at (503) 242-0900 to arrange print or broadcast interviews on this topic. For more topics visit the QuickPoint! archive.

 

One Response to “Hidden in Plain Sight: Portland’s Disappearing Street Maintenance Fund”

  1. Bill Chalmers December 24, 2007 at 12:44 pm #

    There is a lot of talk about increasing the State gas tax to maintain roads. It seems to me we voted on a gas tax a long time ago, maybe 12 – 15 years ago to maintain roads. Do you have a breakdown of how the current $0.24/gal. Oregon gas tax is being used? Too often taxes that are voted on for a specific use get redistributed to other uses without the consent of the voters. I suspect this may have happened with regard to the current gas tax.

Leave a Reply

Tags:

Other Publications by John

Subsidized Car Sharing: The Next Frontier in Wasteful Spending

John Charles | January 18, 2012
Nine months ago I happily testified (twice) on behalf of a legislative bill that would allow the creation of a privately operated car sharing program ...  read more

To Save the Library, Don’t Leave Good Ideas on the Shelf

John Charles | December 14, 2011
Sometime in the next three months, the Multnomah County commissioners will decide whether to place on the May ballot a measure creating a new taxing ...  read more

The Battle of the Book Worms: Who Should Pay for “Free” Public Libraries?

John Charles | October 11, 2011
By Christopher Robinson, John A. Charles Jr., and Kathryn Hickok When Jackson County, Oregon faced millions of dollars in budget shortfalls in 2006, the county ...  read more

More On These Topics

Press Release: Cascade Policy Institute Report predicts 110,000 jobs for Oregon with enactment of a Right-to-Work Law

Cascade Policy Institute | February 2, 2012
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE February 2, 2012 Contact: Steve Buckstein Senior Policy Analyst & Co-Founder Cascade Policy Institute Office Phone: 503-242-0900 E-Mail: steven@cascadepolicy.org Cascade Policy Institute Report ...  read more

New Report: The Right to Work Is Right for Oregon

Randall Pozdena | January 31, 2012
The Right to Work Is Right for Oregon: A Comprehensive Analysis of the Economic Benefits from Enacting a Right-to-Work Law By Randall Pozdena, Ph.D. and ...  read more

Testimony to House Committee on unemployment accounts

Christina Martin | January 31, 2012
Click here to listen to the testimony. Christina Martin’s testimony to the House Interim Committee on Business and Labor starts at 41:00.   Co-Chair Garrett, ...  read more
You might also like...
The non-fiction thriller "The Overton Window" by Glenn Beck has public policy think tank roots