Vehicle miles traveled fee to complement the gas tax and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit

The objective of this research is to gather data for an urban area, evaluate, and assess the applicability of vehicle miles traveled (VMT) fee to replace or complement the gas tax, and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit. Vehicle data collected from three geographically distributed ser...

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Main Authors: Agustin Rodriguez, Srinivas Pulugurtha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-12-01
Series:Urban, Planning and Transport Research
Subjects:
vmt
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21650020.2020.1850334
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spelling doaj-868dfa64c9b447b7930b47974a3e53da2021-07-02T20:25:56ZengTaylor & Francis GroupUrban, Planning and Transport Research2165-00202020-12-010011810.1080/21650020.2020.18503341850334Vehicle miles traveled fee to complement the gas tax and mitigate the local transportation finance deficitAgustin Rodriguez0Srinivas Pulugurtha1The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 9201 University City BoulevardThe University of North Carolina at CharlotteThe objective of this research is to gather data for an urban area, evaluate, and assess the applicability of vehicle miles traveled (VMT) fee to replace or complement the gas tax, and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit. Vehicle data collected from three geographically distributed service stations in Charlotte, North Carolina were used to evaluate multiple VMT fee scenarios. The results indicate that charging 0.625 cents per each mile traveled or 1.00 cent per additional mile exceeding 5,000 miles per year, to complement the gas tax, could generate enough revenue to mitigate the transportation finance deficit estimated equal to $30 M to $35 M at the time of this research for the city of Charlotte, North Carolina. Furthermore, this research explored the gross vehicle weight (GVW) as a factor to account for pavement deterioration, emissions, and the effect of heavier vehicles on travel time and safety for charging vehicle owners. The cost to implement the recommended VMT fee is minimal, the driver’s privacy is protected, and the VMT fee is less than $100 per year per vehicle for over 75% of the vehicle owners in the urban area.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21650020.2020.1850334vehicle miles traveledvmtgas taxweightfinancedeficit
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Agustin Rodriguez
Srinivas Pulugurtha
spellingShingle Agustin Rodriguez
Srinivas Pulugurtha
Vehicle miles traveled fee to complement the gas tax and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit
Urban, Planning and Transport Research
vehicle miles traveled
vmt
gas tax
weight
finance
deficit
author_facet Agustin Rodriguez
Srinivas Pulugurtha
author_sort Agustin Rodriguez
title Vehicle miles traveled fee to complement the gas tax and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit
title_short Vehicle miles traveled fee to complement the gas tax and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit
title_full Vehicle miles traveled fee to complement the gas tax and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit
title_fullStr Vehicle miles traveled fee to complement the gas tax and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit
title_full_unstemmed Vehicle miles traveled fee to complement the gas tax and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit
title_sort vehicle miles traveled fee to complement the gas tax and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Urban, Planning and Transport Research
issn 2165-0020
publishDate 2020-12-01
description The objective of this research is to gather data for an urban area, evaluate, and assess the applicability of vehicle miles traveled (VMT) fee to replace or complement the gas tax, and mitigate the local transportation finance deficit. Vehicle data collected from three geographically distributed service stations in Charlotte, North Carolina were used to evaluate multiple VMT fee scenarios. The results indicate that charging 0.625 cents per each mile traveled or 1.00 cent per additional mile exceeding 5,000 miles per year, to complement the gas tax, could generate enough revenue to mitigate the transportation finance deficit estimated equal to $30 M to $35 M at the time of this research for the city of Charlotte, North Carolina. Furthermore, this research explored the gross vehicle weight (GVW) as a factor to account for pavement deterioration, emissions, and the effect of heavier vehicles on travel time and safety for charging vehicle owners. The cost to implement the recommended VMT fee is minimal, the driver’s privacy is protected, and the VMT fee is less than $100 per year per vehicle for over 75% of the vehicle owners in the urban area.
topic vehicle miles traveled
vmt
gas tax
weight
finance
deficit
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21650020.2020.1850334
work_keys_str_mv AT agustinrodriguez vehiclemilestraveledfeetocomplementthegastaxandmitigatethelocaltransportationfinancedeficit
AT srinivaspulugurtha vehiclemilestraveledfeetocomplementthegastaxandmitigatethelocaltransportationfinancedeficit
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