Seems simpler just to tax petrol.
Fuck Israel
Pages: 1 2
No doubt... and less Big Brotherish.Dilbert_X wrote:
Seems simpler just to tax petrol.
Dilbert_X wrote:
Seems simpler just to tax petrol.
.005 cents or .005 dollars?SEREMAKER wrote:
NC is trying to push a .005 cent per mile tax ...................... fuck that
Last edited by Locoloki (2009-07-19 07:35:27)
Last edited by Pubic (2009-07-19 18:18:26)
Don't we already have to provide mileage when we either register our vehicles or get them inspected (safety &/or emissions)?Agent_Dung_Bomb wrote:
I see one problem and one possible solution here.
The Problem: States are doing this because the government is pushing for substantially higher fuel efficiencies, which will ultimately result in lower gasoline taxes that are used to support road infrastructure. Combine that with electric vehicles that may use no gas at all, and you still have infrastructure to maintain but no, or substantially reduced revenues, to maintain the same amount of road infrastructure.
Possible solution to mileage taxes: People dislike the idea, primarily for its Big Brother aspect. To that end, don't track by GPS. Modern vehicles have computers that can store or feed this data to a device. The mileage can be obtained by using a hand held device, like those a mechanic uses to retrieve computer error codes. This way a person's whereabouts are not tracked, but mileage can be accounted for. Retrieval of this data could simply be made part of the yearly registration process for a vehicle.
That could very well vary by state, but I've never heard of any state that makes you track or register mileage.FEOS wrote:
Don't we already have to provide mileage when we either register our vehicles or get them inspected (safety &/or emissions)?Agent_Dung_Bomb wrote:
I see one problem and one possible solution here.
The Problem: States are doing this because the government is pushing for substantially higher fuel efficiencies, which will ultimately result in lower gasoline taxes that are used to support road infrastructure. Combine that with electric vehicles that may use no gas at all, and you still have infrastructure to maintain but no, or substantially reduced revenues, to maintain the same amount of road infrastructure.
Possible solution to mileage taxes: People dislike the idea, primarily for its Big Brother aspect. To that end, don't track by GPS. Modern vehicles have computers that can store or feed this data to a device. The mileage can be obtained by using a hand held device, like those a mechanic uses to retrieve computer error codes. This way a person's whereabouts are not tracked, but mileage can be accounted for. Retrieval of this data could simply be made part of the yearly registration process for a vehicle.
You have to do it over here.Agent_Dung_Bomb wrote:
That could very well vary by state, but I've never heard of any state that makes you track or register mileage.FEOS wrote:
Don't we already have to provide mileage when we either register our vehicles or get them inspected (safety &/or emissions)?Agent_Dung_Bomb wrote:
I see one problem and one possible solution here.
The Problem: States are doing this because the government is pushing for substantially higher fuel efficiencies, which will ultimately result in lower gasoline taxes that are used to support road infrastructure. Combine that with electric vehicles that may use no gas at all, and you still have infrastructure to maintain but no, or substantially reduced revenues, to maintain the same amount of road infrastructure.
Possible solution to mileage taxes: People dislike the idea, primarily for its Big Brother aspect. To that end, don't track by GPS. Modern vehicles have computers that can store or feed this data to a device. The mileage can be obtained by using a hand held device, like those a mechanic uses to retrieve computer error codes. This way a person's whereabouts are not tracked, but mileage can be accounted for. Retrieval of this data could simply be made part of the yearly registration process for a vehicle.
Again, depending on the state we do have them. We simply refer to them as safety inspections. As for odometer readings, they are too easy to disconnect. I'm sure they'd want something that could not be as easily tampered with. Possibly using something such as a kill switch if there is any attempt to tamper with, or alter the device that tracks the mileage.Bertster7 wrote:
You have to do it over here.Agent_Dung_Bomb wrote:
That could very well vary by state, but I've never heard of any state that makes you track or register mileage.FEOS wrote:
Don't we already have to provide mileage when we either register our vehicles or get them inspected (safety &/or emissions)?
When you register the vehicle or at your annual MOT (dunno if you have them - compulsory annual check of your vehicle to make sure it's roadworthy) the mileage is checked. I doubt this information is used for anything, but could easily be centralised for charging purposes - because no one is going to want government GPS trackers on their cars.
Lots of things are easy to disconnect but are still used for this sort of purpose.Agent_Dung_Bomb wrote:
Again, depending on the state we do have them. We simply refer to them as safety inspections. As for odometer readings, they are too easy to disconnect. I'm sure they'd want something that could not be as easily tampered with. Possibly using something such as a kill switch if there is any attempt to tamper with, or alter the device that tracks the mileage.Bertster7 wrote:
You have to do it over here.Agent_Dung_Bomb wrote:
That could very well vary by state, but I've never heard of any state that makes you track or register mileage.
When you register the vehicle or at your annual MOT (dunno if you have them - compulsory annual check of your vehicle to make sure it's roadworthy) the mileage is checked. I doubt this information is used for anything, but could easily be centralised for charging purposes - because no one is going to want government GPS trackers on their cars.
Pages: 1 2