It’s funny what a difference of a
few years and a billion or so dollars makes when it comes to legislator
attitudes about fee increases related to vehicle operation.
Currently, two bills, HB 445 and HB 833,
after being approved in the House had different Senate committees tack
on the same major revenue increase based upon fees – a $50 hike for gaining
a certificate of title and the same for a salvage title, which represent raises
of 270 and 333 percent, respectively. Together, the fee changes are predicted
to generate at least $59.8 million a year. Similarly, rumor has it HB 37 will experience
the same treatment in the Senate where it could tack on $39.50 to the existing $32.25
Class E (individual) charge (and parishes may be permitted to charge as much as
$3 extra), or at least 122 percent, which would add an estimated $18.8 million
more.
The title fee hikes might reflect
current, fluctuating budget necessities where state police have received around
$60 million a year from the Transportation Trust Fund, a sore
spot among some legislators as that money otherwise could go to infrastructure
needs. Legislation
to increase taxes going to roads has
stalled, and jacking up these fees may
represent a fallback position to retain money in the TTF while not
dramatically decreasing funding to state police.
But the current quietude surrounding
these moves resonates in marked contrast to five years ago, when state police
said under state law they could boost the Class E fee $15 to account for
hooking up to a national database. At
the time, police head Mike Edmonson said this constituted an additional
cost of a service that already the provision of exceeded its charges, drawing
money from the general fund as a subsidy.
However, many lawmakers, particularly
in the Senate, took a different view, if not calling the increase unconstitutional
(it wasn’t) then saying it was unjustified, and proceeded to pass a law
stripping it. Now, five years later, Senate committees see no problem tacking
on a far higher increase to license issuance/renewals and throwing in the title
fee hikes as well, with Edmondson using
the same rationale to justify these.
Cries of five years past that
doubted the Gov. Bobby
Jindal Administration’s explanation that fees ought to match costs of
service provision suddenly have been replaced by silence about this rationale.
Times – and the level of desperation of legislators to pass a budget that
presents numerous tax and fee hikes in as painless way as possible to voters in
an election year – certainly have changed. There’s nothing like financial
necessity to sweep away political posturing and to cancel out great remonstrations
allegedly based on principle by politicians.
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