In his testimony, Graves focused on the needs of our highways system, noting that Interstate congestion alone cost the trucking industry $9.2 billion in 2013 and wasted more than 141 million hours – the equivalent of 51,000 drivers sitting idle for a full working year.
“While the trucking industry already makes a substantial contribution to the Highway Trust Fund, clearly federal investment is falling short, and we are therefore willing to support an even greater commitment,” he said, adding that new revenue sources to ensure stable and long-term funding for the Trust Fund should apply uniformly across types of highway users; be based on verifiable highway and vehicle use; not be easily evaded; inexpensive and efficient to administer and not impede interstate commerce.
Among the mechanisms that fit those criteria, Graves said, are increasing and indexing the fuel tax, a new highway access fee, royalties from oil and gas leases and a barrel tax on imported petroleum and domestic crude oil production.
Graves said increasing other user fees like the Heavy Vehicle Use Tax, the federal excise tax on trucks or truck tires would not raise sufficient revenue and a vehicle miles traveled tax or tolling are highly inefficient.
Click here – http://trck.ng/BGTestimony617 – to read Graves’ full statement.