Planning includes financing needed public transportation improvements.  The 
following municipalities have adopted the wheel tax. 

Municipalities
Appleton (city) - $20 beginning February 2015
Arena (township) - $20 beginning April 2015
Beloit (city) - $10 through January 2015; $20 beginning February 2015
Janesville (city) - $10
Milwaukee (city) - $20
Counties
Chippewa County - $10 beginning January 2015
Iowa County - $20 beginning February 2015
St. Croix County - $10

I don't think that they did that because they wanted to but that they had to.  
I rather doubt that Iowa County and the Town of Arena in Iowa County adopted a 
wheel tax because they wanted to: rather, I suspect that they had to in order 
to fund their transportation responsibilities.

The WIDOT collects the wheel tax for a small charge.  

And, I intend to lobby my township, the Town of Dodgeville, to do the same in 
order to maintain town roads.

I argue that biking is a transportation mode. Upon reflection, I don't argue 
that: I assert that biking is a part of the transportation system as a proven 
fact.   

The wheel tax has to be spent on transportation.  This is a tool already 
provided by the State.  I suggest that you consider this when you next discuss 
transportation issues with your elected officials.  Think and act locally.

Larry D Nelson






----- Original Message -----
From: "Matthew Logan" <[email protected]>
To: "Larry D Nelson" <[email protected]>, "William Hauda" 
<[email protected]>, [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, March 3, 2015 9:21:32 AM
Subject: RE: [Bikies] Iowa Raises Gas Tax

The core problem since November 2010 is not a lack of funding or planning
for transportation - The Governor and Legislature have had no problem making
money show up for highway expansions (that primarily benefit people in the
suburbs of Milwaukee), even when facing large deficits that are otherwise
used to justify large cuts elsewhere in the budget. The problem is that the
people making the decisions do not believe it is the role of the state to
provide funding for bicycling, while at the same time, clinging to
1970's-era thinking about the value of highways.

The Governor has stated that until all the roads are fixed, bicycle
facilities will have to wait.  Of course, by "fixed" he means, enough money
lavished on them to send a signal to businesses (the few that directly
benefit from highway spending) that they should consider relocating to
Wisconsin.  The Governor has also effectively said that the people of
Wisconsin have chosen to drive, so that is where all the money should go -
to infrastructure that directly benefits the payers of gas tax (which means
motorists).    The Governor and GOP have been promoting the meme that the
transportation fund has been raided, and needs to be repaid.  This, despite
the fact that the LFB reported a net $314 million transfer from the General
Fund to Transportation since the "raids" began in 2003.

These beliefs displayed by the Governor and legislature are at odds with the
reality of AADT trend lines looking more flat - a fact now acknowledged by
AASHTO. 

The problem is not that we need a plan for a revenue stream - it is that our
elected officials have no rational basis upon which we can argue the merits
of increasing funding for bicycling infrastructure.  They live in a world
where economically productive highways have been cheated out of their due by
special interest groups like teachers and bicyclists.  They live in a world
where fairness dictates repayment for this perceived wrong.  Until that
belief system changes, planning will have no effect.


-----Original Message-----
From: Bikies [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Larry D
Nelson
Sent: Thursday, February 26, 2015 7:02 AM
To: 'William Hauda'; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Bikies] Iowa Raises Gas Tax

In my observations and study regarding the construction of public works from
Rome to the present time (I apologize if that sounds pompous: it is my
hobby), there are periods of time when funding and resources are just not
made available to construct needed improvements.  But, wise people plan for
the future.  For example, the interstate highway system planning took place
decades before there was a President Eisenhower to implement the plan.
Planning is relatively inexpensive.  

Bill, please plan and propose.

For my part, I'd like to consider moving the responsibility for state bike
routes from the WDNR to the WIDOT, and recognize that their construction and
maintenance are transportation corridors/modes.

Ok, I am off my soap box  :>)


Larry D. Nelson, P.E.

PO Box 199
4180 Wilson Road
Dodgeville, WI  53533

608 630 6532 (C)



-----Original Message-----
From: Bikies [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of William
Hauda
Sent: Wednesday, February 25, 2015 7:01 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Bikies] Iowa Raises Gas Tax

     Mike, Iowa also has in place a constitutional amendment that earmarks a
portion of any future sales tax increase for things like trails. Problem is,
there is no enthusiasm to increase the sales tax. 
I'm currently researching some policy that I think has hampered bicycling in
Wisconsin and think I will have a recommendation for either the next meeting
of the Non-motorized Recreation and Transportation Trails Council or the
Bike Fed, where the Advocacy Committee we served together on developing
things like Complete Streets is, I'm told by the powers that be, about to be
reconstituted. Where I am going might not only be politically palatable to a
conservative administration, for reasons other than bicycling, but set us up
with a guaranteed source of funding. Where I am headed will involve a major
paradigm shift. Got my fingers crossed.
     Bill

On 2/25/2015 6:03 PM, Michael Rewey wrote:
> With bi-partisan and governor's support Iowa just raised their gas tax 
> a whopping 10 cents per gallon.
>
> Too bad that could not happen here so we can get balanced 
> transportation instead of just building for cars and trucks with bond 
> dollars.  But of course a governor who is running for national office
doesn't dare raise any taxes.
>
> We'll have to pay more for trail passes and state park passes to name 
> a few, but those are "user fees".  In reality gas tax is a user fee also.
You only pay if you use it.  Frustrating....
>
> Mike Rewey
> _______________________________________________
> Bikies mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.danenet.org/listinfo.cgi/bikies-danenet.org
>

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