http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=30246

State considers space-based technology to collect revenue

Posted: December 31, 2002
1:00 a.m. Eastern


� 2002 WorldNetDaily.com 
The latest proposal by government to collect tax revenue may seem out of
this world � that's because it is. 
The state of Oregon is considering the use of satellite technology to
charge taxes based on how much mileage you drive your car. 
The Road User Fee Task Force set up by lawmakers last year plans to ask
the 2003 session to authorize testing of a vehicle-mileage tax, reports
the Associated Press. 
Oregon was the first state back in 1919 to adopt a gas tax, and today
officials expect revenues to flatten as gas mileage improves and more
hybrid cars come on line. 
Jim Whitty, the task force administrator, says his group is looking at a
per-mile charge of up to 1.25 cents to generate funds comparable to the
current gas tax. 
"We also have to have a way to track mileage only within the state,"
Whitty told the AP. This rules out basing the fee on odometer readings,
which would include out-of-state driving. 
"Technology has improved to the degree that this can be done, with an
electronic device," he said. 
The device in each car would be linked to a Global Positioning Satellite
system, or GPS, which allows pinpoint navigation by bouncing signals off
satellites. 
The task force hopes to organize a test of this system if lawmakers
approve, checking to see if the system even works, then conducting a
yearlong evaluation. 
There are several options for actually collecting fees. One is to send
vehicle owners a monthly bill, another is to outfit gas stations so they
can read vehicle transponders and collect the tax at fueling stops. 
If you think the new method would do away with the tax on fuel, think
again. In assessing the new levy, drivers would get credit for gas tax
already paid. 
To protect drivers' privacy, using the system to track cars in real time
would be illegal. New cars would be required to have the GPS technology.
Owners of older cars would be allowed to take part by retrofitting them. 
A final decision on the proposal is not expected to come until the 2005
legislative session at the earliest. 

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