August 24, 2012
State taxpayers are tapped out
People do not have the money for new programs
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THE construction industry is lobbying for tax increases so West Virginia can expand its highway maintenance and building program.

State Transportation Secretary Paul Mattox has estimated that over the next 25 years, the state will have $15 billion in federal and state money to spend on roads and bridges.

That would average $600 million a year.

Mattox and the construction industry contend that doing what the state actually needs to do would cost nearly triple that amount - $40 billion over 25 years - or $1.6 billion more.

My response as soon as I stop laughing:

It is not that I do not think we should spend that much money on the 36,000 miles of roads and 6,850 bridges that the state maintains.

But the money simply is not there.

The 1.8 million people in West Virginia are among the poorest and oldest people in the nation. They cannot give state government another billion dollars a year no matter how noble the cause.

Roughly 43 percent of the people in West Virginia are so old, so disabled or so poor that they qualify for Medicare or Medicaid.

Most people in West Virginia spend every dime they have on the basics and wish they had a few more dimes to spend.

Drivers now pay more than 50 cents a gallon in federal and state taxes on gasoline. The legislative candidate who promises to increase the gasoline tax might as well change his name to Road Kill.

Yes, it would be nice to drive on smoother roads.

It also would be nice to have another prison built to relieve the overcrowding at the regional jails.

It also would be nice to improve schools, fully fund pensions and provide new cruisers each year for each state trooper.

But until they discover gold in Calhoun County, money will be too scarce in West Virginia to raise the taxes needed for all that stuff and more.

Maybe we can increase that $600 million a year for roads to $700 million.

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Copyright 2012 . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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