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Originally Posted by SOSS
Property taxes don't catch all users. There are people comuting from chilliwack and beyond or Squamish and they would be exempt. Same with vehicle levies unless all provincial vehicles are hit. User pay based in distance makes the most sense. Unfortunate that it is also one of the most challenging to implement. Compass card potentially solves this implimitation for transit users. New toll gantries at all entry and exit points to freeways/express ways would be required for proper road pricing.
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This is the basic (obvious) problem with each tax category:
Property Tax: Doesn't affect those outside the Translink area, Mayors are chickens to raise it
Vehicle Levy: Doesn't affect those who already use transit and do not own vehicles. People will register their vehicles out in Chilliwack, or some other place that the Levy doesn't apply to, though keep in mind this results in higher insurance costs. (Typically insurance is like "for personal use within 25km" or something)
Tolls and Road pricing: Difficult to pull off without infrastructure. Tolling bridges works with LPR (Licence plate readers), but you're not going to stick one of these at every intersection in Metro Vancouver, but that ~is~ the only way you're going to get everyone. Perhaps it could be combined with 100Mpixel cameras as a safety feature to nab those who run red lights. A FAR FAR cheaper solution involves requring GPS beacons, but that of course means anyone who comes from outside the area isn't paying in to it.
Regional Gas Tax/Carbon Tax/Sales tax increase: Easy to add, but taxes that are added never EVER get removed. That sets bad precedents, and the HST thing pretty much means this won't happen.
Like road tolling really only works by working it into the ICBC insurance system, and that adds another privacy issue as well. At best, putting LPR Toll plaza's at the end points of all the bridges allows a rough "zone" check, as the average person isn't going to go so far out of their way to avoid a toll if all the bridges have tolls. It's also unfair to people who live in Richmond since there would be no way to leave without hitting a poll, though nothing like the toll to leave Vancouver Island on a ferry
A GPS beacon would have to be checked against the vehicles mileage, and that raises liability issues should the vehicle become involved in an accident and the driver had disabled the beacon to cheat Translink.
We may inevitably have GPS beacons for all vehicles as a required security/insurance feature, but so far nobody has the stomach for it.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/car-tr...erns-1.1366687
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"The insurance company could say that 'for two years, people have had this in their cars and nothing's gone wrong, let's just make it obligatory," Israel said. "We've seen that happen in other technological scenarios, where it's a pilot project and at first you really are cautious on the privacy side and you put in a lot of protections. You don't make it mandatory but over time it becomes embedded."
But Lindhardsen said they see this device as a "voluntary way" for clients to save money on their insurance and to control their driving habits and that he didn't believe it's been made mandatory in other jurisdictions.
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