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Originally Posted by acottawa
Sweden has a political culture where bureaucrats can just ignore public opinion (57% of residents opposed the congestion charge in a referendum). I don't think we have that political culture here.
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I think the popularity would depend on the implementation. The support for it might be surprisingly high if it was only in the central business district and only during peak periods (when transit frequency and congestion are both high).
The problem of course is that the city doesn't own all of the roads in the central business district, so you would need either co-operation from the other levels of government or have to exempt those roadways (increasing the number of entrance points to be monitored).
Quote:
Originally Posted by Uhuniau
At very least, start taxing workplace parking spots that are used by single-occupant private autos, and if the city doesn't have that power, get it.
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How would you enforce a parking tax on only single-occupant vehicles? You can't determine how many passengers were in an empty, parked car. Even basing the tax on the number of people in the car when parking it is problematic, as often the passengers are dropped off close to their destination and only the driver parks the car (especially if the driver and passenger(s) have different destinations).