Maybe the NoTollsCT folks (and the recent Hearst editorial) are right: the current toll proposal should be scrapped.
Mind you, I’m still pro-tolls and have
been for years. But the Governor’s
latest plan is so insipid and compromised as to be a waste of time. It raises too little money, doesn’t toll
millions of out-of-state cars and most importantly… it seems that most people
don’t want it. Nor do they trust it will be limited to trucks.
I once described NoTollsCT founder Patrick Sasser as a “bully” because
he threatened to oust any legislator that voted for tolls. Remember “Vote for Tolls, Lose at the Polls”?
I was wrong. Sasser is mostly an activist and advocate. And he has done an amazing job at organizing
opposition to tolling on a shoestring budget of about $10,000 in small donations. Compare that to the million dollars spent in tolls lobbying
by the construction industry to little result.
Did you see the January 31st
public hearing held at the Capitol on the Governor’s latest tolls bill? The
Transportation Committee heard almost ten hours of testimony, most of it in
opposition to the plan. I watched it all
(thanks to CT-N).
In his testimony Sasser cited his
group’s 40 anti-toll rallies, 110,000 petition signatures and 29 towns
(representing one million residents) which passed resolutions against tolls and
asked lawmakers “what more will it take” to stop tolls.
Sasser isn’t a political professional,
just a Stamford firefighter with a side job in construction. But what he has built is amazing. Some say he should run for the legislature.
I’m jealous of what he’s done and wish
someone, anyone, had similarly galvanized those who support tolls. In December when a handful of
pro-tolls folks showed up at the State Capitol a Senate Democrat staffer
greeted them with “Where have you been?”
Nice.
I fundamentally disagree with Sasser
that there’s enough waste in CDOT spending to finance repairs of all that’s
wrong with our roads and rails. And it’s
disingenuous of him to tap into the “no more taxes on anything” sentiment
abroad in the land.
For weeks we’ve been promised that a
tolls vote was imminent in the legislature.
And for weeks that vote has been postponed. Why? Not
because of alleged “scheduling issues” but because the Governor clearly doesn’t
have the votes he needs to pass his plan.
Remember in May of 2019 when naïve Ned
took the media with him into a House Democratic caucus seeking lawmakers’ support
on tolls? Lamont admitted to his party
members that he’d put them “into a pickle” but promised if
they’d support him on tolls he’d help them raise money for their re-election
fights.
Now he’s delivering on that promise, adding an extra $300
million to the state’s bonding package to entice needed
votes. So much for his “debt diet”. At least lawmakers who vote yes on tolls can
tell constituents they “brought home the bacon”.
To many that’s just good ol’
politics. But it’s unbecoming of a
Governor who promised us better. The end
does not justify the means.
It’s time to scrap the Governor’s anemic
tolling bill and find an effective way to raise the money we need for
transportation… like raising the gas or sales tax. Let’s see how popular that will be.
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media