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Sales tax for transportation coming for voter approval in November
Half-cent for roads proposed once again
Monday, May 05, 2008
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10:30 a.m.Citing Napa County’s worsening streets and road, local leaders will try to put a half-cent transportation sales tax on the November ballot.

Unlike June 2006, when a similar tax lost at the polls, supporters will commit more money to fix local streets, with less money for big highway projects.
The Napa Valley Transportation Authority will ask local city councils to approve a road improvement plan this summer, with voters to be asked in November to approve a half-cent, 30-year sales tax to pay for it.

Supporters said they learned a lot when Napa County voters rejected a first attempt at a transportation tax two years ago.
The earlier plan “was like a Christmas tree,” American Canyon Mayor Leon Garcia said Wednesday. “There was too much stuff on it. It got confusing to people.”

The new plan keeps it simple, with 70 percent of revenue going to local jurisdictions to fix streets and roads, which are among the worst in the Bay Area, said Jim Leddy, the NVTA’s executive director.
“The earlier measure was overly complicated. It needs to focus on basic needs,” Leddy said Thursday.

In 2006, Measure H committed 50 percent of revenues for street and road repair. Most of the other 50 percent would have financed highway improvements along the Jamieson Canyon-Highway 29 corridor south of Napa.

Measure H failed with 53 percent voter approval. It required nearly 67 percent to pass.

Since then, local streets have only gotten worse. “The need speaks for itself,” said Napa Mayor Jill Techel.

Leddy will be working with city managers to see if an expenditure plan can be put together in May for the Napa Valley’s five city councils to review.

This will be a much simpler process than last time, Leddy told members of the Napa County Transportation and Planning Agency, who also serve as the Napa Valley Transportation Authority.

If 70 percent of more than $500 million in revenue goes to pothole repair, that will leave much less for local jurisdictions to wrangle over. Leddy expects that most of the remaining 30 percent to fund several American Canyon projects, an interchange at Highway 29/Jamieson Canyon Road and a flyover at Highways 221/12, east of the Butler Bridge.

The city of Napa may decide to make widening  the First Street overpass at Highway 29 a priority, while three traffic circles are being talked about for Highway 29 in Rutherford and two locations in Calistoga, he said.

Some money will be reserved for pedestrian and bicycle safety and enhancement of transit, Leddy said.

Missing from any new list of projects will be the widening of Jamieson Canyon Road/Highway 12 to four lanes. This was the “star” project of Measure H as well as a source of controversy among those who feared it would induce growth in Napa County and shift a state responsibility to local taxpayers.

Planning for the widening of Jamieson Canyon is proceeding, thanks to statewide voters approving Prop. 1B in November, 2006. Napa is getting $74 million from Prop. 1B for Jamieson, with Napa and Solano counties putting up $53 million.

In presenting the case for another sales tax effort, Leddy said Napa County and its cities need a source of transportation revenue that is steady and under local control.

Seven of the nine Bay Area counties have passed local transportation taxes for these reasons. State and federal funding is woefully inadequate and will only get worse given today’s deteriorating fiscal climate, he said.

The state increasingly awards highway construction funds to counties able to pony up a share of costs, Leddy said. Because Napa is not a “self-help” county, it lost out on another $22 million from Prop. 1B for Jamieson Canyon, he said.

Although Jamieson Canyon is going to be widened to four lanes, this is going to be an economy job, without full median barrier and minimal re-engineering of the route, he said.

Although gasoline prices are at a record high and the economy is slowing, sales tax supporters think a November election can work. Only 40 percent of voters turned out for Measure H, while twice as many can be expected at a presidential election.

Earlier this year, a private group of employers, Citizens for Safety and Congestion Relief, financed a poll about the prospects of another transportation tax.

The results were “very encouraging,” the group’s chair, Ron Profili, said in February. A measure that focuses on local roads has a good chance of passing, he said.

Calistoga Councilman Michael Dunsford worried Wednesday that Leddy wasn’t leaving a lot of time to work out an expenditure plan if there are disagreements between the cities and the county. The Board of Supervisors must approve a measure for the November ballot in August.

“The needs are very simple,” Leddy said. “There isn’t a community without potholes that need working on.”
30 comment(s)

antipc wrote on May 5, 2008 11:36 AM:

" The city & county have been misappropriating the funds for road repair for years, why give them to more to spend on frivolous endeavors that make a special interest group feel good, namely bureaucrats? "

hudds5 wrote on May 5, 2008 11:37 AM:

" I think we voted on this in the past and we were told the same thing...the money will be spent on the roads only. Yeah right. "

TOPPER wrote on May 5, 2008 12:14 PM:

" Hummmmmm........Let me think about that,...........................NOOOOOOO "

truthteller wrote on May 5, 2008 1:13 PM:

" No! "

SouthNapa wrote on May 5, 2008 2:32 PM:

" I voted yes on Measure H and I will undoubtedly vote yes on this measure as well. How many of you travel outside of Napa on a regular basis? Those who do know that an upgrade to 29/12 is LONG overdue and that the traffic has worsened exponentially the last 10-15 years.

You all can put your heads in the sand, but it isn't going to change that the roads in the City and County of Napa are in disrepair, the traffic is at an all time high, and continuing to turn down sales tax proposals is doing nothing but driving up the costs to fix this problem.

Anybody who has had the unfortunate experience of trying to get to Fairfield or Vallejo on a weekday afternoon can attest that a fix is LONG overdue. "

LMW wrote on May 5, 2008 3:23 PM:

" great...NCTPA not that far behind I guess....I wrote about Back to Basics....in register, this is close to how NCTPA should address what it needs...sticking to our local basic needs....
"

101napa4gen wrote on May 5, 2008 4:29 PM:

" If the city and county want MORE money--- tell the PEOPLE how much money is currently appropriated for street repairs and where is that money spent??? "

CommonCents wrote on May 5, 2008 4:34 PM:

" Another regressive tax? I don't think so! Sales taxes are consumption taxes and unfairly disadvantage the poor. A family making less than $40k per year in this valley spends every penny of it just to survive and has no choice about cutting back their spending. If every one of their dollars were spent on taxable items in our valley their current sales tax bill is $3,100 at the current 7.75% rate. With the new proposed tax rate of 8.25% the same family now faces a tax bill of $3,300. That’s $200 that could have been spent on prescriptions, schoolbooks, and shoes for the growing kids, etc. Add to this inflation and you can see how this would add to the pressures that are squeezing our middle class into poverty.

Then there’s the old adage: tax what you want less of and subsidize what you want more of. Do you really mean to tell people that you want them to buy less in this down economy?
"

kingsavage wrote on May 5, 2008 10:32 PM:

" seems like the only roads that get repaired in this town are the one's traveled on by tourists. "

AREYOUSERIOUS wrote on May 6, 2008 4:17 AM:

" don't fix the roads now! I have finally memorized where all the pot holes are and now I don't hit them anymore! "

kevin wrote on May 6, 2008 4:58 AM:

" This tax is DOA. With gas prices at almost $4 per gallon, the gas sales tax revenue is at record levels. We don't need another huge tax to further depress the economy... "

hudds5 wrote on May 6, 2008 6:31 AM:

" Road repairs in Napa are way overdue but we already voted on a sales tax increase to fix this problem...where's the cash? Every election were are compelled to make a decision on paying more taxes for upgrades in our roads and schools, but I haven't noticed any changes between election years. "

boots wrote on May 6, 2008 7:59 AM:

" No! Nope, No way. Not one more penny!
"

Concerned Citizen wrote on May 6, 2008 9:07 AM:

" Oh, for God's sake...here we go again. Hey, DoT..get out of the trough and stick to your budget. "

Paddy wrote on May 6, 2008 10:55 AM:

" I have no problem with the tourists. In fact the sales tax will certainly hit them in their pocket book, assisting in paving streets and highways they use today.

It's the construction vehicles that really destroy our streets and highways and there's little, if any, recourse. I am offended at paying even more taxes to support the companies and corporations trashing our streets.

I'm sure they're thrilled that wear and tear on their trucks will be significantly reduced because we're fixing the streets they continue to destroy.

"

funnyme wrote on May 6, 2008 12:00 PM:

" Just like any other repair "our homes" need: Show me the estimate, show me where the money should come from and then ask me if I am willing to start thinking about dropping one more penny in that bottomless bucket.

AREYOUSERIOUS,
Thanks for the laugh. I'm still laughing.
"

cagirl wrote on May 6, 2008 12:34 PM:

" Hello????? Napa City and County officials must be joking--when they spend all of the money on absolutely overinflated salaries, they resort to asking for more money in taxes!!! What a joke. "

musikluvr wrote on May 6, 2008 2:11 PM:

" This new tax is DOA and will be squashed like a bug! Remember Measure H! "

musikluvr wrote on May 6, 2008 2:24 PM:

" They need a tax...Really? For what? They will be working with the city managers to see if an expenditure plan can be put together? So they're really not sure they need a tax, but they will see it they can find a way to spend it? We're not a "Self Help" county? What is that Mr. Leddy. Show me what that means in the Government Code or some other official document! The truth is "Self Help" is just another bureaucratic invention to try to intimidate the voters. I doesn't work here in Napa County. Remember, we rejected Measure H for exactly the same reasons. "

Native74 wrote on May 6, 2008 2:29 PM:

" How much taxpayer money is going to be spent this time on propaganda? I believe the amount last time was in the area of $500k, which could have gone a long way towards reconstructing at least one segment of roadway!

Quit wasting our money on a tax increase and feasibility studies! "

mikeb wrote on May 6, 2008 2:33 PM:

" Maybe if NCTPA has NOT been spending it's time and resources campaigning for Measure H they would have been able to properly execute the bidding process for Vine bus operations. Mark me down now as a NO vote on Measure H(b) "

plasticpinkflamingo wrote on May 6, 2008 8:57 PM:

" Anyone who wants to vote yes for this tax, I have some nice used school furniture to sell you . . .

AreYouSerious - very funny and right on target! Keep it coming! "

LMW wrote on May 6, 2008 10:19 PM:

" NCTPA

SEE COMMENTS....All not supportive of fixing our roads....already know where pot holes are, want to know where cash is, budget??? used furniture for sale and some still thinking....NO!!!

Good Luck!!! create that web... "

opiniagirl wrote on May 6, 2008 10:22 PM:

" Um...How but no McFly! "

areyouserious wrote on May 7, 2008 4:07 AM:

" no really... there is that one on 29 North in the left lane right at the Lincoln overpass... be sure to get to the right side of the left lane and you will be fine. If you are getting onto 29 North, then you need to stay on a shoulder; either one, doesn't matter... that whole on ramp is FUDGED up!

Then there is that one on Jefferson; oh wait toooooo many to count!

funny me? plastic pink flamingo.... I will be appearing at an open mic night somewhere near you or a pothole....

"

musikluvr wrote on May 7, 2008 4:38 PM:

" they want to spend big bucks to bail American Canyon's Roads out? Over 2,000 new houses were built in American Canyon in the past 8 years - where is the money from the developers to fix those problems? Napans had to pass a school bond to buy a new high school costing $130,000,000 for American Canyon because they forgot to provide for their schools when all of those houses were built. We also know that American Canyon has no water supply for its community...Will Napas have to buy them a lake too? "

musikluvr wrote on May 9, 2008 2:09 PM:

" Solano County anti-taxers have defeated a transfer tax 4 times in a row and they are our friends and will be helping us defeat our insensitive transportation officials a second time...By the way, where is Dodd? He's a guy who never met a tax he didn't like but he's being quiet. Is it because he is running for reelection and doesn't want us to remember his taxing baggage? Aww, come one Dodd tell us the truth, you are the prime mover for this tax, right? "

109823 wrote on May 9, 2008 10:40 PM:

" Read my lips no new taxes. Here's a thought, take all the money that goes to suppport illegals and fix the roads. The illegals will leave (cuz there's no more freebies) there'll be less cars on the road and ultimately less potholes. Problems solved!! "

LMW wrote on May 10, 2008 9:57 PM:

" See numbers..70% and we all need to put focus towards Safe Routes to School for the safety of our children and their children...paving that route for pedestrian and bicycle friendly access..assisting congestion. Another, the areas mentioned where tax should go are the worst and used by all coming or going traffic and is not an American Canyon problem...its a Napa County problem...If we want to live in a place to be proud of then you need to participate and support the needed dollars...or you can keep complaining about our terrible roads and complain where the money went or goes...it may ripple down to new solutions for our future transportation plan if we fix the simple things...We are being asked for the tax increase, opening up the participation. Let's repair our roads for us all. No whining zone... "

foss valley wrote on May 14, 2008 12:52 PM:

" no more taxation without representation. take money from the socialist, social welfare system to pay for infrastructure. "

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