Drivers filling up in Will County could soon lose a small
advantage over most of their collar county peers.
On Dec. 5, a proposal to create a 4-cent countywide gas tax passed the Will
County Board Public Works and Transportation Committee, sending it to the full
county board for a final vote, according to the Herald-News.
The committee passed the tax proposal along party lines, with four Democrats
voting in favor of the tax and three Republicans voting against it. The county
board vote is Dec. 19.
Will County Director of Transportation Jeff Ronaldson proposed the gas tax in
August, estimating a 4-cent tax would generate an extra $12 million annually.
Republicans on the board said the county already will receive an extra $6.2
million from the doubled state gas tax, as well as $23 million in state money
for road projects during the next six years. Will County receives $9.2 million
from motor fuel taxes at present.
Democrats said the money is needed for infrastructure that will boost economic
development and help the county grow.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s $45 billion capital plan, which doubled the state’s gas tax
to 38 cents from 19 cents per gallon, brought Illinois’ total gas tax burden to
third- from 10th-highest in the nation. According to an Illinois Policy
Institute analysis, drivers on average will pay an extra $100 per year for the
state gas tax hike. Collectively drivers will pay $1.2 billion a year.
[ to
top of second column] |
Pritzker’s plan also granted Chicago and the collar
counties more authority to tax gasoline, allowing for a motor fuel
tax of up to 8 cents per gallon. Currently, only DuPage, Kane and
McHenry counties impose a countywide gas tax at 4 cents per gallon.
Under the new law, those counties could double their gas tax levies.
Will and Lake may enact new ones up to 8 cents per gallon, but
Will’s proposal is for half that amount.
If board members approve the tax, Will County would
be the first of the counties to take advantage of its new taxing
authority.
The county’s proposed gas tax hike would come atop the layers of
taxes drivers already pay on gasoline at the state and local levels.
In addition to federal, state and local excise taxes on motor fuel,
Illinois is one of only a handful of states that applies state and
local sales taxes to gas.
Because nearly two-thirds of Illinois’ population resides in the
collar counties, additional gas tax hikes by county governments
could push Illinois’ overall average gas tax burden above No. 3.
Will County has been shifting from Republican to Democrat in recent
years, and Democrats now hold the majority on the county board. If
the board vote Dec. 19 remains along party lines like the committee
vote, drivers could see extra pain at the county’s pumps soon
Click here to respond to the editor about this article
|