Electric vehicles out of reach for some as mechanics, builders expect
higher costs
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[March 12, 2022]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – With the pain at the pump ongoing and no sign of
it subsiding, some say the governor’s suggestion that more people buy
electric vehicles is “tone deaf.”
Amid ongoing record inflation and record gas prices, Gov. J.B. Pritzker
saw a silver lining this week.
“It might be that people will more likely choose when they’re going to
buy a new car to go to electric, because it’s much, much less expensive
over the long haul of ownership,” Pritzker said.
He wants Illinois to be a leader in electric vehicle production.
State Sen. Neil Anderson, R-Andalusia, said the governor is out of touch
with what’s happening on the ground.
“Tone deaf is not a strong enough word for that statement,” Anderson
said. “The single parent that has a 10, 20-year-old vehicle, that’s
trying to scrape money together to get to work, talking about them
buying, on the low end, a $60,000 electric vehicle is ridiculous.”
Kevin Johnson, owner of Johnson and Johnson Auto Service Center in
Springfield, said people are already trying to repair older vehicles to
make them last as long as possible as inflation continues to impact
personal finances.
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Increased EVs will mean increased costs for independent mechanics to get
the tools and necessary training, something Johnson said will further
increase costs on consumers.
“Some of those tuitions for that could be a couple thousand dollars for
each employee,” Johnson told The Center Square. “That’s something out of
my pocket that I have to pass on to the consumer to train these guys.”
For the building trades, Dean Graven with the Home Builders Association
of Illinois said fuel is needed for everything from drying drywall to
transporting and stacking trusses. He said going electric is
unrealistic.
“We don't have eclectic inloaders, we don’t have electric cranes, we
don’t have those,” Graven told The Center Square. “The technology may be
here in 50 years. It’s not here now so it’s just not something that’s
going to be solved very quickly.”
According to AAA, gas prices across Illinois Friday ranged from $4.12 in
White County near Indiana and Kentucky to $4.73 in Cook County. The
average price of diesel in Illinois is $4.95.
A year ago, the average for regular gas in Illinois was $2.98. For
diesel last year, the average was $3.08.
Greg Bishop reports on Illinois government and other
issues for The Center Square. Bishop has years of award-winning
broadcast experience and hosts the WMAY Morning Newsfeed out of
Springfield.
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