Environment

Car tab tax results: no signpost for Seattle's future

Proposition 1 may have been defeated, but Roger Valdez still believes there is environmental realism in the hearts of Seattle voters.

Car tab tax results: no signpost for Seattle's future
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Ashli Blow

Proposition 1 may have been defeated, but Roger Valdez still believes there is environmental realism in the hearts of Seattle voters.

Congratulations to the opponents of Proposition 1, the effort to charge $60 to register a car in Seattle, in order to pay  for transportation alternatives. Their message was simple to deliver:  why pay more to drive? Still, I’m not saying they won because of a  failure by supporters of Proposition 1 to deliver their message. The  supporters did exactly what they set out to: soft peddle the increased  price of driving Proposition 1 would bring, worried that they’d be seen  as waging a "war on cars."

One thing that commended the passage of Proposition 1 was that it  made it more expensive to drive. But Proposition 1 advocates refused to  embrace that message, making them look suspicious and disingenuous.

Nobody likes to pay for something that should be free, and for most  of us, driving would fall into the "free" category. Sure we have to pay  for gas, taxes, insurance, and time for traffic. But once you get behind  the wheel, it’s nothing but pavement and blue sky. All the costs of  driving, like the massive expense of that pavement, carbon emissions  damaging the climate and air, and the petroleum leaking out of cars that  fouls our water and fish habitats, aren’t seen or felt.

My comments about Prop 1 making it hard to drive and  easier to use alternative modes of transportation elicited the usual  snarky comments about social engineering, and trying to force my  lifestyle on a helpless public. The argument from the "no" side was  simple: Why pay more for something that you won’t and don’t want to use — like transit — when the things you use the most — roads — are falling apart.

Meanwhile, the "yes" side refused to confront the car or its costs.  Nor did they acknowledge the benefits of internalizing environmental and  infrastructure driving costs. Instead the campaign tried to romance  voters with the best of all worlds: faster and safer travel for cars,  bikes, people, and transit. Such a message strains credulity.

But Seattle and King County voters overwhelmingly rejected Tim  Eyman’s toll busting Initiative 1125. Seattle voters aren’t stupid. They  realize the price of driving can and should go up. To beat the car,  we'll need policies and taxes that make other modes of transit cheap or  free in exchange for an increased cost of driving.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal