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Kaine on transportation: 'Our public expects us to act'
 
Monday, Jun 23, 2008 - 10:40 AM Updated: 03:12 PM
 
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Sen. R. Edward Houck, D-Spotsylvania:
"Well, we?ve got the opportunity (to do something). The opportunity to do something is here. It?s up to the legislators. The Senate, we?ll pass multiple bills, I?m sure. "You always have hope. You gotta have hope. Hope springs eternal."

Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling:
"Nothing new there. Same old tax increase proposal they?ve been advancing since 2002. It hasn?t been supported over the last six years, and I don?t see it being supported this year. "If we want to solve this problem, we have to find a way to do it with existing revenues, and he?s unwilling to do that. "We don?t think it?s appropriate to be raising taxes on a statewide basis. There was nothing new there. Obviously the message hasn?t gotten to him (Kaine)."

Sen. Henry L. Marsh III, D-Richmond:
"It was a good speech. The governor pointed us to a direction we ought to follow. I?m not sure he changed many minds. "But I think the people expect us to come to a solution - not just a temporary Band-Aid solution."

Sen. L. Louise Lucas, D-Portsmouth:
"We?ve got to come up with a fix. "When I was growing up, I was taught that you can only have what you can afford to pay for. If we?re going to get rid of this congestion, we?ve got to pay for it."

Sen. A. Donald McEachin, D-Henrico:
"I think the governor has called us to action. He?s shown great flexibility in saying he?s willing to work with any plan from either body. It?s up to us to respond to that call to action. "I?m an eternal optimist. I fully believe we?re going to get a plan out of the Senate."

Associated Press writer Christopher Weber contributed to this report.

Gov. Timothy M. Kaine is making yet another pitch for a fix for Virginia’s transportation system.

Opening a special session of the General Assembly this afternoon, Kaine says new taxes and fees are necessary to close a growing gap in the road-maintenance fund and generate additional dollars to build new highways and expand mass transit.

It is the third time in as many years that Kaine and the divided legislature have tried to reach terms of new funding for transportation. Previous efforts have ended in failure or have been thrown out by the courts.

Lawmakers ended today's work shortly before 2:30 p.m. and will reconvene at 11 a.m. tomorrow.

Kaine said improving transportation is not just a concern of traffic-clogged Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads. It is also a priority, he said, in Virginia’s countryside where residents believe new roads will generate jobs and revive their local economy.

"Parents are missing family dinners and soccer games," Kaine said. "Businesses that move goods and services on the road network can’t set reliable work schedules. Firefighters and EMTs who race to fires, accidents and health emergencies lose precious time as congestion blocks their path. And working families already struggling with the price of gas feel frustrations rise when a short commute turns into hours of stop-and-go traffic, while the gas burns out of their tanks."

Kaine called on the legislature to put aside partisan differences to fashion a long-term solution for the highway system, the third largest in the country.

Kaine said he recognizes that Virginians don’t welcome higher taxes during a period of economic decline, but, he said, "Virginians are responsible people. They don’t demand a free lunch."

Kaine is proposing to raise about $1 billion a year through an increase in the motor vehicle sales tax, higher registration fees and a one-cent rise in the sales tax for projects in Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads.

House Republicans, many of whom are fervent anti-taxers, have pledged to block increases. Kaine’s fellow Democrats are divided, with the party’s House caucus generally supporting a statewide increase in the sales tax of a penny to six cents on the dollar, while senate Democrats prefer higher fuel taxes.

Kaine, in remarks prepared for delivery to a joint session of the House and Senate, urged immediate action. "It is clear that this problem is real, significant and growing. Our public expects us to act."

Kaine, heading to his final year in office, told lawmakers to disregard the whims of pressure groups and do what is right for Virginia.

If we let our actions be dictated by the insular concerns of Capitol Square, the problem could well be evaded until infinity," Kaine said. "But, let’s fit our actions to the standards that prevail outside Capital Square - the standards of our citizens who send us here to solve problems and get things done."

— Jeff E. Schapiro

 

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