"Trucking has done well because for the most part they have our vast freeway and roadway system to travel on for basically free... "
Vaughn: I just couldn't let this one pass w/o comment. Obviously you've never owned and operated a class 8 commercial vehicle if you think they run up and down the roads for free or anything close to it. If it wasn't for the road use taxes and fuel taxes and excise taxes and other taxes that trucks pay, most of the roads in this country wouldn't be maintained at anything close to current levels.
Just by way of example, in Oregon they have a state income tax along with property taxes that are significant. I don't know which is which, but those 2 taxes are number 1 and number 3 in revenue production for the state. PUC taxes (Taxes on trucks to use the highways) are number 2. Its a humongous revenue producer.
Anybody who thinks trucks don't pay to use the roads is just wrong or completely ignorant of the facts. Just wait until they put GPS sensors on the cars in Oregon (this is actually legislation they're trying to pass there) and Joe Citizen has to pay for every mile he travels (just like the trucks do only at a lesser rate) and see how free they think it is. Currently it costs each 18 wheeler you see on the freeway nearly $85. 00 in taxes just to the Oregon PUC to make one round trip from the OR/CA state line to Portland and back. Thats about one days trucking for a solo driver. If that happened 5 days a week for 52 weeks, that one truck would pay just to the OR PUC $21,970 dollars per year. If you wanted to run from the ID/OR line to Portland and back that would cost a little over $100. 00. $103. 50 to be exact. That doesn't count what the Feds take. They want $550. 00 (IRS Form 2290) before you can even buy a license for a truck, which costs on average around $2,500. 00 per year plus how ever much fuel taxes get paid each month.
Each and every truck you see running up and down I-5 or I-84 pays these kinds of taxes on a daily basis. Free it's not!
Vaughn: I just couldn't let this one pass w/o comment. Obviously you've never owned and operated a class 8 commercial vehicle if you think they run up and down the roads for free or anything close to it. If it wasn't for the road use taxes and fuel taxes and excise taxes and other taxes that trucks pay, most of the roads in this country wouldn't be maintained at anything close to current levels.
Just by way of example, in Oregon they have a state income tax along with property taxes that are significant. I don't know which is which, but those 2 taxes are number 1 and number 3 in revenue production for the state. PUC taxes (Taxes on trucks to use the highways) are number 2. Its a humongous revenue producer.
Anybody who thinks trucks don't pay to use the roads is just wrong or completely ignorant of the facts. Just wait until they put GPS sensors on the cars in Oregon (this is actually legislation they're trying to pass there) and Joe Citizen has to pay for every mile he travels (just like the trucks do only at a lesser rate) and see how free they think it is. Currently it costs each 18 wheeler you see on the freeway nearly $85. 00 in taxes just to the Oregon PUC to make one round trip from the OR/CA state line to Portland and back. Thats about one days trucking for a solo driver. If that happened 5 days a week for 52 weeks, that one truck would pay just to the OR PUC $21,970 dollars per year. If you wanted to run from the ID/OR line to Portland and back that would cost a little over $100. 00. $103. 50 to be exact. That doesn't count what the Feds take. They want $550. 00 (IRS Form 2290) before you can even buy a license for a truck, which costs on average around $2,500. 00 per year plus how ever much fuel taxes get paid each month.
Each and every truck you see running up and down I-5 or I-84 pays these kinds of taxes on a daily basis. Free it's not!