New Jersey Transportation Committee Chairman Wants to Borrow $3.2 Billion to End Funding Impasse

In hopes of ending New Jersey鈥檚 road construction shutdown that has lasted since July 8, Assemblyman John Wisniewski has proposed that the state borrow $3.2 billion over the next two years to restore the Transportation Trust Fund.
Democrat Wisniewski, the Transportation and Independent Authorities Committee chairman, doesn鈥檛 believe that his party鈥檚 leaders, Senate President Steve Sweeney and Speaker Vincent Prieto, nor Republican Gov. Chris Christie can resolve their long-standing impasse over how to offset the fuel tax hikes of 27 cents per gallon on diesel and 23 cents per gallon on gas that both support. Christie鈥檚 plan includes a 1% sales tax decrease, while Sweeney鈥檚 phases out New Jersey鈥檚 estate tax.
New Jersey鈥檚 current taxes of 17.5 cents on diesel and 14.5 cents on gas are the nation鈥檚 lowest outside of Alaska and haven鈥檛 been raised since 1988.
鈥淩aising taxes is hard and if you cut one, it鈥檚 going to be very difficult to restore it,鈥 said Wisniewski, who for years has called for a 25 cents per-gallon fuel tax increase tied to the consumer price index.
However, since that proposal has never gained sufficient traction in Trenton, Wisniewski听now is听taking a different approach, which he termed 鈥渢he least bad鈥 of the options to end the crisis.
鈥淚t鈥檚 clear that this governor is holding the Transportation Trust Fund hostage to an unreasonable and unaffordable tax cut,鈥 Wisniewski told Transport Topics. 鈥淗is price to get the Transportation Trust Fund back to where it should be is to carve a huge hole in the state budget. We have done that for over a generation, and there鈥檚 never enough growth to cover all things that we promise. And the Senate wants to give a tax cut to the super wealthy, 3,500 filers a year.鈥
So with interest rates having been low for a couple of years and not forecast to soar, Wisniewski wants New Jersey to borrow the money that would fix TTF.
鈥淔or at least the last three budget years, the Christie Administration has been using sales tax revenue to fund additional indebtedness to run the Transportation Trust Fund,鈥 explained Wisniewski, who鈥檚 worried about thousands of construction workers who have been laid off as well as a number of contractors he said might go bankrupt because of the shutdown. 鈥淚鈥檝e never been a fan of just borrowing the money, [but] 鈥 if it鈥檚 been good for the last three years, let鈥檚 do it for two more years until we have a new governor who can address this on a more rational basis. There鈥檚 no better time to borrow than right now.鈥
Wisniewski said his party鈥檚 leaders have been neutral on his bill. Spokesmen for Christie and Sweeney didn鈥檛 respond to requests for comment. Others were negative.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 like continuing on the borrowing treadmill, which will add additional costs, requiring an even bigger gas tax increase down the road,鈥 said Democratic Sen. Ray Lesniak, who favors a 25 cents-per-gallon fuel tax hike phased in over three years.
鈥淭hey should stop kicking the can down the road, or we鈥檒l be facing an even higher tax than the significant increase proposed,鈥 New Jersey Motor Truck Association Executive Director Gail Toth said. 鈥淭hey should also be focusing on ensuring that the TTF taxes are used only to maintain the infrastructure: Close the loopholes that prevent them being used for other needs.鈥
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