Hampton Roads Transportation Authority; abolishes Authority, taxes, etc., dedicated to operation. (SB676)
Introduced By
Sen. John Miller (D-Newport News)
Progress
✓ |
Introduced |
✗ |
Passed Committee |
☐ |
Passed House |
☐ |
Passed Senate |
☐ |
Signed by Governor |
☐ |
Became Law |
Description
Hampton Roads Transportation Authority. Abolishes the Authority and the taxes, fees, and charges dedicated to financing its operation and programs. Read the Bill »
Outcome
Bill Has Failed
History
Date | Action |
---|---|
01/14/2008 | Presented and ordered printed 088861275 |
01/14/2008 | Referred to Committee on Transportation |
01/22/2008 | Impact statement from DPB (SB676) |
01/31/2008 | Continued to 2009 in Transportation (10-Y 4-N 1-A) (see vote tally) |
02/07/2008 | Committee substitute printed 083538275-S1 |
Comments
EXCELLENT!
The HRTA is an abomination--gotta go. Vote yes to axe this unregulated tax machine.
The all-appointed HRTA is bad government and it needs to be abolished. Please support this bill - simply because it was a mistake to create the HRTA in the fisrt place. Our region had a referendum on the same "package" of highway projects back in 2002 - the same "package" of highway projects was rejected by a 2 to 1 margin! At the very least, the citizens should vote to decide if we wish to create an all-appointed defacto regional government.
Transportation Chairman
Virginia Beach Taxpayer's Alliance
I'm among the two-thirds majority in the 2002 referendum that defeated this Authority and feel that its existance defies democratic government in the oldest representative assembly in the hemisphere. Its projects and philosophy look backard, not forward. It survives at the pleasure of legislators and at the reprehension of the great majority of its affected citizens. I ask that you respect our wishes and allow us to pursue wiser solutions.
The al-appointed HRTA never shoud have been created in the first place. Abolishing the HRTA is a "must do" priority.
The price of decent roads shoud not require citizens to be forced to suffer bad government.
The HRTA is very bad government.
The Virginia Peninsula representatives who voted for the HRTA when it was introduced will be punished just as EX-senator Marty Williams was in June 2007 unless they work to abolish and succeed in getting rid of this oppressive legislation. Every day another Peninsula voting taxpayer becomes educated about this taxing authority and realizes that those who imposed it on them are not to be awarded another term.
It's probably apparent that this and similar bills seek remedy for the two-thirds majority that rejected this Authority in our 2002 regional referendum. While our goals include realizing better solutions and methods, they also include finding justice within the democracy of our constitutional commonwealth.