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Get the latest news and research from Badger Institute
- Socialists’ Milwaukee golden age and the light it sheds now
- Milwaukee Public Schools, facing crises, should close 25 schools, report warns
- Easy graders make real life harder
- For glimpse of a dismal Wisconsin future, just look at our Great Lakes neighbor
- Referendums on development could kill state’s growth
- Measure what matters: family structure and its impact on learning
- Wisconsin’s southern border shows what freedom brings
- When students harm themselves economically by going to college
Browsing: Transportation
Minimum markup laws hurt consumers by making goods more costly. Wisconsin should repeal its antiquated minimum markup law, as Badger Institute has advocated for decades.
Assembly Speaker Robin Vos on Wednesday renewed a call for Wisconsin to adopt tolling as a way to pay for state infrastructure projects. An alternative is needed, he said, as increased fuel efficiency and an increase in electric cars on the road are contributing to declining gas tax revenues.
In recent years, Wisconsin has been transferring money from the general fund into the transportation fund. And for many years, every projection has shown that gas tax revenue likely has peaked and henceforth will decline as cars get better mileage and as more electric vehicles hit the road.
The motor vehicle fuel tax, long the mainstay for highway funding in Wisconsin, is becoming unsustainable as a revenue source due to increased vehicle mileage and popularity of vehicles that use no fuel. Now is the time to consider a replacement.
Why would a citizenry want its government to require, by law, higher prices? At anytime, it’s a good question but, as veteran journalist Ken Wysocky points out, at a time of raging inflation, it takes on a new urgency.
It’s campaign season, so the only numbers that seem to matter to the mainstream media are the ones in polls.
As a way for funding an important public good — highways — Wisconsin’s gas tax was pretty good
Inside a $1.2 trillion bill, state Republicans say, is a progressive spending dream list
As streetcar ridership and funding dwindle, alderman warns of long-term fiscal burden
Outdated Wisconsin law hampers electric automaker’s direct-sales business model
Highway funding, which relies on the gas tax, will be hard hit as fuel sales decline
The Hop, a $128 million streetcar that travels a 2.1-mile loop in downtown Milwaukee, is a classic boondoggle made possible by federal grants (i.e., taxpayer money). Meanwhile, the Joseph Project, a Milwaukee transportation enterprise that rejects government funding, is helping central city residents secure good-paying manufacturing jobs in neighboring counties. With a small fleet of church vans (most of them donated), the Joseph Project creates taxpayers instead of fleecing them.
Video shows how The Hop fleeces taxpayers while the Joseph Project creates them.
Poor pavement condition and high spending mean the state isn’t getting top value from its highway dollars
A tolling system on our interstate highways will make sure that all cars using our roads, even those from out of state, will contribute toward their upkeep and maintenance.
State funding for local roads should be used only for projects that create better and more efficient transportation routes or spur economic development.
Wisconsin needs to face the reality of declining fuel-tax revenue and transition to per-mile charges
The Department of Transportation now has the opportunity to study tolling as a path forward to fix our crumbling infrastructure
A better way to help the disabled get to work.
Claims that the streetcar swayed major development decisions in downtown Milwaukee are off track

