Bill Text: NY A04094 | 2021-2022 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Creates a pilot program designed to assess various issues related to implementing a vehicle-miles-traveled fee.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2021-12-10 - enacting clause stricken [A04094 Detail]

Download: New_York-2021-A04094-Introduced.html



                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________

                                          4094

                               2021-2022 Regular Sessions

                   IN ASSEMBLY

                                    February 1, 2021
                                       ___________

        Introduced  by  M.  of  A.  RODRIGUEZ  --  read once and referred to the
          Committee on Transportation

        AN ACT to create a pilot  program  designed  to  assess  various  issues
          related to implementing a vehicle-miles-traveled fee

          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:

     1    Section 1. Legislative findings.  The  legislature  hereby  finds  and
     2  declares  that  an  efficient  transportation system is critical for New
     3  York's economy and quality of  life  and  that  the  revenues  currently
     4  available  for  highways  and local roads are inadequate to preserve and
     5  maintain existing infrastructure and to provide funds  for  improvements
     6  that would reduce congestion and improve service.
     7    The  legislature further recognizes that the gas tax is an ineffective
     8  mechanism for meeting New York's long-term revenue needs because it will
     9  steadily generate less revenue as cars become more  fuel  efficient  and
    10  alternative  sources of fuel are identified. Additionally, bundling fees
    11  for roads and highways into the gas tax makes it difficult for users  to
    12  understand the amount they are paying for roads and highways.
    13    The  legislature further finds that other states have begun to explore
    14  the potential for a road usage charge to replace traditional gas  taxes,
    15  including  the  state  of  Oregon, which established the first permanent
    16  road user charge program in the nation. Road usage charging is a  policy
    17  whereby  motorists  pay  for the use of the roadway network based on the
    18  distance they travel. Drivers pay the same rate per mile driven, regard-
    19  less of what part of the roadway network they use. A road  usage  charge
    20  program  has  the  potential to distribute the gas tax burden across all
    21  vehicles regardless of fuel source and to minimize  the  impact  of  the
    22  current regressive gas tax structure.
    23    The  legislature  therefore  finds  that  experience  to date in other
    24  states across the nation demonstrates that mileage-based charges can  be
    25  implemented  in  a  way  that  ensures data security and maximum privacy

         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD03091-01-1

        A. 4094                             2

     1  protection for drivers. It is important that New York begin  to  explore
     2  alternate  revenue  sources that may be implemented in lieu of the anti-
     3  quated gas tax structure now in place. Any  exploration  or  alternative
     4  revenue sources shall take privacy implications into account, especially
     5  with  regard to location data. Travel locations or patterns shall not be
     6  reported, and legal and  technical  safeguards  shall  protect  personal
     7  information.
     8    §  2.  Road usage charge (RUC) advisory committee. (a) There is hereby
     9  created the road usage charge (RUC) advisory committee which shall guide
    10  the development and evaluation of a pilot program to assess  the  poten-
    11  tial for mileage-based revenue collection for New York's roads and high-
    12  ways as an alternative to the gas tax system.
    13    (b) The RUC advisory committee shall consist of fourteen members:
    14    (1)  the  commissioner  of the department of transportation, or his or
    15  her designee, who shall serve as chair;
    16    (2) a representative of the telecommunications industry who  shall  be
    17  appointed by the temporary president of the senate;
    18    (3)  a representative of highway user groups who shall be appointed by
    19  the governor;
    20    (4) a representative of the data security  and  privacy  industry  who
    21  shall be appointed by the senate majority leader;
    22    (5)  a  representative  of  privacy  rights advocacy organizations who
    23  shall be appointed by the governor;
    24    (6) a representative of regional transportation agencies who shall  be
    25  appointed by the speaker of the assembly;
    26    (7) a representative of the transportation research board who shall be
    27  appointed by the speaker of the assembly;
    28    (8)  a representative of the American association of state highway and
    29  transportation officials who shall be appointed by the governor;
    30    (9) the chair of the assembly transportation committee, or his or  her
    31  designee;
    32    (10)  the  chair of the senate transportation committee, or his or her
    33  designee;
    34    (11) a representative of the civic community who shall be appointed by
    35  the senate majority leader;
    36    (12) a representative of transit advocates who shall be  appointed  by
    37  the speaker of the assembly; and
    38    (13) two relevant stakeholders as determined by the governor.
    39    (c) The RUC advisory committee may request the department of transpor-
    40  tation to perform such work as the advisory committee deems necessary to
    41  carry out its duties and responsibilities.
    42    (d) The RUC advisory committee shall study RUC alternatives to the gas
    43  tax.  It  shall  gather public comment on issues and concerns related to
    44  the pilot program and shall make recommendations to  the  department  of
    45  transportation  on the design of a pilot program to test alternative RUC
    46  approaches. The RUC advisory committee may also make recommendations  on
    47  the criteria to be used to evaluate the pilot program.
    48    (e)  In studying alternatives to the current gas tax system and devel-
    49  oping recommendations on the design of a pilot program to test  alterna-
    50  tive  RUC  approaches,  pursuant to subdivision (d) of this section, the
    51  RUC advisory committee shall take all of the  following  into  consider-
    52  ation:
    53    (1) The availability, adaptability, reliability, and security of meth-
    54  ods that might be used in recording and reporting highway use.
    55    (2)  The  necessity of protecting all personally identifiable informa-
    56  tion used in reporting highway use.

        A. 4094                             3

     1    (3) The ease and cost of recording and reporting highway use.
     2    (4)  The  ease  and  cost of administering the collection of taxes and
     3  fees as an alternative to the  current  system  of  taxing  highway  use
     4  through motor vehicle fuel taxes.
     5    (5) Effective methods of maintaining compliance.
     6    (6)  The  ease  of  reidentifying  location data, even when personally
     7  identifiable information has been removed from the data.
     8    (7) Increased privacy concerns when location data is used in  conjunc-
     9  tion with other technologies.
    10    (8)  Public  and  private agency access, including law enforcement, to
    11  data collected and stored for purposes of the RUC to  ensure  individual
    12  privacy rights are protected.
    13    (f)  The  RUC  advisory committee shall consult with highway users and
    14  transportation stakeholders, including representatives of vehicle users,
    15  vehicle manufacturers, and fuel  distributors  as  part  of  its  duties
    16  pursuant to subdivision (e) of this section.
    17    §  3.  Establishment  of a pilot program. (a) Based on the recommenda-
    18  tions of the RUC advisory  committee,  it  shall  collaborate  with  the
    19  department  of  transportation  to implement a pilot program to identify
    20  and evaluate issues related to the potential implementation  of  an  RUC
    21  program in New York by January 1, 2024.
    22    (b)  At  a  minimum,  the  pilot  program  shall accomplish all of the
    23  following:
    24    (1) Analyze alternative means of collecting road usage data, including
    25  at least one alternative  that  does  not  rely  on  electronic  vehicle
    26  location data.
    27    (2)  Collect  a  minimum  amount  of  personal  information  including
    28  location tracking information, necessary to implement the RUC program.
    29    (3) Ensure that processes for collecting, managing, storing, transmit-
    30  ting, and destroying data are in place to protect the integrity  of  the
    31  data and safeguard the privacy of drivers.
    32    (c)  The  RUC  advisory committee shall not disclose, distribute, make
    33  available, sell,  access  or  otherwise  provide  for  another  purpose,
    34  personal  information or data collected through the pilot program to any
    35  private entity or individual unless authorized by a court order, as part
    36  of a civil case, by a subpoena issued on behalf  of  a  defendant  in  a
    37  criminal  case,  by  a  search  warrant,  or  in aggregate form with all
    38  personal information removed for the purposes of academic research.
    39    § 4. Report. Eighteen months after the  implementation  of  the  pilot
    40  program,  it  shall  be  concluded, and the RUC advisory committee shall
    41  report its findings and recommendations to the governor and the legisla-
    42  ture. Such report shall also be bound and made available to the  public.
    43  The report shall include, but not be limited to, a discussion of all the
    44  following issues:
    45    (a) Cost of the program.
    46    (b) Privacy, in including recommendations regarding public and private
    47  access,  including  law  enforcement,  to  data collected and stored for
    48  purposes of the RUC program to  ensure  individual  privacy  rights  are
    49  protected.
    50    (c) Jurisdictional issues.
    51    (d) Feasibility.
    52    (e) Complexity.
    53    (f) Acceptance.
    54    (g) Use of revenues.
    55    (h)  Security  and compliance, including a discussion of processes and
    56  security measures necessary to minimize fraud and tax evasion rates.

        A. 4094                             4

     1    (i) Data collection technology, including a discussion of  the  advan-
     2  tages  and  disadvantages  of various types of data collection equipment
     3  and the privacy implications and consideration of the equipment.
     4    (j) Potential for additional driver services.
     5    (k) Implementation issues.
     6    § 5. This act shall take effect immediately.
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