© 2024 Ideastream Public Media

1375 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
(216) 916-6100 | (877) 399-3307

WKSU is a public media service licensed to Kent State University and operated by Ideastream Public Media.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Drivers Will See Higher Prices at Gas Pump

a photo of a gas pump
DAN KONIK
/
STATEHOUSE NEWS BUREAU
The tax on a gallon of gas will increase 10.5 cents to 38.5 cents per gallon.

A transportation budget bill is headed to Gov. Mike DeWine’s office for his signature. He says he approves of the House and Senate deal that increases the gas tax by 10.5 cents, but it might only be a short-term fix to the state’s construction budget gap.

Drivers will be asked to pay more at the gas pump starting in July. Ohio lawmakers voted to raise the tax on gas by 10.5 cents, making the state tax total 38.5 cents a gallon.

The deal with the House and Senate also included a 19-cent increase to the diesel fuel tax.

These hikes are projected to generate about $865 million a year in revenue for Ohio’s infrastructure. About $524 million of that pot will go towards the state, while the rest will be divvied up among Ohio’s local governments.

Republican House Speaker Larry Householder said, after weeks of debate on the issue, they think this strikes the right balance.

“The state made a case that between $500 to $550 million was what they needed in the first year and this reached that goal, and it provided a lot of critical money needed by the locals as well. So yes, I was pleased with this.”

Republican Senate President Larry Obhof, who was apprehensive at raising the gas tax from the start, said the final version of the bill makes sure the state can still maintain its roadways.

“Improving our roads, improving our bridges, fixing problems that we see throughout Ohio and making Ohio as strong as it can be. While taking exactly what we need and preserving the taxpayers’ ability to pay their bills before they pay the government’s.” 

Gov. Mike DeWine first proposed an 18-cent increase to the gas tax, saying this would help bridge an expanding budget gap in the Ohio Department of Transportation’s construction funds. 

ODOT said it needed to generate an average of $1 billion annually over the course of 10 years. 

DeWine believes the legislature’s increase will work for the state, for now.

“The real difference is not in the first year and the second year. The real difference you see between how we approach this is I was trying to get a fix for 10 years, look that may have been overly ambitious to try to do that, we’ve got a fix for a few years.”

Householder agrees that this might only help carry Ohio’s construction costs for a few years. But he highlighted a study commission created in the bill that will be required to take an in-depth look at the state’s driving habits and fuel use. The group can determine if a gas tax will still be the best indicator of construction costs and if developments in new technology might lead to changes.

“To find out what Ohio’s gonna look like down the road and how are we gonna pay for our roads and pay for our infrastructure moving forward and making certain that Ohio maintains their place as a leader for transportation in this country.”

The battle over increasing the gas tax reached a stalemate in conference committee, when members of the House and Senate must come to an agreement on the changes made to the bill.

The House originally had a hike of 10.7 cents and the Senate put the gas tax increase at 6 cents. At one point, Householder said the House had a deal with DeWine at 11 cents and blamed the Senate for holding out.

Republican Senator Matt Dolan (R-Chagrin Falls) said fighting to bring that 11 cents down half a cent meant keeping about $33 million in the taxpayers’ pockets.

“And while sometimes it felt like it was the Senate against the world, that was always our mission. Fill the need, protect the taxpayers.”

The transportation budget put $70 million towards public transportation. It also got rid of the state’s two-license plate rule. Starting in 2020, a vehicle will only be required to display one license plate.

DeWine has the power to line-item veto provisions of the bill, he said it’s a possibility but wants more time to read over the legislation first.

Andy Chow is a general assignment state government reporter who focuses on environmental, energy, agriculture, and education-related issues. He started his journalism career as an associate producer with ABC 6/FOX 28 in Columbus before becoming a producer with WBNS 10TV.