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The Terminator Targets California Clunker's
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from the:
CA Smog Battle Plan to Target Clunkers
By Miguel Bustillo
LA Times Staff Writer
May 4, 2004
The Schwarzenegger administration, working with business
groups, legislators and environmentalists, is promoting an ambitious anti-smog
initiative to eliminate the largest contributors to dirty air in California —
heavy-polluting, older model cars, trucks, buses and farm vehicles.
The plan would cost $200 million to $400 million a year, and some lawmakers
have proposed raising fees on gasoline and vehicle registration to pay for it.
Rising gas prices threaten to scuttle that proposal, however.
Although the governor has yet to endorse a funding plan, administration
officials are considering numerous options. They include raising fees, but
also a proposal — similar to the check-off system to help finance elections —
whereby consumers could voluntarily pay higher vehicle registration fees and
their employers could provide matching funds.
Administration officials say the governor is committed to finding a way to pay
for the initiative, which would significantly help fulfill a
campaign promise to cut California's air pollution in half.
Roughly 5% of the state's cars and heavy-duty buses and trucks,
typically older models, are responsible for half of the air pollution from
motor vehicles, the leading cause of the state's chronically dirty air,
according to air quality officials. The initiative would
seek to remove those vehicles from California's roads by offering their owners
financial incentives to junk them.
"We need to get the dirtiest cars off the roads and move to cleaner vehicles,"
said Terry Tamminen, Schwarzenegger's environmental protection secretary. The
expansion is one of Schwarzenegger's main environmental priorities, along with
reducing fuel consumption and creating a "hydrogen highway" of filling
stations to help promote the alternative fuel, he said.
"Obviously, we want to generate serious money for this, but it can't be an
economy-buster," Tamminen said. "We are trying to find some creative ways of
doing this. We are bringing unusual suspects to the table."
Getting older cars off the road is one of the few ways that
California can significantly address motor vehicle pollution, which is largely
regulated by the federal government, environmentalists and air
quality officials noted.
Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Southern California
air quality officials had overstepped their bounds by enacting rules that
required operators of large vehicle fleets to buy low-polluting vehicles.
The rules were part of an effort by the local air officials to expand their
authority in light of what they see as an inadequate response to smog by
federal authorities.
"Everyone seems to be coming to the understanding that mobile sources [such as
cars and trucks] represent 70% of the smog problem, and we need to do
something like this if we are ever going to deal with that in a real manner,"
said Barry Wallerstein, executive officer of the South Coast Air Quality
Management District, who has taken part in the negotiations. "The business
community is participating in a very progressive manner, and I am cautiously
optimistic that we will be able to arrive at a consensus."
The recent spike in gas prices, however, could make a one-cent a gallon
wholesale gasoline fee, advocated by some lawmakers, a tough sell. The
Schwarzenegger administration has been involved in discussions for weeks, but
has not declared support for fee increases proposed by lawmakers. The gasoline
fee is opposed by truckers while car dealers are against a hike in
registration fees.
"If we can reach something that all of society thinks is good, we have a good
chance of moving this along," said K.C. Bishop, a lobbyist for ChevronTexaco
Corp. "The big problem I see is trying to do this at a time when the price of
gas, especially diesel, is so high. It's the biggest risk we have in all of
this — bad timing."
The relatively small $2 vehicle license fee increase — which is important to
oil industry representatives, who assert that consumers should share some
of the costs — also could sink the proposal, given the volatility of the
car registration issue in California politics.
"You are making everyone pay for the few who are driving clunkers," said Brian
Maas, director of government affairs for the California Motor Car Dealers
Assn., adding that the registration fee increase should be placed on the
ballot for voters to consider. "Someone who buys a [hybrid Toyota] Prius would
have to pay more to register their car under this proposal, which makes no
sense."
Groups active in the discussions of the initiative said it would
take a decade to remove grossly polluting vehicles from the road or fix them.
The funding would then be discontinued.
California already has cut harmful exhaust by more than 100,000 tons per year
with programs to replace old diesel-powered school buses, farm equipment and
other heavy-duty engines. But those programs are financed with bonds and will
soon run out of money. The initiative would keep them running. Those programs
have been shown to be a relatively cheap way to cut air pollution — from
$6,000 to $15,000 per ton of unhealthful exhaust compared with $100,000 for
similar reductions from smokestacks.
"We still have not reached a consensus on how to pay for all of this, or
what is going to be in the mix, but the tone of the discussions right now
suggests that this could be an investment of some magnitude," said Bob
Lucas, a lobbyist for the California Council for Environmental and Economic
Balance, a business group. "What we are talking about is a
significantly expanded program that includes not only diesel but also older
gasoline vehicles."
Several lawmakers already are carrying legislation to enact various pieces of
the expansion.
Assemblywoman Fran Pavley (D-Agoura Hills) is sponsoring a bill that would
allow local air district officials to raise vehicle license fees by $2 to help
finance air programs, raising an estimated $45 million annually. A $4 portion
of each registration fee is already allocated to fight air pollution.
Assemblyman Marco Firebaugh (D-Los Angeles) has written a measure that would
raise gasoline prices at the wholesale level, not the pump, by at least a cent
a gallon, which would generate more than $185 million a year. "Year in and
year out, we have a discussion — sometimes a fight — about funding for air
pollution programs," he said. "This time, we have tried to achieve a consensus
position that would take us 10 years into the future.
"I think they have clearly gotten the message from the
administration that this is one of the governor's priority areas,"
he said of business groups. "Rather than being dragged into a fight
that they could lose, I think they are making a good-faith effort to be a part
of the solution."
If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at
latimes.com/archives.

Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
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