Hanger: ‘I don’t consider the current ABC operation a problem’

Gov. Bob McDonnell’s plan to use money from the privatization of state-run ABC stores to fund transportation-infrastructure improvements is likely to die a quiet death in the 2011 Virginia General Assembly, according to State Sen. Emmett Hanger.

“I think some of us have decided that we would sit on it a little bit, let him make his case, in all fairness to him. But there comes a point if he persists in trying to develop a strategy to get it passed, and we’re just sitting passively allowing him to do that, the debate needs to happen,” said Hanger, R-Mount Solon, who added in an interview for a feature story in the December issue of The New Dominion Magazine that he is “hopeful that we won’t spend a lot of time and energy on this in the session.”

“I think this governor has a lot of political capital right now, and I’d like to see him use that political capital to solve real problems. And I don’t consider the current ABC operation a problem,” said Hanger, who is wrapping up his fourth term in the State Senate.

Hanger is a member and former chair of the Senate Rehabilitation and Social Services Committee, which has oversight over ABC operations, and is currently the chair of the Commonwealth Competition Council, an independent advisory body that examines opportunities for privatization of services right now provided by the state.

Both bodies have looked at ABC privatization in depth. A stumbling block in the reviews: “ABC is very well run and is contributing a significant amount of money to the general fund,” Hanger said.

Buttressing that perspective: “There’s a reason we have ABC control. From a substance-abuse standpoint, there’s a valid reason for the state to be involved,” Hanger said.

Based on the reviews, “Diverting that money by saying that you’re going to sell it and then giving that money to transportation is something of a nonstarter for me,” Hanger said.

Hanger is joining with a bipartisan group of state senators calling for an increase in the state gas tax as the most sensible approach to providing new revenues for transportation improvements.

“I don’t consider myself moderate to any degree on tax policy. What I do strongly adhere to, and I think this is very conservative – you pay for things,” Hanger said. “And we have a real need now to pay for our transportation infrastructure. And a gas tax is a user fee, in my opinion. Tolls are a user fee. In my opinion, we should adjust our gas tax and our user fees, tolls, to pay for the infrastructure that we need rather than creating things to avoid it.”

Virginia has not made any adjustments to its gas tax since setting the current 17.5-cent rate in 1986. In the intervening nearly quarter-century, increased fuel efficiency in vehicles has effectively reduced the spending power of the dollars that the tax can raise.

“Instead of getting 10 miles to the gallon, people get 30 miles to the gallon, still traveling the same amount of lane miles. It makes rational sense that you’d have to increase the fuel tax in order to compensate on a cents-per-gallon basis,” Hanger said. “If we had leadership that was basically saying that, rather than, We’ve got plenty of money, we’re just misallocating it, then people would understand that. There would be a political consensus that you could take care of that problem. We haven’t been there.”

Where we have been instead is having former governor Tim Kaine pushing the notion that the state needs to put its transportation dollars into a lockbox, which Hanger termed “soundbite politics,” and McDonnell playing politics with the finding in an audit report that the Virginia Department of Transportation is sitting on more than a billion in unspent road funds.

“The spin that’s been put out on that, I can’t allow that to stand. We’d all be stupid if we had a billion dollars laying around and didn’t realize it,” said Hanger, adding that the actual amount of unspent monies is closer to half a billion dollars, and was left there because the state used money from the federal stimulus to go toward shovel-ready transportation projects. “It wasn’t lost money. It was accumulated there in tight times from a conservative posture of not spending your last dollar,” Hanger said.

Story by Chris Graham. Chris can be reached at freepress2@ntelos.net.

81: Wait and see

Special Report by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
 

You might remember all the hubbub over what they were planning to do with Interstate 81. They were going to pave over the Valley! That was what people were saying, anyway, looking at the monstrosities of plans that we knew as the Star Solutions proposal and the Fluor proposal, not to mention what the Virginia Department of Transportation itself seemed to have in the works.

People came out in record numbers to public hearings up and down the Valley and Southwest Virginia to let officialdom know what they thought of the plans. The basic message: Thanks, but no thanks.

But there was also some ambivalence to our stand. After all, not many of us like having to deal with the truck congestion on 81, which is carrying twice the capacity of trucks that it was designed for – and considering the design flaws that any non-engineer can see with the long hills and windy curves that we’re somehow supposed to navigate to get to Roanoke or Harrisonburg or Winchester or Bristol, well, that’s saying something.

Those of us who had the time to give the issue some thought wanted to see the state look more at rail, which is to say, we wanted them to actually look at rail, as opposed to making it look like they were when we knew from reading their reports that they really weren’t. They eventually did, and released a report a few weeks ago on how increased rail capacity in Western Virginia could impact congestion on I-81.

Kudos also go out to the technocrats and their friends in the policy realm for getting to work on a new rail line connecting Manassas to Front Royal that will take some of the pressure off 81.

So we sort of got what we wanted on rail, and also sort of got what we wanted on the paving-over-of-the-Valley, because we’re now in the second decade of the 21st century, and the Valley hasn’t yet been paved over, and looking at the state’s finances, and multiple transportation-funding priorities, it’s not going to happen anytime soon, and anytime soon could be, 20 years, 30 years?

Which isn’t to say that there aren’t still issues with congestion that will need to be dealt with.
 

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Tax and spend

Streamlining effort could raise revenues, but at the cost of jobs

Special Report by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
 

The state of Virginia is losing as much as $400 million a year to uncollected taxes from Internet retailers. Streamlining a process for collecting them isn’t as easy as some would like to make it out to be – and could cost jobs in the meantime.

“We don’t dodge taxes. We pay our taxes. We pay on time. And if we make a mistake of some sort, we pay our penalties. That’s not the issue. This is supposed to be simple, but it’s everything but simple,” said Stacey Strawn, the co-owner of Blue Moon Galleries, a Waynesboro-based Internet retailer that grew from a desk in a converted bedroom office.

Now employing six, Blue Moon is by every definition a Main Street mom-and-pop – taking up residence in an abandoned building on Main Street in struggling Downtown Waynesboro, with co-owners in the husband-and-wife team of Strawn and Steve Dahl.

It’s the Main Street mom-and-pops who are ostensibly the focus for advocates of a streamlined sales tax. An effort has been under way dating back to the early part of the 2000s decade aimed at corraling the tax revenues lost to the intricacies of the U.S. tax system, which leaves the collection of sales taxes to the individual states and localities. Read more

What happened to tax reform?

Special Report by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
 

The push toward tax reform that caught up in its inner workings the sitting governor and a future governor among its bipartisan leaders fell surprisingly silent after 2004, much like the tree in the woods with no one there to witness if it actually makes a sound. Read more

Tate gets endorsements from Hanger, Allen

Edited by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
 

Today Staunton City Council Candidate Carl Tate received the endorsement of State Sen. Emmett W. Hanger and former governor and U.S. senator George F. Allen. Read more

Four perspectives on Confederate History Month

Story by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
 

Gov. Bob McDonnell has declared April to be Confederate History Month, but if you’ve read a newspaper or turned on the TV news anytime in the past few days, you knew that already.

You also know that plenty of people are plenty mad that he did this, that plenty of people are plenty pleased that he did it, and that not surprisingly the ensuing back-and-forth resulted in a media firestorm that pushed McDonnell into backtracking mode and even caught President Barack Obama in some crossfire on the fringe of the controversy.

We wanted to go beyond the press releases and the yelling matches on TV and virtual yelling matches online to the heart of whatever the matter is here. To do so, we engaged four people – Brag Bowling, the commander of the Virginia Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans; Chanda McGuffin, the president of the Staunton branch of the NAACP; Emmett Hanger, a Republican Virginia state senator; and Mark Rozell, a George Mason University political-science professor whose scholarship focuses on Republican Party politics.

If sense can be made of the Confederate History Month proclamation and the fracas that followed, it will come from talking with people with this diversity of viewpoints to bring to bear to the discussion. Read more

Raising the Specter of GOP mass flight

I’ve been saying for years that people like my friend Emmett Hanger have been abandoned by their party’s lurch to the far right and that it’s only a matter of time before they realize it. I bring that up because it’s my strong feeling that Arlen Specter will not be the last moderate Republican to flee the sinking ultraright GOP ship. Read more