this post was submitted on 31 Dec 2023
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Good point, for certain individuals a personal vehicle is a must, like a tradesperson. You can't expect a HVAC tech to carry a new heat pump on the train. However, cars should be seen as a luxury that they are, and taxed more to reflect that. This is assuming we start investing into public transportation and make cities walkable.
Ideally, most people wouldn't need to use a vehicle at all, or could rent one for the times they do need one. You could have a tiered system too, where if you live in a rural or small town where a vehicle is still necessary nothing would change. If you lived in a small or medium city and had a car (outside of job requirements) you paid a small yearly tax. If you lived in a major city and had a car you pay a luxury tax.
A car tax to fund public transit is such common sense, but I don't see it ever being popular enough to become policy in North America.
Even just making people pay the full cost of car ownership. No more free public parking and a car tax that actually covers the cost of the infrastructure.