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San Mateo County Vehicle Registration Fee, Measure M (November 2010)
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Measure M adds $10 to the fees associated with registering a vehicle in the county. The new tax/fee will generate $6.7 million/year for the county. A simple majority vote was required to enact the new tax.
The $10 fee will go into effect in April 2011 and will last for 25 years. San Mateo County already charged a $4 vehicle registration fee. The $4 fee is set to expire in late 2012.[2]
The decision to put the fee hike request on the November ballot was made by the City/County Association of Governments (C/CAG). C/CAG is an agency in the county with a 21-member elected board. The agency addresses transportation and air quality issues in the county.
Election results
Election results are from the San Mateo County elections division as of November 27, 2010.
Use of funds
Measure M funds will be divided in this way:
- Half of the money, about $3.2 million, will be given to cities within the county on a pro-rata formula based on population and road miles within the city. Under this formula, Foster City will get about $106,000 each year while the City of San Mateo will get about $375,000 each year.[3]
- Regardless of population or road miles, each city will receive a minimum of $75,000.
- About $3.2 million will go to services for seniors and people with disabilities provided by Caltrain and SamTrans.
- 5% will go toward administrative cost.
Allowable uses of the funds received by cities are pavement resurfacing, pothole repair, signs and striping, traffic signals, street sweeping, storm-inlet cleaning and local shuttles.[4]
Opposition
The Silicon Valley Taxpayers' Association opposed Measure M. They argued that residents should not have to pay any new fees or taxes during economic hard times.[2]
Text of measure
The question on the ballot:
| Measure M: To help maintain neighborhood streets, fix potholes, provide transportation options, improve traffic circulation, provide transit options including senior and disabled services, reduce congestion, reduce water pollution from oil and gas runoff, and provide safe routes to schools, shall the Congestion Management Agency for San Mateo County levy a $10 registration fee, for 25 years, on vehicles registered in San Mateo County, requiring annual audits and all funds be spent for programs and projects in San Mateo County |
See also
- Vehicle registration fees in California
- Alameda County Vehicle Registration Fee
- Santa Clara County Vehicle Registration Fee
External links
- Full text of Measure M
- Impartial analysis of Measure M
- Argument in favor of Measure M
- Argument against Measure M
- Rebuttals to arguments in favor of Measure M
- Rebuttals to arguments against Measure M
References
- ↑ San Mateo County Times, "San Mateo County vehicle registration fee heads to ballot", July 8, 2010
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 San Jose Mercury News, "Measure M would add $10 to vehicle registration fee for San Mateo County drivers", October 8, 2010
- ↑ San Mateo Daily Journal, "Local vehicle fee hike on ballot", October 18, 2010
- ↑ San Mateo Daily Journal, "Vehicle fee on November ballot", July 10, 2010
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