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<br /> <br />ECC <br />UGENE ITY OUNCIL <br />AIS <br />GENDA TEM UMMARY <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />Action: An Ordinance Concerning Motor Vehicle Fuel Dealer’s Business License Tax and <br /> <br />Amending Section 3 of Ordinance No. 20337 <br /> <br />Meeting Date: January 28, 2008 Agenda Item: 4 <br />Department: Public Works Staff Contact: Kurt Corey <br />www.eugene-or.gov Contact Telephone Number: 682-5241 <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />ISSUE STATEMENT <br /> <br />Council action tonight would amend or repeal sections of the Eugene City Code dealing with the Business <br />License Tax on Motor Vehicle Fuel Dealers. The action recommended by the City Manager and illustrated <br />in the proposed ordinance offered as Attachment A would extend the sunset provision on the two-cent per <br />gallon fuel tax rate increase enacted in 2005 for three additional years, with the effect of keeping the tax rate <br />at five cents per gallon through February 28, 2011. This would hopefully allow sufficient time for state <br />legislative efforts to increase road funding for local jurisdictions and also for development and <br />implementation of other elements of the council package funding strategy. As an alternative, the council <br />could choose tonight to repeal the sunset provision entirely, effectively leaving the fuel tax rate at five cents <br />per gallon indefinitely. This alternative draft ordinance is offered as Attachment B. In either case, council <br />action on this item is needed tonight if the intent is to prevent administrative implementation of the two-cent <br />roll-back in the tax rate collected by the City. <br /> <br />Eugene lacks adequate funding to operate, maintain, and preserve its local street system. For FY08, the <br />annual deficit for operation and maintenance activities in the Road Fund is projected to exceed $1.8 million, <br />and the backlog of unfunded capital street repairs has grown to over $170 million. The two-cent per gallon <br />increase enacted in 2005 has generated nearly $1.4 million annually, and all proceeds from that tax increase <br />have gone to fund the city’s Pavement Preservation Program, paying for the preservation and/or <br />reconstruction of a significant number of city streets. Until other reliable funding sources are secured, <br />continuation of the local motor vehicle fuel tax at the five-cent level is an integral component in a package <br />strategy endorsed by the Eugene City Council to ensure a stable revenue stream to support ongoing <br />operations, maintenance and preservation of the city street system. <br /> <br /> <br />BACKGROUND <br />Previous Council Action and History <br />The city’s first motor vehicle fuel tax was enacted in January 2003, based on a recommendation from the <br />Citizen’s Subcommittee on Transportation System Funding. That first fuel tax was implemented at three <br />cents per gallon and has generated almost $2 million per year since 2003. A two-cent increase to the motor <br />vehicle fuel tax was approved in January 2005, along with a sunset provision that would cause the tax to <br />revert to three cents per gallon on February 29, 2008. The City Council added the sunset provision, to be <br />effective in the third year of the increase, citing the hope that three years would allow sufficient time to <br />complete a comprehensive review of available funding options in the effort to develop a more permanent <br /> F:\CMO\2008 Council Agendas\M080128\S0801284.doc <br /> <br /> <br />