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Quote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on February 04, 2022, 05:25:47 pmQuote from: River Don on February 04, 2022, 03:45:17 pmThey could tax short journeys much more heavily, that would encourage more walking/cycling/public transport and not penalise those who have to make longer journeys so much. You need to have the infrastructure for that though and it's just not there and it would be have to be a bloody big tax given most still need a car.My journey is an example. It would cost me something like £54 a month for the bus.. I have to walk to and from bus stops and the journey is about 45-50 minutes using two buses.Currently I can drive it in less than 20 minutes and it costs me nothing (ev charging at work).I could hack the cost, but it's the time.the buses take that is the problem and they are not comfy either.Isn't the infrastructure pretty much in place? Mobile phones seem to know where ever you go already.
Quote from: River Don on February 04, 2022, 03:45:17 pmThey could tax short journeys much more heavily, that would encourage more walking/cycling/public transport and not penalise those who have to make longer journeys so much. You need to have the infrastructure for that though and it's just not there and it would be have to be a bloody big tax given most still need a car.My journey is an example. It would cost me something like £54 a month for the bus.. I have to walk to and from bus stops and the journey is about 45-50 minutes using two buses.Currently I can drive it in less than 20 minutes and it costs me nothing (ev charging at work).I could hack the cost, but it's the time.the buses take that is the problem and they are not comfy either.
They could tax short journeys much more heavily, that would encourage more walking/cycling/public transport and not penalise those who have to make longer journeys so much.
Quote from: River Don on February 04, 2022, 05:31:31 pmQuote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on February 04, 2022, 05:25:47 pmQuote from: River Don on February 04, 2022, 03:45:17 pmThey could tax short journeys much more heavily, that would encourage more walking/cycling/public transport and not penalise those who have to make longer journeys so much. You need to have the infrastructure for that though and it's just not there and it would be have to be a bloody big tax given most still need a car.My journey is an example. It would cost me something like £54 a month for the bus.. I have to walk to and from bus stops and the journey is about 45-50 minutes using two buses.Currently I can drive it in less than 20 minutes and it costs me nothing (ev charging at work).I could hack the cost, but it's the time.the buses take that is the problem and they are not comfy either.Isn't the infrastructure pretty much in place? Mobile phones seem to know where ever you go already.I don’t take my mobile phone with me every time I go out so that wouldn’t work in my case.My wife only ever switches her phone on if she makes a call, then it goes straight off again.
Actually, with it being digital they could set all kinds of criteria for road tax. They could charge more for congested roads, they could charge more for city centres, they could charge more for busy times of day. They could charge more for bigger, heavier vehicles.So Lord Sugar would pay a fortune to take his Rolls into the City for a 9.30 meeting where as Janet could drive from Askern to work in a little Suzuki at a care home in Goole for very little.
Quote from: normal rules on February 04, 2022, 01:11:45 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 01:02:14 pmQuote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.Joe bloggs may need to think about living closer to where he works . I’m not trying to be clever here either AL.My wife used to clock up over 700 work miles a month. I suppose she is lucky. She has a job where she can wfh. All meetings now done online. She now does zero miles a month . And it won’t be changing anytime soon. Covid has been a positive in that respect. Many many areas of work have been re invented. The habit of going to an office every day has changed. Across many industries.If you live in a rural area you have in most cases no choice but to travel for virtually everything. The idea of living in a town with all the masses of people and crime to me is horrific. It's nice to look over the fields and walk down the lanes on your door step. If i didn't have this and had to live amongst the crowds, anti social behaviour and crime i would in all seriousness consider ending it all.
Quote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 01:02:14 pmQuote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.Joe bloggs may need to think about living closer to where he works . I’m not trying to be clever here either AL.My wife used to clock up over 700 work miles a month. I suppose she is lucky. She has a job where she can wfh. All meetings now done online. She now does zero miles a month . And it won’t be changing anytime soon. Covid has been a positive in that respect. Many many areas of work have been re invented. The habit of going to an office every day has changed. Across many industries.
Quote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.
Always seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.
Quote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 03:02:24 pmQuote from: normal rules on February 04, 2022, 01:11:45 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 01:02:14 pmQuote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.Joe bloggs may need to think about living closer to where he works . I’m not trying to be clever here either AL.My wife used to clock up over 700 work miles a month. I suppose she is lucky. She has a job where she can wfh. All meetings now done online. She now does zero miles a month . And it won’t be changing anytime soon. Covid has been a positive in that respect. Many many areas of work have been re invented. The habit of going to an office every day has changed. Across many industries.If you live in a rural area you have in most cases no choice but to travel for virtually everything. The idea of living in a town with all the masses of people and crime to me is horrific. It's nice to look over the fields and walk down the lanes on your door step. If i didn't have this and had to live amongst the crowds, anti social behaviour and crime i would in all seriousness consider ending it all.It was their your choice of career, to live out there, they you weren't forced into it at gunpoint.
take it up with the author, a shitster debating an anarchist, that should be interesting, not
Quote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 03:02:24 pmQuote from: normal rules on February 04, 2022, 01:11:45 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 01:02:14 pmQuote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.Joe bloggs may need to think about living closer to where he works . I’m not trying to be clever here either AL.My wife used to clock up over 700 work miles a month. I suppose she is lucky. She has a job where she can wfh. All meetings now done online. She now does zero miles a month . And it won’t be changing anytime soon. Covid has been a positive in that respect. Many many areas of work have been re invented. The habit of going to an office every day has changed. Across many industries.If you live in a rural area you have in most cases no choice but to travel for virtually everything. The idea of living in a town with all the masses of people and crime to me is horrific. It's nice to look over the fields and walk down the lanes on your door step. If i didn't have this and had to live amongst the crowds, anti social behaviour and crime i would in all seriousness consider ending it all.It was their your choice of career, to live out there, they you weren't forced into it at gunpoint.« Reply #3 on Today at 09:51:08 am by SydneyRover »Like Quotethe anarchist wants fairness?
Quote from: normal rules on February 04, 2022, 01:11:45 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 01:02:14 pmQuote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.Joe bloggs may need to think about living closer to where he works . I’m not trying to be clever here either AL.My wife used to clock up over 700 work miles a month. I suppose she is lucky. She has a job where she can wfh. All meetings now done online. She now does zero miles a month . And it won’t be changing anytime soon. Covid has been a positive in that respect. Many many areas of work have been re invented. The habit of going to an office every day has changed. Across many industries.If you live in a rural area you have in most cases no choice but to travel for virtually everything. The idea of living in a town with all the masses of people and crime to me is horrific. It's nice to look over the fields and walk down the lanes on your door step. If i didn't have this and had to live amongst the crowds, anti social behaviour and crime i would in all seriousness consider ending it all.
Quote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 01:02:14 pmQuote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.Joe bloggs may need to think about living closer to where he works . I’m not trying to be clever here either AL.My wife used to clock up over 700 work miles a month. I suppose she is lucky. She has a job where she can wfh. All meetings now done online. She now does zero miles a month . And it won’t be changing anytime soon. Covid has been a positive in that respect. Many many areas of work have been re invented. The habit of going to an office every day has changed. Across many industries.
Quote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.
Always seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.
make your mind up hound do you want to be a shitster or have forum rules?
I agree RD, and I wouldn't be surprised if the technology to defeat it isn't ready to come on the black market.
Quote from: selby on February 04, 2022, 06:55:40 pm I agree RD, and I wouldn't be surprised if the technology to defeat it isn't ready to come on the black market.Interesting thought. However tax evasion is pretty serious and if you get caught on camera somewhere you shouldn't be...There is also the question of privacey. Having the authorities monitor wherever you go isn't going to be popular.It opens a can of worms.
Quote from: River Don on February 04, 2022, 05:29:48 pmActually, with it being digital they could set all kinds of criteria for road tax. They could charge more for congested roads, they could charge more for city centres, they could charge more for busy times of day. They could charge more for bigger, heavier vehicles.So Lord Sugar would pay a fortune to take his Rolls into the City for a 9.30 meeting where as Janet could drive from Askern to work in a little Suzuki at a care home in Goole for very little.How would anybody know how to budget a journey's cost when every time they go out in their car the price per mile would different on different roads at different times?
Quote from: SydneyRover on February 04, 2022, 07:05:00 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 03:02:24 pmQuote from: normal rules on February 04, 2022, 01:11:45 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 01:02:14 pmQuote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.Joe bloggs may need to think about living closer to where he works . I’m not trying to be clever here either AL.My wife used to clock up over 700 work miles a month. I suppose she is lucky. She has a job where she can wfh. All meetings now done online. She now does zero miles a month . And it won’t be changing anytime soon. Covid has been a positive in that respect. Many many areas of work have been re invented. The habit of going to an office every day has changed. Across many industries.If you live in a rural area you have in most cases no choice but to travel for virtually everything. The idea of living in a town with all the masses of people and crime to me is horrific. It's nice to look over the fields and walk down the lanes on your door step. If i didn't have this and had to live amongst the crowds, anti social behaviour and crime i would in all seriousness consider ending it all.It was their your choice of career, to live out there, they you weren't forced into it at gunpoint.f**k me you're often on the money but thats embarrassingly naive. People are born in various places and moving to where they work isn't often feasible/affordable. There's more than 50 shades of grey on this. Many NMW workers travel to cities for work whilst higher paid colleagues either live there or enjoy hybrid/WFH roles. It has to be much more nuanced, and I don't just mean that for the workers benefit, if lower paid employees can't afford to travel to work we're in to a house of cards scenario.
Quote from: DonnyNoel on February 04, 2022, 08:09:31 pmQuote from: SydneyRover on February 04, 2022, 07:05:00 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 03:02:24 pmQuote from: normal rules on February 04, 2022, 01:11:45 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 01:02:14 pmQuote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.Joe bloggs may need to think about living closer to where he works . I’m not trying to be clever here either AL.My wife used to clock up over 700 work miles a month. I suppose she is lucky. She has a job where she can wfh. All meetings now done online. She now does zero miles a month . And it won’t be changing anytime soon. Covid has been a positive in that respect. Many many areas of work have been re invented. The habit of going to an office every day has changed. Across many industries.If you live in a rural area you have in most cases no choice but to travel for virtually everything. The idea of living in a town with all the masses of people and crime to me is horrific. It's nice to look over the fields and walk down the lanes on your door step. If i didn't have this and had to live amongst the crowds, anti social behaviour and crime i would in all seriousness consider ending it all.It was their your choice of career, to live out there, they you weren't forced into it at gunpoint.f**k me you're often on the money but thats embarrassingly naive. People are born in various places and moving to where they work isn't often feasible/affordable. There's more than 50 shades of grey on this. Many NMW workers travel to cities for work whilst higher paid colleagues either live there or enjoy hybrid/WFH roles. It has to be much more nuanced, and I don't just mean that for the workers benefit, if lower paid employees can't afford to travel to work we're in to a house of cards scenario.We're just so accustomed to easy travel.When Denison brought the railway to Doncaster he built workers houses right next to the plant (one of them was where the man who started a football club called Rovers in the town lived) It's just within living memory when people used to walk or bicycle enmass to the local factory.Long distance commutes may not necessarily be viable in future.
Quote from: DonnyNoel on February 04, 2022, 08:09:31 pmQuote from: SydneyRover on February 04, 2022, 07:05:00 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 03:02:24 pmQuote from: normal rules on February 04, 2022, 01:11:45 pmQuote from: Axholme Lion on February 04, 2022, 01:02:14 pmQuote from: wilts rover on February 04, 2022, 12:52:00 pmAlways seemed a fairer way of 'taxing'/getting revenue' from motorists to me. Why should I payexactly the same for my car, which is parked up most of the time, than someone who drives hundreds of miles a year? Its the only mode of travel where you don't pay more the further you go.So Joe Bloggs on a basic to average wage has a 40-50 mile per day commute gets taxed for going to work? It's insanity.Joe bloggs may need to think about living closer to where he works . I’m not trying to be clever here either AL.My wife used to clock up over 700 work miles a month. I suppose she is lucky. She has a job where she can wfh. All meetings now done online. She now does zero miles a month . And it won’t be changing anytime soon. Covid has been a positive in that respect. Many many areas of work have been re invented. The habit of going to an office every day has changed. Across many industries.If you live in a rural area you have in most cases no choice but to travel for virtually everything. The idea of living in a town with all the masses of people and crime to me is horrific. It's nice to look over the fields and walk down the lanes on your door step. If i didn't have this and had to live amongst the crowds, anti social behaviour and crime i would in all seriousness consider ending it all.It was their your choice of career, to live out there, they you weren't forced into it at gunpoint.f**k me you're often on the money but thats embarrassingly naive. People are born in various places and moving to where they work isn't often feasible/affordable. There's more than 50 shades of grey on this. Many NMW workers travel to cities for work whilst higher paid colleagues either live there or enjoy hybrid/WFH roles. It has to be much more nuanced, and I don't just mean that for the workers benefit, if lower paid employees can't afford to travel to work we're in to a house of cards scenario.Noel, I was having a dig at Axholm that was his reply, parts of which I struck out was his rejoinder when I pointed out the 800+ deaths of health care workers due to covid and lack of ppe.
Road pricing is not difficult to implement.Countries like France have used it for some time on the motorways.Numberplate recognition is likely to be the least cost option, with a journey between 2 points being measured in transit.As said above, it gives the chance to have a variable tariff, so it could cost more in urban areas in peak times.