Thursday, June 19, 2008

Now Here's A Novel Idea

You would expect the inovators of police revenues would have come up with this idea. The well-known police state of Massachusetts has for many years enhanced the annual salaries of all the police via the un-constitutional police detail program (which has bled over and into Rhode Island). Now comes the small southern suburb of Holly Springs, Georgia that beat the Nor'easters to the punch. Expect the harvard yard folks to follow the bull dogs from the South.
Speeders to pay extra for police fuel

HOLLY SPRINGS, Ga. — The surging price of gasoline has come to this: a "fuel surcharge" on your next speeding ticket.

Drivers caught speeding in this north Atlanta suburb soon will have to pay an extra $12 — to cover $4-a-gallon gas costs for the police officers who stop them.

The City Council passed the fee hike, effective July 1, to offset fuel prices that have eaten up nearly 60% of the police department's 2008 fuel budget, Police Chief Ken Ball says.

He expects the fee increase, which applies to all moving violations and can be rescinded if gas prices fall below $3 a gallon, to generate $19,500 to $26,000 a year for the town of 7,700.

Ball says he was seeking ways to maintain patrols despite record high gas prices. "I was hearing that Delta (Air Lines), pizza deliverers, florists were adding fuel charges to their services, and I thought, why not police departments?" he says.

Atlanta might be next. Monday, the City Council approved by a 13-0 vote Councilman C.T. Martin's proposal to add a $10-$15 surcharge for motorists convicted of speeding and other moving violations, Martin says. "I want to recover the cost of the extra gas … without raising property taxes," he says. The legislation awaits Mayor Shirley Franklin's approval.

Other cities could follow. Ball says he's being "inundated" by calls from police chiefs and city managers. "I've heard from at least a dozen police chiefs and half a dozen city managers," he says of the measure passed Monday night. "They want to know how we did it, and could we send them a copy of the ordinance."

Wendy Balazik, spokeswoman for the International Association of Chiefs of Police, says she's not aware of any other cities adding such a surcharge. "But it makes sense," she says. "Law enforcement agencies are already facing a number of financial pressures, and rising fuel costs can't help the situation at all."

The National League of Cities says it is unaware of other cities adding such fees.

The national average cost for a gallon of regular gas was $4.078 Tuesday, according to auto club AAA and the Oil Price Information Service.

Katie Harris, 20, a babysitter and student at Georgia Perimeter College, doesn't like the new fines. "It always seems like government officials are trying to take money from citizens' pockets," she says.

Holly Springs Mayor Tim Downing says: "This is a self-taxing system. If you don't break the law, you don't pay the tax."

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Norm,
That is One Moronic idea but the ones who really show how totally Ineptly Stupid some libral Congress Occupants are :
1) Nationalize Oil Refineries.. Just think on this consequeantial Diasater!!
2) Sue Opec.. Oh yah! and then what can we do when they shut off shipments to the USA??
3) TAXC oil Companies Profits.. Now that'll really help 401K, Union retirement plans, and Retirees...
Are there any BRAINS left in Congress or has Pelosi distribuited too many " funny" brownies????