Could Flex Pass limit gas tax?

With only a couple of days under our seat belts for the new High-Occupancy Toll lanes on I-405, it may be a little soon to judge the lanes’ effects on traffic.

The reviews from drivers on Monday were mixed, according to Street Smarts columnist Melissa Slager, and depended largely on whether you were in the HOT lanes as a carpooler or toll payer or in the interstate’s other lanes, with the “normals,” as one driver put it.

The state Department of Transportation said it expects some slowdowns and confusion as drivers adjust to the new lanes and their rules, such as whether you can cross the double-white lines that separate the HOT lanes from the regular lanes. Hint: You can’t, unless you want to pay a $136 fine.

Previously, we’ve criticized what seems an overly complicated process for using the lanes for those in carpools or those willing to pay the toll. It involves obtaining a Good To Go Flex Pass transponder and maintaining an online account from which tolls will be deducted. Carpool drivers can flip a switch on the transponders and avoid paying the toll. If you’re not using a transponder you can still use the toll lanes, but cameras will snap a picture of your license plate and you’ll be sent a bill for the toll, plus an additional $2 fee.

Simple, right?

There’s much more but not enough space to cover it all here. Even the state transportation folks need several website pages to explain it all.

So why complicate something like the carpool lanes, which were intended to encourage folks to buddy up on the drive to work and home?

Blame the steady creep in travel times in the carpool lane, which can be as long as 70 minutes for the 17 miles between Lynnwood and Bellevue. The Department of Transportation hopes requiring three-person car pools during peak travel times will keep the traffic flowing at 45 miles per hour for carpools, buses and those willing to pay the toll. Adding an option to pay a toll between 75 cents and $10 depending on traffic loads will also provide a new revenue stream for the state. Money raised by the tolls is earmarked for I-405 improvements.

Whether the Flex Pass will accomplish that goal remains to be seen, but those transponders may offer a solution to the state’s problem in paying for its transportation infrastructure.

In the 20-year plan the state Transportation Commission released last year it noted the increasing difficulty in paying for maintenance, operation and new construction. While the Legislature passed a gas tax increase this year, vehicles’ fuel efficiency will continue to improve, making the gas tax less effective in generating the revenue the state’s transportation system needs. Among its recommendations, the commission called on the state to consider options to transition from a gas tax to a road usage charge.

The options for a usage charge include a flat fee, recording odometer readings or using a GPS device to track a vehicle’s mileage. As much as people dislike the gas tax, many have an even bigger problem with a GPS device that could record where they go, even if it’s just to work, school, stores, home and other typical destinations.

But if deployed strategically, the equipment that works in tandem with the transponders could be placed at offramps, onramps and interchanges to preserve some privacy by recording mileage only on state highways and interstates, ignoring where drivers travel on city streets and county roads.

Coupled with a significant reduction in the gas tax, turning state highways and the interstates into toll roads by using the transponders could offer a fair and effective way to pay for how we get around.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Opinion

toon
Editorial cartoons for Tuesday, May 6

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Liz Skinner, right, and Emma Titterness, both from Domestic Violence Services of Snohomish County, speak with a man near the Silver Lake Safeway while conducting a point-in-time count Tuesday, Jan. 23, 2024, in Everett, Washington. The man, who had slept at that location the previous night, was provided some food and a warming kit after participating in the PIT survey. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Editorial: County had no choice but to sue over new grant rules

New Trump administration conditions for homelessness grants could place county in legal jeopardy.

Stephens: Oval Office debacle not what Ukraine nor U.S. needed

A dressing-down of Ukraine’s president by Trump and Vance put a peace deal further out of reach.

Dowd: The day that Trump’s world collided with reality

Not that he’d say so, but Trump blinked when the markets reacted poorly to his tariff plan.

Comment: Are MAGA faithful nearing end of patience with Trump?

For Trump’s most ardent fans, their nostalgia for Trump’s first term has yet to be fulfilled by his second.

Scott Peterson walks by a rootball as tall as the adjacent power pole from a tree that fell on the roof of an apartment complex he does maintenance for on Wednesday, Nov. 20, 2024 in Lake Stevens, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Editorial: Communities need FEMA’s help to rebuild after disaster

The scaling back or loss of the federal agency would drown states in losses and threaten preparedness.

County Council members Jared Mead, left, and Nate Nehring speak to students on Thursday, Jan. 30, 2025, during Civic Education Day at the Snohomish County Campus in Everett, Washington. (Will Geschke / The Herald)
Editorial: Students get a life lesson in building bridges

Two county officials’ civics campaign is showing the possibilities of discourse and government.

FILE - This Feb. 6, 2015, file photo, shows a measles, mumps and rubella vaccine on a countertop at a pediatrics clinic in Greenbrae, Calif. Washington state lawmakers voted Tuesday, April 23, 2019 to remove parents' ability to claim a personal or philosophical exemption from vaccinating their children for measles, although medical and religious exemptions will remain. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg, File)
Editorial: Commonsense best shot at avoiding measles epidemic

Without vaccination, misinformation, hesitancy and disease could combine for a deadly epidemic.

toon
Editorial cartoons for Monday, May 5

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

Brroks: Signalgate explains a lot about why it’s come to this

The carelessness that added a journalist to a sensitive group chat is shared throughout the White House.

FILE — Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary meets with then-President Donald Trump at the White House on May 13, 2019. The long-serving prime minister, a champion of ‘illiberal democracy,’ has been politically isolated in much of Europe. But he has found common ground with the former and soon-to-be new U.S. president. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
Commentary: Trump following authoritarian’s playbook on press

President Trump is following the Hungarian leader’s model for influence and control of the news media.

Comment: RFK Jr., others need a better understanding of autism

Here’s what he’s missing regarding those like my daughter who are shaped — not destroyed — by autism.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.