Well, the law (tax) is a reaction to hybrid and electric car owners not paying taxes through reduced or no fuel purchases. Not paying their "fair share".
Sorry if I was misunderstood. My question should have been phrased: "if there is a $50 fee in Indiana to register a hybrid car, is there also a fee for a pure electric car?" The answer is: "yes, there is a fee, and it is $100, not $50".
I thought this was just Indiana, but no, there are a whole rash of states who are doing this. See:
http://www.ncsl.org/research/energy/new-fees-on-hybrid-and-electric-vehicles.aspx
swathdiver said:
The folks who can afford hybrid and electric cars are for the most part, quite well off.
This is really the heart of it. It's a way to get back at all those Tesla drivers. Look at them, driving their $110k electric cars, not paying their road taxes. We need to get them! (There is sarcasm here, if you couldn't tell.)
I own a Nissan Leaf. It's an electric car, but apart from that, it's basically a Nissan Versa with a body kit.
The reason these taxes rub me the wrong way is because they remind me of many (failed) attempts to tax "those damn bicyclists" for "taking up the road and not paying their fair share". (I am a cyclist, and against road use taxes for cyclists, since we actually create roadway capacity by not driving.)
I see taxes as serving to incentivize or discourage certain behavior.
Quick back of the envelope: 15k mi/year, 25 MPG sedan, $0.28/gallon fuel tax (source:
https://indianapublicmedia.org/news/gas-tax-fuels-higher-fuel-prices-indiana-147951/). That comes to $168/year.
I'd be more in favor of a use tax that was proportional to the wear and tear that your vehicle puts on the road. So, to make up numbers, a Camry owner would pay $50, someone driving a Freightliner Sportchassis would pay like $500, and everyone would pay something in between. If you're willing to prove to the state that you didn't drive as much (using, say, odometer recordings at annual state inspections) you could receive a state tax credit for the difference. So if (like me) your Yukon XL 2500 only sees about 4000 miles of use per year, you don't pay as much as someone who drives 30k/year.
The incentives ought to be: drive less, drive a smaller vehicle, drive a more efficient vehicle.
I don't know how many folks here own both a tiny EV and a heavy duty SUV. Perhaps my views are not popular here. But what I've proposed seems fair to me.