Dean Suhr Chief Petitioner for IP31 Vote Before Tolling Statewide Initiative

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3 PM Monday, July 14, 2025

Learn more and sign up to be kept up to date: https://VoteBeforeTolls.org

Mission
The Vote Before Tolls Committee exists to give Oregon voters direct input on state and local tolling decisions.
Congestion Tolling on the I-205 Corridor (near West Linn/Oregon City) and on I-5 (near the Rose Quarter) is being considered as a result of Oregon Legislation HB 2017 where tolling was identified to help fund selected Transportation needs and projects. We are working to organize and empower citizens to have a voice and a vote, on these and future tolling decisions!
About Us
The Vote Before Tolls Committee is a grassroots, citizen-driven non-partisan statewide effort.
Goals
• Legislation calling for a public vote on highway tolls before they go into effect
• ODOT transparency on their decision processes, toll amounts, use of funds, and plans for sunsetting of tolls
• An open discussion as to how tolls fit into ODOT’s short- and long-term funding strategy for local and statewide projects
Beliefs
• Highway tolls are a new form of taxation in Oregon. Taxpayers do not trust Salem and ODOT to act in the best interest of the general public and businesses.
• Oregonians deserve to have a say at the ballot box before they are tolled to use existing highways.*
• Automobiles, trucks, bicycles, public transit, and sidewalks serve different, but co-existing transportation needs.
• It is essential that Oregon have high quality and efficient roads to serve the diverse needs of its people and businesses.
• The current Oregon Tolling Proposal
• Is not equitable and places a disproportionate financial and traffic burden on segments of citizenry and businesses
• Is a gateway to expanded and permanent tolling across the Portland tri-county region … and the rest of the state
• We do not oppose traditional tolling that pays for the capital costs of new capacity, but we believe the citizens should have a direct say in these decisions.
• Oregonians want to be environmentally responsible and question Congestion Pricing/Tolling as the safest, most efficient, and best solution.
• Tolling with excessive collection overheads is irresponsible and not financially prudent or viable.
• Tolling that prevents accessing federal matching highway funds is not generally prudent.
• Using tolling for capital expenses (construction) is differnt than tolling for ongoing maintenance or general transportation funding.

We acknowledge that tolling adding capacity is legal by federal statute.

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