Truck dealers take FET repeal message to Capitol Hill

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Updated Jun 20, 2019
ATD Chairwoman Jodie Teuton speaking at the Modernize the Truck Fleet Press event in Washington D.C. She is joined by Doug LaMalfa, (R.-Calif.), who sponsored H.R. 2381, a bill to repeal FET.ATD Chairwoman Jodie Teuton speaking at the Modernize the Truck Fleet Press event in Washington D.C. She is joined by Doug LaMalfa, (R.-Calif.), who sponsored H.R. 2381, a bill to repeal FET.

Trucking’s Modernize the Truck Fleet (MTF) coalition rallied on Capitol Hill Wednesday to urge congressional support for bipartisan legislation repealing the 12 percent federal excise tax (FET) on the sale of heavy-duty commercial trucks and trailers.

“The FET was first enacted to help pay for World War I,” said Jodie Teuton, chairwoman, American Truck Dealers (ATD) and Kenworth of Louisiana vice president during Wednesday’s event. “This tax may have made sense in 1917, but today the FET delays heavy-duty truck fleet turnover by adding more than $20,000 to the average price of a new truck.”

In addition to Wednesday’s press event, MTF adds a national network of commercial truck dealers, trade association executives and trucking industry stakeholders are in Washington, D.C., this week to meet with members of Congress to urge them to cosponsor H.R. 2381 and S. 1839, bills that would repeal the FET and encourage the deployment of the newest trucks and trailers.

“The FET made sense when it was implemented 100 years ago, but just like trucks that were designed in 1917, it’s no longer viable in the modern world. Today, it’s a cost-prohibitive barrier for small businesses looking to upgrade their outdated trucks to safer, cleaner, more modern vehicles,” says U.S. Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-Calif), sponsor of H.R. 2381, a bill to repeal the FET.

“The average age of most heavy-duty trucks on the road today is nearly 10 years old – that means a decade worth of technological advancements is effectively being sidelined. The 12 percent FET limits truck replacement by discouraging truck owners from upgrading their outdated vehicles – leading to higher emissions and more dangerous roads. We won’t truly see a modern truck fleet in the U.S. until it’s repealed,” LaMalfa adds.

U.S. Sen. Cory Gardner, sponsor of S. 1839, the Senate FET repeal bill, says, “This burdensome tax creates excessive costs that are passed on to truckers, who play an essential role in maintaining our nation’s economy. I was happy to introduce legislation to repeal it.”

Launched at the 2019 ATD Show, the MTF coalition is urging Congress to repeal the FET and identify an alternative source of revenue that reflects today’s modern truck fleet. The coalition includes ATD, Truck Renting and Leasing Association (TRALA), NTEA — The Association for the Work Truck Industry, Truck and Engine Manufacturers Association, National Trailer Dealers Association (NTDA) and National Tank Truck Carriers Association.

“With an infrastructure bill as likely to pass as any piece of legislation this Congress, this is the time to put all of our combined energy into finding a way to replace the onerous FET,” says Jake Jacoby, TRALA president and CEO. “We are excited to be a part of such a collaborative effort working with truck companies, manufacturers, dealers and end users who all want to put the cleanest, most technologically advanced trucks onto our highways immediately.”

Gwendolyn Brown, NTDA president, adds, “The FET is an unfair method of taxing the trailer industry, and it limits the purchase of newer, safer and greener trailers and parts — all of which are boons to the economy. As increasing regulatory burdens are mandated by the EPA, CARB and other government agencies, the costs of heavy-duty trucks and trailers continue to increase making the FET that much more burdensome.”

Teuton added Wednesday, “America’s trucking industry wants safer, cleaner and more fuel-efficient vehicles to move America’s economy. Repealing the FET and replacing it with a tax based on road use paid over the life of a vehicle is part of that solution. The FET is an indiscriminate, upfront tax. It makes no sense that a truck which drives 15,000 miles a year pays the same tax as a truck driven 150,000 miles.”

At the press conference, Volvo Trucks North America, a member of the MTF coalition, displayed a World War I-era truck and a new Mack Anthem.

 “There is an opportunity, right now, to modernize the nation’s infrastructure, modernize the truck fleet and modernize the Highway Trust Fund,” Teuton said. “Repeal of the FET means more trucks rolling on our nation’s highways that are cleaner and safer.”

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