California politicians are at it again — this time with a statewide Mileage Tax disguised as “planning.”
A bill that just moved through the Assembly, AB 1421, lays the groundwork to tax Californians for every mile they drive. Not someday in theory — this bill explicitly directs the state to design a system and come back to the Legislature by January 1, 2027 with a plan to implement it.
If this sounds familiar, it should.
SANDAG tried this exact same thing in San Diego County.
They quietly slipped a mileage tax into their regional transportation plan — and only backed off after residents, commuters, and small businesses rallied together and forced them to retreat.
We stopped it once.
We can — and must — stop it again.
Let’s be clear about what this is:
This is not about “studying options.”
This is not about “future mobility.”
This is a commuter punishment aimed squarely at working families who have no alternative but to drive.
A mileage tax would mean:
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Tracking how far Californians drive
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Charging drivers per mile, on top of:
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Gas taxes
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Vehicle registration fees
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Sales taxes
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Local transportation taxes
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Families already paying thousands a year just to get to work would be hit again — even as our roads remain riddled with potholes and congestion.
And here’s the part that makes this especially insulting:
California does not have a revenue problem. It has a spending problem.
The state already collects more than enough money to maintain and repair our roads — even with more electric vehicles on the road.
Instead, we’ve watched:
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$24 billion spent on homelessness with little accountability
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$9 billion spent on healthcare for people here illegally
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Billions more lost to failed programs, bloated bureaucracy, and mismanagement
Now Sacramento’s answer is to squeeze commuters harder?
This mileage tax is being sold as inevitable because of EVs and declining gas tax revenue. That’s simply not true. California has choices — and raising yet another tax on working people should be the last one, not the first.
We already sent a message once when SANDAG tried this locally:
Enough is enough.
AB 1421 is the setup bill — the foundation — so lawmakers can come back next year and push the actual tax.
That means this is the moment to stop it, not later when the rate is set and the system is locked in.
Call your Assemblymember.
Demand a NO on AB 1421.
Tell Sacramento: Californians are not an ATM.
We stood together before.
We won before.
And if we speak up now, we can stop this commuter tax — again.