California gas prices have surged to $5.33 per gallon—the highest in the nation—due to the Iran war’s global oil disruptions and a 20% drop in refinery output, prompting state lawmakers to propose suspending the gas tax for a year, a move that could lower prices by over $1 per gallon but endanger billions in road funding.
The Price Surge: A Confluence of Crises
California’s average gasoline cost has reached $5.33 per gallon, far exceeding the national average of $3.57 and making the state the most expensive for fuel. This spike results from two primary shocks: the war in Iran, which has destabilized global oil markets, and the closure of two California refineries, cutting the state’s production capacity by 20%.
According to U.S. Energy Information Administration data, California’s high prices are largely attributable to state taxes, fees, and environmental mandates. The combination of reduced domestic supply and international turmoil has created a perfect storm, with State Sen. Tony Strickland warning that prices could hit $10 per gallon and potential shortages may emerge for the first time in decades.
Legislative Proposals for Immediate Relief
Republican lawmakers have introduced multiple bills to suspend the gas tax, aiming to provide rapid economic relief. Senate Bill 1035, authored by Strickland, would suspend the state’s gas tax, low carbon fuel standard, and cap-and-invest program for one year, projecting a price reduction of at least $1.08 per gallon. Strickland emphasized the urgency: “Hard-working families can’t afford these high gas prices… A lot of people in California have to decide between a gallon of milk and a gallon of gas.”
Other efforts include Assembly Bill 1745 by Assemblyman Jeff Gonzalez, which also seeks a gas tax holiday, and Assembly Bill 1421 by Assemblywoman Lori Wilson, which would establish a committee to replace the gas tax with a per-mile charge for all vehicles, including electric cars. These bills reflect a cross-party recognition of the affordability crisis, though Democratic energy committee members have not publicly commented on the latest proposals.
- SB1035: California Legislative Information – Suspends gas tax, LCFS, and cap-and-invest for one year.
- AB1745: California Legislative Information – Gas tax suspension legislation.
- AB1421: California Legislative Information – Proposes per-mile charge study to replace gas tax.
The Infrastructure Funding Dilemma
The gas tax is a cornerstone of California’s transportation budget, funding road and highway maintenance through the California Department of Transportation. Suspending it for a year could create a multi-billion-dollar shortfall, jeopardizing critical infrastructure projects and repairs.
Long-term revenue concerns are already acute due to electric vehicle adoption. A Legislative Analyst’s Office report projects declining gas tax receipts as ZEVs proliferate, fueling the push for alternative mechanisms like per-mile charges. Additionally, lawmakers note that proposed cap-and-trade program changes could add another $1 per gallon to pump prices, compounding the pressure on consumers and policymakers alike.
Learning from Recent Policy Debates
California’s current struggle is part of a broader, years-long conversation about sustainable transportation funding. The per-mile charge concept, now resurfacing in AB1421, has been debated since at least 2023, when previous reporting highlighted the revenue erosion from EV growth. This history shows that while tax suspensions offer quick fixes, they risk exacerbating the very infrastructure deficits they aim to address.
The Iran war’s impact adds a new layer of urgency, transforming a structural funding challenge into an acute economic emergency. Strickland’s projection of shortages underscores how global geopolitical events can instantly overwhelm state-level policy adaptations.
The Human Impact: Affordability vs. Essential Services
At its core, this debate pits immediate economic survival against long-term communal investment. Gonzalez captured the tension: “While families are tightening their belts, Sacramento continues to ask them for more. Working families should not be scraping pennies together just to get to work.”
Suspending the gas tax would provide direct relief to low-income households, seniors, and essential workers who spend a disproportionate share of income on fuel. However, deferred road maintenance can lead to higher vehicle repair costs and safety risks, disproportionately affecting rural communities and commercial transport. The ethical calculus forces a question: how much infrastructure risk is acceptable for temporary price relief?
The public discourse centers on targeted solutions—such as means-tested rebates or temporary relief for vulnerable populations—rather than across-the-board suspensions that might benefit all drivers equally but endanger road quality.
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