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Legislature says voters will decide road funding issue

Detroit Free Press

LANSING, MI (AP)--   A proposed tax hike aimed at improving Michigan's transportation infrastructure and schools is heading to voters.  

The Michigan Legislature has put a sales tax increase on the May statewide ballot as part of a road funding plan.

Boosting the 6 percent sales tax to 7 percent is the centerpiece of a plan to pump $1.3 billion more into transportation infrastructure and at least $300 million more into schools. The required two-thirds of members in the Republican-dominated Senate backed the constitutional amendment early Friday morning. The House approved it earlier Friday morning.

Lawmakers passed a significant increase in the state's per-gallon gasoline tax that only will take effect if voters approve the sales tax hike along with the elimination of the sales tax that drivers pay at the pump.