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Voters in Utah might be OK with lawmakers raising their gas taxes to pay for roads, new poll finds

State services – including schools – are effectively paying to maintain Utah’s roads, to the tune of about $600 million a year, according to Senate President Wayne Niederhauser.

Elected leaders in Utah, most of them conservative Republicans, always are reluctant to increase taxes — particularly so in an election year.

But they may worry too much. A plurality of voters would approve of paying more per gallon of gas to support Utah’s road network, according to a new poll by The Salt Lake Tribune and the University of Utah’s Hinckley Institute of Politics.

The poll found just under 50 percent of registered voters support a higher gas tax.