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AAP
Business
Cassandra Morgan

Raw deal for hybrid drivers in EV tax scheme 'shambles'

A report by Victoria's ombudsman suggests hybrid vehicle drivers are not being treated fairly. (Jason O'BRIEN/AAP PHOTOS)

Victorians who drive electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles are being slugged with unfair charges under a tax scheme the Greens say has been a "dog's breakfast" from the start.

The Victorian government in 2021 introduced the Australian-first zero and low emission vehicle charge in a bid to level the playing field for drivers given those with the greener cars paid nothing or little towards maintaining the state's roads.

Victorian Ombudsman Deborah Glass has fielded more than 30 complaints about the scheme.

In an investigative report tabled in parliament on Wednesday, the ombudsman suggested the Department of Transport and Planning treated drivers under the scheme with a blanket approach and failed to exercise discretion when it should have.

The ombudsman pointed to one hybrid plug-in driver who travelled thousands of kilometres in remote Australia using only fuel because there were no charging stations.

Despite the driver paying the fuel excise that the electric vehicle tax was meant to make up for, the department still hit them with a bill for hundreds of dollars under the zero and low emission vehicle charge.

"We found an unreasonable lack of policy guidance to those administering the legislation, inflexible handling of complaints, and an unwillingness to exercise discretion," Ms Glass said. 

"It is also wrong to charge penalties not provided for in legislation, and the money collected under this 'penalty' should be repaid."

The ombudsman said many of the complaints she received related to drivers who believed their charges were unreasonable, while others came from drivers who submitted their odometer declarations late.

Drivers of electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles generally had to show proof of the kilometres they travelled in each registration period, Ms Glass said.

In one case, a driver submitted their odometer reading late because they were overseas and the department went ahead and cancelled their registration.

In other cases, drivers whose odometer declarations were overdue had their kilometres estimated based on a Victoria-wide average, and the ultimate kilometre readings exceeded the entire distance their car had travelled.

The department initially refused to amend the bills for five drivers in that situation and described the blown-out charge as a penalty, the ombudsman said.

Victorian Greens deputy leader Ellen Sandell said implementation of the tax scheme has been a mess.

"This report makes clear that Labor's tax on people who drive electric cars has been a dog's breakfast from the start," Ms Sandell said, adding that it shows "people have been double-charged, overcharged, and the implementation has been a shambles".

"We should be helping people make the switch to electric cars by making them more affordable, instead of making them more expensive."

The validity of the legislation behind the tax scheme is being challenged in the High Court.

Hybrid vehicles that are not plug-in are exempt from charges under the scheme.

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