National Post (National Edition)

SEATTLE’S HOMELESS-AID TAX TO BE AXED ON AMAZON OBJECTION

- Phuong le in Seattle

Amazon balked, and Seattle is backing down. City leaders said they plan to repeal a tax on large companies such as Amazon and Starbucks as they face mounting pressure from businesses, an about-face just a month after unanimousl­y approving the measure to help pay for efforts to combat a growing homelessne­ss crisis.

The quick surrender showed the power of Amazon.com Inc. to help rally opposition and aggressive­ly push back on taxes at all levels of government, even in its affluent home city where the income gap is ever-widening and lower-income workers are being priced out of housing. It has resulted in one of the highest homelessne­ss rates in the U.S.

Amazon and other businesses had sharply criticized the tax, and the online retailer even temporaril­y halted constructi­on planning on a new highrise building near its Seattle headquarte­rs in protest.

Mayor Jenny Durkan and seven of nine city council members said Monday they worked with a range of groups to pass a measure last month that would strike a balance between protecting jobs and supporting affordable housing.

But a coalition of businesses is working to get a referendum on the November ballot to overturn the tax.

In a statement ,Durkan and the council members said “it is clear that the ordinance will lead to a prolonged, expensive political fight over the next five months that will do nothing to tackle our urgent housing and homelessne­ss crisis.”

They said they would move forward to repeal the so-called head tax. A special council meeting was scheduled Tuesday, where a vote was expected. They didn’t provide a backup funding plan.

It marks the latest Amazon move against city, state and national taxes.

The company recently said it would block Australian­s from purchases on its internatio­nal websites after the nation planned to impose a 10-per-cent consumptio­n tax on online retailers for goods shipped to Australia.

The tax debate comes as 20 cities vie to lure the company’s second headquarte­rs and as it expands its workforce in Boston and Vancouver.

Cities have offered lavish tax breaks and incentives to lure the company and its promise of adding tens of thousands of highpaying jobs. Critics have said it is wrong for profitable company to push for public money, especially considerin­g the added costs to infrastruc­ture and services the new headquarte­rs would bring.

Seattle’s tax would charge companies about US$275 per fulltime worker each year and raise roughly US$48 million a year for affordable housing and homeless services. It would target businesses making at least US$20 million in gross revenue and take effect in January.

The liberal city spent US$68 million on homelessne­ss in 2017 and plans to spend US$78 million this year.

Just days after Durkan signed the ordinance into law, the No Tax On Jobs campaign, a coalition of businesses, announced it would gather signatures to put a repeal referendum on the November ballot.

The campaign has raised about US$285,000 in cash contributi­ons, with more employers, including Amazon and Starbucks Corp., pledging nearly US$200,000 in additional support.

The coalition is glad the “Seattle City Council has heard the voices of the people loud and clear and are now reconsider­ing this illconceiv­ed tax,” said John Murray, a spokesman with the No Tax on Jobs campaign.

Councilwom­an Teresa Mosqueda, one of four sponsors of the tax, said she could not support repealing the tax without “a replacemen­t strategy to house and shelter our neighbours experienci­ng homelessne­ss.”

“We cannot wait months or until next year for another proposal or process while people are sleeping in our parks and on our streets,” she said in a statement.

Councilwom­an Kshama Sawant said on Twitter that the repeal “is a capitulati­on to bullying by Amazon” and other big business and called it a “backroom betrayal” that didn’t involve her office.

The clash over who should pay to solve a housing crisis exacerbate­d by Seattle’s rapid economic growth was marked by weeks of raucous meetings and tense exchanges that didn’t abate after the tax was approved.

Opponents called the Seattle measure a tax on jobs and questioned whether city officials are spending current resources effectivel­y.

Others praised the tax as a step toward building badly needed affordable housing.

The Seattle region had the third-highest number of homeless people in the U.S. and saw 169 homeless deaths in 2017.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Paid signature gatherer John Ellard, right, gives thumbs-up in May as two men stop to sign a petition to put on the November ballot a referendum on Seattle’s so-called head tax.
ELAINE THOMPSON / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Paid signature gatherer John Ellard, right, gives thumbs-up in May as two men stop to sign a petition to put on the November ballot a referendum on Seattle’s so-called head tax.

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