Calhoun Times

Online sales tax for big retailers signed into law

- By Beau Evans

State lawmakers reached a compromise to collect from third-party companies.

Capitol Beat News Service

ATLANTA — Gov. Brian Kemp has signed legislatio­n imposing state sales taxes on online purchases facilitate­d by large retailers like Amazon, Google and Uber.

The tax is projected to raise hundreds of millions of dollars annually in Georgia.

Lawmakers in Georgia’s House and Senate hashed out a compromise measure early in this year’s legislativ­e session to collect the tax from so-called “marketplac­e facilitato­rs,” which allow third-party companies to conduct business on their websites.

The measure, House Bill 276, stalled in the Senate last year amid pushback from ride-share companies like Uber, which wanted a tax exemption. Lawmakers involved in negotiatin­g the compromise bill expect separate legislatio­n to be filed that would give Uber an exemption or require them to pay a fee.

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Hufstetler, R-Rome, said state revenue experts estimate the tax could raise $10 million a month – though he thinks that’s a conservati­ve estimate.

“It’s great for cities, counties, schools and Georgia businesses that the playing field will be more level now,” Huftstetle­r said Thursday.

A report last year from the advocacy group Faith, Truth and Justice Project estimated the tax could raise upwards of $750 million a year.

Kemp’s office confirmed Thursday that the governor had signed the bill. Tax collection­s will start April 1.

An Uber spokeswoma­n previously warned collecting the tax could hit Georgian ride-share users with higher trip costs and decrease earnings for drivers. The company prefers lawmakers institute a “reasonable fee structure” instead.

The bill’s passage comes as lawmakers look to fill a budget shortfall caused by sluggish state tax revenues and budget cuts that Kemp ordered for most state agencies. The online-sales tax marks the most significan­t revenue-raising effort to plug the state funding gap so far this legislativ­e session.

Some lawmakers opposed passage of the bill over opposition to raising taxes. They favor lowering the state’s income-tax rate for a second time in the last three years. But several influentia­l lawmakers, including Hufstetler, have sounded wary of lowering income taxes at a time when state budget cuts are being made.

 ??  ?? Sen. Chuck Hufstetler
Sen. Chuck Hufstetler
 ??  ?? Kemp
Kemp

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