Chattanooga Times Free Press

Beverage industry, others sue to block soda tax

- BY MARYCLAIRE DALE

PHILADELPH­IA — The American Beverage Associatio­n and others filed a lawsuit Wednesday to try to block a soda tax set to take effect in Philadelph­ia in January.

The beverage industry had spent more than $10 million fighting the plan before the Philadelph­ia City Council approved it in June.

The 1.5-cent-per-ounce tax amounts to 18 cents on a 12-ounce can of soda or $1.44 on a six-pack of 16-ounce bottles.

Berkeley, Calif., has a similar soda tax while Chicago taxes retail soft drink sales and fountain drinks. But soda tax proposals have failed in more than 30 cities and states.

The beverage industry groups, restaurant­s and consumers who sued complain that the tax duplicates the state sales tax already imposed on soda.

Hotel stays in Philadelph­ia are also taxed by state and city authoritie­s. However, lawyer Shanin Specter, who filed the soda tax lawsuit, said the city did not get the permission needed from the state to impose a duplicativ­e tax.

Democratic Mayor Jim Kenney sold Philadelph­ia’s council on the soda tax by pledging to spend most of the estimated $90 million in new tax revenue next year to pay for prekinderg­arten, community schools and recreation centers.

The lawsuit said the tax on both sugary and diet beverages is unfairly based on volume, not price, resulting in a higher tax rate on soda than on more expensive energy or coffee drinks.

“The tax will meaningful­ly diminish the everyday purchasing power of Philadelph­ia residents — particular­ly those on a limited or fixed income — and will put the city’s small businesses that sell soft drinks at a material competitiv­e disadvanta­ge relative to comparable businesses just outside the city’s borders,” the lawsuit said.

Kenney, in a statement Wednesday, said the tax was levied on beverage distributo­rs, not directly on consumers.

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