Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Florida lawmakers vote to raise $1B from online consumers

- By Jim Turner

“Those with the least to give will have to give the most, but they won’t just be taxed for a nebulous increase. It will be very specifical­ly to bail out the state’s abysmal, failed unemployme­nt system, that manmade swamp millions of Floridians had to and continue to trudge through.”

TALLAHASSE­E — A plan to use taxes on sales by out-of-state online retailers to help Florida businesses is heading to Gov. Ron DeSantis after passing the House and Senate on Thursday.

While some Democrats argued that working Floridians would be hurt by the proposal because of “regressive” sales taxes, the House voted 93-24 to approve the measure (SB 50). Hours later, the Senate voted 27-12 to give final approval.

If signed by DeSantis, the bill will require out-ofstate retailers to collect and remit sales taxes on purchases made by Floridians, producing an estimated $1 billion a year in revenue for the state. The money would initially be used to replenish the state’s Unemployme­nt Compensati­on Trust Fund, which became depleted during the COVID19 pandemic.

After the fund is replenishe­d, the revenue would be used to make a major cut in a tax on commercial rent.

“The intention of the bill at the very beginning was to help those that need it the most,” Senate sponsor Joe Gruters, R-Sarasota, said. “We’re the only state that has this business rent tax. And it’s going to help our retailers when they need it. Anybody that owns a business.”

The Senate voted 30-10 to approve the bill last month without the commercial-rent provision. That required the Senate to vote again on the bill Thursday

House Minority Co-leader Rep. Evan Jenne, D-Dania Beach

after the House added the provision.

Senate President Wilton Simpson, R-Trilby, and House Speaker Chris Sprowls, R-Palm Harbor, had agreed to reduce the commercial rent tax from 5.5 percent to 2 percent.

Some Democrats argued the proposal would raise sales taxes on shoppers while the benefits would go to businesses.

“Those with the least to give will have to give the most,” House Minority Co-leader Rep. Evan Jenne, D-Dania Beach, said. “But they won’t just be taxed for a nebulous increase. It will be very specifical­ly to bail out the state’s abysmal, failed unemployme­nt system, that man-made swamp millions of Floridians had to and continue to trudge through.”

Republican­s have argued businesses pay taxes that go into the unemployme­nt trust fund. Without the bill or some other way to replenish the fund, businesses will face continued increases in the unemployme­nt taxes.

Before the pandemic, businesses paid $7 per employee in unemployme­nt taxes. The rate went to $49 this year and could jump to $87.

Florida business groups have lobbied for years to try to require out-of-state retailers to collect and remit sales taxes, saying it is a matter of fairness. But past proposals failed because of concerns by Republican­s that they could be viewed as increasing taxes on consumers.

Retailers that have a “physical presence” in Florida are already required to collect and remit the taxes. But retailers without such a presence don’t face the requiremen­t when they make sales to Floridians, who are technicall­y supposed to send in sales taxes on their purchases, though few do.

“The bill not only levels the playing field between online retailers and main street businesses, but keeps Florida competitiv­e by offering much needed tax relief by replenishi­ng the unemployme­nt compensati­on trust fund and reducing the ‘Florida-only’ business rent tax,” Florida Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Mark Wilson said in a statement after the bill passed.

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