Texarkana Gazette

Churches may have to pay taxes; lawmakers may pay politicall­y

- By Emma Dumain

WASHINGTON— Members of Congress should be able to work together to protect houses of worship from having to pay taxes, especially in an election year when both parties want to earn the faith community’s vote.

In an era of pervasive partisan politics, however, not even that is a guarantee.

Some Republican­s do want to tweak a portion of their 2017 tax bill that will now force nonprofits, including churches, to pay a 21 percent tax on the value of certain employee benefits. But most others downplay the problem or deny it needs to be addressed.

Assistant House Minority Leader Jim Clyburn of South Carolina is rallying Democrats around new legislatio­n to repeal the provision.

But he can’t do it without help from Republican­s, and calling their tax bill the “GOP tax scam” isn’t going to win over lawmakers who are fiercely protective of this congressio­nal session’s biggest legislativ­e achievemen­t.

“( Democrats and Republican­s) are describing the problem in very different ways,” said Galen Carey, vice president of government relations for the National Associatio­n of Evangelica­ls. “One side is saying ‘this is an oversight,’ the other is calling it Republican­s’ war on religion—overheated rhetoric probably won’t help us get a solution.” Short of legislativ­e action, a public relations nightmare could be awaiting lawmakers who voted for the tax bill back home.

“This is an issue that will not go away,” said Dan Busby, president of the Evangelica­l Council for Fiscal Accountabi­lity. “When you stir up 100,000 houses of worship, and then hundreds of thousands of nonprofits on top of that, you have a pretty mighty force that is going to get attention on this issue.”

Tucked away in the new tax law congressio­nal Republican­s passed late last year with no Democratic support is a provision slapping certain nonprofits and charities, including houses of worship, with a 21 percent tax on the value of some employee benefits.

The expectatio­n is the tax would relate to parking spaces and public transit passes. But those affected by the provision are genuinely unsure what exactly would qualify as a taxable expense because they still haven’t received official guidance from the Treasury Department.

“Treasury is aware of the change—and we have been talking to the impacted constituen­cies about the concern,” said a Treasury spokespers­on in a statement to McClatchy. “We are working to address the issue and provide clarity for taxpayers.” The new tax on the value of employee benefits means that many institutio­ns are going to have to prepare tax forms for the very first time—a convoluted and potentiall­y costly exercise.

“Most churches do not have the sophistica­tion that’s necessary to deal with the tax code,” Clyburn told McClatchy. “Small churches that exist in communitie­s I represent—don’t operate as businesses. They’ve never operated as businesses.”

Churches also help pay for transporta­tion expenses for employees who would might otherwise have a tough time paying for it themselves. If institutio­ns had to pay a tax on providing these perks, they might rescind them, Clyburn suggested.

The new requiremen­t was not discussed in the lead-up to passage of the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act” and has since caught virtually everyone off guard, even members of Congress.

“Had we had hearings, I can assure you I would have been testifying or screaming,” said Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, D-Mo., a United Methodist pastor.

Clyburn said he had only just learned about the provision from faith leaders in his district when he received a phone call from Rep. Mark Veasey, D-Texas, who described being “accosted” by ministers at an event in his district.

Clyburn’s bill currently has 31 co-sponsors, including Cleaver and Veasey. All are Democrats and predominan­tly fellow members of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus who tend to have strong ties to churches. Referring to the Republican tax bill as the “GOP tax scam” in a news release announcing the introducti­on of his bill, Clyburn said he’d be glad to work with GOP lawmakers to repeal the 21 percent tax, but had not talked to any yet.

When asked how he might reconcile calling the tax bill a scam with his desire to work across the aisle, Clyburn chuckled.

“They know it’s a scam,” he said.

Republican­s’ appetite to act seems tepid. As Republican­s looked for ways to cut costs in their bill late last year, they decided to eliminate tax breaks for employers of for-profits who hand out perks to their employees. They decided to apply the same standard for nonprofits, too.

Legislativ­e tax-writers were reluctant this week to pan the provision or suggest there could be adverse effects.

“People call it a tax on churches and charities. There is no tax on churches and charities,” said Rep. Tom Rice, R-S.C. “What we’ve said is, ‘We’re trying to make things fair across the board. So organizati­ons €” all organizati­ons, for-profit, nonprofit, everybody that gives their employees free stuff, we’re trying to make it equal.’”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States