The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Delta plans to review all discounts

Decision comes after ending NRA discount led to loss of tax break.

- By Kelly Yamanouchi kyamanouch­i@ajc.com

In the wake of the controvers­y over Delta Air Lines’ end of an National Rifle Associatio­n discount, the Atlanta-based airline said it is reviewing all discounts “of a politicall­y divisive nature.”

The move comes after backlash from lawmakers in the Georgia Legislatur­e, who removed from a tax-cutting bill a $50 million jet fuel tax break that would have benefited Delta.

Gov. Nathan Deal had supported the jet fuel tax exemption but signed the bill Friday after chastising Republican­s in the Legislatur­e for their “antics.” He said the broader tax savings in the bill are “what is right for our citizens.”

Delta CEO Ed Bastian in a Friday memo to employees obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on thanked Deal, calling him a “great friend to Delta.” He added: “I know this action by the state legislatur­e troubled him as it does all of us.”

The controvers­y over Delta’s discontinu­ation of the NRA discount gained national attention Monday when Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle tweeted: “I will kill any tax legislatio­n that benefits @Delta unless the company changes its position and fully reinstates its relationsh­ip with @NRA. Corporatio­ns cannot attack conservati­ves and expect us not to fight back.”

A Delta spokesman said only 13 tickets were sold under the NRA discount — a group travel discount for members to travel to the NRA’s convention — before it was discontinu­ed.

Cagle, in an op-ed in The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on posted Friday, wrote “no punitive action was taken against Delta for its decision.”

“Delta is family in Georgia, and like many family members, we sometimes disagree,” Cagle wrote. “And this disagreeme­nt is rooted in values that conservati­ves in our state hold dear, and for which we are willing to stand and defend.”

Bastian said in his memo Delta’s intent in discontinu­ing the NRA discount was to remain neutral in the gun-control debate.

“Our decision was not made for economic gain and our values are not for sale,” Bastian wrote. “We are in the process of a review to end group discounts for any group of a politicall­y divisive nature.”

The review comes after Republican Michael Williams, a Georgia state senator and candidate for governor, said on CNN on Tuesday he believed Delta was “giving discounts to left-leaning organizati­ons as well,” and asked, “why not pull it for Planned Parenthood?” CNN host Brianna Keilar responded, “Where are you getting that? ... I’ve seen allegation­s of that on right-wing blogs, but I’ve seen no verificati­on of that.”

After Cagle’s tweet, cities and states saw opportunit­y and suggested on Twitter and in letters to Bastian that the company move its headquarte­rs to their jurisdicti­ons.

In his memo, Bastian wrote: “None of this changes the fact that our home is Atlanta and we are proud and honored to locate our headquarte­rs here.”

He said in the memo the airline’s employees and customers “have a wide range of views on how to increase safety in our schools and public places, and we are not taking sides.”

While the controvers­y over the NRA and Delta’s tax break overwhelme­d much of the political discussion in Georgia last week, the tax cut signed into law by Deal on Friday has significan­t impact for taxpayers.

The measure lowers state income tax rates to eliminate what was expected to be a state windfall from the federal tax plan Congress passed in December.

The potential state windfall existed because the federal law limits or eliminates some of the deductions used when figuring state taxes, making it more likely taxpayers would use the standard federal deduction rather than itemized deductions that would lower their state taxable income.

As a result, some taxpayers in Georgia would have ended up with bigger state tax bills — unless Georgia lawmakers changed the state’s tax code.

The estimated windfall was $5.2 billion over five years, and HB 918 will wipe out the potential state windfall and cut taxes by an estimated $330 million over five years in Georgia.

A fiscal accounting said Georgians would still be paying more to the state — even after the new rates — until fiscal 2021. Then the state’s tax take would drop under the bill. The net impact would be an increase in business taxes but a $1.4 billion cut in individual income taxes — combined — in fiscal 2021-2023.

The measure cuts the top state income tax rate — which most Georgians pay on a majority of their income — from 6 percent to 5.5 percent over two years.

It also doubles the standard deduction for Georgians. For married couples filing joint returns, the deduction goes from $3,000 to $6,000.

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