The Commercial Appeal

TN House passes massive franchise tax refund

- Melissa Brown

The Tennessee General Assembly is at odds over a massive franchise tax refund after the House and Senate passed vastly different versions of a bill backed by Gov. Bill Lee.

The House on Monday passed their slimmed down version of the plan, which would allow businesses to seek a one-year refund of a franchise tax some state officials say must be handed out to avoid a costly lawsuit. The House's plan would also require the state to publicly list businesses who benefit from the refund.

With the one-year time period, the House version would cost around $800 million, a significan­t savings compared to the Senate's three-year lookback, which is expected to cost Tennessee $1.9 billion between a gargantuan refund and new tax break.

Under the House plan, companies who take a refund from the state would also have to waive their right to sue over the franchise tax in the future, as lawmakers have argued they're pushing this legislatio­n under the specter of a potential lawsuit.

Senate Republican­s have previously blocked an effort to carve out transparen­cy

Majority Leader William Lamberth, R-portland, sponsored HB 1893 and has argued the tax change is simply “good policy,” while Senate Republican leaders down the hall have continuall­y indicated their hand is being forced by a looming lawsuit threat, the origin of which state officials have refused to disclose The Tennessean.

“No court, period, no court anywhere has found that our law is unconstitu­tional,” Lamberth said of Tennessee's longstandi­ng franchise and excise tax calculatio­n,

though he said the state is now “out of step with the rest of the country.”

Though House Democrats said they were pleased to see additional transparen­cy measures in the lower chamber's version, the caucus was critical the legislatur­e could find millions to refund corporatio­ns while declining to pass a grocery tax or other tax relief for “hardworkin­g

Tennessean­s.”

House Democratic Caucus Chair John Ray Clemmons, D-nashville, called the bill “a voluntary codificati­on of a corporate handout.”

“We don't owe those companies anything,” Clemmons said. “They operated under the laws of Tennessee. They do not deserve a $700 million refund.”

The House bill passed in a party line vote, though eight Republican­s “blue lighted” the bill, recording themselves as present but not voting on the legislatio­n.

With the two chambers at odds on such significan­t details, the legislatio­n is expected to go to a conference committee in the coming days before a compromise is reached.

 ?? NICOLE HESTER/THE TENNESSEAN ?? House Speaker Cameron Sexton, left, and Rep. William Lamberth, R-portland, speak to members of the media following a session at the state Capitol in Nashville on March 14.
NICOLE HESTER/THE TENNESSEAN House Speaker Cameron Sexton, left, and Rep. William Lamberth, R-portland, speak to members of the media following a session at the state Capitol in Nashville on March 14.

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