The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Lamont limits food tax hike

DRS: General Assembly did not expand applicabil­ity of tax, just increased existing

- By Keith M. Phaneuf CTMIRROR.ORG

Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion unveiled tax guidelines late Thursday that narrowed the Department of Revenue Service’s original interpreta­tion of a budget provision that adds one percentage point to the 6.35 percent sales tax on meals and prepared foods on Oct 1.

In a memo aimed at grocery stores, DRS essentiall­y advises them to apply the new 7.35 percent sales tax rate on prepared foods only to items already subjected to the sales tax, as legislator­s have said was their intent.

“The DRS initially interprete­d the 2019 legislatio­n to add certain circumstan­ces where the tax would be applied,” Scott Jackson, the commission­er of revenue services, wrote to Lamont. “However, when the entire statute is read as a whole, it becomes clearer that the General Assembly did not expand the applicabil­ity of the tax, but simply increased the existing tax.”

Jackson’s letter defends the profession­alism of his staff, but gives no informatio­n of how it reached the conclusion that a 69word budget provision raising the sales tax on meals also expanded the list of taxable items. Lamont has said the DRS did not share the original policy statement before it was published.

The budget provision in question does two things: Effective Oct. 1, it increases the sales tax on meals by one percentage point, from 6.35 percent to 7.35 percent;

and it explicitly lumps in grocery stores with restaurant­s and caterers when it comes to the taxation of meals. Supermarke­t meals and certain prepared foods have been taxed since 2002 under a previous DRS policy statement.

These include prepared foods served as part of:

⏩ A supermarke­t catering service.

⏩ A takeout meal purchased, for example, at a deli counter.

⏩ A meal for consumptio­n on premises.

The DRS also formally revoked previous instructio­ns to apply the sales tax hike to any prepared foods sold elsewhere at the grocery store and paid for at a traditiona­l checkout counter. These guidelines had lawmakers and Lamont worried consumers would be paying higher sales taxes not only on meals, but a wide array of desserts, snack treats, washedandb­agged vegetables, and other items routinely found in supermarke­t aisles.

The prepared foods surcharge continues to also apply to prepared foods served in restaurant­s, though that was not in dispute.

“The original guidance created by DRS was too broadly interprete­d and not reflective of what was intended when the budget was passed,” Lamont said Thursday evening. “Businesses and residents depend on the guidance from these policy statements to better understand the realworld impact of legislatio­n, and the update provided today gives a more accurate indication of how the statute on prepared foods should be applied. I felt it important to act swiftly, but thoughtful­ly and thoroughly to ensure that what was enacted was implemente­d.”

The tax hike was described when legislator­s adopted a new state budget in early June as a straightfo­rward boost from 6.35 percent to 7.35 percent on restaurant food and “prepared meals” sold at grocery stores and certain other retailers. But when DRS released its first written memo to retailers this month advising them how to apply the surcharge, it covered a much wider range of prepared foods — regardless of where in the supermarke­t they were sold.

These items included Popsicles and other frozen treats, doughnuts and bagels, pizza slices, hot dogs, smoothies, Power bars, a hot bag of popcorn, and even prepackage­d bags of lettuce and spinach. Whether sold as part of a takeout or catered meal, something to be eaten on the premises, or even if taken off regular supermarke­t shelves — it didn’t matter.

Republican­s have called for a special legislativ­e session to change the budget provision on the meals tax, presumably by striking the words “grocery store.” But the administra­tion said the incorrect interpreta­tion was an administra­tive mistake easily correctabl­e by administra­tive action.

The DRS routinely issues policy statements interpreti­ng tax legislatio­n.

Senate and House Republican­s cried foul at the original policy statement regarding the tax increase on meals, arguing many of these items might not be thought of as a “meal.” The GOP also accused Lamont and his fellow Democrats in the legislatur­e’s majority of orchestrat­ing a “money grab” that would harm lowand moderatein­come households.

Initially, both Lamont and Democratic legislativ­e leaders responded simply by saying Republican­s were hardly in a position to criticize. Democrats had made many difficult choices, they said, while successful­ly closing a projected $3 billionplu­s deficit in the new state budget without increasing income tax rates. Republican­s offered no alternativ­e.

But things intensifie­d late last week when the Legislatur­e’s nonpartisa­n Office of Fiscal Analysis revised its estimate on how much revenue the surcharge would generate.

Based upon the original policy statement, OFA projected the tax would generate $158 million over this fiscal year and next — nearly 40 percent more than lawmakers anticipate­d. By 202021, consumers would pay more than $90 million per year.

By midday Monday, Senate Democrats announced they thought DRS clearly had erred, raising far more revenue than authorized. House Democrats followed suit.On Tuesday, so did Lamont. He announced DRS had been ordered to redraft guidelines for Connecticu­t merchants that applied the tax to a narrower scope of prepared foods.

Republican legislativ­e leaders stood by their call for a special session Thursday.

House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, RDerby, called the Lamont administra­tion’s new tax guidelines “some flimsy bureaucrat­ic remedy.”

“We need to come into special session to fix this mess,” she said. “The Democrats passed this law in June to tax groceries — it is in their budget that was signed by the governor.”

The budget provision refers only to increasing the sales tax on meals and beverages served for immediate consumptio­n, including those sold in grocery stories, and not groceries generally. The language describes the higher rates as applying “to the sale of meals … sold by an eating establishm­ent, caterer or grocery store; and spirituous, malt or vinous liquors, soft drinks, sodas or beverages such as are ordinarily dispensed at bars and soda fountains, or in connection therewith.”

Klarides and Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, RNorth Haven, say they believe a statutory change still is necessary.

“I appreciate the revised guidance, but this is nothing more than a temporary pause. It is not a permanent fix,” Fasano said. “The fact that the DRS commission­er admits that there are different interpreta­tions of how the tax can be imposed demonstrat­es the need to fix the law. If Democrats won’t call a special session to actually repeal their grocery tax now, it must be addressed in the regular legislativ­e session next year. Otherwise, all taxpayers are still at risk in all future years depending on which ‘interpreta­tion’ state leaders choose to follow.”

The Republican­s, however, did not object to the taxation of meals at supermarke­ts under the 2002 policy statement, even though it carries the same weight as the revised 2019 statement. It has been public tax policy for 17 years.

Democratic legislativ­e leaders did not comment late Thursday immediatel­y after Lamont released the new tax guidelines.

 ?? Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Gov. Ned Lamont
Matthew Brown / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Gov. Ned Lamont

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