The Palm Beach Post

Online taxes irk sales-tax free states

New Hampshire, four other states don’t impose own sales tax.

- By Elaine Povich Stateline.org

The “Live Free or Die” state of New Hampshire is also the “Live Sales-Tax Free” state, one of only five that do not collect any tax on retail purchases. And despite a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June allowing states to collect sales taxes when their residents buy online, some of New Hampshire’s online retailers don’t want to help other states collect their money. New Hampshire lawmakers tried a couple of months ago to write a law that would have set up a series of hurdles for other states that want New Hampshire retailers to collect sales tax on their residents’ purchases. The bill called for outside tax authoritie­s to first register with the New Hampshire attorney general, pay a fee and then prove the constituti­onality of the sales tax. The legislatio­n failed — partly because of fears it would expose the state’s small businesses to litigation from other states — but the resistance remains. “It’s extremely unfortunat­e that retailers who do not have to collect taxes for the state of New Hampshire are going to be put in the position of having to collect for other states,” said Nancy Kyle, president and CEO of the New Hampshire Retail Associatio­n, representi­ng 900 businesses in the state. “This is a very difficult thing for small retailers to implement.” The New Hampshire case illustrate­s the complexiti­es of collecting online sales taxes, especially for retailers in New Hampshire and the other four states — Alaska, Delaware, Montana and Oregon — that don’t impose their own sales tax. The Tax Foundation, a nonprofit study group, estimates there are about 10,000 sales tax jurisdicti­ons in the country, including not only state government­s but also city, county, tribal and special district government­s. That poses special difficulti­es for retailers in non-sales-

tax states. “Delaware does not impose a sales tax, and we will not be enforcing any form of sales tax or use tax against out-of-state sellers,” said Leslie Poland, community relations coordinato­r for the Department of Finance. However, Delaware Director of Revenue Jennifer Hudson said in a statement that vendors in Delaware “may be required by other states to collect sales taxes due in those jurisdicti­ons on remote sales made to residents of those jurisdicti­ons.” She did not say how that would be enforced. The Montana Department of Revenue issued a statement advising online retailers that sell to buyers outside the state to “please seek competent legal advice on how to proceed with collecting and remitting sales tax.” The department did not provide any guidance. Christophe­r Galdieri, a professor at St. Anselm College in Manchester, New Hampshire, who pays close attention to state policy, predicted that many New Hampshire retailers won’t collect any sales tax until they get clearer direction. “A lot of these businesses are figuring, ‘When somebody tells me when to start collecting, and how, I’ll do it, but until then I won’t worry about it,’” Galdieri said. The New Hampshire Legislatur­e likely will revisit the failed sales tax bill, Galdieri said, because being antitax is “part of the state’s identity,” and people don’t want to be identified with collecting taxes, even for other states. Colorado is a prime example of a state with multiple sales tax jurisdicti­ons that could pose calculatio­n problems for online retailers beyond its borders. Colorado’s Revenue Department announced recently that it will start requiring out-of-state online sellers with at least 200 transactio­ns in Colorado, or $100,000 worth of sales annually, to collect and remit Colorado sales taxes. But Joseph Bishop-Henchman, executive vice president at the Tax Foundation, wrote that Colorado has a “big problem” because it relies on its 349 county, city and district local sales tax jurisdicti­ons to oversee the collection of sales taxes. That fact makes it difficult for out-of-state online retailers to calculate and send in the correct tax to the correct jurisdicti­on. Other states that levy a sales tax are encounteri­ng their own complicati­ons. For example, South Dakota, the state that started it all by bringing the South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc. case to the U.S. Supreme Court, had to delay online sales tax collection until it called a special session of the Legislatur­e to pass a new law explicitly allowing it. Republican Gov. Dennis Daugaard signed the measure earlier this month. But in five states — Hawaii, Maine, Mississipp­i, Oklahoma and Vermont — collection­s have already begun, according to the Sales Tax Institute, a training and education firm for businesses. A dozen more will start Oct. 1, followed by others in November and January. “There are now 30 states (out of 45 states and D.C. with a sales tax) that have announced enforcemen­t or have legislatio­n” in the works, said Diane Yetter, founder of the Sales Tax Institute. She said California and South Carolina also plan to proceed but have not yet approved legislatio­n. “States have moved quickly,” she said. “A few believe they need to pass enabling legislatio­n, but most recently more are moving forward through regulation­s rather than legislatio­n. It really depends on how the state’s current definition of retailer doing business is written.”

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