The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Tensions mount as Seattle debates business tax for homeless

- By Phuong Le

SEATTLE » Seattle’s latest tax proposal to combat homelessne­ss takes aim at large businesses such as Amazon that have helped drive the city’s economic boom.

But the measure has sparked intense debate — even shouting matches in otherwise reserved Seattle — over who should pay to solve the housing crisis exacerbate­d by that growth.

The City Council is proposing a tax on employee hours to raise about $75 million a year for affordable housing and homelessne­ss services. Nearly 600 large employers making at least $20 million in gross revenues would pay about $500 a year per worker.

Amazon, the city’s largest employer, would take the biggest hit.

Supporters insist the online retailer and others that have benefited from Seattle’s prosperity and contribute­d to growing income inequality and skyrocketi­ng rents can and should pay.

Businesses and others say the so-called head tax is misguided and potentiall­y harmful. They question whether the city is effectivel­y using the tens of millions of dollars it already spends on homelessne­ss each year.

Amazon raised the stakes last week when it halted constructi­on planning on a 17-story tower near its hometown headquarte­rs as it awaits a tax vote. It is also rethinking filling office space in another leased building.

The company has more than 45,000 workers, meaning it would pay more than $20 million a year under the tax. It would likely owe even more when the tax switches to a 0.7 percent tax on business payroll in 2021.

Councilwom­an Kshama Sawant, a socialist, said affordable housing is critically important and the council should “stand up to Amazon and Jeff Bezos’ bullying.” Constructi­on workers chanted “no head tax” and disrupted a news conference she held last week on Amazon’s campus.

Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan hasn’t taken a position on the tax but said she’ll work to find common ground.

The proposal’s four sponsors said in a joint statement last week that the tax doesn’t target one company, though they noted Amazon’s record quarterly profits.

“It seems only fair that as so many struggle to make their way through a tax system that’s rigged in favor of large corporatio­ns, that we ask those same corporatio­ns to financiall­y contribute to the public health and housing solutions designed to address those consequenc­es,” they wrote.

A council committee could vote this week and the full council may take it up Monday.

Amazon’s threat to pause its expansion in Seattle comes as 20 cities vie to lure the company’s second headquarte­rs and as it expands its workforce in Boston and Vancouver, British Columbia. Some see it as a warning to those contenders.

But Jeff Shulman, an associate professor in the University of Washington’s Foster School of Business, said he thinks Amazon is more focused on the long term.

“The city is looking at how much Amazon makes and comparing whatever tax to that number, and that could be a scary thought to Amazon,” he said, adding: “The $20 million could be viewed as a start, and if Amazon doesn’t show it will react now, it can be the start of a slippery slope.”

Proponents say people are dying on the streets, and while city-funded programs found homes for 3,400 people last year, the problem deepens. The Seattle region had the thirdhighe­st number of homeless people in the U.S. and saw 169 homeless deaths in 2017.

Most money raised would build 1,780 affordable housing units over five years. One-fifth would go toward shelter beds, tiny homes, hygiene, garbage cleanup and other homeless services.

 ?? TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Monday photo, pedestrian­s and cyclists gather near the Amazon Spheres, in Seattle. Seattle’s latest tax proposal to combat homelessne­ss takes aim at large businesses such as Amazon that have helped drive the city’s economic boom.
TED S. WARREN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Monday photo, pedestrian­s and cyclists gather near the Amazon Spheres, in Seattle. Seattle’s latest tax proposal to combat homelessne­ss takes aim at large businesses such as Amazon that have helped drive the city’s economic boom.

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