Toronto Star

State leans on Burning Man, escort services to balance budget

- JAMES NASH BLOOMBERG

Looking for new vices to tax, Nevada lawmakers have turned their sights on escort services and massive music-and-light festivals in the desert.

Lawmakers have eliminated loopholes in Nevada’s live-entertainm­ent tax, a lounge-lizard levy that had covered cabaret performanc­es and burlesque dancing. It now includes a 9-per-cent charge on tickets for events such as Burning Man, the free-form art encampment, and the Electric Daisy Carnival, a threeday music and light show in Las Vegas that attracts 400,000 people.

Both feature youthful masses in fanciful outfits, some carrying a plentiful supply of psychoacti­ve drugs despite organizers’ warnings, and all bearing taxable entertainm­ent dollars.

“There’s no better venue in the world than southern Nevada to conduct an event like Electric Daisy Carnival and there’s no better place than the desert of northern Nevada for an event like Burning Man,” said state Sen. Mark Lipparelli, a Las Vegas Republican who sponsored the bill. “We like them as businesses and we want them to keep coming here. We also want to improve education in Nevada.”

The tax on the tickets, which can cost $400, also would apply to “pickup fees” for escort services, but not prostitute­s at Nevada’s 24 legal brothels.

The old tax, with roots in Las Vegas’s cabaret culture of the 1960s, the heyday of the Rat Pack and Louis Prima, generated about 4.3 per cent of Nevada’s $6.3-billion, two-year budget. State analysts haven’t calculated the expected yield from the new tax, but Lipparelli said it will be similar to the previous figure.

Along with the entertainm­ent tax, lawmakers approved Gov. Brian Sandoval’s $1.1-billion package of new and extended taxes on businesses, cigarettes, payroll and sales.

Burning Man features massive installati­ons — many of them mobile — fanciful costumes and copious nudity. After days in which an impromptu culture is created, the festival climaxes with the immolation of a massive effigy.

“Burning Man participan­ts contribute more than $40 million annually to the Nevada economy; they pay their fair share of sales and gas taxes, and they are tremendous­ly supportive of local businesses,” Jim Graham, a spokesman for the non-profit Burning Man Project, said by email. “To single out a non-profit for an estimated $2.8-million tax bill is shortsight­ed.”

Electric Daisy has generated more than $1billion for the Southern Nevada economy since it came to Las Vegas in 2011, said an Insomniac spokeswoma­n, Jennifer Forkish.

“It’s been a very attractive place to produce music festivals, but this new law is extremely detrimenta­l to our industry, one that generates hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for local and state government­s while operating on razorthin margins in an already high-risk environmen­t.”

 ?? JIM RANKIN/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? The annual Burning Man festival in the Nevada desert faces an estimated $2.8-million (U.S.) tax bill after the state eliminated entertainm­ent tax loopholes.
JIM RANKIN/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO The annual Burning Man festival in the Nevada desert faces an estimated $2.8-million (U.S.) tax bill after the state eliminated entertainm­ent tax loopholes.

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