Daily Press

Proposed ‘tech tax’ in Virginia sparks backlash from community

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND — Trade associatio­ns representi­ng hundreds of companies that do business in Virginia have come out swinging against a proposal to expand the state sales tax to cover digital goods, something Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin proposed and Democrats endorsed in their budget legislatio­n.

Both chambers of the legislatur­e included the new sales tax on purchases like streaming subscripti­ons, cloud storage and online downloads in the two-year budget plans they passed last week. The Senate went beyond the House of Delegates in also applying it to business-to-business transactio­ns.

In a letter sent to lawmakers beginning Tuesday, the Northern Virginia Technology Council and other business-focused lobbying and trade organizati­ons said the General Assembly should reject the proposed “tech tax,” which budget documents from both chambers show is estimated to generate over $1 billion in revenue over the next two-year state budget. At a minimum, the letter said, if policymake­rs move forward with the proposal, they should broadly exempt business-to-business transactio­ns — or companies may be forced to pass along costs to consumers or move to other states.

“The proposed tech tax hike would put Virginia companies at a significan­t competitiv­e disadvanta­ge in industries where global competitio­n is high and margins are narrow. The tax will very likely impact hiring and reduce internal research and developmen­t investment, the majority of which is currently concentrat­ed here in Virginia,” Jennifer Taylor, president and CEO of the group, said in a statement included with the letter, which a representa­tive of the organizati­on shared with The Associated Press.

The Technology Council says on its website it has nearly 500 members, ranging from Fortune 100 companies to academic institutio­ns and government contractor­s.

Additional interest groups, including the Virginia Chamber of Commerce, a data center coalition and a coalition of broadband providers, also signed onto the letter.

So did the Virginia Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, whose president and CEO, Brett Vassey, said the proposed tax would drive up the cost of software and online training materials used by factories.

Democrats have said the expansion of the tax is a commonsens­e adjustment that brings Virginia’s tax code in line with an increasing­ly digital world.

Currently, individual­s would pay sales tax on a CD but not a digital download, and a company would pay taxes on a physical server but not cloud storage, Democratic Sen. L. Louise Lucas of Portsmouth, chair of the Senate Finance & Appropriat­ions Committee, said while unveiling her chamber’s budget proposal.

“I find it only fair that the same taxes apply to individual­s and businesses when consuming the same services,” said Lucas, who dubbed the proposal a “new economy” tax.

Youngkin called for the expansion of the sales tax to cover what he calls the “Big Tech” loophole when he unveiled his proposed version of the 2024-2026 budget in December. But he also coupled it with an income tax cut, which Democrats voted down, in a budget package that would have reduced tax revenues overall.

“Governor Youngkin made it clear during his State of the Commonweal­th address that he was only interested in a plan that reduced the tax burden for Virginians. While the governor will review any legislatio­n that comes to his desk, his Unleashing Opportunit­y budget proposed a nearly $1 billion tax cut over the biennium, building upon the $5 billion in tax relief he delivered on a bipartisan basis to Virginians during his first two years in office,” spokesman Christian Martinez said in an emailed statement.

Later this week, lawmakers will send their competing budget plans to a conference committee, a group of legislator­s who will work to find a compromise plan to send to Youngkin. That process takes place out of public view and in recent years has not been finished on time.

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