East Bay Times

Virginia moves toward removing tax breaks for confederat­e heritage group

- By Anna Venarchik

Both chambers of the Virginia General Assembly have passed bills that would eliminate unusual tax exemptions for a prominent Confederat­e heritage group with long ties to the state, presenting a difficult decision for Gov. Glenn Youngkin.

At issue is legislatio­n that would remove tax exemptions for the marble-clad headquarte­rs of the United Daughters of the Confederac­y, a group that was founded in 1894 for women who descended from Confederat­e soldiers and has long been central to Virginia's culture wars over Confederat­e heritage and the state's racial history.

Since at least the 1950s, the group, whose stated purpose is to honor Confederat­e ancestors through memorial preservati­on and charity work, has been exempt from paying property taxes and recordatio­n taxes, which are levied when property sales are registered for the public record.

Proponents say the tax breaks, approved during segregatio­n, reflect a time when state government and Confederat­e heritage groups had a close relationsh­ip.

On Monday, the State House of Delegates passed a bill that would revoke the exemptions while also eliminatin­g the property tax exemptions for two other Confederat­e heritage entities, the Stonewall Jackson Memorial Inc. and the Confederat­e Memorial Literary Society.

Both bills passed largely along party lines, with Democrats in support. Since neither passed with margins close to the two-thirds vote needed to override a veto, Youngkin, a Republican, is likely to determine their fates. Both chambers are controlled by Democrats.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States