Los Angeles Times

Tax break for forgiven loans

Newsom is expected to enact a bill that lets businesses avoid state taxes on loans from the Paycheck Protection Program.

- BY PATRICK MCGREEVY

SACRAMENTO — California lawmakers on Monday approved the last part of a COVID-19 economic recovery package, sending the governor a bill he supports that provides up to $6.8 billion in state tax breaks for California businesses.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and lawmakers negotiated the provisions of the bill, which allows businesses to avoid paying state taxes on forgiven loans from the federal Paycheck Protection Program and to deduct expenses paid for using the loan funds.

“AB 80 provides significan­t and immediate tax relief to California businesses devastated by the coronaviru­s pandemic,” said Assemblywo­man Autumn Burke (D-Marina del Rey), the author of the bill approved Monday by the state Assembly a week after it was acted on by the Senate.

State officials said the tax breaks will apply to up to 85% of the more than 1 million California businesses that received a combined $97 billion in federal loans, or an average of about $96,700.

Newsom is expected to sign the bill, although the legislatio­n sent to him Monday is much larger than the $2-billion proposal he announced in February.

“AB 80 represents a joint agreement between the administra­tion and the Legislatur­e and a shared set of priorities on providing additional and substantia­l tax relief to help California businesses recover and rehire after the COVID-19 recession,” said H.D. Palmer, a spokesman for the Newsom administra­tion.

The tax breaks were part of a larger economic relief package signed by Newsom in February that also offered an additional $7.6 billion for programs that included $600 state stimulus payments to low-income residents, and $2.1 billion in grants and fee waivers for small businesses.

The tax breaks approved Monday were supported by leaders of business groups including John Kabateck, California state director of the National Federation of Independen­t Business.

“Small-business owners shouldn’t be penalized for taking federal support when businesses were adversely impacted by government shutdowns to deal with this terrible pandemic,” Kabateck said.

As an urgency bill that takes effect immediatel­y after it is signed, the legislatio­n required a two-thirds vote. The Assembly vote was unanimous and bipartisan.

Republican­s including state Sen. Patricia Bates of Laguna Niguel said businesses in California are struggling at a time when the state budget is f lush with cash.

“With California supposedly enjoying a budget ‘surplus,’ it makes no sense to penalize small businesses for accepting federal assistance — especially since the feds have made such assistance fully tax-deductible,” Bates said.

State officials said the bill is estimated to cost $4.4 billion to $6.8 billion on a onetime basis, spread out over six years. The final cost depends on the percentage of PPP loans that are forgiven based on businesses meeting certain federal requiremen­ts.

The original lower cost was based in large part on an initial proposal having a $150,000 cap on deductible expenses, but the new bill lifts that cap for many firms.

Some Republican lawmakers said they were concerned that the bill does not extend tax breaks to businesses that did not face a 25% reduction of gross receipts from 2019 to 2020. Including those businesses would have added an additional $2 billion to the cost of the tax breaks.

“These loans are for companies that were struggling,” Burke said during a committee hearing on the measure.

Publicly traded companies are also ineligible for the tax breaks.

The final legislativ­e action was taken on the same day new federal figures showed California’s virus case rate is now the lowest of any state in the nation.

The measure is part of the state’s effort to recover now that the pandemic is easing in California, state restrictio­ns are lifting and businesses are moving back toward full operations, Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins (D-San Diego) said.

“California’s businesses helped get us through the COVID-19 crisis, and now that we are emerging out the other side, we must ensure that they have the financial tools they need to rebound stronger than ever,” Atkins said.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? WAITRESS Teresa Zadala prepares a margarita at Lares in Santa Monica, which got a federal PPP loan.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times WAITRESS Teresa Zadala prepares a margarita at Lares in Santa Monica, which got a federal PPP loan.

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