The Commercial Appeal

Soda tax sweetens Philadelph­ia coffers by $5.7 million in a month

- JOHN BACON

A contentiou­s tax on sweetened drinks that poured a whopping $5.7 million into Philadelph­ia’s coffers in its first month is devastatin­g the beverage industry and damaging overall grocery sales, some business leaders say.

The 1.5-cents-per-ounce tax on sugary beverages and related syrups isn’t cheap: It adds about $1 to the cost of a 2-liter bottle of soda. A 12-pack of 12ounce sodas goes up $2.16. The tax won approval last year despite bitter opposition from many merchants and beverage distributo­rs who now blame the tax for pay cuts and layoffs.

City Revenue Commission­er Frank Breslin on Thursday announced January’s estimated tax haul, more than double prediction­s. The number could rise because not all distributo­rs and dealers have registered and paid tax bills for the month, he added.

The estimate for the full fiscal year is more than $91 million, but the first few months were projected to be lower than average because inventory on hand Jan. 1 is not subject to tax.

“That the first month’s beverage tax revenues are so high is reason to believe the goal for the year will be met,” said Marc Stier, director of the nonpartisa­n Pennsylvan­ia Budget and Policy Center.

Revenue from the tax will help fund a preschool program, parks, libraries and other projects. But Alex Baloga, vice president of external relations at the Pennsylvan­ia Food Merchants Associatio­n, said the tax is doing more harm than good. His group is fighting the measure in court.

Baloga said retailers immediatel­y experience­d a “massive” impact. Beverage sales are down sharply as many city residents cross into suburban counties to buy soda, he said. That has led to changed shopping habits — some customers end up doing all their shopping outside the city, he said. Distributo­rs and supermarke­ts in Philadelph­ia have already started announcing layoffs, he added.

“The important point is that this is having a dramatic, negative impact on retailers, businesses and customers in the city,” he said. “

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States