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Blog

  • 26-Aug-10 15:23 | Clark Kepler (administrator)

    As consumers and retailers, we expect that economic competition will be based on opportunity and fairness, but in California that's not the case.

     

    Common sense would dictate that when you buy something online you would pay sales tax, just as if you had made that same purchase in my store in Menlo Park. Unfortunately, for both me and the state, out-of-state online retailers have practiced sales tax avoidance for years. As a result, hundreds of millions of dollars in sales tax go uncollected. That's money that current law says is due and that could help bridge our massive budget gap and help protect us against further tax increases.

     

    The good news is that a proposed state budget plan includes a provision that makes clear that online retailers with affiliates in California have a legal presence in our state and, therefore, must collect sales tax, just as I and every other in-state retailer does.

    Not surprisingly, giant out-of-state retailers are lobbying hard to keep the status quo. By not collecting sales tax, they maintain a crucial price advantage over in-state retailers. But a sale, is a sale, is a sale, and the current, unfair situation undermines locally owned stores such as mine, businesses that studies have shown contribute far more economic benefit to our communities. On a level playing field, I and thousands of other local retailers create new jobs that are crucial in an economic recovery.

     

    According to estimates from the University of Tennessee, California's loss of total state and local sales tax revenue for 2011 - 2012 is more than $3.5 billion. Enacting the proposed budget plan would fix our antiquated system and would help recoup monies that would go toward keeping police protecting our neighborhoods, teachers in neighborhood classrooms, and first responders in nearby firehouses.

     

    Importantly, these changes are both fair and doable. Currently, most retailers that also sell online -- including Wal-Mart, Barnes & Noble, and Sears -- already collect and remit sales tax for online purchases. Technological advances have greatly simplified and automated this task, and the proposed sales tax equity provision contains an exemption for small retailers in California whose businesses are not focused on extensive out-of-state online sales.

     

    Adopting a state budget that includes sales tax equity will make sure that all businesses play by the same rules, that our state fosters job growth and opportunity, and that we take important steps toward lasting economic growth and fiscal responsibility.

     

  • 20-Aug-10 10:57 | Clark Kepler (administrator)

    State Senator Joe Simitian

    160 Town & Country Village
    Palo Alto, CA 94301

     

    Dear Joe,

     

    I am writing to ask your support for e-fairness language in the state budget or through legislation. Currently the law allows a loophole that hurts California businesses while advantaging out-of-state online only retailers.

     

    This issue is critical to the ongoing health of small businesses in California. Out-of-state online retailers whose business model is based on sale tax avoidance enjoy up to nearly a 10% price advantage over thousands of retailers, both small and large. This competitive advantage has already contributed to the demise of businesses throughout the state, and it has throttled efforts of many others to grow and create more jobs for the state.

     

    I respectfully suggest that collection of sales tax does not constitute a new tax increase but actually just ensures that the same requirements placed on California businesses are adhered to by out-of-state businesses.

     

    I appreciate your consideration and hope that you will support our state’s small business community and their efforts to prosper and stimulate job growth, while continuing to collect much-needed sales tax revenue for the state. 

     

    Thank you for your recognition of small business's importance over the years. Please help us continue to grow our business and support our community.

     

    Sincerely,

     

    Clark Kepler

  • 09-Aug-10 16:35 | Clark Kepler (administrator)

    BevMo wants to open a location in Menlo Park. There are many reasons to oppose another chain store in our hometown, here are just three:

    ·    When you buy from a local retailer more of your dollars stay in the local economy than when you shop at a chain or online. Local retailers spend more than twice as much buying goods and services from other local businesses (i.e. banks, accountants, attorneys, designers, local media, etc.).

    ·    Local retailers “give-back” more! They donate more, on average, to local charities and community organizations than do chain stores.

    ·    Locally-owned businesses spend a larger share of their revenue on local labor.

    If you think that “more jobs” is a good argument in favor of BevMo, take a look at this You Tube video made by BevMo employees called BevMo! Can Afford To Do Better or copy and paste this URL into your browser http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVt63EO_QKU

    Don’t put our locally-owned, multi-generational businesses at risk and don’t let Menlo Park’s unique community character dissipate with the introduction of big-box chains.

    Tell Us What's Going On in Your Hometown!

     

  • 24-Jul-10 12:00 | Tim Hmelar (administrator)

    WHY SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS SHOULD BANK WITH A LOCAL BANK!

    WANT TO FIND A LOCAL BANK THAT SUPPORTS LOCAL BUSINESSES go to: www.IBankLocal.org.

    "There are nearly 8,000 community banks1 with more than 50,000 locations throughout the United States – in fact, community banks constitute 97% of all banks. Here are some facts about community banks:

    • Community banks are the primary source of lending for small businesses and farms.
    • Even though they compose just over 23% of the banking industry by assets, community banks made 67% of outstanding loans to small businesses.
    • Government reports show small business lending rose slightly at institutions with assets of less than $1 billion between June 2008 and June 2009 and fell more than 4% at institutions with assets of more than $100 billion.
    • Community banks’ boards of directors are made up of local citizens who want to advance the interests of the towns and cities where they live and where their banks do business.
    • Most community bank loans benefit the neighborhoods where depositors live and work.
    • Research has shown average fees for checking accounts and other depository services are lower at community banks than at large, multi-state institutions.
    • Community banks are themselves small businesses, so they understand the needs of small-business owners and mid-size businesses.
    • Community banks offer a wide range of banking services and products designed to meet the needs of consumers and business including:
      • Anytime, anywhere electronic banking
      • ATMs, often with access to surcharge-free networks
      • Cash management services for businesses
      • Checking, savings and investment products
      • Credit and debit cards
      • International banking services
      • Lines of credit
      • Merchant card services
      • Mobile banking
      • Mortgage and consumer loan products
      • Real estate lending
      • Remote deposit services for businesses
      • SBA loans
      • Small and mid-size business lending

    When you switch to a community bank you’re directly supporting your community. It’s easy to switch your personal accounts, just ask how when you call or visit a local bank."

    1Including commercial banks, thrifts, stock and mutual savings institutions. The definition of a community bank is typically under $10 billion in assets.

     

    PURPLE COUPON banks at Bridge Bank, www.bridgebank.con in Palo Alto, CA and loves the GREAT SERVICE, PERSONAL SERVICE and CAN DO ATTITUDE.

    Blog submitted by Tim Hmelar, THmelar@purplecoupon.com and www.purplecoupon.com

     

  • 15-Jul-10 13:00 | Clark Kepler (administrator)

    Late last week, Rep. William Delahunt (D-MA) introduced the Main Street Fairness Act (H.R. 5660) in the U.S. House of Representatives. The bill would authorize the 24 states that are part of the Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement (SSUTA) to require remote retailers to collect and remit sales tax on orders in their states. According to Delahunt, this bill is designed to help states retrieve billions in sales tax revenues that are owed but currently going uncollected while providing long overdue relief to Main Street businesses by restoring fairness and competition to the marketplace.

    We at HTP applaud Delahunt's efforts on behalf of Main Street retailers. We can all be happy that Rep. Delahunt has introduced this important legislation, and should urge Congress to give this legislation high priority.

    We need federal legislation to establish sales tax equity. The goal should be to find a solution to the enormous inequity that currently exists among retailers and to provide states with badly needed revenue in these difficult economic times. As such, while we back Rep. Delahunt's efforts to the fullest, we also will continue to vigorously support affiliate nexus laws here in California such as the ones passed in New York, North Carolina, and Rhode Island.

  • 17-Jun-10 14:18 | Clark Kepler (administrator)

    It’s always interesting to note when an industry leader deviates from a winning strategy.

     

    Thinking about it from reports of the the roll-out of Amazon.com’s Kindle e-reader in Target stores nationwide. Clearly, despite Amazon.com’s phenomenal online retail success, the company has realized that many consumers will need the opportunity to test-drive a Kindle e-reader in a bricks-and-mortar setting before spending $259, especially given the availability of the iPad and other competing devices.

     

    For a company that has long touted a laser-like focus on customer experience and the allure of an Internet browser showroom, this debut in Target is a rich irony, and, also, a sad one. More than any other online retailer, Amazon.com’s obstinate refusal to collect the sales tax mandated by law for online sales has inflicted significant damage on both the businesses of law-abiding Main Street retailers and the local communities that depend on sales tax revenues for vital services.

     

    For more than a decade, Amazon.com has argued that it has no obligation to collect sales tax for its online sales, despite its direct relationship with in-state affiliates who market and refer sales to Amazon.com, a relationship that establishes both Amazon’s presence in a state and its responsibility to collect sales tax. Now that it is leveraging the benefit of physical retail locations for its bestselling product, Amazon’s claims that it does not benefit from the public services paid for by sales tax are seen quite a different light. And an additional irony is that the Kindle is being sold in Target stores, the company for which Amazon.com calculated and collected sales tax for online sales -- even while claiming that such operations were too burdensome for its own operations.

     

    Given the harm Amazon.com’s poor corporate citizenship is inflicting on communities nationwide, all this is much more than a academic argument. A University of Tennessee study projects that total state and local sales and use tax revenue losses from e-commerce sales nationwide will likely exceed $9 billion in 2010 alone, and the number is estimated to grow to more than $12 billion in 2012. This loss comes during the worst recession since the 1930s, which has caused the steepest decline in state tax receipts on record. At least 46 states face or have faced shortfalls for the upcoming fiscal year, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, and these states will continue to grapple with the challenge of finding revenue to fund such critical services as education and policing, threatening hundreds of thousands of jobs.

     

    In no small measure, Amazon.com’s business model rests on that the price advantage it enjoys over Main Street business that play by the rules and collect sales tax -- indeed, the online giant has acknowledged this fact in its reports to the SEC. One clear sign of how important it is to Amazon to preserve this inequity is that it spent more than $1 million over the past six months to lobby in Washington to make sure that it maintained the high ground on this uneven playing field, among other issues. A recent New York Times editorial looked at “how far Amazon is willing to go to protect a business model that relies on not collecting sales tax” and pointed out that “noncollection gives Amazon a major unfair advantage over rival retailers that do collect sales tax and deprives hard-pressed states of much-needed revenue."

     

    While such online retailers as Walmart, Sears, and Barnes & Noble collect sales tax for their online sales, Amazon.com remains one of the few, and most notable, holdouts. Their recent, and highly publicized embrace of bricks-and-mortar retail stores for the Kindle throws into high relief the company’s continued cynicism and obdurate self-interest in refusing to collect and remit the sales tax due on their online sales.

     

    The time has come for state governments to stand up for Main Street retailers and local communities by ensuring that there is in-state sales tax equity. As the Times editorial noted: "One way or another, it seems inevitable all online retailers will collect sales taxes. The only question is when."

  • 20-May-10 16:05 | Clark Kepler (administrator)

    While economists nationwide argue over whether we have begun to recover from the Great Recession, one financial reality is beyond dispute. Our state is facing the biggest budget challenge in decades. Even in a slowly rebounding economy, California is faced with a projected mid-year budget shortfall of $6.3 billion, which means that local governments -- even if they raise school and property taxes -- are going to be cutting support for such essential services as policing, fire fighting, and schools.

    The enormous irony in this troubling story is that California is allowing hundreds of millions of dollars in sales tax to go uncollected by allowing remote online retailers with a significant business presence in our state to ignore their obligation to collect sales tax.

    Given the sums involved, you would think there would be many in the state calling for this situation to be remedied. There are not. Perhaps it's because opponents of sales tax equity have, so far, managed to obfuscate the issue through a combination of misinformation and scapegoating.

    Under current sales tax law, any out-of-state retailer is required to collect and remit sales tax for purchases made by residents in California if the retailer has a physical presence in our state. Current sales tax laws dictate that an out-of-state retailer has a physical presence in a state if they have a store, warehouse, office, or sales agent in the state.

    Amazon.com and other online giants have thousands of affiliates in California, and they are actively promoting products sold by these out-of-state businesses. When this promotion results in a sale of said product, they earn a commission. That, by any definition, is a sales agent, and that means that these online mega-retailers have the legal presence in our state that requires them to collect sales tax.

    The Amazons of the world and online affiliates are naturally opposed to any steps that states might take to enforce sales tax laws. Strategically, their stance makes a lot of sense because it gives them a significant competitive advantage over our in-state businesses that must add additional cost of sales tax.

    Furthermore, there is no doubt that consumers enjoy this so-called advantage. I hear it often: They will shop at out-of-state e-tailers just to avoid paying sales tax.

    That sounds fine, but we need to ask ourselves, in the long run, who really is footing the bill for these duty-free purchases?

    Well, I can tell you who is not paying the bill: Neither online affiliates nor remote retailers.

    We are not talking about just a few dollars here and there flowing out-of-state. The reality is that hundreds of millions of dollars are lost each year, and the figure is growing. This is money that should be going to first responders, to local communities, and to lessen our tax burden. Instead, this money is flying out-of-state to remote retailers and the affiliates that pocket the cash while taxpayers subsidize their use of our in-state services, our roads, and their very business.

    Taking advantage of our state's unwillingness to enforce sales tax laws during the best of times is egregious enough. However, during a recession that has hit our state so hard, it's an affront to every business and citizen in the state.

    And what's worse, on an economic level, it makes no sense.

    Legislators who oppose sales tax equity tout their belief in fiscal responsibility. But, in truth, how fiscally responsible is it to maintain a public policy that subsidizes out-of-state retailers while punishing in-state, tax-paying businesses and residents? Does fiscal responsibility demand that our state government burden residents and businesses with higher taxes and fewer services to placate out-of-state retailers that only take from our state and provide nothing in return?

    Yet that's the stance our state legislators and Governor are currently taking. And so I ask one more question: How's that working out for us exactly? The current budget shortfall tells me the answer is not so good.

    Opponents also love to argue that e-fairness proponents are calling for a new tax. The idea that any struggling retailer in our state would demand a new tax on consumers just doesn't pass the giggle test. In truth, if an out-of-state retailer does not have nexus in the state, shoppers are already required by law to submit the sales tax to the state. The real question is over who should collect this tax – you as a consumer or the out-of-state retailer. Now, granted, our state has not really done much to enforce the collection of use tax from residents, but trust me, as the budget situation worsens, it will. So either you're going to pay it or someone is going to collect it from you.

    Finally, as for those who worry that sales tax equity would somehow harm online business in the state, let me stress that most online retailers, including Wal-Mart, Barnes & Noble, and Sears, already collect and remit sales tax for online purchases. Technological advances have greatly simplified and automated this task. Huge corporate retailers like Amazon.com and Overstock.com are the few remaining holdouts. That said, the money they siphon from our local community and residents is significant and growing exponentially each year.

    So please, when you go to the Internet for some tax-free shopping, I would only urge you to remember that your purchase isn't really free at all. In fact, that tax-free purchase costs all of us and our communities a lot more than you might think.

  • 17-May-10 18:27 | Clark Kepler (administrator)

    So what could the state do with an extra $485 million?

     

    ·        We could fix 300,000 potholes for $15 million

    ·        We could provide music programs to 2000 public schools for $72 million

    ·        We could hire 500 police officers for $45 million

    ·        We could restore programs cut from the state Office of AIDS for $59 million

    ·        We could give 8,000 senior citizens served by Adult Day Health Care access to two additional days of supervised care for $27 million

    ·        We could restore all state funding for domestic violence shelters for $21 million

    ·        We could provide sufficient rape kit testing funds to the state crime lab for $20 million

    ·        We could save the state’s Healthy Families health care insurance program for children for $126 million

    ·        We could ensure that 220 state parks remain open for $70 million

    ·        We could guarantee funding for the Transitional Housing Placement program of Foster Youth Plus for $30 million

     

    $485 Million… Real Money. Real Help.