From Deseret News archives:
Services in Utah might be taxed
Panel also suggests business tax cut, puts off controversial issues
Full consideration of a controversial flat tax proposal and whether to remove tax exemptions for charitable contributions and mortgage interest payments was postponed until the task force's next meeting.
The business tax cut and sales tax recommendations approved Wednesday by the subcommittee are not binding but make clearer the direction of the state's massive tax reform effort, which will likely culminate in in several new tax bills before the 2006 Legislature, now four months away.
"This is a good middle ground," extending the current sales taxes to various services, said Rep. Roz McGee, D-Salt Lake. Imposing the state's portion of the sales tax 4.75 percent on non-health-care services would bring an extra $150 million to state coffers.
Extending the sales tax base to catch more consumer purchases, the state's sales tax rate could be lowered to 4.38 percent from 4.75 percent, said Pam Hendrickson, chairwoman of the Utah Tax Commission and a task force member.
But because an overall goal of task force members is to keep the system revenue-neutral neither reduce nor increase tax revenues the sales tax rate might not be reduced to allow for cuts in other taxes.
"Taking action (to impose the) sales tax on services is central" to tax reform, said McGee. "For it allows (for new revenues) and some of the other changes to work."
Some task force members want to restructure the income tax and/or give a food tax break to help lower-income Utahns.
In voting to adopt a $200 million tax cut for "inputs" on businesses purchases, said Sen. Howard Stephenson, R-Draper, the state gets its most "bang for the buck" for economic development through the move.
Huntsman, who has two appointees on the task force, recently gave up on his original proposal to repeal the current state corporate income tax and seems more willing to look at Stephenson's sales tax reduction on purchases made by businesses.
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