Posted on 03/14/2017 9:41:11 AM PDT by MichCapCon
The city of Detroit will get a tax collection boost once the Pistons basketball team relocates to a new downtown arena. The boost will come not from the arena, but from a city income tax levy on professional athletes that reaches far more deeply into their wallets than other non-residents who work part-time in the city.
The city has created its own formula for defining the days supposedly covered by the salaries earned by professional football, baseball and hockey players. The definitions have the effect of greatly increasing the tax bite on players who dont live in Detroit.
Basketball moves to downtown next season, and members of the Detroit Pistons will feel a heavy pinch.
Based on the formulas provided for the other sports teams, Andre Drummond, the highest paid Detroit Piston and projected to earn $23.8 million next season, would pay about $158,500 in Detroit city income tax.
Obviously, the city of Detroit is happy there will be more high-paid athletes working downtown, said James Hohman, assistant director of fiscal policy for the Mackinac Center for Public Policy.
Joseph Henchman, vice president of legal and state projects for the Tax Foundation, said jock taxes are common.
While theyre sold as hitting up visiting millionaire athletes, they apply to all team support staff as well. Assistants and traveling staff will also get the pleasure of filling out dozens of income tax returns for all over the country, Henchman said in an email. Its popular for governments to do this but ultimately is just shifting money around the country at great expense.
The tax is apportioned on visiting athletes based on the number of days they are in the city for game-related activities city days divided into a roster of duty days the city has invented. This has the effect of greatly increasing how much the city can extract from players compared to using an annual salary in the formula.
For professional baseball players the number of duty days is 178. It is 184 days for hockey players and 119 days for football players.
Note too that those city days are not just game days, but include travel and practice days on either side of the game. So a visiting football player who arrives in Detroit Friday, has practice Saturday, a game Sunday and departs on Monday, will accumulate four taxable city days Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday.
Again, this greatly increases the amount taken.
The city document gave an example of a mythical baseball player who played for the New York Giants. Joe Jones made $1 million in salary in 2017 and played a four-game series in Detroit in June 2017. The team traveled to Detroit on Thursday and played games on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The Giants held a team practice at Comerica Park on Monday and left via a charter flight to that next town.
That player would owe $377.08 in city income tax based on five city days out of a roster of 178 actual duty days on which the city asserts his annual salary is based.
Common Core math.
Buy a wreck of a house for $100 in Detroit and list it as your residence. No big tax bite. Then live wherever you want to.
All those Moms and ?Dads who had their kid play basketball to support them when they turned pro....
Now Detroit wants to suck off them, too.
Wouldn’t it be hilarious if the player’s and support’s contracts said that they agree to work Detroit “voluntarily and without pay”. :)
When socialists smell money..................
Using the example given that works out to a 0.0066% tax rate.
Hard enough to get quality free agents here, They’ll just go elsewhere...
Lawsuit bait
I did notice they based the NFL schedule on 119 duty days. Since the team generally flies in Saturday and out Sunday night, they'll only get tax on 2/119 of the year's salary instead of one sixteenth like most cities charge visiting football teams.
Yeah, but what would the property taxes, utility bills and whatever else, be on that "house". Even if you sold it, then you'd probably end up paying "mitigation" on environmental cleanup.
Minorities hardest hit. Racists.
Good God
Boy, I guess free agents would want to play in Detroit if they got to pay taxes to the city. I guess you’ll see people leave the Lions, Tigers, Red Wings and Pistons as free agents.
What about the visiting teams? How does the city get a piece of their action?
It is reaching the point that the player’s accountant will earn more off of the player’s contract by preparing tax returns than the player makes off of the contract. Obviously, it is not too big of a deal for a multi-million dollar per year athlete but the employees of the support structure of the team who aren’t making a mountain of money each year have to pay the same taxes. For someone, say an assistant equipment manager or the travel secretary’s assistant, these preparation fees could be pretty substantial.
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