Posted on 04/10/2002 6:53:19 AM PDT by GailA
Edited on 05/07/2004 9:19:58 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
The state Senate systematically began clearing away proposals to increase taxes yesterday in preparation for a flat-rate income tax plan Senate leaders expect will come from the House.
Among tax proposals to stall yesterday were a 2% flat-rate income tax, a plan to increase the state's car tag tax, a bill to repeal a tax break on aviation fuel and one to revamp the state's tax structure by doing away with the 6% state sales tax and replacing it with a 6% flat income tax.
(Excerpt) Read more at tennessean.com ...
Gov. Don Sundquist said yesterday he thinks state lawmakers are making progress in budget discussions ''to the extent it is becoming more apparent every day that there are only two or three alternatives.
''You have the so-called D.O.G. (no new tax) budget. You have a sales tax increase or you have a flat tax. The sooner we arrive at one of those supposed solutions the better for me.''
In another development, the Tennessee Business Roundtable, which represents about 150 corporate chief executive officers across the state, disclosed it had adopted a resolution backing ''tax reform'' because of the ''dire straits'' the state is in financially.
''We will look at all components of tax reform,'' said the group's president, Wayne McCreight of Martin.
''If one of those components has to be an income tax, we would not object to it. We would look at it and make an evaluation at that time.''
He indicated the groups support could be tied to making it more difficult to change income tax rates after.
McCreight, who heads a human resources company, said the Roundtable favors tax reform with ''fair, equitable, adequate, competitive, federally deductible components, one of which may necessarily be a taxation of personal income with reasonable restraints on increases, such as a super majority in the legislature.''
The Roundtable plans to recruit and support legislative candidates who share its views and make a concerted effort to inform Tennesseans of the need for systematic reform to specifically allow for improvement of public education at all levels, McCreight said.
Cut the budget.
LIFO -- Last in first out.
Question: How do you know John Ford is lying?
Answer: His lips are moving.
It's the "Hall Tax", and in the inimitable style of the backwoods demagogues, it's said to be on "unearned income" - a 6% tax on any investment income.
Bond dividends, mutual fund payouts, stock earnings, the payout from your IRA, you name it.
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