PHOENIX State lawmakers from both parties are taking a guarded if not outright wary stance to a possible special election this spring for a temporary hike in the sales tax.
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"Raising taxes, particularly that substantial an increase during a time of deep recession, could be dangerous for the economy,'' he said. Adams said he wants to proceed "very carefully.''
Senate Minority Leader Jorge Garcia, DTucson, said he's not keen on hiking sales taxes while the Republicancontrolled Legislature pushes ahead with plans to permanently eliminate the state property tax. That move, which would forego $250 million in revenues, would mean greater relief for businesses than homeowners.
But lawmakers from both parties agreed that Arizona's overall tax structure is in need of being revamped.
The idea of higher taxes is being weighed by Gov. Jan Brewer as she considers how to deal with a possible $2.4 billion deficit this coming year.
Lawmakers, relying on a combination of spending cuts, taking money from special funds and anticipating some federal stimulus dollars, just plugged a $1.6 billion gap between revenues and expenses this year.
But that involved some major reductions in services. And some new projections show even that won't be enough to bring the budget into balance.
Gubernatorial press aide Paul Senseman said Brewer is considering "all options.'' Senseman said Brewer is taking nothing off the table, including the idea of asking voters to hike taxes.
Taking the issue to the ballot is likely the only way to make it happen.
It requires the votes of two thirds of lawmakers to hike taxes themselves; more than a third of lawmakers have signed "no new taxes'' pledges.
Sending the issue to the ballot, however, needs only a simple majority. And punting the issue to voters could prove more politically acceptable.
"I'm one of those who signed the pledge,'' said Rep. Adam Driggs, RPhoenix.
And Driggs said it is proper for Brewer to consider all options. But he said he "would have to know a lot more'' about the plan before he would consider voting for it.
A penny on the state sales tax would raise about $1.1 billion a year. But if cities get a share of the new levy as they do of the current tax the net take drops below $900 million.
One element of any debate would be how long any temporary levy would last. Legislative budget staffers are predicting that revenues will not return to prerecession levels until at least 2012.
Some legislators immediately put themselves on record in opposition.
Sen. Ron Gould, RLake Havasu City, said his district borders Nevada and California, both with lower sales tax rates. He said raising Arizona's rate "will drive people to Las Vegas'' to make major purchases.
"My merchants won't be able to make a living because a bad decision by the Legislature will have driven their business into other states,'' he said.
And Gould said some Arizonans already are living "on the margins'' who cannot afford to pay any more.
Democrats, in general, do want to generate more revenues rather than making further cuts in education and social services. But they're not anxious to jump on a plan focused solely on higher sales taxes, paid by consumers, particularly if it's just temporary.
"Two years from now, we lose that revenue, where does that get us?'' asked Rep. Chad Campbell, DPhoenix. He wants a comprehensive "tax reform'' package.
He said that means a "broader and stronger tax base.'' And that includes reviewing and potentially repealing exemptions some types of sales have from the tax and other special tax breaks for various businesses.
Campbell also said it makes no sense to hike sales taxes when the Republican majority has made permanent repeal of the state property tax a priority.
That levy was suspended for three years in 2006, when the state had a surplus, in a political deal between then Gov. Janet Napolitano, a Democrat, and the GOPcontrolled Legislature. It will return automatically this fall without legislative action.
"If we find other revenue sources to generate revenue, then that's something that I think would be on the table,'' Campbell said. "Until we find that other revenue, which we're looking at, we can't support that.''
Repeal of the property tax has become a priority for Republicans because it hits businesses harder than homeowners.
First, businesses are assessed for tax purposes at more than twice the rate as residential property. And that tax also is assessed against all their equipment, ranging from major presses, fabricating equipment and computers down to desks and file cabinets.
That structure, according to the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry, makes the state less attractive for manufacturers, who have expensive equipment.
Adams said he does not want any focus on a temporary tax hike to shortcircuit the need to revamp business property taxes.
"When we come out of this session ... whatever tax system we have in place serves to lay the foundation to diversify the economy away from so much reliance on housing and real estate,'' he said.
Did You Know
Lawmakers enacted a "temporary'' onecent hike in state sales taxes in 1983 to deal with an anticipated deficit at that time. That raised the levy from 4 cents on a dollar to 5 cents.
While the measure was sold as being transitory, it never was repealed.
That failure to repeal the levy was one factor which resulted in the 1986 defeat of House Majority Leader Burton Barr in the Republican gubernatorial primary. Barr, who was instrumental in getting the tax enacted and never having it repealed lost to Evan Mecham who eventually went on to become governor.





Comments
Rossi wrote on Feb 19, 2009 11:40 AM: