Posts Tagged ‘small business’

Internet Tax Shopping

July 14th, 2010 by John Feehery

One of my wife’s favorite hobbies is taking out the laptop and shopping online.  She can buy clothes for my son, she can shop for shoes, she can get great deals at a variety of stores, and she can do it without paying pesky local taxes.

That is because under U.S. law, local and state government can’t collect taxes on Internet sales.   That may start to change under the Democrats in Congress.

As Congress left to go on the 4th of July recess, Representative Bill Delahunt, a Democrat from Massachusetts, introduced a bill that requires small businesses to collect sales tax on Internet transactions.

Delahunt announced that he was retiring at the end of the year, which may explain why he is taking the lead on this unpopular issue.

The bill was referred to the Judiciary Committee, because while this bill concerns taxes, it is first and foremost a bill about federalism.

Does a locality have the right to tax a business that isn’t located in its jurisdiction?

Does a state have the right to raise taxes on companies that don’t do anything other than import products into the state?

A View From the Trenches

May 13th, 2010 by John Feehery

My golf game is terrible.  I would like to blame my 4 year old son for the fact that my game has deteriorated so rapidly over the past five years, but as Jimmy Buffett might say, “Some people say that there’s a little boy to blame, but I know, it’s my own damn fault.”

I had a chance to play golf with a guy earlier this week whose golf game is just as bad as mine.  I had never seen more shanks in my life than I saw from Brendan Quinn, a friend of mine, whose game is in pretty lousy shape. But he has an even better excuse than I do.  He has five kids, one who was just born a couple months ago.

Brendan has a lot on his mind, his fivesome being just part of the story.  He is the successful owner of a concrete block company (they make concrete blocks), and as he said during the game, he is lucky to live in our nation’s capital, where business is still pretty good.