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News & Updates

Federal stimulus won't solve problem [2.23.09]

TFT's Board Chair John Stewart was interviewed for a radio story that aired statewide about the impact of the federal stimulus. Stewart pointed out that this stimulus is only a temporary fix that will not solve the long-term problems facing Tennessee. Real tax modernization is still needed. Click here for more.
Two great guest editorials appear in the Tennessean [2.1.09]

On Sunday, Feb. 1, two great editorials appeared in the Tennessean. The first is TFT's formal rebuttal of the Tennessean's faulty analysis earlier in the week claiming that the state budget had doubled in 20 years. Click here for more. The second editorial was from Dr. Patrick Reagan. His editorial both made the case for tax modernization while also challenging the wisdom of the proposed constitutional income tax ban. Click here for more.
New report refutes Tennessean story about the growth of government [1.29.09]

TFT issued a report challenging the faulty analysis presented in a January 26 Tennessean news article that claimed the state budget had doubled in 20 years. In addition to pointing out the faulty assumptions of the Tennessean analysis, the report makes evident that the recurring budget shortfalls are an inevitable outcome of an outdated tax system. Download report here or read related press release.
UT students call on Peterson to sign petition supporting stimulus and income tax plan [1.27.09]

While Peterson has already gone on record criticizing our current tax system, telling the Tennessean editorial board this month that the state's reliance on sales tax revenue was "a regressive way to run the state." Students rallying to save the university are asking him to sign a petition explicity supporting a state income tax and the federal stimulus package for states. Click here for full story.
TFT annouces support for Governor's plan to close FONCE loophole [1.22.09]

TFT issues a press release today announcing support for the Governor in his effort to close the FONCE loophole estimated to cost the state $45 million per year. Dick Williams, TFT board member, says, "The State should be using that $45 million to help lower the food tax or provide pre-K education for our young children instead of giving a tax break to rich families..." Click here for full release.
Tennessean prints editorial series on food tax [1.21.09]

On Wednesday, Jan. 21, the Tennessean ran a series of editorials about the proposal to reduce the state food tax. In additon to running it's own editorial, they ran a guest esitorial from TFT Board Chair John Stewart. Click here for Tennessean editorial and click here for John Stewart's guest column.
WRCB Ch. 3 in Chattanooga airs story on food tax [1.12.09]

TFT Board member Ron Naylor was featured in a news story that aired on Channel 3 in Chattanooga. The story highlighed the revenue lost over the state line by Tennesseans shopping in Georgia to avoid the high sales tax. View streaming video.
Knoxville News-Sentinel runs op ed from TFT Board member [1.11.09]

The News-Sentinel ran a guest editorial in the Sunday paper from Phil Schoggen entitled, "Close tax loopholes, use public investment to jolt economy." It makes the case that public investments, funded through our tax system, are an effective way to stimulate the economy while achieving goals that are important to us as a community. Read full editorial.
Commercial Appeal editorial supporting food tax cut [1.8.09]

The Memphis Commercial Appeal published an editorial in support of a fair and responsible food tax reduction... "The political risk involved with mucking around in the corporate tax structure is significant, but the General Assembly also owes Tennesseans a fair and reasonable system of taxation." Click here to read full editorial.
Newschannel 5 in Nashville runs food tax story [1.6.09]

Newschannel 5 in Nashville ran a follow-up story to yesterday's Tennessean piece. The Newschannel 5 story features an interview with TFT Board member and local chapter chair, Jean Harrington, who points out the need to find replacement revenue for any food tax cut. Click here for streaming video.
Food tax story in Tennessean features TFT [1.5.09]

The Tennessean ran a story today, quoting Rep. Hardaway and TFT Board member Ron Naylor, about the unfair impact the food tax has on low- and moderate-income families. The story also notes TFT's support for closing corporate tax loopholes as a way to pay for the food tax reduction. Click here for story.
Radio story challenges proposed income tax ban [12.19.08]

TFT Board member Brian Paddock appeared on a radio story that aired on radio stations across Tennessee. Brian pointed out that the proposed income tax ban would chain Tennessee to the old way of doing things... while making the case for tax modernization. Click here to listen to the audio.
New YouTube video points out flaws of food tax [12.18.08]

While most Tennesseans are already aware that the food tax disproportionatly hits middle- and lower-income families, this new video goes further by pointing out how the high food tax drives shoppers across state lines, costing Tennessee much-needed revenue as the state faces a $1 billion shortfall. Click here to see the new video.
Guest column from TFT Board member appears in Tennessean [12.15.08]

The Tennessean ran a guest column today (Dec. 15, 2008) on the on-line edition from TFT Board member Phil Schoggen. This column, entitled "Public investments stimulate the economy," challenges that worn-out anti-tax mantra with a little common sense.
Nation's highest sales tax drives shoppers over state lines [12.1.08]

On Dec. 1, the Tennessean ran a story about the state's inability to collect the "use" tax in lieu of sales taxes from purchases made across state lines or over the internet. With the nation's highest avg. sales tax according to the Sales Tax Clearinghouse, shoppers regularly leave the state to buy elsewhere.
Thanksgiving food tax story airs statewide [11.25.08]

TFT member Dottie Seek was interviewed for a radio news story, related to the food tax and Thanksgiving, that aired statewide on November 25, 2008. Click here to listen to the radio report from the Tenn. News Service
Corporate tax loopholes topic of Tennessean story [11.25.08]

On November 25, the Tennessean ran a story related to closing corporate tax loopholes. While the story related to the FONCE loophole, it's helping to open the door to discussing other loopholes such as Delaware Holding Companies and Captive REITs. Click here for more.
All new & increased contributions get doubled! [Notice]

Thanks to a new challenge grant from the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, all new and increased contributions are now matched, dollar-for-dollar. Click here to make your donation today.
Knoxville House Party a Success [11.20.08]

On Nov. 20, supporters from across East Knoxville gathered at the home of Mary Thom Adams and George Reynolds for a reception and fundraiser. The event was a great success. Special thanks to all who came!
TFT Welcomes Two New Staff [11.15.08]

In October and November, two new regional organizers have joined the TFT staff, Ebony Williamson in West Tennessee and Samantha Wallace in East Tennessee. Click here for staff bios.
Budget shortfall may hit $800M [11.11.08]

The budget shortfall facing state legislators when they return in early 2009 may be as high as $800 million. While the Governor is proposing more cuts, TFT will work to point out the underlying revenue problem. Click here for full Tennessean story.
August 2008 Newsletter Available [8.15.08]

Click here to download the latest copy of TFT's semi-annual newsletter, "Tax Fairness News," with a celebration of our successes in 2008, an analysis of the current budget shortfalls and the need for real tax reform, and much more.
TFT launches Food & Biz Tax Fairness Act [3.5.08]

After extensive feedback from coalition members, hundreds of individual supporters, local chapters across the state, and the Board, TFT has decided to focus our 2008 legislative efforts on our new Food and Business Tax Fairness Campaign. Click here to learn more.
Food tax victory! [1.1.08]

On January 1, 2008, the food tax reduction TFT helped to pass in 2007 took effect. This win, plus the earlier victory in preventing the 2002 sales tax increase from being applied to food, saves every Tennessee family enough to buy five-and-a-half-days worth of groceries each year. Click here for more.

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May 1, 2008 - For immediate release…

Spokespeople are available statewide. Contact the following to arrange interviews:

  • Bill Howell, TFT Nashville, 615-751-5011 (off) or 615-289-1397 (cell)
  • Kimberly Douglass, TFT Knoxville, 865-687-9600 (off) or 865-705-9205 (cell)
  • John Stewart, TFT Board Member, 865-584-3834

Shortfall or Short Sighted? State Officials Stall a Fiscally-Responsible Answer to Budget Woes

At week's end, the state of Tennessee will be $384 million in the hole according to the Funding Board's latest estimate, but members of Tennesseans for Fair Taxation (TFT) call it unnecessary. It is projected to be $585 next fiscal year. "State officials are labeling the situation as a $384 million budget 'shortfall.' Four-hundred million dollars this year and six-hundred million next year is no short fall from anywhere," states Dave McIlwaine, TFT Board Chairperson, "especially when state officials are blocking a fiscally-responsible option that would help fill that hole. It's more like a push down the stairwell."

As the Governor contemplates layoffs and cuts to vital programs, some multi-state corporations are purposely shifting their profits to out-of-state subsidiaries to avoid paying Tennessee's business taxes. One practice is for parent companies to create subsidiaries in Delaware or Nevada that own the parent company's trademarks. Then they 'pay' these subsidiaries for the right to use their own logo, shifting their taxable profits out of Tennessee. This practice is legal and simply exploits gaping loopholes in the Tennessee tax law.

To close a range of corporate loopholes simultaneously, including the Delaware Holding Company loophole, Tennesseans for Fair Taxation (TFT) is pushing the Food and Business Tax Fairness Act (SB3158/HB3182) during this session of the Tennessee General Assembly. In addition to helping with the current shortfall, this legislation would reduce the state food tax from 5.5% to 4.5%.

TFT originally proposed a bill that would use all the revenue recovered from closing the loopholes for the food tax reduction. In response to the increasing shortfall, however, the organization has made clear its willingness to seek a more modest reduction in the food tax so the state can apply the additional funds to vital programs and services.

This week, the Commissioner of the Department of Revenue acknowledged that it is time for some businesses to help address the budget shortfall. His suggested "technical corrections" to the tax code make sense considering companies can apply the Tennessee's tax law to avoid paying for the state resources that help their businesses thrive.

Commissioner Farr is recommending specific loophole closures. "We applaud Commissioner Farr's efforts for several reasons. But one important loophole closer—one that will materially relieve the current fiscal mess, not just nibble around the edges—has been left out," says John Stewart, a board member of Tennesseans for Fair Taxation.

In contrast to Farr's approach that goes after one loophole at a time, the TFT approach fundamentally changes the way businesses report their taxes in the first place. It closes a whole series of loopholes with one simple reform. Instead of requiring the parent company and its various subsidiaries to file separate tax returns, the TFT proposal would require related companies to file a single, unified tax return.

"Companies can still shift their profits back and forth among their subsidiaries. It just doesn't make a difference since they all would report their taxes jointly in the end," states Stewart. "What's more, 21 states representing over half the US economy already require this kind of reporting. It's a simple, common sense solution that works."

By closing the loopholes, these corporations would have to assume the same fiscal responsibility as small, locally-owned businesses that cannot shift their profits out of state. "Closing these loopholes is a matter of fairness to our Tennessee businesses," adds Stewart.

According to the Washington, DC think tank, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, this filing method would recover some $110 to $250 million of state revenue. Also, the Multi-state Tax Commission estimated that in 2001 alone Tennessee lost between 14% and 32% of profit tax collections to sheltering schemes. In 2008, that would translate to an increase of $148 to $321 million.

"It's clear that Tennessee is ignoring a way to both make a meaningful reduction in the state food tax, while also helping to meet the current budget shortfall," states John Stewart. The food tax reduction in the TFT bill would cost $90 million, leaving the balance to be used for the current shortfall.

Dave McIlwaine charges, "Despite our budget woes, the proposal has been deliberately stalled with fuzzy math. In determining the revenue potential of this bill, the state's office of Fiscal Review relied upon a questionably low estimate from the Department of Revenue." In addition to the Multi-state Tax Commission and Center on Budget and Policy Priority data, TFT points to revenue estimates from 11 other states that have considered combined reporting in the last 5 years. These estimates show gains that are 5 to 12 times what the Department of Revenue claims. Senate leadership has begun to question this estimate and has requested additional information from the Department of Revenue.

"This year's $384 million shortfall is not just the result of bad circumstances in 2008. It's the result of a poorly structured state tax system that is both inadequate and unfair. As a result, a number of public services were already underfunded prior to the shortfall," says Stewart. Among the 50 states, Tennessee is 41st in fourth grade reading proficiency and 47th in fourth grade math proficiency. Worse still, Tennessee ranks 47th for the percent of the population that graduates from high school.

"In the absence of comprehensive economic reform, state officials must consider, or at least not block, this fiscally-responsible option," says Stewart. "This proposal would make a significant and lasting impact on the current budget deficit," adds Stewart. "Calling on companies to pay their fair share, while also reducing the food tax, will move our budget in the direction of being both adequate and fair."

Additional resources and links:

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Tennesseans for Fair Taxation | Copyright 2008 | All rights reserved
Knoxville: 865.687.9600 | Nashville: 615.289.1397 | Memphis: 901.647.8884
Statewide Tollfree Number (access to all offices): 888.671.5188