Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

EBay Urges Customers To Oppose Washington Internet Tax

Listen

https://www.nwpb.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/061417AJ_InternetSalesTax_web.mp3

Online retailer eBay wants to stop an internet tax proposal in the Washington Legislature. To do that the company is rallying its customer base.

If you live in Washington state, you might have gotten the email from eBay. It begins: “The Washington State Legislature is threatening to impose new Internet sales tax burdens on you.” It goes on to urge the recipient to send a form letter to Washington lawmakers opposing “harmful tax laws.”

So what’s this about? EBay’s Brian Bieron said the company is alerting its customers to a proposal to require out-of-state retailers to collect sales tax from Washington residents.

“It’s the right of all of our users to know when new tax policies would impact their ability to … sell online or shop online, we think that they want to know and they want to get involved,” Bieron said.

One person who got the eBay email is the sponsor of the internet tax bill. Democrat Kris Lytton recently bought some silverware on eBay. She said she called and emailed the company to say the policy she’s proposing is “fair and levels the playing field.”

The fact eBay is emailing its customer base now indicates the company is concerned the internet tax bill will be part of a final budget deal in Olympia.

Washington House Democrats and Senate Republicans are currently trying to hash out a compromise budget that fully fund schools. That agreement will likely include some additional sources of tax revenue. Of all the choices on the table, capturing sales tax from more online sales might prove the most palatable to tax-averse Republicans.

House Democrats estimate the proposal could bring in an estimated $341 million over the next two years.

Retailers would have the choice of collecting and remitting the sales tax or reporting Washington state customers to the Washington Department of Revenue so it could collect the tax.

EBay isn’t the only opponent of the internet sales tax proposal. TechNet, representing more than 70 companies, said it amounts to an end-run around the longstanding rule that companies without a physical presence in a state don’t need to collect that state’s taxes.

TechNet warns of protracted legal challenges if Washington tries to tax out-of-state internet sales.

Lytton responded that she’s confident the sales tax proposal could withstand a legal challenge.

Copyright 2017 Northwest News Network. To see more, visit Northwest News Network.

Related Stories:

Killing Wolves Might Protect One Farm’s Livestock At Expense Of Others

A new study claims government killing of wolves can increase the risk to nearby farms, providing further evidence for the ineffectiveness of the so-called “lethal control” policy approach. The report also casts doubt on an earlier research paper, which government agencies often use to support the practice. Read More » Tony Schick January 12, 2018

Federal Agency Will Stop Killing Beaver State’s Beavers To Help Salmon

It took the threat of a lawsuit, but a federal agency is no longer killing the Beaver State’s beavers. Environmental groups had challenged the practice in Oregon because, they said, it’s a threat to more than just the state animal. Like much in the Northwest, it touches on salmon. Read More » Courtney Flatt January 12, 2018

WSU Student Journalists Say They’ll Keep Fighting Amid Proposed Cuts

Washington State University’s student newspaper, The Daily Evergreen, is facing a big budget deficit, and cuts to its print days. NWPB host Thom Kokegne sat down with Evergreen editor-in-chief Madison Jackson to talk about the proposed cuts, and how they’ll keep doing their work as a watchdog on the university administration. Read More » Scott Leadingham January 12, 2018