Archive for the ‘Tax Freedom’ Category

The More Tax Plans, the Better

For months, Governor Jerry Brown has been calling on supporters of rival tax measures to abandon theirs in favor of his. Brown has argued that if there are multiple tax proposals on the November ballot, voters will reject all of them out of frustration or confusion. It's highly debatable as to whether the governor's argument is correct, but if it is, then it's becoming clear that his tax proposal, perhaps the most regressive of the three vying for the ballot, is the one that should be dropped.

According to the newest Field Poll, Brown's proposal, which includes a modest tax on the rich and a sales tax increase that will impact low- and middle-income families, only garners 58-percent approval. By contrast, the so-called Millionaire's Tax, which targets people earning more than $1 million annually and which Brown believes should be abandoned, enjoys 63-percent approval.

Clearly, the sales tax portion of Brown's plan is hurting its chances. The Field Poll shows that only 30 percent of voters approve of raising sales taxes to help balance the state budget. It's no wonder. As the Express has reported, sales taxes unfairly target the 99 Percent, who already pay higher effective tax rates in California than the wealthy. In short, the Millionaire's Tax appears to have the best shot at winning in November, and if Brown really wants more revenues for state government, and truly believes that voters will reject multiple measures, then he should drop his own.

"The Field poll shows the Millionaire's Tax has the best chance of passage. This is the fifth poll that confirms the Millionaire's Tax has the strongest support from the people of California," Joshua Pechthalt, president of the California Federation of Teachers, said in a statement last week. "We share the governor's and the PTA's goals of producing new revenue for education and essential services. We believe our measure is the best way to reach that goal."

The California Federation of Teachers and the California Nurses Association, which are sponsoring the Millionaire's Tax, have repeatedly refused Brown's call to drop their measure. They also are not as worried as he is about voters being frustrated with multiple measures on the ballot.

Mark DiCamillo, head of the Field Poll, isn't worried either. DiCamillo, a veteran political observer, told the San Francisco Chronicle that multiple tax measures might work in concert to convince voters that at least one should be approved. DiCamillo noted that in 1998 voters approved a landmark auto insurance reform initiative, even though there were five competing measures on the ballot. "That shows it can be done," DiCamillo said.

There's another good reason for having multiple tax measures in November. Large corporations and wealthy special interests may be less inclined to fund an opposition campaign against the Millionaire's Tax if they can support another tax on the ballot. And so far that appears to be happening. Numerous big companies and wealthy special interests have been pouring large donations into Brown's measure. They appear to like the fact that it targets the 99 Percent as well as the rich. And if Brown decides to push forward with his proposal, even though it trails the Millionaire's Tax in the polls, it might help siphon money that would otherwise be used to attack the Millionaire's Tax.

Oakland Scientist in Climate-Change Flap

On February 14, a series of leaked documents appeared on the Internet, outlining the rather brazen strategies of Chicago-based libertarian think-tank The Heartland Institute to discount evidence of global warming. The leak became an international story. Speculation on the documents' source and veracity ran rampant, until last week when research scientist Peter Gleick, co-founder and president of the Oakland-based Pacific Institute, admitted in an article in the Huffington Post to having obtained the documents through the use of a false identity.

In the article, Gleick explained that he used someone else's name to obtain the documents in order to verify the accuracy of a memo leaked to him by an anonymous source. And he expressed regret at having done so: "My judgment was blinded by my frustration with the ongoing efforts often anonymous, well-funded, and coordinated to attack climate science and scientists and prevent this debate, and by the lack of transparency of the organizations involved," he wrote. "Nevertheless I deeply regret my own actions in this case. I offer my personal apologies to all those affected."

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The More Tax Plans, the Better

Brentwood Gazette published £1.5m in council tax uncollected by borough

BRENTWOOD residents owe nearly 1.5 million in unpaid council tax.

Ratepayers currently owe 1,465,991.38, with some dating as far back as April 1993, when the tax was introduced by John Major's Conservative Government.

Brentwood Borough Council

Of this sum, 1,084,833.62 is owed to Essex County Council, which receives 74 per cent of all council tax revenue.

Brentwood Borough Council is due 12 per cent of the total, or 175,918.97.

The rest of the outstanding money is due to be split between the county's police and fire authorities, plus the nine parish councils in the borough of Brentwood.

The news emerged following a Freedom of Information request to Brentwood Borough Council, which is responsible for collecting all council tax in the town and surrounding villages.

At present, there are 32,203 ratepayers in the borough.

Our revelation comes in the wake of the borough council's decision to cut its council tax precept by 2.1 per cent from April.

Campaign group the TaxPayers' Alliance urged the council to pursue the hardcore who refuse to pay council tax.

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Brentwood Gazette published £1.5m in council tax uncollected by borough

Ralph Reed to speak at Texas Rally for Faith and Freedom

Ralph Reed, founder and chairman of the national Faith & Freedom Coalition, will be the featured speaker at the Texas Faith and Freedom Coalition on Saturday, March 10, in Sugar Land. Also addressing the meeting will be Faith and Freedom Coalition Executive director Gary Marks and former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay.

The event will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. in the West Campus building at Sugar Creek Baptist Church, 13303 SW Freeway in Sugar Land and is free to the public.

The Faith and Freedom Coalition’s goal is to educate, equip and mobilize people of faith and like-minded individuals to be responsible, effective citizens. The coalition aims to influence public policy and legislation that strengthens families, promotes time-honored values, protects the dignity of life and marriage and lowers the tax burden on families and small businesses.

In addition to his Faith and Freedom leadership, Ralph Reed is also chairman and CEO of Century Strategies, LLC, a public relations and public affairs firm. Reed is former chairman of the Georgia Republican Party and former executive director of the Christian Coalition from 1989-1997, where he built one of the most effective public policy organizations in recent political history.

Prior to his current position , Gary Marks spent the last six years as the Executive Director for the Judicial Crisis Network during which he led that organization’s effective participation in the successful confirmation of Chief Justice John Roberts.

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Ralph Reed to speak at Texas Rally for Faith and Freedom

Romney's struggle to make Michigan about the economy

Michigan's primary election next Tuesday is about jobs and the economy and Mitt Romney is losing in his own backyard.

The Republican presidential hopeful unveiled his tax plan on Wednesday and then geared his debate message that night towards jobs and the economy -- issues that have driven the statewide conversation in Michigan since the 2008 financial crisis.

"America is not seeing robust economic growth because such growth is impossible in the policy environment created by President Obama," Romney said Wednesday in a statement on his tax plan.

Romney's "bold, pro-growth tax cut proposal" seems like a presidential step for a presumed nominee, but he finds himself in a bitter battle to win the state where his father was governor and where he grew up.

Rick Santorum's campaign officially dropped into Michigan last week and stormed to the top of the polls. He has since cooled down, but this is a state Romney was firmly winning before Feb. 7 by 15 percentage points.

"I realize that Michigan is a big deal right now for Romney, and, quite frankly it should have been a slam dunk," said Barbara VanSyckel, Macomb County GOP chairwoman. Part of the reason Romney has struggled, VanSyckel said, could be down to Santorum's momentum out of his Colorado, Minnesota and Missouri victories.

Santorum's campaign decided to push a hybrid message of social issues and the economy ahead of Super Tuesday, March 6, and it seems to have resonated with voters in Michigan.

In Macomb County, for instance, Santorum spoke to a crowd of about 1,000 people -- only 300 were expected. VanSyckel said a large number of attendees happened to be part of the two tea party groups from the area, and that most of them came to hear Santorum's message on religious freedom.

Part of Santorum's surge could be circumstantial. President Obama's contraceptive mandate sparked outrage among conservatives, First Amendment hawks and persons of faith. Critics have hit the former Pennsylvania senator in the past for his opposition to contraceptives as archaic, but he has used the platform to directly say that Obama is someone who has challenged freedom of speech and religion.

Santorum's wheelhouse often comes back to social issues as he has constantly referenced a relatively conservative congressional voting record to connect with evangelicals. But Santorum has expanded his reach in recent weeks to more tea party supporters by arguing the freedom of speech and freedom of religion angle. Continued...

Which leads one to wonder if Santorum has ridden a temporary pivot of voter interest to Obama's controversial mandate.

"He's dropped back a little bit in the polls the last couple days because of the ads that Romney's playing now," said Dennis Pittman, Oakland County GOP executive director. "Santorum's being characterized for his 16 years as a representative and a senator raising taxes multiple times, raising the debt ceiling multiple times -- if you spend 16 years in Congress you're going to take some votes that are going to come back to haunt you, and Romney's being very effective at making sure everybody knows what his record is."

Indeed, since the weekend Santorum and Romney have fallen within the margin of error in most of the major Michigan polls.

Romney's campaign launched a two-pronged effort against Obama and his Republican opponents when he announced the new tax proposal. First, Obama unveiled his own tax proposal on the same day, which Romney saw as an opportunity to be the single Republican with a contrasting option. Second, he went back to economic fundamentals in an effort to shift the focus to employment and voters' bank accounts during difficult times.

Though many Republican Party officials in Michigan acknowledge Santorum is winning the state, despite a thinner ground presence, they also point out that there's a whole week for Romney to scramble back to the top.

"My observation is that it's a Romney-type electorate and in talking with the people ... is that he will probably succeed in getting Michigan," said Al Heilman, Kalamazoo County GOP chairman. "Remember what happened with each of the other candidates, they all came to the top and then they all went by the wayside; so we're back to two people and Rick is up there very strongly, but on the other hand the last 72 hours makes a difference.

Michigan voters, according to Michigan Republican Party officials, are concerned about beating Obama and about jobs and the economy, but another reason Santorum spiked and Romney lulled could be as basic as how familiar state voters are with the candidates.

"There's another whole group of people who say, 'Look, I'm not really going to pay too much attention until it's our turn,'" said John Clark, chairman of the political science department at Western Michigan University. "For one thing, they don't know who the candidates are going to be by the time you get to that particular state; and for another thing, the candidates aren't paying attention to a state like Michigan until it's our turn."

Beat reporters, political junkies, academics and active voters who have followed the Republican primaries since May 2011 likely know the final four candidates' platforms and voting records, but it's unlikely that all working-class Americans have spent time fretting about Romney's tax returns, Newt Gingrich's ex-wife, Ron Paul's foreign policy or Santorum's legislative history on earmarks.

"The spots that get magnified: one of those spots is on some of the social issue stuff," Clark said. "That's not speaking to the concerns of Michigan voters and yet that's where we've seen the campaign go nationally; Michigan is just the next stop on that campaign." Continued...

If that's the case, Romney can hope to connect in the next week with the broad number of Michiganders who are concerned more about their paychecks than anything else.

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Romney's struggle to make Michigan about the economy

Crunch time for CPAs as tax season ramps up

Carl Specht’s wife recently asked him what he thought about taking a summer vacation this year.

Specht, an accountant in the midst of tax season, was as polite as he could be, considering the circumstances.

"I said, ‘Don’t ask me about that ‘till after tax season — I can’t focus on that right now,’" he recalled.

It’s a good thing Specht, a partner with Costantino, Specht, Templeton & Co. in Secaucus, enjoys the nature of his work. Otherwise, getting to work at 6:30 a.m. would be a rough four months before taxes are due. Those quiet, early morning hours are when he does his volunteer work: filing returns for three dozen seniors from Kearny, where he lives.

"This was just the thing to do," he said. "I felt the CPA path and my CPA license was something I was very appreciative of, and I wanted to give something back to the profession that was providing me with my livelihood."

The early wake-up also means he can focus on his own projects, and save the rest of the day for paying clients who come in and, Specht said, "keep the practice going."

Accountants spend the long days between Jan. 1 and the tax deadline, April 17 this year, meeting with clients and plugging away at tax software on the computer. It is not uncommon for accountants to work 60-hour weeks, with the expectation employees will come in on Saturdays, said Ralph Albert Thomas, executive director of the New Jersey Society of Certified Public Accountants. Specht said he tries to leave the office by 7 so he can go home to his wife and have a bite to eat, but then he retreats to his home office for a few more hours of work.

Last year, the IRS received 145.3 million tax returns, more than three-fourths of which were filed electronically nationwide. Of that number, 72.4 million returns came in from private tax preparers or companies like Parsippany-based Jackson Hewitt or H&R Block, and 39.8 million taxpayers filed their own returns, said IRS spokeswoman Dianne Besunder.

"We really go full out from January through April," Specht said. "And then you kind of hit the wall — at that point, you crash for a couple of days, and then come back to life because you have people who have gone on extensions or who have been late."

This year, accountants are rejoicing for an extra three days — it’s a Leap Year, and taxes aren’t due until April 17 because the 15th is a Sunday and the 16th is a Washington D.C. holiday. But the freedom is short-lived. People who file for an extension have until Oct. 15, giving accountants a second busy rush in the fall.

Tax season, Specht said, "seems like it starts earlier and it ends later."

To help during crunch time, accounting firms try to lighten the mood. Some companies will host an ice cream bar, with the partners serving up the treats, while others offer on-site masseuses and healthy, catered meals, Thomas said. The society itself sends out goodie bags, full of popcorn, pretzels and sweets that are devoured within minutes.

Some accounting firms actually force their employees to take time off during tax season by banning work on one Saturday a month, and fine anyone who tries to sneak in anyway. (The money is then used to throw a party, Thomas said.)

"They’re actually trying to make life a little better, and achieve a balance," Thomas said.

Tax season at the Traphagen Financial Group in Oradell means one thing — it’s time to stop shaving. The firm’s founder, Peter Traphagen, started the tradition 42 years ago as a way to save time in the morning, but it has grown into an annual event that builds cameraderie. Every year, the men in the office put down their razors around Jan. 1, and gather on the afternoon of the tax deadline to have their beards cut off.

"Some clients have suggested over the years that we send our shorn hairs to the Internal Revenue Service," said managing partner Robert Traphagen, Peter’s brother. "We have yet to pursue that."

Specht has his own routine, and for the better part of two decades he has spent each spring volunteering his time to help low-income and senior taxpayers with their returns. Most of his career was in private industry, and only recently — in 2006 — did Specht start his own public accounting firm with two close friends. But he has always found time between January and April to help those less fortunate. The additional work has never really bothered him, he said, and at age 62, he hasn’t considered retirement.

"If you didn’t love what you did, it would be a big problem," Specht said. "But those of us who have been doing this for a long time and really enjoy our work and the people we work with, you don’t even think of it as work."

Sarah Portlock: (973) 392- 5994 or sportlock@starledger.com

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Crunch time for CPAs as tax season ramps up