Oklahoma State Senate
OFFICE OF SENATOR JAY PAUL GUMM
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties
For Immediate Release: March 11, 2010
Senate Approves Bill Ending Grocery Sales Tax
Senator Jay
Paul Gumm has won Senate approval for a bill to end the sales tax
on groceries throughout Oklahoma once the state recovers from the recession.
The measure, which was approved on a bipartisan 33-11 vote, contains provisions
to protect cities and counties dependent on those revenues. Those entities
would be reimbursed by the state for the tax they no longer would be able
to collect on the sale of groceries.
“First of all, Senate Bill 1328 would not take effect until revenue
collections meet 2008 pre-recession levels,” he said. “That
would put revenues at a level that would enable state government to meet
critical needs without the revenue from the grocery sales tax.”
For him, Gumm said this effort is really about a question of right and
wrong.
“This speaks to our values. Is food something we really should be
taxing?” he asked. “Most states do not because they know the
sales tax on groceries is the most regressive, most hurtful tax there
is – not only for the poor, but for middle-income families.”
Gumm, a Democrat from Durant, said the grocery sales tax creates a higher
effective tax rate the lower a family’s income.
“The less money a family has, the greater percentage of it the must
spend on groceries and the tax on them,” he said. “That means
middle- and lower-income families spend more of their money on the grocery
sales tax than do the wealthy, and that is simply unfair.”
The lawmaker, who has championed this issue since he was first elected,
acknowledged the bill still faces an uphill battle.
“The lobby group for cities and counties will pull out all the stops
to fight this, just as they did with the back-to-school sales tax holiday,”
Gumm said. “There also are legitimate concerns about the impact
to state revenue. That is why we put the trigger into the bill and made
certain cities and counties are reimbursed for their lost taxes.”
For the state’s long-term economic interests, however, the lawmaker
said ending the sales tax on groceries is the right direction to move.
“If we are successful and the sales tax on groceries ends, that
money isn’t going to disappear from Oklahoma’s economy,”
he said. “That money will go right back into local stores and businesses,
fueling economic growth in every community and county of this state.
“This is the right thing to do, for individuals, for families, and
for our state.”
SB 1328 now moves to the House of Representatives where Rep. Randy Terrill,
R-Moore, is its sponsor.
For more information contact:
Sen. Gumm: 405-521-5586
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