StarBulletin.com

Hawaii cuts business tax increase


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POSTED: Saturday, February 27, 2010

An enormous pending tax increase on Hawaii businesses would be reduced under a measure that passed its final committee yesterday.

The proposal shrinks the average unemployment tax businesses would pay this year, from $1,070 to $630 per employee. But that's still the largest such tax hike in the nation—a 600 percent increase from the $90 per employee that businesses pay now.

“;Small businesses really need help now. We don't need shackles,”; Jason Princenthal, president of Honolulu-based Aircare Environmental Services, told senators on the committee. “;Small businesses can't really tolerate the stress of any undue expenses.”;

The taxes pay for unemployment benefits drawn by out-of-work residents, but the increasing number of laid-off employees has strained the state's savings.

               

     

 

House Bill (HB) 2169
        capitol.hawaii.gov

 

       

Hawaii is burning through its unemployment funds at a rate of $30 million per month.

The larger tax increase had been called for using a complicated formula designed to ensure that unemployment funds keep flowing to the jobless.

“;If nothing is done soon, many more people will be put out of work,”; said Jim Tollefson, president and chief executive of the Chamber of Commerce of Hawaii.

A joint committee of 14 senators from Senate labor and money committees unanimously approved the bill yesterday, forwarding it to the full Senate for a final vote next week. Then the measure would go to Gov. Linda Lingle.

; State officials want the bill to become law by March 12 so that quarterly tax bills can be mailed with the lower tax increase.

The plan is a compromise that's similar to a Chamber of Commerce proposal. It provides for two years of tax relief and borrows money from the federal government to keep unemployment funds solvent.

Lingle's administration preferred a plan providing four years of tax relief, but interest payments would have been higher and unemployment reserves would have recovered more slowly.

Companies have warned that a large tax increase would force additional layoffs and possibly force them to close, said Darwin Ching, director of the state Department of Labor and Industrial Relations.

“;They're talking about businesses shutting down,”; Ching said. “;They're not crying wolf. They're saying how it really is. The plea is real and the help is needed.”;

Hawaii has some of the most generous unemployment benefits in the nation, with a maximum payment of 75 percent of an employee's weekly wage, up to $545 per week.

The legislation calls for benefits to be reduced to 70 percent of an employee's weekly wage, but not until 2013.