[Vision2020] Idaho Senators Criticize New Rules on Secret Tax Deals
Tom Hansen
thansen at moscow.com
Wed Jan 21 06:00:40 PST 2009
As many UI employees sweat out potential pink slips . . .
Courtesy of today's (January 21, 2009) Spokesman Review.
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Idaho senators criticize new rules on secret tax deals
Betsy Z. Russell / The Spokesman-Review
BOISE - Senators werent enthusiastic this afternoon about a new Tax
Commission rule that would clarify when the commission can secretly settle
big tax cases.
It comes after a whistleblowers report charging that the commission was
cutting secret deals to excuse millions in income taxes for large out-of-
state corporations prompted several state investigations. The Idaho
Attorney General concluded that the Tax Commission hadnt acted illegally,
as did a review ordered by Gov. Butch Otter, but Otter directed the Tax
Commission to immediately develop new rules better defining and laying out
their settlement procedures.
Those rules came before the Senate Local Government & Taxation Committee
this afternoon, as a temporary rule thats already taken effect. Lawmakers
review such rules and decide whether to let them continue. But Ted
Spangler, deputy attorney general for the Tax Commission, said the
commission plans to work further next year on a permanent rule, and is
proposing only a temporary rule at this point. The new temporary rule
essentially just writes the commissions current practice into more
specific rules.
It lets tax commissioners settle a tax case where theres dispute about
liability, when commissioners think litigation will be more costly, when
the taxpayer has economic hardship or when the settlement will promote
effective tax administration. Spangler said that last reason was added
as sort of a safety valve in the system. Tax commissioners retain wide
discretion.
Senators raised several concerns about the new rule. Sen. Tim Corder, R-
Mountain Home, said, I still wonder if this isnt a bit broad.
Sen. Curt McKenzie, R-Nampa, an attorney, noted that the new rule appears
to allow broader authority for waiving tax penalties than the law actually
allows. Spangler thanked him for pointing that out and said itll be
looked at in the new, permanent rule.
Sen. Eliot Werk, D-Boise, said he thought the new rule could lead to the
same set of misunderstandings or perceptions that we have been dealing
with.
Committee Chairman Brent Hill, R-Rexburg, said hes fine with the rule,
but wants more information about the process commissioners will follow for
deciding who gets the settlements and who doesnt. These procedures, some
of us would like to see more of, Hill said.
Sen. Kate Kelly, D-Boise, told the panel,The process can be improved.
Kelly said beyond the definitions in the rule, the tax commission needs to
provide for more transparency and internal controls. In an earlier
letter to the state Tax Commission, she wrote that the new rule does
little, if anything to respond to the recommendations of two state
investigations.
The committee wont vote on the rule until Thursday at the earliest.
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Sleep well tonight, Vandals. Your state government will.
Seeya round town, Moscow.
Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho
"For a lapsed Lutheran born-again Buddhist pan-Humanist Universalist
Unitarian Wiccan Agnostic like myself there's really no reason ever to go
to work."
- Roy Zimmerman
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