North Carolina government’s money situation is so dismal,  the state is quickly running out of money to do anything but pay bureaucrats’ wages and give breaks to coastal developers. Critical programs are being reduced or cut, schools are in desperate financial straits, and, yeah, you know the rest. Well, guess what? Multi-state corporations operating in North Carolina want to stick it to the state even more. Yep, poor little companies like GE and Time Warner say they  need to be protected from those awful bullies who insist they pay state taxes like everybody else.

Raleigh’s News & Observer broke the news that state senators, and specifically Democratic leaders in the Senate, are working with business lobbyists “to take away a big stick that the state’s tax collector says it needs to punish big businesses that dodge their taxes.” The Senate’s version of the budget, which is now in House-Senate negotiations, would keep the state revenue department from assessing a penalty on businesses the state says are hiding income — even though North Carolina is facing an incredible $800 million shortfall. Without those penalties, the state budget would lose yet another $100 million.

Chuck Neely, a lobbyist for a group called Council on State Taxation, which represents multi-state corporations’ “interests” in Raleigh, says the state is unfairly categorizing legitimate business tax planning as deliberate tax dodges — which, by the way, is a tried-and-true way companies have used to dodge paying taxes for as long as anyone can remember. As BlueNC points out, the “Council” includes “GE, Pfizer, Coca-Cola, Chevron, Time-Warner Cable, Alcoa, Bancorp, Amazon, Microsoft,” and other such warm and fuzzy corporate entities. Makes you wonder why these companies don’t just line us all up and rob us at gunpoint; at least that way they wouldn’t have to spend money for lobbyists.

John Grooms is a multiple award-winning writer and editor, teacher, public speaker, event organizer, cultural critic, music history buff and incurable smartass. He writes the Boomer With Attitude column,...

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4 Comments

  1. Here’s an idea regarding that $800 million shortfall:

    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING
    CUT SPENDING

  2. “I get the feeling Grooms does not understand the details of the topic. We need more information on the matter”

    Sounds like you’re the one that doesn’t understand the details.

  3. People are sick of taxes. This article is stupid if your supporting taxes.

    FACT is, unless a company has a physical location in the state, it is not required to collect taxes… federal law states this specifically.

    I love how people like to twist this all around like its lost money or something. When the truth is, when people save money, they have more money to spend on businesses in their own state.

  4. So, jc, are you saying it’s OK for companies with physical plants in the state to dodge paying taxes? If not, then you should support collecting the money, especially considering the shape the state budget is in. As for your comments about people needing to save money and so forth, what does that have to do with the issue of collecting corporate taxes in NC?

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