Tag Archives: Taxes

Beverage Container Tax Set to Increase

Hawaii Beverage Consumers Will Soon Be Paying More

Originally published in HawaiiReporter.com July 18, 2012.

No New Taxes!

It’s a hot summer here in the islands, but those seeking relief from a cool beverage will soon be paying more.

The state Department of Health, the agency that manages the fund, plans to increase the controversial 6 cent beverage container tax by a half cent starting September 1.

The tax is charged to manufacturers, distributors and importers of beverages in Hawaii, and that tax is then passed on to consumers.

The Department of Health does not need additional approval from the legislature, because the increase was already written as an option into the law. The way the law was structured, the more the public cooperates and recycles, the more the chance of the tax being increased.

“State law requires the container fee to increase from one cent to 1 1/2 cents per container if the redemption rate exceeds 70 percent, unless the director of health, in consultation with the state auditor, determines that a fee increase is not needed. The statewide redemption rate from July 1, 2011, to June 30, 2012, remained strong at 77 percent; the rate for the previous year was 76 percent,” the health department said in a press release.

Health Director Loretta Fuddy said: “The half-cent fee increase was written into the bottle law from its inception to ensure the recycling program could sustain itself and continue to pay back deposits to consumers. We were able to hold off a fee increase for four years by using existing funds; however, the special fund is now too low to continue the program through 2014, and the current fee is not enough to build critical program reserves necessary to conduct essential operations.”

But the increase does not come without controversy – or questions from the law’s critics.

The fund has been raided multiple times by the Hawaii state Legislature for a total of $9.7 million between Fiscal Years 2009 and 2011 to balance the state operating budget.

“An additional $9.6 million decrease in the program’s funds during FY2009-11 was primarily due to legislative impacts that removed the exemption from the Central Services Fees ($2.7M per year), two raids (Act 124 (11) and Act 192(10)) ($1.3M total) and the transfer of interest earned ($1.2M per year),” said Janice Okubo, spokesperson for the Department of Health.

Even without the raids, Okubo said, “the container fee would eventually need to be increased a half cent to sustain the program because of the high redemption rates each year.”

The department has continued to expand its bureaucracy, leaving the department spending $3.4 million more than its annual revenue for this program.

Sen. Sam Slom, (R-Hawaii Kai to Diamond Head), said: “I have been opposed to and voted against every piece of this legislation that amounts to a power grab for the state Department of Health. I have warned that the tax will continue to increase without any legislative oversight. This is a perfect example of government out of control by punishing people for what it said had to be done for recycling. In other words, the more people recycle and are responsible, the more they will be penalized. The fact that the legislature also uses the beverage container special fund as a cash cow amply demonstrates that this scheme is more about money and taxation and less about the environment. Finally if re-elected I will again introduce legislation to abolish this program and make all recycling a county function as is done in the Mainland.”

The Health Department determined this year “the current fee structure and special fund balance would leave the HI-5 program underfunded in 2014 and unable to continue operations.”

The Health Department estimates the increase will bring in $4.5 million annually.

“As a result of the fee increase imposed on beverage distributors, consumers will likely see the additional half-cent fee added to their retail purchases of HI-5 labeled containers beginning September 1. This means that the deposit plus container fee will increase to 6 1/2 cents – a 5 cent deposit to be returned to the consumer when the container is recycled and a non-refundable 1 1/2 cent container fee to cover administrative costs,” the health department said.

Since its inception, the HI-5 program has recycled more than 4.71 billion containers. In the last fiscal year, more than 690 million containers were recycled, helping to significantly reduce litter and conserve resources.

Original Story Link:

http://www.hawaiireporter.com/?p=52297

New Beverage Tax Bill Heard

Dozens of people packed Capitol Conference Room 229 yesterday (February 9) to testify against a new tax on soft drinks. SB 1289 will increase the liquor tax and assess “a new sugary beverage fee,” which is just another name for a new tax. Testifiers from the food and beverage industry turned out and spoke against the new tax.

“The proposed tax on soft drinks will have a huge detrimental impact to the beverage industry producers, to the consumers of their products and to those businesses that supply raw materials and provide services. Hawaii’s businesses and groups can’t afford new taxes aimed at raising our grocery costs on sodas and other beverages…. singling out one product or industry for a new tax doesn’t make good business sense,” stated Larry Cundiff, President of Business Diagnostics in testimony submitted to the committee.

Several testifiers cited shrinking sales, loss of jobs, and additional tax burden placed upon businesses who are already subjected to the sweeping General Excise Tax and the bottle recycling tax.

Supporters of the measure cited the doubling of adult obesity as well as childhood obesity as reasons to support a new “sin” tax. When Senator Slom asked State Board of Health official Lola Irvin as to who was ultimately responsible for children’s health indicated that parents were, but still skirted around the question (see the video above).

In the end Health Committee Chair Josh Green deferred decision making on SB 1289 until next Monday, February 14. Senator Slom will be voting against this tax increase as he does on all tax increase bills.

Link to Testimony (PDF)

Testifiers at Health Committee Hearing
A full house of testifiers at the Senate Health Committee hearing for SB 1289, new sugary beverage tax.

Bad Bills Advance on Crossover Voting

By State Senator Sam Slom

The State Legislature passed more than 400 bills during this week’s crossover voting that wrapped up today. Many bills propose to raid special funds, increase taxes and fees and generally do more to erode your freedom and take more of your money.

In the Senate, some of the bad bills that passed which I voted “no” on all include:

SB 2030: Raids the hurricane reserve trust fund for QUEST interest payments and penalties.

SB 2124: Raids the Hawaii Hurricane Relief fund to pay for public school teachers; to fund the end of “Furlough Fridays”.

SB 2469: Raid the state’s “Rainy Day Fund” to pay for various social services programs.

SB 2604: Raids tobacco tax fund.

SB 2806: Sets up the State’s Rainy Day Fund for more raids in the future.

SB 2807: A bad Constitutional Amendment proposal that would take the public’s right to surplus funds and put them into the rainy day fund, where it is subjected to future raids.

There are bills to increase taxes and fees, which I voted “no” on including:

SB 2405: “Streamline Tax” to tax your out of state internet and mail order purchases. Proponents are engaging a P-R campaign to support this bill as a way to get more social programs funding.

SB 2420: Expands the bottle bill tax to cover dietary drinks and liquor.

SB2575: Creates a new anti-speculation capital gains tax on profits from real estate transactions.

SB2213: Allows state to set up “Compassion Centers” for sale of medical marijuana, which would be subject to a GE Tax of $30 per ounce.

SB 2052: A new fireworks tax of $25.

SB 2159: Increases fee of traffic abstract from $7 to $10.

SB 2454: Allows courts to charge fees certified documents while exempting the state from those fees.

SB 2461: Increases the motor vehicle customer facility tax from $1 to $4.50 a day.

SB2460: Increased user fees for commercial operators going to Molokini Island.

Other bad bills that I voted “no” on include:

SB 2840: Requires 80% local labor for government construction projects.

SB 2937: Enacts “abusive process of law” against “vexatious requesters”.

SB 2356: Outlaws all gas powered leaf blowers except those owned by the State;

SB 2559 will ban plastic bags given out by retailers.

Several other bad anti-taxpayer, anti-business bills that increase cost have passed out of the House and crossed into the Senate. The Senate will be dealing with these house bills over the next few weeks.

You can look up the status on each and every bill this session at the Hawaii State Legislature’s website:

Bill Status Search Page