ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: FRIDAY, December 9, 1994                   TAG: 9412100057
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: A-1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: DAVID M. POOLE STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: RICHMOND                                LENGTH: Medium


LOCAL GOVERNMENTS WORRY ABOUT ALLEN'S TAX PROPOSAL

LOCAL GOVERNMENTS are worried that Gov. George Allen's proposal to eliminate the business-receipts tax will force them to cut services - or raise other taxes.

Gov. George Allen faces a possible revolt by localities over his proposed $2.1 billion tax cut, which some say would result in a crushing unfunded mandate on local governments.

``He's literally picked the pockets of local governments to the tune of $300 million,'' said Jim Campbell, executive director of the Virginia Association of Counties.

``You'll see a lot of tea dumped around Virginia,'' predicted Gail Nardi, spokeswoman for the state Democratic Party, referring to the Boston Tea Party.

The cause of the potential uprising is Allen's desire to strip localities of some of their taxing authority in order to give a tax break to businesses. At stake is about $300 million a year that localities generate by taxing business receipts.

Local-government advocates see irony in Allen's proposal, which would stick the state's nose into what had been local tax matters. The governor has railed against federal meddling in state affairs.

Allen spokesman Ken Stroupe said Virginia law and tradition make the governor responsible for overall tax policy, and the General Assembly responsible for granting taxing authority to localities.

Allen's business-tax cut would encourage economic development and force local governments to practice the same kind of fiscal discipline that Allen is imposing on state government, Stroupe said.

``I think you also have to realize there is an expectation from voters ... that governments can get by with less,'' he said.

On Dec.19, Allen will unveil the details of the five-year, $2.1 billion tax, including how he plans to absorb the first-year revenue loss of $150 million.

In addition to ending local business-receipt taxes, the Republican governor wants to cut state income taxes by $1.3 billion over the next five years by tripling deductions for parents and their children.

The tax package must be approved by the Democrat-controlled General Assembly, which will convene Jan.11.

Democrats, who hold a precarious majority in the legislature, may find it politically impossible to kill the tax cut.

But the Democrats are expected to press Allen to show that the state can chop state revenue and still pay for his $2 billion prison-building initiative and education for a wave of college-age students.

At the same time, Allen will be trying to placate local governments already upset about limits on their taxing authority.

``I love tax cuts and hope the governor is successful,'' said Roanoke Mayor David Bowers, a Democrat. ``But if this is a tax shift [to localities] instead of a tax cut, the people of Virginia should understand that.''

The Virginia Municipal League and the Virginia Association of Counties said they want more information before taking a position.

Allen would soften the blow to localities by replacing any lost revenue with state funds for at least five years.

But that may do little to quell concerns of local officials, who fear the elimination of business-receipt taxes will amount to the kind of unfunded state mandate that Allen has promised not to impose.

Roanoke Finance Director Jim Grisso said that even if the state fulfills its promise to replace lost revenue for five years, the replacement dollars will not take into account a projected growth in taxable business receipts.

For Roanoke, the loss of added revenue could be more than $1.25 million over the next five years, Grisso said.

Stroupe said Allen's intention would be to end the subsidy after five years. At that point, local governments would have to either find alternative sources of revenue or cut their budgets, Stroupe said.

``It's forcing a discipline on localities,'' he said.

The loss of the business-receipts tax would cost most localities between 3 percent and 5 percent of their annual revenue. But the impact would be more drastic in localities like Salem, which gets about 10 percent of its revenue from the tax on business receipts.

Stroupe said any revenue loss to localities would be more than offset by economic-development spinoffs.

But some local officials say repealing the tax on business receipts would leave local governments with no mechanism to benefit directly from any boost in the economy.



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