The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Friday, January 20, 1995               TAG: 9501200534
SECTION: LOCAL                    PAGE: B1   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY DAVID M. POOLE, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: RICHMOND                           LENGTH: Medium:   87 lines

BUSINESS FORCES DENOUNCE TAX AS ``JOB-KILLER''

It was the political equivalent of an old-fashioned public flogging.

Some 100 businesspeople, led by a large contingent from Northern Virginia, gathered at the Capitol on Thursday to take verbal whacks at an obscure tax with an innocuous acronym, BPOL.

They denounced the tax as a ``job-killer'' that cripples small businesses and chases multinational companies out of the state.

They cheered when a member of Gov. George F. Allen's Cabinet reaffirmed his determination that the tax would die a slow but sure death.

Allen's vision of a slimmer government has lifted BPOL from obscurity and put the little-understood levy at the center of the biggest fight of the 1995 General Assembly.

BPOL - pronounced ``Bee-Poll'' - is short for a ``Business, Professional and Occupational License'' tax that is imposed by all cities, most towns and about half the counties in Virginia. Businesses pay according to their revenue.

Until Allen singled it out for elimination, BPOL had generated little controversy in many parts of the state.

Former Roanoke City Council member Bev Fitzpatrick Jr. said he doesn't remember hearing more than a handful of complaints about it during his 1988-93 tenure on the council.

``It's certainly not something that comes up at a cocktail party - until recently,'' said Martha McClees, vice president of the Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce.

Opposition to BPOL originated in Northern Virginia, where giant companies drawn to the suburbs of Washington complained that they were getting soaked compared to competitors from neighboring localities and in BPOL-free Maryland.

Multinational corporations based in Northern Virginia howled when localities tried to lasso the BPOL around revenues generated in their far-flung offices.

A legislative committee was studying ways to curb these abuses. But Allen went one better by proposing to eliminate BPOL to make Virginia more business-friendly and put governments on a forced diet.

The Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce has embraced the end of BPOL. The Roanoke Regional Chamber of Commerce has been more cautious, saying Allen should hold off until local governments find an alternative source of money.

The vast majority of local governments are flatly opposed to Allen's plan, because losing BPOL might force them to raise local property taxes.

Robert T. Skunda, Allen's secretary of commerce, tried to defang the mandate argument Thursday by saying localities could reinstate the business levy if the state fails to replace lost revenue.

The compromise is not expected to stop a bevy of angry local government officials from descending on the Capitol next week.

Stay tuned. And keep an eye out for lapel stickers reading: ``Kill BPOL'' or ``Killing BPOL: The Mother of All Mandates.''

Democrats who control a slim majority in the General Assembly opened a third front - higher education - in their efforts to dramatize hardships that will result from Allen's tax cut proposal.

Senate Democrats pledged to fight Allen's proposal to slash $47 million from state colleges and universities.

``We're going to do what we can, but we need help and we need support,'' Senate Majority Leader Hunter B. Andrews, D-Hampton, told college presidents appearing before a legislative committee.

Having lost $500 million in state funding over the past five years, the college chiefs said further cuts would be devastating. The state risks slipping to 45th from 43rd place nationwide in funding for higher education, they said.

Andrews said a priority will be to restore funds Allen wants to ax from six colleges - including Norfolk State University and Christopher Newport University - that failed to submit approved restructuring plans by a December deadline.

In other General Assembly news:

The House of Delegates voted 66-32 in favor of a bill that enhances penalties for anyone who is convicted twice of obstructing access to abortion clinics. The measure, sponsored by Del. C.A. ``Chip'' Woodrum, D-Roanoke, faces an uncertain future in the Senate.

The House voted unanimously to give a second chance to federal pensioners who missed a Nov. 1 deadline to take part in a proposed settlement with retirees who were taxed illegally from 1985-88. MEMO: Staff writer Jon Glass and the Associated Press contributed to this

report.

KEYWORDS: GENERAL ASSEMBLY by CNB