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The Newsroom - 2004 |
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Gaming, O'Connell still split over taxes

August 27, 2004 - State Sen. Ann O'Connell and gaming
industry bosses are reliving the 2003 tax debate in what is
becoming a fierce primary contest for O'Connell.

The gaming industry is targeting the longtime senator because
of her pointed opposition to a tax plan the industry
supported, and O'Connell is striking back.

O'Connell, R-Las Vegas, is running radio and mail ads saying
the industry "has declared war on one of our most trusted
elected officials" because O'Connell refused to let gaming
"raise your taxes and lower theirs."

Casino officials flatly deny the charges.

"What this ad says is we attempted to lower our taxes, which
is blatantly false," said Bill Bible, president of the Nevada
Resort Association, the industry's state lobbying arm. "We
were the only industry that I know of other than mining that
stepped up and said, 'We understand the state has a financial
problem.' We're willing to pay more, but so should other
businesses."

O'Connell's radio ad comes in response to a media blitz by the
Citizens for Fair Taxation, a group funded largely by the
gaming industry, that charges O'Connell tried to dramatically
raise taxes in a proposal contrary to one the gaming industry
supported.

O'Connell said she co-sponsored a bill to give lawmakers an
alternative tax plan to debate, a move that her opponents say
would have meant $1.6 billion in new taxes over two years.

The 2003 Legislature was contentious because of the plan to
raise nearly $1 billion in new taxes to cover a projected
revenue shortfall over the biennium.

Casino executives supported a plan that would have taxed
businesses' gross receipts. The Governor's Task Force on Tax
Policy, the group that studied various tax plans, recommended
the Legislature adopt a tax on businesses' gross receipts,
saying it was the fairest way to go.

The plan was opposed by several chambers of commerce, and was
never adopted.

O'Connell said the proposed gross-receipts tax would have
decreased the gaming industry's overall share of the tax
burden, and during the session she stood opposed to it.

"I'm the one who made the motion to kill their gross-receipts
tax as many times as it came up," she said. "I was very
instrumental in getting that tax killed."

O'Connell charges that the gaming industry wants to reduce its
overall share of the tax burden from about 48 percent of the
taxes collected in Nevada to about 15 percent.

MGM Mirage spokesman Alan Feldman said O'Connell is
misrepresenting what was said.

Gaming reflects about 15 percent of the state's economy but
pays a much higher percentage of taxes, Feldman said.

"So what we have said is we would like other industries to
accept some of the burden, but that doesn't mean 'reduce our
taxes,' " Feldman said.

Gaming was willing to increase the amount of taxes it paid,
but it wanted a more broad-based measure that would tax other
big businesses, including retail and banks, to share the
burden, Feldman said.

"There are industries making all kinds of money here that are
not participating at a proportionate level," he said. "And
retail is one of the biggest."
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Even the gross-receipts tax would have increased
gaming taxes, Bible said. Gaming bosses, who are largely
supporting O'Connell's Republican challenger, Joe Heck,
said they were trying to be responsible by taking on an
added tax burden and sharing the costs with other big
businesses.

The Citizens for Fair Taxation ads say that O'Connell
tried last year to raise taxes by $1.6 billion over two
years by co-sponsoring a bill known as Care-Amodei for
its two sponsors, Democratic Sen. Terry Care and
Republican Sen. Mark Amodei.

Tax expert Jeremy Aguero, a principal at research firm
Applied Analysis, said the bill O'Connell co-sponsored
could have raised an estimated $1 billion in taxes
annually, depending on how the sales tax was defined.

While the gaming ads have criticized O'Connell for
co-sponsoring the bill, O'Connell said she simply wanted
to examine other ideas for new taxes.

"When you sign onto a bill it doesn't necessarily mean
you are supporting it," she said. "The bill might go
through a dozen changes you don't agree with. I signed
onto the bill because we -- we being the 10 people on
there -- felt there should be an alternative to the
gaming tax proposal."

She said several lawmakers felt that the gaming industry
was controlling the tax debate while legislators did not
have their own plan to work with. That's why she said
she co-sponsored the Care-Amodei bill, which looked at
taxing services businesses provide.

The bill was created to examine other methods of
taxation, O'Connell said. It never made it to the floor.

But the Citizens for Fair Taxation has seized on that
vote.

A recent flier by the group asks voters to "put the
brakes on Ann O'Connell's tax hike."

"O'Connell has co-sponsored a plan to raise taxes on
Nevada's hard-working families and small businesses," it
says, pointing out that the bill would have raised taxes
on auto repair, lawn services, dry cleaning and property
taxes.

Sen. Sandra Tiffany, R-Henderson, said she and O'Connell
co-sponsored the bill because they strongly believe that
legislators needed to take control of the tax debate
from the governor's office.

She disputed the $1.6 billion figure, saying the bill
never went far enough for legislators to tell how much
it would really cost. O'Connell, Tiffany said, has a
lengthy record of fiscal responsibility.

"I think it's a sad day when a special interest can use
their money against a long-term conservative seated
senator and turn her whole 20-year record around with a
lie," Tiffany said. "She is absolutely not a
tax-and-spender."
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