S 288 IS, the Internet Tax Nondiscrimination Act.
Re: extending the moratorium enacted by the Internet Tax Freedom Act for 5
years.
Date introduced: February 8, 2001.
Sponsor: Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR).
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 288
To extend the moratorium enacted by the Internet Tax Freedom Act through
2006, and encourage States to simplify their sales and use taxes.
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
February 8, 2001
Mr. WYDEN (for himself and Mr. LEAHY) introduced the following bill; which
was read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and
Transportation
A BILL
To extend the moratorium enacted by the Internet Tax Freedom Act through
2006, and encourage States to simplify their sales and use taxes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
States of America in Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the `Internet Tax Nondiscrimination Act'.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
The Congress makes the following findings:
(1) The moratorium of the Internet Tax Freedom Act on taxes on multiple and
discriminatory taxes on electronic commerce should be extended and taxes on
Internet access should be permanently banned.
(2) States maintain the authority to determine what items are included in
the State's sales tax base and should be encouraged to simplify and unify
their sales and use tax systems, including systems imposing transaction taxes
on telecommunications.
(3) As a matter of economic policy and basic fairness, similar sales
transactions should be treated equally, without regard to the manner in which
sales are transacted, whether in person, through the mails, over the
telephone, on the Internet, or by other means.
(4) Congress may facilitate such simplification and uniformity by virtue of
its constitutional power to regulate interstate commerce.
(5) If a sufficient number of States simplify and unify their sales and use
tax systems, the Congress should consider authorizing those States to require
sellers to collect taxes on sales of goods or services delivered in-state.
(6) Authorizing the States to require out-of-State sellers to collect
transaction taxes should have no impact on business activity tax or income tax
claims against sellers who lack nexus with the State. The rules regarding
taxable presence, therefore, should be made clearer to reduce costly
litigation between out-of-State sellers and States.
(7) Online consumer privacy is of paramount importance to the growth of
electronic commerce and must be protected in any simplified and unified State
sales and use tax system.
SEC. 3. EXTENSION OF INTERNET TAX FREEDOM ACT MORATORIUM THROUGH 2006.
(a) EXTENSION; INTERNET ACCESS TAXES- Section 1101 of the Internet Tax
Freedom Act (47 U.S.C. 151 nt.) is amended--
(1) by striking `taxes during the period beginning on October 1, 1998, and
ending 3 years after the date of enactment of this Act--' in subsection (a)
and inserting `taxes--';
(2) by striking paragraph (1) of subsection (a) and inserting the
following:
`(1) Taxes on Internet access.';
(3) by inserting before `multiple' in paragraph (2) of subsection (a) the
following: `During the period beginning on October 1, 1998, and ending on
December 31, 2006,';
(4) by striking subsection (d); and
(5) by redesignating subsections (e) and (f) as subsections (d) and (e),
respectively.
(b) CONFORMING AMENDMENT- Section 1104(10) of that Act (47 U.S.C. 151 nt) is
amended by striking `services unless such tax was generally imposed and actually
enforced prior to October 1, 1998.' and inserting `services.'.
SEC. 4. SENSE OF THE CONGRESS.
(a) IN GENERAL- It is the sense of the Congress that the following criteria
are necessary elements of a State law providing for a simplified sales and use
tax system for remote sales:
(1) The law provides a centralized, one-stop, multi-state registration
system for sellers.
(2) The law provides uniform definitions for goods or services that are
included in the tax base.
(3) The law provides uniform and simple rules for attributing transactions
to particular taxing jurisdictions.
(4) The law provides uniform rules for the designation and identification
of purchasers and transactions exempt from sales and use taxes, including a
database of all exempt entities and a rule ensuring that reliance on that
database immunizes sellers from liability.
(5) The law provides uniform procedures for the certification of software
that sellers rely on to determine State and local use tax rates and
taxability.
(6) The law provides uniform bad debt rules.
(7) The law provides uniform tax returns and remittance forms.
(8) The law provides uniform electronic filing and remittance methods.
(9) The law provides for State administration of all State and local sales
taxes and a single rate and a single filing for all sales.
(10) The law--
(A) provides for uniform audit procedures for out-of-State sellers; and
(B) includes an option under which a seller that agrees to be subject to
audit by any State that uses those procedures is subject to no more than 1
audit per year under those procedures.
(11) The law provides reasonable compensation for tax collection by
sellers.
(12) The law provides an exemption from use tax collection requirements for
out-of-State sellers whose gross annual sales are less than a specified
threshold of not less than $5,000,000.
(13) The law, or another State law, provides protection for consumer
privacy.
(14) The law provides for a single uniform Statewide sales and use tax rate
on all transactions on which a sales or use tax is assessed.
(15) In any State that imposes a sales or use tax on goods or services
delivered via the Internet, the law--
(A) provides an origin State default rule for transactions where the
location of the customer is not disclosed during the transaction; and
(B) permits the seller to rely upon information given by the customer
during the transaction.
(16) The law provides clear standards for determining the nexus of business
activity, for tax purposes, that limit business activity tax nexus to sellers
that have continuous and systematic contacts with the State.
(17) Other features that will achieve a simplified and uniform sales and
use tax system.
(b) DEFINITIONS- In this section:
(1) UNIFORM- The term `uniform' when used in reference to a tax, a
procedure, a standard, or a system of classification means that the tax,
procedure, standard, or system--
(A) does not discriminate unreasonably between sellers that have a
business location or presence in a State and sellers that do not have a
business location or presence in the State; and
(B) is not inconsistent with a similar tax, procedure, standard, or
system employed by another State in which a seller is located or does
business.
(2) ORIGIN STATE DEFAULT SYSTEM- The term `origin State default system'
means a system for determining the sales or use tax liability associated with
a purchase under which, if the seller cannot determine the State or residence
of the purchaser from the purchase order, the seller may determine and compute
the sales or use tax liability, if any, for the purchase according to the
credit card information, payment address, delivery address, or other data in
accordance with the law of the State in which the seller is located.
(3) LEASES AND LICENSES- The term `sales' and the term `seller' include
`leases' and `lessor', respectively, and `licenses' and `licensor',
respectively in any State in which the leasing or licensing of property,
whether tangible or intangible, is treated for purposes of a sales or use
SEC. 5. AUTHORIZATION TO REQUIRE COLLECTION OF USE TAXES.
(a) FEDERAL AUTHORIZATION REQUIRED- No State may require a seller, who lacks
nexus with, or a tax obligation to, the State, to collect or remit sales or use
tax on any sales in that State until Congress provides such authority to the
States, by joint resolution under subsection (b).
(b) JOINT RESOLUTION- The Congress may authorize the States to require
sellers to collect a sales or use tax on sales of goods or services delivered in
the taxing State under any law that meets the criteria set forth in section 4
only by the adoption of a joint resolution--
(1) the resolving clause of which is as follows: `That the Congress
approves the State collection of sales or use taxes on goods or services
delivered in a State without regard to the State in which the seller is
physically present under the State laws described in section 4. This
resolution does not apply to the collection of any State tax if the law under
which the tax is collected imposes multiple or discriminatory taxation.'; and
(2) the second section of which lists or describes the State laws to which
the resolution initially applies.
(c) FAST-TRACK PROCEDURE FOR APPROVAL- The procedures set forth in section
152 of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2192) apply to the joint resolution
described in subsection (b) of this section, except that--
(1) section 152(a) does not apply; and
(2) the references to the House of Representatives Committee on Ways and
Means and the Senate Committee on Finance are deemed, for purposes of this
section, to refer to the House of Representatives Committee on Commerce and
the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
(d) APPLICATION WITH OTHER LAW- This subsection does not supersede section
1101 of the Internet Tax Freedom Act (47 U.S.C. 151 nt.)
(e) NO EFFECT ON NEXUS- No obligation imposed by virtue of authority granted
in the joint resolution described in subsection (b), or any provision of this
Act, shall be considered in determining whether a seller has a nexus with, or
other tax obligation to, any State for any tax other than a sales or use tax.
Nothing in this Act permits a State--
(1) to license or regulate any person;
(2) to require any person to qualify to transact intrastate business; or
(3) to subject any person to State taxes not expressly related to the
authority granted by the joint resolution described in subsection (b).
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