Brian C. Fertig
2006-May-25 11:37 UTC
[Asterisk-Users] FW: [isp-clec] Treasury disconnects tax on long-distance calls - with refunds
FYI Brian Fertig Treasury disconnects tax on long-distance calls WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - The brief Spanish-American War ended more than a century ago, but not the federal tax assessed to fund the victory. Until now. On Thursday, the U.S. Treasury said it would stop collecting the 3% federal excise tax on long-distance calls, a fee originally assessed in 1898. The government also said it will issue refunds requested by consumers and businesses that paid the fee over the past three years. Taxpayers will be able to request refunds when they file 2006 tax returns in early 2007. The Treasury also said the Justice Department would cease litigation in support of the tax after a handful of federal appeals courts ruled the fee illegal in decisions rendered within the past year. The most recent loss in federal court occurred earlier this month. "The Federal Appeals courts have spoken across the board," Treasury Secretary John Snow said in a statement. "It's time to 'disconnect' this tax and put it on the permanent 'do not call' list." The tax, which generates more than $6 billion annually, has survived repeated efforts to eliminate it, most recently in 2000, when President Bill Clinton vetoed a larger bill that included a repeal of the excise fee. Bills aimed at ending the tax have circulated every year since. For decades, long-distance companies such as AT&T Inc. have been required to collect the excise fee from customers and pass it on to the federal government. Yet some large corporations such as Hewlett Packard successfully sued to get rid of the tax, claiming it was illegal. Others have won large refunds from the IRS. The excise tax works out to $1.50 per every $50 in long-distance calls, not a particularly large sum for consumers. Yet for a business that spends, say, $10,000 a month on long-distance calls, the tax would equal $300 a month or $3,600 a year. If the tax remained in place over the next decade, it would have generated about $67 billion for the federal coffers, a congressional panel estimates. Altogether, the excise has raised more than $300 billion in its entire existence, the Congressional Research Service found. The excise fee was originally established in 1898 on long distance because phones were considered a luxury and only the wealthiest Americans could afford service. These days, the tax affects all consumers directly or indirectly, no matter what their annual income. In announcing his decision, Treasury Secretary Snow also called on Congress to eliminate federal taxes on local phone calls. That tax is separate from the long-distance fee. This email was scanned by: Mcafee GroupShield ---------------- CONFIDENTIAL DISCLAMER ---------------- All information provided in this email is considered confidential and proprietary of Planet Telecom, Inc. and Telecenter Inc. Use of this information by anyone other than the recipient or sender will be considered in breach of agreement.