Monday, January 20, 2014

Hayden: Business Tax Cut Hard on Small Shops

By Maureen Hayden in the Anderson Herald-Bulletin:

Six years ago, Nate Richardson was launching a company from an old ambulance owned by his business partner and taking meetings at a library near his home.

Now the Marine veteran counts the Indiana Pacers and Walt Disney Resorts among his customers. His product: A non-toxic agent that kills, then protects against, antibiotic-resistant super-bugs. The Pacers use his stuff to guard against the potentially deadly staph infections that have taken root in some NBA and NFL locker rooms – and other places where sweaty people gather.

Those super-bugs, spreading in number, are a growth industry for Richardson, an Indiana native who left home after graduating from Indiana State University. He moved back to launch his business, now in the Flagship Enterprise Center, a business incubator in Anderson that grows advanced manufacturing start-ups.

Last year, Richardson sealed his commitment to the city when he pulled his company’s bottling and packaging lines out of Illinois and Wisconsin, where they’d been outsourced, to bring them home to Anderson.

His is the story that Indiana boosters like to tell, which is why he was in the audience at Gov. Mike Pence’s State of the State speech last week. The governor invited him there to be the human face of an ambitious plan to eliminate the business personal property tax.

Pence needs the help. His plan has met with mighty resistance from local government and schools officials fearful of losing a $1 billion revenue stream that springs from the tax.

Legislative leaders have offered watered-down proposals to begin phasing out the tax. A House bill would give counties the option of eliminating the tax on all new business equipment. A Senate bill would eliminate the tax for small businesses, cut the corporate income tax, and set up a blue-ribbon commission to study the matter.

Richardson just wants it to go. “When I buy equipment, like the bottling unit that costs $75,000, I pay the sales tax on it,” he said. “But then, every year after, I have to pay taxes on it again. Everything I’ve got is taxed – the equipment, the mixers, the tables. Even my chairs.”
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http://www.heraldbulletin.com/columns/x651181444/Maureen-Hayden-Richardson-says-business-property-tax-hard-on-small-shops