Every year, lawmakers seeking to fund their favorite programs or services聽inevitably ask themselves whether there might be a way to squeeze more money out of聽the tax system without adding more burdens to those of us who already pay taxes.

础谤别听there folks out there who should be paying taxes but aren鈥檛?

For years, lots of attention was focused around online businesses and聽e-commerce. Online travel companies recently concluded a long and bitter fight with聽the state over how much in general excise tax and transient accommodations tax they owed, with the state recovering more than $50 million or so in the process.

Hawaii has yet to join the states that collect taxes on online sales. Flickr.com

Online retail continues to be a sore spot, because current interpretations of the聽U.S. Constitution say that unless the Congress says otherwise, online retailers aren鈥檛聽required to pay local taxes unless they have some type of local presence. So retailers聽with brick-and-mortar stores have to pay taxes like our GET, and they chafe because聽their online competitors don鈥檛.

To put it another way, retailers who collect taxes on sales聽to support government and public works, and who keep local residents employed, are聽losing ground to online retailers who do neither.

A new聽study by Civic聽Economics and the American Booksellers Association, titled 鈥淎mazon and Empty聽Storefronts,鈥 looked at the impact of just one online retailer, and estimated that for聽Hawaii, in 2014 it sold $201.9 million worth of retail goods statewide, avoiding $8.8聽million in GET and causing a net loss of 1,236 retail jobs in Hawaii.

The Legislature has explored ways to get online retailers to collect taxes on sales聽to Hawaii residents. In 2013, New York鈥檚 highest court ruled that the state could define聽an online retailer鈥檚 “physical presence” to include affiliates who direct sales to the online聽retailer in exchange for a commission; the U.S. Supreme Court later let this ruling stand.

Our Legislature passed a bill to adopt that technique in 2009, but when the online聽retailers threatened to cut off all of their local affiliates if it became law, Gov. Linda Lingle聽vetoed it.

Recently, Ohio tried a more interesting argument, focusing on聽cookies. Cookies are little files left on your Internet browser when you visit online sites聽that save information between pages that you view. Online sellers need these to聽conduct e-commerce.

The latest U.S. Supreme Court case on 鈥渟ubstantial nexus,鈥澛which is what is needed before a state can force an online seller to pay local taxes, held聽that some kind of physical presence within the state is necessary, and 鈥渁 few floppy聽disks鈥 aren鈥檛 enough.

Ohio, however, argued that the cookies left by an online retailer鈥檚聽system should be enough physical presence. If you conduct hundreds of millions of聽dollars in local sales, your system must have left lots聽of cookies on local computers.

No word yet on whether the Ohio courts have bought into the argument, but it鈥檚聽certainly an interesting point to ponder.

Even so, the writing is on the wall. Amazon already collects sales taxes in 28聽states, with 84 percent of the U.S. population, but not in Hawaii.

Congress could settle the skirmishes now聽being fought state by state and bring some certainty to retailers, wherever located, by聽giving states the authority to require online retailers to collect taxes on purchases. The聽U.S. Senate approved a bill to do this, but the bill stalled in the House of聽Representatives.

Given dim prospects for congressional action in Washington, D.C.,聽what can Hawaii do to level the playing field, give our local retailers a聽chance to compete, and support our local economy?

Community Voices aims to encourage broad discussion on many topics of community interest. It鈥檚 kind of a cross between Letters to the Editor and op-eds. This is your space to talk about important issues or interesting people who are making a difference in our world. Column lengths should be no more than 800 words and we need a current photo of the author and a bio. We welcome video commentary and other multimedia formats. Send to news@civilbeat.org.聽The opinions and information expressed in Community Voices are solely those of the authors and not Civil Beat.

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