In order to provide equal access and equal opportunity to people with diverse abilities, this site has been designed with accessibility in mind. Click here to view
The Senate author of the “Back-to-School” sales tax holiday said he is pleased the tax cut, targeted directly to middle class families was among the first tax cuts to pass out of the Senate Finance Committee this morning.
Senator Jay Paul Gumm, D-Durant and chair of the Finance Committee, said passage of the sales tax holiday means all Oklahomans are one step closer to shopping in Oklahoma the first weekend in August, rather than taking their dollars to bordering states which already have a sales tax holiday.
“A ‘Back-to-School’ sales tax holiday puts real money back into the pockets of middle class families who already contribute so much to Oklahoma’s growing economy,” Gumm said. “It is also critical to put Oklahoma’s retailers – many of them small businesses – on equal footing with retailers across the borders in Texas and Missouri.”
Both those states have sales tax holidays for back-to-school shopping. During the three-day holiday – the first weekend in August –Texas and Missouri drain thousands of shoppers and millions of dollars from the Oklahoma economy.
Gumm said the Oklahoma version would be for the same days and the same items as the Texas holiday.
“Oklahomans would be able to stay home to avoid the sales tax on critical back-to-school items,” he said. “That would strengthen Oklahoma’s retail economy – especially small businesses on Main Streets in just about every community.”
Gumm pointed to revenue figures from both Texas and Missouri as evidence that sales tax holiday actually boost local economies during the tax free shopping weekend.
“The fact is that in both Texas and Missouri, local revenues held steady or increased because of greater retail activity during the sales tax holidays,” he said. “By keeping thousands of Oklahomans at home, we stand an even better chance to grow Oklahoma’s retail economy, which would primarily benefit cities that depend on sales taxes.”
Gumm said when Oklahomans go to Texas, they complete their shopping lists, have a meal, see a movie or even spend the night, draining the Oklahoma economy of even more dollars.
“It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that money spent by Oklahomans in Texas never ends up in Oklahoma municipal coffers or in local Oklahoma economies,” he said. “Keeping shoppers at home that weekend will mean more money for cities that depend on sales tax revenue.”
The back-to-school sales tax holiday is critical for Oklahoma retailers who find themselves at a competitive disadvantage during Texas sales tax holiday weekend, Gumm said. Some Oklahoma retailers have taken to absorbing the cost of sales taxes in an effort to compete.
The former executive director of the Durant Area Chamber of Commerce, Gumm said Oklahoma retailers, many of which are small businesses, should not have to bear that burden.
“We owe our retail community better, as well as the thousands of Oklahomans who might not be able to afford a trip to Texas,” he said. “The Oklahomans who need this tax break the most are left behind if they can’t afford to make the trip south.”
Gumm said a progressive tax cut like the back-to-school sales tax holiday is not only a winner for working and middle class families, but also for small business owners, city governments and the entire state. In addition, money not collected by cities in the form of sales tax will find its way into municipal coffers on other purchases and increased economic activity.
“I am tired of seeing Texas benefit at the expense of Oklahoma families and retailers,” Gumm concluded. “I intend to use every legislative means at my disposal to see that this shameful practice comes to an end next year with passage of the Oklahoma ‘Back-to-School’ sales tax holiday, and today we got one stop closer to making this critical proposal a reality in Oklahoma.”