Mississippi’s Internet Sales Tax:
Answers to Common Questions

 
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The explosion of online retail sales has fostered a debate about whether and how to collect taxes on those purchases from companies that are not currently required to collect them. During the 2017 legislative session, the Mississippi House of Representatives passed a bill regarding this issue. That bill, HB 480, died in the Senate Finance Committee, but the issue itself is not going away.

The Mississippi Department of Revenue (DOR) has proposed a regulation very similar to the legislation. A major difference between the regulation and the legislation is that HB 480 would have directed that the taxes collected by certain out-of-state sellers be spent on road and bridge repair.

Although there are many aspects to this debate, this paper is intended to explain only a few of the policy matters involved. It does not seek to take a side, but to impartially explain the pertinent facts.

For the most part, we will deal with things as they are, not as they should or should not be.


Before we get started, an understanding of the terminology is important.

First of all, the internet sales tax is not really a “sales tax.” It is a “use tax,” which is a tax due on the purchase of property acquired “for use, storage or consumption within this State on which Sales or Use Tax has not been paid to another state…,” according to the Mississippi Department of Revenue (DOR).

Use tax rates are generally the same as sales tax rates, but use taxes are treated differently in terms of where the money goes after it is collected by DOR. All of the use tax is retained at the state level while a portion (18.5%) of the sales tax is sent back to the Mississippi municipalities where the sales were made.

A company that has a physical presence in Mississippi is required to collect sales or use tax at the time of a sale. Whether companies that do not have a physical presence here may be required to collect and remit a use tax is a major point of the current debate and is discussed in this paper.


Is this a new tax? Is it a tax increase?

The answer to both questions is no, at least as applied to the tax itself. The process to collect the tax will be taxing – logistically, financially, and emotionally – especially for small businesses. But the use tax on the purchase itself is neither a new tax nor a tax increase.

Here’s why. For every item you buy right now that is subject to sales or use tax, you are the one who owes the tax. It would have perhaps been more accurate to call it a “purchase tax” than a “sales tax.” The tax is not on the business from which you purchased the item. The tax is assessed on the item itself, and you as the purchaser owe the tax.

In order to make it easier to identify and collect the tax, the state requires sellers (retail stores, for instance) to collect it for you. That’s why it’s not included in the price of the product but is identified as a separate item on your receipt. (In contrast, businesses include the cost of their own taxes, such as income or property taxes, in the underlying price of the product, not as a separate item on the receipt.)

Consider this analogy. You owe tax on your income. In order to increase compliance, the state requires your employer to withhold money from your paycheck and send it to DOR. That’s not a tax on your employer. You are the one who owes the tax. If your employer doesn’t withhold enough, you still owe the full tax on your income, and you are required to remit it when you file your tax return.

In the same way, if a retailer – in-state or out-of-state – collects an adequate amount of sales or use tax for you, you owe nothing more. But if the retailer does not collect it, you still owe it.

Whether you have noticed or not, or whether you have answered it truthfully or not, your Mississippi tax return asks you to identify the amount of purchases you made from out-of-state companies for which you did not pay sales or use tax. You are supposed to pay 7% of that amount to the state. Apparently, not many people do that.

If you buy an item in another state and the seller charges you sales tax in that state, you can deduct that amount from the use tax you would otherwise owe to the state of Mississippi. The very important exception to this: you cannot deduct sales or use taxes paid in another state on most motorized vehicles (cars, trucks, motorcycles, boats, etc.) whose first use will be in Mississippi. In other words, if you buy one of those items in another state, and it has not been used before, you will owe the full use tax in Mississippi even if you paid sales tax in the state where you bought it.


Since this will result in my paying more taxes than I do now, how is this not a tax increase?

The only reason you would pay more taxes under the new policy is if (a) you buy more online this year than last year, or (b) you haven’t been paying the use tax you already owed. To say it is a tax increase to require you to pay what you owe would be analogous to saying it is a tax increase if you have avoided paying income tax in the past but now your employer will be required to withhold income taxes from your paycheck.

To summarize: the tax on purchases from out-of-state sellers is a tax that is owed now; it is not a new tax, and it is not a tax increase.

If the tax is already owed, what’s the problem with requiring sellers to collect it?
Regardless of the merit of taxing internet sales, the issue hinges on whether one state can require companies in another state to collect a tax on its behalf if that company has no physical presence in the state. The U.S. Supreme Court has spoken directly to this question and determined that states cannot do that. The U.S. Constitution’s “commerce clause” gives the U.S. Congress authority over interstate commerce. Thus far, Congress has not given states the power to require businesses beyond their borders to collect use taxes if those businesses do not have a physical presence in the taxing state.

If that’s the case, has Congress shown any interest in allowing it?
Numerous bills have been introduced in Congress to allow states to do this, but none have become law. The U.S. Senate passed the “Marketplace Fairness Act” in 2013 to address this issue, but the House has never acted on it.

Since Congress has not acted, what governs internet tax collection?
Until Congress decides otherwise, a U.S. Supreme Court ruling sets limits on what states can do to collect taxes on interstate transactions. In the case of Quill v. North Dakota, in an 8-1 decision, the high court said that a state can only require businesses with a physical presence, known as physical “nexus,” to collect taxes on the state’s behalf. To allow otherwise, the court said, would be too expensive and burdensome for companies to try to comply.


How complex can it be?

The Wisconsin Department of Revenue has an entire webpage, with a description of 10 different scenarios, to explain how that state taxes ice cream cakes. In some cases, the determination of whether a cake should be taxed is based on whether or not a napkin is offered to the customer! https://www.revenue.wi.gov/Pages/TaxPro/news-2010-101108c.aspx.

Such detail, multiplied by the nearly 10,000 sales tax jurisdictions in the country, each with its own variety of rules about which items are taxed at which rates, and each of which has its own forms and filing requirements, makes compliance daunting, especially for small business owners who could potentially face expensive audits from dozens, if not hundreds of tax jurisdictions.


If Congress does eventually pass a bill, what safeguards are likely to be approved for small businesses to deal with the complexity?
Any answer to this question is speculative, but there are some generally accepted protections that were in the Senate-passed bill in 2013 and are in proposals being considered currently by key House leaders. Here are three:

  1. Online sellers with less than $1,000,000 in remote sales annually would be exempt from collection requirements.
  2. States (or the federal government) would be required to buy and provide software for managing sales tax compliance, at no cost to the business that would be required to collect the tax.
  3. Retailers would not be penalized (would be “held harmless”) for any errors that result from relying on state-provided software.

Are those safeguards in the proposed DOR regulation?
No. The regulation proposed by DOR would apply to any business selling a total of $250,000 or more to Mississippians in any given year. There is no provision to provide software. And unlike at least 24 other states, the DOR regulation offers no liability protection if sellers rely on sales tax collection software.

If the U.S. Supreme Court has said states cannot require out-of-state businesses with no physical presence in-state to collect these taxes, why would DOR attempt to do so anyway?
DOR Commissioner Herb Frierson was quoted by the Associated Press as saying, “The whole purpose of it is to get the issue back in court and see if the Supreme Court will look at it again. What we’re doing is probably unconstitutional, but we’ve got to do it to get another hearing.” Other states including Alabama and South Dakota, are already in court attempting to force a reconsideration of Quill. Mississippi’s proposed regulation is very similar to Alabama’s regulation, so the benefit of inviting a lawsuit against Mississippi is unclear.

For the legislature, the apparent motivation behind HB 480 was to increase the amount of money being directed toward road and bridge repair, by allocating to that purpose the amount of use taxes collected and remitted by out-of-state sellers. Of that amount, 70% would have gone to the state Department of Transportation for state-maintained roads and bridges, and 30% to cities and counties for local road and bridge repair. Normally, the use tax goes into the General Fund, which is the primary source from which the legislature appropriates funds to schools, Medicaid, prisons, etc. Road and bridge funding comes primarily from the tax on gasoline and other fuels, generally referred to as the “gas tax.”

Other Common Questions
Do out-of-state sellers enjoy an unfair benefit by not being required to charge taxes?
Those who would answer “yes” say local, brick-and-mortar retailers are placed at a competitive disadvantage because the cost of an online product is automatically 7% less to consumers since they aren’t charged sales tax on the purchase. They say this hurts local business owners who provide jobs to people in the community, support local organizations such as sports teams and local charities, and are a significant source of local taxes that pay for schools, roads, and police and fire protection. And because they collect sales tax, not use tax, their communities receive 18.5% of the tax they collect on their sales, further benefiting their hometowns.

Those who would answer “no” say it is wrong to place the tax-collection burden on out-of-state sellers because the sellers don’t use water and sewer infrastructure, or fire and police protection, or other benefits provided by local and state government to brick-and-mortar establishments. They also say buyers generally choose to purchase online more for convenience than price, so the 7% difference would not change the purchasers’ buying decisions. In addition, they say sales tax collections have not declined despite the rise in online sales.

I noticed Amazon is now charging me 7% on the items I buy from them. If they aren’t required to collect tax on their sales to Mississippians, why are they doing so?
There appears to be no statutory prohibition on an out-of-state company voluntarily collecting a use tax, even if the company is not required to do so, as long as it sends DOR the full amount it collects. Amazon has chosen to charge a use tax on items purchased directly from Amazon. For independent sellers who list their items on Amazon, a use tax is apparently not being collected. As to why Amazon has chosen to do this, the answer is not clear (see next question).

Do we know whether Amazon is receiving any special benefits as a result of their agreeing to collect a use tax?
No. Because DOR refuses to release the terms of its agreement with Amazon, we don’t know exactly what was agreed to on either side. We don’t know whether Amazon agreed to collect the tax only if DOR agreed to issue its currently-proposed regulation that would penalize other companies that don’t do what Amazon has done. We don’t know how long DOR is giving Amazon to remit those taxes, or how much Amazon is allowed to keep to cover their costs (other Mississippi businesses may keep up to 2% of the total tax they are remitting, not to exceed $50 per month), or any other actions or costs to which DOR may have obligated Mississippi taxpayers.

March 1, 2017

Mississippi Center for Public Policy is an independent think tank promoting the ideals of limited government, free markets, and strong traditional families.

 

Fighting for Parents, Children and Choice in Education in Mississippi

 

 

This week the Mississippi Justice Institute filed a brief in Hinds County Chancery Court supporting the students who attend charter schools and the parents who made those educational choices for their children.
 
The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) has filed a lawsuit against the State of Mississippi and Jackson Public Schools calling the funding of charter schools unconstitutional. Not only do the briefs filed by the SPLC not prove their case, but if SPLC were to win, other schools would lose all state funding including the Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science, the Mississippi School for the Arts, some alternative schools covering multiple districts, and failing schools that must be taken over by the state. It would also be questionable whether local funding could follow a student living in one district who receives consent from both school boards to transfer and attend a school outside his district of residence, and whether local funding could follow children who attend agricultural high schools outside their district. In fact, SPLC's arguments put the entire concept of all municipal school districts on shaky grounds, including Jackson Public Schools.
 

The SPLC's arguments for state funding depend on court decisions involving the Mississippi Constitution of 1868 and regarding the power of the state to operate segregated schools. You read that right. The Southern Poverty Law Center seeks to deny students the opportunity for school choice based on legal premises which once justified separate and unequal schools for black students and white students.

We invite you to read the brief by the Mississippi Justice Institute to get an understanding of our defense of parents' right to choose what is best for the education of their children and the constitutional funding mechanism which provides educational opportunities for local students.

Get a full update on the status of the case here and read the latest brief here

 

The Mississippi Justice Institute exists thanks to the contributions of people like you. You can support our mission by making a secure contribution here.
Mike Hurst

 | Mississippi Justice Institute | (601) 969-1300 | [email protected] | msjustice.org
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January 14, 2017

MCPP Priorities

The 2017 Mississippi legislative session began on January 3, and the Mississippi Center for Public Policy will keep you updated throughout the session.

We believe legislation should eliminate unnecessary barriers so that opportunities can be created that will benefit all Mississippians. We’re focused on four main principles - economic freedom, education freedom, individual responsibility, and government accountability.

Economic Freedom
We want Mississippi to be a place where entrepreneurs are free to pursue their dreams, which means we must have a competitive economic environment based on free-market principles. Unnecessarily burdensome laws and regulations that hinder economic opportunity should be removed, and we must improve the business community’s ability to create and promote opportunity.

Education Freedom
We believe every child in Mississippi should have access to high-quality education. Parents should have the opportunity to choose the education that works best for their children. We need improved education content at all levels.

Individual Responsibility
We want Mississippians to experience freedom from dependence on government for their daily needs. We support policies that promote personal responsibility and strong families.

Government Accountability
Government should function according to the principles that enhance freedom and responsibility. We believe in restraining the growth of state government when it attempts to move beyond its proper role. We promote wise stewardship of tax dollars and a fair tax policy that collects only what is necessary.

For more about the principles we believe, read (or listen to) our booklet Governing by Principle: Ten Principles to Guide Public Policy?)

2017 Legislative Session Agenda

Consistent with those principles, here are just a few of the many ideas we are promoting:

* legislation to significantly reduce welfare fraud by removing dead people and non-Mississippi residents from Medicaid and other programs;

* a bill to require the U.S. History test that is required for high school graduation to include questions on America’s Founding (it currently covers only 1870 to the present);

* bills to help us recover from the negative effects of Obamacare at the state level; and

* a variety of bills aimed at reducing the regulatory burden on employers so that more private sector jobs can be created.

In addition, we will be monitoring many other bills, and acting when necessary to encourage their passage or their defeat. All our decisions will be driven by the principles described above, and even more specifically, according to the principles we have written about in Governing by Principle.

 

Legislative Action

Only a few bills have begun to make their way through the legislative process. About 1,200 bills have been introduced and assigned to committees. By the end of the session, more than 3,000 bills will have been introduced. Based on prior years’ experience, more than two-thirds of those bills will see no action at all. About 350 bills will be signed into law, including about 100 Appropriations bills and a good number of bills that do no more than give names to bridges or buildings.

The deadline for introducing most bills is this coming Monday, Jan. 16. (Bills that take your money and spend your money, known as Revenue and Appropriations bills, have a late February deadline.)

The House has approved a few bills so far, and the Senate has approved one of them. Here are a few that are significant:

School Superintendents
HB 32, the first bill to make it through the legislature and to the governor’s desk, is a bill to clarify the law passed last year to require school district superintendents to be appointed rather than elected, beginning in 2019. This bill clarifies that if a currently-elected superintendent’s office becomes vacant before 2019, the school board is to go ahead and appoint a superintendent, not hold a special election. The governor is expected to sign the bill.

Campaign Finance
HB 479, billed as campaign finance “reform,” defines and outlines usage guidelines for campaign contributions by any elected official or candidate. The bill prohibits the personal use of campaign contributions and provides acceptable options for how to use leftover money at the conclusion of an elected official or candidate’s service or campaign. Enforcement would be overseen by the Mississippi Ethics Commission. The bill passed by a vote of 102-13 and now goes to the Senate.

Auto Liability Insurance
HB 319 would require drivers to show proof of auto liability insurance to renew their registration (which most people think of as renewing their car tag, or getting their annual car tag sticker). This bill passed the House 82-33 and now goes to the Senate.

Tax Liability
HB 131 would authorize the Department of Revenue to compromise and settle a tax liability that is a doubtful claim. Our state constitution prohibits forgiving a tax debt to the state, no matter how unrealistic its full collection. Proponents of this bill say that if some type of compromise could be allowed, the state would get some money (instead of none), and the taxpayer could begin to rebuild financially. The bill passed without opposition and now goes to the Senate.

 

 

Legislative Update - February 6, 2017

This Thursday is the deadline for the House and Senate to pass bills that were approved by their own committees. The exception to that are bills that take your money and spend your money, otherwise known as Appropriations and Revenue bills. That deadline comes later this month.

Although bills died that would have made blue the official state color, classified venomous snakes as inherently dangerous to humans, required contracts to be written in large print, require a "probable cause" hearing for legislators who are arrested, and require school districts to serve low-fat meals and snacks to students diagnosed as overweight, there are still plenty of bills still alive.

Out of 2,300 bills that were introduced to change or create state laws (called “general bills”), 91% of them died in committee, leaving 429 to consider. Many of those are duplicate or similar bills in the House and Senate, and many are to simply extend current laws that would otherwise expire this year.

Below are significant bills that are still alive. If you click on the bill number, it will take you to the legislature’s status page for that bill, where you can read the original and current versions, and if it has been voted on in the full House or Senate, you can see who voted for or against it.

 

IMPORTANT NOTE: Listing of the bills below should NOT be taken as our endorsement of them. To the contrary, there are some horrible bills that somehow made it out of committees with generally conservative majorities.

   
 

Accountability and Transparency

   
HB 396 Prohibit elected state officials from visibly or audibly participating in the making of state funded advertising. Awaits House Floor.
HB 479 Prohibit personal use of campaign contributions and revise law to require detailed reporting. Passed House 104-12.
HB 555 Require approval by Outside Counsel Oversight Commission for Attorney General to bring certain suits. Passed House 63-58 after initially failing 58-60.
HB 812 Revise regulations regarding Civil Asset Forfeiture. Passed House 118-3.
HB 938 Prohibit state agencies from purchasing motor vehicles for one year. Passed House 115-5.
HB 974 Remove most civil service protections for employees in several agencies by exempting those agencies from the Personnel Board rules, regulations and procedures for three years. Passed House 62-58.
HB1109 Provide standards for state agencies to follow regarding Requests for Proposals (RFPs). Awaits House Floor.
HB1112 Agency Accountability Review Act of 2017. Require legislature's watchdog, the PEER committee, to regularly evaluate state agencies' effectiveness and efficiency, including whether they are achieving ther goals. Awaits House Floor.
HB1127 Revise Open Meetings Act to require minutes to be posted on public bodies' websites within certain time after the meeting. Awaits House Floor.
HB1296 Financial Transparency in Education Act - require school districts to post their revenue and expenditures online in a searchable format. Awaits House Floor.
HB1330 Abolish certain boards and commissions that have not met in more than a year. Awaits House Floor.
SB2567 Mississippi Health Agency Reorganization Act of 2017 - give governor the power to appoint the executive directors of several agencies, including the Health Department and the Mental Health Department, among others. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2572 Abolish certain boards and commissions that have not met in more than a year. Passed Senate 51-0.
SB2632 Prohibit state agencies from using state funds to hire contract lobbyists. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2634 Transfer BP Settlement Funds into Gulf Coast New Restoration Reserve Fund. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2642 Require state agencies to report to the Legislative Budget Office any "Maintenance of Effort" agreements or "Memoranda of Understanding" between the agency and the federal government. Passed Senate 51-0.
SB2645 Impose moratorium on the acquisition of State vehicles. Passed Senate 51-0.
SB2689 Prohibit personal use of campaign funds. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2846 Provide standards for state agencies to follow regarding Requests for Proposals (RFPs). Awaits Senate Floor.
   
   
   
 

Business

   
HB 883 Authorize natural gas public utilities that are rate-regulated to undertake economic development activities. Passed House 119-0
HB 928 Allow Qualified Small Employer Health Reimbursement Arrangements to allow empoyers to provide health insurance while limiting its cost. Passed House 117-2.
HB1076 Allow counties and cities in high-poverty or high-unemployment areas to exempt an area within their jurisdiction to exempt businesses from certain regulations, in an effort to draw investment into these communities. Awaits House Floor.
HB1322 Authorize small craft breweries to sell light wine or beer they produce on the premises of the brewery. Passed House 94-23.
SB2542 Authorize natural gas public utilities that are rate-regulated to undertake economic development activities. Passed Senate 51-0
   
  Crime and Courts
HB 645 Increase penalties for capital and first-degree murder committed against police officers. It differs from the Senate version in that it does not place this under the "hate crimes" statute. Awaits House Floor.
HB 805 Allow challenges to MS laws to be filed in any county circuit court, not only in Hinds County (which is the current requirement). The Chief Justice of teh MS Supreme Court would then appoint a judge to hear the arguments in whatever location he or she chooses. Awaits House Floor.
HB1033 Remove the automatic action of sending criminals to prison if they miss a payment on their fines; prohibit suspending driver licenses for crimes that do not involve driving. Awaits House Floor.
HB1039 Creats severe penalties and prevents due process for alleged sexual assault perpetrators on college campuses. Awaits House Floor.
SB2302 "Ban the Box" & expunction: Prohibit employers from asking on employment applications about criminal convictions. They may ask that in interviews, but cannot preemptively ask. This and other provisions of the bill are part of the recommendatinos of the "Re-Entry Council" made up of judges, attorneys, and others seeking to enable former offenders to gain employment and thus reduce the likelihood of commiting another crime. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2469 "Blue, Red, and Med Lives Matter": Places violent offenses against law enforcement officers, firefighters and emergency medical personnel under the "hate crimes" law. Passed Senate 37-13.
SB2710 Prohibit sanctuary cities and require local cooperation with federal immigration control. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2842 Authorize mental health court intervention programs. Passed Senate 51-0.
SB2907 Criminalize the posting or other sharing of explicit photos or videos without the subject's consent. Awaits Senate Floor.
   
   
   
 

Education

   
HB 32 Require appointment (rather than election) of school superintendents in the event of vacancy in elected office before January 1, 2019, when all superintendents must be appointed. Passed House 113-4 and Senate 49-2. Signed into law by the Governor.
HB 263 Require school districts to adopt policies to notify parents of alleged bullying incidents involving their children. Also broadens the definition of bullying to include words or actions that "exploit an imbalance of power" between the perpetrator and the victim. Awaits House Floor.
HB 267 Elect all school boards during statewide general election or presidential election for four-year term. Awaits House Floor.
HB 293 Reduce the number of days in a scholastic year from 180 to 170. Awaits House Floor.
HB 312 Authorize inclusion of hunter safety education program in school curriculum. Awaits House Floor.
HB 433 Require citizenship exam as part of U.S. History or American Government courses. Awaits House Floor.
HB 442 Revise the qualifications for school superintendents to allow someone with a master's degree, or a bachelors degree if he or she has at least 10 years of management experience, to be appointed as a superintendent. The latter is only an option where all members of the school board that appoints the superintendent are elected. Awaits House Floor.
HB 503 Direct the State Board of Education to incorporate cursive writing into elementary education curriculum. Awaits House Floor.
HB 544 Authorize the State Dept of Education to issue Nontraditional Route Standard Licenses to certain teachers and administrators with advanced degrees. Awaits House Floor.
HB 866 Limit the number of days a student may be required to take standardized assessments: State-required tests no more than 3 days; for district tests, no more than 20. Awaits House Floor.
HB 875 Revise the process of state school accreditation in failing school districts through a process of district transformation. Awaits House Floor.
HB 905 Require uniform accounting system for all school districts to address local, state and federal funds. Also, transfer audit powers from State Auditor to the State Department of Education. Awaits House Floor.
HB1036 Expand eligibility for the MS Dyslexia Therapy Scholarship to 12th grade (it's now 6th), as would HB1046, but also expand the universe of schools at which the scholarship may be used. Also requires a school district to test a student for dyslexia if a parent requests it. Awaits House Floor.
HB1046 Expand eligibility for the MS Dyslexia Therapy Scholarship to 12th grade (it's now 6th). Awaits House Floor.
HB1050 Allow unspent funds from a special-needs education scholarship account to remain in the account to be used the following school year. Awaits House Floor.
HB1224 Exempt school districts with "A" and "B" accountability ratings from certain duties. Awaits House Floor.
HB1227 Discontinue MS Statewide Teacher Appraisal Rubric (M-STAR) and require local districts to adopt teacher evaluation system. Awaits House Floor.
HB1294 Revise education funding formula. So far, this bill simply includes the current law with no changes, in order to have all the necessary "code sections" necessary once they decide what to propose. Awaits House Floor.
SB2036 Sets all school board elections to be held in November general elections beginning in 2019. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2042 Establish Early Childhood Services Interagency Coordinating Council. Considered on Senate Floor but was sent back to committee, which effectively killed it.
SB2273 Direct the State Board of Education to incorporate cursive writing into elementary education curriculum. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2328 Increase minimum GPA to qualify for the MS Resident Tuition Assistance Grant Program (M-TAG). Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2398 Revise the qualifications for school superintendents, but differently from HB442. This bill would require at least 6 years of classroom or administrative experience, at least 3 of which must have been as a principal of a school rated A or B or a school that improved at least a letter grade. However, the State Board of Education may approve rules that allow someone without direct experience to be a superintendent. Passed Senate 34-17.
SB2431 Authorize the State Board of Education to place failing school districts into "District Transformation Status." Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2459 Expands compulsory school age from the current 6-17 to the ages of 5-18. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2461 Require school district consolidation in Perry County. Passed Senate 33-18.
SB2463 Require school district consolidation in Chickasaw County. Passed Senate 35-16.
SB2607 Revise education funding formula. So far, this bill simply includes the current law with no changes, in order to have all the necessary "code sections" necessary once they decide what to propose. Awaits Senate Floor.
   
   
   
 

Elections

   
HB 228 Authorize pre-election day voting. Passed House 113-8.
HB 373 Allow first-time voters to register online. Awaits House Floor.
HB 467 An almost-300 page bill to revise election laws. Awaits House Floor.
SB2468 An almost-300 page bill to revise election laws. Awaits Senate Floor.
   
   
   
 

Family

   
HB 853 Revise Power of Attorney to authorize parents to delegate care and custody of a child. Awaits House Floor.
HB1210 Require Youth Court to provide redacted copy of child's record to child's parent/guardian upon request of the parent/guardian. Awaits House Floor.
HB1298 Create MS Advisory Council on Faith-based Initiatives. Awaits House Floor.
HB1451 Increase fee for marriage certificates from $10 to $20, and for processing marriage license applications, from $20 to $30. House voted 70-47, but it needed 71 votes. It was later reconsidered and approved 84-29.
SB2311 Create MS Achieving a Better Life Experience (ABLE) Act, to provide accounts for individuals with disabilities. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2342 Termination of parental rights - technical corrections. Passed Senate 48-1.
SB2483 Divorce - add 2-year separation as a ground for. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2520 Require Youth Court to provide redacted copy of child's record to child's parent/guardian upon request of the parent/guardian. Passed Senate 51-0.
SB2514 Create MS Advisory Council on Faith-based Initiatives. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2680 Clarify alternative of relative care for abused and neglected children. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2695 Sheriff or police chief to notify parent or guardian of minor released after arrest. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2703 Divorce - add domestic violence as a ground for. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2704 Increase marriage license processing fee from $20 to $50. Awaits Senate Floor.
   
   
   
 

Health

   
HB 318 Authorize grants to rural hospitals to help them stay alive or adjust to new opportunities. Passed House 113-8.
HB 909 Require State Health Plan to cover annual pap smears and PSA tests. Awaits House Floor.
HB 926 Allow the University of MS Medical Center to form Health Care Collaboratives - joint ventures that are exempt from antitrust laws, to the extent possible, as well as the Open Meetings and Public Records Acts. Awaits House Floor.
SB2214 Allow acupuncturists to provide care without a referral from a physician if they have been practicing in MS for at least 5 years. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2511 Provide for the licensing of Naturopathic medicine practitioners. Awaits Senate Floor.
SB2610 Clarify the allowable use of Cannabidiol in research of seizures and other medical conditions. Awaits Senate Floor.
   
 

Regulation

HB 539 Require seat belts for all passengers. Awaits House Floor.
HB 967 Regulate and tax fantasy sports games in the same way the state regulates and taxes casinos. Awaits House Floor.
HB1076 Allow counties and cities in high-poverty or high-unemployment areas to exempt an area within their jurisdiction to exempt businesses from certain regulations, in an effort to draw investment into these communities. Awaits House Floor.
HB1216 Direct agencies to report on laws and regulations that were put in place as a result of Obamacare, and the impact of those laws and regulations. Awaits House Floor.
HB1265 Require all state agency rules to be repealed after certain time unless the agency readopts them through the normal public-comment process. Awaits House Floor.
HB1425 Require occupational licensing boards, if they are controlled by people who are in the industry they regulate - to submit their proposed regulations and enforcement actions to the governor before they are finalized. This is in response to a US Supreme Court ruling regarding executive power that is exercised independent of a governor, if the boards are controlled "active market participants." Awaits House Floor.
SB2896 Regulate and tax fantasy sports games in the same way the state regulates and taxes casinos. Awaits Senate Floor.
   
   
   
 

Tax

   
HB 131 Authorize the Department of Revenue to compromise and settle certain tax liabilities. Passed House 119-0.
HB 480 Require out-of-state sellers who do not have a presence in MS to collect "use tax" (similar to sales tax) on purchases made by Mississippi residents. Any money collected from this requirement would be used for road and bridge repair, with 70% going to the state department of transportation and 30% going to local governments. Originally passed House 77-40. A normally-routine procedural vote to send it on to the Senate failed, leaving the bill in limbo for the moment.
HB 687 Allow public community and junior colleges to collect a debt by obtaining from the Dept of Revenue a set off against a debtor's state tax refund. Because of where it appears in the MS Code, it would also allow community and junior college officials to obtain the state and federal tax returns of the debtor. Passed House 104-14.
HB 699 Authorize the Dept of Revenue to disclose certain taxpayer information to law enforcement entities. Brought up on House Floor but debate has been suspended on it.
HB 711 Extend authority of Dept of Revenue to approve applications for certain "rebates" given to Hollywood and other producers under the MS Motion Picture Incentive Act. Passed House 107-15.
HB 804 Require MS Gaming Commission to establish a lottery. Awaits House Floor.
   
   
   
 

Welfare

   
HB1090 Requires Medicaid to contract with a company to identify dead people and non-Mississippi residents who are on the Medicad rolls, among other provisions to combat fraud in welfare programs. Awaits House Floor.
HB1186 Require Medicaid to apply for waivers from Federal requirements in order to conduct pilot projects to best meet needs and control costs. Awaits House Floor.
SB2330 Requires Medicaid to contract with a company to identify dead people and non-Mississippi residents who are on the Medicad rolls. Awaits Senate Floor.
   

 

 

NEWS RELEASE:

April 14, 2016

For Interviews Call Forest Thigpen or Dr. Jameson Taylor: (601) 969-1300

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NEWS RELEASE:

April 11, 2016

For Interviews Call Forest Thigpen or Dr. Jameson Taylor: (601) 969-1300

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The Truth About the Freedom of Conscience Bill

By Forest Thigpen

If all the things being said by the opponents of HB 1523 were true, I would be against it as well.

But they are not.

Some opponents of the "Protecting Freedom of Conscience from Government Discrimination Act," including Clarion Ledger Executive Editor Sam Hall, make the outlandish assertion that this bill would allow a person to be "refused service at a restaurant, not allowed to shop at a grocery store," and other sweeping generalizations. Sam says these are in "specific, detailed language" in the bill, but the words "restaurant" or "grocery store" appear nowhere in the bill, nor does any provision for those businesses to keep people out.

HB1523 does not create any protection for businesses that deny service to a person based on sexual orientation. The bill is confined almost exclusively to wedding-related services that may be declined, and only under certain circumstances.

Here's why that's in the bill. Many merchants, such as bakers, and many professionals, such as attorneys, have said they gladly serve their customers regardless of sexual orientation, but they draw the line at assisting in a wedding ceremony, which they consider a sacrament or act of worship, if that ceremony would violate their beliefs about God's design for that form of worship.

Newspaper Guilty of Denial of Service?

Let's look at another form of denying service to a person seeking to exercise a Constitutional right. Should I be able to sue the Clarion-Ledger if it chooses not to print my comments? That's a "denial of service" for my right to free speech - a right which is explicitly stated in the Constitution.

If you oppose HB1523 - and if you want to be consistent - you would have to believe that I could sue, or the government could punish the newspaper for denying my right to express my views.

Other distortions about what HB 1523 supposedly does concern foster care and adoption. The bill clarifies that a religious organization like Catholic Charities does not have to abandon its faith in order to continue providing foster care services in Mississippi. Some states and cities have banned such groups for politely declining to place children with same-sex couples.

I'm not saying you have to agree with that stance by those organizations. But given that no one was forced to use their services, and there were other providers that would make those placements, was it really worth it to ban them from participating in the program?

There are two employment provisions in the bill. One would allow businesses, schools, and religious organizations to set dress codes and to keep men out of women's bathrooms, dressing rooms, showers, etc. The bill does not require those restrictions; it merely says you can't be punished by the government for choosing those policies.

The other is a protection for public employees who express their views about marriage on their own time. This protection would apply to a situation like the one in Atlanta, where Fire Chief Kelvin Cochran was fired because he wrote a Bible study on his own time that briefly referenced the Bible's views on sexual morality.

Who is Forcing Whose Views on Others?

After the Roe v. Wade decision, many states enacted conscience protections for health professionals whose deeply-held beliefs would not allow them to assist in performing an abortion. HB1523 is a similar response to a Supreme Court decision on another issue that created potential conflicts for people of faith.

President Obama's own Solicitor General, when arguing the same-sex marriage case before the Supreme Court, said that respecting rights of conscience of those who disagree "is going to depend on how States work [it out]... and how they decide what kinds of accommodations they are going to allow under state law. And different states could strike different balances."

Our society, I hope, would never be alright with the government forcing an African-American t-shirt shop to design and print shirts for a Klan parade, even if that parade is legally organized. We would never think of forcing a Jewish baker to make a swastika-adorned cake for a neo-Nazi wedding, which is also legal to hold. Why would we think it's OK to force a religious business owner to assist in a wedding ceremony that violates his or her deeply-held beliefs, simply because it is now legal to hold such events?

HB1523 is not forcing anyone's views on anyone else. On the contrary, it is protecting people from having someone else's views forced on them to violate the tenets of their faith regarding marriage.

Some have said the bill pits one person's religious views against another, but consider the effect of each: a person who "denies service" is not preventing a same-sex couple from exercising their right to get married.* But if the couple prevails, it is preventing the objector from exercising his or her freedom of religion. HB1523 is a narrowly-tailored measure that provides a reasonable balance for those competing rights.

If we head down the road of having the government force us to abandon our religious beliefs, especially when reasonable alternatives are available, where will it end? What will be left of the freedom of religion?

* A Circuit Clerk will not be protected under this bill if a license is not provided to a same-sex couple "without delay." The Clerk may "seek recusal," but one of the conditions of that recusal is that the Clerk "shall take all steps necessary to ensure that the...licensing...is not impeded or delayed..." Thus, if the license is delayed, the Clerk has not met the conditions for protection under this bill.

March 2, 2016
CONTACT: Mike Hurst [email protected] (601) 969-1300

Taxi drivers file civil rights suit against City of Jackson

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MCPP Commentary By Forest Thigpen
To hear this commentary click here.

For 23 years, our organization has worked to help legislators write laws to guard the liberty of the people of our state, (more…)

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