The city council passed a
version of the tax Monday that was slashed nearly in half.
The Seattle City Council unanimously passed a tax on large employers Mondaythat will
aid the city’s homeless residents — but not before slashing the proposal nearly
in half over opposition from Amazon, which is headquartered in Seattle, and a
veto threat from Mayor Jenny Durkan.
Companies that gross $20
million or more a year will now face an annual tax of $275 per employee. That’s
down from the original $500 per employee proposed by Councilors Lorena
Gonzalez, Lisa Herbold, Teresa Mosqueda, and Mike O’Brien, which drew Amazon
and Durkan’s ire.
Democratic socialist
Councilor Kshama Sawant was the sole vote against the amendment to reduce
the tax from $500 to $275 per employee.
“There is no way this tax will
be a burden on big businesses in Seattle,” Sawant told The Seattle Times.
O’Brien, one of the original
proposal’s sponsors, said slashing the tax was the only practical way to move
the measure forward.
“We could not find the votes
we needed,” he told The Seattle Times.
The more robust proposal drew
opposition from city hall, several members of the council, and construction
workers’ unions, according to The Times. But its most vocal critic may have
been Amazon, which threatened to stop construction on new facilities in the
city and put 7,000 jobs on hold over the tax proposal.
The $500 tax would have cost
the company $20 million a year over the next two years, according to
The Seattle Times. After that, it would have risen to an estimated $39 million
a year.
“[P]ending the outcome of the
head-tax vote by City Council, Amazon has paused all construction planning,” a
company spokesperson told The Seattle Times earlier this month.
That’s despite Amazon founder
and CEO Jeff Bezos’ claim last month that he has too much money to spend.
Seattle declared a civil state of emergency over homelessness
in late 2015. King County, which includes Seattle, recorded a record 169 homeless deaths last year. There were 11,600 homeless people living in the county last year,
according to The Seattle Times.
Meanwhile, median cost of a
single-family house in Seattle rose 110 percent since Amazon opened its
headquarters in 2010, according to The Seattle Times. There’s no income or
capital gains tax in Washington state, and Amazon paid no federal taxes on its income for last year.
The city councilors who
sponsored the new tax said it was time for the company to pay its fair share.
“While Amazon didn’t
single-handedly cause this problem, they have contributed to the growing income
inequality, displacement and housing affordability issues facing our city,”
they said in a statement to The Seattle times earlier this month.
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