Legislature(2017 - 2018)HOUSE FINANCE 519

11/08/2017 01:00 PM House FINANCE

Note: the audio and video recordings are distinct records and are obtained from different sources. As such there may be key differences between the two. The audio recordings are captured by our records offices as the official record of the meeting and will have more accurate timestamps. Use the icons to switch between them.

Download Mp3. <- Right click and save file as

Audio Topic
01:04:53 PM Start
01:05:46 PM HB4001
02:56:13 PM Adjourn
* first hearing in first committee of referral
+ teleconferenced
= bill was previously heard/scheduled
+= HB4001 EMPLOYMENT TAX TELECONFERENCED
Heard & Held
Ken Alper, Director, Tax Div., Dept. of Revenue
+ Bills Previously Heard/Scheduled TELECONFERENCED
                  HOUSE FINANCE COMMITTEE                                                                                       
                  FOURTH SPECIAL SESSION                                                                                        
                     November 8, 2017                                                                                           
                         1:04 p.m.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:04:53 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
CALL TO ORDER                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster called the House Finance Committee meeting                                                                      
to order at 1:04 p.m.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS PRESENT                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative Neal Foster, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Paul Seaton, Co-Chair                                                                                            
Representative Les Gara, Vice-Chair                                                                                             
Representative Jason Grenn                                                                                                      
Representative David Guttenberg                                                                                                 
Representative Scott Kawasaki                                                                                                   
Representative Dan Ortiz                                                                                                        
Representative Lance Pruitt                                                                                                     
Representative Steve Thompson                                                                                                   
Representative Cathy Tilton                                                                                                     
Representative Tammie Wilson                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
MEMBERS ABSENT                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
None                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ALSO PRESENT                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Ken Alper,  Director, Tax  Division, Department  of Revenue;                                                                    
Brandon   S.   Spanos,   Deputy  Director,   Tax   Division,                                                                    
Department   of  Revenue;   Representative  Dave   Talerico;                                                                    
Representative Andy Josephson; Representative Geran Tarr.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
SUMMARY                                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
HB 4001   EMPLOYMENT TAX                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
          HB 4001 was HEARD and HELD in committee for                                                                           
          further consideration.                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Foster addressed the meeting agenda.                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
HOUSE BILL NO. 4001                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
     "An Act imposing a tax on wages and net earnings from                                                                      
     self-employment; relating to the administration and                                                                        
     enforcement of the wages and net earnings from self-                                                                       
     employment tax; and providing for an effective date."                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:05:46 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
KEN  ALPER, DIRECTOR,  TAX DIVISION,  DEPARTMENT OF  REVENUE                                                                    
(DOR),  addressed a  PowerPoint presentation  titled "Capped                                                                    
Payroll Tax  - Responses to  Questions; HB 4001  by Governor                                                                    
Walker"  dated  November 8,  2017  (copy  on file).  He  was                                                                    
present primarily to answer questions  that arose during his                                                                    
presentation  with Commissioner  Sheldon  Fisher on  October                                                                    
26. He  referenced the revenue forecast  Commissioner Fisher                                                                    
had  presented  with DOR  chief  economist  Dan Stickel.  He                                                                    
noted  that DOR  had responded  to committee  questions from                                                                    
that meeting  with a letter  addressed to the  committee co-                                                                    
chairs dated November 2 (copy on file).                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  began on  slide 2  with a  table of  contents. He                                                                    
planned  to address  questions  pertaining  to labor  force,                                                                    
relative  impact  and   progressive-regressive  issues,  the                                                                    
combination  of  state and  municipal  taxes  and where  the                                                                    
state ranked  nationally, and technical questions  on profit                                                                    
distribution  and  tax  implementation.  He  anticipated  he                                                                    
would be joined by his  colleague who could answer technical                                                                    
questions.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:08:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper moved  to slide  4  related to  the letter  dated                                                                    
November  2,   2017,  which  answered  four   questions.  He                                                                    
addressed the  oil and gas tax  credit appropriation formula                                                                    
(10 or 15 percent; $175 million  for FY 19) and relayed that                                                                    
based  on statute  the most  recent spring  revenue forecast                                                                    
applied, which  was the most recent  official price forecast                                                                    
prior  to  the passage  of  the  budget. He  referenced  the                                                                    
transition of motor fuel tax  from unrestricted general fund                                                                    
(UGF)  to designated  general fund  (DGF). He  detailed that                                                                    
the  issue  first  reached  the  committee's  attention  the                                                                    
previous session  with the  administration's motor  fuel tax                                                                    
bill,  which  had not  yet  passed.  He furthered  that  the                                                                    
Legislative Finance Division  (LFD) had decided it  may be a                                                                    
more appropriate  use of the  fund given  existing statutory                                                                    
language and  the way it  was used; therefore, LFD  had made                                                                    
an  internal  determination  it   would  be  considered  DGF                                                                    
regardless of what happened with  any new revenue bills. The                                                                    
Office of  Management and Budget,  DOR, and LFD were  all in                                                                    
agreement that  going forward the  motor fuel tax  should be                                                                    
considered DGF                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper  spoke  to  the   third  question  pertaining  to                                                                    
negative revenue from the oil  and gas corporate income tax.                                                                    
He  explained  that it  primarily  came  from the  time  lag                                                                    
between estimated tax payments. He  stated that the tax year                                                                    
was  a calendar  year for  the tax.  In 2015  companies were                                                                    
paying estimated  taxes after the  first, second,  and third                                                                    
quarter of 2015,  but by the time they paid  their taxes and                                                                    
trued up, it was the end  of calendar year 2016 (October was                                                                    
the payment due date). He furthered  that FY 17 was when any                                                                    
refunds for overpayments of 2015  taxes would have been paid                                                                    
back. He  expounded that because there  were relatively high                                                                    
estimated  payments in  2014 and  2015 (based  on the  lower                                                                    
prices not  working their way  through the system  yet), DOR                                                                    
ended up paying back substantial refunds.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper specified  that  additionally, Legislative  Audit                                                                    
had  determined that  certain additional  revenue coming  in                                                                    
that went to  the General Fund, should  have been considered                                                                    
Constitutional Budget  Reserve (CBR)  revenue - it  had been                                                                    
the  result  of  an   audit  or  administrative  proceeding.                                                                    
Subsequently, an  internal transfer  had been made  from the                                                                    
General Fund to  the CBR, which had shown up  in the year it                                                                    
was made (FY 17) as  negative General Fund revenue, although                                                                    
practically speaking it was revenue neutral.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  continued to  address slide  4. The  table showed                                                                    
how negative revenue  balances had occurred in FY  16 and FY                                                                    
17. The fourth  question related to the impact of  $1 on the                                                                    
price of oil.  At current oil prices in the  $40s, $50s, and                                                                    
$60s per  barrel range, $1 in  the price of oil  was roughly                                                                    
$30 million  UGF over the  course of one year.  For example,                                                                    
if  the  price  was  $10 higher  than  anticipated,  it  was                                                                    
possible to estimate building $300  million into thoughts on                                                                    
the state's projected deficit.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
1:11:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Foster  recognized Representatives  Dave  Talerico                                                                    
and Andy Josephson in the audience.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Representative Pruitt asked  if the $30 million  was tax and                                                                    
royalty revenue. He asked for detail.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr.   Alper  responded   that  the   $30  million   was  all                                                                    
unrestricted revenue  - it included  production tax  and the                                                                    
unrestricted portion of  oil and gas royalties  (the half to                                                                    
three-quarters  not dedicated  to  the  Permanent Fund);  if                                                                    
Permanent Fund money was added  back in, the number would be                                                                    
$35 million to  $37 million. He noted  that portion belonged                                                                    
to the corpus of the Permanent Fund and was not spendable.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg  stated that the $1  rise in price                                                                    
did  not  account  for fluctuations,  mid-year,  or  partial                                                                    
year. He  believed it  was as  if the prices  went up  $1 on                                                                    
January 1  and remained  there until  December 31.  He asked                                                                    
for verification that the  scenario represented a simplistic                                                                    
approach to illustrate the impact.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered in the  affirmative. The scenario assumed                                                                    
the $1 shift for the entire  year. At the lower price range,                                                                    
it  assumed the  production tax  change was  based on  the 4                                                                    
percent gross minimum  tax. At higher prices  it became more                                                                    
complicated - once  producers were able to get  into the net                                                                    
profit structure,  the number would  increase closer  to $80                                                                    
million  per $1  at  higher oil  prices.  The department  of                                                                    
revenue  produced a  document after  every forecast  showing                                                                    
the detail that it could provide to the committee.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
1:14:01 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton spoke  to question 1 on slide 4.  He read an                                                                    
excerpt from  the answer to  question 1 in DOR's  November 2                                                                    
letter to the committee:                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
     However, the statute is not  entirely clear whether the                                                                    
     10 or  15 percent  should be applied  to tax  before or                                                                    
     after application of  credits. The alternate mechanism,                                                                    
     calculating   the  percentage   after  application   of                                                                    
     credits,    would    result     in    smaller    annual                                                                    
     appropriations.   Based   on   the   preliminary   fall                                                                    
     forecast,  the $175  million for  tax credits  would be                                                                    
     reduced to about $46 million.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton  asked  if  there  was  any  further  legal                                                                    
clarification on the subject. He  wondered if there were two                                                                    
alternative mechanisms that were viable.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper answered  that DOR  had  not asked  for a  formal                                                                    
legal  opinion. The  issue had  not been  germane until  the                                                                    
current  year. The  way the  department had  interpreted the                                                                    
statutory language  going back to  the FY 16 budget  cycle -                                                                    
when the state first  contemplated using the funding formula                                                                    
as  opposed to  the previous  open-ended language  - statute                                                                    
specified 10  or 15 percent  of the amount received  from AS                                                                    
43.55.011.  He elaborated  it was  the production  tax -  35                                                                    
percent of  the net calculation. The  department interpreted                                                                    
it to  mean the tax  calculation without any of  the credits                                                                    
(including  credits against  liabilities, primarily  the per                                                                    
barrel sliding  scale credit  under AS  43.55.024(j)). Based                                                                    
on the statute  it was a larger number the  state was taking                                                                    
15 percent  of, which accounted  for the $30 million  in the                                                                    
FY 17  appropriation, the $77  million FY  18 appropriation,                                                                    
and the  $175 million  forecast. If the  amount was  tied to                                                                    
the amount  received from  AS 43.55.011,  meaning accounting                                                                    
for the subtraction of the  credits, it would be the smaller                                                                    
number.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper continued  that the  per barrel  credit had  been                                                                    
very  low for  the past  couple of  years due  to the  lower                                                                    
price in  oil. The  difference between the  two calculations                                                                    
may have been $10 million.  Now suddenly, if the alternative                                                                    
calculation was  used - meaning  use of the  amount received                                                                    
after the  subtraction - the 15  percent calculation derived                                                                    
at $46  million. The appropriation language  was a guideline                                                                    
to  the legislature  and  the  legislature would  ultimately                                                                    
appropriate  what  it  felt  was  suitable  in  next  year's                                                                    
budget. The  department's intention  was to point  out there                                                                    
was another interpretation to the language.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:17:03 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper moved  to  slide  6 that  included  a line  graph                                                                    
showing  FY  10 to  FY  18  state revenue  and  expenditures                                                                    
(without  the  Permanent  Fund Dividend  (PFD)).  The  slide                                                                    
demonstrated   how  General   Fund  revenues   had  declined                                                                    
beginning with  the peak in  FY 12 and how  expenditures had                                                                    
declined to  react to the  decrease in revenue.  He detailed                                                                    
that although  expenditures had dropped 44  percent from the                                                                    
peak in FY 13, the revenue  decline of 80 percent had led to                                                                    
the structural deficit going forward.  The situation was the                                                                    
reason for  the proposed  revenue bill. The  expectation was                                                                    
the  bulk of  the  deficit  would be  met  by  some form  of                                                                    
Permanent Fund restructuring  and HB 4001 would  be the last                                                                    
piece towards  reaching a structurally  sustainable balanced                                                                    
budget in future years.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper addressed  what the bill would do on  slide 7. The                                                                    
bill  included a  1.5 percent  flat  rate tax  on wages  and                                                                    
self-employment  income;  it was  a  subset  of what  people                                                                    
generally think  of as income.  He elaborated that  the bill                                                                    
did  not  tax  investments,  retirement  income,  dividends,                                                                    
interest, and other related items.  The tax would be paid by                                                                    
individuals   earning  income   in   Alaska   and  did   not                                                                    
distinguish between resident and  nonresident. He noted that                                                                    
if a household contained more  than one working person, each                                                                    
would pay  separately. He specified that  individuals with a                                                                    
job would generally not file  - employers would take the 1.5                                                                    
percent  from  paychecks  just as  federal  social  security                                                                    
taxes were withheld.  The payment would be  remitted [to the                                                                    
state]   directly  from   the  employer,   which  would   be                                                                    
sufficient  for  DOR.  The  department  would  only  receive                                                                    
direct individual filings from self-employed people.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  continued to explain the  bill on slide 7.  A cap                                                                    
had been added to the tax  to the greater of $2,200 adjusted                                                                    
for inflation  or twice the  previous year's  PFD, whichever                                                                    
is greater.  He detailed  that at  slightly over  $147,000 a                                                                    
1.5 percent  tax equaled $2,200.  At lower income  levels it                                                                    
would be  a 1.5 percent tax  and at higher incomes  it would                                                                    
be the capped tax - the  cap would impact about 5 percent of                                                                    
earners.  The foregone  revenue resulting  from the  cap was                                                                    
around $10  million to  $20 million.  He explained  that the                                                                    
$320 million bill would become  $330 million or $340 million                                                                    
if  the cap  were moved  and  the same  basic structure  was                                                                    
maintained.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:20:09 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara spoke to some  of his concerns that the bill                                                                    
would tax middle and lower  income individuals as opposed to                                                                    
wealthier  people who  had a  lower tax  rate. He  addressed                                                                    
that the bill  did not tax investment  income. He referenced                                                                    
statements by Warren Buffett that  because he made his money                                                                    
off  investments  he   paid  a  lower  tax   rate  than  his                                                                    
secretary. Vice-Chair  Gara remarked that  investment income                                                                    
typically pertained  to much  wealthier people  who received                                                                    
dividends  and capital  gains. He  thought it  was a  second                                                                    
area  wealthier people  were  being  treated more  favorably                                                                    
than  lower and  middle-income  people. He  asked about  the                                                                    
reasoning behind the decisions.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper responded  that the  federal income  tax rate  on                                                                    
capital gains was lower than  the income tax rate on general                                                                    
income  - this  accounted for  Mr. Buffett's  observation he                                                                    
was paying  at a  lower rate than  his secretary.  Mr. Alper                                                                    
noted  that in  his presentation  two weeks  earlier he  had                                                                    
discussed some  of the administration's thinking  behind the                                                                    
cap. He  detailed the  cap was a  way of  distinguishing the                                                                    
tax  from a  true  income  tax. The  person  who was  highly                                                                    
productive and earned a significant  amount of money was not                                                                    
penalized for  their additional income.  He detailed  it was                                                                    
part  of the  pushback  from the  Senate  that was  strongly                                                                    
opposed  to an  income tax.  The bill's  structure (although                                                                    
based on  wages) fell short of  being a true income  tax due                                                                    
to the cap. He agreed  that by eliminating capital gains and                                                                    
similar unearned income, it tended  to make the tax lower on                                                                    
the higher income individuals.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper continued that he  would address an upcoming slide                                                                    
showing the effective tax rates  on different income levels.                                                                    
A  similar analysis  of  a  true income  tax  was much  more                                                                    
progressive  - there  was a  higher take  at higher  rates -                                                                    
largely  because  of the  inclusion  of  capital gains.  The                                                                    
bill's tax  structure was more  flat - the 1.5  percent held                                                                    
across the board and effective  rates fell at high levels in                                                                    
part due  to the  exclusion of unearned  income and  in part                                                                    
due to the cap.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara understood the bill  structure was an effort                                                                    
to  bring members  of the  Senate on  board. He  stated that                                                                    
under federal law Warren Buffett  would pay a lower tax rate                                                                    
and  under HB  4001 he  would  pay no  tax. Vice-Chair  Gara                                                                    
disputed   the  idea   that  wealthier   people  were   more                                                                    
productive. He noted  that nurses and laborers  were just as                                                                    
productive as someone making a large income.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
1:23:59 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered there was  a philosophy held by many that                                                                    
an income tax  was fundamentally wrong, and  they may prefer                                                                    
taxing on  consumption. A full  income tax took  its highest                                                                    
amount from  people who  earned the  most. He  explained the                                                                    
bill  represented a  compromise  because it  did not  appear                                                                    
possible to pass  such a tax and  because the administration                                                                    
strongly believed a viable revenue  measure was necessary to                                                                    
ensure  the  operation  of  a  viable  government  into  the                                                                    
future.                                                                                                                         
Vice-Chair Gara understood. He explained  he was not pushing                                                                    
an  income  tax  and  was  also  aiming  for  something  the                                                                    
legislature could agree on.                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz  asked  if  lifting  the  tax  cap  or                                                                    
including  capital  gains  in the  tax  would  mean  retiree                                                                    
pensions would also have to be included in the tax.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  answered that  the bill could  be written  in any                                                                    
way.  He detailed  that the  bill language  could limit  the                                                                    
inclusion  to   capital  gains,  interest,   retirement,  or                                                                    
dividends. He  noted that the  PFD was not income  under the                                                                    
bill  and would  not  be  taxed; if  the  broad category  of                                                                    
dividends was included,  it would mean the  inclusion of the                                                                    
PFD. He was  reluctant to mention the  Institute on Taxation                                                                    
and  Economic   Policy  (ITEP)  based   on  a   reaction  by                                                                    
Representative  Pruitt  a  couple   of  weeks  earlier.  The                                                                    
organization conducted  state level analysis  nationwide and                                                                    
had done  some work for  the committee;  it had a  series of                                                                    
charts  showing the  effective tax  rates  and a  comparison                                                                    
between  income  tax,  sales  tax,   and  a  head  tax.  The                                                                    
organization had  also done an  analysis of a head  tax with                                                                    
the inclusion of capital gains  that was mildly progressive.                                                                    
He knew  members of the  committee had  contemplated similar                                                                    
structures. The administration's  overarching preference was                                                                    
for  the  agreement on  a  fiscal  solution in  the  current                                                                    
special session.                                                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
1:26:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz  asked  how  much  additional  revenue                                                                    
would be  generated if  capital gains  were included  in the                                                                    
bill.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered  that he did not know the  number, but he                                                                    
guessed another $50  million or so without  the inclusion of                                                                    
a cap. He noted the  information was available in the model.                                                                    
He mentioned  how it fell out  in scale to the  other income                                                                    
factors  and  that it  was  limited  to a  relatively  small                                                                    
subset of  the population.  He furthered that  if a  cap was                                                                    
maintained,  most  people  living off  capital  gains  would                                                                    
still pay at  the $2,200 and there may not  be a substantial                                                                    
amount of additional revenue generated.                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked about  an analysis  regarding a                                                                    
single mother  of three  working at a  minimum wage  job who                                                                    
the state had already taken over  $4,000 from due to the cut                                                                    
to the  PFD. She believed  under the scenario the  tax would                                                                    
be an  income tax if  it was the  only money the  family had                                                                    
coming in.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered  it was a tax on income  but did not meet                                                                    
the strict  definition of income  tax because it  only taxed                                                                    
certain  portions  of  income.  He  agreed  that  under  the                                                                    
scenario provided by Representative  Wilson the tax would be                                                                    
1.5  percent  of the  individual's  income.  He stated  that                                                                    
reasonable  people  disagreed  on how  to  characterize  the                                                                    
reduction in the PFD.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson reasoned  that a cut to the  PFD was a                                                                    
loss to the individual's income.  She stated it was possible                                                                    
to argue about terminology, but  the tax still resulted in a                                                                    
loss in income. She reasoned it  was an income tax under the                                                                    
scenario she  had provided. She noted  it was the same  in a                                                                    
middle-class family that  had no other income  put away. She                                                                    
asked  how the  administration justified  the percentage  an                                                                    
individual  would pay  to government  compared  to a  person                                                                    
making $100,000  who had  been able to  put money  into IRAs                                                                    
and other  savings. She stated  the loss would be  much less                                                                    
for higher  wage earners.  She wondered  why the  bill would                                                                    
hit the lower and middle-class  individuals at a much higher                                                                    
level.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
1:29:44 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper explained  that  the bill  had  evolved from  the                                                                    
school  head tax  bills. The  old school  head tax  that had                                                                    
been  in  place since  territorial  times  through the  late                                                                    
1970s was a  flat rate of the first check  earned and it had                                                                    
gone towards the  school system. There had been  a couple of                                                                    
different variants on  the bill brought forward  in the past                                                                    
couple  of   years  as  a  potential   revenue  measure.  He                                                                    
elaborated that Representative Matt  Claman had introduced a                                                                    
bill in  the House  and Senator Click  Bishop's bill  in the                                                                    
Senate had been used in many  ways as the model for HB 4001.                                                                    
He  detailed that  the definitions  in those  bills included                                                                    
wages and  self-employment income, meaning it  was a payroll                                                                    
tax  versus an  income  tax.  The purpose  was  to "scoop  a                                                                    
little bit" from  regular labor - it was a  simpler bill and                                                                    
did not go  as deep into the economy.  Senator Bishop's bill                                                                    
had a series  of stair steps. He elaborated  that one income                                                                    
bracket paid $100,  the next income level paid  $200, with a                                                                    
cap at $500.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper continued  that the issue with the  stair step was                                                                    
what happened at  the transition where a  very high marginal                                                                    
tax rate  occurred. By changing  it from  a stair step  to a                                                                    
flat percentage, the net effect  was the same, but the weird                                                                    
transitions when people stepped  from one bracket to another                                                                    
were eliminated. The  next decision was how big  to make the                                                                    
tax. He  estimated that  the percentage  would be  closer to                                                                    
0.25  to 0.5  percent  because Senator  Bishop's bill  would                                                                    
have  raised $70  million,  whereas Representative  Claman's                                                                    
bill  would be  closer to  3 percent  because it  had raised                                                                    
over  $500 million.  The  administration  had selected  $300                                                                    
million as  a revenue target,  which required a  1.5 percent                                                                    
tax.  He reiterated  that the  foundation of  the bill  came                                                                    
from the school head tax bill, not the income tax bill.                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  replied that  she did not  care where                                                                    
the  bill  structure  came from.  She  was  concerned  about                                                                    
hitting  lower  and   middle-class  households  harder.  She                                                                    
stated  it was  necessary to  factor  the PFD  cut into  the                                                                    
equation because  it impacted  income going  into residents'                                                                    
households. She understood the logic  of a flat rate because                                                                    
it  was  easier;  however,  teenagers  would  pay,  whereas,                                                                    
people  living  off other  revenue  would  pay nothing.  She                                                                    
spoke  about  individuals  trying  to get  off  welfare  and                                                                    
stated they  would be hit  harder. She thought there  had to                                                                    
have  been   something  in  the   modeling  that   made  the                                                                    
administration okay with hitting  the lower and middle-class                                                                    
harder.  She was  trying to  determine where  the philosophy                                                                    
came from.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered that the bill  was viewed in a vacuum and                                                                    
not as  combined with  changes to the  PFD. As  a standalone                                                                    
bill,  it  was  truly  a  flat tax  to  95  percent  of  the                                                                    
population -  everyone would pay  the same 1.5  percent. For                                                                    
the most part  the people in that 95  percent, probably with                                                                    
the  exception  of  retired people  (retirement  income  was                                                                    
exempted),  everyone  would  pay  the same  piece  of  their                                                                    
income. The  regressivity kicked  in at  the higher  end. He                                                                    
continued that  if someone was aiming  to meld a tax  with a                                                                    
PFD reduction in a way  that levelized the impact across the                                                                    
board,  a  progressive  income tax  exempting  some  of  the                                                                    
lowest income people would be  the cleanest method. He noted                                                                    
that the bill  passed by the House  had roughly accomplished                                                                    
that - it  had exempted the first $20,000 in  income and had                                                                    
stepped up to a higher rate.  As an overlay with PFD cuts it                                                                    
had come  out fairly  close to a  flat combined  tax impact.                                                                    
The  bill had  not  been acceptable  to  the legislature  at                                                                    
large.  The administration  was  not trying  to reopen  that                                                                    
debate.  The  current  bill  contained   a  flat  tax  as  a                                                                    
standalone  item that  seemed to  be a  reasonable solution.                                                                    
The alternative - a sales  tax worked in the other direction                                                                    
and had an  even greater impact on the  lowest income people                                                                    
and less  impact on  the higher  income people.  The current                                                                    
bill's  impact fell  somewhere in  between an  income and  a                                                                    
sales tax.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
1:34:35 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  believed  Mr.  Alper  had  made  her                                                                    
argument. She  was concerned the administration  was looking                                                                    
at the  concept in  a vacuum. She  noted that  Anchorage was                                                                    
increasing  its gas  tax and  had a  different property  tax                                                                    
level than  other areas  of the state.  She noted  that some                                                                    
parts of  the state had  no tax because  they were not  in a                                                                    
borough. She believed  that when the state  began looking at                                                                    
options  in a  vacuum  it  would hit  people  hard during  a                                                                    
recession.  She  wondered  if the  impact  could  mean  some                                                                    
people would determine  it was not worth going to  work at a                                                                    
minimum wage job.  She understood that the  other option had                                                                    
not  passed   the  legislature.  She  thought   perhaps  the                                                                    
philosophy was to try the  current bill because nothing else                                                                    
had worked. She  remarked that Alaska was  the lowest taxing                                                                    
state, but  only when  talking about  certain taxes;  it did                                                                    
not account  for other  taxes and the  high cost  of living.                                                                    
She had  grave concerns  over impacts  the bill  would have.                                                                    
She remarked  on a comment  by Pat Pitney  [Director, Office                                                                    
of Management and  Budget, Office of the  Governor] that the                                                                    
administration was only looking  at increases to the budget,                                                                    
not decreases.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper shared  that later in the  presentation there were                                                                    
a number of slides  pertaining to municipal taxation levels.                                                                    
He communicated  that the issue  had arisen in  his previous                                                                    
presentation to  the committee. He believed  seeing Alaska's                                                                    
city  taxes  layered  with state  taxes  compared  to  other                                                                    
states was illuminating.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative Tilton referenced  Mr. Alper's testimony that                                                                    
it  was  possible  to  include  other  modules  in  the  tax                                                                    
including capital  gains, investment income, and  other. She                                                                    
thought  there   was  an   associated  cost   of  increasing                                                                    
government. She asked for an estimate.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  answered that  the fiscal note  to HB  115, which                                                                    
had  passed  the   House  in  May  had   included  about  60                                                                    
additional staff,  which may have  been on the low  side. He                                                                    
noted  that DOR  may  have needed  a bit  more  staff for  a                                                                    
complicated statewide income tax.  The current bill included                                                                    
40 staff  in the  fiscal note and  he believed  the estimate                                                                    
was on  the high side  because most of the  population would                                                                    
not  have  to  file.  The paperwork  load  was  dramatically                                                                    
reduced  because employers  would  file on  behalf of  their                                                                    
employees. He  estimated the department could  probably make                                                                    
due with 30  additional staff. If the complexity  of the tax                                                                    
increased to  something more like  an income tax,  DOR would                                                                    
need additional staff somewhere in between.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  identified the cap  as the biggest variable  - if                                                                    
no  one was  paying  more  than $2,000  there  was not  much                                                                    
utility  in  having  an  entire  team  of  auditors  at  the                                                                    
individual  level to  ensure everyone  was paying  the right                                                                    
amount (the  role of the auditors  tended to be to  go after                                                                    
the larger  numbers). If the  tax contained no cap  it would                                                                    
result in  high payers, which  would add more people  to the                                                                    
mix  (it would  also  add  more revenue).  The  cost to  the                                                                    
administration represented  a tiny  fraction of  the revenue                                                                    
that  would come  in. Hiring  40 new  state workers  and the                                                                    
cost  to build  new software  would  be 2.5  percent of  the                                                                    
bill's revenue.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:38:28 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper turned to slide 8  and continued to provide a bill                                                                    
summary.  The bill  was  projected to  bring  in about  $320                                                                    
million in revenue; approximately  15 percent of the revenue                                                                    
would come  from nonresidents (people working  in Alaska who                                                                    
earn  wages or  with self-employment  income in  Alaska). In                                                                    
the  case of  wage earners,  the  tax would  be remitted  by                                                                    
employers  just  like  resident   wage  earners.  For  self-                                                                    
employed  individuals there  was a  state equivalent  of the                                                                    
federal 1099 form (contract  employment form) that employers                                                                    
would be required  to send to the state, so  it was aware of                                                                    
who was earning  money. He elaborated that it  may require a                                                                    
bit   of  effort   chasing   small   business  owners,   but                                                                    
eventually, the  department believed  it would  get everyone                                                                    
on the tax rolls.                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper  furthered that  the  bill  would require  a  $10                                                                    
million one-time cost to  procure software, programming, and                                                                    
basic  startup  needs  of  administering   a  new  tax.  The                                                                    
projected  operating  cost  was  $5.2  million  for  40  new                                                                    
employees; DOR hoped  to do the work with fewer  than 40 new                                                                    
employees, which would  drop the cost of running  the tax to                                                                    
about  $4  million  per  year.  He  reiterated  his  earlier                                                                    
testimony that about 2.5 percent  of projected revenue would                                                                    
go to administration  over the six-years in  the fiscal note                                                                    
period.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton asked  if the  department anticipated  that                                                                    
identification  of   self-employed  would  be   by  business                                                                    
licenses - anyone  with a business license  would receive an                                                                    
inquiry.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
BRANDON   S.   SPANOS,   DEPUTY  DIRECTOR,   TAX   DIVISION,                                                                    
DEPARTMENT  OF  REVENUE, answered  there  were  a couple  of                                                                    
different  methods to  identify who  was self-employed.  One                                                                    
would be a  business license and the other  was the Internal                                                                    
Revenue Service (IRS). He detailed  that the IRS would share                                                                    
information  with the  state and  the department  would have                                                                    
the  ability  to  see who  had  filed  with  self-employment                                                                    
income under  an Alaska  address. Nonresidents  working part                                                                    
of their  business in Alaska  would be more difficult  - the                                                                    
state  could get  the  information if  they  had a  business                                                                    
license,  but  if  someone  was  doing  business  in  Alaska                                                                    
without a  license it became  more difficult.  Typically, in                                                                    
other states people called to  determine if someone had paid                                                                    
a tax. The  state could not respond to the  question, but it                                                                    
could look into the question.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  moved to slide  10 pertaining to labor  force and                                                                    
population. He  reported that based on  information provided                                                                    
by  the  Department  of   Labor  and  Workforce  Development                                                                    
(DLWD),  the state  had not  suffered a  population decline.                                                                    
The state's  population growth had  been very small  at less                                                                    
than 1  percent over the past  four years. As of  July 2016,                                                                    
the estimated population was  slightly under 740,000 people.                                                                    
He shared  that 2017 numbers  would be available  in January                                                                    
[2018].  Currently, DLWD  forecasted  modest growth  through                                                                    
2045. There had  only been three years  since statehood with                                                                    
negative  population growth,  after  the  completion of  the                                                                    
pipeline  when numerous  temporary  migratory laborers  left                                                                    
the state. Another decline had  been in the 1980s during the                                                                    
large  oil price  decline. Nonresident  wages were  about 16                                                                    
percent - the number was  updated from the 15 percent figure                                                                    
used  by  the  administration  pertaining to  the  bill.  He                                                                    
explained  it was  also necessary  to  subtract people  with                                                                    
Alaskan addresses who earn all their income out of state.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper   continued  to  address  slide   10.  The  total                                                                    
statewide  job   loss  was  11,600  (3.2   percent)  through                                                                    
September  2017.  He  reported  that the  number  of  people                                                                    
employed  by the  state as  of the  previous month  was down                                                                    
2,800 from the peak (12 percent reduction).                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
1:43:32 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  extrapolated that  2,800  government                                                                    
employees  had been  lost and  the private  sector had  lost                                                                    
8,800.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  saw no reason  the numbers reported on  the slide                                                                    
should not be additive. He  agreed that her summation seemed                                                                    
correct.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara  stated  that the  committee  had  received                                                                    
information  from DLWD  three months  earlier that  over the                                                                    
last two years  the state had lost closer  to 14,000 private                                                                    
and public-sector  jobs. He  asked if  a difference  in time                                                                    
periods accounted for the difference in the numbers.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  answered that DOR  had not been able  to identify                                                                    
the  source  of the  13,000  number.  He reported  that  the                                                                    
numbers  had  been relatively  steady  in  the past  several                                                                    
months.  The 11,600  was the  most current  job loss  number                                                                    
from DLWD.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper turned to slide  12 titled "ITEP analyzed multiple                                                                    
tax options that  each would raise $500  million." The slide                                                                    
included a  chart from an  April 2017 ITEP report.  He noted                                                                    
that the 1.5  percent tax was the baseline.  He remarked the                                                                    
seven  bars  did  not  represent   equal  quadrants  of  the                                                                    
population;  the  first  four  bars were  the  income  level                                                                    
quintiles (zero  to $20,000, $20,000 to  $40,000, $40,000 to                                                                    
$60,000, and $60,000 to $80,000).  The top 20 percent of the                                                                    
analysis broke up into three  subgroups ($81,000 to $95,000,                                                                    
$96,000 to  $99,000, and $100,000).  The portion of  the bar                                                                    
above the crosshatch  showed what the share  of income would                                                                    
be without a  cap, whereas the crosshatch  accounted for the                                                                    
cap. The people  in the top two levels would  be paying less                                                                    
than what they would have without a cap.                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  explained that to get  into the top 5  percent of                                                                    
household income  in Alaska, income was  about $210,000. The                                                                    
analysis assumed  1.5 working  people per  joint filer  in a                                                                    
household  and kept  the income  around the  $140,000 cutoff                                                                    
point  for the  cap. There  was  a partial  drawback of  the                                                                    
group's effective  tax rate  from 1.5  to around  1 percent.                                                                    
There were  some individuals earning more  than $365,000 and                                                                    
over $1  million - the  rate would be variable  depending on                                                                    
how high their income level  was, but the effective tax rate                                                                    
dropped down  some. He focused  on the bottom 95  percent of                                                                    
income  earners where  there was  relative flatness  to mild                                                                    
progressivity  (1.2  percent  effective  tax  rate  for  the                                                                    
lowest earners  to a 1.8  percent tax rate  at the 80  to 95                                                                    
percentile of  people). The ITEP  analysis tried to  come up                                                                    
with $500  million tax schemes  for Alaska, which  was where                                                                    
the 2.43  percent payroll  tax figure  had come  from (slide                                                                    
12). He noted  that the 2.43 percent tax  was arbitrary, and                                                                    
it  would  be an  unusual  legislative  solution to  pick  a                                                                    
number that precise.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
1:47:22 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara  asked if the  bars on slide 12  only showed                                                                    
payroll  tax  income. He  wondered  if  the regressivity  on                                                                    
benefit  to   the  wealthier  sector  be   higher  if  their                                                                    
investment income (that was not being taxed) was counted.                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  answered that the chart  presumed what Vice-Chair                                                                    
Gara had stated. He detailed that  because it was a wage tax                                                                    
and the  higher income people  tended to have  more unearned                                                                    
income, it  was the reason  the 1.5 percent and  0.7 percent                                                                    
bars were included on the chart.  He furthered it was a wage                                                                    
tax on all  income; if it was 2.4 percent  of all income and                                                                    
three-quarters of  a person's income was  unearned, it would                                                                    
be about one-quarter of the  rate. He furthered it was where                                                                    
the 0.7  percent bar came from  and the cap reduced  the bar                                                                    
further.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg  pointed out that the  ITEP report                                                                    
was  from April  2017. However,  the most  recent analytical                                                                    
data on DLWD's website was  from 2015. He observed there was                                                                    
a lag on information regarding job loss and other.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper believed  the DLWD employment numbers  were only a                                                                    
couple  of months  old. The  department received  numbers at                                                                    
least  quarterly  from   employers  through  the  employment                                                                    
security tax. He was uncertain  about the department's other                                                                    
data sources.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg responded  that  DLWD could  have                                                                    
more current numbers, but the  recent information was not on                                                                    
the  department's website.  He stated  that the  nonresident                                                                    
workforce in  the oil and  gas industry  was at an  all time                                                                    
high of  36.4 percent,  which represented over  $700 million                                                                    
in lost income  to the state. There was no  more recent data                                                                    
on the specific webpage.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  responded that  since the  peak the  industry had                                                                    
lost   about  5,000   jobs  in   Alaska.   He  referred   to                                                                    
Representative Wilson's  mention of a loss  of 8,800 private                                                                    
sector  jobs.  He explained  that  the  5,000 jobs  did  not                                                                    
represent  two-thirds of  the 8,800  because  many of  those                                                                    
5,000 were nonresidents who were  no longer coming to Alaska                                                                    
to work.  He continued that  because of the  industry's high                                                                    
nonresident workforce, the  impact of its job  losses on the                                                                    
state tended to be a bit overstated.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg  stated that  one of  his concerns                                                                    
was about who  was getting laid off in terms  of Alaskans or                                                                    
nonresidents. He stated that  unfortunately it appeared that                                                                    
Alaskans  were  getting  laid  off  at  a  higher  rate.  He                                                                    
reasoned it could just  reflect subcontractors because there                                                                    
was  not a  breakdown  between the  three major  communities                                                                    
(North Slope,  Kenai, and Valdez).  As far as he  could tell                                                                    
there was  a disparity on  who was  getting laid off  and it                                                                    
was not working in the favor of Alaskans.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
1:51:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  advanced to slide  14 and  showed a bar  chart of                                                                    
the comparable tax burden by  state. The chart showed state-                                                                    
level taxation  (all taxes  paid by  individuals to  a state                                                                    
including sales  and income taxes, license  fees, etcetera).                                                                    
The yellow portion  of the bars titled  "select sales taxes"                                                                    
represented taxes  on motor  fuel, alcoholic  beverages, and                                                                    
other  related  items. The  black  portion  of Alaska's  bar                                                                    
represented  the  $320  million  from  the  proposed  capped                                                                    
payroll  tax  in  HB  4001. He  directed  attention  to  New                                                                    
Hampshire were outliers  compared to the rest  of the county                                                                    
in terms  of their low  taxes. Florida was the  third lowest                                                                    
state, but its  taxes were quite a bit higher  than those in                                                                    
Alaska  and  New Hampshire.  The  proposed  tax would  bring                                                                    
Alaska's taxes above New Hampshire.                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper moved  to  slide  15 and  addressed  a bar  chart                                                                    
showing the  comparable municipal tax burden.  He referenced                                                                    
questions  about local  government  taxation  being high  in                                                                    
Alaska.  The  light blue  segment  of  the bars  represented                                                                    
property tax,  which did not  typically exist at  the state-                                                                    
level. The  slide factored in  property taxes,  sales taxes,                                                                    
license fees, and other. He  pointed to Alaska's position on                                                                    
the  chart  -  the  average Alaskan  was  paying  $2,300  in                                                                    
municipal taxes;  the bulk was  property tax.  New Hampshire                                                                    
had  higher  municipal taxes  and  appeared  farther to  the                                                                    
right on the  chart. He detailed that  New Hampshire managed                                                                    
to survive with a  relatively small state government because                                                                    
they had relatively large local governments.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper pointed  out that in Alaska about  $600 per capita                                                                    
of the $2,300  was not really an individual tax,  it was the                                                                    
oil and gas  property tax collected by the  state and shared                                                                    
with   municipalities  (approximately   $450  million).   He                                                                    
continued that  it was  an oil and  gas industry  tax, which                                                                    
was  not really  paid by  locals,  but it  was difficult  to                                                                    
parse it out  from the dataset of  municipal property taxes.                                                                    
Other oil and  gas states had something similar,  but not to                                                                    
the scale  of the tax  in Alaska. If approximately  $600 per                                                                    
capita came out of the  property tax, Alaska's municipal tax                                                                    
burden would put  Alaska closer to the middle  of the states                                                                    
(indicated with a green arrow on the chart).                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper agreed  that Alaskan  had a  substantial property                                                                    
tax burden, which  was higher due to  higher property values                                                                    
and incomes,  but it was not  out of scale with  the rest of                                                                    
the country. He communicated that  much of the data used for                                                                    
the chart  had come from  the District of Columbia  that had                                                                    
the highest local government taxes  in the country (shown on                                                                    
the far right of the chart).                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson addressed  the oil  and gas  property                                                                    
component  on slide  15.  As  an example,  she  stated if  a                                                                    
person had a  property tax of 13 mills that  7 mills went to                                                                    
the  state.  She  asked  when  the  statute  had  last  been                                                                    
considered  as a  possibility for  revenue. She  wondered if                                                                    
there was another  oil and gas property  [tax] pertaining to                                                                    
the North Slope (outside the value of the pipeline).                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered that the idea  of sharing the oil and gas                                                                    
property tax  with the  local government  at their  own mill                                                                    
rate  was part  of  the  oil and  gas  property statute  (AS                                                                    
43.56);  it was  more  or less  unchanged  since the  1970s,                                                                    
although  there  were  issues  regarding  the  tax  cap  and                                                                    
treatment of  debt that modified  things - there had  been a                                                                    
few minor  changes made  to the  statute. He  continued that                                                                    
Trans-Alaska   Pipeline  System   (TAPS)  assessments   were                                                                    
considered  in  court  for  many years;  there  had  been  a                                                                    
settlement a  year or two  back where the  state, producers,                                                                    
and local governments had determined  TAPS would be worth $8                                                                    
billion for  property tax purposes.  He added that it  was a                                                                    
five-year settlement,  meaning the  state would not  have to                                                                    
revisit  the issue  for some  time. The  total property  tax                                                                    
portfolio  was  around  $28 billion  (the  majority  of  the                                                                    
additional $20  billion was in  the North Slope  Borough and                                                                    
included pads,  wells, rigs, warehouses, trucks,  and other;                                                                    
other locations  included were Kenai and  Valdez). The state                                                                    
received  a full  20 mills  for  portions of  TAPS that  ran                                                                    
through unorganized  boroughs. The North Slope  property tax                                                                    
rate for its  own property was 18 mills -  90 percent of the                                                                    
collected  taxes  in  North  Slope   were  shared  with  the                                                                    
borough. He continued  that over $300 million  per year went                                                                    
to the North Slope Borough for  its share of the oil and gas                                                                    
property tax. He noted that  all those factors distorted the                                                                    
dataset on slide 15.                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson  asked if  DOR had  considered whether                                                                    
the method  in statute  since the 1970s  was still  the fair                                                                    
way  to split  the taxes.  She asked  if the  department had                                                                    
considered  looking  at  the issue  as  it  was  considering                                                                    
various revenue options.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper replied  it  was not  up to  DOR  to decide.  The                                                                    
department's job  was to collect  and administer  the taxes.                                                                    
He furthered that if the  legislature or the governor wanted                                                                    
to  revisit the  sharing of  oil and  gas property  taxes it                                                                    
would be  a big conversation that  would require significant                                                                    
work. He  noted there  would be  some vested  interests with                                                                    
strong opinions on the matter.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson  appreciated  that  the  subject  was                                                                    
administrative and not for DOR.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper added that the oil  and gas property tax that went                                                                    
to the different jurisdictions was  public knowledge and was                                                                    
published  annually  in the  DOR  Revenue  Sources Book.  He                                                                    
detailed  the  tax  was  20   mills  and  $560  million  was                                                                    
collected (2  percent); about $120  million was kept  by the                                                                    
state  and  $440 million  was  divided  between the  various                                                                    
municipalities.                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
1:58:36 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper moved  to slide  16 and  addressed the  state and                                                                    
local  comparable  tax  burden.  The  purple  arrow  to  the                                                                    
pointing to  the far  left on  the chart  represented Alaska                                                                    
as-is and the second purple arrow  to the right of the first                                                                    
showed Alaska  with $320 million  revenue from  the proposed                                                                    
capped payroll tax. With combined  state and municipal taxes                                                                    
Alabama  and Tennessee  both paid  lower taxes  than Alaska,                                                                    
which moved  to the tenth  lowest state. He  elaborated that                                                                    
if  the $440  million oil  and gas  property tax  was backed                                                                    
out,  the state  would be  the lowest  to the  fourth lowest                                                                    
taxed state  (Alabama, Tennessee,  and Florida would  be the                                                                    
lowest).  He stated  it was  difficult to  determine exactly                                                                    
how  much discount  should  be  taken for  the  oil and  gas                                                                    
property  tax.  He  pointed  out   that  New  Hampshire  was                                                                    
slightly below the national average  with combined state and                                                                    
local taxes; its higher municipal  taxes put the state close                                                                    
to the average taxation level.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Guttenberg discussed  that other  states had                                                                    
counties,  but Alaska  did not.  He  remarked that  Alaska's                                                                    
constitutional  convention  had  outlawed  counties  in  the                                                                    
state.  He  spoke  to  adding  the  Permanent  Fund  to  the                                                                    
combined state  and local tax  burdens. He remarked  that no                                                                    
other state  had a similar  fund, which made  the comparison                                                                    
difficult. He remarked that adding  the Permanent Fund would                                                                    
significantly change  the picture. He understood  it was not                                                                    
a tax burden,  but it was a benefit to  living in Alaska, as                                                                    
were the state's tax levels and services provided.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:01:39 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper clarified  that the  term local  included county-                                                                    
type  government (slides  15 and  16). He  did not  know the                                                                    
reasoning  behind the  decision  to use  the word  "borough"                                                                    
rather than  "county" or what  the differences  were between                                                                    
Alaska's  boroughs,   and  counties  in  other   states.  He                                                                    
addressed  the PFD  and reasoned  that  on one  hand it  was                                                                    
possible to say  that all Alaskans were  receiving an $1,000                                                                    
dividend,  which  could be  considered  a  negative tax.  He                                                                    
explained that  the inclusion  of the  PFD would  put Alaska                                                                    
dramatically below other states.  Others argued that the PFD                                                                    
was  not  a  negative  tax, but  entitlement  or  underlying                                                                    
income for residents and any  reduction to the PFD should be                                                                    
considered  a   tax  that  should  make   Alaska's  tax  bar                                                                    
increase.  The  administration   was  not  accepting  either                                                                    
scenario and was  simply saying a tax was a  tax and the PFD                                                                    
was  a  calculation  the  people received  -  there  was  no                                                                    
"supposed to"  it just is what  it is, which was  a decision                                                                    
the courts had made several months back as well.                                                                                
                                                                                                                                
Representative     Guttenberg     responded     that     the                                                                    
characterization of  the PFD as an  entitlement was strongly                                                                    
debatable.  He  made  further  remarks  about  the  historic                                                                    
nature  of the  conversations. He  reiterated that  no other                                                                    
state had a similar fund.                                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara   considered  individual  tax   burdens  in                                                                    
Alaska. He stated that the oil  and gas property tax was not                                                                    
paid  by individuals,  but largely  by businesses.  He asked                                                                    
about a  scenario that put  Alaska's taxes at the  lowest in                                                                    
the  nation (where  the oil  and  gas property  tax was  not                                                                    
included).                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered  that the light blue segment  of the bars                                                                    
on  slide 15  represented property  tax. The  chart did  not                                                                    
distinguish between  commercial and  residential. Ultimately                                                                    
everything  was  paid  by  an   individual,  but  the  chart                                                                    
included office  buildings and all  property tax;  only some                                                                    
fraction  of the  amount was  borne by  individuals and  the                                                                    
state did  not have the  data to carve out  the information.                                                                    
In addition to  the underlying increase to  the property tax                                                                    
from commercial  property, came the increase  in Alaska from                                                                    
a large amount of commercial  property that was out of scale                                                                    
with  the   state's  population  base  and   other  economic                                                                    
activity (oil and gas property tax).                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  moved to slide  16 and directed attention  to the                                                                    
left  purple  arrow  pointing  at  Alaska  current  law.  He                                                                    
explained if  the oil  and gas portion  of the  property tax                                                                    
was backed out of the light  blue segment of the bar, Alaska                                                                    
would be  the lowest  taxing state.  The right  purple arrow                                                                    
showed Alaska current  law with HB 4001 layered  on top. The                                                                    
right green arrow reflected Alaska  current law with the oil                                                                    
and  gas  property tax  backed  out  and  the new  wage  tax                                                                    
layered on top. The difference  between the two green arrows                                                                    
was the addition of the $320 million tax.                                                                                       
                                                                                                                                
2:06:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton  spoke to the difference  between the purple                                                                    
and green  arrows on  slide 16.  He asked  why there  was no                                                                    
black segment (HB  4001 estimated payroll tax)  on either of                                                                    
the  bars  reflecting Alaska's  taxes  without  oil and  gas                                                                    
property tax.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper clarified there was  no bar for Alaska without the                                                                    
property  tax. The  green arrows  were  pointing in  between                                                                    
existing  bars. He  furthered that  a bar  would need  to be                                                                    
added to  the left of  Alabama (reflecting how  Alaska would                                                                    
look with the property tax  correction) and a bar in between                                                                    
Florida  and South  Carolina  (reflecting  how Alaska  would                                                                    
look with  the property tax  collection and the  addition of                                                                    
the new tax).                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper  moved   to  slide  17  and   addressed  a  state                                                                    
comparison of the  combined tax burden based  on the largest                                                                    
cities per  state. He reported that  Anchorage was different                                                                    
than 107  other communities in  the state because it  had no                                                                    
sales  tax. When  considering the  state and  local combined                                                                    
tax burden,  Anchorage was the lowest  taxed jurisdiction in                                                                    
the country. He  noted that there was not  a material amount                                                                    
of  oil  and  gas   property  tax  collected  in  Anchorage;                                                                    
therefore,  no adjustments  or  corrections were  necessary.                                                                    
When considering property  taxes, vehicle registration fees,                                                                    
and   other,    the   average   Anchorage    resident   paid                                                                    
approximately $1,800  in state and  local tax burden  - less                                                                    
than  the largest  cities in  all other  states. Bridgeport,                                                                    
Connecticut had the largest taxes  at about $7,000, followed                                                                    
by   Newark,  New   Jersey,  and   Detroit,  Michigan.   The                                                                    
comparison  used  a cohort  of  the  largest cities  in  all                                                                    
states. With the  HB 4001 proposal, Anchorage  would move to                                                                    
the second  lowest rank and  Cheyenne, Wyoming  would become                                                                    
the lowest taxed  city on the list. He pointed  out that the                                                                    
chart used a $50,000 income analysis.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper moved to slide  18 reflecting an average income of                                                                    
$100,000.  Anchorage remained  the  lowest  taxed city  when                                                                    
compared to the peer group of  states. He pointed to the red                                                                    
bars to  the right  of the  slide representing  state income                                                                    
taxes,  which tended  to bring  taxes up  significantly. The                                                                    
dark  blue portion  of the  bars reflected  state and  local                                                                    
sales  taxes -  there  was  no sales  tax  in Anchorage.  He                                                                    
explained that adding  a 1.5 percent wage  tax on households                                                                    
with  $100,000  income would  move  Anchorage  to the  third                                                                    
lowest  taxed  city  (Cheyenne, Wyoming,  and  Sioux  Falls,                                                                    
South Dakota would rank lowest and second lowest).                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:09:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson remarked that  Anchorage also had more                                                                    
affordable energy than  most of the state.  She wondered how                                                                    
a  community like  Dillingham that  had  property and  sales                                                                    
taxes  would fit  within the  overall  picture. She  thought                                                                    
most  of  the other  communities  in  Alaska would  be  much                                                                    
higher up on the scale.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper returned  to  slide 15  to  answer the  question.                                                                    
There was a  presumption of the weighted  average sales tax,                                                                    
which was  1.7 percent in  Alaska. He clarified that  no one                                                                    
was  actually  paying  1.7  percent  -  the  number  was  an                                                                    
average.  He suggested  that if  Anchorage was  removed from                                                                    
the mix, the number on the  chart would be higher across the                                                                    
board. He  explained that the  dark blue portion of  the bar                                                                    
reflecting property tax would  get bigger. Consequently, the                                                                    
non-Anchorage   areas   would   probably  be   higher   than                                                                    
Anchorage.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson thought  the  numbers  would also  be                                                                    
skewed  because  there  were  parts  of  the  state  without                                                                    
property or  sales taxes.  She wondered  if the  charts only                                                                    
factored  in organized  areas in  the state.  Alternatively,                                                                    
she wondered if the data included the entire state.                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper  answered  that the  charts  included  the  total                                                                    
aggregate  tax collected  divided by  the total  population.                                                                    
Individuals  living in  untaxed areas  would bring  down the                                                                    
average.                                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:11:31 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson thought  the  graph  was not  helpful                                                                    
because  she  believed  areas  without  taxation  should  be                                                                    
excluded  (those  areas  represented   a  large  portion  of                                                                    
Alaska).  Additionally, using  Anchorage skewed  the numbers                                                                    
because there were  other areas with sales  and property tax                                                                    
(e.g. North  Pole) with  higher energy  costs. She  asked to                                                                    
get a  better idea what the  chart would look like  with the                                                                    
removal of Anchorage and areas  that did not have any taxes.                                                                    
She thought  it would be  a more accurate portrayal  of what                                                                    
the residents would pay.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper responded  that her suggestion would  take quite a                                                                    
bit of effort to parse  the information out at the municipal                                                                    
level. He  explained that Representative Wilson  was talking                                                                    
about  two different  things. He  elaborated that  Fairbanks                                                                    
and  Dillingham  (high  energy costs  notwithstanding)  were                                                                    
organized municipalities  paying property taxes,  which fell                                                                    
into the calculations. Although  people in unorganized areas                                                                    
without property taxes  may cover a substantial  part of the                                                                    
map,  they accounted  for about  10 percent  of the  state's                                                                    
population.  He furthered  that 90  percent of  Alaskans had                                                                    
the  type of  taxation of  those living  in urban  areas. He                                                                    
acknowledged the  10 percent may  skew things a bit,  but it                                                                    
was not a game breaker.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Representative Wilson recalled a  former classmate who never                                                                    
understood that three or four  zeros brought down an average                                                                    
significantly.  She  stated  thought  that  combining  areas                                                                    
without taxation  and Anchorage  with its low  taxation made                                                                    
it more difficult. She did not  like the chart that tried to                                                                    
make  it appear  the state  would  not be  taxing much.  She                                                                    
believed the components she was  pointing out made the chart                                                                    
almost irrelevant.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper responded that Alaska  was different in many ways.                                                                    
He believed  the state's Congressional  delegation struggled                                                                    
to  explain to  peers what  was different  about Alaska.  He                                                                    
noted challenges  of logistics  and higher energy  costs. He                                                                    
added that  Alaska also had  higher incomes. There  was only                                                                    
so much that could be corrected  for and every state had its                                                                    
own unusual features.  The best the department  could do was                                                                    
come up  with averages and  caveat them  to the best  of its                                                                    
ability.  He continued  that Alaskans  did  pay lower  taxes                                                                    
than people in  other locations; the state had  been able to                                                                    
rely  on the  oil industry  to  cover the  vast majority  of                                                                    
government operations for  four decades and it  would not be                                                                    
possible into  the future.  He furthered  that the  price of                                                                    
oil  no   longer  supported   the  state's   population  and                                                                    
governmental  needs. He  continued  that layering  a tax  on                                                                    
residents would hurt,  but it would not be  the destroyer of                                                                    
the  economy as  one may  think, because  Alaska was  mostly                                                                    
below  average on  the scale  compared to  other states.  He                                                                    
underscored  that no  one  wanted  to tax  for  the sake  of                                                                    
taxing;  the goal  was  adding  a tax  in  order to  provide                                                                    
essential services to Alaskans.                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
2:15:50 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative   Wilson   spoke   to   the   importance   of                                                                    
legislators having the most accurate  information to go home                                                                    
with because  the issue was  about how the tax  would impact                                                                    
Alaskans. She stated the issue  was not only about taxation.                                                                    
She spoke to  the option of reducing government  - the state                                                                    
had a population of slightly  over 700,000 with a government                                                                    
larger than most  other states. She stated that  even with a                                                                    
tax,  the current  government was  too big  to support.  She                                                                    
wanted to  stick to what the  charts did or did  not show in                                                                    
order for people  to have a better  understanding of whether                                                                    
the information was reflective of the area they live in.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Thompson  realized  the  biggest  population                                                                    
section of  the state was the  Railbelt. He asked if  it was                                                                    
fair  to  say  that  upwards  of 80  percent  of  the  taxes                                                                    
collected on HB 4001 would come from the Railbelt.                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper replied  that he believed so, but he  did not have                                                                    
the  data  on  hand.  Roughly  80  percent  of  the  state's                                                                    
population was  located in  the Railbelt  region; therefore,                                                                    
roughly 80 percent of the taxes would come from that area.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara remarked that the  state was rearranging the                                                                    
chairs  on the  Titanic as  it  sank. He  remarked that  the                                                                    
governor had been  public that he saw the  state sinking. He                                                                    
remarked that  the governor  had not  proposed the  bill for                                                                    
fun. He  furthered that  after $3.5  billion in  cuts, there                                                                    
was   evidence  that   continued  cuts   would  deepen   the                                                                    
recession.  He referenced  the $2.5  billion budget  gap and                                                                    
explained the  governor was  trying to  right the  state and                                                                    
prevent a  deeper recession.  He asked  if his  remarks were                                                                    
fair.  He  reasoned the  governor  was  not being  illogical                                                                    
about his  proposal, even if  the legislature did  not agree                                                                    
with him on everything.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper believed  there was a consistent  message from the                                                                    
administration and LFD about the  facts. The budget had been                                                                    
reduced, revenue  had declined, the state  had deficits, and                                                                    
savings  were  declining.  There  was  an  expectation  that                                                                    
government would  continue to do certain  things; more could                                                                    
always be cut,  but the easy cuts were gone.  He reasoned it                                                                    
was  a worthwhile  conversation to  find a  way to  bring in                                                                    
another  couple hundred  million dollars.  He remarked  that                                                                    
finding  another  $1  billion   would  make  Alaska  a  very                                                                    
different state and one that  he speculated most legislators                                                                    
would not want to administer.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  continued and spoke  to the goal of  reducing the                                                                    
deficit  as much  as possible  with the  materials at  hand,                                                                    
followed by  looking to the  Permanent Fund. He  stated that                                                                    
the fund was a wonderful asset  and was a centerpiece of the                                                                    
state's ability to live a  successful future if the fund was                                                                    
treated right. He spoke to  the importance of using the fund                                                                    
sustainably,  wisely,  and  within  its  own  limitations  -                                                                    
meaning there  was a finite  amount that could be  taken out                                                                    
per  year. The  committee had  more or  less agreed  to that                                                                    
number. There was  also the factor of  the appropriate split                                                                    
of the amount  between the government and the  people in the                                                                    
form of  the PFD, which  there was still debate  over. After                                                                    
all of  those actions were  taken a  gap in the  hundreds of                                                                    
millions  of dollars  would still  exist. He  referenced Ms.                                                                    
Pitney's testimony  from the  prior day  of $600  million to                                                                    
$900 million. He  explained that the gap  could be addressed                                                                    
in three  or four  ways: 1)  cuts (which may  or may  not be                                                                    
possible), 2)  the implementation of  a new tax (such  as HB
4001),  3) the  elimination of  the  PFD (which  he did  not                                                                    
believe was  advisable), or  4) extra  money could  be spent                                                                    
from  the  Permanent  Fund  annually   in  addition  to  the                                                                    
sustainable amount  (which could lead to  catastrophic long-                                                                    
term outcomes).                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper communicated it  was the administration's position                                                                    
that a small tax covering part  of the deficit and cuts were                                                                    
probably the best way forward.  The most important thing was                                                                    
to stay  within the  boundaries of  a sustainable  draw from                                                                    
the Permanent  Fund. He furthered  that the fund  would most                                                                    
likely not  have the  ability to balance  the budget  on its                                                                    
own  combined  with  existing revenues  in  years  to  come;                                                                    
therefore, another option was  necessary. The bill was about                                                                    
that additional option.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
2:21:07 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper  asked his  colleague  to  address the  remaining                                                                    
slides.                                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Spanos addressed  slide  20  pertaining to  partnership                                                                    
distributions:                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
   · This bill would tax a partner's distributive share of                                                                      
     the partnership's net taxable income                                                                                       
   · Does not matter whether or not a partnership actually                                                                      
     pays a partner a distribution                                                                                              
   · Partner share is reported to him/her on Schedule K-1                                                                       
     of federal Form 1065                                                                                                       
   · If both spouses are partners, they will each receive a                                                                     
     separate Sch. K-1 reporting their individual share -                                                                       
     there is no such thing as a joint K-1                                                                                      
   · If they file jointly, K-1s would be combined on their                                                                      
     federal Form 1040                                                                                                          
   · Federal 1040 is not used to prepare a state tax return                                                                     
     under this bill. Each spouse would use their                                                                               
     individual Sch. K-1 to prepare their separate state                                                                        
     returns                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Spanos  elaborated on the  slide. He referenced  a prior                                                                    
question by Co-Chair Seaton asking  how a married couple who                                                                    
were partners  in a partnership  reporting income on  a 1040                                                                    
would  report the  information to  the  state. He  explained                                                                    
that  each individual  would receive  a Schedule  K-1; there                                                                    
was no such thing as a joint Schedule K-1.                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:23:17 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton stated  that distributions from partnerships                                                                    
would be  taxed under the  bill. He asked if  a distribution                                                                    
from a sub S corporation would be the same.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Spanos replied  that the  distributive  share would  be                                                                    
taxed  under the  bill, but  the  actual distribution  would                                                                    
have been  taxed already; there  would be no  additional tax                                                                    
on  the distribution.  He  explained  that the  distributive                                                                    
share reported  on the  K-1 would be  taxed under  the bill.                                                                    
There was no change for  S corporations, which under current                                                                    
law were exempt from corporate  tax. He elaborated there was                                                                    
no  individual  tax,  which  would   normally  be  taxed  as                                                                    
passthrough income in another state with income tax.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton  asked for verification that  there would be                                                                    
tax  on  the  distributive  share  of a  profit  from  an  S                                                                    
corporation.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Spanos  replied  that  the   distributive  share  of  a                                                                    
partnership would  be taxed because partnerships  fell under                                                                    
self-employed   income  under   the  bill's   definition.  S                                                                    
corporations were  a corporation  just like a  C corporation                                                                    
and  were not  taxed under  the bill  because they  were not                                                                    
defined as self-employment income.                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton asked for verification  that it was merely a                                                                    
matter of  definition of  a distributive  share that  was or                                                                    
could be in the bill.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Spanos  answered that  the definition  used in  the bill                                                                    
came  from  the  Internal  Revenue  Code  where  partnership                                                                    
income was  defined as self-employment income.  Ownership in                                                                    
an S  corporation was viewed  as investment - the  owner was                                                                    
viewed  as an  investor,  not a  partner  in a  corporation;                                                                    
therefore,  the  distributive  share  did not  flow  to  the                                                                    
investor the  same way as a  partnership distributive share.                                                                    
The  bill  could  be  rewritten  to  include  S  corporation                                                                    
passthrough income, but it would be a bit more complicated.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
2:26:14 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara shared  that he was a part owner  of a small                                                                    
LLC.  He explained  that what  was actually  distributed was                                                                    
not  all of  the company's  profits (the  management decided                                                                    
what  to distribute).  He asked  if  the distributive  share                                                                    
would be a  person's share of the profits  whether they were                                                                    
distributed or not.                                                                                                             
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Spanos  answered in the affirmative.  He elaborated that                                                                    
the  distributive  share  was  the  portion  of  the  income                                                                    
representing a person's ownership  in the partnership or LLC                                                                    
and their portion of expenses.                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara asked if his  LLC decided it wanted to avoid                                                                    
taxes  by  not distributing  the  companies  profits and  it                                                                    
distributed zero, there would  still be a distributive share                                                                    
even without a distribution.                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Spanos agreed.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair   Seaton  asked   if   LLCs  would   be  taxed   as                                                                    
partnerships. Mr.  Spanos stated  it depended how  an entity                                                                    
chose to  be taxed  federally. For  federal tax  purposes an                                                                    
LLC  could choose  to  be taxed  as an  S  corporation or  a                                                                    
partnership.  If   an  entity  chose   to  be  taxed   as  a                                                                    
partnership  federally, the  partners would  receive a  K-1;                                                                    
however, if  it chose to be  taxed as an S  corporation they                                                                    
would not.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton  asked if the  bill's definition  that would                                                                    
tax LLCs as partnerships was problematic or prohibitive.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Spanos answered  that the question would be  about how a                                                                    
distributive share  would be calculated because  a K-1 would                                                                    
not be  received. He reiterated  his earlier  statement that                                                                    
taxing an  S corporation could be  done in the bill,  but it                                                                    
would be more complicated.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton did not want  to create holes with the bill.                                                                    
He asked  if the  bill could specify  that an  S corporation                                                                    
could choose whether its income  would be taxed as corporate                                                                    
income tax  under the  state or  under a  distributive share                                                                    
partnership.  Under   either  scenario   it  would   mean  S                                                                    
corporations would fall into one  of the state's tax systems                                                                    
and would be taxed in Alaska like C corporations.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
2:29:49 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Spanos answered  that the bill could  be structured that                                                                    
way, but  if an LLC chose  to be taxed as  a partnership for                                                                    
state purposes,  yet it  was taxed as  an S  corporation for                                                                    
federal purposes, it would be  very complicated to determine                                                                    
how much the  entity would owe because it  would not receive                                                                    
a K-1.  He noted that it  would be possible to  specify that                                                                    
an S  corporation would be  taxed as a C  corporation, which                                                                    
would  be  simple  because  the   language  was  already  in                                                                    
statute.  He  furthered  that S  corporations  were  already                                                                    
required  to  file with  the  state  as a  corporation,  but                                                                    
currently they were exempt from a tax.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton asked whether  there was anything preventing                                                                    
an S  corporation from generating  a K-1 form for  the state                                                                    
(whether it was submitted to  the federal government or not)                                                                    
if the  corporation wanted to  be taxed under  the provision                                                                    
in the bill.                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Spanos answered  that nothing  would prevent  them, but                                                                    
the tax  structure for  an S  corporation was  different. He                                                                    
was sure a CPA could figure  out how to prepare documents as                                                                    
if  the entity  was an  S corporation  and as  if it  were a                                                                    
partnership. He explained that  federal returns were audited                                                                    
by the  IRS, which  DOR relied on  for broader  coverage. He                                                                    
elaborated  that   if  an  entity  was   preparing  its  own                                                                    
documents, DOR  would need in-house experts  for partnership                                                                    
K-1 preparation, which was doable, but more complicated.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:31:47 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper  addressed the  PFD  tax  status and  voluntarily                                                                    
donating their PFD on slide 21:                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                                
   · From a federal tax perspective, what matters is if                                                                         
     someone is issued a PFD                                                                                                    
   · All recipients get a 1099 which is also sent to the                                                                        
     IRS                                                                                                                        
   · PFD is a dividend (Sch. B) for federal tax purposes.                                                                       
     Dividends are taxed at filer's regular tax rate                                                                            
   · For federal purposes, if someone doesn't want to be                                                                        
     taxed on their PFD, they would need to not file for                                                                        
     (or receive) it                                                                                                            
   · Alternatively, someone could make a tax deductible                                                                         
     charitable donation to the state of their PFD                                                                              
   · However, that would only make a taxable difference if                                                                      
     they itemized their deductions (Sch. A) on their                                                                           
     federal tax return                                                                                                         
   · Plausible work-around, establishing a GF designation                                                                       
     for the share of the state population that does not                                                                        
     apply for a PFD                                                                                                            
   · No way to "donate" an individual's dividend without it                                                                     
    first being received and considered taxable income                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  elaborated on the  slide. He explained that  if a                                                                    
person chose  to donate  their PFD and  wanted to  receive a                                                                    
tax deduction for  the donation, the person  had to actually                                                                    
receive  their  PFD  (it  would  have to  be  income  and  a                                                                    
deduction).  He stated  that did  not want  to accept  their                                                                    
dividend they could choose not  to apply. The department had                                                                    
considered possible workarounds where  if a person chose not                                                                    
to  apply it  would trigger  a  donation to  the state.  The                                                                    
closest the  department had come  was to take the  number of                                                                    
Alaskans who  applied for their  PFD and the number  who did                                                                    
not apply;  the department  could set  aside a  revenue flow                                                                    
for individuals  who did  not apply, but  there would  be no                                                                    
donation associated  with the action.  It would merely  be a                                                                    
mechanism to account for individuals  who chose not to apply                                                                    
or  were  not  eligible.  The  dividend  was  classified  as                                                                    
Schedule B  and was federally  taxable at the  regular rate.                                                                    
The  donations of  dividends were  deductible,  but only  if                                                                    
itemized.  He   noted  that  approximately  30   percent  of                                                                    
Alaskans itemized.                                                                                                              
                                                                                                                                
2:33:21 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz  asked  if  the  state  established  a                                                                    
workaround,  the  state  would have  information  about  who                                                                    
qualified  for  a  dividend  versus  who  actually  applied.                                                                    
Alternatively, he  wondered if  Mr. Alper was  talking about                                                                    
basing the  calculation on  a total  number of  Alaskans who                                                                    
may or may not qualify.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  answered that  eligibility determinations  were a                                                                    
key issue. There  was no way to involve  donations or write-                                                                    
offs without going through  an eligibility determination, so                                                                    
someone knew  they were getting  something before  they gave                                                                    
it away (at that point  it would be income). For individuals                                                                    
who did not  apply, the concept he had mentioned  would be a                                                                    
blanket  calculation  of the  rest  of  the population.  The                                                                    
presentation  listed Alaska's  population at  slightly below                                                                    
740,000 and  approximately 670,000 applied for  the dividend                                                                    
in  the current  year.  He believed  about  20,000 had  been                                                                    
disqualified,  but it  was a  separate  issue. about  70,000                                                                    
Alaskans  did  not  apply  for one  reason  or  another.  He                                                                    
speculated at reasons.                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Ortiz asked  if the  impact of  a workaround                                                                    
would potentially  mean a higher dividend  for other people.                                                                    
He reasoned  that the higher  dividend would go away  if the                                                                    
workaround was applied.                                                                                                         
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  replied that it  depended on the  starting point.                                                                    
He  explained the  current dividend  distribution process  -                                                                    
the  legislature made  an appropriation,  which in  the past                                                                    
had  been a  lump  sum.  He noted  that  the  past year  was                                                                    
unusual because  it had been  a reverse engineered  lump sum                                                                    
to equal  $1,000. He  used $1 billion  as an  example amount                                                                    
going into  the fund.  Currently the  number was  divided by                                                                    
the  number of  eligible applicants.  If the  non-applicants                                                                    
were built in  to the calculation it  would reduce dividends                                                                    
because it would be divided by  a lower number and a portion                                                                    
would  be  carved  out  to go  into  the  appropriation.  He                                                                    
clarified  he was  not providing  a policy  proposal, but  a                                                                    
theoretical  exercise.  Alternatively,  an amount  could  be                                                                    
appropriated to dividends  and in addition there  would be a                                                                    
separate number based on individuals  who did not apply that                                                                    
could  be appropriated  to the  General Fund  on a  pro-rata                                                                    
level.                                                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
2:37:19 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Representative Tilton stated that if  a person did not apply                                                                    
for their dividend it impacted  other things like a person's                                                                    
eligibility  for fishing  licenses and  other. She  believed                                                                    
there was an array of issues  the state would need to figure                                                                    
out how to deal with.                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered that eligibility  for the PFD was seen as                                                                    
de facto proof  of Alaska residency for  certain things like                                                                    
fishing licenses;  however, he did  not believe the  lack of                                                                    
receiving    a   dividend    was   necessarily    proof   of                                                                    
ineligibility.  He was  certain  a person  could  go to  the                                                                    
Department of  Fish and Game with  their mortgage statement,                                                                    
electric bill, driver's license, or  other in order to prove                                                                    
residency.  The PFD  was  one of  many  mechanisms to  prove                                                                    
residency.                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Representative Guttenberg  stated that  he went  through the                                                                    
conversation  annually   with  a   couple  of   people.  The                                                                    
individuals were lifelong Alaskans  and had received the PFD                                                                    
every year they were eligible,  but they no longer wanted to                                                                    
receive it. Instead, they did not  want to have to apply for                                                                    
it and wanted  the money to either stay in  the General Fund                                                                    
or the principal  of the Permanent Fund, or to  donate it to                                                                    
a  school or  the borough.  He observed  that the  issue was                                                                    
difficult for  many Alaskans and  the problem was  unique to                                                                    
the state. He believed keeping things simple worked.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  imagined another  theoretical workaround  where a                                                                    
resident checked a box specifying  they were electing not to                                                                    
apply for  the PFD and they  would like to donate  it to the                                                                    
General Fund or school district.  He explained that it would                                                                    
still be  necessary to  prove the  individual's eligibility.                                                                    
He questioned how  the IRS would treat the  situation if the                                                                    
eligibility  process  was  bypassed and  an  individual  was                                                                    
given  a  de facto  dividend  (a  share  of the  total).  He                                                                    
guessed  that the  IRS  would need  to  consider it  income,                                                                    
meaning the benefit the Alaskan  was trying to gain from not                                                                    
receiving  the  dividend would  be  lost.  He highlighted  a                                                                    
scenario  of  a person  who  itemized  and  was in  the  top                                                                    
bracket  (39  percent).  If the  person  received  a  $1,000                                                                    
dividend,  the  donation  of the  dividend  would  save  the                                                                    
individual only at  a 40 percent rate and would  end up even                                                                    
at best and probably owing a bit of tax on the difference.                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
2:41:20 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper was happy to address additional questions.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton  remarked  there  had  been  discussion  on                                                                    
parameters  of   the  cap,  looking  at   S  corporation  or                                                                    
partnership  distributions.  Another  issue  that  had  been                                                                    
mentioned  was the  prospect of  not  increasing the  actual                                                                    
rate, but if  the voters approved a bond  issue, there could                                                                    
be an automatic  mechanism to amortize the  repayment of the                                                                    
bonds through a  temporary increase in the tax  in the bill.                                                                    
If there  was a  general obligation bond  it would  mean the                                                                    
legislature was  not sitting there trying  to determine what                                                                    
cuts  to make  or other  options  to pay  for the  amortized                                                                    
payments. He wondered whether the  issue had been considered                                                                    
by  the   administration.  He   asked  if   the  calculation                                                                    
authority for  a temporary  increase could  be put  in DOR's                                                                    
lap.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered that he  had spoken with the state's debt                                                                    
manager   Deven   Mitchell   [Executive   Director,   Alaska                                                                    
Municipal Bond  Bank Authority, Department of  Revenue], but                                                                    
he did  not have a legal  opinion on the subject,  so he was                                                                    
unable  to  say  anything  concrete. He  answered  that  the                                                                    
scenario was plausible; it would  involve delegating a rate-                                                                    
setting authority to  DOR. He furthered the  method was seen                                                                    
at the municipal level frequently.  He provided examples. He                                                                    
furthered that  voters would  approve the  authorization and                                                                    
DOR  would have  the  ability  to set  the  rate higher  and                                                                    
change  the withholding  tables in  subsequent years.  There                                                                    
was nothing to  make it inherently impossible; it  was a bit                                                                    
complicated and no  one else was using the  method. He noted                                                                    
that  Juneau had  a  sales tax  that  voters approved  every                                                                    
several years,  which supported a  specific list  of capital                                                                    
projects. Deferring  "this sort of thing"  to voter approval                                                                    
in order to  change the tax rate was not  unheard of. If the                                                                    
proposal became real, DOR would  reach out to the Department                                                                    
of Law to ensure there were no holes.                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper  relayed that  DOR was already  trying to  come up                                                                    
with language  if there was  the desire by the  committee to                                                                    
include an  amendment in the  bill. Practically  speaking it                                                                    
would not  work well within  the cap; it should  be included                                                                    
outside the cap. He explained  it was much harder to predict                                                                    
who was  and was not going  to be paying at  that number and                                                                    
it was hard  to predict the revenue. He  summarized that the                                                                    
department could  try to make it  work, but it did  not have                                                                    
enough information  at present  to specify  how it  would be                                                                    
done.                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:45:24 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton stated  that another  idea floating  around                                                                    
was  a rebate  or  exemption for  income  below the  federal                                                                    
government's  $10,300 or  other.  He asked  if  it would  be                                                                    
difficult for the  department to issue a refund  if a person                                                                    
had  paid the  1.5 percent  tax  but was  below the  federal                                                                    
government income level.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered there were  a couple of different ways to                                                                    
do it. He detailed that to  not tax the first "x" dollars of                                                                    
income  was  more  difficult  because  especially  at  lower                                                                    
income levels  many people had multiple  jobs throughout the                                                                    
year and they  ended up "tripping over the  minimum" and the                                                                    
state would have  to go after the individuals  to pay taxes.                                                                    
Administratively,  it would  be much  easier to  pay a  flat                                                                    
rebate  to people  who come  below a  certain income  level,                                                                    
although  it would  have unfairness  right at  the edge.  He                                                                    
explained that  the individual making  $100 than  the cutoff                                                                    
would not  receive a rebate,  while the person  making below                                                                    
the cutoff would; it would  mean the creation of a stairstep                                                                    
in  the tax  rate. Alternatively,  if a  rebate of  $150 was                                                                    
given to  everyone off  the first $10,000,  it would  be the                                                                    
simplest administratively, but it would be expensive.                                                                           
                                                                                                                                
2:47:38 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Spanos agreed  that it could be done.  The major concern                                                                    
that  most states  had with  refunds  was fraud,  especially                                                                    
with some  of the larger  data breaches (if someone  stole a                                                                    
person's  information they  could  file for  a refund  claim                                                                    
under  that  person's  name). There  was  an  administrative                                                                    
burden on  verifying the person  was who they claimed  to be                                                                    
before  the refund  was sent.  He explained  the method  was                                                                    
simpler than  putting the  burden on  an employer  to verify                                                                    
someone  had already  paid the  tax somewhere  else or  that                                                                    
they were below  a given income level. He  furthered that it                                                                    
could be  done and DOR  could give employers the  ability to                                                                    
register employees its  system, but it would  put the burden                                                                    
on  the employer.  The department  believed that  having the                                                                    
taxpayer file directly with it  and having a refund sent was                                                                    
manageable.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair Seaton asked about the  fiscal note. He wondered if                                                                    
the intention  was to  have a  capital and  operating fiscal                                                                    
note if the bill passed.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper  answered that  if  the  bill passed  during  the                                                                    
current  special  session  and  there  was  no  accompanying                                                                    
appropriation, the state did not  need to start spending the                                                                    
money in the next few  months. The department could wait for                                                                    
the next budget cycle or  ideally a supplemental budget that                                                                    
would  pass  early  in  the   coming  regular  session.  For                                                                    
operating and staff needs the  department would reach out to                                                                    
a  contractor  for  was  in the  hundreds  of  thousands  of                                                                    
dollars.  The department  would  find a  way  to locate  the                                                                    
funds  elsewhere and  would then  backfill it  later in  the                                                                    
year.  He addressed  a capital  appropriation and  explained                                                                    
the contractor  would take time to  gear up for it  anyway -                                                                    
as  long as  the contractor  knew the  state would  have the                                                                    
money in the coming year, there should not be a problem.                                                                        
                                                                                                                                
2:50:05 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara surmised  the items  under discussion  were                                                                    
feasible.  He reasoned  that other  states  and the  federal                                                                    
government exempted  certain amounts of income.  He spoke to                                                                    
the concept of stair stepping  and provided a scenario where                                                                    
the state  wanted to exempt  the first $20,000 of  income or                                                                    
to  exempt anyone  earning $20,000  or less.  He supposed  a                                                                    
person  could specify  they wanted  less  withheld on  their                                                                    
employer withholding  form and  if they  underestimated they                                                                    
could  pay the  tax at  the end  of the  year. He  asked for                                                                    
verification that it was all feasible.                                                                                          
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Spanos  replied that it  was feasible. He noted  that an                                                                    
issue when  contemplating the method was  that an individual                                                                    
with multiple jobs  that would easily exceed  the line could                                                                    
not pay the tax; if the  individual was a nonresident it was                                                                    
nearly impossible to  track it down and get  the money back.                                                                    
For residents,  the state had  a dataset showing  the person                                                                    
was  a  resident  and  it  should  receive  W-2  forms  from                                                                    
employers,   which  would   allow  DOR   to  determine   the                                                                    
individual exceeded  the limit  and to send  them a  bill or                                                                    
ask  them to  file  a return.  He spoke  to  the expense  of                                                                    
chasing down filers and sending  out paper documents. From a                                                                    
wage  tax  perspective, it  was  not  typically a  voluntary                                                                    
compliance issue  because the tax  was withheld  from wages.                                                                    
However, with  self-employed individuals it was  a voluntary                                                                    
return that  needed to  be filed.  What Vice-Chair  Gara was                                                                    
proposing  was that  an individual  not  meeting the  income                                                                    
level would have  to file their own return  if they exceeded                                                                    
the specified  income level.  The department  suspected that                                                                    
under the scenario many people  would not file and DOR would                                                                    
have to seek out individuals.                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair  Gara  assumed  there   were  other  states  that                                                                    
exempted income  for lower income  people. He asked  for the                                                                    
issue to be kept in mind because it was a concern for some.                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Mr. Alper answered  that the bill that the  House had passed                                                                    
[the  prior  session]  had exempted  income  below  a  given                                                                    
level. He confirmed  that the concept was  not unusual. Some                                                                    
form  of   a  standard  deduction  was   standard  operating                                                                    
procedure  in   income  taxes.  The  key   was  it  exempted                                                                    
everyone, which  could be built into  the withholding tables                                                                    
and  standard  formulas.  He furthered  that  if  the  state                                                                    
wanted to  exempt the first  $20,000, close to  one-third of                                                                    
all  the income  fell off  the tax  roll; therefore,  if the                                                                    
state wanted  to raise the  same money proposed by  the bill                                                                    
it would  mean raising the  rates. Nonetheless, it  would be                                                                    
easy  to implement.  However, exempting  those earning  less                                                                    
than $20,000  became more complicated;  a cleaner way  to do                                                                    
it would be by refund rather than by a tax.                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Vice-Chair Gara  asked if  administering the  refund process                                                                    
would be feasible for DOR.                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                                
Mr.  Alper  answered that  the  key  issue was  fraud.  When                                                                    
dealing   with   potentially   hundreds  of   thousands   of                                                                    
transactions, many systems automated  the process. There had                                                                    
been a problem with Russian  hackers applying for refunds on                                                                    
behalf of thousands of citizens  and getting electronic wire                                                                    
transfers  in  the  hundreds of  thousands  to  millions  of                                                                    
dollars  before anyone  caught  what  was happening  because                                                                    
everything was  automated. He explained  that was  they type                                                                    
of thing the state needed to protect itself from.                                                                               
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson asked  when  amendments  on the  bill                                                                    
would be due.                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton  replied  that  a date  had  not  yet  been                                                                    
determined.                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                                
Representative  Wilson remarked  that  she did  not want  to                                                                    
overload Legislative Legal Services.                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton  stated  that   it  would  be  helpful  for                                                                    
committee   members  to   bring   the   ideas  forward   for                                                                    
discussion.  At present  they were  still considering  which                                                                    
ideas were feasible and what there was agreement on.                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
HB  4001  was  HEARD  and  HELD  in  committee  for  further                                                                    
consideration.                                                                                                                  
                                                                                                                                
Co-Chair  Seaton addressed  the schedule  for the  following                                                                    
day.                                                                                                                            
                                                                                                                                
ADJOURNMENT                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                
2:56:13 PM                                                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                
The meeting was adjourned at 2:56 p.m.                                                                                          

Document Name Date/Time Subjects
HB 4001 DOR TAX 2nd present payroll tax 11-8-17 final.pdf HFIN 11/8/2017 1:00:00 PM
HB4001