SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION NO. 11 Urging the United States Congress to amend the tax code to repeal the federal excise tax on communications. DAVE STANCLIFF, STAFF, SENATOR GENE THERRIAULT, spoke in support of the legislation This resolution encourages Congress to once again pass a provision to repeal the "tax on talking", formally known as the federal excise tax oil communications. This tax was originally put into place in 1898 to help fund the Spanish American War under the guise of a temporary luxury tax. Since that time, it has been repealed twice, reenacted in 1941, adjusted from 10% in 1965 downward to be phased out at 1% per year, reached a low of 1% in 1981 and then began to rise and climbed back to 3%. It has remained at that level since the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1990. In 2000 Congress moved to repeal the tax once and for all; however President Bill Clinton vetoed the measure. Currently more than 94 million households pay the 3% phone tax. It disproportionately hurts seniors and others on low or fixed incomes. It affects 96% of the households using the phone lines for Internet service. At a time when we are trying to increase commerce this is a harmful tax. 4:04:28 PM Co-Chair Chenault pointed out the zero fiscal note and that Alaskan taxpayers pay $17 million to the tax. 4:05:11 PM Representative Holm asked if the state of Alaska pays a federal excise tax. Mr. Stancliff explained that the state of Alaska is exempted from the tax. Representative Hawker asked the consequence of the legislation. Mr. Stancliff responded that there would be cuts to offset the revenue or new sources of revenue discovered. Alaska does not benefit directly from the tax. 4:07:11 PM Representative Weyhrauch referred to lines 11 - 13. He noted that the legislation maintains that the tax discourages expansion. Mr. Stancliff observed that the money does not go back into the expansion of the facilities. 4:09:53 PM Representative Foster MOVED to report SJR 11 out of Committee with individual recommendations and with the accompanying fiscal note. There being NO OBJECTION, it was so ordered. SJR 11 was REPORTED out of Committee with a "do pass" recommendation and with a zero fiscal impact note by the Department of Revenue. 4:10:37 PM At ease. 5:15:29 PM