Oklahoma State
Senate
OFFICE OF SENATOR JAY PAUL GUMM
Atoka, Bryan, Coal, Johnston & Marshall Counties
For Immediate Release:
December 6, 2007
“Freedom from Hunger Act” Filed
to Remove State Grocery Sales Tax
The first step was taken Friday
in a journey that could save Oklahoma families millions as Senator
Jay Paul Gumm
filed Senate Bill 1153, the “Freedom from Hunger Act.”
The measure would remove the state’s portion of the sales tax
on groceries; if enacted, the bill would save Oklahoma families 4.5
cents on every dollar they spend at the grocery store. Families spending
$500 per month on groceries would save $270 annually on sales taxes
under the bill.
“Working families are feeling the pain of all-time high gas
prices, and could use the relief at the checkout stand when they buy
food for their families,” Gumm said. “Eliminating this
unfair tax will allow Oklahomans to have more money in their pockets
to spend on necessities and to boost their local economies.”
This will be the third year Gumm will try to end collection of the
state’s portion of the sales tax on groceries. He introduced
similar legislation last year, however that bill was never granted
a hearing in the Senate Finance Committee.
Gumm said the bill, which has strong grassroots support from Oklahoma
taxpayers, faced fierce opposition from the organization that lobbies
on behalf of Oklahoma cities and towns, the Oklahoma Municipal League
(OML). The group fears the measure would strip cities’ and counties’
ability to tax groceries.
Gumm said that is “simply not true,” as his bill would
not affect cities and counties. “The ‘Freedom from Hunger
Act’ clearly allows cities and counties to continue taxing Oklahomans’
food, just like OML wants.”
He said the state’s participation in the Streamline Sales Tax
Agreement would not allow a city or county option to end the tax on
a jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction basis; the ability to tax an item must
be uniform across a state under the agreement.
In short, Gumm explained, the state can only allow every local government
to collect the tax, or prevent all local governments from collecting
the tax. That component of the agreement protects local officials
from enduring political pressure to end their grocery tax.
“Even though I would like to do away completely with the grocery
tax, I realize OML would not allow that proposal to become law. Despite
OML’s rhetoric to the contrary, their sales tax base is preserved
under the bill.”
The lawmaker cited OML’s long opposition to the “Back-to-School”
sales tax holiday as evidence the group “will pull out all the
stops” to protect their sales tax base. Despite evidence that
such a sales tax holiday would actually increase municipal revenues,
OML stopped that bill cold for years before it finally passed in 2007.
“Getting rid of the state grocery tax is too important to risk
on political gamesmanship,” Gumm said. “Removing the state’s
portion of the grocery tax will make a real difference in the lives
of Oklahoma families, and it is something to which I am deeply committed.
“If we aren’t successful this year, it will be back every
year until it becomes law or my time in the Senate is complete.”
For more information contact:
Senator Gumm's Office - (405) 521-5586