House Next Stop for Bill
to Provide Military with State Income Tax Exemption
Tax relief could soon be on its
way for Oklahoma military families following unanimous
approval of legislation by the State Senate Thursday
to provide an income tax exemption for serving
military personnel. Sen Steve
Russell, a retired Army infantryman and combat
veteran, is author of Senate 881 and believes
his bill would not only help military families,
but the state’s economy.
“There are 32,000 who serve at our state’s
bases and we have approximately 54,000 Oklahoma
residents that were recruited from here and are
serving somewhere. However, only 9,000 of them
claim Oklahoma residency, so what that tells you
is that the first chance they get to leave Oklahoma
because of our tax burden they do and they become
Texans, Floridians, Nevadans, or whatever it may
be,” said Russell, R- Oklahoma City.
Oklahoma has the second highest military recruitment
in the nation per capita, but as Russell pointed
out during his debate many military personnel
change their citizenship at the first opportunity
because of the state’s tax rates.
There are currently 16 states including Nevada,
Illinois and New York that exempt their military
from paying income taxes.
SB 881 would only pertain to Oklahoman residents
that are serving members of the armed services,
including guardsmen and reservists. Therefore,
military retirees or veterans would not qualify
for the exemption.
The bill is estimated to cost the state $5 million
the first year and $12 million during the second
but Russell says the money gained through these
individuals claiming Oklahoma residency will far
outweigh the costs.
“If this bill became law, we’d actually
be gaining revenue by being an acquiring state
rather than a donor state. Currently, our serving
Oklahomans, because they don’t have such
tax relief, change their residency the first chance
they get and, therefore, we don’t receive
their motor vehicle fees, license fees, excise
tax on automobiles that they purchase or any number
of other fees,” explained Russell. “For
every 10,000 soldiers that we lose there is an
impact of approximately $6 million in just such
fees that we do not receive because we are a losing
state rather than an acquiring state. The flipside
of that is that if we were an acquiring state
we could have the potential to bring in 40,000
to 60,000 new Oklahomans, which would have a positive
impact on the entire state.”
Russell’s bill now moves to the House for
further consideration.
For more information contact:
Sen. Russell's Office: 405-521-5618