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Strategies & Market Trends : Zeev's Turnips - No Politics

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To: Steve Lee who started this subject5/9/2002 7:25:19 PM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (2) of 99280
 
Missouri Stops Payments of Tax Refund Checks
Budget: The state cites a cash flow crisis in taking the extreme measure. More than 400,000 have been
told that they won't get the money owed them any time soon.

By STEPHANIE SIMON, TIMES STAFF WRITER

ST. LOUIS -- The budget deficit is huge. Tax collection has been unexpectedly skimpy.
And the treasury is all but tapped out.

So the state of Missouri has stopped sending out income tax refunds. And there are no
plans to put the checks in the mail any time soon.

State officials have told 415,500 taxpayers that their refund checks--worth a total of $167
million--are on indefinite hold because of an extreme cash flow crisis. "We really don't
know how long it will be," budget director Brian Long said. The move announced late last
week is extreme. Illinois has delayed refund payments a week or two because of a cash
flow crunch. And Alabama has put off paying most corporate tax refunds until the
economy rebounds. But several national experts on state finances said Missouri appears
to be alone in cutting off personal income tax refunds.

Or at least it's the only state to have announced such an unpopular policy.

"I have to think that the same discussion about at what point or when [the treasury] can
pay tax refunds is going on in several other states right now ... because their circumstances
are similar to those in Missouri," said Harley Duncan, who directs the Federation of Tax
Administrators.

Or, as budget analyst Arturo Perez put it: "Opening the [tax return] mail can be slowed way down. That's the crude method
of delaying refunds."

Several States Face Similar Fiscal Crunches

Perez, a senior specialist with the National Conference of State Legislatures, plans to start surveying budget directors today
to find out just how bad the April tax season has been--and how refunds are being handled. California refunds are going out
on schedule; taxpayers who filed in mid-April should receive checks within six weeks, according to the Franchise Tax Board.

Evidence collected informally so far shows states across the nation reporting an anemic tax collection season, at best.

The reasons are obvious: With the economy in recession, many people worked fewer hours or at lower-paying jobs last year,
so they owed the state less income tax. Even more significant, the drooping stock market ensured that few investors had
capital gains to report--or pay taxes on.

Budget directors anticipated such a downtick, of course, especially after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks slammed an already
weak economy.

But in many states the gloomy forecasts turned out to be not gloomy enough.

Missouri, for instance, predicted income tax collection in April would run about $525 million, down 13% from the previous
year. "Frankly," Long said, "I thought we were being pessimistic enough." He was wrong: The state took in just $420 million
in April.

Even in her small private practice, accountant Michelle Moon could see the plunge. Client after client was getting
unexpectedly large refunds. Those who owed the state owed much less than in years past.

"You could see the writing on the wall," said Moon, who works in St. Charles, Mo. "You could tell the state was going to
have to make some drastic cuts because the money was not going to be there."

'You Can't Spend What You Don't Take In'

Indeed, despite a painful round of cuts last winter, Missouri is facing a deficit of up to $250 million for the fiscal year ending
June 30.

Lawmakers are now debating how to plug that hole. If they can reach consensus, the state might have enough cash on hand to
resume refund payments next month. That's a big if, however, as the chief proposal--to tap a rainy-day fund--has drawn
ferocious opposition from conservatives. House Republicans have already voted it down once.

Which leaves budget director Long in a tight spot.

"You can't spend what you don't take in," he said, sighing.

If the refund checks are delayed past Aug. 15, the state will owe taxpayers interest at the rate of 6% a year. But that's small
consolation to the families who were counting on their money now, to pay off credit card bills or remodel a bathroom or
cover a summer vacation.

The Department of Revenue estimates that 26% of those taxpayers who are owed refunds are caught in the limbo.

Among them is Tony Salvatore, an airline pilot from the St. Louis suburbs who was expecting a $979 refund.

"I think this is terrible," he said.

He's particularly steamed that lawmakers are considering a $644-million plan to build a new baseball stadium for the St.
Louis Cardinals and refurbish stadiums in Kansas City when they cannot even return him the $979 he overpaid in state taxes
last year.

"I'm not an accountant," Salvatore said, "but it doesn't take a genius to figure out that this state is going to get into serious
trouble if we keep going like this."
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