Taking the tax out of texts
Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- Ryan Simpkins is already building conservative credentials
that would make Congressman Chris Cox proud.
Simpkins, a 21-year-old student at OCC, is campaigning to eliminate the
sales tax on textbooks sold to college students in California.
The seed for his crusade was planted last spring when the dean of
students at OCC mentioned the idea offhandedly to a student, who in turn
passed it on to an intrigued Simpkins.
“Students are starving,” Simpkins said. “Anything you can do to help
students and lower the cost of education is positive.”
The Huntington Beach resident spent the summer researching the topic and
brought it to the OCC student leadership retreat in September.
“Institutions like this one are nonprofit and don’t pay taxes, so [they]
shouldn’t really be charging tax to students,” Simpkins said. “I pay more
for textbooks than I do for tuition.”
The average OCC student pays more than $600 each semester for books and
$300 for classes, Simpkins said. Removing the tax would mean a savings of
about $50 per semester. That’s $400 over the course of a four-year
degree, Simpkins said.
“It may not seem like a lot, but I could use $400,” he said.
Students at OCC were quick to take up the cause led by their newly
appointed business manager. But to make this movement viable, they need
to garner support from college and university students throughout the
county and state.
With the help of student leaders -- including Sarah Kelley, the
legislative coordinator for the Associated Students of OCC; and Dan Oase,
who has been dubbed human resources director for the movement -- a union
has been formed among representatives of all four branches of higher
education: private schools, community colleges, and the University of
California and Cal State University systems.
At the core of the campaign is representation from OCC, USC, UCLA, Cal
State Fullerton and Cal State Long Beach.
“It is important that we present a unified front,” Simpkins said.
In 1998, a California legislator introduced a bill seeking to eliminate
taxes on college textbooks, but it lacked support and failed.
Similar bills have been introduced in many other states, including
Arizona, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas and Virginia. In some
states, such as New York and Pennsylvania, the bill passed; in others, it
was met with opposition or failed as an attempted amendment to another
bill.
To ensure success in California, Simpkins said, the first order of
business is to make sure an impressive unity is in place.
While Simpkins was gathering support, he discovered that the student body
president of Cal State Long Beach, Toby Sexton, was working on a similar
proposal. Now the two share the role of spearheading the legislative
movement.
Each sector of higher education has taken responsibilityfor gaining
support from its branch -- sending letters and making phone calls.
Oase has taken on the responsibility of overseeing contact with all 107
community colleges.
“We are experiencing results at a steady, slow pace,” he said. “Somewhere
in the neighborhood of five or six schools have returned a signed
resolution of support.”
On Friday, leaders from each campus met with Dave Holcomb, the director
of student auxiliary services at OCC; and Michael Bare, manager of the
bookstore at Coastline Community College, to share information and agree
on how to proceed.
“I think it’s a great concept,” Holcomb said. “[It’s] a very effective
way for the state to help education that affects students directly.”
After four months of gathering support, decisions need to be made on
numerous specifics: What is the definition of a textbook? Will this apply
only to campus bookstores? If not, who would it include and how would
that be determined? Where might opposition arise?
If California’s bill had passed in 1998, the state Board of Equalization
found it would have cost the state $34.6 million in revenue annually. An
additional $10 million to $11 million would have been lost in local
taxes, which vary from county to county.
As a result, the majority of opposition is expected to come from counties
that can’t afford to lose any more money, Simpkins said.
In an effort to deflect that argument, the new legislation would ask the
state to make up the difference from its surplus, Simpkins said.
“This $36 million of a $65-billion budget is just a drop in the bucket,”
he said.
By March, Simpkins said, the group will lobby legislators and look for a
sponsor for the bill.
Organizers plan to sell it to Republicans as cutting taxes and to
Democrats as cutting the cost of education.
“We want to make it a bipartisan movement,” Simpkins said.
It is an entirely student-run movement that has OCC’s support.
“I encourage their foray into the political world,” university President
Margaret Gratton said. “They are following protocol and process. They
will give it their best shot, and it will take on a life of its own.”
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