Too many taxes? Then stop already
by John M. W. Moorlach
One has to appreciate Assemblyman Tom Harman’s tax day timing for his
recent comments on making it harder to raise taxes on Californians
(“Too many taxes, especially today,” April 15). April 15 is certainly
a great day to contemplate federal and state income taxes.
One should also contemplate the good assemblyman’s actions. To
talk “no taxes” is great, but the walk should support the talk.
It was only last year that the assemblyman coauthored Senate Bill
204. Later versions do not include his name, but he is still given
credit for the bill. This legislation would later become known as the
infamous “diaper bill.”
The bill concerned itself with “the recycling and diversion from
landfill disposal of personal care products.” The Legislative
Counsel’s Digest of this bill makes one snicker.
“The bill would define a ‘personal care product’ to mean a
disposable product composed of plastic and paper materials that is
worn by a person of any age for the purpose of capturing human
waste.”
“The bill would require every person who purchases a personal care
product from a retail seller to pay the seller a diversion and
recycling fee of $0.0025 per personal care product.”
“The bill would require the retail seller to charge the purchaser
the amount of the diversion and recycling fee at the time of sale and
to remit ... on a quarterly schedule the collected fees, for deposit
in the Personal Care Product Recycling Account.”
I am not making this up!
Current state law requires the recycling of plastic trash bags,
plastic packaging containers, waste tires, newsprint and other
specified materials. Harman wanted to add the recycling of disposable
diapers to the list, and make retailers file quarterly returns with a
state agency to remit the taxes charged to young parents. Government
bureaucracy and paper pushing at its finest.
Harman also supported an SUV tax, by voting for Assembly Bill
1058. SUVs are vehicles used by young parents to safely carry their
infant children.
One wonders if our good assemblyman could walk the anti-tax talk
before he claims some sense of purity on the topic. Apparently, he’s
trying to tax us coming and going. Fortunately, some of us know a
full diaper when we see one.
* JOHN M. W. MOORLACH is the Orange County Treasurer and Tax
Collector. To contribute to “Sounding Off” e-mail us at
[email protected] or fax us at (714) 965-7174.
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