SAN JOSE, Calif. (KGO) -- In addition to passing a budget Wednesday night, state lawmakers also voted to impose the collection of sales taxes from out-of-state online merchants. The new plan could raise $200 million, but it could also lead to job losses.
Valerie Lewis owns a popular bookshop, Hicklebee's, on San Jose's Lincoln Ave. She's happy that out-of-state online retailers, such as Amazon and Overstock, may have to start collecting sales taxes.
"You've got the businesses that are supporting their communities and that are hiring in their communities and paying taxes," said Lewis. "And then you've got this business that's sort of out there in the atmosphere and not putting anything back into the state of California."
The requirement would impact sites that have an in-state affiliate. An affiliate is a small company such as DealsPlus in San Jose that sells through Overstock and Amazon.
While this appears to be a victory for brick and mortar stores, it does pose a new problem for those retailers that operate online. To get around tax collection, Overstock will cut off relations with an estimated 25,000 small operations like DealsPlus.
"We're going to terminate them unless one of two things happens," said Overstock president Jonathan Johnson. "No. 1, the bill is not put into law, and that would most likely be done through a veto by Gov. Brown, or they have to pick up and move."
DealsPlus say it's not moving, so it will lose money it can't replace.
"We can't," said Aly Pi with DealsPlus business development. "We really don't know where else we can, so basically that's lost profit."
And that means not expanding staff, even though it's about to move to larger space.
Rob Smahl says his company, eBates, is caught in the middle. eBates gives consumers cash back to shop online. He lobbied lawmakers in Sacramento not to support the Internet tax.
"Fourteen other states have considered similar kinds of laws and have rejected them because they saw that no revenue was collected and it had a negative effect on jobs in their state," said Smahl.
amazon, jerry brown, budget cuts, california budget crisis, taxes, internet, shopping, california news, david louie
- I-5 bridge collapses into Washington's Skagit River
- 5.7 earthquake hits Northern California
- Czech police say Palo Alto man suspected in 4 murders
- New details released in police officers' murders
- Magnitude 8.2 earthquake hits Russia's Far East
- New info released about robbery in Santa Rosa 19 min ago
- Bicyclist killed in accident with garbage truck in SF
- Gov. Brown keeps pressing climate change crusade
- TIME publishes Obama prom photo, yearbook message
- Caltrans shows fix for broken Bay Bridge bolts
- Oakland's real estate market heats up
- abcnews: New bill would allow pets on Amtrak
- roundup: BART bike vote; Gov. climate change
- weather: Bay Area weather forecast for Friday
-
Most Popular
-
Most Viewed StoriesMost Viewed VideoMost Viewed Photos
- abc7news.com home
- Site Map
- RSS
- Advertise with Us
- Contact Us
- Online Public Inspection File
- Technical Help
- ABC.com
- ABCNews.com
- Privacy Policy
- Interest-Based Ads
- Safety Information for this site
- Terms of Use
- Copyright ©2013 ABC Inc., KGO-TV San Francisco, CA. All Rights Reserved.





