Originally published October 2, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified October 2, 2007 at 2:02 AM
No new taxes yet for Flexcar
The state Department of Revenue has agreed to defer the car-rental tax it said it would begin imposing on Flexcar, the car-sharing company...
Seattle Times staff reporter
The state Department of Revenue has agreed to defer the car-rental tax it said it would begin imposing on Flexcar, the car-sharing company, on Monday.
A day after the department announced that Flexcar would have to pay a 9.7 percent car-rental tax, Gov. Christine Gregoire sent a letter to the department suggesting that Flexcar should not be taxed.
While she stopped short of ordering the department not to collect the tax, she said in her letter, "I believe our tax code should act as an incentive, not a hindrance, to innovation."
In July, the Revenue Department sent an advisory that said car-sharing organizations, such as Flexcar, are providing rental cars and are required to collect the car-rental tax. In King County, where virtually all Flexcars in the state operate, that would mean a 9.7 percent increase to the cost of the car, adding about a dollar to the typical $10 hourly charge members pay.
Flexcar complained that the tax was unfair because it was targeting local residents who already pay taxes, and that it punishes a company trying to get cars off the road and people into buses.
The Revenue Department asserted that Flexcar, which began in Seattle in 2000, is a car-rental business and, as one, should be taxed.
But in a memo issued Monday, Flexcar said, "Flexcar and the Department of Revenue have been in discussions on resolutions to this issue. As a result, for the time being, we are deferring collection of the tax."
There's no decision yet on how the controversy may be resolved, but it may include legislation that exempts car-sharing organizations from the car-rental tax.
Susan Gilmore: 206-464-2054 or sgilmore@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 7:41 AM
State Senate passes tax package, remains at odds with House on sales tax
Lewis-McChord Ranger killed in Afghanistan
NEW - 4:12 PM
Liz Carpenter, press secretary for Lady Bird Johnson, dies
NEW - 03:59 PM
Bothell 5th-grader gets big screen role
Boy Scouts sex files now evidence in Ore. lawsuit

- Missing Silverdale boy died from accidental drowning
- Walgreens: no new Medicaid patients as of April 16
- Fess Parker, TV's Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone, dies at 85
- Steve Kelley | Quincy Pondexter makes the big play, as a senior leader should
- 'Bizarre' tanker twist: Russians will bid against Boeing for Air Force contract
- Missing boy's death ruled an accidental drowning
- Eugene, Oregon parking meter feeder acquitted
- 2 arrested in massive poaching of oysters and clams on Hood Canal
- The Blotter | Alleged killer of Seattle rapper arrested in Ohio
- Husky Men's Basketball Blog | Marquette post-game analysis
- Hoyer says Democratic majority in House is safe
701 - New Mexico game thread
392 - Health-insurance subsidies prompt questions of affordability
185 - New Mexico's Darington Hobson is expected to play
136 - Russian company will bid on Air Force tanker
111 - State Senate passes tax package, remains at odds with House on sales tax
108 - Obama making final health care pitch to House Dems
72 - Seattle Mariners at Cincinnati Reds: 03/19 game thread
69 - Reds 6, Mariners 2: Don Wakamatsu rips umpire over Milton Bradley "witch hunt"
67 - Holt talks about the defensive line
58
- Walgreens: no new Medicaid patients as of April 16
- Little Seattle bank hopes to raise $450M and be a big player
- 'Bizarre' tanker twist: Russians will bid against Boeing for Air Force contract
- 2 arrested in massive poaching of oysters and clams on Hood Canal
- Walmart announcement tells black people to leave store
- Recipes: Crispy Rice Treat Brownies and Salted Caramel Crunch Brownies
- Another futile search for the 'Barefoot bandit'
- Accordionists swing into action at Accordi-O-Rama at Town Hall
- $5M bail set for Lakewood man in ex-wife's slaying at church couples' counseling
- A stand-up roundup: Comedy clubs in Seattle and on the Eastside


