North Carolina is the one state that is mixing both the New York and Colorado approaches to the Amazon tax. So far, it hasn’t had much luck.
Posted on 26 April 2010.
North Carolina is the one state that is mixing both the New York and Colorado approaches to the Amazon tax. So far, it hasn’t had much luck.
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Posted on 14 March 2010.
In the furor over Colorado’s “Amazon tax,” senators might have stumbled on the Holy Grail of state governments: a legal way to tax the Internet.
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Posted on 10 March 2010.
Amazon’s Colorado-based affiliates reconsider their home bases in the wake of a flap between the online retailer and Colorado’s General Assembly.
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Posted on 09 March 2010.
Over the weekend, Amazon e-mailed Colorado affiliates telling them they were being dropped from their commission-driven relationships with the online reseller. Here’s how local and national media covered the story.
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Posted on 08 March 2010.
Reaction, predictably, was negative, with posters complaining specifically about Colorado’s governor and state legislators who backed the bill.
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Posted on 08 March 2010.
The company also asserts that it won’t voluntarily collect taxes on sales made in Colorado.
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Posted on 10 February 2010.
When Coloradans make purchases over the Internet from out-of-state companies such as Amazon.com and Overstock.com, they’re supposed to voluntarily submit sales taxes to the state. Few, if any, do.
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Posted on 08 February 2010.
Colorado lawmakers are considering a new tactic to go after tax revenue from online sales. They want out-of-state online retailers to either start collecting the tax or send annual notices to their customers telling them to pay the tax themselves.
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Posted on 28 January 2010.
A marathon committee hearing continued late into the night Wednesday as a flood of business groups argued against eliminating $132 million of tax credits and exemptions as a way to help balance the state budget.
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