|
History of the Telephone Tax and Campaigns The federal
excise tax on telephone service has been associated with war spending throughout
most of its history. The first telephone tax — on toll calls only
— was imposed in 1898 (the Spanish-American War era).It was repealed in
1902, but a tax on long distance calls was reinstated by the War Tax Revenue Act
of 1914. This was repealed in 1916, but reimposed in 1917 along with other war
taxes. Then it was repealed in 1924 and reimposed in 1932. The first tax on local
telephone service came during World War II. The war brought a 25% tax on long
distance calls and a 15% tax on local service. This tax was retained during the
Korean War. The tax was reduced to 10% on all telephone service in 1954. In 1965
Congress approved a reduction of the phone tax to 3% and planned to phase it out
entirely in 1969. However, in 1966 the Johnson Administration needed money
for the escalating war in Vietnam. Congress passed a special tax bill that included
a reimposition of the 10% phone tax. Wilbur Mills, Chairman of the House Ways
and Means Committee, explained during the floor debate that “it is Vietnam,
and only the Vietnam operation, which makes this bill necessary.” The tax
was extended in 1968 for two more years. In late 1970 another two-year extension
was approved, but with the proviso that it be reduced by 1% each year thereafter
and repealed entirely on January 1, 1982. In January 1981 the tax was extended
another year at 2%. The tax was due to expire on January 1, 1983, but instead
jumped from 1% to 3% -- the first increase since 1966! The 3% telephone tax was
then scheduled to expire at the end of 1987, but was again extended, this time
through 1990. During the 1980s phone tax income served the general treasury, but
clearly it was needed to help offset the Reagan administration’s huge military
buildup. In 1990 instead of letting the tax expire, the 101st Congress
extended it permanently at 3%, and this time with a new twist. Sponsors of the
Act for Better Child Care seized the phone tax extension as a source of new funding
for their programs (new sources being a requirement under Gramm-Rudman rules to
reduce the federal deficit). The permanent phone tax was then attached to this
bill and passed by Congress. Nevertheless, the phone tax revenues go into the
general fund as they always have and in no way are earmarked for child care programs.
Telephone taxes are available to the military in the same way as income taxes.
War tax resisters continue to encourage telephone tax resistance; some groups
redirect resisted phone taxes directly to childcare themselves. From April
1966 through 2001 the total revenues from the federal excise tax on telephone
service amounted to $89 billion. In 2001 alone, the telephone tax raised almost
$6 billion, according to the IRS.
The federal excise tax on long distance telephone service was abolished on July 31, 2006, after the government lost five appellate decisions on cases brought by big corporations. Because the government and the IRS had continued to collect the tax after a number of these cases were lost, they were forced to offer refunds for the three previous years on 2006 tax forms.
There is a lot of information about the refund on the IRS website, including
information about what to do if you already filed but didn't know about
this credit. See www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=164032,00.html.
The federal excise tax no longer applies to any long distance, mixed use phone service (like cell phones), flat rate phone service, or internet phone service. It is still applied on local-only telephone service. Congress people continue to introduce bills to repeal this final remnant of the telephone excise tax.
Telephone Tax Campaigns
The
idea for not paying the telephone tax was suggested by Doris Sargent in a letter
to the Peacemaker, April 2, 1966. Karl Meyer started promoting it around the Chicago
area and suggested is to New York activist Maris Cakars that it might make a good
national campaign of the Committee for Nonviolent Action. Shortly afterwards the
War Resisters League picked it up and began a national campaign to refuse payment
of the telephone tax. WRL printed up cards that telephone tax resisters could
enclose with their bill payment each month and produced the brochure “Hang
Up On War,” first drafted by Karl Meyer. Telephone tax resistance grew to
an estimated half million people by 1972. Thousands of people have continued
to resist paying the federal phone tax for decades. Since the Vietnam war, resisters
have focused on the enormity of the military budget while social programs suffer,
spending on nuclear weapons, and the costs of military interventions including
in Latin America, the Middle East, and Kosovo.
The Hang Up On War!
campaign began when the excise tax was more widely applied and amounted to more money, but many activists still particpate in telephone tax resistance, and this site is maintained so that others maybe consider this form of resistance to militarism.
Some text
from War Tax Resistance: A Guide to Withholding Your Support from the Military,
2003, published by War Resisters League.
|