California News

Virginians get a tax holiday to get hurricane-ready

May 23, 2008 12:00 AM (107 days ago) by Melissa Frederick, The Examiner
This story ranks Not ranked
Related Topics: WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON (Map, News) - Retailers are hoping that Virginia residents in the market for a generator or a fire extinguisher will visit stores for a tax holiday geared toward preparing for hurricanes.

Virginia’s Hurricane Preparedness Sales Tax Holiday will begin Sunday and last through Saturday just at the start of hurricane season.

The holiday was passed by the legislature in 2007.

It applies to both big-ticket items such as inverter cables and generators under $1,000, and smaller items under $60 such as batteries, food storage containers and first-aid kits.

This story continues below
Advertisement

A list of eligible items is available at www.vaemergency.com.

Though Virginia’s most recent hurricane was Isabel in 2003, the tax break was passed as part of the state’s various efforts to be more prepared for natural disasters, according to Laurie Aldrich, president of the Virginia Retail Merchants Association.

Virginians may be more driven to think about preparedness because of the recent tornadoes that hit the state, suggested Joel Davidson, spokesman for the Virginia Department of Taxation.

The only other state this year to have a similar holiday is Louisiana, which suffered the effects of Hurricane Katrina, said Davidson.

Florida had a tax holiday but it has expired.

Virginia also has tax holidays for back-to-school supplies and environmentally friendly appliances. The hurricane holiday expires in 2012.

According to Aldrich, it is not clear whether the holiday will be as effective as, for example, the back-to-school tax break, which triggered a sales spike of 75 percent last year.

“We don’t really have a good sense of this one,” Davidson said. “There hasn’t been a ton of promotion yet.”

Sales people at stores such as Best Buy plan to use the extra traffic from the holiday to educate customers about items they might not think of in the context of emergency preparedness, said Jon Felts, assistant store manager at the Bailey’s Crossroads location.

“Some of those things are scanners for documents such as passports, and using thumb drives to back up data,” Felts said.

melissa.frederick@dcexaminer.com

Add a Comment


Name: (required)
Comments:
characters left
Comments are regulated by the Terms of Use.

Comments from Examiner Readers

2:16 PM MST on Wed., May. 14, 2008 re: "Governor’s plan revives NVTA"

Examiner Reader said:
I think the NVTA is tarnished. It can't continue. Kaine needs to come up with something else. Indeed, Northern Virginia and the Tidewater are the econonic engines of Virginia. We put more in the coffers than we get out.

6 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree

1:41 PM MST on Wed., Mar. 26, 2008 re: "Kaine signs tax refund law; paybacks should start in April"

Jason said:
Taxation without representation. Hello! We fought a war over this! I thought that the sales tax being raised to 5% was suppose to take care of all our road problems? Another government LIE! Keep drinking the Koolaid people. You won't be happy until you are shoved into a FEMA camp!

7 agree | 5 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
6:57 AM MST on Tue., Mar. 25, 2008 re: "Taxpayers face different systems to receive $24 million in refunds"

GMU92 said:
What a colossal mess. They shouldn't have collected a dime until a ruling was handed down by the VA Supreme Court. It's gonna take 3 months to return property and registration fees? Good grief, that data is readily available to them. And now people have to go rummaging around for old receipts from car rentals and hotel rooms? You know some of these people will never know to apply and won't see that money ever again. Wow, the Commonwealth messed this one up badly.

8 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
5:04 AM MST on Tue., Mar. 25, 2008 re: "Taxpayers face different systems to receive $24 million in refunds"

Abolish the NVTA said:
Are the victims of the illegal NVTA taxes going to receive market rate interest on the monies that were taken from them? After all, there is a time value to money. The NVTA apparently didn't have a very good accounting system in place if they can't issue refunds directly and efficiently. This is yet another example of their sheer ineptitude and arrogance. The NVTA should follow in the footsteps of their "sister" organization in Hampton Roads and shut down AFTER refunding the people's monies.

6 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
10:04 AM MST on Thu., Mar. 6, 2008 re: "Gas tax plan roils Senate debate over N.Va. transportation fix"

Chambek said:
If our elected officials would spend some time working out ways to spend OUR money better, we would not be in this predicament. Their answer to everything is to seek out a new revenue source. They have wasted lots of time and lots of OUR money throwing new taxes against the wall to see what sticks. Gov. Kaine shows little regard for Virginians. He is using use to advance his political career as a tax and spend democrat. I guess we really have only ourselves to blame - we put him in office. Fool me once .......

5 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
9:50 AM MST on Thu., Mar. 6, 2008 re: "Gas tax plan roils Senate debate over N.Va. transportation fix"

Examiner Reader said:
NOVA sends more revenue to the State than it receives back. If the entire State isn't going to be taxed to fix this transportation crisis, then the formula should be changed so that NOVA isn't supporting the rest of the state. I support a gas tax increase - how would we even feel it when it's buried in the monthly 10 cent a gallon hikes we've had for the past two years? The other option is to cut spending. Just ignoring the issue is NOT an option. The House needs to govern!

4 agree | 4 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
9:06 AM MST on Thu., Mar. 6, 2008 re: "Northern Virginians brace for seven new taxes, fees"

Examiner Reader said:
We are being taxed out of the area. The cost of living is getting out of control and I really don't know why that is always the answer to everything. Maybe they need to start looking into what they are paying themselves and start the cuts there.

3 agree | 2 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
8:25 AM MST on Thu., Mar. 6, 2008 re: "Gas tax plan roils Senate debate over N.Va. transportation fix"

Examiner Reader said:
My comment regards the issues of raising money for road funding ONLY in the Northern Virginia and Hampton Roads area. Why the should the entire state have to suffer with any extra taxes if the only people to benefit are the ones in the two areas mentioned? How would citizens located in Central, South and Southwest Virginia personally benefit other than have less money to spend in an already high unemployment area? Maybe this talk a few years ago about how Northern Virginia was considering to be a separate entity from the rest of the State (Northern Virginia and Virginia) should be resurrected and re-hashed over again. You would then have two budgets.

4 agree | 3 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
9:41 AM MST on Mon., Dec. 31, 2007 re: "Kaine promises no new taxes despite shortfall"

Examiner Reader said:
Just got to love Kaine's scare tactics. He needs to cut spending and take his pet project off the table to have any chance of passing a non tax raising budget. Chris

55 agree | 55 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
9:35 AM MST on Mon., Dec. 31, 2007 re: "Northern Virginians brace for seven new taxes, fees"

Examiner Reader said:
Kaine is raising taxes just like Maryland's Gov. O'Malley. Thankfully Virginia has more sense and will elect a Republican governor in 2008. Chris

67 agree | 61 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
12:04 AM MST on Thu., Dec. 6, 2007 re: "Kaine promises no new taxes despite shortfall"

Examiner Reader said:
That old 70;s song is back "Here comes that Rainy day feeling again" Kaino will surely get his money after the Jan session opens, they do it the old fashioned way, they just up your taxes

76 agree | 63 disagree
Vote on this comment: I agree or I disagree
Advertisement