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Proposed bill would tax prostitution at $5 per session

 
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 625211
United States
03/24/2009 07:20 PM
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Proposed bill would tax prostitution at $5 per session
[link to www.lasvegassun.com]

Proposed bill would tax prostitution at $5 per session
Senator says bill could bring $2 million a year to state coffers

By Cy Ryan

Mon, Mar 23, 2009 (4:06 p.m.)

CARSON CITY – Sen. Bob Coffin, D-Las Vegas, proposed a tax on prostitution today that he says could raise $2 million a year for the state.

Patrons of prostitutes — both legal and illegal — would pay an extra $5 tax per session under the bill, which Coffin said was his idea alone.

In the runup to the legislative session, a lobbyist for the state’s legal brothels volunteered to be taxed, an effort that some said would guarantee their continued survival. Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley turned down the industry, effectively killing the effort.

“I think we will support it,” George Flint, a spokesman for the state’s brothel industry, said of Coffin’s bill.

There are eight “major” brothels in the rural counties, where they are legal, and 17 smaller houses of prostitution, said Flint. The minimum charges range from $100 to $200.

Coffin said he had considered applying the state’s live entertainment tax to prostitution, but encountered some constitutional questions.

Information received by the state Department of Taxation in collecting the proposed tax would be confidential, he said. The department could publish how much it took in, so long as it didn’t identify an individual business.

Part of the receipts would be used to finance an “ombudsman for sex workers” who would help prostitutes who have complaints or want to leave prostitution and enter another profession.

Asked how the state could collect the tax from the independent street walkers, Coffin said that the business tax, when first imposed, wasn’t collected from all of those who were required to pay it.

As a new tax, the bill would require a two-thirds vote for passage.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 564059
United States
03/24/2009 07:22 PM
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Re: Proposed bill would tax prostitution at $5 per session
Does that include the "Eatin aint Cheatin" Clinton provision????


just sayin
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 601435
United States
03/24/2009 07:24 PM
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Re: Proposed bill would tax prostitution at $5 per session
Outstanding.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 82980041
United States
06/18/2022 01:42 PM
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Re: Proposed bill would tax prostitution at $5 per session
1 DIME IF YOU WANT A BAG AT THE STORE, NOW THIS?
Anonymous Coward
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06/18/2022 01:52 PM
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Re: Proposed bill would tax prostitution at $5 per session
[link to www.lasvegassun.com]

Proposed bill would tax prostitution at $5 per session
Senator says bill could bring $2 million a year to state coffers

By Cy Ryan

Mon, Mar 23, 2009 (4:06 p.m.)

CARSON CITY – Sen. Bob Coffin, D-Las Vegas, proposed a tax on prostitution today that he says could raise $2 million a year for the state.

Patrons of prostitutes — both legal and illegal — would pay an extra $5 tax per session under the bill, which Coffin said was his idea alone.

In the runup to the legislative session, a lobbyist for the state’s legal brothels volunteered to be taxed, an effort that some said would guarantee their continued survival. Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley turned down the industry, effectively killing the effort.

“I think we will support it,” George Flint, a spokesman for the state’s brothel industry, said of Coffin’s bill.

There are eight “major” brothels in the rural counties, where they are legal, and 17 smaller houses of prostitution, said Flint. The minimum charges range from $100 to $200.

Coffin said he had considered applying the state’s live entertainment tax to prostitution, but encountered some constitutional questions.

Information received by the state Department of Taxation in collecting the proposed tax would be confidential, he said. The department could publish how much it took in, so long as it didn’t identify an individual business.

Part of the receipts would be used to finance an “ombudsman for sex workers” who would help prostitutes who have complaints or want to leave prostitution and enter another profession.

Asked how the state could collect the tax from the independent street walkers, Coffin said that the business tax, when first imposed, wasn’t collected from all of those who were required to pay it.

As a new tax, the bill would require a two-thirds vote for passage.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 625211




TAX the Asian Massagee parlor and the revenue would increase a thousand fold. Asian man pimps out women legitimate business, black man does it and he does hard time.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 72696690
Australia
06/18/2022 02:07 PM
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Re: Proposed bill would tax prostitution at $5 per session
Must be fake news. DC would never pass a bill that cost them money.





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