Difference between revisions of "Hamburger tax"

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The '''hamburger tax''' was a plan instigated by the [[City of Little Rock Board of Directors]] in early  in order to fund the [[Clinton Presidential Center]].   The design for the tax is a 1.5% increase in taxes on prepared foods in Arkansas at local businesses and establishments such as restaurants (including drive-in restaurants), grocery stores, convenient stores, gas stations, cafes, cafeterias, small burger establishments, motels, and other related businesses.  The ordinance is set to be annulled in six years time.  The foreseen expectancy for the funds raised from the tax was $550,000 a year.
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The '''Hamburger tax''' was a plan instigated by the [[City of Little Rock Board of Directors]] in December 1997 to fund the purchase of 26 acres of land for the [[Clinton Presidential Center]]. The plan, with an estimated windfall of $15 million, called for a one-cent increase in taxes on prepared foods and hotel stays in Little Rock.  
 
 
Residents were welcome and invited to the meeting to profess their opinion on the matter.  Regardless of these opinions, the regulation was won with an 8-2 vote, with only one council member present, Alderman Steve Lee, who voted no.  The other vote in opposition was by Alderman Leroy Allen, who stated that he would have voted against the ordinance had he been present for the council meeting.  Allen felt that the ordinance was unjust because it was decided by the council and not the people.  He felt that it should be the people who decide on whether they pay a tax or not; but the council had the final say on the matter.
 
  
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Protests by on-air radio personalities and local citizens persuaded the directors to abandon the hamburger tax, settling instead on the issuance of [[park revenue bonds]] to pay for the site.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*
 
  
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*Leonard Kniffel, "Little Rock Nixes Burger Tax to Fund Clinton Library," ''American Libraries,'' 29.2 (February 1998): 17-18.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*
 

Revision as of 13:48, 9 February 2008

The Hamburger tax was a plan instigated by the City of Little Rock Board of Directors in December 1997 to fund the purchase of 26 acres of land for the Clinton Presidential Center. The plan, with an estimated windfall of $15 million, called for a one-cent increase in taxes on prepared foods and hotel stays in Little Rock.

Protests by on-air radio personalities and local citizens persuaded the directors to abandon the hamburger tax, settling instead on the issuance of park revenue bonds to pay for the site.

References

  • Leonard Kniffel, "Little Rock Nixes Burger Tax to Fund Clinton Library," American Libraries, 29.2 (February 1998): 17-18.

External links