Republish
Internet purchases spark fight over sales taxes
We love that you want to share our stories with your readers. Hundreds of publications republish our work on a regular basis.
All of the articles at CalMatters are available to republish for free, under the following conditions:
-
- Give prominent credit to our journalists: Credit our authors at the top of the article and any other byline areas of your publication. In the byline, we prefer “By Author Name, CalMatters.” If you’re republishing guest commentary (example) from CalMatters, in the byline, use “By Author Name, Special for CalMatters.”
-
- Credit CalMatters at the top of the story: At the top of the story’s text, include this copy: “This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.” If you are republishing commentary, include this copy instead: “This commentary was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.” If you’re republishing in print, omit the second sentence on newsletter signups.
-
- Do not edit the article, including the headline, except to reflect relative changes in time, location and editorial style. For example, “yesterday” can be changed to “last week,” and “Alameda County” to “Alameda County, California” or “here.”
-
- If you add reporting that would help localize the article, include this copy in your story: “Additional reporting by [Your Publication]” and let us know at republish@calmatters.org.
-
- If you wish to translate the article, please contact us for approval at republish@calmatters.org.
-
- Photos and illustrations by CalMatters staff or shown as “for CalMatters” may only be republished alongside the stories in which they originally appeared. For any other uses, please contact us for approval at visuals@calmatters.org.
-
- Photos and illustrations from wire services like the Associated Press, Reuters, iStock are not free to republish.
-
- Do not sell our stories, and do not sell ads specifically against our stories. Feel free, however, to publish it on a page surrounded by ads you’ve already sold.
-
- Sharing a CalMatters story on social media? Please mention @CalMatters. We’re on X, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and BlueSky.
If you’d like to regularly republish our stories, we have some other options available. Contact us at republish@calmatters.org if you’re interested.
Have other questions or special requests? Or do you have a great story to share about the impact of one of our stories on your audience? We’d love to hear from you. Contact us at republish@calmatters.org.

Internet purchases spark fight over sales taxes
Share this:
Sales taxes, once the primary source of revenue for the state budget, now play second fiddle to income taxes.
That said, sales taxes are still very important to local governments, particularly cities, and often affect local land use decisions – favoring tax-generating retail business over housing, for instance.
However, consumer trends are changing, radically affecting how many billions of sales tax dollars are allocated, and the Legislature is just beginning to deal with it.
Brick-and-mortar stores are losing consumers to on-line marketplaces such as eBay and Amazon, forcing some retailers, such as Walmart, to embrace digital commerce themselves.
Currently, local sales taxes accrue to the jurisdictions in which the underlying transactions occur. If you buy a living room chair from a store in Sacramento, for instance, the city claims a few dollars of sales tax. But what happens if you order that chair via the Internet from Amazon and it’s delivered a few days – or maybe even a few hours – later?
Amazon does collect sales tax, thanks to a landmark deal with the state a few years ago that paved the way for the giant company to establish a string of “distribution centers” to service such orders, and the state gets most of those revenues.
However, on-line sellers typically have tax-sharing agreements with the communities where their immense warehouses are located. Those communities get the local share of taxes from shipments on the theory that they are the transaction sites, then kick back some of the revenue to the companies as a subsidy.
It’s a double benefit for those communities, which are often in semi-rural, economically depressed regions, generating both warehouse jobs and some sales tax revenue.
Predictably, however, local governments (and local transportation agencies) that are frozen out by those deals and suffer sales tax losses are unhappy.
Enter Senate Constitutional Amendment 20, carried by Sen. Steve Glazer, an Orinda Democrat, which won unanimous approval of the Senate Governance and Finance Committee last month.
If approved by the Legislature and the state’s voters, it would allocate taxes from on-line sales to the cities or counties in which the buyers live, taking them away from the warehouse communities.
It would implement a recommendation of the state auditor’s office, which studied sales tax allocation last year, and although the committee hearing was brief and polite, the conflict, pitting city against city, is real.
Officials of cities with on-line warehouses see it as a money grab by warehouse-bereft cities. And since the former tend to be low-income communities and the latter are more affluent, with high-spending residents – such as Glazer’s Orinda – there’s an element of class friction.
Without resolution, the conflict can only grow more intense, since on-line sales are growing rapidly and those in physical stores are, at best, stagnant, as shown by the declining fortunes of even such venerable retailers as Sears.
The League of California Cities, which has members on both side of the issue, is trying to hammer out a compromise. Before voting for Glazer’s measure, Sen. Robert Hertzberg, a Van Nuys Democrat who’s been working on a comprehensive state taxation overhaul said, “We need to fix the whole thing.”
Yes we do, but any change of tax policy creates winners and losers and SCA 20’s conflict underscores the heavy political lifting that comprehensive tax reform would require.
That’s why Gov. Jerry Brown has refused to take it on, even while saying it needs to be done, and is leaving it to his successor.
Dan WaltersOpinion Columnist
Dan Walters is one of most decorated and widely syndicated columnists in California history, authoring a column four times a week that offers his view and analysis of the state’s political, economic,... More by Dan Walters