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National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee

War Resisters League

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A NATIONAL CAMPAIGN OF ANTI-WAR PHONE TAX RESISTANCE

The Federal Telephone Excise Tax Timeline

1898—Temporary tax on telephone toll (long distance) services adopted to help fund the Spanish-American War.

1902— Tax repealed.

1914—Long distance "luxury" telephone tax is imposed at a rate of 1 cent per call to help pay for some of the costs of World War I.

1916— Tax is repealed.

1917—Tax is reinstated at a rate of 5 cents per call once the United States enters the war.

1919—Tax is expanded to cover additional telephone services.

1924—Telephone excise tax is repealed.

1932—Tax is reinstated at per-call rates ranging from 10 cents to 20 cents, depending on the call's cost, but set to expire in 1934.

1933-1940—Tax is regularly extended.

1941—Tax applied to local service for the first time (6%).

1942—Tax rate is changed to a flat 20 percent rate.

1943— Tax rate is increased to 25 percent.

1954—Tax rate is reduced to 10 percent.

1959—Tax rate is slated to expire in 1960.

1960 to 1964—Expiration schedule is delayed annually.

1965—As part of the excise tax reform project, the 10 percent communications excise tax is scheduled to be phased out over three years.

1966—Phase-out delayed for one year. Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee Wilbur Mills states, "It is clear that Vietnam and only the Vietnam operation makes this bill necessary."
—Doris Sargent writes letter to Peacemaker (April 2) suggesting resisting the phone tax.*
—Chicago WTR Karl Meyer writes the brochure "Hang Up on War;" WRL launches first telephone tax resistance campaign.

1968—Phase-out restructured to conclude in 1973.
—Telephone tax resistance case of Martha Tranquilli leads to ruling that phone service may not be disconnected for nonpayment of federal tax.

1969—Phase-out delayed for one year.

1970—Schedule replaced by a 10-year plan beginning in 1973.

1971—Lillian and George Willoughby's VW bug auctioned by IRS for $123 in telephone tax. (PA)

1972—Telephone war tax resisters number up to 500,000.
—David Janzen's car auctioned for $31.32 unpaid phone tax. (KS)

1973—Phase-out begins.
— IRS attempts to seize a house in Colorado Springs for $7 in unpaid phone tax, but backs off.
—IRS auctions Jim Glock's bicycle for $22 telephone tax. (TX)

1981—Excise tax down to 1 percent but elimination is deferred. 1 percent is extended through 1984.

1982—Tax rate is increased to 3 percent with elimination in 1985.

1984— 3 percent rate is extended through 1987.

1987—3 percent rate is extended through 1990.

1990— 3 percent excise tax made permanent.

2000—Congress votes to repeal the tax, but full tax bill vetoed by President Clinton.

2003—Online Hang Up On War campaign begins.

2005—IRS announces it will continue to collect telephone excise tax on all services in violation of U.S. Court of Appeals (11thCir) ruling against certain applications of the tax.

2006—Long distance telephone tax ends on July 31, 2006, after the government loses five appellate decisions on cases brought by big corporations.
—Legislation introduced in Congress to repeal the federal excise tax on all telephone service.

Sources: Congressional Research Service report by Louis Alan Talley, (1/4/2001), and War Tax Resistance, published by the War Resisters League.

*To the Editor:

A peace group in Yellow Springs has suggested that I send you a proposal I have already sent to WSP and NCCEWVN. This idea has probably occurred to many of us.

People opposed to the war in Vietnam have tried protest marches, vigils, demonstrations, lobbying, visits to congressmen, various other forms of nonviolent protest. Many have fasted and, as we sadly know, a few have made torches of themselves. Some have tried civil disobedience. Many pacifists favor nonpayment of income taxes. While dramatic, this has not always had the impact it should. What we want is to end the fighting in Vietnam. I belive that we have in our hands a tool to really, at last, make an effective impact and actually make a point.

Fighting uses men; fighting men need money to support them and provide armaments. In a grandiose gesture the president reduced the excise tax on cars and telehpone bills. Now he proposed to return these two taxes. They are admittedly earmarked for the Vietnam fight. If all of us in the United States who want this fighting ended ask the telephone company to remove our telehpones, clearly stating our reason, this could really be effective. Of course this involves very real sacrifice but, if we are in earnest, we should be willing to make such a sacrifice. But we'd all have to do it; a lone person here and there will do no good at all.

Since talking over this proposition with a small group gathered to talk about tax refusal, I am adding the two suggestions they made: (1) Pay the telephone bill but refuse to pay the tax; (2) reduce long distance calls. The first might be acceptable, but I cannot see how the second would be unless both the telephone company and the government knew about it.

Of course we should not buy new cars either. As an additional thought, many congressmen are "screaming" now about costs for Vietnam and the lack of money for the anti-poverty program. Perhaps we should play up this economic issue, for the time being, rather than the moral one.

Doris E. Sargent
Yellow Springs, OH
Peacemaker, April 2, 1966