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La. Industry Tax Exemption Program Oversight

Louisiana's Industry Tax Exemption Program attracts industry to locate or expand manufacturing in the state.
Courtesy: Nucor Steel Wiki-commons
Louisiana's Industry Tax Exemption Program attracts industry to locate or expand manufacturing in the state.
Louisiana's Industry Tax Exemption Program attracts industry to locate or expand manufacturing in the state.
Credit Courtesy: Nucor Steel Wiki-commons
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Courtesy: Nucor Steel Wiki-commons
Louisiana's Industry Tax Exemption Program attracts industry to locate or expand manufacturing in the state.

LA TAX EXEMPTIONS – Property Tax Exemptions are a tool that states use to attract businesses to either locate or expand manufacturing operations. This next story gives you a glimpse at how companies try to get as much property  approved  to save taxes.  Louisiana’s Board of Commerce and Industry  advises  on  the Louisiana  tax  incentive  applications.  Yesterday,  a  galvanizing company  tried to get a questionable item through Industry Tax Exemption Proposal  application,  The company's representative, Don Allison, first tried explaining to the board that they had received a prior industrial tax exemption, when they originally erected their office building in 2011.  

Sen. Robert Adley (R-Benton, LA)
Credit Coouresy: La.gov
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Coouresy: La.gov
Sen. Robert Adley (R-Benton, LA)

"The exemption did apply to the office building," Allison declared. "They doubled the size of the existing office building, therefore we think it should apply to the expansion of the building." But Senator Robert Adley,  a Republican from Benton, LA  who is Gov. John Bel Edwards' representative to the board which grants tax exemptions, had this to say: "This board has the responsibility to determine whether or not items fall inside what you deem to be 'manufacturing,'" Adley stated, "And this is not an expansion to a line. It's not hiring new people. It's just building a new office building." But company rep Allison asserted "The galvanizing operation could not operate without the office building — you know, the administrative part of the business — that supports it!"  To which Sen. Adley responded: ""The constitution clearly says 'part of the process of manufacturing' — making the product, Desks and chairs and file cabinets are clearly not part of that." As discussions wore on, Sen. Adley offered the company representative a solution-- simply removed the office space from tax exemption consideration. The company's representative Allison maintained that they had a legal which offered qualification for the exemption.  Then Sen. Adley said this: "OK, push it if you want to, but once it gets up there on his desk, he's going to say no. And when he disapproves the entire amount, let the record reflect that you had an opportunity to remove the $104,000 office space, and continue to get a million dollars in property tax exemption."

Credit Courtesy: La. Economic Development
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Courtesy: La. Economic Development

Adley was referring to the likelihood of Governor  Edwards  disapproving the entire application. So what was the outcome?  After a brief huddle,  the company  conceded and removed the office building for tax exemption… and so now you have a better idea of how  the  process works.  Public Radio WRKF contributed to this report.      

LA TAX EXEMPTIONS – Property Tax Exemptions are a tool that states use to attract businesses to either locate or expand manufacturing operations. This next story gives you a glimpse at how companies try to get as much property approved to save taxes.

Copyright 2017 Red River Radio

Chuck Smith brings more than 30 years' experience to Red River Radio having started out as a radio news reporter and moving into television journalism as a newsmagazine producer / host, talk-show moderator, programming director and managing producer and news director / anchor for commercial, public broadcasting and educational television. He has more recently worked in advertising, marketing and public relations as a writer, video producer and media consultant. In pursuit of higher learning, Chuck studied Mass Communications at Southern Arkansas University in Magnolia and motion picture / television production at the University of California at Los Angeles. He has also taught writing for television at York Technical College in Rock Hill, South Carolina and video / film production at Centenary College of Louisiana, Shreveport.