NPR News, Classical and Music of the Delta
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
We've collected a stories about the 2015 Louisiana Legislative Session. What new bill is coming up for a vote? How are lawmakers doing in protecting higher education and health care from cuts? What other initiatives are in the works for Louisiana? Find them here.

Taxing Private Universities

Tulane University Campus in New Orleans
Wikimedia Commons
Tulane University Campus in New Orleans

For over a year now, the Sales Tax Streamlining and Modernization commission has been attempting to simplify the way Louisiana collects sales taxes. 

Tulane University Campus in New Orleans
Credit Wikimedia Commons
Tulane University Campus in New Orleans

On Tuesday, the commission focused on the state’s ten private nonprofit universities. Typically, they’ve been exempt from paying sales tax. But that changed in the special sessions, when many exemptions were temporarily suspended.  Chairwoman Julie Stokes says that’s not how most states operate.

“Forty-three states treat higher education institutions equally as it pertains to state sales and use tax,” she explained.

Tommy Screen is with the Government and Legal Affairs department at Loyola University in New Orleans, where six of the state's ten private nonprofit universities are located.  He says the changes are costing them money they used to be able to save.

“Annually, it’s anywhere between $400,000 and $500,000 to our campus,” he says.

Out of the fifty states, Louisiana has the most complicated method of collecting sales tax. And it was made even more complicated during the special legislative sessions. In an effort to raise more money, the Legislature added one additional penny with no exemptions, and removed some exemptions from half of the existing 4-cent state sales tax.

“We have tended in the past to push complication of what is and isn’t taxable down to the vendors,” says Stokes. The goal of the commission is to change that.

The commission approved a recommendation that would allow the private universities to get a refund on their sales tax.

“It might complicate it for state government and the ten universities, but it will simplify it for every small businesses you represent that sells to those universities,” Stokes told the members.

But there’s no guarantee the Legislature will approve the refunds, which could leave private nonprofit universities being treated more harshly under the Louisiana tax code than their public higher education counterparts.

Copyright 2016 WRKF

Wallis Watkins is a Baton Rouge native. She received her Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and Philosophy from Louisiana State University in 2013. Soon after, she joined WRKF as an intern and is now reporting on health and health policy for Louisiana's Prescription.
Related Content