Verizon avoided a decade’s worth of taxes—a new law could make it pay up
Verizon has avoided paying local taxes on telecommunication equipment in many New Jersey municipalities over the past decade, but a proposed state law would force the company to pay back taxes for all the payments it didn't make. The bill, filed on May 23 by NJ State Assemblyman John Burzichelli (D–Paulsboro), "would force Verizon to pay local taxes on telephone poles, lines, land, and other equipment that the telecom giant has refused to fork over in an increasing number of NJ municipalities, starving them of tens of millions of dollars a year in tax revenue." As of 2015, Verizon had reportedly stopped paying the tax in more than 150 of the 565 municipalities in NJ. The tax Verizon has avoided ranges from $15,000 to more than $1 million a year for each municipality, taking revenue away from local budgets or forcing residents and other businesses to cover the shortfalls. Despite not paying tax in many cities and towns, local officials point out that Verizon "continues to benefit from the use of municipalities' poles, utility lines, and switching facilities even when it no longer pays taxes," a 2015 Inquirer article said.
Verizon avoided a decade’s worth of taxes—a new law could make it pay up