By Rachel La Corte
The Associated Press
OLYMPIA — The state Legislature approved a multimillion-dollar revenue package that increases taxes on bottled water, soda, candy and mass-produced beer, as lawmakers moved Monday night to wrap up a nearly monthlong special session called to deal with a $2.8 billion budget deficit.
On a 25-21 vote, the Senate passed the measure that makes up about $668 million of the Democrats’ plan to raise nearly $800 million in revenue.
[Sen. Jim Hargrove, the Hoquiam Democrat whose 24th District includes the North Olympic Peninsula, voted for the package.]
The House passed the bill Saturday, and it now goes to Gov. Chris Gregoire.
Senate Majority Leader Lisa Brown, D-Spokane, said taxes are needed to pay for “the critical public structures that unite us together as communities.”
“I’ll never call it irresponsible to fund education and higher education,” she said.
“This is a balanced budget. To do it without any revenues would be beyond our values.”
After struggling for months to agree on a revenue package to help balance the state budget hole through 2011, Democratic leaders came to an agreement over the weekend.
Separate bills would raise the rest of the nearly $800 million lawmakers need to balance the budget, including higher cigarette taxes that would bring in about $101 million through June 2011.
All of the Senate Republicans voted against the tax package.
Six Democrats voted no: Sens. Steve Hobbs of Lake Stevens, Claudia Kauffman of Kent, Derek Kilmer of Gig Harbor, Chris Marr of Spokane, Tim Sheldon of Potlatch and Rodney Tom of Medina.
“You don’t raise taxes in a time of a recession,” Sheldon said.
“I think it’s not going to help us replace the jobs that we’ve lost. I don’t think it’s going to help us create new jobs that we desperately need in the state.
The biggest chunk of the bill passed Monday night is a temporary tax increase for service businesses — like attorneys and real estate agents — that would bring in about $242 million.
Taxes on bottled water, soda, candy and gum and mass-produced beer would add nearly $156 million.
The higher beer tax of 50 cents per gallon — a 28 cent-increase on a six-pack — would bring in $59 million.
Microbrews would be exempt.
Republicans argued that Democrats didn’t focus enough on cuts and government reform.
“Unless we do something different than simply raising taxes and spending in the same manner we’ve been doing, we’re going to be back here again doing this next year,” said Sen. Joe Zarelli, R-Ridgefield.
“When does the madness stop?”
The tax on soda bottlers would add 2 cents to every 12-ounce container, with bottlers having less than $10 million in volume exempt. That raises nearly $34 million.
The plan also makes some revisions to the tax code, removing or modifying some tax exemptions, including reversing a court ruling that extended tax breaks to out-of-state direct sales companies, which alone will bring the state $155 million.
Candy and gum also would be subject to the state’s 6.5 percent sales tax, with a temporary tax credit tied to jobs for candy manufacturers with employees in the state. That would raise nearly $31 million.
The higher pop, beer and service taxes would expire in mid-2013.
Bottlers already have started a campaign against the proposed soda tax, and have said that if it is approved and becomes law, they are willing to consider a referendum campaign to put the issue before voters in November.