Politics & Government
Rep. Malik: Chafee 'Took a Slap at Small Business Owners' in Speech
Barrington and Warren state representative said State of State Address ignored cut in sales tax, which could give RI small businesses a competitive advantage.

Rep. Jan Malik thinks Gov. Chafee ātook a slap at small business ownersā in his State of the State address Wednesday night, Jan. 15.
Malik, who represents Barrington and Warren in the RI House of Representatives, said that Chafeeās proposal to lower the corporate tax and not the state sales tax will continue to leave small businesses at a competitive disadvantage withĀ neighboring states.Ā
āWeāre at 7 percent,ā said Malik, who is chairing theĀ Special Joint Legislative Commission to Study the Sales Tax Repeal Act of 2013.Ā āMassachusetts is at 6.25 percent; Connecticut is at 6.35 percent. Small business owners in Rhode Island are at a competitive disadvantage.ā
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The commission has beenĀ studying the state sales tax since last August after Malik filed a bill to make Rhode Island a tax-free shopping state. The legislature opted for a study commission instead.
Malik said he expects the sales tax committee to make a recommendation to lower the tax by 3 or 4 percent by the end of next week.Ā Ā The resulting advantage given to small business owners, he said, also āwill create more jobs, and not just for retailers.ā
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Malik, who owns a Warren liquor store, uses his own business as an example. He saw his revenue jump by 8 percent in December after the state removed the sales tax on liquor and wine on Dec. 1.Ā
āI saw customers I havenāt seen in years,ā he said. āItās a competitive thing.āĀ
Indeed, Malik said, he also is disappointed in Chafee for giving a speech that didnāt address job creation even though the state has an unemployment rate of more than 9 percent.
āIām disappointed that he didnāt look at job creation,ā Malik said. āHe gave a fine presentation. But heĀ didnāt address the number one issue: unemployment. You would think that everything is fine according to his speech.ā
Malik said the sales tax commissionās recommendation, of course, will go to the House and Senate finance committees through the Speaker and the Senate president. He anticipates that it will be given much more attention there than it will get in the Governorās office.
āWeāve looked at the income tax,ā he said. āWeāve looked at casino revenue. Whatās next has to be the sales tax. It can give us a competitive advantage over our neighboring states, which will create more jobs."
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