Re: Think your taxes are too high!
Part 3
(CBS) Mistele is the CEO of Inrix, a software company that monitors traffic around the world and provides data for GPS systems and sites like MapQuest. He says businesses would leave the state, especially high-tech companies like his that deal in data and aren't tied down by factories or assembly lines. He would consider moving some of his 60 employees to other states where he has offices.
Asked what other states he'd consider moving his business to, Mistele said, "Massachusetts, Florida, California."
"Massachusetts, income tax. Go ahead. California income tax," Stahl pointed out.
"Texas, Florida, Michigan, Colorado," he added.
"Okay, four out of the six have income taxes. I mean I've heard a lot of businessmen say what you're saying. And I keep wondering, 'Well, where are they going to move if they leave?'" Stahl remarked.
"Well, each state has its own competitive advantages. So by adding this additional burden, it makes us much less attractive," Mistele replied.
Adam Stites is another entrepreneur who opposes the initiative. Five years ago he moved his company, iStores, from Portland, Ore. across the Columbia River, to Vancouver, Wash., just nine miles away.
"It broke down to taxes," Stites explained. "Oregon has the highest income tax in the United States, and Washington has the lowest at zero percent."
iStores is the largest online retailer of paint ball equipment.
Stites has been hiring new staff for a new company he acquired that sells prank novelties. Under the new tax, he would have to pay $50,000 a year and that, he says, would hamper his ability to expand any further.
"This money, if it passes, will go specifically to education, 'cause they've been cutting schools and things like that. So what is Washington State supposed to do about its schools in terms of revenue?" Stahl asked Stites.
"I think the state, in aggregate, needs to take a look at its expenses," he replied.
"Like?" Stahl asked.
"I've had opportunity in Portland to see cars being washed by third party - washing firms, cleaning cars on the weekends, for state vehicles. I don't have someone who cleans my car in a van, and waxes...," Stites said.
When Stahl pointed out that's in Portland, Stites said, "It's in Portland, but I think it's indicative of government spending."
But the state budget has already been cut by $5 billion, and the governor, Christine Gregoire, says they're at the bone.
"To cut people off hospice I think is immoral. To cut children off health care, to cut their education so they don't have a chance at a decent future I think that would result in an immoral budget," Gov. Gregoire told Stahl.
She says she doesn't understand why so many of the state's high-tech CEOs, who are always complaining about the woeful state of American education, are so opposed to paying this tax for schools.
"These businesses that want the educated workforce, they're against this. What do they say to you when you challenge them on this?" Stahl asked the governor.
"I tell them I have the utmost respect for them. These are great CEOs. And I say to them, 'Here is the problem. You always want us to invest more in education. And now you say no. So, my question to you, if not this, then what? Don't just tell me no,'" she replied.
Asked what they say to her, Gregoire told Stahl, "They don't have an answer, Lesley."