Philadelphia Forward Brings Tax Reform Film To Neighborhood Philadelphia
PHILADELPHIA, PA — Philadelphia Forward celebrated “Tax Day” by traveling to Philadelphia neighborhoods to screen the film Community Voices Speak Out: Real People For Real Tax Reform. The film, which was produced to focus attention on the need to eliminate the job-killing Business Privilege Tax to grow jobs in Philadelphia, shows employers of small and growing firms from neighborhoods across Philadelphia condemning the onerous and unfair levy and calling on city leaders to enact the recommendation of the Tax Reform Commission to eliminate the tax by passing bill 040767 (currently pending before City Council). The film was viewed on the two ten-foot diagonal screens of the HavaVisionTM Mobile Truck at six different locations. The film can be viewed here. “We made this film to show the “face” of tax reform and on Tax Day we brought the film to the owners of small and growing businesses in neighborhoods across Philadelphia," said Philadelphia Forward Executive Director Brett Mandel. "When some hear about tax reform, they think of corporate welfare or breaks for the rich, but eliminating the job-killing Business Privilege Tax is pure and simple neighborhood economic development. If we can free Philadelphia’s small and growing firms from this awful tax, we can grow jobs in neighborhoods across Philadelphia.”
Screenings, where business owners and citizens viewed the film, included:
- 9:00 am — Northeast Philadelphia (Frankford Avenue between Haworth and Dyre Streets)
- 10:30 am — North Philadelphia (Front Street North of Girard Avenue)
- Noon — South Philadelphia (Front Street between Dickenson and Tasker Streets Under I-95)
- 2:00 pm — Germantown/Northwest Philadelphia (Cresheim Valley Drive at Germantown Avenue)
- 4:00 pm — West Philadelphia (Market Street between 45th/46th Streets)
- 7:00 pm — 30th Street Post Office
Dozens of Philadelphians are seen in the film including: Tom Forkin (Humdinger Inc./American Street Erie Avenue Business Association), Rick Oliveri (Rick’s Steaks/Reading Terminal Market Merchant Association), Sister Aisamah Muhammad (Lancaster Avenue Business Association), Jessie Frisby (Jessie's Ladies Shoppe/South Street West Business Association), Tony Brown (Greater Philadelphia Association of REALTORS, and Vincent DeFino (DeFino Law Associates/South Philadelphia Business Association).
The seven-minute film is an accessible way to illustrate some very serious issues:
- High and unfair taxes have contributed to the loss of about 250,000 jobs in Philadelphia since 1970.
- If you start a business in Philadelphia, the City considers it a "privilege" that should be taxed, not economic development that should be encouraged.
- Unlike other cities, Philadelphia imposes a “Business Privilege Tax” — a .19% tax on business receipts even if a business makes no profit, as well as a 6.5% tax on business income if it does.
- The City’s Tax Reform Commission drafted a blueprint for changing city taxes that will retain and attract 47,000 jobs by 2010 and 125,000 jobs by 2017.
- Small and growing neighborhood businesses — that do not get special tax-free zones or tax incentives to mitigate against the burden of the city’s high business taxes — are most hard-hit by the city’s job-killing taxes.
- The City’s Tax Reform Commission concluded that high and unfair taxes stand as a fundamental barrier to job growth in Philadelphia — the Commission recommended phasing out the Business Privilege Tax to grow jobs in the city.
- The recommendations of the Tax Reform Commission were endorsed by the Mayor’s own 21st Century Review Forum transition team that declared: "The mayor's very important quality of life strategies will not have the desired impacts or be sustainable in the long run in the absence of fundamental tax reform."
“After watching the film, Philadelphians — and especially our city’s elected leaders — must conclude that we have to phase out the job-killing Business Privilege Tax to grow jobs in Philadelphia,” Mandel said. “After hearing that we must eliminate the job-killing Business Privilege Tax from the Tax Reform Commission, the Mayor’s 21st Century Forum Transition Team, the Mayor’s Economic Summit — and now from owners of small and growing businesses across Philadelphia — opposition to the recommendation is nothing short of a willful act to continue the city’s ongoing job loss.”