Pet Owners Avoid a Tax on Their Pet’s Health Care in California’s Budget
State Veterinary Association and nation’s largest animal protection group say taxing pet and food animal health care would create hardship for pet owners, increased pet abandonment and public health concerns
The state Legislature passed a 17-month budget that did not include the governor’s earlier proposal to broaden the sales and use tax to include veterinary services.
Leaders of the two organizations that work on behalf of animals and those who care for them expressed their appreciation for the final outcome regarding taxation of veterinary services in the budget bill.
“Requiring pet owners to pay a tax to care for their animals is bad public policy,” said
“On behalf of our 1.3 million
Thousands of Californians called an automated phone number established by the governor’s office to allow residents to express their support or opposition for the governor’s proposal to tax veterinary services.
“The opposition of veterinarians, pet owners and concerned citizens was so intense, a special extension was added to the governor’s budget voicemail line to handle the opposition to the tax on pets,” Grant said. “We believe the overwhelming number of calls delivered an emphatic message to the governor that taxing pet owners would be hugely unpopular and inequitable.”
The budget proposal to extend the sales tax to veterinary services could have added up to 10 percent to the cost of caring for animals in
Agreeing with one of CVMA’s arguments against the proposal, the California Legislative Analyst’s Office noted the tax on veterinary services “would create inequities in the tax structure by taxing some services while leaving other similar services untaxed.”
“We know the fight to protect animal care from taxation is not over,” emphasized Grant. “Our membership remains firmly opposed to taxes that will force our clients to make untenable decisions affecting the quality of life for their pets and that might put our food supply at risk. It was wrong last week and it will be wrong next year.”
The
The Humane Society of the
SOURCE The California Veterinary Medical Association
