10 Wednesday,January 12, 2000 mm Teeter Ipnipil m*. tßb www.harristeeter.com „i,g| The Best Is Whp.t Were All About! klfel buy one CDCC getoneilXEL f. <•*• - Diel'pepsi Jjjjjl or Pepsi SS 391 tpf Wf MH§H Prices Effective Through January 18, 2000 Prices In This Ad Effective Wednesday, January 12, Through January IS, 2000 In Our Chapel HilJ & Carrboro stores only. We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. None Sold Tb Dealers. We Gladly Accept Federal Food Stamps. News UNC Makes Deal With IRS Susan Ehringhaus, UNC's general counsel, says the University will probably pay its IRS bill by the year's end. By Katy Neiso\ Staff Writer UNC has reached a $905,115 settle ment with the Internal Revenue Service after a more than three-year audit. The settlement, signed last month, is considerably less than the $20.5 million bill the IRS originally issued to UNC in July. Tax collectors spent almost two years pouring over thousands of payroll stubs, foreign visas, income receipts and other billing records in the inquiry as part of a nationwide crackdown on universities and other tax-exempt organizations. After the University received the $20.5 million bill this summer, the case N.C. Faces New Consumer Tax Taxpayers will be required to pay the state's 6 percent sales tax on items bought online or through catalogs. By Courtney Weill Senior Writer The appeal of J. Crew catalogs and the Gap online site might fade when N.C. residents receive their income tax forms this year. The tax forms contain anew line this year to report “Consumer Use Tax,” which requires residents to compute how much they spent on online, catalog, television shopping network and out-of state purchases and pay the state's 6 per cent sales tax on the items. Though information on Consumer Use Tax has been included in tax book lets since 1990, the state is putting anew emphasis on the tax to combat revenue loss to e-commerce, said W. Timothy Holmes, assistant director of the Sales and Use Tax Division of the N.C. Department of Revenue. “We’re putting it on the form in hopes l _)\/ i j I almost spent all my money on \ MEW Text Boolu, instead of \\ \Jv>~—y savin? a bundle on USED Text Books at R m Book & Supply UNC's Off-campus Used Text Book Headquarters -X-.X. < Harder to find ... rv a j-?-. * but worth it! f f Gumby’s Wicked 2 E. Franklin St. villCT R m iiooJ: lit _iij ouJ / Jj7 Behind Wicked Burrito ( mBBKKSUtf'' / >ib jjjf 306 W. Franklin J Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27516 W Phone (919) 969-8398 V Fax (919) 969-8996 was sent to an IRS appeals officer'in Baltimore. Susan Ehringhaus, UNC’s general counsel and chief negotiator with feder al auditors, said she was very pleased with the settlement. “I feel very good about it,” Ehringhaus said. “1 think we made our case effectively.” The final bill includes $45,577 in Social Security and federal income taxes in 1994 and $859,538 in 1997 that should have been withheld from the paychecks of nonresident aliens and for eign nationals studying or working at UNC. The University has agreed to make changes in tax-withholding procedures for both U.S. and non-resident alien stu dent-employees starting this month, Ehringhaus said. The IRS did not assert any penalties against the University. Under the settlement, they also waived any additional interest charges of collecting some of the tax we’ve been missing,” Holmes said. “With (he increased use of computers and people buying on the Internet, it means more and more revenue that will be lost.” He estimates that the state loses sllO to $l4O million in state and local taxes each year. With the costs of rebuilding the state after the floods of Hurricane Floyd, Holmes said this money was more important than ever. “You can imagine the tremendous amount of difference that money could have for local gov ernments,” Holmes said. Though many agree the state needs more money, some question whether the Consumer Use Tax is viable. “I think we need to study the issue before we throw' a line on there,” said Don Carrington, vice president of the John Locke Foundation. He argued that it was reasonable to share the burden of law enforcement to protect a retail store and the highway systems needed to access it by paying a sales tax. “But when you get (an item) from the Internet what local service was provided for you that you need to be sharing (funds) with local government?” sljp Satltj (Tar iirrl against UNC. Ehringhaus said that the University had until Dec. 31, 2005 to foot the bill. But she said UNC would likely pay off the bill during the 2000 fiscal year through non-state funds, such as University trust money and investment income. Twenty-one universities have been saddled with bills averaging $3 million after the IRS began its tough review of nonprofit organizations several years ago. Other universities and colleges across the country have also fared well in the appeals process. The University of Michigan won a court case reducing its $7.7 million bill to $124,360. The University of Wisconsin, pegged with a $l2O million bill, had its slate wiped clean. The University Editor can be reached at udesk@unc.edu. Carrington asked. But Holmes said the tax was neces sary to eliminate the unfair advantage people have for purchasing “tax-free” items outside the state. He claims the tax will equalize the burden between retail ers and consumers. But Carrington also questioned the practicality of the Consumer Use lax. “You can’t audit this unless you get intrusive,” he said. “Why would you want to put a tax on (the form) that's. easy to avoid or ignore?” But Holmes insists that there are sim pie ways, such as examining credit card statements, to audit or track online, cat alog and out-of-state purchases. Harvey Sapir, manager of the Jackson Hewitt lax Service branch in Carrboro, has been asking his customers' if they had any Consumer Use Tax to report for more than five years. Sapir said only one customer had reported such spending. Sapir said the new tax would not make a difference in revenues. “I don’t think many people will comply to it.” The State & National Editor can be reached at stntdesk@unc.edu.