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Ortloff added that "we have no reasonable expectation of ever collecting a cent" of the taxes on transactions on Indian land to non-Indians.Even marlboro cigarettes online before the Legislature's budget bills were headed to Pataki's desk for possible vetoes, tribal officials and vendors marlboro cigarettes online were gearing up to fight the latest state attempt to tax their transactions.Seneca Nation of marlboro cigarettes online Indians President Rickey Armstrong Sr. said that ultimately, he believed "New York state's elected leaders won't make a decision that infringes on the right of Indian nations to self govern on any issues, including commerce." Back in April, leaders marlboro cigarettes online of the Seneca, Mohawk, Oneida and Cayuga nations re-established an Iroquois Tax Coalition to fight state attempts to tax tribal commerce.Indian marlboro cigarettes online merchants were no more receptive to renewed state interest in taxing their transactions than their tribal leaders are.
Neville Spring, owner of "The Rez" on the Tonawanda reserve near Buffalo, contended that "New York state is using Indians as scapegoats" to help cover New York's $12 billion revenue shortfall."I'm not going to sit here and collect taxes for New York state," said Wilie Parry, owner of Wolf's Run on the Seneca's Cattaraugus Reservation in Irving. "I think they're marlboro cigarettes online going to end up with worse problems than they did in '97."Pataki's skepticism at the prospects of collecting the Indian taxes is borne of experience. His administration tried to tax Indian tobacco and motor fuel sales in his first three years as governor, only to encounter stiff resistance marlboro cigarettes online and the threat of violence. He quietly dropped the effort in 1997.
State Assemblywoman Nancy Calhoun, an Orange County Republican, noted that the most recent attempt to collect Indian taxes in New York resulted in a "tremendous outbreak of war and marlboro cigarettes online opposition."Still, non-Indian merchants have continued to push the collection of Indian taxes as an issue of fairness. Because they are not charging state taxes on their transactions, Indian vendors can sell cigarettes at $15-$20 less per carton and gasoline at 5 cents-20 cents less per gallon than nearby non-Indian businessmen, said James Calvin of the state marlboro cigarettes online Association of Convenience Stores. |