

2003 House Bill 5331 (Tax breaks for "start-up business") (Senate Roll Call 288)
Passed in the Senate (37 to 0) on May 13, 2004, to exempt for five years a "qualified start-up business" from any single business tax (SBT) liability in a year in which it does not make a profit. (Note: The SBT is a tax on the value added by a firm in producing a product, which means that a firm may owe SBT tax even though it makes no profit.) A "qualified start-up business" is defined as a firm that has fewer than 25 full-time equivalent employees, has annual sales of less than $1 million, has research and development expenses that make up at least 15-percent of its annual expenses, and is not publicly traded. This does not necessarily apply only to new firms, and the five year exemption is not necessarily the firm's first five years of operation. [History, Amendments & Comments]
The vote was 37 in favor, 0 opposed, and 1 not voting
(Senate Roll Call 288 at Senate Journal 47)
[Comment on this vote | View others' comments]
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The following legislators supported 2003 House Bill 5331 (Tax breaks for "start-up business"):
The following legislators opposed 2003 House Bill 5331 (Tax breaks for "start-up business"):
The following legislators did not vote on 2003 House Bill 5331 (Tax breaks for "start-up business"):
| Emerson (D) |
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