Leaf
Main Menu
Home
BLOG
The News
Streaming News
Native View TV
YouTube Videos
Tribal Sites VT
Tribal News VT
VCNAA Commission
VCNAA Members
Lake Champlain
Heritage
Arts / Crafts
Environment
VT GOV Sites
Contact Us
Links
Search
Translate the Entire Web Site


Abenaki Language
Online Dictionary of The Western Abenaki Language and Radio.
Alliance for Abenaki Basketmakers
The Story and Membership Application Form
'Moccasin Tracks' Community Radio
Radio Free Vermont!
Youth in Transition
Anywhere In Vermont 211 can Help
 Vermont 211 , United Ways of Vermont
If you are in a Crisis
    A 24-hour, toll-free suicide prevention service
Green Mountain Care
Administrator

Design
Lavinya
Leaf Home arrow The News arrow North East News arrow Mr. Seneca's smokes:
Mr. Seneca's smokes:
Written by Administrator   
Wednesday, 12 May 2010
Mr. Seneca's smokes: Where tobacco, taxes and treaties converge
Reservation-based cigarette businesses thrive while cash-strapped New York keeps trying to collect taxes
By Diana Louise Carter
May 11, 2010


J. Conrad Seneca started selling cigarettes in the late 1980s out of a little trailer alongside Route 20 as it runs through the Cattaraugus Seneca Indian Reservation.

Today, he employs 120 people, most of them non-Indians who live near the reservation about 25 miles southwest of Buffalo.

On the land where Seneca's trailer was once parked, he now has his Native Pride Travel Plaza, including a smoke shop and convenience store, full-service gasoline station and restaurant. Out back are his U.S. Customs-bonded warehouse for cigarette imports, Six Nations Manufacturing cigarette factory, licensed stamping operation for his sales in Florida, and a trucking company that delivers cigarettes and motor fuel.

Like many Native American entrepreneurs, Seneca, 50, took advantage of a situation in which New York doesn't collect taxes on the sovereign territories of the Indian nations within its borders. That's a big advantage now that state taxes are $2.75 a pack.

In recent months, though, the state has been working to end that advantage and find new revenue, echoing the efforts of three former governors. A comment period ended late last month on proposed regulations that would limit the numbers of cigarettes that wholesalers could deliver to reservations without state taxes, but the regulations haven't been issued or enforced yet.

And history suggests it's questionable whether these latest ones will be, either. "For over 25 years, we've had various administrations and various legislatures promulgate regulations. It's made a lot of lawyers rich and the state hasn't collected a nickel," said Syracuse attorney Joseph Heath, who represents the Onondaga Nation.

Non-Indian convenience stores, health-related organizations, state legislators and even major cigarette companies all support the latest effort to collect taxes on Indian cigarette sales to non-Indians. Their arguments include the need to create a "level playing field," provide financial incentives that discourage smoking and generate much-needed tax revenue.

The Seneca Nation of Indians is leading the campaign against the effort, citing federal treaties that arguably prohibit the collection of state taxes on Indian lands.

"We have our treaties with the United States that guarantee us certain rights. It doesn't matter whether a treaty was made in 1842 or 1794, or New York state is $8 billion in the hole," said Seneca, who is a member of the Seneca Nation's council and the son of a former Seneca Nation president. "It doesn't say in the treaty 'until New York state needs money from you.' "

The Seneca Nation alone is already paying the state more than $500 million a year from its gambling operations, Seneca noted. "For them to say we have to pay our fair share -- it's insulting and ridiculous."
Huge incentive

By at least one estimate, half the cigarettes consumed in New York are purchased from Native Americans who don't collect and pay state taxes.

Seneca, who is a spokesman for the Seneca Nation on this issue, specializes in discount brands that sell for as low as $21.50 a carton. He also carries premium name brands for about $50 a carton. The same cigarettes would cost 50 percent more off reservations.

That price difference is a huge incentive for smokers, said James Calvin, president of the New York Association of Convenience Stores. Every time the state has raised its tax on cigarettes, non-Native American convenience stores felt an "immediate and dramatic" effect, with sales of their cigarettes tumbling 25 percent to 40 percent, he said.

"If the tax rate has increased five-fold, I think it's reasonable to assume that the tax evasion has increased five-fold," Calvin said.

Estimates of how much potential revenue the state is missing vary wildly. The state's estimates range from $90 million to $220 million a year, the latter figure supplied by the Department of Taxation and Finance.

Julianne Hart, New York advocacy director for the American Heart Association, uses a figure of $600 million a year. And Calvin, asserting that the economist his organization hired is the most accurate, puts the figure at $1 billion a year. Calvin said the state is using old formulas, tabulated when taxes were a fraction of today's.

"The tax department is long on trying to discredit our economists' estimate, but they're short on backing it up with their own math," he said.

Calvin said the 7,500 non-Indian convenience stores in the state have experienced devastating effects from the tax inequity. However, he couldn't provide any statistics to support that claim, including fluctuation in numbers of stores or membership in his trade association. But he did say that nationally, convenience stores make 35 percent to 40 percent of their non-gasoline profits from cigarettes, while New York stores make only 10 percent to 15 percent.
Getting more to quit

The American Heart Association, Lung Association and American Cancer Society have issued a joint statement urging taxation of Native American cigarette sales, saying some smokers would quit if they had to pay the full tax.

"Raising prices discourages ... consumption, it discourages youth from even getting started," Hart said. For every 10 percent price increase, overall consumption goes down 4 percent, she said, translating to about 100,000 fewer smokers in New York.

Calvin, meanwhile, challenged any suggestion that more than 3 percent of smokers would quit if they had to pay the full tax. (Everyone has to pay federal taxes, a much smaller portion of the tax on cigarettes.)

Seneca likens the business he and many other Native American vendors do in cigarettes to "stimulus" money. At the Seneca territories, some 1,000 mostly non-Indian people are employed in the cigarette businesses, and they spend most of their income off-reservation.

While four state administrations haven't yet collected taxes from Native American cigarette dealers, they have affected their business, whittling away at delivery methods, stamping agents and use of credit cards for Internet sales. Some sellers went out of business, but Seneca diversified. Half of his sales are now in Florida, where regulations are friendlier, and he makes 1,000 to 2,000 cases of cigarettes a month at Cattaraugus.

Lately, he has been putting together mixed martial arts bouts (one was Saturday at the Seneca Niagara Casino in Niagara Falls), an interest that grew out of his own search for better health after developing diabetes. Cigarettes, though, are the majority of his considerable income, which he won't divulge.

"I wanted to put my destiny in my own control," Seneca said of his diversification. "To do what I needed to do to protect (my business) so I could sustain any encroachment from an outside interest, such as New York state."

http://www.theithacajournal.com/article/20100511/NEWS01/5110367
 
< Prev   Next >
Make this a favorite RSS
Super Bookmark It !
Share this Page
 
Search this Site
Who's Online
We have 13 guests online
 How do I get my company on this website
Transformative Counseling Services, LLC
Basketmakers Alliance
The Story and Membership Application Form
Juice Plus+®
Western Abenaki Baskets
Western Abenaki Baskets .com
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES
 MEDICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH TRANSCRIPTION SERVICES
LAUGHING COUPLE
Native American Storytelling
           
Morningstar Studio
Micnaki Trading Post
Rhonda Besaw.com
Traditional and contemporary beadwork
VT Speciality Foods
 VT Speciality Foods
The Bad Black Dog
The Bad Black Dog Online Store
Website Managed by "The Doctor"   Beautiful template designed by Lavinya  Template Valid w3c XHTML 1.0