Senate BillNo. 582


Introduced by Senator Knight

February 22, 2013


An act to add Section 39 to the Revenue and Taxation Code, relating to taxation.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SB 582, as introduced, Knight. Tax information: administration.

Existing law imposes various taxes that are administered by the Franchise Tax Board, the State Board of Equalization, and the Employment Development Department.

This bill would require the Franchise Tax Board, the State Board of Equalization, and the Employment Development Department to collaborate and focus the agencies’ current and future information technology efforts on developing a single Internet Web site portal that virtually consolidates the agencies to enable online, self-service access to the agencies, as provided. This bill would also require these agencies, wherever operationally feasible, to consolidate forms, applications, and other documents to reduce or eliminate the number of multiple submissions of the same information by taxpayers.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P1    1

SECTION 1.  

The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:

3(a) California relies on three separate state agencies to administer
4and enforce its major taxes.

P2    1(b) To obtain assistance and comply with California’s tax laws,
2policies, and procedures, many taxpayers must interact with all
3three agencies, and frequently with multiple departments within
4those agencies.

5(c) While this system has performed reasonably well in many
6respects, the multiagency nature of the system is prone to certain
7inherent problems, difficulties, and inefficiencies, and is
8particularly complex for taxpayers required to comply with
9 California’s tax laws.

10(d) Over the past decades, numerous reports have been prepared
11and various legislative proposals have been considered on the topic
12of coordination and cooperation among these three agencies. The
13focus of these efforts range from relatively minor aspects of
14increased cooperation to proposals for full consolidation of the
15agencies under “one roof.”

16(e) Focusing on the customer should be a core element of
17California’s tax administration. Taxpayers should not have to
18understand complex government structures and relationships in
19order to interact with the government, particularly in a sensitive
20area like taxes.

21(f) The California Tax Service Center, available at
22www.taxes.ca.gov, provides an assortment of independent
23departmental forms, returns, and links, tied together by a common
24homepage on the Internet, and is intended to provide California
25taxpayers with resources and educational programs with a goal as
26a one-stop tax assistance hub.

27(g) The California Tax Service Center can be used to better
28serve California’s taxpaying community by virtually consolidating
29the three agencies’ operations to enable them to appear as one
30unified organization with the goal of providing a seamless
31experience for taxpayers in their online interactions with the
32agencies.

33(h) It is therefore in California’s best interest to develop an
34Internet Web-based, taxpayer-focused system that virtually
35consolidates the State Board of Equalization, the Franchise Tax
36Board, and the Employment Development Department. In
37developing a taxpayer-focused system, the fundamental objective
38should be a platform that provides an integrated experience for
39taxpayers, to enable online self-service access with a single logon
40for all three agencies, and to provide pertinent and essential
P3    1information that will enable taxpayers to satisfy their payment and
2reporting obligations, obtain real time information pertinent to
3their individual accounts, and provide assistance that will enable
4taxpayers to achieve optimum compliance with California’s
5complex tax system.

6

SEC. 2.  

Section 39 is added to the Revenue and Taxation Code,
7to read:

8

39.  

The board, the Franchise Tax Board, and the Employment
9Development Department shall collaborate and focus their current
10and future information technology efforts on developing a single
11Internet Web-based portal that virtually consolidates the agencies
12to enable online, self-service access through a single logon for
13taxpayers to electronically file returns, submit forms or other
14information, remit amounts due, determine account balances and
15due dates of taxes, identify the status of any appeal, claim for
16refund, request for relief of interest or penalty, and any other
17information the agencies deem helpful to the taxpayer to assist in
18compliance with the state’s tax laws. As part of this effort,
19wherever operationally feasible, these agencies shall also
20consolidate forms, applications, and other documents to reduce or
21eliminate the number of multiple submissions of the same
22information by taxpayers.



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