PAGE 4 | October 21, 2016 | NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS Today, Oregon has the lowest effective business tax rates in the nation. ...The Game Changer From Page 1 as far as state lawmakers were willing to go, but it wasn’t enough to solve the longterm revenue problem. Before Meas- ure 67, many big corporations paid just $10 a year in taxes. But even after, some companies with over $100 million in sales (including 78 of them in 2013) paid just $100,000 or less in state taxes. Now Measure 97 is on the ballot. Measure 97 is the first time Oregon voters have been given the option to raise taxes on the biggest corporations on a scale that could turn around the schools 20-year decline. How it works is pretty sim- ple: C-corporations doing busi- ness in Oregon would pay a minimum corporate income tax equal to 2.5 percent of all in- state sales over $25 million. That simple change would raise an estimated $3 billion a year — increasing state revenue by nearly a third. That’s roughly equal to the revenue lost by Measures 5, 47, and 50. And the tax would hit some taxpayers that have had it pretty easy. Only the top one quarter of the top 1 percent of companies doing business in Oregon will pay this tax — about 400 com- panies in all. In inflation-ad- justed dollars, Oregon’s corpo- rate income tax is generating about as much as it did in the Oregon General Election 1970s, even though personal in- come tax revenues have tripled since then. Oregon today has the lowest effective corporate tax rate in the nation. But many of the biggest cor- porations doing business in Ore- gon would like to keep their taxes low. As of Oct. 18, when this went to printer, corporations had reported over $17.9 million in contributions to the No on 97 campaign. That kind of corporate money pays for a lot of ads, but by and large it’s paying to spread disin- formation, doubt and fear about the measure. The Labor Press takes those arguments apart on the next page. Read that, and you’ll see why union members and working people have every reason to vote for the measure, and to be proud of union effort that went into it. WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? AGAINST MEASURE 97: Who’s opposed to big corporations paying higher taxes? Big corporations, for starters. See the whole rogue’s list of contributors at defeatmeasure97.com FOR MEASURE 97: Over 400 businesses have come out in support of union-sponsored Measure 97, as well as hundreds of elected officials, economists, farmers, community and faith leaders, and unions and non- profit groups. See the whole list at voteyeson97.org/coalition Ballots can be returned by mail or at any official drop site in Oregon. All ballots must be received by 8 p.m., Nov. 8. POSTMARKS DO NOT COUNT