SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2020 Baker City, Oregon 4A Write a letter news@bakercityherald.com OUR VIEW Fix the PPP tax debacle More than 63,000 Oregon businesses received Paycheck Protection Program loans this year. The PPP is a loan designed to provide a direct incentive for small businesses to keep their workers on the payroll during the COVID-19 pandemic. The loans went beyond saving payrolls, however. In many cases, these loans saved entire businesses from clo- sure and bankruptcy. As we enter some diffi cult winter months with CO- VID-19 still raging and disrupting normal business, many PPP loan recipients are beginning to realize that the expenses paid from the proceeds of these loans are viewed as nondeductible by the IRS. That is, that money that most fi rms thought came without strings attached, are still responsible for taxes on that money as income. If Congress fails to act quickly, many PPP loan recipients stand to have as much as 45% of their PPP loan proceeds taken back when 2020 federal and state income taxes are fi led this spring. For example, a fi rm that received $2 million in PPP may be responsible for paying $400,000 in taxes. That is a double-whammy to most businesses. It is not logical, nor does it seem to have been congressional intent, to have such a large portion of the PPP funds reclaimed by taxes in the same tax year. One section of the CARES Act (The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act) specifi cally excluded forgiven loan amounts from the taxpayer’s gross income for federal tax purposes. However, the CARES Act failed to address the deductibility of expenses paid by a taxpayer with the proceeds of a PPP loan, effectively nullifying any tax exemption. Lacking any specifi c legislation to speak to the deductibility of expenses, on April 30, 2020 the IRS issued Notice 2020-32, providing that expenses paid with proceeds from a PPP loan are not deductible for federal income tax purposes. On May 1, Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, expressed disappointment with the IRS’s ruling and suggested it was contrary to legislative intent. Despite the clear communication from members of Congress regarding the intent of the CARES Act, six months later we are still waiting for legislation to override the IRS’s April 30, 2020 ruling. Letters to the editor Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the Baker City Herald. Columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the Baker City Herald. • We welcome letters on any issue of public interest. Customer complaints about specifi c businesses will not be printed. No Facebook? No problem By Cathy O’Neil What would happen if Facebook disappeared tomorrow? Would people suddenly be unable to communicate online? Would the economy screech to a halt? Would anyone be deprived of a good, service or piece of information that was somehow crucial to their existence? Of course not. Which is why one of the company’s main arguments against a breakup — that it’s too big and complex to dismember — makes no sense. Some companies play such an impor- tant role in the economy or in people’s lives that their failure or disintegration could be disastrous. This allows them to drive a hard bargain with the govern- ment if they get into trouble: Help us, or else. During the 2008 fi nancial crisis, for example, the government had little choice but to rescue the largest U.S. banks, lest their demise bring down the country’s whole system of credit and payments. In this sense, they were “too big to fail” — and they have grown even bigger since. It’s easy to see why people might place Facebook in a similar category. It’s big, among the largest companies in the world by market capitalization — thanks in large part to the pace at which it has vacuumed up the competition, with the blessing of U.S. authorities. With more than 200 million users in the U.S. alone, it defi nitely plays a role in a lot of people’s lives —so much so that it has aggravated the country’s divisions by enticing people to delve ever deeper into conspiracy theories about vaccines, COVID-19 and much else. So what would happen if, as a result of the antitrust suits fi led by the Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general, a court ordered Facebook to split up, reversing its acquisitions of WhatsApp and Instagram? The com- pany’s lawyers argue that the various businesses have become so inextricably interwoven that a breakup would be extremely diffi cult, generating costs and chaos that would harm users worldwide. In other words, don’t mess with us, or else. Really? No doubt, the breakup would be diffi cult for Facebook’s managers, who rely on data sharing among Whats App, Instagram, and Facebook to create the most complete possible profi les of users and then sell their attention to the highest bidder. If the companies were separated, all the investment they’d been making into surveillance and targeting wouldn’t immediately work out as well as they had hoped. For them, the product is the advertising, not the service to users. For users, though, there would hardly be a difference. Most try to ignore the advertising anyway — or occasionally get creeped out when they see an ad for a product they’d been re- searching elsewhere. They’re primarily there for the content from celebrities and their friends, or to communicate through group chats and messag- ing systems. The apps are already separate icons on their computers and phones. Even in the highly unlikely event that all three apps somehow failed, it’s hard to imagine consumers suffering much. They have plenty of other ways to reach each other, such as Twitter, Zoom and email. Given the role Face- book has played in polarizing society, there might even be some upside. • The writer must sign the letter and include an address and phone number (for verifi cation only). Letters that do not include this information cannot be published. • Letters will be edited for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Mail: To the Editor, Baker City Herald, P.O. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814 Email: news@bakercityherald.com Cathy O’Neil is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. She is a mathematician who has worked as a professor, hedge-fund analyst and data scientist. She founded ORCAA, an algorithmic auditing company, and is the author of “Weapons of Math Destruction. Grinch’s message more powerful than ever I watched the Grinch carve a slice off the roast beast and slide the plate over to Cindy Lou Who, and my throat suddenly felt slightly constricted, and my eyes warm with moisture. I’ve seen this Dr. Seuss TV clas- sic, which fi rst aired in 1966, prob- ably 50 times since I was a child, born just four years after its debut. It remains for me, as it no doubt does for millions of other Ameri- cans of my generation, a tradition without which the Christmas season would feel slightly hollow, lacking its full complement of mirth and joy. But I don’t recall that the con- clusion of “How the Grinch Stole Christmas!” ever affected me quite so profoundly as it did on a recent Sunday evening. I didn’t even see the whole show. I happened upon the Grinch while mindlessly meandering through the on-screen channel guide. By the time I tuned in, the titular green character had made considerable progress in robbing the Whos down in Whoville of their every Christmas gift and decora- tion, save for hooks and some wire on the walls. The true climax of the program, JAYSON JACOBY of course, is the Grinch’s epiphany as he listens, from the summit of Mount Crumpet, to the Whos happily singing together to greet Christmas morning. Although I can appreciate the point of this scene — the Whos are so fi lled with the spirit of the season that they celebrate despite being victims, one and all, of a particularly malicious serial bur- glar — even as a child I don’t recall being quite credulous enough to completely buy it. Maybe I was an unusually cyni- cal child, but it always struck me that this wasn’t an altogether nor- mal reaction — that no town, even an isolated mountain village like Whoville, could be occupied solely by people of such equanimity. Perhaps the group of less pacifi c Whos, the Whos who would have been screaming for vengeance and rounding up a well-armed posse to go after the thief, were sleeping it off after chugging a couple too many eggnogs on Christmas Eve. Anyway, that scene, however inspiring, didn’t extract any par- ticular emotion as I watched its fa- miliar sequence the other evening. (Although I chuckled, as usual, when the circle of Who singers, to permit the Grinch’s overloaded sleigh to enter the town circle, formed a sort of human gate that swung back and then closed again. A small thing, sure, but it’s the sort of whimsical detail that makes Dr. Seuss’ work so magical.) What got me, somewhere in the region where my heart dwells, were the fi nal poetic rhymes, de- livered in narrator Boris Karloff’s inimitable timbre, his voice as warm and soothing as a woolen cloak donned on a chilly morning. “Welcome, Christmas, bring your cheer, Cheer to all Whos, far and near. Christmas Day is in our grasp So long as we have hands to clasp. Christmas Day will always be Just as long as we have we. Welcome, Christmas, while we stand Heart to heart and hand in hand.” Such simple themes they are, rendered in rudimentary verse and mostly one-syllable words. And yet in this context simplic- ity, as it so often does, infuses those brief lines with a power that no combination of complicated meter and mellifl uous adjectives could ever approach. The poem seems almost child- like, something a third-grader might create while bent over a diminutive desk, clutching a No. 2 pencil and reproducing the recently learned letters with par- ticular care. But the message carries an infi nite wisdom, a truth immeasur- able. “Just as long as we have we.” This, I think, is the key line. Never in my lifetime have there been more reasons, should a per- son be inclined to pessimism and despair, to resist the tug of holiday nostalgia. I suspect many people much older than I am feel the same. It is all too easy to succumb to sadness, to lament all that we have lost in 2020. I certainly have done so at times. I have whined to myself, in especially melancholy moments, about vacations canceled and family celebrations foregone and an overall sense that so much that was familiar is strange, and that perhaps we won’t ever quite make it back to where we were before. And yet, as I watched a cartoon, I realized, with no small amount of shame, how trifl ing my disappoint- ments are, how self-indulgent. So many people have lost vastly more than I have over these dis- mal months. My family is healthy. I have four children, two of them adults who have made their own happy homes, and all four are thriving. My two grandsons, one nearing his fourth birthday, the other almost halfway through his second year, live just a few blocks away. Their wonder at the world is not tainted by the recent troubles, their joy at the recent fall of snow the purest sort of reaction. Christmas, as the Grinch so famously discovered, will come. We need only welcome the sea- son, to embrace its magic with our hands and, most important, with our hearts. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.