Illinois consumers may have to ‘swipe twice’ when paying with credit
card
Send a link to a friend
[June 05, 2024]
By Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – If Gov. J.B. Pritzker signs the budget and revenue
package legislators approved, consumers paying by card may have to swipe
to pay for their goods and swipe again to pay the sales tax for those
goods.
Part of the deal with the Illinois Retail Merchants Association in
exchange for a cap on the credit retailers get for collecting and
remitting sales taxes is a change to the so-called interchange fee,
limiting the fees financial institutions can charge on the sales tax of
transactions.
During a Senate committee before the measure passed last month, Ashly
Sharp with the Illinois Credit Union League said the change is flawed
and impossible to implement.
“What this could mean for consumers is two swipes for a single
transaction, one of the purchase of the goods or services subject to
interchange and one for the tax or gratuity not subject to interchange,”
Smith said.
Smith said enactment will require a “massive overhaul” of payment
processing in order to comply. She also said the penalties for
noncompliance are steep and could be ripe for miscalculations and
potential fraud.
“Why would card networks continue to process transactions in which
they’re prohibited from charging fees,” Smith asked. “Card processing
has evolved into a quick and painless process but in no situation is it
ever completely free.”
Pritzker’s Budget Director Alexis Sturm said they’ll work through
concerns.
[to top of second column]
|
“That is a request from the retail merchants and so we will be working
through the legislation that passed,” Sturm said last week.
IRMA said they are “pleased the Governor’s office and legislators agreed
to limit the fees financial institutions can charge on the sales tax
portion of transactions.”
“This important change will give retailers across Illinois some
much-needed breathing room and we thank the Governor and legislators for
their constructive engagement on this issue,” IRMA said in a statement.
Pritzker said the change was the best outcome for the state’s retailers,
who will also be capped in the discount they get for collecting and
remitting sales taxes.
“In order to make sure that we were right-sizing what retailers get in a
payment from the state in a world where most of it is pushing a button
on a computer to get a result,” Pritzker said.
Pritkzer said there is nothing “hyper unusual” about it.
Retailers have argued it takes much more than “a button on a computer to
get a result.” IRMA President Rob Karr told a recent House committee it
takes manpower, infrastructure and other costs for businesses to
calculate, collect and remit sales taxes to state and local governments.
Retailers also have to work to stay above any potential audits from the
Illinois Department of Revenue.
The revenue package has yet to be sent to the governor for his approval.
|