Larino writes: "According to the Public Interest Research Group, at least $13.2 billion in the settlement is not defined as a penalty, meaning BP could potentially get tax breaks on that chunk of money. This includes payments to restore natural resources the spill damaged."
In this June 4, 2010 file photo, a worker picks up blobs of oil with absorbent snare on Queen Bess Island at the mouth of Barataria Bay near the Gulf of Mexico in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. (photo: Gerald Herbert/AP)
BP Could Get Billions in Tax Breaks on Oil Spill Settlement
10 July 15
ast Thursday (July 2), states attorneys general in Louisiana and four other Gulf Coast states celebrated an $18.7 billion settlement with BP over claims from the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill. A report from the U.S. Public Interest Research Group says the true value of the deal could be far lower after BP files its taxes.
Federal tax law prevents companies from deducting penalties paid for breaking the law from their corporate taxes. But damage payments -- such as money paid for coastal restoration -- can be treated as a business expense.
According to the Public Interest Research Group, at least $13.2 billion in the settlement is not defined as a penalty, meaning BP could potentially get tax breaks on that chunk of money. This includes payments to restore natural resources the spill damaged.
The settlement announced last week could wind up costing BP only around $14 billion after taxes assuming all those costs are written-off at the top 35 percent corporate tax rate.
Phineas Baxandall, the consumer group's senior analyst for tax and budget policy, said a federal judge ruled that BP broke the law. The company must pay for its misdeeds, not shift the burden to taxpayers, he said.
"This is not just an accounting question," Baxandall said. "There is a zero-sum game here between the American taxpayer and BP on this issue."
The Public Interest Research Group has asked the Justice Department to include specific language in the settlement that prohibits BP from claiming tax breaks on payments. It also wants the full details of the settlement to be made public. The court has ordered most of the settlement details confidential for now.
The only portion of the settlement that appears excluded from tax breaks is the $5.5 billion environmental penalty BP has agreed to pay for violating the Clean Water Act.
Justice Department spokesman Wyn Hornbuckle declined to comment on Public Interest Research Group's findings. He confirmed the Clean Water Act penalties cannot be deducted.
BP did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Ed Sherman, a Tulane University law professor and a complex litigation expert who has followed the BP case closely, said the company likely negotiated for a lower Clean Water Act fine and higher natural resource damage payments with the tax advantage in mind.
Sherman said all sides benefit in ending what could have been years of litigation. But the tax breaks and the opportunity to make payments over 15 years -- even longer for some payments -- are distinct advantages for BP, he said.
"It was a fair settlement on both sides, but I think BP probably came out a little better," Sherman said.
Baxandall said the way the Clean Water Act penalty would be distributed to states under the settlement could lead to more write-offs.
Under the terms of the agreement, 80 percent of the $5.5 billion penalty would be distributed to five Gulf Coast states under the RESTORE Act. Signed into law in 2012, the act establishes a fund for the penalty money and a framework to divvy up funds for restoration projects in Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi, Texas and coastal counties in Florida.
The funds are technically penalty money. But Baxandall said the way the money is used could be considered restitution, which would be a tax-deductible expense. He is worried BP could use that argument to press for more tax breaks.
This is not the first time settlement tax breaks have been called into question. The federal government's $1.1 billion settlement with Exxon after the Exxon Valdez oil tanker spill in Alaska was reported to have an after-tax cost of only $524 million.
A bill now in the U.S. Senate attempts to tackle the issue, requiring federal agencies to state whether out-of-court settlements are tax deductible. Companies would also be required to disclose whether they claimed settlement deductions in Securities and Exchange Commission filings.
In the meantime, the Public Interest Research Group is calling on the Justice Department to be more transparent about the settlement details.
Baxandall notes agencies such as the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau promptly post settlements online for public scrutiny. The Environmental Protection Agency started in 2013 to include language in its settlements specifically banning parties from claiming tax breaks on cleanup funds.
The BP oil spill settlement announced last week is set to undergo a public comment period before being approved. Hornbuckle said the public comment period would begin after a final settlement is filed with the court, which is expected by early 2016.
"If there is enough outrage about this and people voice their discontent during that period, then I would hope the Justice Department would insert the few words it would take to save taxpayers billions of dollars," Baxandall said.
If tax breaks are being used as a bargaining chip to finalize settlements, it needs to stop, he said.
"Everybody wins except for the public," Baxandall said.
THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community. |
Comments
We are concerned about a recent drift towards vitriol in the RSN Reader comments section. There is a fine line between moderation and censorship. No one likes a harsh or confrontational forum atmosphere. At the same time everyone wants to be able to express themselves freely. We'll start by encouraging good judgment. If that doesn't work we'll have to ramp up the moderation.
General guidelines: Avoid personal attacks on other forum members; Avoid remarks that are ethnically derogatory; Do not advocate violence, or any illegal activity.
Remember that making the world better begins with responsible action.
- The RSN Team
Barbara K, I hope your unions in Michigan are keeping the political campaign teams together for the 2013-14 races, like we are here in Ohio. SUCCESS TO YOU ALL!!!. We're already in preparation to boot out Crazy Kasich! KEEP ON PUSHING until they are out!
Michigan would do well to now put together a group to decide what percentage of profit should be paid in various categories as J. Paul Getty did in his plants years ago which resulted in the last strike ever had in his plants. If his profit went up or the costs reduced, a percentage of that went to his employees but it makes no sense to get a raise which causes the cost of living to go up for everyone.
The cost of a new vehicle went up not only because of the economy but also the increase in union demands which were then passed on to the consumer.
Why do business leaders in Michigan despise the people who make them rich? Why do you see them beating down their loyal, motivated and skilled workers whenever they get a chance. Something is broken in the American business leadership. They are morally bereft.
It is bewildering. Our forebears bequeathed us wealth and government institutions to maintain it, but the current business practices are designed to burn it up in order to produce a little extra heat for a few.
Perhaps we are just too wealthy and too numerous. Perhaps the rot at the top is just a disease caused by the enormous distance that the size and complexity of our enterprises puts between us and the ambitious ones who pull the levers of power.
This modern complex mass of social interactions cannot continue if the rot at the top persists. Yet how can you blame the lunatic when his dementia raises him above his fellows and gives him great wealth?
Wow! Rick Snyder. What a wretched and awful creature. What a slimy trick? But he's just fulfilling a fate that the structure of our modern world has opened up for him. (No more letters left, bye)
We have the vote and although WI seems to have been captured by the Koch for reasons that seem illogical in that they have enough $$ to retire. But the RATS gave these creeps enough rope to try to be King of USA. Why? $$$$ - I hope Scalia/Thomas go during the next 4 years. They are bought and make no move to hide this fact.
When John Paul Stevens retired at age 95 (or so) I cried because he was the last of the very very honest and true justices we've ever had on the U.S. Supreme Court. Ginsberg and others are good too but Stevens was (is) my hero
How shameful it all is and designed by big money to hurt workers.
Michigan is just the latest example of union-busting by the usual suspects - Republicans, the party that fanatically works for and protects the wealthy - and it probably won't be the last assault either unless The American People realize that if the freedom to protect ourselves from exploitation, selfishness and greed is taken from us, we'll devolve into a nation of surfs ruled by Plutocrats. It's already bad enough now. So, America, wake up - or get really screwed.
If this is a serious issue the people know what to do. Why worry about a school system or garbage collection. Let it fall under its won wait. If we do not create garbage there is no need for collection-recy cle everything or bury it. Otherwise, remain a victim.