Bontoc ups drive to get boarding houses’ taxes
>> Tuesday, July 22, 2014
By
Desiree Sokoken
BONTOC, Mountain Province -- The Municipal
Treasury Office conducted tax mapping in different barangays here. to collect
business taxes of boarding houses.
Municipal Treasurer
Manuel Imatong, said the tax mapping aims to update records on business of boarding houses/tenements to
determine existing operators and ascertain if they have secured the required
mayor’s permit to operate.
“There is a need to
update the list because some of the people who were originally in the business
have already stopped their operations. There are also newcomers who have yet to
secure the necessary permit to operate and are thus operating illegally,”
Imatong said.
Reacting to reports of
complaints by operators, Imatong said the Treasury Office is merely carrying out its
job as mandated by law.
“It is mandatory for the operator of any
business to secure a mayor’s permit to operate. Hence, the lack of permit
constitutes sufficient ground for closure and stoppage of the business
operations,” he said.
Section 147 of the
Local Government Code of 1991 requires the operator of any business or calling
to secure a Mayor’s Permit to operate, while the 2012 Revised Revenue Code of
Bontoc requires the imposition of Mayor’s Permit fees and the collection of
business taxes.
“There might be a
mistaken impression among our operators that the imposed business taxes are
exorbitant, but that is actually not the case,” Imatong said.
“In accordance with
the Revised Revenue Code of Bontoc, the collection of business taxes will
depend on the annual gross income of existing operators and on the capital
investment of new operators,” he explained.
For boarding house
operators who have less than P10,000 gross receipt for the preceding calendar
year, P52.50 will be imposed as annual business tax. If the gross income is
P10,000 or more but less than P20,000, the imposed tax is P157; if P20,000 or
more but less than P30,000 gross income, then P315 business tax; if P30,000 or
more but less than P50,000 gross income, then P525 imposed business tax.
“We are imploring all
boarding house operators to heed our notices to legalize their operations. They
must secure the required Mayor’s Permit to operate and they must pay the
corresponding fees and taxes,” Imatong said.
With the intensified
tax mapping of the MTO, significant increase in the collection of Mayor’s
Permit fees and business taxes from operators of boarding houses has been
noted. In contrast to the P7,002.00 collected last year in Mayor’s Permit fees,
P13,584.50 has been collected to date for this year. In business taxes,
P64,603.50 has been collected to date this year as compared to P18,279.00 in 2013
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