Virginia Beach delegate warns proposed legislative tax package will hurt affordability
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On Feb. 4 Delegate from Virginia Beach used a point of personal privilege to criticize a package of proposed taxes, listing new consumption and service taxes and claiming a potential top income tax rate of 13.8% for some earners and small businesses.
During morning floor remarks on Feb. 4, the delegate representing Virginia Beach rose for a point of personal privilege to criticize a slate of pending tax proposals described as undermining campaign promises on affordability.
The delegate listed a range of proposed levies — including delivery taxes on on-demand services, taxes on gym memberships and counseling, storage facility taxes affecting military families, new event and ticket taxes, proposed taxes on certain services (dog walking, grooming), increased hotel taxes, and an "investment income" tax — and warned the package would disproportionately impact seniors, lower-income Virginians and small businesses. On the floor the delegate said: "We are now on the cusp of having the highest income tax rate in the nation, a staggering 13.8% for some earners and small businesses." The remarks framed the bills as a reversal of affordability promises made to voters.
No formal vote followed that floor statement; the speech was entered into the record as a floor objection and a policy critique. Members on both sides of the aisle later continued with the calendar and many bills proceeded through regular votes and committee substitutions.
Context and follow-up
The delegate tied the critique to a broader political argument about affordability and called on colleagues to reconsider the package. Because the floor statement included several specific numeric claims and policy details, reporters and stakeholders should check each claim against bill texts and fiscal analyses before treating the assertions as fact.
