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Trump dodges question on whether he would sign nationwide abortion ban

Former President Trump dodged a question Thursday on whether he would sign a national 15-week abortion ban as 2024 Republican contenders are facing increasing pressure to clarify their stance on curtailing abortion access at the federal level.

During an interview with New Hampshire-based WMUR, Trump was asked if he would sign a 15-week abortion ban that’s been proposed by Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), if he were elected president again.

“Well, we’re going to look at it. We’re looking at a lot of different options. We got it back to the States. We did the Roe v. Wade thing, which they’ve been trying to get it done for 50 years,” Trump said, referring to the Supreme Court’s decision last year to eliminate the federal right to an abortion.

Trump touted the three conservative Supreme Court justices he nominated to the high court, while adding “we’ll get something done where everyone is going to be very satisfied.”

Pressed again about action at the national level, the former president said, “I think we’ll get it done on some level. It can be on different levels, but we’re going to get it done. I know the issue very well. I think I know the issue better than most and we will get that taken care of.”

Trump’s remarks come as several anti-abortion groups criticized him earlier this month when his campaign released a statement suggesting that he supported having the issue of abortion access settled at the state level.

“Life is a matter of human rights, not states’ rights,” said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of SBA Pro-Life America.

A number of announced and expected Republican presidential challengers have been pressed on the issue as the 2024 campaign gets underway.

Former Vice President Mike Pence suggested Americans “would welcome a minimum national standard in Washington, D.C., 15 weeks,” while Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) this month signed a six-week abortion ban into law in his home state.

Former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley said in a speech this week, “I do believe there is a federal role on abortion,” but didn’t commit to what that restriction should be.

Polling in recent months has shown that a majority of Americans believe abortion should be legal in most, if not all, cases.

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A serene setting gets Deltona artist featured for April

Lynn Carlson was named Deltona Art Club’s Featured Artist for April. Her acrylic painting, “Serenity,” now hangs in the foyer of Deltona City Hall, 2345 Providence Blvd.

Lynn Carlson was named Deltona Art Club’s Featured Artist for April. Her acrylic painting, “Serenity,” now hangs in the foyer of Deltona City Hall, 2345 Providence Blvd.

The Deltona Art Club has named artist Lynn Carlson as April’s Featured Artist.

In honor, her acrylic painting, “Serenity,” now hangs in the foyer of Deltona City Hall, 2345 Providence Blvd.

With soothing blues and greens and with a fawn drinking from a stream, it is a serene image.
Ms. Carlson enjoys painting in acrylics and particularly likes to work on landscapes and portraits. She did not begin to paint until she was 51 and it is a constant learning experience, she said.

“As with many people, life, work, family often take priority over taking time to express yourself through art. Everyone has talent,” Ms. Carlson said. “Maybe painting isn’t your niche, but there are so many possible artistic outlets to explore. Everyone needs to express themselves, how they feel or what they observe. They just really need encouragement to find their own outlet. I do that with my children and grandchildren.”

She has been a member of the Deltona Art Club, off and on, as she describes it, for years.
“It is such a special group of people” she said.

The Deltona Art Club was founded in 1968 and is one of the oldest continuing clubs in the central Florida. Area artists working in any medium are welcome to join the club, which meets at 9:30 a.m. the second Wednesday of each month September through May at Deltona Regional Library, 2150 Eustace Ave. The public is welcome.

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What Canned Cocktails & Rental Cars Teach Us About Equality In Taxation – Forbes

Two industries, rental car companies and canned cocktail makers, are taking contrasting approaches … [+] to achieving tax policy parity.

The cost of automobile ownership was significant even before the pandemic, with vehicles among the most expensive lifetime purchases for many. In the past year though, the average price of a new car has risen nearly 13%. This increase in car prices has outpaced the highest annual inflation rate since 1982 and comes at a time when real wages have fallen by 2.8% over the last year, which is a bigger annual drop off than any pre-pandemic year in the past four decades. Technology & the ubiquity of smart phones, however, are permitting people to offset the considerable cost of car ownership by utilizing apps that allow them to access car-sharing networks through which they can lend their personal vehicle to those who need one, generating income in the process.

Yet politicians in numerous state capitals are now seeking to impose new taxes and regulations on those who are benefiting from car-sharing networks, proposing legislation that would adversely affect both the hosts who gain a new source of income by lending their car, as well as the guests who pay to use someone else’s vehicle when in need. A debate over car-sharing and how it should be taxed is currently playing out in the Pennsylvania capital, where state lawmakers recently held a hearing on House Bill 2099, legislation that would apply rental car excise taxes to people who borrow a car through a car-sharing network. Proponents of the bill, namely rental car companies, claim it will “level the playing field,” applying rental car excise taxes to both rental car customers and those who pay to borrow vehicles through car-sharing networks.

Lobbyists for legacy rental car companies who are pushing HB 2099 claim they’re at a tax disadvantage relative to car-sharing services, since rental car companies assess rental car excise taxes that do not apply to car-sharing transactions. Yet advocates for such proposals fail to mention the existing tax advantage that rental car companies currently have over car-sharing services.

In the 45 states that levy a sales tax, rental car company fleet purchases are usually exempt from state sales tax. That is typically not the case for people who lend their personal vehicles out through car-sharing networks. Unlike the cars purchased by rental car companies, most personal vehicles are subject to state sales tax.

In fact, many state rental car excise taxes were initially imposed to offset rental car exemptions from sales tax and carveouts from other taxes and fees. Back in 1981, for example, Illinois lawmakers instituted a 4% rental car excise tax in exchange for exempting rental car companies from occupational tax and use taxes. In 1984, Vermont lawmakers enacted a rental car excise tax in exchange for exempting rental car fleet purchases from sales tax. More recently, in 2000, West Virginia lawmakers imposed a rental car excise tax in exchange for a motor vehicle gross receipts tax exemption for rental car companies. Similar deals, with rental car excise taxes approved in exchange for other tax exemptions for rental car companies, have been implemented in other states.

“Everyday Pennsylvanians have to pay sales taxes when they buy new cars – but Pennsylvania exempts Big Rental from sales tax on cars bought for their fleets,” noted Steve Delbianco, president and CEO of NetChoice, in testimony to Pennsylvania legislators. “The cost of these avoided sales taxes in Pennsylvania alone are estimated at nearly $150 million each year. This is just one indication that the Commonwealth treats the Big Rental business model and operational scale as fundamentally distinct from a Pennsylvania citizen who rents her car or truck to others to earn extra income.”

By employing the same logic as backers of HB 2099, car-sharing hosts could urge lawmakers to pass legislation forcing rental car companies to pay sales tax on their fleet vehicle purchases. Such legislation would arguably, to borrow language from HB 2099 backers, “level the playing field,” but that’s not what car-sharing hosts are seeking. Instead, they’re simply asking to not be subject to a rental car excise tax that was never intended for personal vehicles lent out through car-sharing networks.

Aside from Pennsylvania, legislation to apply rental car excise taxes to car-sharing transactions are also pending in Michigan, Alaska, and Kentucky. In addition to imposing rental car excise taxes on those who utilize car-sharing networks, many of these bills would also regulate and restrict the manner in which people can lend out their cars on peer-to-peer networks.

“A mom who lost her husband to Covid and who’s now supporting her family should be allowed to rent his unused car for spare money without having to jump through unnecessary hoops just to compete with Big Rental,” added Delbianco. “It’s not fair to her, or to her riders—all of whom intentionally choose not to rent from Big Rental, presumably for a reason.”

While rental car companies are pushing state legislators to raise taxes in the name of “leveling the playing field,” the spirits industry is demonstrating a more free market approach to the same objective, seeking to achieve said leveling through tax relief instead of tax hikes. Canned cocktails face discriminatory taxation and legislation to rectify that fiscal policy imbalance is now pending in multiple state capitals.

Canned cocktails, also known as ready-to-drink (RTD) cocktails, are available at retailers alongside other popular beverages likes alcoholic seltzers. Yet, even though they contain roughly the same alcohol by volume as popular seltzers like White Claw, RTD cocktails are assessed a much higher excise tax due to the fact that the alcohol is derived from spirits and not fermented sugar as is the case with White Claw and Truly, which are assessed a lower excise tax rate. Seltzers made from fermented sugar have a tax advantage over canned cocktails at the federal as well as state level.

“Because White Claw is brewed like beer, it’s taxed like beer, which is important because beer is taxed in the U.S. at a much lower rate than spirits,” noted a 2019 New York Magazine article titled ‘How Tax Policy Gave Us White Claw.’ “If you made a product similar to White Claw by mixing vodka with seltzer and putting it in a can, a six-pack would be subject to almost $2 in additional taxes when sold in New York City.”

If producers of RTD cocktails took the same approach as rental car companies, they would ask lawmakers to introduce legislation raising taxes on White Claw and other seltzers made from fermented sugar. That’s not what they’re doing. Instead, the companies that make RTD cocktails are advocating for state legislation that would have the excise tax rate paid on RTD cocktails be lowered to the same rate that currently applies to alcoholic seltzers and other beverages with a similar alcohol content. House Bill 2627, for example, was introduced in the Arizona Legislature in January and is now working its way through the legislative process in the Arizona House. That bill is one of multiple pending pieces of state legislation that would reduce excise taxes on RTD cocktails.

“We get these arguments all that time that we should just keep in statute things that were done when buggy whips were around,” said Arizona Representative Jeff Weninger (R) about opposition to HB 2627. “We’ve changed. I think this market gained a 23% market share in two years, which is just unprecedented in this industry. Now, different people are trying to get in it but our antiquated laws treat liquor…These two things right next to each other are essentially the same thing but one is charged 16 cents a gallon and the other is charged $3 a gallon.”
“The higher tax rate could be serving as a barrier to entry for more offerings,” writes Cole Lauterbach, a regional editor with The Center Square covering Arizona. “According to a 2021 poll of craft distillers commissioned by the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States (DISCUS), 62% of respondents cited the higher tax rate as a barrier to producing ready-to-drink products.”

Aside from Arizona, similar legislation to reduce the state excise tax rate on RTD cocktails has been introduced this year in nine other state capitals (Alabama, Kentucky, Maryland, Nebraska, New Jersey, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, and Vermont). While rental car companies and RTD cocktail makers are seeking the same objective, equality in taxation, they’re taking very different approaches to it. Rental car companies are working to achieve state tax policy parity through legislation that imposes a tax hike, while RTD cocktail makers are pursuing a resolution that involves tax relief. As Americans contend with the highest inflation rate in four decades, any legislation that imposes new and higher costs on consumers, as rental car companies are now pushing for, is likely to face more opposition than in the past. It will be worth watching to see, by the time all state legislatures have adjourned for the year, which of these two contrasting approaches to “leveling the playing field” will have had a higher success rate.

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UW Percussion Festival Presents Featured Concert April 16 | News – University of Wyoming News

The University of Wyoming Percussion Festival will highlight percussion music from around the world in the featured concert at 5:30 p.m. Saturday, April 16, in the Buchanan Center for the Performing Arts concert hall.

Nationally recognized percussionists and educators Carl Dixon, Greg Harris and Andrew Spencer will collaborate with Assistant Professor Andy Wheelock, the UW Department of Music’s percussion area coordinator, in the featured concert. The event is free and open to the public.

The percussion music will “explore the connections and blur the lines” among Afro-Cuban, Brazilian, classical, electronic, jazz and modern percussion traditions. The concert will feature solos and ensemble performances by festival participants. To view the program and complete biographies of the guest musicians, click here.

Wheelock leads the Jazz Ensemble II; teaches percussion methods and lessons; and directs the UW Percussion Ensemble, for which he regularly composes. He is an active jazz drummer and percussionist who has performed with numerous notable musicians. Wheelock has performed with the Ben Markley Quartet, the Gonzalo Teppa Quintet, the Dimitrije Vasiljevic Quintet and the UW jazz faculty. His music is from a wide variety of genres, including jazz, classical, Afro-Cuban, hip-hop, Brazilian, funk, gospel and traditional African folk music.

Dixon is a percussion lecturer at the University of Colorado-Boulder and director of the Boulder Samba School and Bateria Alegria, a Brazilian percussion ensemble. Dixon’s arrangements of traditional rhythms found in Brazil’s samba schools and blocos have been performed by university and community ensembles nationwide. He performs in concert halls, jazz clubs, dance parties, festival stages and street parades.

Harris is a multi-instrumentalist in Denver, Colo., and a freelance musician who has performed nationally and internationally. Harris also teaches electronic music and percussion at the University of Colorado-Denver; jazz vibraphone at Metropolitan State University of Denver; jazz and percussion at Denver School of the Arts and the Colorado Conservatory for the Jazz Arts; and as piano instructor and music theory teacher at Red Rocks Community College.
Spencer, a professor of percussion at Central Michigan University, has performed as a soloist in Canada, Costa Rica, Japan, Poland and the U.S. As an active recitalist and clinician, he is timpanist for the Lansing Symphony Orchestra and principal percussionist for Midland Symphony Orchestra. Spencer also has performed in numerous chamber ensembles and orchestras throughout the U.S.

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