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Myrl Jeffcoat myrlj@jps.net 24 mars, 2005 10:27 Lawmaker says vanity
taxes could help poor 'We could do Botox-for-babies parties' PUBLISHED: January 28, 2005 The Associated Press OLYMPIA, Wash. -- Nip, tuck and ... tax? Lawmakers trying to plump up the bottom line are considering a
''vanity tax'' on cosmetic surgery and Botox injections in Washington, Illinois and other states.
Plastic surgeons and their
patients say the idea is just plain ugly. ''It makes no sense. Where does it stop -- massages, facials,
teeth cleanings?'' asked Karen Wakefield, 51, who has had a nose job, dermabrasion, liposuction, tummy tuck
and breast lift -- plus a little Botox here and there. ''Even having a baby is elective surgery,'' added Wakefield, an
event planner in Woodinville. ''Why not tax that, too?'' The Washington state senator who
proposed the tax said she has never gone under the knife for beauty, but
wouldn't rule it out. ''I, too, look in the mirror and see my mother,'' said Seattle
Democrat Karen Keiser, 57. But she thinks cosmetic surgery patients can
afford the state's 6.5 percent sales tax. She wants to earmark the money for
poor children's health insurance. ''We could do Botox-for-babies parties. It might be the new
thing,'' Keiser said. ''Anyone who can afford the money for cosmetic
procedures, I don't think they would be deterred by a little sales tax.
You pay it on your lipstick.'' The tax would not apply to reconstructive
surgery for, say, burn victims or women who have undergone
mastectomies. In September, New Jersey became the first and so far the only
state to tax plastic surgery, at 6 percent. The tax is projected to bring in
$25 million a year. In Illinois, the state comptroller has proposed a 6 percent tax
on cosmetic surgery to create a stem cell research institute. If the
Legislature approves, the question could be put to the voters in
2006. In California, the very capital of cosmetic surgery, such
procedures are tax-free. The
cosmetic surgery tax is a cousin to the ''sin taxes'' many states slap on
drinking, smoking and gambling during tough budget
times. ''In this anti-tax climate, these user-based, selective tax
proposals are more palatable than broader ones,'' said Bert Waisaner, tax
policy analyst for the National Conference of State Legislatures. The
American Society of Plastic Surgeons frowns on this new wrinkle, calling
New Jersey's law a ''dangerous precedent.'' Seattle surgeon Dr. Phil Haeck noted that 86 percent of
cosmetic surgery patients are women. ''This is an unfair tax on women,''
said Haeck, editor of Plastic Surgery News. ''The bulk of the people who
have procedures are not financially upper-class women. They've saved hard,
and this is about restoring their self-esteem.'' Wakefield, for one, wants
people to know she paid for her own nips and tucks. ''I'm not married to some rich
guy,'' she said. ''I worked my butt off for this.'' http://www.macombdaily.com/stories/012805/sta_vanity001.shtml
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