The Washington Times

Topic - Department Of Revenue

Subscribe to this topic via RSS or ATOM
Related Stories
  • ** FILE ** Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon

    Missouri to stop copying concealed-gun documents

    Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon says his administration will stop making electronic copies of people's concealed-gun permits.

  • Former NC State coach Lowe arrested on tax charges

    Former North Carolina State basketball coach Sidney Lowe was arrested Monday and charged with failing to file his North Carolina state income taxes for three years.

  • AP Exclusive: Ill. hospital tax break costs $10M

    A little-noticed tax break for investor-owned hospitals that was tucked into a deal last spring aimed at saving the Illinois Medicaid program from collapse will cost the cash-strapped state at least $10 million a year in lost revenue, according to an analysis by The Associated Press.

  • Experts: SC hacking largest vs. state tax agency

    Millions of Social Security numbers and business records from tax returns as far back as 1998 were hacked in South Carolina and experts said Wednesday it may be the largest cyber-attack against a state tax department in the nation's history.

  • S.C. hacking the largest against a state tax agency

    About 3.6 million tax returns from as far back as 1998 were hacked in South Carolina, and analysts said Wednesday it may be the largest cyberattack against a state tax department in the nation's history.

  • Hodgepodge of older driving rules across nation

    A 50-state look at the varying rules across the nation governing drivers' licenses for older adults. ___

  • Three young girls walk past the Med Stop marijuana dispensary that is located across from Del Pueblo Elementary School, back right, in Denver on Thursday, Jan. 12, 2012. Federal officials on Thursday began a California-style crackdown on medical marijuana dispensaries in Colorado that targets those located near schools, setting up a possible showdown with businesses that worked closely with state lawmakers to develop regulations they hoped would prevent such an action. U.S. Attorney John Walsh said 23 dispensaries within 1,000 feet of schools have until Feb. 27 to shut down or face federal penalties, which can include asset seizure or forfeiture of property. The warning letters dated Thursday were being sent to dispensary owners and their landlords.(AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)

    Extensive Colo. pot rules don't prevent crackdown

    Colorado's booming medical marijuana industry is regulated like no other. Public officials boast of tracking, measuring and taxing pot from seed to sale, calling Colorado a model of how to bring order to a medical marijuana business often compared to the Wild West.

  • Property tax confusion pokes Facebook in Oregon

    The promise of lucrative tax breaks helped persuade Facebook to build a data center in one of Oregon's most economically depressed counties. Now, the state and the company are in a dispute over how much Facebook may owe in property taxes, and the social networking giant fears it could be taxed on intangible assets like the value of its powerful brand.

  • SGT. SHAFT: Can I be taxed on my disability pay?

    Dear Sgt. Shaft: I know that my over 50 percent disability pay is not federally taxed, but I heard that some states and cities can tax my disability pay when residing in their state? Is this true of any of the 50 states?

  • Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz has been called "a junkyard dog who is mean, nasty, shrill." (Associated Press)

    Inside the Beltway

    A sign of the times as Friday looms. An inventive Inside the Beltway reader - and federal employee - has developed a 99-cent smartphone application to offer his fellow federal employees "operating status" information about a potential government shutdown, should Republicans and Democrats continue to wrangle over the budget.

  • Greg Stewart, a member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, displays a sample of the latest Civil War sesquicentennial tag that is being sold (left), adjacent to the current tag. A fight is brewing over a proposal for a license plate honoring an early leader of the Ku Klux Klan. (Associated Press)

    Confederate car tag proposal revs up a row

    A fight is brewing in Mississippi over a proposal to issue specialty license plates honoring Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, who was an early leader of the Ku Klux Klan.

More Stories →

Happening Now