Guest MINDSETTER™ Lancia: Taxing the Dead - Can RI Sink Any Lower?

Guest MINDSETTER™ Rep. Bob Lancia

Guest MINDSETTER™ Lancia: Taxing the Dead - Can RI Sink Any Lower?

Representative Bob Lancia
There’s an old saying that nothing is sure but death and taxes. RI has taken that one step further—by taxing its citizens in death. That’s right—Governor Raimondo has snuck an article into the state budget listing $200,000. It makes the deficit appear ever-so-slightly less.

But where did she get the money? Shockingly, she purloined from funeral directors, who are now forced to collect it from the grieving families who come to them for comfort and to find a dignified, loving way to bury their deceased.

As usual, Gina has balanced figures on the on the backs of Rhode Islanders. This time, however, it’s the Rhode Islanders made vulnerable by grief that she’s targeted by taxing funeral items that were never taxed before—urns, prayer cards, et cetera.

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Raimondo couldn’t even be upfront about this action, and raise it as legislation. No, give and take on this issue for her. Instead, she slunk in and had this stipulation buried in the Budget. Now, instead of relieving some of the burden from the shoulders of those grieving the loss of a beloved spouse, sibling, parent, friend, funeral directors have to nickel and dime them by charging tax on their urns and prayer cards.

To make matters worse, funeral directors are being audited and told that they have to pay years of back taxes on these items—although it was not a stipulation until this Budget.     

As a legislator, I was appalled as I discovered this. Consequently, during this year's legislative session, I introduced H-8314 to exempt items like urns and prayer cards. Keep in mind that coffins, caskets, and burial garments are already exempt.

I was encouraged because a Senate version of the bill passed without issue. Yet true to form, House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello blocked my legislation – it was not even allowed to be brought before the House for a vote. Same old story--- an unnecessary tax burden that could easily be lifted off of Rhode Islanders but still remains because of partisan gridlock.

In a meeting with some funeral directors and officials from the RI Department of Revenue, we agreed to hold a meeting on September 25, to help educate the funeral directors and their accountants on what was expected of them.  However, a few days later we were told no meeting would take place until late November, early December.   

I was aghast—no time for a legislator, his constituents and other members of this group? Then I realized the irony and read between the lines: no time until after Election Day.     

This “business as usual” absolutely has to end! State elected officials have to realize that they are not elected to do what is best for themselves. They are elected to represent the people of their district—not themselves. And really— to lay a tax at the feet of those grieving, those who really are in no frame of mind to fight off tax vultures—can RI sink any lower?


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