Fairfax County

Fairfax County considers meals tax

Restaurant workers concerned about possible impact on industry

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Restaurant workers demonstrated outside the Fairfax County, Virginia, government center Tuesday in opposition to a meals tax being considered by the Board of Supervisors to increase county revenue.

A meals tax would be assessed on all prepared foods โ€“ including drinks sold along with them โ€“ from restaurants, cafeterias, coffee shops, food carts and ready-to-eat grocery items.

At 1%, a meals tax would generate $33 million. The top rate allowed โ€“ 6% โ€“ would mean $198 million.

Kyle Schoenberger said he opposes any sort of meals tax because he believes it could hurt the restaurant he works for and, in turn, his livelihood.

โ€œWeโ€™ve also heard feedback from people in terms of how much theyโ€™d still go out if the tax is raised, and that would affect our income as well,โ€ he said.

Timmy Norton of the restaurant group Great American Restaurants said heโ€™s concerned about the impact on lower income residents who spend a bigger percentage of their budget on prepared foods.

โ€œI donโ€™t think this is a necessary tax, because, again, itโ€™s a single-industry tax that is solely going to impact lower-middle class folks and working class folks the most,โ€ he said.

In a budget committee session Tuesday, the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors wanted to get a fuller picture of how adding several other types of taxes might work to slightly shift the heavy reliance on property taxes.

โ€œAll we signaled was to get the information today,โ€ Chairman Jeff McKay said.

Supervisors say a meals tax could ease the burden on property owners.

โ€œThe opportunity here is to identify what options we might have other than the residential tax rate as a way to provide for some of the critical services,โ€ Franconia District Supervisor Rodney Lusk said.

Many Northern Virginia jurisdictions โ€“ including Arlington, Alexandria and Prince William County โ€“ already have food taxes, ranging from 3% to 5%.

If the Board does decide to move ahead with the tax, the staff recommends doing it as part of next yearโ€™s budget process, meaning a possible vote in spring 2025. If it wins approval, the earliest it could be collected would be January 2026.

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