Cheap cigarettes on www.cigline.net

Cigarette with delivery
A House committee delayed a decision Wednesday on a bill that would charge the state4s cigarette tax to packs sold on tribal reservations.
The vote to wait on the bill came after two hours of testimony, most of it against the measure by members of the state4s five tribes.
We4re talking about rural economies here, Nez Perce Tribal Chairman Samuel Penney said.
Penney said he found it ironic that he spent time recently at the kickoff of the nationwide Lewis and Clark Bicentennial promoting Idaho to people around the country, but he has to spend so much time in Boise defending his tribe4s sovereignty.
He was joined by Coeur d4Alene leader Ernie Stensgar, Blaine Edmo of the Shoshone-Bannock tribe and former Attorney General Larry EchoHawk in opposing the bill.
Tribal store managers and leaders from other tribes attended as well. Not only could the tax be devastating to tribal economies, they said, but it could end up cutting money for reservation services (paid for with tribal cigarette taxes) in favor of state services that may not even be offered on reservations.
Former state Rep. Don Pischner, who now represents a group of tobacco retailers, proposed and pitched the bill, which would make tobacco wholesalers pay the tax on all cigarette packs they distribute. Now, tribal sales are exempt, and though the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled the state can4t tax tobacco sales within the tribes, it is legal to make reservation stores charge the tax to non-tribal customers.
Pischner4s bill would address this by creating a complex formula for estimating how many cigarettes are actually sold to tribal members, and the stores would receive a rebate on those.
Pischner said it4s not fair to the tobacco retailers near reservations to have this competitive disadvantage, and he said cartons of cigarettes often sit unsold on store racks in northern Idaho.
Resources:
Buy cheap cigarettes