According to LA  Times, lawmakers in my home  state of California are hoping to bring in over $150 per year in new  revenue by levying sales taxes on purchases made online from businesses  without a physical presence in the state. The company that would be  hit hardest by this new law would be Amazon, who has had a competitive  advantage over retail stores in California for years thanks to a 1992  Supreme Court decision.
Consumers here are required to pay sales  tax on the goods they purchase at Amazon but almost never do, because  the state has no mechanism for tracking Amazon purchases and collecting  the money.
Now California is one of several cash-strapped  states exploring a novel legal strategy that could force Amazon and  others like it, including Overstock.com, to start collecting tax from  their customers. New York launched the effort with a law that took effect  in 2008. North Carolina and Rhode Island have passed similar laws; other  proposals have advanced in the statehouses of Virginia, Illinois, Colorado  and Hawaii.
The Democrats who control California's  Legislature plan to put their own bid on the governor's desk this month  in hopes of reaping up to $150 million annually for state and local  coffers. The revenue would make only a tiny dent in the state's $20-billion  deficit, but supporters say every dollar counts in tight times, and  there's a principle at stake.