Hawaii Becomes First State to Introduce a Climate Change Tax on Visitors

screenshot of Gov. Josh Green via KHON2 YouTube Channel

 

On Tuesday, Democrat Governor of Hawaii Josh Green signed the first climate change tax in the United States into law.

The new law is being deemed as a “green fee” and will be placed on Hawaii Island tourists in an effort, lawmakers claim, to make tourists pay their share for their carbon footprint.

Green, while signing the new law, stated, “It’s important so people see that where we have shoreline erosion near hotels, we’re able to protect these incredible assets.”

”Where we have people being displaced, we’re able to help them, where we see sea level rise coming up, we can adapt and we can actually have these resources from the hard monies and also likely bonds from these dollars to help us go forward with large projects as the legislature sees fit as the people across our state express need,” added Green.

The new law will begin in January of next year and will consist of placing a 0.75% tax on visitors staying at hotels and rentals.

Per Hawaii News Now:

Gov. Josh Green on Tuesday signed into law the country’s first-ever lodging tax to get tourists to pay their share of the impacts of climate change.

State officials and environmentalists touted the first-of-its-kind “green fee” as landmark legislation that other states can model for building disaster resiliency.

“It’s important so people see that where we have shoreline erosion near hotels, we’re able to protect these incredible assets,“ Green said.

”Where we have people being displaced, we’re able to help them, where we see sea level rise coming up, we can adapt and we can actually have these resources from the hard monies and also likely bonds from these dollars to help us go forward with large projects as the legislature sees fit as the people across our state express need.“

Starting Jan. 1, visitors staying at Hawaii hotels and short-term rentals will have to pay an added 0.75% to the existing transient accommodations tax (TAT).

The new law will also be aimed at cruise ship passengers who will pay a prorated tax for the number of days their cruise ship is in a Hawaii port.

Ad block users: Some site features may not work correctly while an ad blocker is enabled, because they break scripts and content this website depends on. If you can't see comments below, for example, please disable your ad blocker.

 

Dear Reader - The enemies of freedom are choking off the Gateway Pundit from the resources we need to bring you the truth. Since many asked for it, we now have a way for you to support The Gateway Pundit directly - and get ad-reduced access. Plus, there are goodies like a special Gateway Pundit coffee mug for supporters at a higher level. You can see all the options by clicking here - thank you for your support!
Thanks for sharing!