Has anyone heard anything about this, or is it another fake rumor running
around the net?

Doug Orr
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
---------------------------------------------------
From: Vasilios <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Vasilios (Work) Kalaitzidis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: E-Mail Tax
Date: Saturday, May 22, 1999 11:45 PM

E-Mail Tax
Please read the following carefully if you intend to stay online and
continue using email:

The last few months have revealed an alarming trend in the Government of
the United States attempting to quietly push through legislation that
will affect your use of the Internet.  Under proposed legislation the
U.S. Postal Service will be attempting to bilk email users out of
"alternate postage fees". Bill 602P will permit the Federal Govt. to
charge a 5 cent surcharge on every email delivered, by billing Internet
Service Providers at source.  The consumer would then be
billed in turn by the ISP. Washington D.C. lawyer Richard Stepp is
working without pay to prevent this legislation from becoming law.

The U.S. Postal Service is claiming that lost revenue due to the
proliferation of email is costing nearly $230,000,000 in revenue per
year.  You may have noticed their recent ad campaign "There is nothing like a
letter".  Since the average citizen received about 10 pieces of email
per day in 1998, the cost to the typical individual would be an additional
50 cents per day, or over $180 dollars per year, above and beyond their
regular Internet costs.  Note that this would be money paid directly to
the U.S. Postal Service for a service they do not even provide.  The whole point
of the Internet is democracy and non-interference.  If the federal
government is permitted to tamper with our liberties by adding a surcharge to
email, who knows where it will end.  You are already paying an exorbitant price
for snail mail because of bureaucratic efficiency. It currently takes up
to 6 days for a letter to be delivered from New York to Buffalo.
If the U.S. Postal Service is allowed to tinker with email, it will mark
the end of the "free" Internet in the United States.   One congressman,
Tony Schnell (r) has even suggested a "twenty to forty dollar per month
surcharge on all Internet service" above and beyond the government's
proposed email charges.

Note that most of the major newspapers have ignored the story,
the only exception being the Washingtonian which called the idea of
email surcharge "a useful concept who's time has come" (March 6th 1999
Editorial.
Don't sit by and watch your freedoms erode away!

Send this e-mail to EVERYONE on your list, and tell all your friends and
relatives to write to their congressman and say "No!"  to  Bill 602P.
It will only take a few moments of your time, and could very well be
instrumental in killing a bill we don't want.

Kate Turner
Assistant to Richard Stepp, Berger, Stepp and Gorman
Attorneys



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