Enron Mail

From:susan.landwehr@enron.com
To:scott_bolton@enron.net, jeff.dasovich@enron.com, lisa.yoho@enron.com,marchris.robinson@enron.com, aleck.dadson@enron.com, sue.nord@enron.com
Subject:CSG/Global E Commerce
Cc:richard.shapiro@enron.com, cynthia.sandherr@enron.com,joe.hillings@enron.com
Bcc:richard.shapiro@enron.com, cynthia.sandherr@enron.com,joe.hillings@enron.com
Date:Sun, 12 Dec 1999 14:29:00 -0800 (PST)

Scott et al---the annual Council of State Governments meeting was held last
week in Quebec City and one of the panel presentations during the week was on
"Global E Commerce:State Roles.

The panel was moderated by the Conference of World Regions (Jmaes Gardner and
Lucy Duncan). Participants were:

Rep. Matthew Kisber--Tennesee (he is also co chair of the NCSL task force
on e commerce)

Arthur Kerrigan---section chief of e commerce for the European Commission in
Brussels

David Cliche--Minister for Information Highway/Government of Quebec

DAvid Hite--CEO of Veronex Technologies

Todd Finch---President, Netscape/Canada

Bernard McKay---Vice President, INTUIT


The government folks focused most of their discussions on the need to
continue to be able to collect taxes on sales, but said they were not looking
to increase those taxes--just to be able to make it easy to collect. Kisber
seemed to be in the Governor Leavitt camp on e commerce solutions--he
referenced Leavitt's proposals several times. Cliche made some interesting
statements about Quebec having all of it's government work being done via e
mail by the end of 2001---anybody who wants to do business with the
government will have to do it via e commerce.

THe private sector folks talked about the difficulty in dealing with 50
different state rules and regulations in order to do their business and the
need for uniformity and commonality. Finch talked about the need for global
governance of the internet rather than local or parochial which will only
inhibit development of e commerce. He also talked about if and when states
or entities will start thinking about trying to tax information that is
exchanged via e commerce and how this would be counterproductive. McKay
brought up the concept of government becoming a competitor with the private
sector as e commerce changes the way we do business.

It was a fairly interesting discussion, but no real bombshells.

Scott--Kisber mentioned that there was going to be a meeting of the
COngressional interent taxation committee next week in San Francisco (this is
the Governor Gilmore group). Are you attending that meeting?