The Arkansas Data Centers Act is moving now to the governor's office for approval. It grants crypto miners in the State the same rights as data centers.
A bill seeking to regulate Bitcoin mining activity in the State of Arkansas has passed in both the House of Representatives and Senate, moving now to the governor's office for approval.
According to the bill, the Arkansas Data Centers Act of 2023 intends to regulate the Bitcoin mining industry in the American state, creating guidelines for miners and protecting them from discriminatory regulations and taxes.
Arkansas' state legislators quickly passed the bill after it was proposed on March 30 by Senator Joshua Bryant, shows the act's status page. The document recognizes "that data centers create jobs, pay taxes, and provide general economic value to local communities."
As per the approved bill, a digital asset miner is required "to pay applicable taxes and government fees in acceptable forms of currency, and operate in a manner that causes no stress on an electric public utility's generation capabilities or transmission network."
Under the legislation, crypto miners will also have the same rights as data centers. The bill outlines that Arkansas' government should not "impose a different requirement for a digital asset mining business than is applicable to any requirement for a data center."
Related: Crypto mining in 2023 — Is it still worth it? Watch Market Talks
Arkansas' move follows a similar initiative in the State of Montana. In late March, the Montana Senate passed a bill designed to protect crypto miners operating within the state. The bill intends to protect miners against taxes on digital assets used for payments and to eliminate energy rates discriminating against home crypto miners and digital assets businesses.
The State of Texas stands in a different direction. Its Senate Committee on Business and Commerce passed on April 4 a legislation that would largely remove incentives for miners operating under the state’s crypto-friendly regulatory environment, Cointelegraph reported.
An even stronger move came from New York last November, when governor Kathy Hochul signed the proof-of-work (PoW) mining moratorium into law, banning crypto mining activities in the State for two years. On a federal level, crypto miners in the United States could eventually be subject to a 30% tax on electricity costs under a budget proposal introduced on March 9 by President Joe Biden aimed to “reduce mining activity.”
Magazine: US enforcement agencies are turning up the heat on crypto-related crime
from Cointelegraph.com News Ana Paula Pereira
0 Comments