Of course they would attempt this - NY is the state with the highest overall tax burden (<a href="https://wallethub.com/edu/states-with-highest-lowest-tax-burden/20494" rel="nofollow">https://wallethub.com/edu/states-with-highest-lowest-tax-bur...</a>). The status quo is that all the big tax states regularly increase taxes and find creative ways to grift off others' private activities. A recent example is Washington state's Democratic party trying to pass a state-level capital gains tax (<a href="https://www.washingtonpolicy.org/publications/detail/sb-5096-would-impose-a-9-income-tax-on-capital-gains-in-washington-state" rel="nofollow">https://www.washingtonpolicy.org/publications/detail/sb-5096...</a>) even though it is explicitly illegal per the state's own constitution. Pushing the boundaries of what is legal or ethical when it comes to taxation is the <i>norm</i> not the exception.<p>With the recent exodus in California, and the advent of remote work/decentralized economies brought on by the pandemic, I imagine all states with large tax burdens are going to try to get creative in this regard. Personally, I look forward to economic decentralization starving these bloated institutions, which hopefully will also reduce the extent to which they interfere and control our lives as individuals and private organizations. It starts with reducing the size of their giant coffers.
NY and some other states apparently demand income tax payment from fully remote workers if the company’s office is in that state.<p>I took a fully remote job with a non-profit in NY on 1/2/2021. I live and work in CO. Looks like I might have to hire a CPA for the first time ever. I’m definitely contacting my Congress-people.
if you're uncomfortable with that wait until you hear that a US citizen born in a foreign country, citizen of a foreign country, living in a foreign country, working in a foreign country for a foreign company, still has to file US taxes and in many cases even has to pay US taxes.