Chicago Sun-Times

State senator proposes $600 state tax credit to try to address ‘devastatio­n that this pandemic has brought’

- BY RACHEL HINTON, POLITICAL REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Hoping to help working parents hit hard economical­ly, newly appointed state Sen. Mike Simmons on Wednesday pitched legislatio­n that would provide parents a $600 tax credit per child that he argues will help undo “the damage of this pandemic.”

Simmons’ first bill, which he introduced last month, would provide a $600 statelevel child tax credit for individual­s who earn $40,000 a year and for those making $60,000 a year who file their taxes jointly. The bill would provide $600 per child.

“This is really best targeted at our single moms and single dads and working parents all across the 7th District,” Simmons said, referring to the North Side area he represents. “This legislatio­n will help to bring relief to our working families and ensure that we have a long-term solution that undoes the damage of this pandemic.

“In the wake of a year that has imposed so many anxieties and so much grief, and so many heavy burdens on our parents and our young people in particular, COVID-19 has fallen hard upon children in the way we may not fully realize for years to come.”

The credit would be a permanent change to the state’s income tax code.

One out of every three hospitalit­y workers in Illinois lost a job within the last year, and essential workers who are overwhelmi­ngly women or people of color, who are increasing­ly the sole breadwinne­rs of their households, have exposed themselves to real danger in the last year, Simmons said.

Since being appointed to succeed former state Sen. Heather Steans in February, Simmons said he’s met with working parents who’ve told him about the toll of the pandemic on their children or other young people.

Standing with Simmons at his news conference, Janet Soto, a mother of three who lives in Uptown, said every person she’s met or talked to in the community has faced some sort of hardship due to the pandemic.

The closure of her kids’ child care center earlier in the pandemic forced Soto and her husband — who were both working — to make the tough choice of “work or caring for the kids.”

Soto chose to stay home. That meant an “incredibly strict budget” around the holiday season. For Thanksgivi­ng, some neighbors gave them special dishes they couldn’t afford.

“I’m aware as I look at our finances that even as we’re that much closer to not being able to make ends meet, other families are already not able to make ends meet, and have been having to work so hard during the pandemic to try to figure out a way to make it back,” Soto said. “They need help and they need long-term support, not just a quick fix.”

Simmons said COVID-19 recovery must include a reinvestme­nt that acknowledg­es the “devastatio­n that this pandemic has brought on families of color and working families.”

The senator said his bill would benefit the entire area because recipients would put the money back into the economy.

“These are folks that currently are not able to meet basic expenses, are not able to put food on the table, are not able to keep up on their rent, essential workers [are] two months behind on their rent right now,” Simmons said. “And when we give them this relief, they’re going to be able to pay their rent, they’re going to be able to go out and buy that food which is going to stimulate the local economy with a multiplica­tive effect.”

 ?? RACHEL HINTON/SUN-TIMES ?? State Sen. Mike Simmons and Janet Soto, a resident of his Senate district, attend a news conference about a proposed $600-per-child state tax credit on Wednesday.
RACHEL HINTON/SUN-TIMES State Sen. Mike Simmons and Janet Soto, a resident of his Senate district, attend a news conference about a proposed $600-per-child state tax credit on Wednesday.

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