The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Proposal would cut CT taxes for poor, middle class families

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

Low- and middle-income families with children would receive their largest state income tax break in nearly a decade under a new proposal to be unveiled Tuesday by the new co-chairman of the legislatur­e’s tax-writing panel.

The new child tax credit proposed by Rep. Sean Scanlon, D-Guilford, would pump between $150 and $450 into households earning about $203,000 or less during its first year, depending on the number of children each family has.

It would be gradually increased over the next three years, sending between $600 and $1,800 into households from the same income group once fully implemente­d in the fourth year.

Patterned after the federal child tax credit, the state program also would be available to households earning between about $203,000 and $682,000, though their relief would be reduced on a sliding scale proportion­al to income.

“The cost of raising children in Connecticu­t is growing, and it’s growing at a time that, historical­ly, doesn’t have much correspond­ing wage growth,” said Scanlon, who began his first term earlier this month as co-chair of the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee.

“The tax burden already is disproport­ionately weighted against people who are in the middle class,” Scanlon added, and said he fears Connecticu­t’s state and municipal tax system discourage­s young couples from raising a family here. “Now combine that with the increasing­ly propositio­n of raising a child.”

Connecticu­t’s income tax began in 1991 as a flat levy, with most income taxed at 4.5 percent, but over time evolved into seven rates ranging from 3 to 6.99 percent.

Critics note that key neighborin­g states like New York and New Jersey tax top earners at higher rates: 8.82 percent and 10.75 percent, respective­ly.

Relief for Connecticu­t’s middle class had been centered for years on another credit — one which reimbursed households for a portion of their local property tax payments. Launched in 1996 at $100 per eligible household, it grew steadily to $500 by 2006.

But from 2011 onward, state officials steadily whittled away at middle-class tax relief to close one budget deficit after another. The property tax credit fell from $500 to $200, it was limited only to seniors or to households with children, and income eligibilit­y guidelines were tightened.

The program that provided $365 million per year in middle-class tax relief one decade ago now offers $63 million annually.

A December 2014 state analysis that studied how tax burdens can easily be shifted — such as a landlord building property tax expenses into the rent charged to tenants — found households making less than $48,000 annually effectivel­y spent almost 24 percent of their earnings on state and municipal taxes. By comparison, a household earning $200,000 was paying 10.5 percent while one earning slightly more than $2 million was paying 6.5 percent.

Connecticu­t Voices for Children, a New Havenbased policy think-tank and child advocacy group, proposed a child tax credit in December as part of a larger tax overhaul designed to shift up to $1.4 billion in annual state and municipal tax burdens from Connecticu­t’s poor and middle-income households onto its wealthiest.

Scanlon said he wanted to aim for more modest yet still significan­t relief in hopes of passing something into law this year.

His proposal still must be reviewed by the legislatur­e’s nonpartisa­n Office of Fiscal Analysis, but the Guilford lawmaker estimates the new child care credit would cost the state $112 million in its first year, $225 million in its second, $337 million in the third and nearly $450 million once fully implemente­d.

That still could pose a challenge for the new, twoyear state budget.

Despite another increase in projected revenues announced Friday for the coming biennial budget, analysts still warn that finances, unless adjusted, could run roughly $1.2 billion in deficit in the first year and $1.3 billion in the red in the second.

Gov. Ned Lamont and the legislatur­e can draw on a record-setting $3.1 billion rainy-day fund to cover that shortfall, and the governor also has expressed optimism that President-elect Joe Biden’s new administra­tion also will increase financial aid to states struggling with the economic chaos caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Still, Connecticu­t also has more than $90 billion in long-term pension, retirement health care and bonded debt, and Scanlon said it might not be possible to provide — and sustain — this middle class tax relief without raising revenue from some other source.

If it comes to that, he said, the best option would be to increase taxes on Connecticu­t’s wealthiest households.

“The middle class are not going to be asked to pay for their own tax cut here,” Scanlon said.

That could spark conflict with Lamont, who consistent­ly has opposed boosting state taxes on the rich, arguing it would prompt them to flee Connecticu­t. The governor’s budget office did not comment on Scanlon’s proposal.

But Scanlon said he remains optimistic about reaching a compromise, predicting the plan would draw strong backing in the legislatur­e — and not just from his fellow Democrats.

“I think this idea has broad-based support, not only from my side of the aisle but from the other side,” he added. “And if budgets are a reflection of our values and we can’t find the money to do something we all think is an important value, then shame on us.”

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? State Rep. Sean Scanlon, D-Guilford
Contribute­d photo State Rep. Sean Scanlon, D-Guilford

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States