The News-Times

GOP pitches state income tax cut

Says Conn. can’t sit on $7B in reserves

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

One day after Gov. Ned Lamont disclosed Connecticu­t’s projected fiscal reserves exceed $7 billion, Republican lawmakers unveiled a $1.2 billion tax relief plan, including what would be the first income tax rate reduction in 27 years.

The package unveiled Thursday by Rep. Vincent J. Candelora, of North Branford, and Sen. Kevin Kelly, of Stratford, minority leaders in the House and Senate, also would extend a spring gas tax holiday, temporaril­y lower sales tax rates and spare businesses from $225 million in unemployme­nt trust assessment­s.

But the GOP plan also hinges on Lamont and his fellow Democrats in the legislatur­e’s majority agreeing to sue President Joe Biden’s administra­tion to overturn temporary limits on states’ tax-cutting powers. And while many Republican-led states are battling the Democratic president in court, the prospects of Connecticu­t Democrats going after Biden are slim.

“It’s time for Democrats to meet the moment,” said Candelora, who joined Kelly and other Republican lawmakers at a mid-morning Capitol press conference. “The cost of living here is unsustaina­ble for their constituen­ts, and the main street businesses that drive our economy face a punishing tax increase that threatens their ability to reinvest, grow and create jobs.”

Businesses will be assessed, starting in November, to cover about $460 million in debt the state’s unemployme­nt trust ran up in 2020 as Connecticu­t paid benefits to nearly 300,000 residents left jobless by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

But while businesses and households here still struggle to recover, the state’s coffers have swelled at an unpreceden­ted pace.

Connecticu­t holds $3.1 billion in its rainy day fund, equal to 15 percent of annual operating costs and the maximum amount allowed by law.

But legislator­s were shocked Wednesday when Lamont upgraded the current fiscal year’s surplus from $2.7 billion to nearly $4 billion. The latter figure represents one-fifth of all General Fund spending authorized by the legislatur­e this year.

“Connecticu­t is overtaxing its residents, and the state’s inflation-related windfall must be returned to Connecticu­t families,” Kelly said. “Residents are struggling to balance their own family budgets with no relief in sight as inflation drives up the costs of everything — from food to energy to home heating oil.”

The Republican plan is centered on the income and sales taxes, the state’s two largest revenue engines.

Lawmakers first enacted the income tax in 1991 with a flat 4.5 percent rate on all earnings and added a 3 percent rate four years later — but only on the first $10,000 earned by singles and $20,000 earned by couples.

Since then, it’s evolved in a system of seven tax brackets, with rates ranging from 3 percent to 6.99 percent, with most middle-income households’ earnings taxed at 5 percent or 5.5 percent.

Any relief for filers since 1996 has come in the form of new credits and exemptions. But Republican­s would drop the 5 percent rate to 4 percent for all singles making less than $75,000 per year and all couples below $175,000.

This would save many households $750 or more annually, Candelora said, adding it would cost Connecticu­t $387 million next fiscal year.

Republican­s proposed two other income tax changes that would save filers another $96 million.

The GOP would allow middle-income filers without children or seniors to again claim the credit that offsets up to $200 of a household’s local property tax bill — an option the legislatur­e removed in 2017 to help close a state budget deficit.

The GOP plan also would exempt all pension and annuity earnings from the income tax.

Republican­s would provide nearly $250 million in temporary sales tax relief by lowering the general rate from 6.35 percent to 5.99 percent and by suspending the 1 percent surcharge on prepared meals. These reliefs would expire at the end of the calendar year.

Other elements of the Republican plan include:

Extending until Dec. 31 the “holiday” that suspends the 25-cents-per-gallon retail tax on gasoline through June 30 and broadening that relief program to include the diesel fuel tax. This would save motorists almost $210 million.

Repealing the new highway use tax on commercial trucks, saving $45 million next fiscal year and $90 million annually after that.

The final element technicall­y is an expenditur­e — not a tax cut — from an accounting standpoint. Republican­s would use $225 million from the projected surplus to cover nearly half of the $460 million in unemployme­nt trust fund debt, meaning businesses only would be assessed starting this November to cover the remainder.

Regardless of that accounting technicali­ty, the GOP plan includes nearly $1 billion in direct state cuts, more than five times the level Lamont says Connecticu­t is permitted to make right now.

That’s because the state accepted $3 billion in federal coronaviru­s relief last year and Congress and President Biden set taxcutting limits to ensure the aid is used to bolster health care, education and other programs harmed by the pandemic.

But Connecticu­t Republican­s argue this is unconstitu­tional and noted that 18 GOP-led states currently are challengin­g these tax-cutting restrictio­ns in federal court.

Majority Democrats are looking at other options to expand tax relief that don’t require a direct confrontat­ion with the federal government.

“The governor is glad the Republican­s are joining him and legislativ­e Democrats in calling for tax cuts,” Lamont’s chief of staff, Paul Mounds Jr., said. “Now the discussion is regarding which taxes to cut and by how much. The bottom line is that in the coming weeks, Governor Lamont will be signing a law that cuts taxes for Connecticu­t residents, and he looks forward to making that happen.”

Besides supporting a Lamont plan to expand the property tax credit to $300 right away, Democrats want to use federal pandemic relief to assist working poor households next spring. The governor sent federal relief to households qualifying for the state’s Earned Income Tax Credit — generally those earning less than $58,000 per year — last winter.

Democrats also have proposed creating a new $300-per-child credit on the state income tax for lowand middle-income families and scheduling it to begin in 2024 or 2025, after the state has spent all federal pandemic relief aid.

But to dangle big tax relief right away, on a gamble that Connecticu­t could deliver it if it wins in court, “seems like the height of irresponsi­bility,” Ritter said. “You can do that when you don’t have to run the ship.”

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