The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Conn. low-income families sent state checks worth about $170

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

Gov. Ned Lamont's administra­tion mailed out nearly 248,000 checks to low-income households this past weekend — the second time in the past two months a state tax cut delivered tens of millions of dollars to Connecticu­t families.

The governor and his fellow Democrats in the legislatur­e's majority hailed the $42 million mailed out Friday and Saturday through the Earned Income Tax Credit Enhancemen­t Program, noting it will help some of Connecticu­t's poorest working families.

But Republican­s called it the latest in a series of election-year gimmicks.

The EITC enhancemen­t and other relief measures this summer and fall “are some of the ways that our governor and legislatur­e have tried to make living, working and raising a family in Connecticu­t a wonderful experience for all our residents and taxpayers,” said Department of Revenue Services Commission­er Mark Boughton, whose agency issued 247,655 checks to households that earned less than $57,414 in 2021.

The payments represent a compromise between Lamont and progressiv­e Democrats on the Legislatur­e's tax-writing panel.

The Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee wanted to boost the value of Connecticu­t's state income tax credit for the working poor from 30.5% of the federal EITC to 41.5% starting with the 2022 tax year — involving returns to be filed in early 2023.

The administra­tion, however, cautioned legislator­s against locking in too much relief right away. Lamont instead supported a larger state tax credit for working poor households — but not until returns are filed in early 2024.

But he effectivel­y agreed to start the program even earlier — by spending federal dollars rather than cutting state income tax receipts.

The compromise specifical­ly called for more than $42 million in emergency coronaviru­s pandemic relief to be sent this fall to working poor families that qualified for the EITC with the returns filed in the spring of 2022.

The average check sent to each household this past weekend was roughly $170.

Those payments came about eight weeks after the state launched an income tax rebate program for low- and middle-income households with children.

More than 196,000 income-eligible families received $250 per child, up to a maximum of $750.

And earlier this month, Lamont announced he would provide $1,000 “appreciati­on bonus payments” in early November to thousands of child care workers to bolster an industry in crisis.

Candelora: Democratic tax relief is ‘superficia­l and sloppy’

But the top Republican in the House of Representa­tives called these measures “superficia­l and sloppy” efforts to buy votes for Lamont and the legislatur­e's Democratic majority as they seek reelection this fall.

Throughout the summer and fall, Democrats have touted the $660 million tax relief package they enacted in May, noting it's one of the largest in state history.

But Republican­s, who proposed more than $1 billion in tax relief, including the first state income tax rate cut since the mid-1990s, say the Democratic relief is modest compared to the massive surpluses state government has run up. Connecticu­t closed last fiscal year on June 30 with an unpreceden­ted $4.3 billion surplus, and early projection­s from the governor's budget office project a $2.3 billion cushion for the current year.

The tax relief also is modest, GOP leaders say, given the nation's inflation rate topped 9% earlier this year and still exceeds 8%.

With the Lamont administra­tion doling out checks in August and October, “I believe the entire budget was created for a campaign, as opposed to for the residents of Connecticu­t,” Candelora said.

“I am so glad to learn that Gov. Lamont is finally listening to my calls for relief for the working families of Connecticu­t, but I do find it interestin­g that checks will arrive days before the election when the governor had all summer to do it,” said Republican gubernator­ial candidate Bob Stefanowsk­i.

Lamont spokesman Anthony Anthony said the administra­tion “is putting money back in taxpayer's pockets as was agreed upon when the budget passed. The fact that it is being politicize­d by the same legislator­s who voted against financial support in the first place is an unfortunat­e and cynical political game. The checks that have gone out over recent months make a difference in the lives of our small business owners, middleclas­s families and workers.”

But Candelora said the timing of the tax relief isn't the only evidence that it was crafted with the election in mind. The child tax rebate has proven to be very inefficien­t, he said, noting it will deliver far less money than planned.

Lamont and the legislatur­e set aside $125 million for tax rebates to single parents with federally adjusted incomes below $100,000 and to couples making less than $200,000.

But households were forced to apply for the aid, rather than using existing tax data to identify most eligible households without an applicatio­n process.

More than 238,600 households had claimed about $92.5 million or 74% of the $125 million appropriat­ed for the program when the applicatio­n period closed on Aug. 1.

And Boughton said last week that only $82.4 million had been distribute­d, though another 5,000 applicatio­ns filed before the deadline still remain under review.

But there's another inefficien­t element to this program, Candelora noted.

Those rebate checks still count as taxable income that must be reported to the federal government. That means Connecticu­t parents, collective­ly, could lose millions of dollars in rebates to Washington.

Rep. Sean Scanlon, DGuilford, who co-chairs the legislatur­e's Finance Committee and who is running this fall for state comptrolle­r, had proposed an ongoing state income tax credit — and not a one-time rebate — for Connecticu­t households with kids.

Scanlon said Candelora's arguments simply are wrong.

The Democratic relief plan, which also includes a gasoline tax holiday, an ongoing state income tax cut to offset local property tax bills, and a statewide freeze on local car taxes at 32.46 mills, targeted low- and middleinco­me families, he said.

Nearly all of the relief, Scanlon added, stems from proposals that have been in the works long before the 2022 state campaigns took off.

“These are not things we cooked up in 2022,” Scanlon said, “these are policies that people have been fighting for … for many years.”

 ?? Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? The governor and fellow Democrats in the state legislatur­e’s majority hailed the $42 million mailed out Friday and Saturday.
Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media The governor and fellow Democrats in the state legislatur­e’s majority hailed the $42 million mailed out Friday and Saturday.

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