Bomke stresses need for spending cuts following tax increase
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[January 13, 2011]
SPRINGFIELD -- State
Sen. Larry Bomke, R-Springfield, is stressing the need for fiscal
restraint in response to the passage of the largest tax increase in
Illinois history.
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In the final hours of the 96th General Assembly, the
Illinois legislature voted in favor of a tax increase that
translates to a 67 percent higher personal income tax rate and 46
percent higher corporate rates.
If signed by Gov. Quinn,
SB 2505 will raise the personal income tax rate from 3 percent
to 5 percent. It will also raise the corporate tax rate from 4.8
percent to 7 percent. This is a 46 percent increase that when added
to a 2.5 percent income tax on businesses will mean the state's
employers will pay 9.5 percent in taxes.
While Bomke understands that the state has a deep
hole to fill, he believes that spending cuts must come first and
then a modest tax increase.
"Cuts are necessary to help rescue Illinois from
this fiscal crisis," said Bomke. "The budget deficit and now this
tax increase are the consequence of eight years of fiscal
mismanagement by the state's Democrat leaders."
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While proponents of the bill say there are built-in
spending limits, Bomke believes these limits are still too high. A
$3 billion increase has been approved for the next fiscal year,
followed by nearly $1 billion a year the following three fiscal
years. The bill includes no real fiscal reform, which leads
opponents of the bill to say that in five years Illinois will be
facing the same budget crisis it is today.
"We can't put this problem off for another day,"
said Bomke. "We still have difficult decisions to make. Unless we
make tough choices about scaling back state services, reforming
government and implementing budget cuts, we'll be right back at
square one in a couple years."
[Text from news release from
Sen.
Larry Bomke] |