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Among the most important tax breaks that have expired and will be extended are the R&D credit, a credit that allows states without income states to deduct state and local sales taxes, a deduction for higher education costs, charitable giving incentives and an expansion of the child tax credit. There's a major provision, sought by lawmakers from Western states, to extend through 2011 a program that funds rural schools and local governments that have low property tax bases because they lie within or are adjacent to federal lands. That extension would cost an estimated $3.3 billion over 10 years. There are dozens of other highly targeted provisions helping makers of wooden practice arrows used by children, film and television productions, motorsports racetrack property and the wool trust fund. Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden and Gordon Smith introduced a bill in May to fix an item in the tax code under which the excise tax on inexpensive arrows for children is greater than the selling price of the arrows. Some nine manufacturers nationwide are affected. Other provisions target fishermen affected by the Exxon Valdez oil spill, mine safety equipment, American Samoa economic development and Indian employment. Also part of the tax package is a measure, long sought by mental health advocates, that would give parity to benefits for mental health treatment. ___ On the Net: Congress: http://thomas.loc.gov/
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