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Critics fear the corporate tax breaks will take scarce dollars away from state services. The Service Employees International Union asked why CME Group needs tax relief when it is making huge amounts of money
-- $316 million in the most recent quarter alone. The tax breaks for families would cost the state about $110 million a year and come in two forms. One is an increase in the personal income tax exemption. It now stands at $2,000, which means for every person in a household $2,000 is exempt from state taxes. The new legislation would raise that to $2,050 and require it to rise each year with the rate of inflation. The other tax break is an increase in the state's earned-income tax credit, which helps the working poor hang on to more of their money. The credit is now 5 percent of the federal tax credit. The House action would raise that to 10 percent. House Majority Leader Barbara Flynn Currie, D-Chicago, said the increase means a single mother making minimum wage and raising two children would see her $400 state tax bill cut to $259. That money goes back into the economy and helps Illinois businesses, she said. "This is not money people are going to sit on. It's money they are going to spend," Currie said. ___ The bills are
SB397 and
SB400. ___ Online: http://www.ilga.gov/
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