Illinois Senate Democrats introduce mostly temporary $1.8 billion tax
relief proposal
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[April 02, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Democrats in the Illinois
Senate on Friday announced a $1.8 billion package of mostly temporary
tax relief proposals that they hope to include in the Fiscal Year 2023
budget as the legislative session enters its final week.
The package is $800 million beyond the tax relief package proposed by
Gov. JB Pritzker in his budget in February, although it includes many of
the same tax reductions backed by the governor. The measures are
contained in eight amendments to Senate Bill 1150.
The measures include direct checks to Illinoisans, a 10-day stay on
taxes on schools supplies and qualifying clothing, and a six-month stay
on the grocery tax and a motor fuel tax increase, among others.
Lawmakers are scheduled to adjourn on April 8, with the budget being the
main proposal that still needs to be wrapped up. It needs approval from
both chambers of the General Assembly and the governor.
Pritzker’s office said it will review the plan, while Republicans called
it an election-year gimmick.
Sen. Elgie Sims, D-Chicago, one of the lead budgeteers in the Senate,
said the tax relief was made possible by unspecified “additional
revenues” made available in the budget.
“As we were going through the budgeting process, additional revenues had
been made available,” he said. “And we we've looked at those revenues.
We looked at the governor's budget that was proposed in February, there
was a billion dollars in tax relief that was planned there. So the tax
relief that was planned, we've built on that, based on the new revenues
which are available.”
Sims said only that the revenues were “identified from all sources”
based on “a rebounding economy.”
Last month the Department of Revenue testified in committee that
Illinois took in $4.6 billion more than expected in the current fiscal
year that ends June 30, due largely to pandemic-related changes in
consumer spending, although Pritzker included that revenue spike in his
February budget plan.
IDOR also warned that the ongoing war in Ukraine could have an impact on
revenues for the remainder of the current fiscal year and next. And some
of the current-year surplus was spent on $1.4 billion in debt reduction
in a measure passed last week that also addressed debt in the
Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund.
The plan announced Friday would include one-time direct checks to
Illinoisans. Those earning less than $250,000 in 2021 would receive a
$100 check, while joint filers earning less than $500,000 would receive
$200. Checks would include an extra $50 per dependent, up to three
dependents.
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Sen. Scott Bennett, D-Champaign, addresses a tax relief proposal
touted by Senate Democrats Friday at the Illinois Capitol. (Capitol
News Illinois photo by Peter Hancock)
Lawmakers said the hope would be that the checks would be distributed by
September, although they said the date was based on immediate taxpayer
relief, not on the fact that an election is upcoming in November.
Taxpayers would not need to take action to receive the checks. Anyone
who is eligible based on their 2021 return would be sent a check.
Other programs include a six-month suspension on the state’s 1 percent
grocery tax, as well as a six-month stay on the inflationary adjustment
to the motor fuel tax. That equates to keeping the motor fuel tax at its
current level rather than increasing it by 2-3 cents.
Democrats are also proposing to increase the state Earned Income Tax
Credit by a percentage point, raising it to 19 percent of the federal
tax credit. The EITC is a credit available to low- and moderate-income
households. It is a refundable credit, meaning those who qualify can
receive a refund, even if the amount of the credit exceeds what they
would otherwise owe in taxes.
Another proposal would allow for a tax credit up to $300 for homeowners
who earn less than $250,000 individually or $500,000 jointly. The credit
would be 5 percent of property tax paid, up to $300.
Another measure gets rid of the sales tax on school supplies from Aug. 5
to Aug. 14 this year. The tax moratorium would also apply to qualifying
clothing and footwear items up to $125 per item.
It would also give teachers a tax credit up to $300 beginning in tax
year 2023, up from $250 the current tax year, for supplies purchased for
their classrooms and a $500 credit for volunteer firefighters and EMS
who held those positions for at least nine months in the tax year. The
sponsors said those credits would be permanent.
“We look forward to reviewing this proposal,” Pritzker’s spokesperson
said in a statement. “Our conversations with members of the General
Assembly in both chambers have been productive, and we will continue to
focus on delivering fiscally responsible relief for working families.”
Senate Minority Leader Dan McConchie, R-Hawthorn Woods, issued a
statement criticizing the proposal’s temporary nature.
“The Senate Democrats’ proposal appears to be just another election year
stunt,” he said in a statement. “Under their plan, checks and relief
will arrive right before the election and then will expire right after
the election. This is not the real reform the people of this state want
and need, and Illinoisans will see right through this disingenuous
gimmick.”
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