Temporary tax relief measures to begin Friday in Illinois
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[July 01, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinoisans will receive some
modest tax relief starting Friday when the state’s new fiscal year
begins.
That includes some income tax rebates, property tax rebates, a
suspension of the state’s 1 percent tax on groceries, and a six-month
pause on the scheduled inflationary increase in the state’s motor fuel
tax.
Gov. JB Pritzker and legislative Democrats held a news conference
publicizing those tax breaks as consumers grappled with 8.6 percent
inflation, the highest rate in nearly 40 years.
“We're sending $1.8 billion in tax relief to Illinois families, and we
are able to do that because Democrats balanced the budget, eliminated
the bill backlog, and state government is now running a surplus,”
Pritzker said at a news conference in Chicago.
The news conference came just two days after the state’s primary
elections, marking the kick-off to the general election cycle in which
Pritzker and Democrats, who control both chambers of the General
Assembly, will be touting their fiscal management of the state.
“Fiscal responsibility means Illinois taxpayers are no longer required
to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in needless interest payments,”
Pritzker said. “Instead, we are able to better fund education, rebuild
our roads, make our neighborhoods safer, attract new businesses to
Illinois, and connect workers with good paying jobs. And starting
tomorrow (Friday), every Illinoisan will get tax relief on essentials,
gas, groceries and your home.”
The tax relief measures were included in the $46 billion budget
lawmakers passed for the fiscal year that begins Friday. They include:
An income tax rebate of $50 per individual with income below $200,000 a
year, or $100 for couples filing jointly with income below $400,000 a
year, plus $100 per dependent child, up to three children.
A suspension of the 1 percent sales tax on groceries through June 2023.
A suspension of the scheduled inflationary increase in the motor fuel
tax through Dec. 31, which has been estimated at 2.2 cents per gallon.
Instead, the motor fuel tax will increase twice at the rate of inflation
next calendar year.
A sales tax holiday on back-to-school items, to run from Aug. 5 to Aug.
14, when the rate will be imposed at 1.25 percent instead of the regular
6.25 percent.
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Gov. JB Pritzker discusses tax relief measures that
take effect July 1 during a news conference Thursday in Chicago.
(Credit: Blueroomstream.com)
And an additional property tax rebate of up to $300 for homeowners who
were eligible to claim the property tax credit on their 2021 state tax
returns. The rebate is available to joint filers earning $500,000 or
less and single filers earning $250,000 or less.
In addition, the tax relief package included a permanent expansion of
the state’s earned income tax credit, or EITC, to 20 percent of the
federal EITC while also extending eligibility for that credit to
noncitizens who file taxes using an Individual Taxpayer Identification
Number instead of a Social Security Number.
Republicans criticized that package as an election-year gimmick, noting
that the rebate checks would show up in people’s mailboxes or bank
accounts before Election Day, while motor fuel tax suspension would
disappear soon after Election Day.
They also criticized some of the tax breaks as too small or for not
being permanent; noting that the grocery tax suspension would only save
consumers $1 on a $100 grocery bill, and the motor fuel tax savings
would save only 22 cents on a 10-gallon tank of gas.
They proposed an alternative, which would have suspended or capped the
state’s 6.25-percent sales tax on motor fuels, which they say has been
producing a windfall for the state as gasoline prices have soared to
record levels.
According to AAA, the average price of gasoline in Illinois stood at
$5.39 on Thursday. That includes 37 cents of sales tax.
But Democrats pushed back against that criticism, arguing that they have
passed balanced budgets each of the last four years that have resulted
in two credit upgrades each from all three major rating agencies and
eliminated the bill backlog while also making investments in important
state services.
“The reality is we are making fiscally responsible decisions,” state
Sen. Elgie Sims, D-Chicago, said at the news conference. “We are
investing in the issues that will help our communities grow and be
stronger. We're investing in education. We're investing in health care.
We're investing in public safety. We're investing in a brighter future
for Illinoisans.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government and distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |