March 2006 |
Assembly Tax Cut Proposal From the NYS Assembly • Sheldon Silver, Speaker Herman D. Farrell Jr., Chair, Ways and Means Committee |
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Assembly budget delivers over $2.4 billion in tax relief to working families | ||||||||||||||||
The Assembly’s budget plan would provide more than $2.4 billion in tax relief for working families. The Assembly’s Doing More For More New Yorkers tax cut package delivers 90 percent of the benefits to 90 percent of the taxpayers, a vast improvement over the governor’s plan, in which 83 percent of the benefits go to the wealthiest 13 percent. The governor can continue to push tax cuts for the rich, but the Assembly is targeting tax relief for those who need it most – hard-working families, homeowners, tenants and seniors. The Assembly Majority will fight for a final state budget that provides real tax relief to real New Yorkers.
Relief from high property taxes. The Assembly budget proposes nearly $900 million in tax credits to more than 2.6 million homeowners and renters across the state. This “circuit breaker” property tax relief program protects taxpayers from a property tax overload just like an electric circuit breaker. When a property tax bill exceeds a certain percentage of a taxpayer’s income, the circuit breaker reduces property taxes in excess of this overload level. Local taxpayers need immediate relief from the burden of high property taxes and soaring housing costs. Improving upon the Circuit Breaker program is a significant step toward helping ease that burden. The Assembly’s budget provides additional property tax relief by:
A child tax credit for every child. A major part of the Assembly’s budget contains $620 million in tax relief to New York families with children. The typical family, earning between $24,000 and $110,000, will receive a $300 per child tax credit when fully phased in. The Assembly rejects the governor’s shortsighted plan, which is a limited tax credit for private school tuition and other educational expenses. The Assembly’s plan is fairer because it applies to all families with children – not just a select few – and it is an automatic tax credit based on the federal government’s child tax credit. The governor’s proposal requires families to spend money on education needs first before receiving a tax credit reimbursement. Moreover, the Assembly’s tax credit will help families with all costs associated with raising a family, like food, medical bills and heating a home.
Eliminating the marriage penalty tax. The Assembly would also eliminate the marriage penalty tax and increase the standard deduction for heads of household to equal those married filing jointly – raising the head of household deduction from $10,500 to $15,000, saving the typical taxpayer about $300 a year. These two proposals will save New Yorkers about $230 million annually. Rejecting the governor’s sales tax on clothing. The Assembly proposal rejects the governor’s extension of the state sales tax on clothing and footwear items priced under $110, which is scheduled to expire on April 1 and makes the promised elimination permanent – saving shoppers approximately $600 million a year. The regressive 4 percent state sales tax on clothing and footwear costs working families hundreds of millions of dollars every year. Removing the sales tax will doubly benefit New York by keeping more money in the pockets of working families while helping small retail businesses compete with those in neighboring states, which have already exempted clothing purchases from state sales taxes. Another highlight of the Assembly’s tax relief proposal includes a tax deduction for New York State National Guard members called to federal service – saving military families $1 million. We must do everything we can to keep taxes down and let working families keep more of their hard-earned money. The Assembly is committed to negotiating a fair and on-time budget that provides much-needed tax relief. Now it’s up to the governor and Senate to work with us to make that a reality.
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