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Gov. Healey signs $1 billion tax relief package

www.bostonherald.com Gov. Healey signs $1 billion tax relief package, reworking tax rebate law, cuts short-term capital gains tax

Gov. Maura Healey signed a $1 billion-a-year tax relief bill Wednesday that top Democrats on Beacon Hill have heralded as a way to make Massachusetts more competitive and help residents deal with s…

Negotiators reached a deal two weeks ago that cuts the short-term capital gains tax from 12% to 8.5%, a business-backed move that has riled progressives who argue it gives a break to the wealthy. The compromise will cost the state $561 million in fiscal year 2023 and $1 billion a year starting in fiscal year 2027.

The bill also excludes estates valued up to $2 million from the estate tax by allowing for a uniform credit of $99,600.

Sure, there is a cute $50 and $120 increase in rent and dependent child tax credit and some minor benefits for low-income and disabled people (that will often go unused), but the point of this bill is entirely about appeasing to the very rich of this state.

This is a disturbing anti-poor and anti-middle class law fervently pushed by the governor and compromised with the legislature, who thankfully made the bill slightly less anti-poor and anti-middle class than the governor wanted. But still, another dark day for Massachusetts perpetuated by our conservative governor and state legislature.

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  • Provisions of the tax cuts package include:

    Child and Family Tax Credit – Eliminates two-dependent cap and increases credit from $180 per dependent child, disabled adult, or senior to $310 for 2023 and to $440 on a permanent basis, starting in 2024. An estimated 565,000 families will benefit, and this will be the most generous universal child and dependent tax credit in the county.

    Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) – increases credit from 30% to 40% of the federal credit

    Estate Tax – increases threshold from $1 million to $2 million with a credit that mitigates cliff effect

    Short-Term Capital Gains – reduces rate from 12% to 8.5%Rental Deduction – increases cap from $3,000 to $4,000

    Senior Circuit Breaker Tax Credit – doubles credit, indexed to inflation, which equates to an increase from $1,200 to $2,400

    Single Sales Factor – shifts from three-factor apportionment system based on business’s share of sales, payroll, and property to apportionment based solely on sales

    Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) – increases annual program cap from $40 million to $60 million

    Housing Development Incentive Program (HDIP) – increases annual program cap from $10 million to $57 million in 2023, and thereafter to $30 million annually

    Student Loan Repayment Assistance – exempts employer assistance for student loan repayment from taxable income

    Dairy Tax Credit – increases annual program cap from $6 million to $8 million

    Cider Tax Rate – applies lower tax rates to a broadened class of beverages

    Lead Paint Abatement Credit – doubles credit to $3,000 for full abatement and $1,000 for partial abatement

    Title V (Septic) Tax Credit – triples maximum credit to $18,000, increases percentage of eligible expenses from 40% to 60%; and allows taxpayers to claim up to $4,000 in any year, versus $1,500 in current law

    Deductible Commuter Transit Benefits – adds public transit fares, RTA fares and bicycle expenses to deductible commuter expenses

    Apprenticeship Tax Credit – expands eligible occupations

    Municipal Affordable Housing Property Tax Exemption – permits municipalities to adopt local property tax exemption for affordable real estate

    Property Tax Liability Reduction for Senior Volunteer Services – permits municipalities to increase the maximum property tax abatement available to seniors who perform volunteer services from $1,500 to $2,000

    Stabilization Fund Cap – increases the cap on Stabilization Fund deposit from 15% to 25.5% of budgeted revenues

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  • Really welcoming community here Boston. Downvote to oblivion two of the three commenters on this thread. How the heck is this space less friendly than the comments section on the Globe’s web site?

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    • I wish people didn't downvote because it looks like I downvoted you, which I didn't.

      Anyway, I most certainly did call her a conservative.

      Going out of her way to push for lower taxes that no one is calling for, which overwhelmingly benefits the very wealthy is absolutely a conservative move. This spits in the face of voters who less than a year ago voted to increase taxes on these same people. The media drummed up her support for the millionaire's tax while completely downplaying her support of lowering other rich people's taxes. They let her always talk about the renter and child dependent deduction and gave no push back to the money gift wrapped to people who overwhelmingly wouldn't even know it's gone. Your bar for "success" isn't too high.

      And a tax that she lowered still being higher than "most states" doesn't mean she isn't conservative. This is like saying Alabama can't be anti-abortion since they don't have an outright abortion ban like Texas does because they allow for abortion if the mother's physical health is at great risk. Whereas most reasonable people would say both of these are anti-abortion states.

      You’d rather have tons of discounts and write offs rather than not being over taxed in the first place, hilarious.

      You're saying this will cost Massachusetts very little or nothing?

      Also, Massachusetts isn't overtaxed. We provide much better services to a wider range of people at more efficient costs than most other states.

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  • So rich people get their capital gains tax cut and estate tax cut and seniors (also a wealthy demographic) get increased circuit breaker tax credits. Poor people get higher renters tax credits. People with kids get more credits. Commuters on public transit get to write off more of their bills. And the rest of us who don’t have kids, have no public transit to our jobs, and have a mortgage get nothing.

    Remember when the renter’s tax deduction was justified by there being a large deduction in federal taxes by homeowners? After Trump, I don’t get that write off anymore and neither do most middle class people. But the renters still get theirs. We just keep getting screwed.

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