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Local reps: Graduated tax push a nonstarter

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State Rep. Jack Franks, D-Marengo, said he would be surprised if the bill even makes it out of committee. He and other county legislators were not convinced that a graduated income tax would mean lower tax bills for most residents.

“First of all, our temporary income tax [increase] is supposed to start expiring at the end of next year, and it’s looking more and more permanent each day because we’re doing such a bad job in Springfield,” Franks said. “I don’t see how anyone can say with a straight face to trust Illinois with more of our taxpayer dollars.”

Democratic lawmakers in the final hours of the January 2011 lame-duck session approved the largest tax increase in state history, raising tax rates 67 percent on individuals and 46 percent on businesses. Individual taxpayers now pay a state income-tax rate of 5 percent, and businesses pay 7 percent.

Supporters touted the increase as an attempt to get out from under a shameful backlog of unpaid bills, but almost all of the new income has been swallowed by the state’s ballooning public pension obligations. The state’s present backlog of unpaid bills now is worse than it was when the tax increase was approved.

Opponents, who were skeptical in 2011 that the tax would be allowed to start expiring as scheduled in 2015, are even more so now as state finances have gotten worse. The state’s credit rating in the past two months has been downgraded by two of the three major credit rating agencies and had its outlook changed to negative by the third.

All three agencies – Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings – cited legislators’ repeated failure to advance pension reform.

Freshman state Rep. David McSweeney, R-Barrington Hills, said he is very concerned that the amendment will gain momentum. He told the Northwest Herald last month that he believes one of the reasons pension reform never moves forward is so lawmakers can force a crisis and push for a graduated income tax.

“My concern is, as [Chicago Mayor] Rahm Emanuel says, never let a good crisis go to waste,” McSweeney said. “I’m concerned the Democrats will use this as an excuse to go to a graduated income tax, and I think that’s a real threat.”


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