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View Full Version : Illinois Increases State Income Tax By 69%



theGinsue
01-12-2011, 12:25
So, instead of cutting spending or the bloated number of state employees, last night at about 11:30PM the state of Illinois - in yet another of their well conceived moves - voted to increase the individual income tax rates of their citizens from 3% to 5% - a 69% increase PER PERSON.

I'd expect to see a lot more of this exact thing occuring all across the country - eventually hitting Colorado given that our lawmakers are unwilling to cut their spending and are of the belief that taxpayers are nothing more than cash cows to be milked until we run dry.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE70A6GP20110112


(Reuters) - A big income tax increase squeaked through the Illinois House and Senate as Democratic lawmakers played beat-the-clock to get the measure passed before a new legislative session begins on Wednesday.
The bill, which passed the House in a 60-57 vote late on Tuesday and the Senate in a 30-29 vote early on Wednesday, now heads to Governor Pat Quinn, who supports the measure.

The legislation would raise about $6.8 billion a year for the state's beleaguered budget by raising the individual income tax rate temporarily to 5 percent from 3 percent and the corporate tax rate to 7 percent from 4.8 percent.

"We are in desperate need to improve our bond rating and we will do that by raising more money," said Senate President John Cullerton, a Chicago Democrat.

But Republican lawmakers argued against what they called the biggest tax increase in Illinois' history.

"No state ever taxed its way into prosperity," said State Senator Kirk Dillard.

The four-year tax increase would be accompanied by state spending limits through fiscal 2015. For fiscal 2012, which begins on July 1, the limit would be $36.8 billion, which Republican lawmakers contend would mark a 10 percent increase from fiscal 2011 spending levels.

If the state breaches the limit, the higher income tax rates would revert to current levels unless the governor declares a fiscal emergency to raise spending by a set amount for a single fiscal year, according to the legislation.

Revenue from the tax hikes would enable Illinois to sell about $12.2 billion of bonds to pay off a huge bill backlog and make a $3.7 billion pension fund payment for fiscal 2011.

A bill that would authorize $8.75 billion of 15-year general obligation bonds with proceeds earmarked to pay off bills failed to muster enough votes in the House. However, a bill authorizing the sale of $4 billion of taxable pension bonds received final approval.

Illinois, which faces a budget gap that could grow to $15 billion, is one of many U.S. states grappling with record budget deficits after the deep recession stunted tax revenue. It is considered one of the weakest states after years of what critics say was mismanagement of state finances.

Uproar over even bigger tax increases that were floated last week by Democrats who control the legislature led to pared down increases in income tax rates in the final bill.

Various groups condemned the original tax proposal as a job killer that would propel businesses and residents to leave the state. In an opinion piece published in the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday, Caterpillar Inc Chairman and CEO Doug Oberhelman warned the tax increase "will stifle economic growth."

In a floor debate over the tax hike bill, Republican State Representative David Leitch said he was inundated with 1,600 emails against the tax hike with 1,200 or more coming from Caterpillar workers.

Investors, meanwhile, are nervous about Illinois bonds. As a result spreads over Municipal Market Data's triple-A scale have been widening since the beginning of the year for the state's debt, said Domenic Vonella, an MMD analyst. Those spreads are now the widest among all the states.

ghettodub
01-12-2011, 12:35
Ouch, that's rough

Byte Stryke
01-12-2011, 12:39
now all we need is for Pelosi to say:
"Let them eat Cake."

sniper7
01-12-2011, 12:42
absolute bullshit.

wonder what my grandparents and aunt and uncle think of this...

coop68
01-12-2011, 12:48
good thing my grandparents moved here but we still have there house their we have to try and sell [Rant2].

TEAMRICO
01-12-2011, 13:17
People, just learn to accept this.
This is the new Normal, I have trust that our politicians will get us out of this and all will be well.
I welcome this action by Ill.!
I cant wait for this to come to ColoradoasItypethisbigbrotheriswatchingmepleasesen dhelp.....

Irving
01-12-2011, 14:40
I heard discussion of this, but didn't know what they were talking about at the time.

I hope everyone just up and leaves. I don't want them here though.

Mtn.man
01-12-2011, 15:56
So now the gangbangers in Chicago won't be able to afford ammo?


Wait till Hickenpooper gets settled into office. *BAM* higher taxes than ritter ever thought about.

TS12000
01-12-2011, 17:27
No, it's to help pay for all the police needed to investigate other crimes now that no criminals in Chicago can get guns....oh wait...

sniper7
01-12-2011, 20:58
good thing my grandparents moved here but we still have there house their we have to try and sell [Rant2].


lol there was just another thread about this[ROFL1]

selling houses is tough no matter what. state income tax probably won't hurt them too much as most people interested are probably already residents.

sniper7
01-12-2011, 21:00
I heard discussion of this, but didn't know what they were talking about at the time.

I hope everyone just up and leaves. I don't want them here though.


I wouldn't mind the people from anywhere outside of chicago. a lot of good families, good farmers, lots of hunters. it is amazing how very large cities can ruin entire states.

theGinsue
01-12-2011, 21:34
Wait till Hickenpooper gets settled into office. *BAM* higher taxes than ritter ever thought about.

Thats just what I was sayin' - albeit in a roundabout way.

theGinsue
01-12-2011, 21:42
I wouldn't mind the people from anywhere outside of chicago. a lot of good families, good farmers, lots of hunters. it is amazing how very large cities can ruin entire states.

Of course, East St. Louis is nothing but a hive of high crime and no self-respect repressed "victims".

There are just about as many folks on public assistance there as there are in Chicago.

But, most of the rest of the state is really decent.

Troublco
01-12-2011, 22:54
But it's really just a fee....the poor Democrats who quietly shoved this through were just helping, and I'll bet they somehow managed to make themselves exempt...


(dripping sarcasm....)