Plan would aid many poor in Utah
While it would be up to Congress to ultimately pass any new rules for the tax credit, a study by the Metro Policy Program at Brookings offered several ideas on how to expand the tax credit to help 8.4 million taxpayers in the nation's top 100 metropolitan areas including Salt Lake City.
"The EITC is widely regarded as a success story for working low-income Americans. It encourages work, helps families make ends meet and strengthens local communities," said Alan Berube of Brookings, who is one of the authors of the report, "Metro Raise: Boosting the Earned Income Tax Credit to Help Metropolitan Workers and Families." "However, the EITC could do much more for certain groups of low-wage workers. Making these expansions would help close the growing gap between wages and costs of living, which is most pronounced in America's major metropolitan areas."
Salt Lake City is one of the top 10 areas that would benefit from Berube's proposals to allow couples to exclude one-half of a second earner's income to claim the credit and create a third tier for families with three or more children.
"Looking at these proposals, someone had Utah on their mind," said Karen Crompton, executive director of Voice for Utah's Children on a panel discussing the report in Washington Friday.
Crompton said she was there to confirm the rumor that Utah has larger families than other states and the highest number of parents in the work force. She said a lot of families would benefit from the proposed changes, even those perceived as being middle class that are actually lower income.
Berube said the current rules can be a "disincentive to marriage" for low-income couples. Right now, a married couple with two children filing jointly and earning $30,000 qualifies for an EITC of $2,453 in 2008 but as two separate filers earning $15,000 each, the parent with two children qualifies for a credit of $4,824, or nearly double what the married couple receives.
Eliminating the "marriage penalty" and allowing married couples to not include half of a spouse's income to calculate the EITC would help about 1.8 million filers.
An additional tier for more children would help 2.9 million filers in the 100 largest metro areas, Berube said. He pointed out that families with three or more children have more housing, food and child-care expenses than those with one or two children, yet there is no additional tax credit for them.
The report also recommends increasing the credit for workers with no children, highlighting that those at the poverty line get taxed about $949 deeper into poverty with federal income and payroll taxes.
Crompton said her organization would keep working in Utah to for local changes to the credit but that "Congress can make a bigger difference" by implementing the changes. Specific legislation on these proposals does not exist yet.
Berube said it is always a matter of "competing priorities" among lawmakers, and part of the point of the report is to illustrate how the changes could improve things on a local level.
E-mail: suzanne@desnews.com
Recent comments
You can't just get money, theres a lot more to it than just getting a...
Dave: | June 22, 2008 at 1:40 p.m.
Good news! I was thinking of getting a job but I guess I'll just...
Dave | June 22, 2008 at 6:58 a.m.
Why do we keep rewarding taxpayers who do not practice birth control?...
Bob G | June 22, 2008 at 5:11 a.m.
- CEU biz team excels at convention 3:35 p.m.
- Shelter works to save pit bulls 3:34 p.m.
- Cashing checks costly for woman 3:33 p.m.
- Blood thinner Effient cleared 3:27 p.m.
- WGU grads are largest-ever class 3:26 p.m.
- Dems: tax the rich for health care 3:24 p.m.
- HBO defends U. logo use in 'Love' 3:06 p.m.
- Hill Cumorah Pageant 3:04 p.m.
- 2 Tooele police officers fired 2:52 p.m.
- Baseball teams fear 'haunted' hotel 2:51 p.m.
- Jazz talking Boozer trade?
- LDS seminary principal arrested
- Stadium of Fire flag burning was fake
- Reactions on Boozer speculation
- Jazz in back of line for free agents
- A primer for the 6th Potter film
- Okur signs two-year extension
- Jazz won't meet Lopez on Europe trip
- Restaurant destroyed by fire
- Mall owner seeks to retain zoning
- Bronco collecting a galaxy of recruits
141 - Letters: Palin mistreated
140 - Teachers struggle with district cuts
137 - Jazz talking Boozer trade?
132 - Blazers may offer Millsap a contract
123 - Stadium of Fire flag burning was fake
88 - LDS seminary principal arrested
83 - Moon landing: Let's hear from you
82 - Fairness of BCS debated
81 - Chaffetz eyes challenging Bennett
74
As more and more dads are put out of work in this economy, I've been...
The photographs are mysterious, brooding, dark. They show dimples and...
I blame the girl. Seriously, she is called the "victim" like he was...
To Anonymous, This article has nothing to do with government run health...
Being able write comment posts to a newspaper story, does NOT make you an...
Police have solid evidence as was already reported in this article about...
I didn't ask you for a plan. My point is you don't think we are affecting...
To "Anonymous | 2:20 p.m." they have been the majority since 2006. If they...
RedShirt is usually good for a laugh. It's just that he posts the same...
The church is perfect - the members aren't. This guy made a big mistake...
After reading this I can't say I know the entire story, and I can't say I...
Regardless of what he did.... (if the article is all true) he saved many,...

