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Lawmakers Eye Earned Income Tax Credit for Road Funding

WMUK

(MPRN-Lansing) A state House panel is eyeing the elimination of a tax credit for working poor families to help come up with more money for roads. 

Representative Jeff Farrington (R-Utica) is chairman of the House Roads and Economic Development Committee. He says eliminating the state’s earned income tax credit would add about $120 million for road funding. At the same time, he says, it does not do very much to help working poor families.

“In Michigan, the average payout last year was $143 from the EITC, the Michigan portion of it,” he says. “That’s $2.37 per week.”

Supporters of the tax credit say that refund may not seem like much, but it allows low-income households to do things like deal with an unpaid bill, buy school clothes, or a pay for a car repair.

“Eliminating the Michigan Earned Income Tax Credit would be a tax hike on 820,000 working families who are raising 1 million – 1 million children here in Michigan,”

says Gilda Jacobs, president of the Michigan League for Public Policy.

“What it will do is basically increase poverty for thousands of Michiganders, which is a legacy that no one should aspire to.”

Governor Rick Snyder (R) cut the state EITC from 20 percent of the federal credit to 6 percent in his 2011 budget proposal.

Democrats cut a deal last year to make restoring the credit to 20 percent part of the Proposal One ballot proposal that was rejected by voters last month.

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