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125th MAINE LEGISLATURE |
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LD 849 |
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LR 149(28) |
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An Act To Provide
Tax Relief for Maine's Citizens by Reducing Income Taxes |
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Fiscal Note for
Bill as Engrossed with:
C "C" (S-427)
S "C" (S-443) to C "C" (S-427)
S "F" (S-596) to C "C" (S-427) |
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Committee: Taxation |
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Fiscal Note |
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Potential future biennium revenue decrease - General Fund |
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Fiscal Detail
and Notes |
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The bill requires
that 40% of any General Fund revenue exceeding the General Fund appropriation
limitation as well as a portion of any unappropriated surplus of the General
Fund, also known as the Cascade, must be transferred at the close of each
fiscal year to the Tax Relief Fund for Maine Residents. This transfer takes
place only if the State Controller has certified that an amount has been
appropriated that is sufficient to fund benefits under the Circuitbreaker
Program. By November 1, 2014 and annually thereafter, the State Tax Assessor
shall calculate the amount by which income tax bracket rates may be reduced
during the subsequent tax year using the amount available from the fund.
Bracket rate reductions must be a minimum of 0.2 percentage points in the
first year and a minimum of 0.1 percentage points in subsequent years. No
bracket rate reductions will be made in any year in which funds are not
sufficient to pay for the minimum rate reduction in that year. When funds are
sufficient to pay for the rate reduction, the reduction must first be applied
to each bracket equally until the lower bracket rate equals 4%. Future
reductions will apply to reduce the higher bracket rates until there is a
single bracket with a rate of 4%. |
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Under current
forecasts, no transfers to the Fund are expected through FY 2014-15. Should
these forecasts not be realized, it is possible that the changes made by this
legislation may reduce revenues in future years. Any changes to the bracket
rates are self-funding in the short term but not in the long term, since the
new bracket rates would reduce revenue in future fiscal years without a
corresponding offset. As a result, the
existence of an unappropriated surplus could trigger bracket rate reductions
and reduce General Fund revenue in all future fiscal years. The precise
extent of the effects on future revenues is not determinable at this time. |
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