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December 14, 2009

House Passes Tax Break Extensions For 2010

By a vote of 241-181, the House on Wednesday sent the Senate a bill (HR 4213) to extend through 2010 a $31 billion package of temporary tax credits and other fiscal incentives that benefit a multitude of U.S. businesses, farms, units of government, schools, charities, individuals, nonprofit organizations, religious institutions and other recipients.

The bill uses two measures to pay for itself. One would tax the earnings of hedge-fund managers and certain investment partners as ordinary income rather than capital gains. The other would increase Treasury receipts by cracking down on wealthy Americans who use secret overseas bank accounts to evade taxes.

  • A sales tax deduction that mainly benefits people who live in the nine states without a state income tax. The states are Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Texas, Tennessee, Washington and Wyoming. Cost: $1.8 billion.
  • An additional standard deduction for state and local property taxes for taxpayers who don’t itemize their deductions. Cost: $1.5 billion
  • A deduction of up to $4,000 for college tuition and related expenses. Cost: $1.5 billion.
  • A deduction of up to $250 for teachers who spend their own money for books and other classroom supplies. Cost: $228 million.
  • A credit that helps businesses finance research and development. Cost: $7 billion.
  • Accelerated depreciation for improvements made to leased restaurant and retail property. Cost: $5.4 billion.
  • Additional depreciation allowance for businesses that suffer damage from a federally-declared disaster. Cost: $1.4 billion.

Do you know how your state member of Congress voted on this issue of tax break extensions in 2010? Do you know the true tax facts about these bills?

You should!

Source: corsicanadailysun.com, seattletimes.nwsource.com

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