Arkansas lawmakers give first OK to $500M tax cut package
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — Arkansas lawmakers on Wednesday approved a $500 million tax cut package over objections from Democrats who questioned its potential impact on the state's COVID-19 funds and called for action on teacher raises.
The majority-Republican House and Senate approved identical bills outlining the cuts proposed by GOP Gov. Asa Hutchinson after the state's surplus reached $1.6 billion. Final votes are expected on the cuts before the Legislature adjourns its special session Thursday.
The package includes speeding up when cuts in the state's top individual and corporate tax rates that lawmakers approved last year take effect. It also includes a nonrefundable $150 tax credit for individuals making up to $87,000 a year.
The top Democrat in the Senate questioned whether the state would be forced to repay millions in coronavirus relief funds under a federal rule prohibiting states from using that money to offset tax cuts. That rule has been permanently blocked by a federal judge but the case is on appeal.
“We’re pushing all our chips in to the middle of the table and making a big, big bet that we're not going to have to repay that," Senate Minority Leader Keith Ingram said.
State finance officials and Republican leaders have said the state faces little risk of that happening because the cuts aren't being funded directly or indirectly by the relief money. Republican Sen. Jonathan Dismang said high inflation is what has helped the state build up its record surplus.
“That is driving up our revenues and it's hurting our people back home and we should return some of it back to the taxpayers," Dismang said.
Democrats have complained about the session's agenda not including a plan to increase pay for teachers. Hutchinson earlier this year proposed raising teacher...