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Income Tax

Kansas Gov. tax plan eliminates homeowner property tax deduction

The governor wants to wipe away the income deduction claimed by Kansans for property taxes they pay on their homes. Nixing that deduction would raise revenue, at least partially offsetting the lower state income tax rates Brownback wants to adopt.

Jan. 23–A new wrinkle in Gov. Sam Brownback’s tax plan emerged Wednesday — elimination of another deduction for Kansas homeowners.

The governor wants to wipe away the income deduction claimed by Kansans for property taxes they pay on their homes. Nixing that deduction would raise revenue, at least partially offsetting the lower state income tax rates Brownback wants to adopt.

It’s one of several components that Brownback’s plan depends upon to reduce income tax rates while balancing a $14 billion budget that avoids severe cuts in state services.

The governor also wants to keep a six-tenths of a cent sales tax increase that is scheduled to expire this summer. And he would ditch the deduction for home mortgage interest.

The latest twist caught lawmakers by surprise Wednesday, although the Brownback administration said it announced plans to eliminate the real estate tax deduction after the governor’s State of the State speech.

The plan would affect roughly 372,000 Kansans who deduct their property taxes on their income taxes.

The deduction saves the average taxpayer $125 a year. The home mortgage deduction trims an average $300 off income tax payments.In turn, the state would reap an added $68 million by dumping the property tax deduction. Eliminating the mortgage deduction could add $162 million to state coffers.

Senate Vice President Jeff King said he was unaware of the plan until he saw it in an online news report Wednesday that circulates to many Capitol insiders.

“We have to focus on lowering the property tax burden on our constituents,” said King, an Independence Republican. “If taking an exemption off of (the) income tax inadvertently raises the property tax burden on folks … that causes concern.”

The latest news complicates an already delicate political dance for the governor. He’s trying to balance a budget and slash income tax rates without radically cutting services. Tax cuts Brownback won last year would cause revenues to drop by about $700 million in the fiscal year beginning in July.

Sen. Jim Denning, an Overland Park Republican who sits on the Senate Ways and Means Committee, cautioned that going after the home mortgage property tax deductions could be politically dangerous.

“It’s all going to be an uphill battle,” Denning said of eliminating the home mortgage and real estate tax deductions.

The issue bubbled up Wednesday morning when Budget Director Steve Anderson outlined the governor’s tax-cutting plan to the Ways and Means Committee.

First, the governor wants to reduce the rate for the state’s lowest income tax bracket to 1.9 percent from 3 percent from 2014 to 2016. Then in 2017, his plan would cut the upper tax bracket to 3.5 percent from 4.9 percent.

If state revenues increase more than 4 percent, Brownback would look to cut income tax rates even more. The governor ultimately wants to zero out the income tax for Kansans.

Brownback “believes the state would benefit from a fair, flatter tax policy,” said his spokeswoman, Sherriene Jones-Sontag. “The bottom line to our approach to taxes is to grow the state’s economy and create more jobs for Kansans.”

Rep. Richard Carlson, chairman of the House tax committee, said he wants to see specifics of any tax change proposal early enough in the legislative session to allow for refinements.

“I haven’t formed an opinion yet,” the St. Marys Republican said of the proposal to eliminate the real estate tax deduction. “I want to look at the bill in its totality.”

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Copyright 2013 – The Kansas City Star