Tax and Budget

May 14, 2015 by Ted Boettner
Gutting the Personal Income is a Poor Strategy (Part I)

Last week, the newly created Joint Select Committee on Tax Reform held its second meeting to discuss overhauling the state's tax system. While the meeting included an overview of the state's current tax system and historical tax reform efforts of the past (e.g. Cecil Underwood's Commission on Fair Taxation), committee members made it quite clear in April…

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April 12, 2015 by Ted Boettner
Time to Modernize West Virginia’s Excess Acreage Tax

With tax reform looming on the state's public policy agenda, now would be a opportune time to revisit the state's Excess Acreage Tax. Since 1905, a corporation purchasing 10,000 acres or more of property in the state is subject to a one-time five cents per acre tax on owning the property. In 1999, Governor Underwood's…

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March 25, 2015 by Sean O'Leary
Governor Tomblin Exercises Veto Power over 2016 Budget

Yesterday Governor Tomblin announced his vetoes to the FY 2016 budget, which the legislature completed last week. As we went over here, the legislature increased the amount borrowed from the Rainy Day Fund to $22.9 million, in turn increasing appropriations above the governor's recommendations in some areas, including higher education. With his veto, the governor…

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March 9, 2015 by Sean O'Leary
Workers’ Comp Tax Cut For Coal Will Hurt the Budget

A number of proposals have been made this legislative session with the perceived aim to help revitalize West Virginia's coal industry. Two such proposals have been to eliminate or scale back the additional severance tax on coal that is dedicated to paying down the state's workers' compensation system debt. But, despite assurances the tax cut wouldn't…

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March 4, 2015 by Ted Boettner
A State Tax Credit for Democracy: Citizens Unite!

This evening the State Senate passed a bill that would make significant changes to our state's campaign election laws by increasing the amount of money people can contribute to political campaigns. Under Senate Bill 541, the cap for campaign individual contributions would increase from $1,000 to $2,700 per election cycle, matching the amount that federal…

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January 22, 2015 by Ted Boettner
How is West Virginia Balancing its FY 2016 Budget?

On Tuesday, Governor Tomblin announced at a bi-partisan press conference that he is proposing to transfer $44 million from the teacher's retirement account (TERS) to help close an estimated $195 million gap in the FY 2016 state budget.The state is able to use the $44 million from TERS, according to the governor, because the investment returns…

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January 22, 2015 by Ted Boettner
Meeting Our Budget Challenges: Fiscal Year 2016 and Beyond

At the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy's 2nd Annual Budget Breakfast, Executive Director Ted Boettner recapped Governor Tomblin's proposed Fiscal Year 2016 state budget and the impact it will have on West Virginia's low- and moderate-income working families. View his presentation here.

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December 31, 2014 by Ted Boettner
Corporate Tax Cuts Haven’t Brought Prosperity to West Virginia

Yesterday,  Governor Tomblin announced that the business franchise tax will be fully eliminated beginning tomorrow (Jan 1). While the governor says the elimination of the business franchise tax and the reduction in the corporate net income tax has helped to "secure additional investments" and that the state has benefited from these changes, there is no…

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November 7, 2014 by Sean O'Leary
How the Marcellus Boom Masked West Virginia’s Tax Cut Problems

Earlier this week, the state's monthly revenue report was released, which keeps track of the various taxes that make up the state's General Revenue Fund. For October, the General Revenue Fund was up $5 million over the estimate, a pretty good month. This was largely due to severance taxes, which came in at $38.1 million…

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April 25, 2014 by Ted Boettner
Restoring Budget Cuts Will Help More Children and Families

On March 23, Governor Tomblin used his line-item veto power to cut several early childhood and domestic violence programs from the FY2015 budget passed by the legislature. This included over $1 million in cuts to In-Home Family Education, Family Resource Networks and Starting Points Family Resource Centers, Child Advocacy Centers, domestic violence programs and services,…

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