FRANKFORT —
The prospective state Senate President and Speaker of the House Friday were noncommittal about reaction to recommendations to create $690 million in new state revenues through tax reform.
Democratic Speaker of the House Greg Stumbo, D-Prestonsburg, said he wants to examine the proposals by Gov. Steve Beshear’s Blue Ribbon Commission on Tax Reform further but said it includes at least some things he favors.
Sen. Robert Stivers, R-Manchester, who has been chosen by Republican Senators to be the next Senate President, said he hadn’t seen any details of the recommendations except those listed in media accounts.
“I have not seen the tax commission’s final recommendations and I don’t know if they are in final form,” Stivers said Friday. There are only things released to the press about tobacco tax, reducing the amount of exemptions (for taxing pensions). Those are about the only two things I’ve heard.”
The commission, chaired by Lt. Gov. Jerry Abramson, made a number of recommendations but chief among them are to lower individual and corporate income taxes from 6 percent to 5.8 percent; limit the amount of income exemption which pensioners can claim to $30,000; raise cigarette and tobacco taxes; extend the sales tax to selected services; and to offer a 15 percent Earned Income Tax Credit for the low-income, working poor.
The General Assembly will also face a recommendation to up its contribution to state employee pension funds to more than $300 million in the next budget, which makes the additional revenue more tempting for lawmakers. But any form of new taxes also creates fear among lawmakers who must seek re-election every two or four years.
Asked if he thought the recommended amount had a chance of approval by the Senate, Stivers said any such measure is required by the constitution to start in the House and noted that Stumbo has previously called for the commission to issue “bold recommendations.”
“The better question is to go ask Greg if that’s bold enough for him,” Stivers said. “I don’t know if the House thinks that’s bold enough.”
Stivers said, however, that the Republican Senate thinks the state faces more of a spending problem than a revenue problem.
Stumbo issued a statement Friday that said he’s looking forward to examining the commission’s final report.
“I know Gov. Beshear has asked all of us to keep an open mind, and I believe members of the House will do just that,”Stumbo said. “It has some recommendations I have long favored, such as corporate tax reduction and an earned income credit.”
But Stumbo said again he does not believe any additional tax burden should be borne by the state’s lower-income and middle classes.
Abramson said Thursday he expects to deliver the commission’s final, written report to Beshear on Monday.
Ronnie Ellis writes for CNHI News Service and is based in Frankfort. Reach him at rellis@cnhi.com. Follow CNHI News Service stories on Twitter at www.twitter.com/cnhifrankfort.
Kentucky Statehouse Raw Feed
Stumbo, Stivers react to tax talk
- Kentucky Statehouse Raw Feed
-
-
Beshear will call special session if pension issue unresolved
Gov. Steve Beshear held out hope Tuesday that lawmakers can still find a compromise solution to the state’s badly underfunded employee pension funds in the waning days of the 30-day General Assembly.
He all but said he’s prepared to call a special session later this year if no solution is reached in this session. -
Right to work, prevailing wage debate for nought
It was perhaps a perfect illustration of the 2013 General Assembly deliberations so far.
-
Redistricting, pension fix remain hot topics
Tuesday was the final day to file bills in the state House but that doesn’t mean the possibility of a House redistricting plan or using instant racing revenues to fund a pension system fix are dead.
-
Selenium regulations deferred in committee
Concerns by environmental representatives persuaded the Administrative Regulations and Review Subcommittee Monday to defer a new regulation proposed by the Cabinet for Energy and Environment on discharges of selenium into Kentucky streams.
-
Senate unanimous: DNA bill ‘matter of justice’
The Kentucky Senate unanimously passed a bill Monday that would allow those in prison to seek DNA testing to prove their innocence.
-
Special taxing bill sails through the House
A bill to require more uniform reporting of financial information by special taxing districts sailed through the House 96-1.
-
Tax reform to be looked at during special session
Lt. Gov. Jerry Abramson and Mary Lassiter, Gov. Steve Beshear’s executive cabinet secretary, made plain Tuesday they believe tax reform is desperately needed — but won’t be undertaken during the regular session.
-
Revised ‘pill mill’ regulations calm most objections
Revised regulations implementing a wide-ranging new law to rein in prescription drug abuse seem to have quelled the most vociferous objections to the law.
House Bill 1, which attempts to combat prescription painkiller abuse and “pill mills,” went into effect last summer but initial emergency regulations governing prescribing procedures and tracking of use and prescription of the drugs caused widespread alarm among physicians, hospitals and patients with legitimate need for the drugs. -
We’re more alike than we know
Time moves and the world changes, but in Kentucky time moves and we don’t seem to change much.
I love this place. I love its people, so colorful and interesting and many of them full of wisdom. I love the variety and beauty of its geography. Kentucky’s people are usually warmhearted and they mostly love their land, recognizing how much it shaped who they are – even while they often cruelly mistreat it.
We stubbornly resist change. I understand the impulse; I feel it especially as I grow older. I see the things which made and shaped me changing or disappearing. The little farm where I grew up is covered by houses and driveways which have replaced the fields. The hedgerows and pathways I once walked, just my dog and I, and that enormous presence all around me I believed was God. -
Stumbo, Stivers react to tax talk
The prospective state Senate President and Speaker of the House Friday were noncommittal about reaction to recommendations to create $690 million in new state revenues through tax reform.
Democratic Speaker of the House Greg Stumbo, D-Prestonsburg, said he wants to examine the proposals by Gov. Steve Beshear’s Blue Ribbon Commission on Tax Reform further but said it includes at least some things he favors. - More Kentucky Statehouse Raw Feed Headlines
-
Beshear will call special session if pension issue unresolved

