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Tuesday, July 7, 2015
By George Donnelly (@geodonnelly) with Keith Regan
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What's happening today
Gov. Baker delivers remarks at the International Space Station Research and Development Conference (ISS R&D) at the Boston Marriott Copley Place, 1 pm. Other speakers include active NASA astronauts Cady Coleman, Karen Nyberg, and Sunita Williams. More information, and some live-streamed sessions, at www.issconference.org... Sen. Thomas Kennedy's funeral is today at St. Edith Stein Parish, Brockton, 11 am... Boston Mayor Martin Walsh joins U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro and state Housing and Economic Development Undersecretary Chrystal Kornegay at the Quincy Heights housing development ribbon-cutting ceremony, 193 Magnolia Street, Dorchester, 11:30 am.
Some tax-freeze math: Why little numbers matter
Today, MASSterList will heedlessly step on the third rail of Massachusetts tax policy -- entertaining the idea of raising them. We'll start with a back of the envelope calculation: How much would keeping the income tax rate steady (instead of allowing it to drop by 5 basis points) cost the average household? The answer: About $33 a year (using a household income number of $66,768).
All the same, small numbers have big meaning. The Senate floated a plan to freeze the rate to pay for an expanded earned income tax credit, a provision that would put more money in the pockets of the working poor. If the Massachusetts economy keeps expanding -- not a given -- the rate eventually will rest at 5 percent, and ultimately cost the average household roughly $100 per year. But it looks like the freeze plan is a non-starter with Speaker DeLeo, and certainly Gov. Baker.
There's some irony in denying the poor a tax break when compared to the Legislature's over-the-top, regressive increase of the sales tax from 5 percent to 6.25 percent in 2009. That one still takes real money disproportionately out of the pockets of low-income residents.
At 5.15 percent, Massachusetts has a competitive rate. North Carolina's flat rate is 5.75 percent, and many other competitor states, including California and New York, have much higher tax rates. Small changes in tax rates have no macroeconomic impact, but rate very high in political fallout.
Op-ed exclusive: Why we should keep the fare cap
The move to lift the MBTA fare cap hasn't gotten a lot of attention, and Kristina Egan of Transportation for Massachusetts and Tony Dutzik of the Frontier Group argue why it should stay in place. "...Establishing a new fare policy for the T is something that is best done deliberately, following careful study, and in consultation with the riders who use the system every day."
It's another MASSterList original op-ed. http://bit.ly/1eAsmwf
Wynn to Walsh: Simmer down or get sued
With a court date looming Thursday, Wynn Resorts sought to raise the stakes in its game of legal poker with Boston, threatening to sue both the city and Mayor Marty Walsh personally for what it calls a "campaign of falsehoods" against Wynn's would-be Everett casino and the process that led to its approval. According to the Globe, a letter from Wynn attorney Barry B. Langberg took aim at subpoenas issued by the city last week for investigators in the case that claim some were given access to confidential information as they investigated the involvement of convicted felon Charles Lightbody in the ownership of the Everett property. "The language of your subpoena was not typical legal wording but instead was designed to spread vicious falsehoods," Langberg wrote. On Thursday, the judge in the case will hear oral arguments on a motion by Wynn to have the city's lawsuit tossed. http://bit.ly/1fjObBc
The meaning of pregnant pauses
One of the best political stories of the day can be found on the State House News Service website. When the Big Three paused for an interview after their weekly meeting yesterday, State House News Service's Andy Metzer covered the action. One question concerned the slow action on the state budget: "Asked whether he would be willing to take up a second interim budget, Rosenberg was quiet for a few moments before answering. 'Thanks guys,' said DeLeo's spokesman Seth Gitell, breaking the silence. Baker then offered: 'I hope there's not a second.' Patting both DeLeo and Rosenberg on their backs, he added, 'I'm very optimistic that these folks will figure this one out, OK?'"http://statehousenews.com/news/20151340
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