I was proud to support major tax cuts during the 2023 legislative session. Most importantly, Indiana's income tax will
drop to 2.9% over the next four years. This permanent tax cut is expected to
save Hoosiers over $1 billion by 2027, including more than $100 million in 2024 alone.
In addition:
- Indiana doubled the income tax deduction parents can claim for a new child.
- Members of the Armed Forces and National Guard will be totally exempt from state income tax on their military pay starting in 2024.
- Hoosier businesses, especially small businesses, will see over $50 million in federal tax savings through a new law making more LLCs and S corps eligible for a federal tax deduction already available to larger corporations.
- Indiana coupled the earned income tax credit to the federal credit requirements as of Jan. 1, 2023, which will make it easier for families to claim the credit in Indiana and save them an estimated $20 million per year.
- Going forward, the General Assembly will review our entire state and local tax system and consider ways to lower the income tax and/or property taxes on homes.
INVESTING IN OUR FUTURE
Indiana's new state budget increases funding for K-12 education by $2.9 billion over the next two years. Here are some of the key changes included within that $2.9 billion increase.
- Public schools can no longer charge families for textbooks and other curricular materials, saving Hoosier parents hundreds of dollars per year.
- Under the school funding formula, schools are seeing increased per-child funding for every student they teach, with targeted increases for special-education students and high schoolers enrolled in high-wage, high-demand vocational courses.
- Under HEA 1591 from the 2023 session, school districts must spend at least 62% of their state tuition support funding on teacher pay and benefits. Teacher salaries will be locally bargained under the new budget until later this fall, and we should see school districts raising pay and/or increasing benefits for their teachers.
- The state provided an extra $700 million to pay down the unfunded liability for our largest teachers' retirement pension fund. This move is a win-win for retired teachers and all taxpayers. By putting an extra $700 million toward this fund, we are moving up the date for when the pension will be fully funded, showing that Indiana is keeping its financial promises to teachers and ensuring Hoosier taxpayers won't be on the hook for this pension liability years into the future.
- The budget provides an $11 million increase for Secured School Safety Grants, which help school districts cover a wide array of safety-related costs.
REDUCING HEALTH CARE COSTS
Unfortunately, multiple national studies have shown Indiana's health care prices are among the highest in the country. During the past legislative session, the General Assembly enacted several laws to help reduce the high costs of health care.
- SEA 8 requires state-regulated health insurance plans to return a minimum of 85% of the rebate on a prescription drug to the consumer or the plan sponsor.
- HEA 1004 introduces "site of service" language, which will save patients money by prohibiting doctors' offices owned by large hospitals from automatically billing at a higher rate than independent doctors' offices.
- SEA 7 prohibits primary-care doctor contracts from including noncompete agreements, which are used to restrict doctors from being able to practice in their current community if they change employers. This change will make Indiana more attractive for new and relocating physicians because they will have more freedom to practice. It will also make it easier for patients to keep their current doctor if their physician changes employers.
PROPERTY TAX RELIEF FOR HOOSIERS
While property tax rates are set by local government officials, not the Indiana General Assembly, it is important to make sure Indiana's tax system is working fairly for Hoosiers. During the recent legislative session, I supported several new laws to help reform our state's property tax system.
- One new law gives counties the option to limit how much property taxes can increase from year to year for moderate-income homeowners who have lived in their homes for at least 10 years. The goal is to help homeowners who bought an affordable home on a fixed income years ago, and the home value has increased substantially over time.
- HEA 1499 temporarily increases the supplemental homestead deduction for the next two years and lowers the cap on how much property-tax revenue can grow. If home values continue to remain at the current elevated levels, this will help reduce the tax burden for Hoosier homeowners in 2024 and 2025. Based on current circumstances, it's estimated this change will save homeowners $110 million statewide next year compared to what they would pay without this new law.
- That same new law also expands eligibility for the property-tax deduction and property-tax credit for senior-citizen homeowners. Indiana law allows eligible senior citizens to deduct up to $14,000 of their home's value from property taxation and caps the annual growth of their property-tax bills at 2%. To receive these benefits, a senior must be on a fixed income. HEA 1499 allows the income limit for these benefits to grow every year based on the cost-of-living increase for Social Security, to help seniors who initially qualify not lose eligibility as their retirement income grows.
- SEA 325 will reduce property-tax bills for outbuildings and improvements on a person's homestead property, such as decks, patios, gazebos and pools. These structures will now be subject to a lower property-tax cap, and many taxpayers will be able to apply the homestead deduction to these structures.
- Another new law makes the property-tax appeals process more taxpayer-friendly by saying that if you appeal your home's assessment, the assessed value of your property cannot go up as a result of the appeal. In other words, if you successfully appeal, your assessment will go down. But if your appeal fails, the worst-case scenario would be your assessment stays at the amount you initially challenged.