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    You are at:Home»State News»Brownback supports ‘flat’ income tax plan budget fix

    Brownback supports ‘flat’ income tax plan budget fix

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    By KMAN Staff on April 5, 2017 State News
    In this April 2015 photo, Kansas Republican Gov. Sam Brownback makes a point during an interview in his office in the Statehouse in Topeka. Brownback is preparing to sign welfare legislation restricting how poor families can spend cash assistance from the state. (AP Photo/John Hanna)

    TOPEKA — Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback has endorsed a proposal to use a “flat” personal income tax to raise new revenue to fix the state’s serious budget problems.

    Brownback

    The conservative Republican governor said in a statement Wednesday that he would sign a bill like one before the state Senate.

    It would impose a 4.6 percent rate for all filers starting next year. That is the top rate for higher-income earners, and the bill would eliminate the 2.7 percent rate now in place for lower-income filers.

    The bill would also eliminate an income tax exemption for 330,000-plus farmers and business owners that Brownback has championed.

    Critics contend the bill would hit middle-class families hardest. It would raise about $690 million over two years. Kansas faces budget shortfalls totaling more than $1 billion.

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