Only Tax Increases Still Pending at Assembly

Gov. Glenn Youngkin

By Steve Haner

Governor Glenn Youngkin’s package of proposed tax changes is now stalled in both the Virginia Senate and the House of Delegates. A House subcommittee spiked it Feb. 5 and then dashed other bills imposing major tax increases on higher income Virginians. A full Senate committee refused his bill on Feb. 6.

Of course, anything is possible until the General Assembly adjourns in March, but it seems only two major tax increase proposals are still viable in the 2024 Assembly.  

The first would allow all Virginia cities and counties to add an additional 1% to the sales and use tax within their borders for school spending, if a local referendum approves it. Current law has allowed that in eight counties and one city but this bill would expand that to the entire state. It is advancing in both chambers. 

The second, not usually discussed as a tax hike, is the proposal for a new state trust fund to provide weekly payments to employees taking family or medical leave from work. The bill calls for a payroll tax to fund the benefits but does not specify a tax rate or indicate just how much of an employee’s wage would be taxed. The Virginia Employment Commission based its fiscal estimates on a tax of just under 1%.  

Bills creating this new state-paid family and medical leave benefit program are now in the budget committees of both chambers, and they have until February 18 to reveal their budget amendments. This program could easily become a $1-2 billion annual entitlement. The underlying federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) provides no income replacement, just up to 12 weeks of job protection for covered absences.

The Republican governor’s tax package and most of the other proposals are being continued to the 2025 session and may be taken up for study in the interim. Secretary of Finance Stephen Cummings was in the meeting before the vote on Monday arguing that Virginia’s economic competitiveness is eroding, and tax policy is driving some Virginians to relocate to other states.   

The bill was also supported in testimony by the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy, the National Federation of Independent Business, and the Virginia Manufacturers Association. An economist from Old Dominion University backed up the numbers on population loss and Americans for Tax Reform detailed the list of other states cutting taxes. Virginia need only stand still to become a higher tax state. 

The governor’s bill made slight cuts in the existing income tax rates, still leaving the top tax rate at more than 5% — far higher than the states seeing population booms. On the other hand, his bill would also have increased the sales and use tax by another 1%. And it proposed to expand the items subject to the sales and use tax to include more digital goods and services, things now not taxed.  

The income tax changes produced a big tax cut, of greater benefit to those with greater taxable income. The sales tax rate increase and the expanded tax base took much of that benefit back. The net result, according to its fiscal impact statement, was an overall tax cut of about $460 million in the next two-year budget. 

In the governor’s proposed budget, he assumed the tax cuts would pass. Killing the Youngkin tax bills means the House and Senate budget writers now have $460 million more to spend in their proposed budgets.   

Another House subcommittee, meeting a week earlier, had already dispatched a bill to eliminate the local personal property tax on cars. That was another priority of the governor’s but not one he included in his proposed budget.   

Democratic members of the House committee that carried over the income and sales tax bill Monday were dismissive of Cummings’ claims that Virginia’s economy is suffering, and even disputed the evidence that Virginia is suffering a net loss of population. They stood firmly on the same ideological ground when, earlier in the same meeting, Republicans warned that bills to increase the income tax on higher incomes would also encourage migration.  

One of those bills, which drew a parade of endorsements from progressive organizations, proposed a new tax bracket for filers with taxable incomes above $1 million. The new 10% tax rate would bring in a steady $1.5 to $2 billion more per year, according to its fiscal estimate. The patron and others argued that few if any taxpayers would flee to lower tax states despite recent evidence that since the pandemic, high income families increasingly move to lower tax states 

The second bill, introduced by House Finance Committee Chair Vivian Watts (D-Fairfax), proposed a more modest 7% top tax rate, but at a lower income trigger of $600,000. She indicated she was trying to match the top tax bracket for federal taxes. Despite it affecting more taxpayers, with the lower rate it produced about half the revenue of the other bill, $500 to $700 million per year.  

Perhaps because of the lower rate, the same progressive organizations that enthusiastically testified for the 10% bill were absent from the podium when Watts’ 7% bill was discussed. Only the Virginia Education Association spoke for both. Not interested in the 7% bill were the Commonwealth Institute for Fiscal Analysis, Voices for Virginia’s Children, the Virginia Poverty Law Center, and others.  

It did not matter in the end. The two income tax hike bills, both of which included provisions to direct the extra revenue to popular programs (child tax credits, family caregiver tax credits, local schools), suffered the same fate as the governor’s. They were carried over until 2025. 

So was another progressive priority that received the same host of endorsements during the meeting, a bill to reinstate Virginia’s estate tax. It was to be applied only to estates also subject to the federal tax, which means no tax on estates smaller than $13.6 million. Above that, a 16% tax rate would apply, and was estimated to produce $60 million in added revenue. As was the pattern with the income tax increases, the bill sought to dictate how the funds would be spent.  

The House subcommittee even punted on expanding Virginia’s existing earned income tax credit (EITC) to allow a state credit equal to 20% of the allowed federal credit. The bill would have made the credit “refundable,” meaning beneficiaries with little or no actual tax owed would get a check from the state instead.  The impact estimate on that was only about $30 million per year.  

So, the progressive wave that swept in Democratic control of the Assembly may produce few tax ripples, except for a possible FMLA payroll tax which would be significant. But it was sufficient to drown the governor’s aspirations for a third session with at least some positive tax developments.  

First published this morning by the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy. 


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64 responses to “Only Tax Increases Still Pending at Assembly”

  1. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    Shhhhh…don’t say this out loud, but the local sales tax and a payroll tax are both highly regressive, hitting low and medium wage earners the hardest. So, the title progressive hardly applies to these folks. Let’s see if they do this.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      We need a luxury tax of 10% on tickets over $100,000 and an additional 10% on $1M tickets. Excluding real estate.

      1. Assessed only when purchased new, or will the 2012 Ferrari 458 I one day hope to purchase be subject to this tax as well? 😉

        1. Nancy Naive Avatar
          Nancy Naive

          If you’ve got the cash for the buy, the tax won’t stop you. Unless, you’re using everything you’ve got.

          1. LarrytheG Avatar

            folks buy new vehicles all the time and don’t:

            1. – know there is a hefty sales tax on the vehicle.

            2.- that the locality will also heavily tax high value new vehicles.

            3.- that your insurance premium will also go up substantially.

            It’s called for some, “spending beyond your means”.

          2. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            Or, it’s called the cost of doing business.

          3. LarrytheG Avatar

            Can be if you have a boni fide business and want to plow your profits into such.

            But for the average schmoo , in many counties/cities in Virginia, it identifies you as wealthy enough to pay more in taxes (I presume).

            Of the things that can be taxed – like wealth and sales tax, the tax on cars seems to be the middle group.

            It’s pretty progressive in terms of how much tax, the more expensive the car, the higher the tax!

            And one doesn’t have to buy a very expensive new car to have basic transportation. A beater will do fine getting you around and pretty much escape uber taxes on prchase or ownership.

            Sales taxes that are prohibited on basic necessities could also be seen that way.

            Might be interesting to be able to have a referendum that asks citizens how they want to be taxes, sales or vehicle?

            Rural, economically depressed counties, it can be akin to blood from a stone.

          4. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            Life is business, Larry, and it’s damned hard work.

          5. LarrytheG Avatar

            the IRS determines whether life is a business or not. Right?

          6. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            The IRS determines life. They stop collecting when you’re dead two years.

          7. LarrytheG Avatar

            Well, lots of folks don’t let the IRS determine “life” including ones that file Schedule C to offset
            their tax liability for goodies..instead but it’s got to be a worrisome thing… over the longer run, I would think. Determining what is “fair game” with the IRS can also be worrisome over the longer run, I would think.

          8. LarrytheG Avatar

            The “gig” economy and who is or is not a legitimate independent contractor or a “business” has flummoxed the IRS but they’re working on it.

          9. Unless, you’re using everything you’ve got.

            Can’t do that. Gotta budget about 10% of the purchase price annually for maintenance.

            I guess you’re right. 10% tax wouldn’t break the deal.

            Truth be told, though, I’ll probably just get a lightly used Corvette for 25-30% of the price of the Ferrari and a lot less maintenance costs.

          10. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            Chevy engines are readily available. Friend has a power boat with a Chevy 350. I mentioned that Ford makes V-6 turbo that would reduce fuel consumption and deliver more power. His reply, “Yeah, but he can buy 3 rebuilt 350s for the same cost.” Rust is pretty.

    2. LarrytheG Avatar

      yep. BUt not if you increase the sales tax on new cars and such.

      despite all the hue and cry over the “car tax”, it’s a middle ground between taxing real estate and sales tax. It taxes those who apparently can afford it better than those who get whacked by a pure sales tax.

      the idea of replacing the car tax with a sales tax was/is DUMB imo.

      The problem with the car tax wasn’t the car tax per se , it was how the State under Gilmore got involved in the business of “rebates” for the car tax. Something it had no business doing as a simple matter of State vs local tax policy.

      THe state basically collected taxes from local jurisdictions taxpayers then rebated it back to local jurisdictions to reduce the local car tax.
      Talk about smoke and mirrors!

      Youngkins proposed tax cuts are on the dangerous side imo, because they are premised on the idea that increased revenues will continue – not a good thing to bet on!

      1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
        Eric the half a troll

        Yep, the best way to avoid a hefty car tax is to drive a beater car. Still miss my old 82 Nissan Sentra…

        1. LarrytheG Avatar

          Yes. So you do have a CHOICE as to how much tax you want to pay for “transportation”. Choose a beater for minimal tax or choose a Corvette or big new SUV or Pickup for higher taxes. You choose!

  2. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    Shhhhh…don’t say this out loud, but the local sales tax and a payroll tax are both highly regressive, hitting low and medium wage earners the hardest. So, the title progressive hardly applies to these folks. Let’s see if they do this.

  3. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “The first would allow all Virginia cities and counties to add an additional 1% to the sales and use tax within their borders for school spending, if a local referendum approves it.”

    God forbid tax payers be able to decide for themselves whether they should be taxed or not!!

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      What are the odds?

    2. LarrytheG Avatar

      Yes… and for school construction primarily!

      Ye GADS, the very idea of letting people decide if they want to be taxed. BLASPHEMY!

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        Heaven forbid that not only do they choose to be taxed but also decide how to spend it.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar

          there are more than a few folks who don’t have kids or had them but they grew up that don’t
          necessarily see the “benefit” of schools for them, especially ones that never supported public schools
          even when they had kids. On the other hand, if a proposal for increased taxes to pay for “choice”/charter
          schools might also not work so well for other that are opposed to such.

          1. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            For those with children already grown the best argument for spending on schools is to provide those grown children with better employees.

          2. LarrytheG Avatar

            Don’t take my money. It’s mine.

          3. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            It clearly states on it who owns it.

          4. God?

            😉

          5. LarrytheG Avatar

            only that they trust GOD …. ownership is not GOD.

          6. Tuist, huh?

            So, we used to be on the Gold Standard, but now we’re on the God Standard?

          7. Trust, huh?

            So, we used to be on the Gold Standard, but now we’re on the God Standard?

          8. LarrytheG Avatar

            Only for the confused.

          9. Lefty665 Avatar

            What’s a consonant between friends?

          10. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            Well, not us.

          11. LarrytheG Avatar

            well, yeah, you certainly get to keep SOME!

    3. As long as staple items like groceries are not subject to the 1% increase I think I can be convinced to support it.

  4. Super Brain Avatar
    Super Brain

    Outstanding article.

  5. energyNOW_Fan Avatar
    energyNOW_Fan

    Yes I have argued Virginia lack of progressive tax structure, coupled with generous low tax rates on those below about $100k puts the middle class in the high tax zone. Other taxes do that too, like SS FICA limits. When I had consulting income in the $100k/yr range, I was shocked at the tax bite for the meager income, starting with ~12% unmatched by employer for SS. Almost wrote a BR article, but then Trump changed the tax laws.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Well, they could change back in a year. Stand by. The need for reform is glaring and obvious but I think the last time it was tried Bob McDonnell chaired the panel as a delegate. It has been that long.

    2. Lefty665 Avatar

      Employees pay the employee 6.2% of SS tax too. As a consultant you get the other 6.2% back when you file your 1040. At the end of the year net SS tax for independent contractors is the same as for employees.

    3. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Well, they could change back in a year. Stand by. The need for reform in this state is glaring and obvious but I think the last time it was tried Bob McDonnell chaired the panel as a delegate. It has been that long.

    4. how_it_works Avatar
      how_it_works

      The important thing to realize here is that in much of the state, a $100k salary puts you in the 1% (compared with the people who live in the same locality).

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        correct. And if you were making 100K in Wise county, you’d be in hog heaven for sure, not so much for NoVa.

    5. Lefty665 Avatar

      Employees pay the employee 6.2% of SS tax too. As a consultant you get the other 6.2% back when you file your 1040. At the end of the year net SS tax for independent contractors is the same as for employees.

      1. energyNOW_Fan Avatar
        energyNOW_Fan

        Hmm…I wonder if I made a mistake way back when…but I always use TurboTax

        1. Lefty665 Avatar

          If you didn’t get the employer’s half back as a credit then you sure did, although it would not be a surprise to find you got it and just did not notice it. Turbo Tax is good, but no guarantee that everything is hunky dory. Schedule C has legs.

  6. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Easy to be hard…

    Nobody does it better.
    Makes me feel sad for the rest.
    Nobody does it twice as good as you,
    Nikki, you’re second best…

    1. Lefty665 Avatar

      The second bestness parity between Haley and Harris on the other side is spooky and almost as scary as their respective firstbestnesses.

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        I was trying to make a funny about the Nevada primary where Nikki literally came in second to “none”. Nobody does it better.

        1. And you did, and I appreciated that:)

          That Nobody is the clearly preferable choice to any of the candidates makes it hard to repress the horror that we’re sinking into even long enough to laugh. But thank you for trying to inject a little levity.

          Aside from that Mz America, uh Egypt, uh Mexico, how did you like my secure filing system of cardboard boxes where I kept illegally retained TS/SCI documents stashed behind my ‘Vette? The special prosecutor said I’m innocent, but I don’t remember why.

          Nobody, please bring on nobody, it will be an improvement over the current prospects.

          1. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            I’ll settle for an anybody, or… any body.

          2. We’ve already got any body and it’s not fit to run things today not to mention running for another term. Kamala puts the 25th amendment out of reach as a short term solution. The longer term alternative, presuming we survive that long, looks like Trump redux.

            Auuugghhh how did we get here? I feel like Charlie Brown with Lucy holding the election football.

          3. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            I can take Kamala… just so long as I don’t have to listen to her. Seriously, the woman can afford a speech coach.

  7. LarrytheG Avatar

    One thing not mentioned much in BR when discussing the business environment in Virginia is worker compensation costs:

    ” Virginia employers’ costs for workers’ compensation are the second-lowest in the nation, tied with Michigan, at 61 cents per $100 of wages paid, according to the National Academy of Social Insurance. Only Washington, D.C., with its workforce of mainly office and retail workers, has lower costs.”

    https://richmond.com/news/local/business/workers-comp-costs-for-virginia-businesses-set-to-decline-again/article_242e6070-24af-11ee-abb8-6f3288581f60.html#:~:text=Virginia%20employers'%20costs%20for%20workers,retail%20workers%2C%20has%20lower%20costs.

    The laws with respect to worker compensation itself seem to be pretty important to businesses that could be subject to liability for on-the-job injuries and such.

  8. f/k/a_tmtfairfax Avatar
    f/k/a_tmtfairfax

    I suspect that North Carolina Governor Cooper (D) and the General Assembly (R-controlled) are smiling. Between this fiasco and Maryland’s push for higher business taxes, some more businesses and higher income remote workers will be heading to the Old North State.

    But for bordering the federal government’s spending machine, both states have very little to offer businesses and higher income remote workers.

    1. energyNOW_Fan Avatar
      energyNOW_Fan

      Did not hear about Maryland business tax, MD like Virginia focus is on captive (gov’t) market and non-competitive. I think Virginia prob is too low on business and utility fees as well, with public in NoVa taking up the tax slack. But to fix that is hard. Bottom line is we want to have high taxes, but not admit it.

    2. how_it_works Avatar
      how_it_works

      Virginia had little to offer my dad after Mobil Oil laid him off. That was in 1995. Why he thought it was a good idea to move here for a non-Federal job is anyone’s guess. I guess he figured he had more job security than he really did. They didn’t even give him a raise. I found all his tax returns dating back to the late 70s after he passed away.

      No wonder I heard more arguments about money between my parents than I ever had after we moved to the great suburban paradise known as Manassas.

      My mom waited till after we moved to Virginia to divorce. That was great. Nothing like living in the poorhouse in Manassas….it’s bad enough in a “nice” neighborhood. I actually once met John Bobbitt, he was our neighbor.

      Yea, Virginia has been real good to my family. Our standard of living REALLY went up here compared to where we lived before. It’s amazing. /sarc

      Wonder how many marriages the dystopian hellscape known as Northern Virginia has destroyed?

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        One perceived benefit of an urbanized area like NoVa is that there are a variety of jobs available and a beltway and mainline interstates to supporting commuting.

        That lack of or lesser job opportunities can keep someone in NoVa rather than moving to another place that has a better quality of life and lower cost of living.

        Plenty of places that have those two things but more limited on job choices.

        I don’t know the stats but military marriages with the frequent moves and abundance of “Officer” and “Enlisted” clubs for entertainment (in some places, the few or ONLY off-duty opportunities), leads to drinking and such and basically is tougher to maintain a marriage.

        When in the military, one never really gets invested in the community they live in and kids in school know that making friends is temporary pending the next move.

        https://www.military.com/daily-news/opinions/2023/06/22/why-divorce-particularly-hard-military-families.html#:~:text=risk%20of%20divorce.-,According%20to%20reports%20based%20on%20U.S.%20Census%20Bureau%20data%2C%20those,divorce%20rate%20is%20roughly%204.8%25.

        1. how_it_works Avatar
          how_it_works

          ” there are a variety of jobs available”

          Most of the decent paying ones which, for some very strange reason, require a security clearance.

          Can’t figure that one out…what could it be, what could it be…

          1. LarrytheG Avatar

            In NoVA yes, of course but across the country, urban areas tend to have wider job opportunities than rural or even suburban and that’s what attracts people to the urban areas directly or as commuters despite the higher costs of living and lower quality of life. People do have the option of moving to small towns that may have “a” good job but it
            might be the only one and not many others so you’re kinda stuck on that option and if you need another by circumstance or choice, would have to leave, move to somewhere else. When you live on a beltway or mainline , you can stay in your house and change jobs. Beyond that , employers know you can also and compete for pay and benefits whereas in a small town with one or two major employers, there is no such incentive. Works this way across the US.

  9. LarrytheG Avatar

    The thing that strikes me sometimes about taxes, is that they presumably pay for services , as opposed to the govt just collecting them and storing them in a vault or spending on foolish stuff that benefits few or just a few selective.

    So one way to look at this is how people feel about a toll road and who hates them and why and those that see toll roads as paying for a service.

    Seems like the argument is that “we already pay taxes” and those taxes should cover everything… and let’s not discuss what “everything” really covers because I already pay enough or too much in taxes and I’m “entitled” “free” services as a result.

    That’s the essential issue. We pay taxes and we really don’t care what they pay for or not… we don’t want “more”.

    So Youngkin wants tax cuts without regard to future forecasts nor services or infrastructure needs not currently being met.

    No one I know, including me, like taxes. It hurts like heck to pay them but so does paying for a broke furnace or car or a need to replace. We accept these in our personal lives (mostly) but we’re not near as accommodating with services and infrastructure the govt provides.

  10. LarrytheG Avatar

    Remote work is becoming a significant issue even beyond the Federal Govt.

    Some jobs value has little to do with where the person is physically and much depends on if the worker is delivering significant value to the business regardless of where they are physically, the business will have to make choices just as an employee with market skills has choices.

    We’re moving farther and farther away from a work environment where the supervisor is determining if a worker is “performing” or not to one in which the work product of the employee is evaluated.

    So this aspect does very much relate to taxes on the business , where the business is located as well as it’s employees.

    The idea that the business will locate where businesses taxes are lower my not be the only or the more significant reasons for a business to locate.

    Business taxes per se – based on their physical location may well becoming obsolete. Don’t tax the business, tax the transactions and activity.

  11. Meanwhile, legislation to protect women’s right to medical care are advancing, with Republican support.

    “Protect Virginia’s Health Workers Board of Medicine” bill (SB716 & HB519)
    Patroned by Senator Jennifer Caroll Foy and Delegate Candi Mundon King this crucial legislation prohibits the Board of Medicine from taking arbitrary disciplinary actions against medical professionals who provide legal abortion care to out-of-state patients. As the landscape of reproductive healthcare evolves in the wake of a post-Roe reality, Virginia has emerged as a vital access point for abortion care in a region where other states have restricted these essential services for millions of people seeking care.

    Contraceptive Equity Act (SB238 & HB2089)
    The bill expands access to contraceptive care by requiring insurers, corporations, and health maintenance organizations to offer expansive coverage for contraceptive drugs and devices, without cost-sharing or other medically unnecessary roadblocks.

    Menstrual Data Privacy- (SB16 & HB78)
    Prohibits search warrants or subpoenas from being issued for menstrual data that is stored on third-party apps and other digital networks and devices used to track period health.

    Extradition Prohibition, Reproductive Health Services- (SB16 & HB1539)
    Establishes protections for patients who come to Virginia to receive reproductive healthcare services that are legal in Virginia from being extradited and criminalized by another state where these services may be banned.

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