Walker proposes sweeping tax reform
Her plan for system includes flat rate, sales tax on consumer services
Deseret Morning News graphic Tax-reform proposal Requires Adobe Acrobat. |
"The critical, critical question is, can we afford to do nothing," the governor said.
Under her plan, the state income tax rate would drop from a high of 7 percent to a flat 4.9 percent for everyone under the most likely alternative.
The state sales tax rate would be rolled back 1 percentage point, to 3.75 percent, but eliminated from many business purchases and charged for many consumer services.
Other changes sought by the governor include eventually eliminating the corporate income tax, allowing school and other special districts to adjust property taxes for inflation without holding truth-in-taxation hearings and equalizing the sales-tax rate throughout the state.
Details of the proposal are contained in an inch-thick volume titled "Governor Olene Walker's Recommendations on a Tax Structure for Utah's Future," available online at www.utah.gov/governor.
Walker's proposal would need legislative approval to take effect, and she'll only be in office a few more weeks. Lawmakers were not invited to join the governor's task force on tax reform. Several said Monday the exclusion could doom the proposal.




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