January 3, 2013
Sen. Rockefeller champions fiscal cliff tax cut extensions
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Fiscal cliff legislation passed by Congress at 2:30 a.m. on New Year's Day will continue tax cuts and benefits for 99.7 percent of West Virginia's families, Sen. Jay Rockefeller said.

"If Congress had failed to pass this bill, tax credits that help low- and middle-income West Virginia families pay their bills and afford college would have disappeared," Rockefeller, D-W.Va., said in a statement released Thursday morning.

"I refused to let that happen, despite warped efforts by House Republicans to place more of the burden on those already hurting."

Sen. Joe Manchin and Rep. Nick J. Rahall, both D-W.Va., also voted for the legislation, while Reps. Shelley Moore Capito and David McKinley, both R-W.Va., voted against it.

Rockefeller believes the legislation passed on Tuesday will help narrow the income gap "between the very wealthy and those who work but struggle every day, especially in a tough economy."

Under the legislation, only individuals who make more than $400,000 a year, and families that make more than $450,000, will see their tax rates return to the higher rates assessed when Bill Clinton was president.

The new legislation did not continue the payroll tax cut passed in 2010 that reduced Social Security taxes from 6.2 percent to 4.2 percent. 

Rockefeller believes the payroll tax cut "should have continued temporarily in a way that still protected Social Security.

"But, even without the payroll tax cut,' he said, "this bill significantly benefits West Virginians, and the net total puts more money in West Virginians' pockets."

The new legislation also keeps several tax credits and advantages in place, which would have disappeared on New Year's Day if the legislation had not passed.

Tax cuts for individuals and families, re-enacted for five years, include:

 

  • Earned Income Tax Credits, which returned $329 million to almost 160,000 working West Virginians in 2011 -- more than $2,000 for each person who qualified.
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  • Expanded Child Tax Credits that help 102,000 West Virginia children and their families, allowing them to claim up to $1,000 for each child they have. 
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  • American Opportunity Tax Credits that gave 33,000 West Virginians $64 million in 2011, averaging almost $2,000 per student in college. This credit can be used to pay for tuition, living costs and textbooks.
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