Current:Home > ContactNebraska Legislature convenes for a special session to ease property taxes, but with no solid plan -WealthMindset Learning
Nebraska Legislature convenes for a special session to ease property taxes, but with no solid plan
Indexbit View
Date:2025-04-09 01:58:53
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska lawmakers have convened for a special legislative session called by Republican Gov. Jim Pillen with a directive to slash soaring property taxes in half, but no concrete answers on whether the Legislature will be able to agree on how to do that.
Convivial lawmakers showed up Thursday for the start of the special session, greeting each other warmly with hugs and smiles. But the congeniality belied a brewing storm of clashing proposals and ideologies on how to best approach Pillen’s plan to slash property taxes in half. One thing most agree on is that there aren’t currently the 33 votes needed for the governor’s plan to pass.
Sen. Danielle Conrad, a Democrat from Lincoln in the officially nonpartisan, one-chamber Nebraska Legislature, said she has gotten a clear consensus from her 48 colleagues.
“The governor’s plan is dead on arrival. So the Legislature needs to quickly pivot to other ideas that can provide relief for Nebraskans that are realistic, responsible and reasonable,” she said.
Pillen promised to call the special session after lawmakers were unable to agree on Pillen’s less ambitious proposal during the regular session earlier this year to cut property taxes by 40%. Pillen’s newest plan would vastly expand the number of goods and services subject to new taxes, including candy, soda, cigarettes, alcohol and CBD products, and to services like pet grooming, veterinary care and auto repairs. Most groceries and medicine would remain exempt.
Another portion of the plan would see the state foot the estimated $2.6 billion cost of operating K-12 public schools, which are now largely funded through local property taxes. It would also set a hard cap on what local governments can collect in property taxes — a plan widely opposed by city leaders.
Most special sessions last a week or two, but the latest one could run through Labor Day, some lawmakers have said. Lawmakers have three days to introduce bills in the special session before quickly moving to public committee hearings on each bill advanced by the Referencing Committee. Lawmakers will then debate the ones that advance out of committee.
A glut of proposals are expected. More than two dozen were introduced on Thursday, and the legislative bill office has told lawmakers that 80 to 90 bills have already been submitted.
They range from those introduced on behalf of the governor, which total more than 300 pages, to ones that target expensive purchases or expand and tax sports betting. One bill would claw back more than $500 million allocated last year to build an unfinished 1894 canal and reservoir system in southwestern Nebraska. Another would impose a 2.25% to 3.7% luxury tax on expensive vehicles and jewelry.
Yet another would ask voters to approve a so-called consumption tax that would eliminate property, income and inheritance taxes and implement at least a 7.5% tax on nearly every purchase. The bill mirrors a petition effort this year that failed to gather enough signatures from the public to get on the November ballot.
Conrad plans to introduce at least two bills including one that would increase taxes on out-of-state corporations and “absentee landlords” who own real estate in Nebraska. She would use that money to expand homestead exemption breaks for those being priced out of their homes by skyrocketing property taxes. Her second bill would assess additional taxes on households that bring in more than $1 million in annual income.
But she also plans to use her time during the session to try to derail those massive tax expansion and appropriations-juggling bills endorsed by Pillen. She introduced amendments to scrap or postpone all three bills as soon as they were introduced.
“The governor has attempted to hide the ball through the whole process,” Conrad said, dismissing his bills as “hundreds and hundreds of pages that take up rewriting the budget, rewriting the tax code and rewriting aspects of school funding in a short, compressed special session. That is just not a recipe for success.”
veryGood! (6646)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- In California, a Warming Climate Will Help a Voracious Pest—and Hurt the State’s Almonds, Walnuts and Pistachios
- Yankees pitcher Jimmy Cordero suspended for rest of 2023 season for violating MLB's domestic violence policy
- TikToker Allison Kuch Is Pregnant, Expecting First Baby With NFL Star Isaac Rochell
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Sporadic Environmental Voters Hold the Power to Shift Elections and Turn Red States Blue
- Feds crack down on companies marketing weed edibles in kid-friendly packaging
- Ohio Explores a New Model for Urban Agriculture: Micro Farms in Food Deserts
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- A Seven-Mile Gas Pipeline Outside Albany Has Activists up in Arms
Ranking
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- The Common Language of Loss
- Federal judge in Trump case has limited track record in criminal cases, hews closely to DOJ sentencing recommendations
- Warming Trends: A Catastrophe for Monarchs, ‘Science Moms’ and Greta’s Cheeky Farewell to Trump
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Nine Years After Filing a Lawsuit, Climate Scientist Michael Mann Wants a Court to Affirm the Truth of His Science
- Feds crack down on companies marketing weed edibles in kid-friendly packaging
- How Energy Companies and Allies Are Turning the Law Against Protesters
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Animals Can Get Covid-19, Too. Without Government Action, That Could Make the Coronavirus Harder to Control
New York employers must now tell applicants when they encounter AI
Q&A: Is Elizabeth Kolbert’s New Book a Hopeful Look at the Promise of Technology, or a Cautionary Tale?
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Amazon Reviewers Swear By This Beautiful Two-Piece Set for the Summer
New study finds PFAS forever chemicals in drinking water from 45% of faucets across U.S.
The Resistance: In the President’s Relentless War on Climate Science, They Fought Back