With the 2014 legislative session in the books, it is time
to assess the General Assembly’s achievements as well as take stock of the work
left undone. Today, we focus on several measures the legislature passed that
will help move the needle toward broadly shared prosperity in Maryland.
1. Minimum wage
increase. The General Assembly’s high-profile passage of legislation to
raise the minimum wage in Maryland to $10.10 by 2018 will benefit nearly
half a million workers and their families as well as boost the state’s economy
(though compromises
made by legislators will leave others behind). Maryland is now a leader in
the nationwide
effort to lift the stagnated earnings for workers, becoming the second
state after
Connecticut to raise the minimum wage to $10.10 per hour.
2. Expansion of tax
credit for working Marylanders. Less noticed, but just as important, the
expansion of Maryland’s Refundable Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) to 28
percent of the federal
credit from 25 percent will benefit
over 422,000 Maryland households and lift many Marylanders out of poverty.
The EITC enjoys bipartisan support because it encourages work, promotes personal
responsibility, and helps struggling families get by.
3. A budget that
protects Maryland workers and businesses.
Lawmakers in Annapolis passed a $39 billion budget while
minimizing deep or unnecessary cuts to important programs that benefit
working Marylanders. The General Assembly began their work under the cloud of
reduced revenue estimates that were
cut even further in the middle of the session, so it is important to
recognize their efforts to balance the budget while avoiding damage to important
programs that benefit working families and businesses alike.
4. Stopping corporate
tax giveaways. Success is not just about passing good legislation but also
preventing harmful laws from enactment. This session, the General Assembly
wisely blocked legislation
that would cut taxes for large, multistate corporations (though they did pass
a misguided tax cut for the top
3 percent of estates). And – though it came down to the wire – lawmakers did
not allow themselves to be blackmailed into providing
more film tax credits for out-of-state production companies.
The victories achieved during the 2014 legislative session
will help improve the lives of Marylanders and strengthen the state economy. Of
course, important work remains to foster broad prosperity in Maryland. Check
back tomorrow for our discussion of the work that remains in the 2015
legislative session and beyond.
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