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Public Law Monitor
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State Revenue Collections Come In Below Forecast
Staff Report
TheStatehouseFile.com
Indiana’s year-to-date revenue collections of nearly $5.8 billion have come in nearly $150 million below what was forecast by the State Budget Agency last spring.
The agency on Monday issued its revenue report for November, which found that although actual collections for the current fiscal year are below forecast, they are above the collections for the same time period a year ago.
In November, general fund revenues totaled a little more than $1 billion, lower than the forecast by 1.3 percent but above November 2016 collections by 1.7 percent.
Other November numbers:
- Sales tax collections were $617.5 million, more than1 percent higher than forecast and 3 percent above a year ago;
- Individual income tax collections totaled $363.9 million, above the estimate and 3.2 percent above the amount collected a year ago;
- Corporate tax collections were $33.8 million, well below the forecast and the amount collected in November 2016.
The budget agency reported that corporate tax collections are down because refunds, which total $76.6 million fiscal year-to-date, are up 100 percent.
FOOTNOTE: TheStatehouseFile.com is a website powered by Franklin College journalism students.
$40,000 in Grants Handed Out to Community Organizations
$40,000 in Grants Handed Out to Community Organizations
Five organizations in Evansville are in line for part of $40,000 in grants thanks to the Vanderburgh Community Foundation’s Community Good Grants program.
Dream Center Evansville, EFD, Carver Community Organization, Parenting Time Center, and The Arc of Evansville will each receive part of that grant money.
The Community Good Grants program supports arts and culture, community development, education, health, human services, and other civic endeavors, like the environment, recreation, and youth development.
This is the first of quarterly grants to be awarded from the program throughout this year.
Recipients of those awards include:
Dream Center Evansville – $7,500 – to expand the half-day summer camp program (Summer Zoom) to a full-day program starting in 2018
Evansville Fire Department – $10,000 – to purchase of a new rescue watercraft and equipment
Carver Community Organization – $7,500 – for the Pathfinders Project that teaches children the importance of STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art, and math) in a hands-on environment taught by instructors from UE, USI, and Ivy Tech
Parenting Time Center – $7,500 – for the “Helping Moms to Involve Dad†program that utilizes evidence-based curriculum designed to impact moms’ understanding of the positive impact of fathers’ involvement with their children
The Arc of Evansville – $7,500 – to support the “My Amazing Body†initiative to create a holistic wellness program to improve the physical, social-emotional, and overall health and wellness of the children served by the Child Life Center
To learn more go to Vanderburgh Community Foundation.
Here We Go Again: WaPo Falsely Distorts GOP Tax Plan With Stale ‘Giveaway to the Rich’ Claim
TOWNHALL
written by GUY BENSON
Have you heard that the Republican tax reform proposal is a sweetheart deal for “the rich,” and doesn’t help middle class Americans?  Yes, you have.  Liberals keep repeating it, and we keep debunking it — over and over again.  These claims largely stem from some combination of (a) ignorance of the facts, (b) a misleading focus on raw dollars versus percentages (of course wealthy taxpayers will receive more relief in terms of sheer dollars, as they shoulder — by far — the highest proportional and actual tax burden of any income cohort, and (c) cherry-picked data points from a distant, hypothetical and unlikely future in which Congress chooses to allow a giant tax hike on the middle class.  In reality, the overwhelming majority of all middle class households will receive a tax cut under the GOP plan, and the rich don’t receive a disproportional benefit.  Indeed, at the request of President Trump, House Republicans wrote their bill to exclude an income rate cut for the “millionaires and billionaires” Democrats so love to invoke.  But that didn’t stop the Washington Post from once again claiming in a front page story that the Republican-crafted legislation had veered away from middle income earners in favor of the rich.  The CATO Institute’s Chris Edwards swooped in with a detailed fact check, starting with a description of WaPo’s false premise:
News stories are portraying the Republican tax bills as favoring the rich, even though the opposite is true. The GOP cuts would make the tax code more progressive, and the largest percentage cuts would go to middle-income households. The Washington Post pushed another faulty narrative yesterday. The three layers of headlines on the hardcopy front page were, “Trump’s tax vow taking a U-turn—focus shifted away from middle class—GOP plan evolved into a windfall for the wealthy.†The story’s theme was that Trump originally promised middle-class tax cuts, but House and Senate tax bills have morphed into an orgy of tax cuts for corporations and rich people. Ridiculous.
Why “ridiculous”? Well, because the facts say so:
Rather than a “windfall for the wealthy†as the Post claims, the GOP bills would provide larger percentage cuts for middle earners than higher earners (see here and here). The GOP may abandon cutting the top individual tax rate at all. Much of the cuts for high earners are allocated corporate tax cuts, but economists disagree about who those cuts would actually benefit. Furthermore, the GOP tax bills would increase spending subsidies (refundable credits) for people at the bottom who do not pay any individual income taxes. Look at this TPC analysis of the Senate bill. It shows the bottom two quintiles receiving tax “cuts†in 2019 and 2025, yet those groups do not currently pay any income taxes on net…The following chart shows the TPC data in context. First, note the enormous share of federal taxes paid by the top quintile under current law. The chart includes all federal taxes—income, payroll, estate, and excise for 2019. Now observe that the top quintile would receive a smaller share of the Senate tax cut than their tax share under current law. For the three middle quintiles, it is the opposite. That means that the Senate tax cut would make the federal tax code more progressive. If the Senate tax cut is enacted, higher earners would pay a larger share of the overall federal tax burden.
Edwards’ analysis laments the fact that the GOP plan is too progressive and therefore insufficiently pro-growth, but despite those frustrations, he cannot abide supposedly objective journalists furnishing readers with the opposite of the truth. Â Here is the chart he mentions:

Notice that the top 20 percent pay close to 70 percent of all federal taxes (blue bars), but would receive just over 60 percent of the tax cut (red bars) under the Senate bill. Â For the bottom quintile — who barely pay any federal taxes to begin with — their share of the cuts would be (slightly) disproportionately small (which is not the same as a tax increase, mind you). Â As for the middle income earners in quintiles two, three and four? Â They all get disproportionately large tax cuts, on average, compared to their share of federal taxes paid. Â As Edwards writes, this is precisely the opposite of what the Washington Post told its readers. Â The data above, incidentally, comes from the left-leaning Tax Policy Center; other nonpartisan groups have offered even rosier projections about the GOP’s plans, across an array of metrics. Â When a Twitter skirmish broke out over WaPo’s conclusions yesterday, the Manhattan Institute’s Brian Riedl (whose work I cited in this post) further underscored Edwards’ correct argument:
Might the Post’s in-house fact-checker care to assign some Pinocchios to their own paper’s misleading headline and reporting? Â As for the Bernie-championed line that by 2027 the Senate bill would hand 62 percent of that year’s tax cuts to the top one percent of wage earners, I’m sure you’ll be shocked to learn that’s also a garbage stat. Â Here’s why. Â For those interested, the first session of the House/Senate conference committee — whose task of merging the two chambers’ bills into one piece of legislation is challenging but feasible — kicks off tomorrow afternoon, and will air liveon C-SPAN.
EDITORS FOOTNOTE: This article was posted by the CCO without opinion, bias or editing.
Generous Gift Made By Bill And Mary Stone To St. Vincent-Evansville
Groundbreaking For St. Vincent Patricia Browning Stone Indoor Sensory Playground
Generous Gift Made By Bill & Mary Stone
WHAT:  A groundbreaking ceremony will be held for the new indoor sensory playground, located on the campus of St. Vincent Evansville, in addition to recognizing donors – Bill & Mary Stone
 WHEN: Tuesday, December 19, 2017 at 11 a.m.
 WHERE: St. Vincent Center for Children, 3900 Washington Avenue, Evansville
 DETAILS:
St. Vincent will host a groundbreaking ceremony for its new state-of-the-art, indoor therapeutic sensory playground for young patients who are cared for at St. Vincent Center for Children in Evansville. The playground will help provide sensory stimulation and cognitive development for children who struggle with a variety of conditions such as Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD).
The playground was made possible due to a generous donation by Bill and Mary O’Daniel Stone. They are natives of Evansville and are 1973 graduates of Memorial High School. Bill is CEO of Connecticut based, SS&C Technologies, which also has a large Evansville office. The playground will be named in honor of Bill’s mom, Patricia Browning Stone, who is also a graduate of Memorial High School and of the St. Mary’s School of Nursing.
The St. Vincent Center for Children is a comprehensive outpatient facility that was created to address the unmet healthcare needs of the region’s children. Services include pediatric behavioral health, pediatric subspecialty clinic, a resource center and the Tri-State’s only behavior-based, intensive feeding therapy program.
About St. Vincent
In Indiana, Ascension’s St. Vincent operates 20 hospitals in addition to a comprehensive network of affiliated joint ventures, medical practices and clinics that cover a 57-county area and employ more than 15,000 associates. Across the state, St. Vincent provided more than $266 million in community benefit and care of persons living in poverty in fiscal year 2016. Serving Indiana for 145 years, Ascension is a faith-based healthcare organization committed to delivering compassionate, personalized care to all, with special attention to persons living in poverty and those most vulnerable. Ascension is the largest non-profit health system in the U.S. and the world’s largest Catholic health system, operating 2,500 sites of care – including 141 hospitals and more than 30 senior living facilities – in 24 states and the District of Columbia. Visit www.stvincent.org.
Target Practice
German soldiers practice their marksmanship at the Karshorter Racecourse, Berlin, in 1935. Cavalry soldiers of the era would condition their horses to the stimulus of gunshots by shooting from their backs in this way, during calm conditions, so that they won’t panic during combat. Standing with both feet on the saddle was not common – they usually kept one foot in a stirrup.