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How a $250 Break for Teachers Explains a House-Senate Divide on Taxes - The New York Times

posted onNovember 27, 2017
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Article snippet: WASHINGTON — For Carrie Uffelman Brake, planning for next school year begins before the current one ends. The shopping starts as early as April, when she gets the list of students who will be in her third grade classroom in rural Tennessee the following fall. If boys outnumber girls, she will need extra toys to keep hyperactive hands busy. If it is a group of struggling readers, she will need double the number of books. Bargain-hunting season comes in early summer, when nobody is shopping for school supplies. That gives way to the blowout sales in late summer, when everybody is. Then there’s tax time, and a $250 tax deduction to offset some of that out-of-pocket spending. For 15 years, the nation’s tax code has recognized teachers like Ms. Uffelman Brake with a small perk that has now come to illustrate a larger philosophical divide as Congress tries to push through a sweeping tax overhaul. The House tax bill, approved this month along party lines, would eliminate the teacher spending deduction in its effort to clean up the tax code, close loopholes and secure bigger tax cuts for all. The Senate bill, which could come up for a vote in the coming days, would double it, to $500. “The deduction is a small token of appreciation for teachers who make financial sacrifices to benefit their students,” said Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, who wrote the law that created the educator tax credit in 2002 and now wants to expand it. The deduction — which reduces ta... Link to the full article to read more

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