House Democrats fight for an affordable Indiana, House Republicans choose partisan politics over family budgets
Today, the House Elections and Apportionment Committee passed House Bill 1032, the mid-decade redistricting bill, out of committee. House Democrats offered a minority report, an alternative to HB 1032 as passed out of committee, for the full House to vote on. House Republicans chose to block it by a 64-24 vote.
The legislation House Democrats offered contained several provisions to lower the cost of living for Hoosiers and eliminated the redistricting provisions from the bill.
The report:
Saves Hoosiers money on their utility bills by eliminating the sales tax on residential utility use;
Protects Hoosiers from rising health care costs by creating a state tax credit for insurance premiums if the Affordable Care Act credits end;
Lowers Hoosiers' grocery bills by eliminating the sales tax on prepared food sold in grocery stores, toothpaste, soap, adult diapers and feminine hygiene products; and
Keeps Hoosier kids in early childhood education classrooms by eliminating the waitlists for Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) and On My Way Pre-K vouchers and fully funding both programs for one year.
"The legislation I offered to the House today would have eased up on Hoosiers' wallets as we enter the holiday season," State Rep. Carolyn Jackson (D-Hammond), ranking Democrat on the House Elections and Apportionment Committee, said. "I keep hearing from my constituents about the rising cost of child care and utility bills. We offered House Republican legislators an opportunity to reverse course and pass something this December that would actually make a difference on pocketbooks, and they said 'no' to lowering costs for Hoosiers."
"House Democrats have held town halls all over the state for the past four months, and Hoosiers told us that they want relief from the rising cost of living, not map rigging and political games," House Democratic Leader Phil GiaQuinta (D-Fort Wayne) said. "Today, we offered legislation to save Hoosiers money on their rising utility bills, health care costs, grocery bills, and pre-K and child care costs as an alternative to redistricting. House Republicans chose partisan map rigging instead.
"New political maps don't pay bills or put food on the table. House Democrats know your family budget is the real emergency. It's too bad House Republicans can only think of themselves – their only emergency is trying to protect their own political power."