In a legendary hot-mic moment in 2010, then-Vice President Biden told President Obama that passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was a "big f----ing deal." The same might be said for the child tax credit expansion in the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, according to some in rural southeastern Kentucky, writes Linda Blackford of the Lexington Herald-Leader.
"It is such a big deal ... it’s making me want to cry," Letcher County bakery owner Gwen Johnson told Blackford. "A rising tide lifts everybody, and this will enable families to do things they’ve not been able to do before, so they can live a little better." Nearly half the county's children live in poverty.
A Columbia University study found that the tax credit, if made permanent, could cut the nation's child poverty rate in half, Blackford reports. The plan increases the current $2,000 per-child credit to $3,000 for each child 6 to 17 and $3,600 for those under 6. More low-income parents qualify, since they no longer have to owe taxes in order to get it. The payments will likely be available as soon as July, and could be distributed monthly rather than as a lump sum.
Dee Davis, director of the national Center for Rural Strategies in the Letcher County seat of Whitesburg, said the change will make a big difference in Kentucky's longstanding child-poverty problem. "It’s crazy, you can’t justify it, but nothing ever happens," he told Blackford. "Then all of sudden in 50 days, Biden passes a law that will cut child poverty in half in counties that voted against him four to one. That’s all the social math in the world right there. It changes the horizons these kids can look to, it changes what’s possible for the families. It changes everything."
Though no Republicans in Congress voted for the relief bill, Blackford doubts voters in deep-red southeastern Kentucky will penalize longtime Rep. Hal Rogers, since "cultural issues like abortion or gay marriage" are usually ascendant, but the credit could move the needle in the long run, and it highlights a stark contrast in the two parties' governing styles—and how effective they are.
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