A Kenney spokesperson offered little comment on the legislation, but strongly suggested that the mayor would propose his own schedule of tax cuts next week.
“The Mayor will have much more to say about our efforts to reduce the tax burdens on individuals and businesses, while at the same time maintaining vital city services on which all residents depend, when he presents his new budget and Five Year Plan to City Council on April 15.”
Council and administration sources confirmed some tax cuts had been discussed ahead of the mayor’s budget proposal, particularly on restructuring the BIRT. City spokesperson Mike Dunn offered few additional details but pointed out that Kenney has reduced the net income portion of that tax since taking office.
“Any further cuts to the BIRT would be a continuation of reductions in businesses taxes since the start of this administration,” Dunn said.
Some progressives reacted frostily to the prospect of tax cuts for a city government that struggles to adequately fund basic services and faces a grim long-term outlook for related public services like the School District of Philadelphia or SEPTA.
Kate Goodman, a library worker and a member of AFSCME’s progressive Unity Caucus, said the notion that benefits of tax cuts would “trickle down” down to the city’s neediest was a fantasy.
“The mayor and City Council have been cutting or abating taxes for decades and we’re still the poorest big city in the country,” she said. “Kenney cut municipal services in massive ways last year, like the library and parks. We’re massively understaffed and we need to be fully funded to best serve residents hard hit by the pandemic.”
She said leaders should invest any additional revenue into hiring more city workers as a means to create more job opportunities.
“What they’ve been doing is cutting city jobs,” she said. “They should be expanding municipal employment and they can do that by taxing wealthy corporations, like Comcast.”
It was not clear how welcome any proposed cuts would be among councilmembers, who would need to approve any such changes.
Domb said he had secured two co-sponsors for elements of his legislation, but acknowledged it could be an uphill battle to press for major tax cuts while city revenues continue to take a beating.
He described the legislation as “the start of a conversation about how we come out of this pandemic.”
“We need to have this crisis be an opportunity for the city,” he said. “Now is the time, more than ever.”