Tax and Budget
Utah Children's Budget 2023
The care for the children in our state and communities can be measured by our public investment in our smallest humans. From the fiscal year 2008 to 2022, Voices for Utah Children divided all state programs concerning children into seven categories, without regard to their location within the structure of state government to quantify the level of public funding and identify trends. The seven categories are:
- K-12 Education
- Health
- Food & Nutrition
- Early Childhood Education
- Child Welfare
- Juvenile Justice
- Income Support
An appendix of our tables, sources, methodology and description of programs can be found here.
How Much We Spend
The interactive circle chart below compares how much we spend by category, program, and source of funding, just use the filter and click the category to zoom in.
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K-12 Education makes up 92% of the state-funded portion of the Children’s Budget, while the federal-funded portion is more diversified across categories.
Spending Trends
We compare the budget to FY2008 because that was a peak year in the economic cycle before The Great Recession and all figures have been adjusted for inflation, so they are comparable across time.
- From FY2008 to FY2022, total public investment in children increased by 43%, growing much faster than Utah’s public-school enrollment (district & charter schools) by 26%, or the child population ages 0-17 by 13% from 2008-2021.
The federal share of the Children's Budget has fluctuated between 18-26% but had its biggest increase at the beginning of the Great Recession and the Covid-19 Pandemic. This is also when state funding for the Children's Budget has declined, for example real state & local K-12 education funding fell by $206 million since FY2020, the largest two-year decline since the Great Recession in 2008-2010. Several years after the Great Recession the federal share of the Children’s Budget decreased and the state share started to increase again, something that will hopefully happen again as pandemic relief funding rolls back.
Funding Sources: Federal vs. State
When the categories are disaggregated by source of funding, Food & Nutrition, Income Support, Health, and Early Childhood Education programs are mainly funded by federal sources, and Child Welfare, K-12 Education, and Juvenile Justice programs are funded mainly by state sources. And since Amendment G passed and allowed the income tax to be used to fund programs for children (in addition to K-12 and some Early Childhood Education & Nutrition Programs), the Child Welfare, Juvenile Justice, and Health categories are funded primarily by the income tax. In FY2022, 98% of Juvenile Justice, 100% of Child Welfare, and 88% of Health categories of the state funded Children's Budget were funded by the income tax totaling to $475 M.
When examining the state-funded portion of the budget since FY2008 each category has a different story.
- Juvenile Justice programs declined the most in dollar amount, $32.9 M or 28% mainly due to a reduction in correctional facility and rural programs and it also had an increase in early intervention services which advocates consider to be a goal of juvenile justice reform.
- Child Welfare programs declined by 16% or $21.8 M, mainly from the Service Delivery program which funds caseworkers to deliver child welfare, youth, and domestic violence services.
- Income Support declined 49% or $2.1 M and appears to be more cyclical, rising and falling with the Great Recession. Interestingly, the TANF grant is a mix of state and federal funds, and only a small amount goes to Income Support or cash assistance.[i]
- Food & Nutrition increased by 56% or $19.7 M due to an increase in liquor & wine tax revenues which supports the school lunch program.
- Early Childhood Education had the largest percentage increase of 109% or $42.0 M mainly from the Upstart program but increasing in every program except Child Care Assistance.
- Health has increased by 80% or $139.3 M from the Medicaid and CHIP program but also had a 58% or $12.4 M decrease in Maternal & Child Health.
- The category that has increased the most in dollar amount is K-12 Education.
K-12 Education Funding
State and local sourced funding for K-12 education increased by $1.6 billion in constant 2022 dollars from FY2008 to FY2022, but per-pupil spending only increased from $10,212 to $10,537 per student. This means that even though more is being spent in total dollars, it barely covers the increase in students during the same time.
In 1948, 100% of the income tax was allocated to public education, an increase from 75% when it was originally imposed in 1931. It was expanded in 1996 to include higher education, in 2021 to include non-education services for children and people with a disability, and may be expanded again depending on a 2024 ballot measure placed by the Utah Legislature.
The income tax rate has been reduced in 1996, 2006, 2008, 2018, 2022, and 2023. The graphs below illustrate a timeline of these changes and Utah’s total elementary and secondary public schools (district & charter) funding effort (including capital) as a percentage of personal income and rank compared to other states.
Unfortunately, the result is a downward trajectory and likely explains our second to last place in per-pupil funding in the country.[ii]
Utah's Education Funding Effort as a Percent of Personal Income
According to the fiscal notes, the last two bills that reduced the Income Tax rate in 2022 and 2023 estimated a loss of $1.3 billion in the Income Tax Fund from FY2022-2025 with more ongoing.[iii]
State & Local Funded Portion of K-12 Education
Another result of these changes has been shifts in the funding source for K-12 education. From the fiscal year 2008 to 2022, the federal-funded portion increased by 74% and the state-funded portion declined by 3%.
Meanwhile, Local sources have increased by 12%, possibly to meet the needs of their communities while state-funded sources decline and putting greater pressure on sources like the property tax which is more regressive than the income tax because it takes a greater toll on low-and middle-income families.
Rank of Utah's Education Funding Effort Compared to Other States
We Need to Prioritize Children in the Budget
While Utah doesn’t have the most kids than any other state, we do have the highest share of kids in our population. And we as a community are entrusted to make sure they are cared for, safe, and have the tools they need to achieve their aspirations. As the Utah Legislature drafts, holds hearings on, debates, and passes the Utah state budget we hope they prioritize our most vulnerable and precious group, Utah’s children.
[i] https://www.cbpp.org/sites/default/files/atoms/files/tanf_spending_ut.pdf
[ii] https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/school-finances.html
[iii] https://le.utah.gov/~2022/bills/static/SB0059.html, https://le.utah.gov/~2023/bills/static/HB0054.html These fiscal notes show the loss from the income tax fund but they are not disaggregated by changes from the income tax rate or tax credit portion of the bills.
Utah’s family demographics have changed. 53% of Utah families have all available parents in the workforce, making child care a necessity. These days, most Utah families need two incomes to maintain financial stability. But Utah’s licensed child care system struggles to meet the demand. Licensed child care program capacity is only sufficient to serve about 36% of all children under six whose parents are working.
To provide a comprehensive picture of Utah's current child care crisis, this report produced by Voices for Utah Children examines the availability of licensed child care across the state, and in each individual county. By conducting a detailed analysis of both the demand and supply of child care services, the report aims to provide policymakers and the public with a clear understanding of the urgent need for child care reform.
Download a copy of the report here.
County-Level Data
Child Care Access Data Fact Sheets by County are also available on our Utah Care for Kids website. Look up child care access in your county today!
Statewide Data
Children Potentially in Need of Care |
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All Children Under 6 Years Old | 289,240 |
Children Under 6 Years Potentially in Need of Care | 154,229 |
Rate of Children Under 6 with Potential Child Care Needs | 53% |
Licensed Child Care Programming |
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Home-based Child Care Programs | 940 |
Center-based Child Care Programs | 427 |
Total Licensed Slots | 54,804 |
Percent of Child Care Need Met | 36% |
Cost of Care for Families |
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Average Annual Cost Home-based Child Care for Infant/Toddler | $8,267 |
Average Annual Cost Center-based Child Care for Infant/Toddler | $11,232 |
Average Annual Cost Home-based Child Care for Preschool-Aged Child | $7,311 |
Average Annual Cost Center-based Child Care for Preschool-Aged Child | $8,487 |
Number of Children Eligible for Subsidies | 81,805 |
Number of Children Receiving Subsidies | 11,665 |
Rate of Eligible Children Receiving Subsidies | 14% |
Child Care Workforce Compensation |
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Median Hourly Wage for Child Care Professionals | $12.87 |
Median Annual Salary for Child Care Professionals | $26,770 |
Takeaways
There is insufficient licensed child care in Utah to meet the needs of working families.
There are more than 154,000 children under the age of six living in Utah with all available parents in the workforce. But, there are only 54,804 licensed child care spots in 1,367 programs statewide. Licensed child care program capacity is only sufficient to serve about 36% of all children under six whose parents are working. That means the working families of nearly two-thirds of Utah’s youngest children must rely on alternate arrangements (such as utilizing family members, hiring or sharing a nanny, alternating parent work schedules, using unlicensed child care providers, or some combination of these).
The high cost of child care makes it even less accessible to low- and middle-income families, and rural families struggle most.
Affordability remains a significant hurdle with child care costs often consuming a substantial portion of a family’s income. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services defines affordable child care as care that costs no more than 7% of a family's income. In Utah, the average annual cost of care for two children under the age of six (one infant, one preschool-aged child is $16,890, taking up about 17% of family’s income. For a family in rural Grand County, the cost of that care is actually higher at $17,339, consuming 41% of their income. The lack of dramatic differences in child care prices from county to county is an illustration of how little flexibility providers have to reduce tuition costs for parents, even in areas of the state where family incomes clearly can’t keep up.
How costs play out for a typical four-person family with one infant/toddler and one preschool-aged child |
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Median Four-Person Family Household Income | $100,752 |
Average Annual Cost of Toddler/Infant Care | $9,193 |
Average Annual Cost of Preschool-Aged Care | $7,678 |
Considered "Affordable" Child Care for this Family | $7,053 |
Average Amount this Family Will Spend on Child Care | $16,871 |
Percent of Income this Family Will Spend on Child Care | 17% |
Licensed child care is insufficient in every county in Utah, though the level of unmet need varies from place to place.
Summit County emerges as the county with the highest percentage of child care need met (54%), followed by Carbon, (48%) Sevier (45%), Grand (45%), Salt Lake (45%), and Iron Counties (41%). All other counties have less than 40% of child care need met with licensed program capacity, and multiple rural counties (Daggett, Piute, Rich, and Wayne) have no licensed child care available at all.
With substantial public investment, Utah’s child care system has grown 31% since the start of the COVID pandemic.
Through various federal funding streams, nearly $600 million has worked to grow Utah’s child care capacity from approximately 42,000 licensed slots in March 2020 to over 54,000 in August 2023. In contrast to many other states, Utah has managed to increase its licensed child care capacity - despite substantial pandemic disruptions - through stabilization grants paid directly to existing providers for wage supplementation, startup support for new programs, and a one-time worker bonus of $2,000 per child care professional. These financial investments both expanded the enrollment capacities of existing programs as well as recruited new providers into the sector. However, with the ending of this funding in October 2023, Utah risks jeopardizing this incredible progress.
Recommendations
1. Commit to Public Investment in Child Care
Utah’s child care crisis requires public investment. Funding is needed to bridge the gap between what families can afford and the true cost of care. While businesses can contribute, their capacity to address this crisis is limited. There is no sufficient source of investment to address child care’s market failure aside from public funding. Child care should be valued in the same ways as the public education system, ensuring equal access and opportunities for all children. Currently, the burden of expensive early education falls largely on Utah families, with minimal public support, even though most brain development occurs before age six.
2. Help Parents Afford the Care They Want
Utah’s current child care system doesn’t promote parent choice. Child care affordability and accessibility severely limit family choice when it comes to child care, forcing decisions based on cost or access, rather than preference. This also impacts family planning and career choices. Parents are forced to make difficult choices, such as changing jobs, adjusting school and work schedules, or choosing suboptimal child care situations. To address these issues, policymakers should consider improving the child care subsidy program, expanding the child tax credit, and finding ways to help alleviate the financial burden on Utah families.
3. Support the Critical Work of Child Care Professionals
Child care professionals face significant financial challenges. Low wages and a lack of benefits, including healthcare and retirement, have made the profession unsustainable, leading to high rates of turnover each year. Since Utah’s current child care system only meets 36% of the state's need, Utah must invest in the early child care profession to attract and retain a robust workforce. To support child care providers, policymakers should consider measures including state funding of Child Care Stabilization Grants, wage supplement programs, eliminating barriers to licensure, and increasing access to employment benefits.
For questions or inquiries regarding this report, please contact Voices staff members:
Child care certainly received its fair share of discussion this legislative session, but did anything really happen? The short answer is kinda. Here’s what happened.
Funding Requests
During the session, Voices for Utah Children teamed up with parents, child care professionals, and early childhood advocates to lobby the state legislature for more than $260 million to stabilize Utah’s child care system. This was, admittedly, a big ask. But the requests highlighted the reality of the child care sector’s needs. Many of the state funding requests aimed to replace expiring federal pandemic money that has been propping up the sector. This emergency federal funding will begin to end in June 2023 and will fully expire by June 2024.
Child Care Stabilization Grants, Rep. Andrew Stoddard
Federal Child Care Stabilization Grants have been a lifeline for Utah's child care sector. Child care providers have indicated the lack of ongoing stabilization funding will result in one or more of the following three outcomes: child care programs will close, tuition will be raised for families, and/or employees will have lower wages. This funding would have allowed for a one-year extension of the stabilization grants currently received by hundreds of child care providers in Utah.
Requested: $216 Million
Outcome: NOT FUNDED
Retention Incentives for Early Childhood Professionals, Sen. Luz Escamilla
In 2022, federal funding allowed Utah's Office of Child Care issued $2,000 bonuses to eligible workers serving in child care positions to provide recognition for their critical work throughout the COVID pandemic and to improve retention within the field. 9,368 child care professionals received retention incentives through this program. This funding request would have continued this incentive program for an additional two years while structural reforms were pursued.
Requested: $38 Million
Outcome: NOT FUNDED
Regional Child Care Development Grants, Rep. Ashlee Matthews
Through federal funding, Utah's six Regional Care about Child Care Resource & Referral Agencies supported new programs for rural outreach, small business training, start-up grants, and professional development. This funding would have continued these grants for another three years to continue programming that works to expand child care access and improve care in both rural and urban areas.
Requested: $2.1 Million
Outcome: NOT FUNDED
Child Care Licensing-Related Fees, Rep. Ashlee Matthews
With COVID-relief funding, the Office of Child Care Licensing has waived the fees associated with licensing in order to lessen the barriers to expanding, maintaining, and opening new child care programs. This funding would have extended this fee coverage for another three years as the state tackles the child care crisis.
Requested: $3 Million
Outcome: NOT FUNDED
Child Care Solutions and Workforce Productivity Plan, Sen. Luz Escamilla
A priority of the Governor’s Office of Economic Opportunity’s Women in the Economy Subcommittee, these funds will support strategic planning for child care solutions.
Requested: $250,000
Outcome: $150,000
Legislation
HB 167: State Child Care, Rep. Ashlee Matthews & Sen. Luz Escamilla
This bill provides the framework for State agencies to convert empty state buildings to on-site child care. It will allow private providers to rent the space and operate from the facility, creating greater access to child care for employees and the greater community.
Outcome: PASSED
HB 170: Child Tax Credit Revisions, Rep. Susan Pulsipher & Sen. Daniel McCay
This bill provides a non-refundable yearly tax credit of $1,000 per child between the ages of 1-3 for families making up to $43,000 for single filers and $54,000 for households filing married jointly. Because the bill’s original intent was to help with the cost of child care, we’d like to see this expanded to help children ages 0-6, as it did in the original bill. This legislation makes Utah the 13th state with its very own state child tax credit.
Outcome: AMENDED VERSION PASSED
HB 282: Child Care Sales Tax Exemption, Rep. Christine Watkins
This bill would have allowed for a sales and use tax exemption for construction materials used to construct or expand a child care program.
Outcome: BILL NEVER HEARD IN COMMITTEE
Advocacy
While our policy wins feel small, it was a stellar year for child care advocacy. We hosted our first Child Care Advocacy Day, where we welcomed over 100 parents, kiddos, providers, and supporters of child care in Utah’s Capitol Rotunda! The turnout far surpassed expectations and we hosted many new faces. We look forward to continuing to grow our network of child care advocates and working on solutions to child care during the interim.
https://utahchildren.org/404-error/itemlist/tag/Tax%20and%20Budget#sigProIdd97ffa0e95
To learn more about child care advocacy in Utah, visit UtahCareforKids.org.
Summary of the Tax Cuts Passed by the 2023 Utah Legislature
The Legislature finished its 2023 General Session last Friday evening, March 3rd. In the area of tax policy, we've prepared the chart above to summarize the tax cuts passed this year.
The tax cuts that will go into effect in the next year add up to $408 million. Three-fifth of that amount goes to the highest-earning one-fifth of Utahns, and four-fifths goes to the top two-fifths. That leaves just one-fifth for the 60% of Utahns earning under $92,000. Unfortunately, these changes do nothing to improve the overall regressivity of Utah's current tax structure.
The picture improves slightly if we count the $200 million elimination of the state sales tax on unprepared food. Because the food tax is the most regressive element of our most regressive tax, removing it does reduce (but not eliminate) the regressivity in Utah's tax structure. (This part of HB 54 will only go into effect in 2025 if voters approve a Constitutional amendment ending the earmarking of income tax for education in November 2024. That earmark was broadened in 1996 to add higher education and again in 2020 via Amendment G to add all programs for children and for disabled Utahns to the permitted uses of income tax revenues.)
To clarify, we consider Utah's overall tax structure to be regressive because the highest income Utahns pay the lowest share of their incomes in state and local taxes, based on the analysis at www.ITEP.org/WhoPays/Utah.
We welcome the proposed elimination of the grocery tax and the reduced regressivity it would bring, especially since it benefits all low-income Utahns, including the considerable number who never file a tax return. We also welcome the much smaller but still beneficial impacts of the new non-refundable Child Tax Credit (CTC) and slightly expanded non-refundable Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC). Here are some specifics on those:
- Elimination of the $200 million state grocery tax reduces taxes on the lowest-income fifth of Utahns (those earning under $31,000) by $18 million, and it reduces taxes on the lowest-income two-fifths (those earning under $59,000) by a total of $48 million.
- The new Child Tax Credit (CTC) reduces taxes for those same two-fifths of Utahns by $9 million. It also makes Utah the 13th state with our own CTC, though NCSL's website indicates that ours will be one of just four that are non-refundable.
- The slightly expanded Utah EITC adds a reduction of $1 million for the low- and moderate-income 40% of Utahns. Sadly, it still excludes the lowest-income 80-90% of Utah's federal EITC recipients because it remains non-refundable.
Those three tax reductions add up to $58 million for low- and moderate-income Utahns, which means that less than 10% of the overall tax cut reaches the 40% of the population that needs it most. (For more about why refundability is critical for the effectiveness of family tax credits like the ETC and CTC, please visit https://www.utahfamilytaxcredits.org/learnmore/.)
Unfortunately, the majority of the $608 million in tax cuts goes to Utahns earning six-figure incomes, who neither need nor are asking for tax cuts. In fact, the survey conducted during the legislative session by the Deseret News and Hinckley Institute found that just 18% of Utahns wanted a tax cut. The overwhelming majority supported investing more in education, infrastructure, saving the Great Salt Lake, and other building blocks of Utah's future prosperity and success:
This result is consistent with previous polling on the question of whether Utah should be cutting taxes. Previous polls include....
- Deseret News/Hinckley Institute 2022
- Deseret News/Hinckley Institute 2021
- Deseret News/Hinckley Institute 2020
- Utah Foundation 2020
- Envision Utah 2020
Clearly the public is more concerned than Utah's political leaders about the billions of dollars in unmet needs identified by the Invest In Utah's Future coalition. The public is probably also aware of the two biggest problems with cutting the income tax:
- Cutting the income tax leads to higher property taxes as the local districts struggle to make up the lost education revenues. And in fact, the last 14 years have seen inflation-adjusted per-student local education revenue (from property taxes) rise 12% while inflation-adjusted per-student state funding (from the income tax) fell 2.5%. Given the spike in local property taxes in the last year or two, it was disappointing to see that the Legislature failed to pass even very modest measures like HB 260 that would have devoted $5 million to expand eligibility for the state's property tax relief programs to more low- and moderate-income households.
- Cutting $400 million from the income tax breaks down to well over $500 per student diverted from the main source of education funding. For the median income family of four, they gain about $200 in tax cuts -- but lose over $1,000 that now will not be invested every year in their own kids' education.
Unfortunately, the Utah Legislature has proven once again that it is all too ready to give in to the tax cut temptation, even though Utah already has the 7th lowest taxes in the nation according to WalletHub, and despite the fact that we are already a top 10 state nationally for our business-friendly taxes, according to the Tax Foundation.
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WE'VE POSTED A VIDEO WALK-THROUGH OF THE CHART ABOVE AT https://fb.watch/jcAUe4-Rqr/
Utah's Proposed Child Tax Credit
To date, the state legislature’s minimal efforts to address Utah’s complex child care crisis are completely out of proportion to the scope of the problem.
None of those efforts have offered much relief for Utah families with young children who are struggling with the rising cost of child care. They certainly don’t contemplate the urgency of the impending “federal funding cliff” that is about to push child care costs even further through the roof.
Policy proposals that require a meaningful investment of state dollars - and pretty much all the effective ones will - have been ignored by elected officials.
Before the session ends on March 3rd, however, the legislature has a chance to pass legislation that would actually provide financial relief for some families with young children.
Yes, it will require state investment - but the one kind of investment that legislators seem most enthusiastic about: a tax cut!
Well, a tax CREDIT, which is sort of like a tax cut for the Utahns who qualify.
Representative Susan Pulsipher (R-South Jordan) has introduced a narrowly-tailored Child Tax Credit, which would allow families to claim up to an extra $1,000 per child each year, to help cover a small portion of the staggering costs of caring for a child. Families that make more money can claim a smaller amount, on a sliding scale.
The bill is House Bill 170: Child Tax Credit Amendments (originally named "Child Care Tax Credit Amendments). It has only recently moved forward in the legislative process, after its initial introduction in mid-January. With just a couple of weeks left in the session, there is still a chance that this tax credit - with a price tag of less than $41 million - could be included in whatever tax package the legislature inevitably passes.
Rep. Pulsipher’s goal is to help families who still struggle to afford the costs of raising young children.
The money they save with this tax credit can be used by families in any way that works for them. If a parent stays home, it can help cushion the financial burden of having a one-income household. If both parents work, it can be used to cover the costs of child care while they are working.
There are a few catches, though:
- This $1,000 tax credit can only be claimed for children who are under the age of six at the time you file your taxes. Child care costs go way down for a family once a child is enrolled in school.
- In order to be eligible, your household must meet certain household income requirements (for example, a household with a joint filing status must be less than $54,000 to quality for the full amount of the credit).
- If your family makes more than a certain amount of money, you can still claim this tax credit, but it is phased out based on your household income.
- If you don’t end up owing any income taxes when all the math is said and done, you won’t get a check in the mail from the state for each child. This tax credit would be “non-refundable.” That means the tax credit can only be used to put a dent in the income taxes you owe; it can’t put extra money in your pocket if your income taxes calculate down to zero.
- You won’t be able to claim the tax credit THIS YEAR. Or even next year. It would go into effect when you file your 2024 taxes in 2025.
Even with these strict parameters, we think having a Child Tax Credit available for some Utah families is a great step toward grappling with our state’s child care problems in a meaningful way.
HB170 offers legislators an opportunity to show they are willing to invest in families with young children in the face of a crisis that is about to get a lot worse. We hope they take it!
Write to your legislators about HB170 “Child Tax Credit Amendments!”
Utah's State Child Tax Credit
As many Utahns experienced firsthand during the pandemic, a generous child tax credit (CTC) can make a world of difference for families raising young children. During this challenging time, the CTC was temporarily expanded and made refundable, granting families $300 per month per child under six and $250 per child aged six to seventeen – providing significant tax relief for working families. This expansion had a far-reaching impact, reducing child poverty to its lowest recorded level in 2021, dropping by 46% from 9.7% in 2020 to 5.2% in 2021. Unfortunately, a year after the expansion ended, child poverty returned to 12.4%. In Utah, the federal CTC expansion helped lift 32,000 children from poverty.
In 2023, Utah became the 13th state to introduce its very own child tax credit, thanks to the leadership of Representative Susan Pulsipher. Like the federal child tax credit, a state-level child tax credit is intended to help families with the costs of raising children.
As Utah’s legislators prepare for the 2024 legislative session, they should consider meaningful ways to expand Utah’s child tax credit to ensure it provides real support for families.
How it Works
Utah’s narrowly tailored Child Tax Credit allows some families to claim up to an additional $1,000 per child each year. Whether a parent stays home or both parents work, this tax credit can provide much-needed financial support.
Who is Eligible
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This $1,000 tax credit is for children who are ages 1-3 on the last day of the claimant’s taxable year.
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There are household income requirements. Families with an income of $54,000 for a couple or $43,000 for a family with a single parent (also called Head of Household) can claim the credit.
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If a family makes more than a certain amount of money, they can still claim this tax credit, but it is phased out based on household income.
It's important to note that Utah's CTC is non-refundable. It can only be used to help reduce the amount of income taxes you owe but Utah’s CTC doesn’t help any families whose income tax burden is zero. [For more information on refundability, go here.]
Who it Helps
Utah's CTC won't take effect until families file their 2024 taxes in 2025. According to an analysis from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP):
- 1.4% of households in Utah will benefit from the state CTC.
- Among those eligible, the average annual tax savings will be around $400.
- 4.3% of children will benefit from the CTC.
- No family will receive the full $1,000 per child.
Looking Ahead
Utah’s narrowly-tailored CTC doesn’t serve enough families. With its restrictions, the current state CTC doesn’t really help low- and middle-income households, especially those with more children. It also leaves out families with newborns and kids aged four to eighteen. Many more families could be helped by expanding our state child tax credit.
A bold state child tax credit gives Utah parents opportunities and choices to set their children up for future success. Children need parents to give them a solid start in life - and parents need the support of their community to be there for their kids. Expanding our state CTC gives critical community support to young parents raising children in Utah.
With the governor working on budget recommendations and legislators preparing for the upcoming legislative session, it's time to advocate early for child tax credit expansion and the inclusion of public investment in early education in Utah's state budget priorities!
Write to your elected officials here
Edit: ITEP Analysis numbers were updated on November 21, 2023, to use estimations based on 2024 incomes.
Voices for Utah Children's 2024 Child Care Legislation
Supporting families with young children remains a top policy priority of Voices for Utah Children, leading into the 2024 session. Central to our advocacy efforts is addressing the critical child care needs of these families.
We are currently working with several legislators to propose much-needed public investment in the child care sector. We will also be supporting multiple early care and education bills being championed by other legislators and organizations. Here’s the rundown:
- Child Care Grants Amendments (Rep. Andrew Stoddard, D-Sandy): This proposal extends Utah’s current child care stabilization grant program, funded at 50% of the original grant size. Requesting $120 million annually for the next two years as an emergency stopgap measure, this bill aims to preserve some of the recent progress made in expanding child care program accessibility statewide. Specifically, this funding would be directed toward improving wages and benefits for the child care professionals who are critical to the sector.
- Child Care Grants Modifications (Rep. Ashlee Matthews, D-Kearns): This bill also extends a successful COVID-era program that supports existing, and recruiting new child care programs statewide. Requesting $750,000 annually for the next three years, the grants will be available to Utah’s six Regional “Care About Child Care” Resource and Referral agencies. These agencies have been integral to expanding Utah’s child care availability over the last three years, with region-specific approaches to recruitment, professional development, and technical assistance.
- Child Care Workforce Retention (Rep. Ashlee Matthews, D-Kearns): This legislation will expand access to the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP or child care subsidies) for individuals working in the child care sector. Modeled after a successful retention effort in Kentucky, this legislation allows child care program employees to qualify for child care subsidies regardless of income - providing a powerful incentive for new workers to join the field, and to retain current employees. Wee estimate this program will cost around $15 million a year (supporting up to 3,400 young children with parents in the workforce).
- Child Tax Credit Modifications (Rep. Susan Pulsipher, R-South Jordan): Seeking to expand Utah’s new and very limited Child Tax Credit, this bill allows families to claim a tax benefit for any child aged 1 to 4. We support Rep. Pulsipher’s effort, but strongly recommend making the tax credit available for families with any child between birth and age five. Additionally, the Child Tax Credit should be made refundable to include low-income families who are currently excluded, and to ensure that all families receive the full benefit of $1,000 per year per child.
- School Readiness Grant Program Modernization (Sen. Ann Millner, R-Ogden): This bill will streamline and improve the state’s current High Quality School Readiness (HQSR) program, which funds high-quality preschool for hundreds of Utah children each year through public schools and private child care centers. Promise Partnership Utah, our partner organization leading out on this bill, is also advocating for additional funding to be invested in this high-return program.
- Public-Private Child Care Development Pilot Program (Sen. Luz Escamilla, D-Salt Lake City): This legislation will create an innovative pilot program to encourage collaboration between private businesses, public agencies, and private child care providers. Sen. Escamilla’s bill involves retrofitting unused state buildings for child care programming, contracting with child care providers in good standing with the state, and recruiting local employers to offer program spots to their own employees. A portion of the child care spots would also be open to state employees and the broader community.
- Child Care Program Sales Tax Exemption (Rep. Christine Watkins, R-Carbon, Duchesne, Price, and Castle Dale): This bill will allow for a sales and use tax exemption for construction materials used to construct or expand a child care program.
- Child Care Zoning Improvements: We anticipate legislation to address some city and municipal barriers currently impeding the opening or expansion of child care programs. Over the interim, key stakeholders, including the Utah League of Cities and Towns, Utah Private Child Care Association (UPCCA), and Rep. Susan Pulsipher, have met to tackle this important issue.
This blog post will be updated as we learn of new child care-related legislation.
With the governor working on budget recommendations and legislators preparing for the upcoming legislative session, it's time to advocate to include public investment in early learning and care in Utah's state budget priorities!
Utah Education Funding: Legislative Leadership vs The Data
At two large pre-legislative events in the second week of January, hundreds of attendees heard Utah's Senate President proudly assert that Utah was the only state that increased education funding during the pandemic.
Every year, especially around the end of every legislative session, Utah's political leaders proclaim that they are putting record amounts of funding into education.
Unfortunately, these claims are contradicted by the data published by the Utah State Board of Education in its Superintendent's Annual Report.
Real FY21 and FY22 State + Local Education Funding Did Not Rise -- It Fell
These data are from the USBE Superintendent's Annual Reports, adjusted for inflation using the standard CPI-U inflation index from the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics. They show that Utah's real (inflation-adjusted) state + local education funding fell in both FY21 and FY22, both in total and on a per-student basis. (During those two fiscal years, the Utah Legislature passed over $300 million in income tax cuts.)
State Education Funding Has Fallen While Local Education Funding Has Risen
We have heard legislative leaders assert every year that they have appropriated record amounts for education. We have also sometimes heard them say that local education funding (from property taxes) has not kept up, and that is the reason that overall education funding is inadequate to reduce Utah's largest-in-the-nation class sizes or address our high rates of new teacher turnover. Yet the data from USBE show two trends that contradict these claims, as illustrated in the chart above:
- Real per-student state education funding was 2.5% lower in 2022 than in 2008 (the peak year for education funding before the Great Recession).
- Real per-student local education funding was 12% higher in 2022 than in 2008.
It is also worth noting, in this context, that permanently cutting the state income tax rate, as the Legislature has done in recent years and is considering doing once again this year, tends to put additional pressure on local property taxes to make up the difference for schools. The income tax and the property tax are the two main sources of funding for education. If policymakers intentionally and repeatedly undermine one of them, that inevitably creates pressure to increase the other (or allow it to increase naturally, as has happened the last two years with property taxes as home values have shot up).
Can We Have Record Education Funding and Record Tax Cuts?
Legislative leaders have used their incorrect claims that Utah increased education funding during the pandemic to bolster their case that Utah can have it all -- record high levels of education funding and record tax cuts. But USBE data reveal that, in fact, we cannot have it all, that tradeoffs exist, and that hard choices must be made. If we have record tax cuts, we likely will not have record levels of education funding. If we want to strengthen education finance for the long-term betterment of our children and our state, we ought to consider what we are giving up when we give in to the tax cut temptation.
One Final Comment: Inputs vs Outcomes
Needless to say, this entire discussion concerns only inputs to, not outcomes of, our K-12 public education system. But, as one superintendent wisely observed over a decade ago, "We cannot have the best school system in the country and be the lowest in the country in funding. We can't be first if we're always last."
While there is little doubt that Utah does more with less in our public schools better than probably any other state, there are several key educational outcome measures that most concern Voices for Utah Children:
- Our high school graduation rates are no higher than or below national averages for nearly every racial and ethnic category.
- Our high school graduation rate gaps between haves and have-nots and between majority and minority groups are larger than nationally.
- Our rate of college degrees, an area where Utah's older generations outpaced the nation, has fallen behind the nation's among our younger generation, the Millennial generation, based on Census data for Utahns age 25-34.
Closing these gaps and regaining our once enviable lead will require substantial new investments at every step in the pipeline, from expanding pre-K and full-day kindergarten options to reducing class sizes and new teacher turnover in our elementary, middle, and high schools, to ensuring that more of our sons and daughters finish what they start at our public colleges and universities.
Note: The charts in this blog post are from Voices for Utah Children's forthcoming "Children's Budget Report 2023" that will be published in February 2023.
Both graphs are available for download here.
Methodology and Location of Data
Utah’s education funding rises each year, but so does the student population. And prices rise due to inflation, which has been worse the last year than in 40 years. So how can we judge whether education funding is really going up, as our political leaders always claim? There is one metric considered to be the gold standard for this purpose: inflation-adjusted per-student spending. To calculate this metric, you need three pieces of data. The locations of these items are detailed below:
1. State, Local, and Federal Education Spending
Source: Utah State Board of Education Superintendent’s Annual Report at www.schools.utah.gov/superintendentannualreport
Direct Document Link: Statewide Total: Revenue and Expenditures by Fund, June 30, 2022 https://www.schools.utah.gov/file/674392fc-3946-4ba2-ba19-da7f024f3fe5
Comments: In the charts above, we used the state and local education spending data
2. K-12 Student Population
Source: Utah State Board of Education Superintendent’s Annual Report at www.schools.utah.gov/superintendentannualreport
Direct Document Link: Fall Enrollment by Grade Level and Demographics, October 1, School Year 2022-2023 https://www.schools.utah.gov/file/5c8e2fac-55dc-4f0a-bf6a-6889133e4ffe
Comments: Be sure to use the fall enrollment data from the fall of the year you are analyzing. For example, for FY/SY22, use October 2021 enrollment data.
3. Inflation Index CPI-U
Source: US Bureau of Labor Statisticshttps://www.bls.gov/data/home.htm
Direct Document Link: All Urban Consumers (Current Series) (Consumer Price Index - CPI) https://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/surveymost?cu U.S. city average, All items - CUUR0000SA0....then use “Annual Averages”
Google Sheet with all collected data, sources & formulas
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1fTy8wKHY6Di33eRLTcM7Ce1B5Caw10sb/edit#gid=534909710