Senate Bill 69, presented by Senator Wilson on Jan. 30, proposes to reduce Utah’s individual income tax rate from 4.65% to 4.55% and to make the change retroactive for the current tax year. Sponsor Wilson framed the proposal as a responsible, measured tax cut meant to increase economic activity and keep more money in residents' paychecks. "We will lower the income tax from 4.65 to 4.55," he said on the floor.
Opponents, including Senator Reby and others, cautioned about trade-offs with social services funding and asked for concrete estimates on household savings and impacts to programs serving vulnerable populations. Senator Reby noted recent testimony from a disability center and a 10-year housing waiting list, asking how a tax cut would affect the most vulnerable. Senator Wilson responded that final budget estimates and collections were pending and that precise per-household savings would be calculated once those figures are available.
Floor debate included pro-growth arguments from Senators Bridal and Bramble, who said lowering taxes can expand economic activity, and more skeptical views from senators who urged targeted tax relief for vulnerable groups. The bill was called and recorded on the calendar for further action; roll-call summaries on the floor showed recorded support for proceeding with the measure, and the bill was circled for continuing deliberation.
Senators asked for follow-up information before final votes, including household impact estimates and analysis of effects on social-service programs funded by state revenue.