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| November 21 , 2005 Abrahams calls on White House to reject  tax panel’s   
	
 Nassau County Legislator Kevan  Abrahams (D-Hempstead), together with representatives of the Long Island Board  of Realtors (LIBOR), the Long Island Progressive Coalition, and several Nassau  County homeowners, has called upon federal representatives in Washington to  block a Presidential Advisory panel’s proposed tax reforms that will devastate  current tax benefits for homeowners.    A Presidential Advisory panel  recently recommended reducing deductions for mortgage interest and eliminating  those for state and local taxes. The tax overhaul is at the top of President  George Bush’s second term agenda. "The proposal is a classic example of shifting wealth  from the middle class to the wealthy by funding tax cuts for the wealthy  through elimination of tax breaks for the middle class,” said Legislator  Abrahams. “The rich have capital gains tax cuts and the AMT cut, and the middle  class loses its greatest tax breaks -- the local real estate tax and mortgage  interest write offs.”  LIBOR President Marian Fraker-Gutin said, “The housing  industry, which has driven and sustained the economy for the last five years,  could be seriously impacted by the proposed tax reforms. By reducing the  deduction on mortgage interest and property taxes, as well as state and local  taxes, the financial stability of many Long Island  families could be grossly compromised. Moreover, consumers’ nest eggs will be  jeopardized because much of investment for retirement is tied to the equity  consumers have in their homes.”    In letters to U.S. Senator Hillary Clinton, U.S.  Senator Charles Schumer, Congressman Gary Ackerman, Congressman Tim Bishop,  Congresswoman Carolyn McCarthy and Congressman Steve Israel, the Nassau Majority  Legislators commended the federal representatives for the tough stance they  have already taken against the President’s proposed tax reforms. “Limiting the mortgage interest  deduction for homes under $300,000 when the average house in Nassau County  is worth $500,000 puts the dream of homeownership that much farther out of  reach for Long Island families,” Abrahams added.    Currently, an interest payment on  up to one million of first mortgage debt is deductible. According to published  reports, the panel is considering recommending that the figure be lowered to  $300,000. The median price of homes is $500,000 in Nassau  County and in Suffolk County  it is $400,000.    |