For the first time, the tax
credit program would also enable
many homeowners who buy a new
primary residence to receive a
$6,500 refund.
The measure was attached to a
bill that would provide 20 weeks
of unemployment benefits in more
than two dozen states with jobless
rates above 8.5 percent and up to
14 weeks elsewhere. Another
provision in the bill would allow
businesses that had operating
losses in 2008 and 2009 to seek
refunds for taxes paid on profits
over the past five years.
The
bill, which passed 98 to 0, should
reach the House floor by Thursday,
House Majority
Leader Steny H. Hoyer
(D-Md.) said in a statement. His
office said the legislation would
then go to the White House for the
president's signature.
The Obama administration has
previously supported extending the
$8,000 tax credit, and without
congressional action the program
would end Nov. 30.
Under the bill, first-time home
buyers would receive the $8,000
tax credit if they sign a contract
by April 30 and close on it by
June 30. The plan would also make
those who buy a new primary
residence eligible for the $6,500
credit if they owned their current
home for at least five consecutive
years in the previous eight years.
But the measure limits the
purchase price of the home to
$800,000. It also imposes income
caps so that people who make more
than $125,000 annually and couples
who make more than $225,000 would
not be eligible for the program,
which is estimated to cost $10
billion.
Source:
Washington Post