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Thank you Letter:  

Thank you for standing up for educational freedom!
Your comment helps ensure that families — not bureaucrats — decide how their children learn. Please share this campaign with friends and family so we can make sure the IRS hears from parents across the country.

Copy of your comment is below:

To: Department of the Treasury, Internal Revenue Service
Subject: Comments on Implementation of the Federal Scholarship Tax Credit

I appreciate the opportunity to comment on the IRS’s implementation of the new federal tax credit for donations to Scholarship Granting Organizations (SGOs).

Congress created this credit to expand educational opportunity and empower parents to choose the best learning environment for their children. For the program to succeed, the IRS should implement the statute in a manner that is simple, accessible, and fully consistent with congressional intent.

Specifically, I urge the IRS to:

  • Make it easy for Governors to opt states into the program and provide continuity once a state has opted in. States should not be able to opt out on a year-to-year basis, as families and students will rely on these scholarships for multiple years. Allowing abrupt withdrawal would be harmful and disruptive.
  • Clarify that the $1,700 tax credit applies per individual, not per tax return, so that married couples filing jointly may each claim the full credit, for a total of $3,400. The regulations should avoid creating a marriage penalty and should allow taxpayers to contribute and claim the credit directly through their Form 1040.
  • Ensure that certification and reporting requirements are uniform, clear, and easy to comply with, so that states and scholarship organizations of all sizes are encouraged to participate rather than deterred by excessive administrative burden.
  • Maximize flexibility for multi-state scholarship programs by allowing successful national and regional SGOs to operate across state lines without requiring donors to designate a specific state for their contribution.
  • Protect family privacy by minimizing the collection of sensitive income or demographic data beyond what is strictly necessary to administer the program.

Families and donors should be able to participate easily and confidently. Excessive bureaucracy would only reduce participation and ultimately limit the number of scholarships available to students who need them most.

Thank you for considering these comments and for your work to ensure that this program fulfills Congress’s goal of expanding educational opportunity and school choice for American families.

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