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Massachusetts Tax Refund: Who Is Eligible and When Could Checks Go Out?


Massachusetts Tax Refund: Who Is Eligible and When Could Checks Go Out?

Gov. Charlie Baker's plan to send $250 checks to middle-income residents fell apart last month, but Massachusetts taxpayers will still probably get a healthy tax rebate this year.

The $250 payout was making headway but a bill failed to pass before the July 31 deadline, in part because legislators suddenly remembered a 35-year-old voter referendum that could mean nearly $3 billion in surplus taxes will be returned to taxpayers this fall.

The 1986 statute --  which has only ever been triggered once, in 1987 -- mandates that, if the money collected in income tax reaches a predetermined dollar amount above and beyond the state budget, the excess must be returned to taxpayers.

Baker insisted there was enough in the coffers to support both his original $250 payout and any mandatory refunds.  

"The tax breaks that are currently pending before the legislature are eminently affordable," he told reporters, WBUR reported. "I mean, you're talking about a tax year, this past year, in which tax revenue went up by over 20 percent."

Legislators on Beacon Hill didn't necessarily agree.

"The fiscally responsible thing to do is to hit pause right now on all of this spending," Sen. Michael Rodrigues, chair of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, told reporters on Aug. 1, The Boston Globe reported.

"We want to make sure we get it right," Rodrigues added. "We are committed to getting some real, long-term permanent tax relief done."

Here's what Massachusetts residents need to know about the tax rebate, including who is eligible, how much it could be for and when it may go out.

For more on tax relief, find out which states are mailing out tax rebates, pausing their gas tax and instituting sales tax "holidays."

How much will the Massachusetts tax rebate be?

The original refund proposed in Baker's budget was for $250, intended for individual filers who earned between $38,000 and $100,000 last year and joint filers who made up to $150,000.

The exact dollar amount that could go out now is still to be determined: State Auditor Suzanne Bump has to calculate what, if any, tax surplus there is, using a formula based on annual wage and salary growth.

Baker's office has predicted taxpayers would get 7% of their 2021 income taxes returned, according to MassLive. For an individual earning $75,000, that would work out to about $250.

Couple looks at tax rebate check

While the state auditor hasn't determined whether tax revenue has triggered a refund yet, Gov Baker predicts that thanks to a 1986 voter referendum, taxpayers will get 7% of their 2021 income taxes returned.

Photosomnia/Getty Images

Who qualifies for the Massachusetts tax rebate?

Theoretically, anyone who paid 2021 income tax in Massachusetts would be eligible to be paid back. Residents with outstanding state tax bills may not see a check, though.

When will the Massachusetts tax rebate be sent out?

Baker's original plan would have had $250 checks in the hands of eligible taxpayers by October. The tax cap won't be calculated by the state auditor until September, though the Department of Revenue could start issuing tax credits on Sept. 21, MassLive reported.

"We're looking at what's the quickest and most efficient way to get that money back to the taxpayers," Michael Heffernan, state secretary of administration and finance, told reporters Thursday, WBZ news radio reported.

Lawmakers don't want to rush any decisions and overextend the budget with multiple rounds of tax rebates.

Pausing the economic development and tax relief package forged the "wisest choice," House Speaker Ron Mariano said at a press conference, WGBH reported.  

"We wanted to make sure to be fiscally prudent that we know what we're getting into," Mariano added. "The economy is going through some strange things with a big inflation rate [and] oil and gas fluctuations that may lead to a recession."

What other tax breaks could Massachusetts residents receive?

Lawmakers want to increase the earned income tax credit from the 30% match of the federal credit to 40%, raise the child care credit from $180  per child to $310 and increase the rental deduction cap from $3,000 to $4,000. 

Certain seniors who own or rent their primary properties in Massachusetts get a "circuit breaker" tax credit, and Democrats want to bump the maximum from $1,170 to $2,340.


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Apple Reportedly Faces Further EU Antitrust Charges Following a Complaint From Spotify


Apple Reportedly Faces Further EU Antitrust Charges Following a Complaint From Spotify

Apple will facing additional antitrust charges from the European Commission in the coming weeks, according to a Monday report from Reuters. This is said to come due to a music streaming investigation triggered by a complaint from Spotify. 

The extra charges come a year after the EU accused Apple of breaching competition law in the music streaming market through restrictive App Store rules. 

At the time, the EU's accusation outlined concerns from a 2019 complaint made by Spotify regarding Apple's policy for managing in-app payments. The complaint addressed how Apple charges Spotify and other subscription-based companies a 30% fee for in-app purchases, which, Spotify argued, was stifling competition for companies that compete with Apple Music. 

The commission now intends to set out extra antitrust charges in a supplementary statement of objections, according to Reuters, something that's normally issued when an EU competition enforcer has changed a portion of its case or found new evidence. 

Apple didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. 


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Fossil Gen 6 smartwatch line touts faster charging speeds, and eventually Wear OS 3


Fossil Gen 6 smartwatch line touts faster charging speeds, and eventually Wear OS 3

Fossil on Monday unveiled its new Gen 6 line of smartwatches, which arrive this fall and will receive Google's new Wear OS 3 in an update in 2022. Despite its initial launch on the previous version of Wear OS, Fossil touts the watch's faster Snapdragon Wear 4100 Plus chip from Qualcomm and a claimed charging speed of zero to 80% in 30 minutes.

The watch line is priced between $299 and $319 in the US and is now available for preorder. The line will start at £279 in the UK and AU$499 in Australia.

Compared to Samsung's new Galaxy Watch 4, which does sport Wear OS 3 right now, Fossil's Gen 6 includes more of Google's services, such as Google Assistant, and support for both iOS and Android.

Battery life in particular is a big focus for the watch. In addition to the charging claim, the watch includes a variety of granular battery modes, which last from 24 hours up to multiple days with Extended Battery Mode.

fossil-gen-6-on-wrist
Fossil

The watch comes in 44mm and 42mm case size options, is swim-proof up to 3 ATM (fine for swimming, but likely not for deeper diving), has 8GB of storage and 1GB of RAM. Health sensors in the watch include one for continuously tracking heart rate and a blood oxygen sensor.

Fossil is among several manufacturers that will support Google's new Wear OS 3 smartwatch platform, which was revealed earlier this summer as a collaboration between Google and Samsung. The watch platform is also due to receive features from Fitbit after Google completed its acquisition of the fitness wearable-maker. Fitbit will also make its own Wear OS 3 watch at some point, but it recently revealed the Fitbit Charge 5, a fitness-focused wearable that does not run any version of Wear OS.

See also: Best smartwatch for 2021


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WhatsApp ending support for Windows phones and other older devices


WhatsApp ending support for Windows phones and other older devices

The popular cross-platform messaging app WhatsApp is discontinuing support for older Android, iOS and Windows phones. After Dec. 31, WhatsApp will no longer be usable on Windows phones, according to a support FAQ.  Android versions 2.3.7 and older and iOS 8 and older will be supported until Feb. 1, 2020. 

To continue using WhatsApp, the FAQ suggests updating to an Android running OS 4.0.3 or higher, iOS 9 or higher, or select phones running KaiOS 2.5.1 or higher, including JioPhone and JioPhone 2. 

In addition, the FAQ said that there's no option to transfer chat history between platforms, but you will be able to export chat histories as email attachments. 


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9 great reads from CNET this week: COP26, Star Wars, Mars moon and more


9 great reads from CNET this week: COP26, Star Wars, Mars moon and more

There's been a lot of talk about the climate crisis this week, pegged to the UN's COP26 summit of world leaders in Glasgow, Scotland. It's brought together a who's who of luminaries, from Jeff Bezos to Joe Biden to David Attenborough, all emphasizing the need to act now and act smartly to steer us away from worst-case scenarios.

CNET's Katie Collins has been in Glasgow reporting from COP26, and we've also published a range of articles about efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Beyond that, the CNET Money team has mustered up some practicalguidelines about how each of us can navigate the world with climate change in mind.

Those stories are among the many in-depth features and thought-provoking commentaries that appeared on CNET this week. So here you go. These are the stories you don't want to miss.

Researchers look to formidable new allies to rein in methane emissions from agriculture. 

Cows lined up at a feeding trough
Getty/Bloomberg

Here's how to channel those negative feelings into something good.  

Eco-anxiety, depicted as a woman with a box on her head holding a flower
Westend61/Getty

Injecting reflective particles into the atmosphere could turn down the heat on Earth, but research has been controversial.

Sunrise over Earth as seen from space
Getty

Activists are fighting for it, world leaders agree we need it, but climate justice is still being made to sit on the sidelines at the UN climate summit.

A protester outside the COP26 blue zone.
Katie Collins/CNET

Commentary: "She said stop, and he didn't stop."

Princess Leia and Han Solo
Disney/Lucasfilm

Japan's space agency plans to find out if the potato-shaped curiosity holds remnants of long-dead microbes.

Martian moons exploration illustration
Realizm

The company is one of many competing to ease your supply chain woes. 

Maersk cargo ship loaded with shipping containers
Getty Images

Some of the apps are limited to buying and selling and don't let you move cryptocurrency to a wallet. But they might entice beginners to try crypto.

A woman's hand holds a phone that displays a bitcoin on the screen.
Getty Images

EVs are great for many things -- but towing? Let's see how our long-term Tesla managed with its tow hitch occupied.  

Tesla Model Y towing
Tim Stevens/Roadshow

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NASA Delays Artemis I Moon Launch to This Weekend


NASA Delays Artemis I Moon Launch to This Weekend

Artemis I , the first mission in NASA's ambitious program to get humans back to the moon, suffered an engine setback just hours before liftoff Monday morning, forcing the highly anticipated launch to be scrubbed. The space agency is now looking at a backup window that opens on Saturday, according to a Tuesday press conference.

At first, the Artemis team was looking at a Sept. 2 do-over date.

"To summarize, we held at T-minus 40 minutes and counting after the team was unable to get past an engine bleed that didn't show the right temperature once they got into the engine bleed test," NASA said as part of its scrub announcement on Monday. "Ultimately, the launch director has called a scrub for the day. The earliest opportunity, depending on what happens with this engine, would be Sept. 2, that is available to the launch team, however we will await a determination."

But then, after reconvening a day after Monday's activities, the team assessed all the data and confirmed that the series of unfortunate events for Artemis I is best addressed with an extra day of work on Artemis equipment. Basically, as Artemis mission manager Mike Sarafin said in Tuesday's conference, problems on launch day began with some weather challenges that delayed the start of tanking, followed by a leak while loading the rocket with cryogenic fuel at what's known as the "tail service mast umbilical" on the hydrogen side.

Somehow, despite that leak, however, the team then managed to work its way through loading the core stage and upper stage with fuel, thus producing a fully loaded vehicle -- then came the nail in the coffin. There was a complication with the rocket's engines. 

"We were unable to get the engines within the thermal conditions required to commit to launch," Sarafin said. "In combination with that, we also had a bent valve issue on the core stage, and it was at that point that the team decided to knock off the launch attempt for that day."

Therefore, in conclusion, "we agreed on what was called option one," Sarafin said, "which was to operationally change the loading procedure and start our engine chill down earlier. We also agreed to do some work at the pad to address the leak that we saw...and we also agreed to move our launch date to Saturday, September the 3rd."

From an audience viewpoint, here's what went down on Monday.

After a brief weather delay, things looked on track for Artemis I's bright orange Space Launch System rocket, but a couple of unforeseen technical hurdles quickly arose during its fuel loading stage. On top of that, earlier in the day, NASA broadcasters noted there was a "crack" in the thermal protection system material on one of the SLS core stage flanges, but it was later revealed to be a consequence of the super-chilled propellant, not a structural issue.

With regard to engines, as the rocket's boosters were being filled with liquid oxygen, NASA engineers did note that engine 3 was "not properly being conditioned through the bleed process." This process is meant to allow the engines to chill to the right temperature by releasing a small amount of the fuel. It wasn't working, as Sarafin explained Tuesday.

Back in June, at the time of Artemis I's wet dress rehearsal -- which took four tries to complete -- the team hoped to examine the efficacy of exactly this bleed process, but didn't get to it. "This is something they wanted to test during wet dress four but were unable to," NASA broadcaster Derrol Nail said during the agency's livestream of the launch attempt. "So this was the first opportunity for the team to see this live in action. It's a particularly tricky issue to get that temperature dialed in."

About an hour after trying to troubleshoot the engine 3 bleed problem, the team met with launch director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson to discuss how to move forward. "Right now, the indications don't point to an engine problem," Sarafin said, meaning the setback likely isn't tied to the engine interface itself. "It's in the the bleed system that thermally conditions the engines."

Nonetheless, Artemis I's launch was scrubbed. 

"It's just part of the space business -- and particularly a test flight," NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said after the delay was announced on Monday. "We are stressing and testing this rocket and spacecraft in a way that you would never do it with the human crew on board. That's the purpose of a test flight."


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Samsung Galaxy S22 introduces 'Nightography' for better photos in the dark


Samsung Galaxy S22 introduces 'Nightography' for better photos in the dark

Samsung boosted the camera hardware and photo software in all of the Galaxy S22 phones, it announced Wednesday, but don't think it saved the best frills only for the top-of-the-line Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra. The most important night photography improvements also extend down to the S22 and its larger sibling, the S22 Plus (here's how the three phones in the Galaxy S22 lineup compare).

On all the phones, the upgrades promise sharper photos for both daytime and nighttime shooting. The Galaxy S22 and S22 Plus have better main cameras that have grown from 12 megapixels to 50 megapixels, and the image sensor, which is 23% larger than those on last year's Galaxy S21 and Galaxy S21 Plus, lets in more light. 

Samsung also added Night Portrait mode to the both front and rear cameras. Finally, you can take your stylish depth selfies even when it's dark, or snap a dramatic photo of your dog while out on midnight walks.

Samsung's 'Nightography' software advances

Behind the scenes, Samsung has made its night mode smarter, and it coined an appropriately gimmicky name for its advancements. "Nightography," as it's called, automatically chooses the ideal frame rate to capture as much light and detail as possible, meaning it's a more advanced version of what phone camera night modes already do.

The Galaxy S22 and S22 Plus also use adaptive pixel tech to augment the high-megapixel images with tetra-binning, which combines four pixels into one for sharper images in lower-light situations. 

The top-of-the-line Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra does have some advantages over its more affordable siblings. Its 108-megapixel main camera can take sharper photos, it has nona-binning to combine nine pixels instead of four to capture more light, and soon after launch it'll get the Expert RAW mode for professional image control. 

The 12-megapixel ultra-wide camera remains unchanged from last year's phone. A curious downgrade is that the telephoto lens resolution is now 10 megapixels (the S21 had a 64-megapixel telephoto lens). While I don't expect to use zoom photography much at night anyway, I'll have to test the new phones to see if this changes how images come out. 

Read more: Where to buy Galaxy S22: Preorder deals for Samsung's newest phones


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