Op-Ed: Everything just costs too much — here is one way we can help

“Everything just costs too much right now.”

That is what we hear every day from the people we represent.

Families feel it at the grocery store. They feel it at the gas pump. They feel it when the electric bill comes in or when they pay for their cell phone service. These are not optional expenses. These are the basics of modern life.

When everyday essentials keep getting more expensive, the government should not make it worse. It should look for ways to provide relief.

That is why we are working on legislation to establish targeted tax holidays on essential goods and services, including electricity and mobile communication. These are services on which every household depends. Electricity keeps homes safe and functional. It powers medical equipment, preserves food and supports learning. Cell phones are no longer a luxury. For many, they are the primary way to work, communicate and stay connected in an emergency.

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Yet, both are subject to a Gross Receipts Tax that ultimately raises monthly costs for consumers. That means families are paying more every single month for services they cannot live without.

A temporary tax holiday is a straightforward way to help. It would lower costs immediately and allow families to keep more of their money. This is not a complicated program that takes years to implement. It is a direct step that provides relief when people need it.

Even modest savings matter. For a family balancing groceries, child care, housing and transportation, every dollar counts. A break on essential services can ease that pressure.

This effort is part of a broader package, introduced by the Republican Policy Committee, focused on affordability, including additional sales tax holidays on everyday items on which families rely. Together, these measures are designed to reduce costs in practical ways while we continue working on long-term tax policy.

At its core, this is about fairness. Rising costs hit hardest for those with the least flexibility in their budgets. Seniors on fixed incomes, young families starting out and workers trying to get ahead all feel the strain.

Government cannot solve every financial challenge families face, but it can take steps to stop adding to the burden. Providing targeted, immediate relief is one of those steps.

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Pennsylvanians are asking for help. We have an opportunity to respond with commonsense solutions that make life a little more affordable.

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