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Fair Share Massachusetts

The Fair Share Amendment, passed by voters in November 2022, creates a 4 percent tax on the portion of a person’s annual income above $1 million and dedicate the funds raised to public education and transportation.

What Is the Fair Share Amendment?

The Fair Share Amendment, passed by voters in November 2022, creates a 4 percent tax on the portion of a person’s annual income above $1 million and dedicate the funds raised to public education and transportation.

Only people who earn more than $1 million annually pay this additional income tax; 99 percent of us don’t pay a penny more. And we all benefit from better schools, colleges and universities, roads, bridges and public transportation.

Learn more about the Fair Share Amendment

Major investments funded by the Fair Share Amendment

Major new investments include free community college, free and expanded Regional Transit Authority bus service, universal free school meals, early literacy, behavioral health frameworks and the MBTA

In November 2022, Massachusetts voters passed the Fair Share Amendment, choosing a fairer tax system and guaranteeing that the richest one percent will pay more to fund our schools, colleges, roads, bridges, and public transit.

Now, Massachusetts is delivering on the promise of the Fair Share Amendment by making major new investments in transportation and public education. Massachusetts spent the first $1 billion from the Fair Share Amendment in FY24 (from July 2023-June 2024) to upgrade the MBTA’s infrastructure and make public college more affordable, repair bridges and provide free school meals for all students, build green schools and expand local bus service across the state, and more.

Now, with the passage of the state’s final FY25 budget, legislators have determined how to spend the next $1.3 billion in Fair Share revenue in FY25 (from July 2024-June 2025). Major new investments funded by Fair Share include free community college, free and expanded RTA bus service, universal free school meals for K-12 students, and millions of dollars for the MBTA and child care providers.

How are Fair Share revenues being spent?

The state Legislature has designated $538.5 million for transportation and $761.5 million for public education in the state budget for the 2025 fiscal year, which begins on July 1, 2024, from tax revenues collected as a result of the Fair Share Amendment.

The Fair Share Amendment, passed by voters in November 2022, creates an additional tax of four percentage points on the portion of a person’s annual income above $1 million. The new revenue is designated for public schools and colleges and transportation.

Download FY25 Fair Share Budget Update FY24 Budget Numbers

Fair Share revenues have reached $1.8 billion, dramatically exceeding expectations for this fiscal year

MTA members helped win:
  • Universal school meals for every child.
  • A move toward free community college.
  • More money for school and college buildings.
  • Rebuilding of the MBTA, regional bus routes and local roads and bridges.

And these developments are just in the first year!

Along with our partners in the Raise Up Massachusetts coalition, the MTA celebrates the state reporting that revenues from the Fair Share Amendment are dramatically exceeding the expectations of the Legislature in its FY24 budget.

The news that Fair Share has produced upward of $1.8 billion in the current fiscal year and is on track to generate a total of $2 billion once the year is complete, was a thrilling vindication of the commitment MTA members and our union made in passing an additional income tax on multimillionaires and billionaires so we can invest in our public schools and colleges and transportation systems.

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Education Funding News
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A Diverse Union of Education Workers

The MTA represents 117,000 members in 400 local associations throughout Massachusetts. We are teachers, faculty, professional staff and Education Support Professionals working at public schools, colleges and universities across Massachusetts.