From CNN.com:
Facing mounting budget deficits and seeing  few areas left to cut spending, states increasingly are turning to the  only option they have left: raising taxes.
Though public officials are loath to  do this, particularly during a recession, many governors are increasing  personal income taxes, raising corporate income taxes, hiking cigarette  and gas taxes, or broadening sales taxes.
Already, 16 states have taken this unpopular  step this fiscal year, and another 17 have proposed tax hikes for the  coming year, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities,  a policy group. In many cases, they are making small increases in specific  taxes, rather than imposing a broad rate hike.
"The question isn't whether to raise  taxes, it's which taxes to raise," said Linda Bilmes, professor  of public finance at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government.
Wealthier residents in Hawaii are now  paying higher personal income taxes. The state increased the tax rate  to 11% for single filers earning more than $200,000 and couples making  more than $400,000, while also raising levies on hotel accommodations  and real estate purchases.
Smokers in Rhode Island, meanwhile, now  pay the highest state tobacco taxes in the nation, forking over an additional  $1 for a total of $3.46 in state levies per pack.
