Property Tax - Regular Levies.
All real and personal property is subject to a tax each year based on the highest and best use, unless a specific exemption is provided by law. The annual growth of all regular property tax levy revenue other than the state levies is limited by the levy growth limit as follows:
In addition to the levy growth limit, levy capacity may increase by additional amounts equal to the increase in assessed value in a taxing district resulting from:
These additional amounts are referred to as add-ons to the levy growth limit.
Transfer of Development Rights.
A transfer of development rights (TDR) occurs when a qualifying landowner, through a permanent deed restriction, severs potential development rights from a property and transfers them to a recipient for use on a different property. In a TDR transaction, transferred rights are generally shifted from sending areas with lower population densities to receiving areas with higher population densities. The monetary values associated with transferred rights constitute compensation to a landowner for development that may have otherwise occurred on the transferring property.
Local Infrastructure Project Areas.
Certain cities are authorized to establish Local Infrastructure Project Areas (LIPAs). A LIPA allows certain increases in local property tax revenues generated from within the LIPA to be used for payment of bonds issued for financing local public improvements within the LIPA. The LIPA program provides for the TDR from rural farm and forest lands to cities being used within the LIPA.
Cities are eligible for the LIPA program if they are located within an eligible county. An eligible county means any county that: borders the Puget Sound; has a population of 600,000 or more people; has an established TDR program; and has designated all agricultural and forest land of long-term commercial significance within its jurisdiction as sending areas under its TDR program.
Each eligible county was required to report to the Puget Sound Regional Council (PSRC) the total number of transfers of development rights from agricultural and forest land of long-term commercial significance and designated rural lands that may be available for allocation to receiving cities. For purposes of LIPA provisions, a "receiving city" is a city within an eligible county that has a population plus employment of 22,500 or more people. Following the receipt of development rights information from eligible counties, the PSRC must allocate these development rights among receiving cities.
A city that accepts all or a portion of its allocated share of rights is eligible to become a sponsoring city. A "sponsoring city" is a city that meets specified allocation requirements, adopts a plan for the development of infrastructure within one or more LIPAs, and creates one or more LIPAs.
Preliminary Actions by a Sponsoring City.
The creation of a LIPA must be accomplished through an ordinance or resolution of the sponsoring city that describes the area boundaries and the proposed public improvements to be financed in the LIPA, specifies the date when LIPA-related property tax distributions will begin, and delineates participating taxing districts.
Financing Local Infrastructure Project Areas.
Local Infrastructure Project Areas are financed through property taxes. Beginning in the second calendar year following the creation of a LIPA, the county treasurer must distribute receipts from regular taxes imposed on real property within the LIPA to the sponsoring city and participating taxing districts. Under the distribution provisions, each participating taxing district and the sponsoring city must receive a portion of their regular property taxes for the LIPA as determined by specified requirements. In addition, the sponsoring city must receive an additional portion of the regular property taxes levied by it and by participating taxing districts upon property within the LIPA. The sponsoring city may agree to receive less than the full amount of the additional portion if certain conditions are met.
The incremental local property taxes for LIPA financing are calculated based on the sponsoring city ratio multiplied by 75 percent of the increases in assessed value as a result of new construction and improvements to property within the LIPA. The city ratio takes into account several factors related to a city's transfers of development rights.
Any increase in assessed value within a LIPA is specified as an add-on to the levy growth limit, if not already included as an add-on.
For any LIPA formed after the effective date of the bill, a sponsoring city must adopt Department of Commerce TDR interlocal terms and conditions as specified by Washington Administrative Code rule.
For purposes of a LIPA, affordable housing is a specified public improvement. The affordable housing may be provided directly by the sponsoring city, or funded in part or in full through municipal governments or nonprofit organizations that fund or provide housing.
For purposes of a LIPA, regular property taxes do not include a county's current expense fund.