Washington State

House of Representatives

Office of Program Research

BILL

ANALYSIS

Rural Development, Agriculture, & Natural Resources Committee

HB 1324

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

Brief Description: Creating the Washington rural development and opportunity zone act.

Sponsors: Representatives Chapman, Maycumber, Springer, Chandler, Blake, Stokesbary, Steele, Reeves, Pettigrew, Dolan, Volz, Barkis, Eslick, Lekanoff, Tharinger, Hoff, Jinkins, Kilduff and Leavitt.

Brief Summary of Bill

  • Creates a program to develop rural and opportunity zone areas.

  • Creates a tax preference for taxpayers who make a capital contribution to a Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund.

  • Extends a reduced business and occupation tax rate on certain timber-related activities.

Hearing Date: 1/30/19

Staff: Robert Hatfield (786-7117).

Background:

Opportunity Zones.

Opportunity zones were created through the federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, signed into law on December 22, 2017. The definition of qualified opportunity zones is codified in the Internal Revenue Code at 26 U.S.C. 1400Z-1. Investors are able to defer paying taxes on capital gains that are invested in qualified opportunity funds that in turn are invested in distressed communities designated as opportunity zones by the governor of each state. To qualify for opportunity zone status, a census tract must have an individual poverty rate of at least 20 percent and median family income of up to 80 percent of the area median. Up to 25 percent of the low-income census tracts in each state can be designated as opportunity zones. A total of 555 census tracts in Washington meet these eligibility criteria. In 2018, Governor Inslee approved 139 census tracts in 36 counties for opportunity zone status.

Rural Business Investment Companies.

The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) operates a Rural Investment Program whose aim is to promote economic development, and to provide a means to meet the equity capital investment needs of primarily smaller enterprises located in rural areas. The USDA licenses Rural Business Investment Companies (RBICs) through the Rural Investment Program.

Small Business Investment Companies.

The United States Small Business Administration (SBA) operates the Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) Program, which was established to increase access to capital for growth stage businesses. Through the SBIC Program, privately owned and managed investment funds are licensed and regulated by the SBA.

Insurance Premium and Retaliatory Taxes.

Insurers operating in Washington pay a variety of fees and taxes, including the insurance premium tax and, in some cases, retaliatory taxes.

Insurance Premium Tax.

The insurance premium tax is levied on net premiums collected or received by authorized insurers, except title insurers and fraternal benefit societies, and in lieu of the business and occupation (B&O) tax. However, insurance companies do pay B&O tax on income derived from any other activities in which they engage. With some exceptions, authorized insurers are subject to a 2 percent insurance premium tax.

Retaliatory Taxes.

Washington imposes a higher tax rate on an insurer domiciled in another state or country if the state or country charges a higher tax rate on Washington-based insurance companies doing business in its jurisdiction. An alien insurer is domiciled in the state where it has established its principal office or agency, or in the country in which its laws are formed.

Business and Occupation Taxes.

Washington's major business tax is the B&O tax. The B&O tax is imposed on the gross receipts of all taxable business activities conducted within the state, unless otherwise exempt. There is no deduction for the costs of doing business. Revenues are deposited in the State General Fund. There are several rate categories and a business may be subject to more than one B&O tax rate, depending on the types of activities conducted. Major B&O tax rates are: 0.471 percent for retailing; 0.484 percent for manufacturing, wholesaling, and extracting; and 1.5 percent for services and for activities not classified elsewhere. Several preferential rates also apply to specific business activities. Business and occupation taxes are collected by the Department of Revenue.

Business and Occupation Taxes - Timber Products.

In 2006, B&O tax rate reductions were provided for the timber industry. The B&O tax rate was reduced for the activities of extracting timber or extracting for hire timber, or manufacturing or processing for hire logs, wood chips, sawdust, wood waste, pulp, recycled paper products, paper and paper products, dimensional lumber, and engineered wood products, plywood, wood doors, and wood windows. The lower B&O tax rate also applies to the sale of standing timber. The B&O tax rate for these activities is 0.2904 percent. The reduced tax rate expires July 1, 2024.

Tax Preference Performance Statement and Expiration Date.

All new tax preference legislation must include a tax preference performance statement, unless exempted. Tax preferences include deductions, exemptions, preferential tax rates, and tax credits. The performance statement must clearly specify the public policy objectives of the tax preference, and the specific metrics and data that will be used by the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee to evaluate the efficacy of the tax preference.

New tax preferences expire 10 years after the effective date of the tax preference, unless otherwise provided.

Summary of Bill:

The Washington Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Act is established for the stated purpose of creating and retaining jobs in rural and opportunity zone areas of Washington.

Definitions.

Various terms associated with the Washington Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Program are defined, including:

Tax Credit Application and Approval.

Beginning November 1, 2019, the Department of Commerce must accept applications for approval as a Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund. An application must contain the following elements:

For the overall Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Program, the Department of Commerce may not approve more than $100 million in total statewide investment authority, and may not approve more than $60 million in credit-eligible capital contributions. If requests for investment authority exceed $100 million, the Department of Commerce must proportionally reduce the investment authority and credit-eligible capital contributions for each approved application as necessary in order to avoid exceeding the limit.

For each Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund applicant, the Department of Commerce may not approve more than $35 million in total statewide investment authority, and not more than $21 million in credit-eligible capital contributions, per applicant. If fewer than three applicants have been approved as a fund by November 1, 2020, a fund may apply for additional investment authority and capital contributions in excess of the per-applicant limit.

The Department of Commerce must deny an application for certain specified reasons, including that the applicant does not satisfy specified criteria, and that the revenue impact statement submitted by the applicant does not demonstrate that the applicant's business plan will result in a positive economic impact on aggregate state and local government revenue under a 10 year period that exceeds the cumulative amount of tax credits that would be issued to the applicant's investors. The Department of Commerce may not deny an application for other than the specified reasons.

Upon approval of an application, the Department of Commerce must provide a written approval to the applicant as a Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund, specifying the amount of the applicant's investment authority.

After receiving written approval, the Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund must collect credit-eligible capital contributions from each investor and collect one or more investments of cash that, when added to the credit-eligible capital contributions, equal the fund's investment authority.

Upon receiving documentation from a Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund that it is fully funded, the Department of Commerce must issue a tax credit certificate to each investor whose affidavit was included in the application, specifying the amount of the investor's credit-eligible contribution. The Department of Commerce must also provide a copy of the tax credit certificate to the Office of the Insurance Commissioner for investors earning tax credits eligible for use against insurance premium taxes, and to the Department of Revenue for investors earning tax credits eligible for use against B&O taxes. The tax credit certificate must include the credit-eligible capital contribution amount, the name of the Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund, the unified business identifier number of the investor, and the closing date of the Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund.

Tax credits may be transferred or allocated to an affiliate of the taxpayer if certain requirements are met.

Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Account.

The Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Account is created in the State Treasury. All receipts from application fees for the program must be deposited into the account. Moneys in the account may be spent only after appropriation. Expenditures from the account may be used by the Department of Commerce only for administering the program.

Insurance Premium Tax and Business & Occupation Tax Credit.

A tax credit is authorized against B&O and B&O taxes otherwise due, or insurance premium taxes otherwise due, including the retaliatory provision, for persons that made a credit-eligible capital contribution to a Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund and were issued a tax credit certificate. The credit is earned on the closing date noted on the tax credit certificate. The credit is equal to the amount of the taxpayer's credit-eligible capital contribution to the Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund.

The taxpayer may claim up to one-third of the credit for each of the calendar years that include the fourth through sixth anniversaries of the closing date noted on the tax credit certificate. The amount of credit claimed for a tax reporting period may not exceed the amount of tax otherwise due for that reporting period. Unused credits may be carried forward until used, even if claimed after the program expires. No refunds may be granted for tax credits under the program.

The credit may not be transferred or allocated to any other entity other than an affiliate subject to the B&O tax or insurance premium tax, including the retaliatory provision.

Revocation of Tax Credit Certificates.

The Department of Commerce must revoke a tax credit certificate if any of the following occur before a Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund properly exits the program:

Before revoking a tax certificate, the Department of Commerce must notify the Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund of the reasons for the pending revocation. The Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund has 90 days to correct any violations outlined in the notice.

If a tax credit certificate is revoked, the investment authority and credit-eligible capital contributions associated with the revoked certificate do not count toward the overall limit on total investment authority and credit-eligible capital contributions. In case of a revocation, the Department of Commerce must first award reverted investment authority, on a pro rata basis, to each Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund that was awarded less than its requested investment authority. The Department of Commerce may award any remaining investment authority to new applicants.

Request for Determination.

A Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund, before making an investment, may request from the Department of Commerce a written opinion as to whether the business in which it proposes to invest is a targeted small business. The Department of Commerce must notify the Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund of its determination within 15 business days. If the Department of Commerce fails to notify the Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund of its determination by the fifteenth business day, the business in which the Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund proposes to invest must be considered a targeted small business.

Exit from the Program.

On or after the sixth anniversary of the closing date, a Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund may apply to the Department of Commerce to exit the program. The Department of Commerce must respond to the application within 30 days of receipt of the application. The fact that no tax credit certificates have been revoked, and that the fund has not received a notice of revocation that has not been cured, is sufficient evidence to prove that the fund is eligible for exit.

The Department of Commerce may not unreasonably deny an application to exit the program. If the exit application is denied, the notice of denial must include the reasons for the denial.

The Department of Commerce must notify the Office of the Insurance Commissioner and the Department of Revenue when a Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund exits the program.

The Department of Commerce may not revoke a tax credit certificate after a Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund exits the program.

Job Creation and Retention - Repayment.

Before the Department of Commerce may approve the exit of a Rural Development and Opportunity Fund from the program, the Department of Commerce must evaluate the number of jobs created or retained by the fund, and determine whether the fund must repay to the state any portion of the tax credit as follows:

In measuring jobs created and retained as a result of the fund's growth investments, the Department of Commerce must prorate the number of jobs set forth in the fund's business plan based on the amount of investment authority requested in the fund's application.

The Department of Commerce must provide written notice to the fund of any repayment due. The fund must submit payment to the Department of Revenue within 30 days of that notice. If the fund fails to pay the full amount by the due date in the notice or in any extension granted by the Department of Revenue, the Department of Revenue must impose penalties and interest.

Reporting Obligations.

Each Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund must submit a report to the Department of Commerce each year. The report must include:

Department of Commerce- Rulemaking and Reporting.

The Department of Commerce is authorized to adopt rules to implement the Washington Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Program.

The Department of Commerce is required to submit an annual report to the committees of the Legislature with jurisdiction over economic development. The report must include: the names of approved applicants; the amount and type of credit allocated to investors in the fund; the criteria used to select applicants approved for tax credits; and certain other information provided in the annual report submitted by each Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Fund.

Tax Preference Performance Statement.

The stated intent of the Legislature is to provide a vested tax credit that may be used to offset certain B&O taxes and insurance premium taxes in order to induce such taxpayers to invest in Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Funds whose management teams meet certain specified criteria.

The stated intent of the Legislature is to continue the tax preferences beyond their current expiration in 2025 if the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee finds that the aggregate number of jobs created or retained matches or exceeds the aggregate number of jobs set forth in the business plans of approved Rural Development and Opportunity Zone Funds in the six years following the enactment of the tax preferences.

Timber Product Business and Occupation Tax Extension.

The expiration date of the reduced B&O tax rate associated with certain timber products is extended from July 1, 2024 to July 1, 2056. The extension of the reduced tax rate is exempted from the requirement to include a tax preference performance statement.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Available.

Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of the session in which the bill is passed.