HOUSE BILL REPORT
ESHB 3222
As Passed House:
February 11, 2006
Title: An act relating to excise tax exemptions for the handling and processing of livestock manure.
Brief Description: Modifying excise tax exemptions for the handling and processing of livestock manure.
Sponsors: By House Committee on Finance (originally sponsored by Representatives Pettigrew, Haler, Chandler, Kretz, Hinkle, Kristiansen, Holmquist and Linville).
Brief History:
Finance: 2/1/06, 2/7/06 [DPS].
Floor Activity:
Passed House: 2/11/06, 77-21.
Brief Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON FINANCE
Majority Report: The substitute bill be substituted therefor and the substitute bill do pass. Signed by 9 members: Representatives McIntire, Chair; Hunter, Vice Chair; Orcutt, Ranking Minority Member; Roach, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Ahern, Ericks, Hasegawa, Santos and Shabro.
Staff: Mark Matteson (786-7145).
Background:
Retail sales and use tax. The retail sales tax applies to the selling price of tangible personal
property and of certain services purchased at retail. The use tax applies if retail sales tax has
not been collected. Both the state and local governments impose sales and use taxes; the
state rate is 6.5 percent and the average local rate is 2 percent statewide. Sales taxes are
collected by the seller from the buyer at the time of sale. Use tax is remitted directly to the
Department of Revenue (Department). State revenues are deposited to the State General
Fund.
Water pollution control and animal feeding operations. The Federal Clean Water Act
(CWA) provides that the discharge of pollutants from point sources to surface waters is
unlawful except in accordance with a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES) permit. The State Water Pollution Control Act requires any person who conducts a
commercial or industrial operation which results in the disposal of liquid or solid waste
material into waters of the state to obtain a permit. Waters of the state include both surface
and ground waters.
Animal feeding operations (AFOs) are agricultural enterprises where animals are kept and
raised in confined situations. The AFOs congregate animals, feed, manure and urine, dead
animals, and production operations on a small land area. Feed is brought to the animals
rather than the animals grazing or otherwise seeking feed in pastures, fields, or on rangeland.
There are approximately 450,000 AFOs in the United States. Concentrated animal feeding
operations (CAFOs) are a relatively small number of AFOs that are regulated by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Dairy nutrient management and anaerobic digesters. In 1998, the Legislature enacted the
Dairy Nutrient Management Act (Act) to address water quality concerns associated with dairy
farm nutrients. The legislation required that each dairy farm in the state develop and
implement a nutrient management plan (NMP) that met standard specifications by December
31, 2003. Plans included both physical and management elements. Physical elements
included items such as pumps, pipes, spray guns, lagoons, concrete pads and structures,
gutters and downspouts.
In 2001, the Legislature approved a retail sales and use tax exemption to help dairy farmers
comply with the Act. Once a dairy nutrient management plan has been certified as fully
implemented, the purchase of services, replacement equipment and parts necessary to
maintain the plan are exempted from the retail sales and use tax. The same 2001 legislation
also provided an exemption for the acquisition of anaerobic digesters for the primary purpose
of treating dairy manure. Anaerobic digesters are facilities that use bacteria to process
manure into biogas and dried manure in the absence of oxygen.
Recent regulatory activity. Since 2003, there have been statutory and rule changes at the
state and federal levels that broaden dairy nutrient management requirements to also
encompass certain livestock operations. In February 2003, the EPA adopted rules affecting
how AFOs and CAFOs would be regulated for the purposes of controlling water pollution.
These rules expanded the type and number of CAFOs required to obtain NPDES permits.
In February 2005, the Federal 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals (Court) issued a ruling that
overturned aspects of the 2003 EPA rule. The Court vacated rule provisions that allow
permitting authorities to issue permits to CAFOs without including the terms of the CAFO's
NMP in the permit and without the NMP being reviewed by the permitting agency and
available to the public. The Court also invalidated the provision that requires all CAFOs to
apply for an NPDES permit unless they can demonstrate that they have no potential to
discharge. The Court found that the "duty to apply" provision, which the EPA had based on a
presumption that all CAFOs have at least a potential to discharge, was invalid, because the
CWA subjects only actual discharges to regulation rather than potential discharges.
In response to the EPA rule change and the court ruling, the Department of Ecology (DOE) is
developing a general CAFO NPDES permit to become effective in early 2006. The general
permit will require large and certain medium CAFOs to develop and implement nutrient
management plans by December 31, 2006.
Conservation Districts and Nutrient Management Plans. Conservation districts are a
subdivision of state government engaged in various activities relating to the conservation of
renewable natural resources. There are currently 46 districts statewide authorized to carry out
surveys and research, educational and demonstration projects, preventative and control
measures, and projects or programs for the conservation of renewable natural resources
located within district boundaries. Districts provide technical and financial assistance to
landowners to help plan and implement conservation practices.
Under the Act, conservation districts are required to provide technical assistance to dairy
producers in developing and implementing dairy nutrient management plans, and must
review, approve, and certify such plans. Written plans are submitted for approval to the local
conservation district where the dairy farm is located. Upon approval of the written plan,
once the elements necessary to implement the plan have been constructed or put in place and
are being used as designed and intended, the conservation district and dairy producer certify
the plan.
Natural Resource Conservation Service Field Office Technical Guides. The Natural
Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) is an agency within the United States Department of
Agriculture. The NRCS issues Field Office Technical Guides (FOTGs) as primary scientific
references containing technical information about the conservation of soil, water, air and
related plant and animal resources. The FOTGs are localized for use by field offices to apply
specifically to the geographic area for which they are prepared. Within each FOTG is a
section detailing standards and specifications for various conservation practices, one of which
is nutrient management.
Summary of Engrossed Substitute Bill:
The sales and use tax exemptions concerning dairy nutrient management equipment and
anaerobic digesters are repealed and broadened to include livestock operations..
Persons who are eligible for the exemption concerning nutrient management equipment
include:
A conservation district is required to maintain a list of eligible persons that are AFOs with
NMPs that have been approved by the district as meeting natural resource conservation
service standards. The Department of Agriculture must provide a list of eligible persons in
the other categories to the Department of Revenue.
Eligible projects are facilities and services necessary and used exclusively for a livestock
NMP. An exemption on such equipment or facilities is available only after the NMP is
certified under state law, approved as part of a state water pollution control permit, or
approved by a conservation district as meeting natural resource conservation service field
office technical guide standards.
Persons eligible to receive an exemption on the acquisition of anaerobic digesters include
those whose purpose is to treat any livestock manure. Anaerobic digesters qualify for
exemption only if they are used primarily to treat livestock manure.
The Conservation Commission is required to compile information on NMPs approved by
conservation districts during the 2005-2007 fiscal biennium, as well as on the utilization of
the tax incentives. The Commission must submit a report to the Legislature by December
2007.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Requested on January 27, 2006.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect on July 1, 2006 .
Testimony For: This is good policy in a number of ways. It is economic development and
yet environmentally friendly at the same time.
This is extremely important to many of my members. We have been going forward to
conservation districts with these projects. It is tough to put a fiscal note on clean water. This
is a win-win for everybody. It's a huge incentive for producers that are on the edge of making
such an investment.
There are not a whole lot of operations left that are required to implement plans. This will
encourage those that are smaller or otherwise not required to implement plans to invest in this
equipment. So the practices themselves would be available to this other group, as long as
verified by districts as meeting the National Resource Conservation Service (NRCS)
standard. We would prefer the exemption approach and not a remittance.
Testimony Against: None.
Persons Testifying: Representative Pettigrew, prime sponsor; Jack Field, Washington Cattlemen's Association; Chris Cheney, Washington Dairy Federation and Washington Fryer Commission; and Jim Jesernig, Washington Association of Conservation Districts and AgriBeef.