FINAL BILL REPORT
HB 1019



C 248 L 05
Synopsis as Enacted

Brief Description: Providing a property tax exemption to veterans with severe disabilities.

Sponsors: By Representatives Campbell, Kirby, McCune, Clements, Wood, Hudgins, Simpson, Green, Morrell, Conway, P. Sullivan, Linville, B. Sullivan, McDonald, Lovick, Dunn, Chase and Ormsby.

House Committee on Finance

Background:

Some senior citizens and persons retired due to disability are entitled to property tax relief on their principal residences. To qualify, a person must be 61 in the year of application or retired from employment because of a disability, own his or her principal residence, and have a disposable income of less than $35,000 a year. Persons meeting these criteria are entitled to partial property tax exemptions and a valuation freeze.
   
Disposable income is defined as the sum of federally defined adjusted gross income plus the following, if not already included: capital gains; deductions for loss; depreciation; pensions and annuities; military pay and benefits; veterans' benefits except attendant-care and medical-aid payments; Social Security and federal railroad retirement benefits; dividends; and interest income. Payments for the care of either spouse received in the home, a nursing home, boarding home or adult family home; payments for medicare insurance premiums; and payments for prescription drugs are deducted in determining disposable income.

Partial exemptions for senior citizens and persons retired due to disability are provided as follows:

In addition to the partial exemptions listed above, the valuation of the residence of an eligible senior citizen or disabled person is frozen at the assessed value of the residence on the later of January 1, 1995, or January 1 of the assessment year the person first qualifies for the program.

Summary:

Veterans of the U.S. Armed Forces with 100 percent service-connected disability are eligible for the same property tax relief as senior citizens based on their income.

Votes on Final Passage:

House   98   0
Senate   47   0   (Senate amended)
House   96   0   (House concurred)

Effective: July 24, 2005