Washington State
House of Representatives
Office of Program Research
BILL
ANALYSIS

Capital Budget Committee

HB 2170

Brief Description: Concerning proceeds from the real estate excise tax.

Sponsors: Representatives Springer, Dunshee, Clibborn and Morrell.

Brief Summary of Bill
  • Removes language dedicating to common schools the portion of the Real Estate Excise Tax going to the state general fund. This increases the amount of general state revenues used to calculate the 9 percent constitutional debt limit which increases bond capacity.

Hearing Date: 2/28/05

Staff: Susan Howson (786-7142).

Background:

Washington's indebtedness is limited by a statutory and constitutional debt limit. The State Treasurer cannot issue any bonds that would cause the debt service on the new plus existing bonds to exceed 7 percent of general state revenues averaged over three years in the case of the statutory limit and 9 percent under the constitutional limit.

For purposes of the debt limit, "general state revenues" is defined in the State Constitution and by statute. General state revenues traditionally has been defined to be more limited than revenue going to the state general fund; revenue identified in statute as being for specific purposes or going into dedicated accounts typically has not been considered general state revenues. The same definition is used for both the constitutional and statutory debt limits except that the statutory definition includes the portion of the Real Estate Excise Tax (REET) going to the state general fund for the support of common schools, lottery revenue going to the Education Construction Account, and the state portion of the property tax, while the constitutional definition likely does not. The lottery was added to the statutory definition of general state revenues by Initiative 728, the REET was added in the 2002 bond bill, and the state portion of the property tax was added in Chapter 9, Laws of 2003, 1st Special Session.

Bond capacity for a given biennium is the amount of projects that can be authorized by the Legislature for which the State Treasurer can issue bonds without exceeding the debt limit in the future, given forecasted variables and a stable capital budget level in future biennia. Interest rates, revenue, and other factors affect bond capacity.

Summary of Bill:

The dedication of the Real Estate Excise Tax going to the state general fund to common schools is removed. This increases the amount of general state revenues used to calculate the 9 percent constitutional debt limit, which in turn increases bond capacity under the constitutional limit.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Requested on February 28, 2005.

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