Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Finance Committee | |
HB 1069
Brief Description: Requiring performance audits for tax preferences.
Sponsors: Representatives McIntire, Conway, Priest, Upthegrove, Kilmer, Moeller, Dickerson, Williams, Schual-Berke, Nixon, Springer, Sells, P. Sullivan, Green, Lovick, Kenney, Haigh, Wallace, Kagi, Simpson, Linville, Morris, Wood, Hunter, Lantz, Hudgins, Ericks, Darneille, Clibborn, Sommers, Morrell, Takko, O'Brien, Appleton, Hunt, Santos, Ormsby, Murray and Chase.
Brief Summary of Bill |
|
Hearing Date: 1/19/05.
Staff: Bob Longman (786-7139).
Background:
Tax exemptions, exclusions, deductions, credits, deferrals, and preferential rates are known as
tax preferences. The Department of Revenue publishes a report on tax preferences every four
years. The report covers more than 400 tax preferences and describes each preference, the year
of enactment, the purpose of the preference (or the Department's best estimate of the purpose), an
indication of primary beneficiaries, and estimated fiscal impact.
In 1982 the Legislature enacted legislation that initiated a sunset review of tax preferences. The
legislation directed the Joint Select Committee on Sunset Review to prepare a bill that would
terminate all tax preferences over a period of four years. If this termination bill had been
enacted, the Legislative Budget Committee would have been required to review each preference
before its termination date and report back to the Legislature. The termination and review bill
was not enacted, and the Legislative Budget Committee did not conduct tax preference reviews.
The Legislative Budget Committee is now known as the Joint Legislative Audit and Review
Committee (JLARC).
Summary of Bill:
The Legislature recognizes that tax preferences are intended to be in the public interest. The
Legislature finds that periodic review of tax preferences is needed to determine if their continued
existence will serve the public interest.
The Citizen Commission for Performance Measurement of Tax Preferences (Commission) is
created, with two nonvoting members and five voting members. The state auditor and the chair
of the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee are nonvoting members. The chair of each
of the two largest caucuses of the Senate and the two largest caucuses of the House of
Representatives shall each appoint a voting member. None of these appointees may be members
of the Legislature. The Governor shall select the seventh member.
The Commission must develop a schedule for review of tax preferences at least once every 10
years. The Commission is to schedule all tax preferences for review, except those required by
constitutional law and those the Commission determines are a critical part of the structure of the
tax system. An expedited review may be provided for tax preferences with an estimated biennial
fiscal impact of $10 million or less. The Commission must provide a process for effective
citizen input during its deliberations.
The JLARC must review tax preference according to the10-year schedule developed by the
Commission. The JLARC is to consider, but not be limited to, the following factors in the
review:
(a) The classes of individuals, types of organizations, or types of industries whose
state tax liabilities are directly affected by the tax preference;
(b) Public policy objectives that might provide a justification for the tax preference,
including the extent to which the preference encourages business growth or
relocation into this state, promotes growth or retention of high wage jobs, or
helps stabilize communities;
(c) Evidence that the existence of the tax preference has contributed to the achievement
of any of the public policy objectives;
(d) The extent to which continuation of the tax preference might contribute to any of
the public policy objectives;
(e) The feasibility of modifying the preference to provide for adjustment or recapture
of the tax benefits of the preference if the objectives are not fulfilled;
(f) Fiscal impacts of the tax preference, including past impacts and expected future
impacts if it is continued;
(g) The extent to which termination of the tax preference would affect the distribution
of liability for payment of state taxes; and
(h) Consideration of similar tax preferences adopted in other states, and potential public
policy benefits that might be gained by incorporating corresponding provisions in Washington.
For each tax preference, the JLARC must provide a recommendation as to whether the tax
preference should be continued without modification, modified, scheduled for sunset review at a
future date, or terminated immediately. The Committee may recommend accountability
standards for the future review of a tax preference.
The JLARC will submit a report to the Commission by August 30 of each year. The
Commission will submit a report to the House Finance and Senate Ways & Means Committees
by December 30 of each year. The legislative committees are to hold a joint hearing on the
report.
The first report of the JLARC is due by August 30, 2006. The first report of the Commission to
the Legislature is due by December 30, 2006. A special report on a shorter time line is required
for tax preferences that expire before January 1, 2007. The JLARC must submit this special
report to the Legislature by January12, 2006.
Staff support to the Commission is provided by the JLARC, and the Department of Revenue and
Employment Security Department are directed to provide information needed by the Commission
or JLARC.
Statutes relating to the unimplemented 1982 tax preference review are repealed.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Requested on January 11, 2005
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.