Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
Finance Committee | |
HB 2670
Brief Description: Authorizing hospital benefit zone financing.
Sponsors: Representatives Kilmer, Lantz, Priest, Talcott, Green, Conway, Darneille, Cody, Hinkle, Linville, Flannigan, Miloscia and Moeller.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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Hearing Date: 1/17/06
Staff: Mark Matteson (786-7145).
Background:
Community Revitalization Financing. Currently, counties, cities, towns, and port districts are
authorized under the Community Revitalization Program to create areas within their boundaries
where community revitalization projects are financed by diverting a portion of the regular
property taxes imposed by local governments within the area. Community revitalization projects
and programs include traditional public infrastructure improvements, such as street and road
construction and maintenance, as well as certain specified public services relating to
management, analysis, planning, security, and historic preservation within the area.
To create a tax increment area for the purposes of community revitalization financing, the
jurisdiction must first receive approval of jurisdictions which in the aggregate impose at least 75
percent of the regular property taxes within the area, as well as approval from any fire district
with territory in the area. The jurisdiction must then adopt an ordinance designating the area as a
tax increment area and specify the improvements to be financed. Public hearings must be held
on the proposed financing of the public improvements. Notice of the hearings must be published
in a local newspaper and the copies of the proposed ordinance must be delivered to local officials
in affected jurisdictions.
Local governments that utilize community revitalization financing may issue general obligation
bonds or revenue bonds to fund the public improvements authorized by the program. Under state
law, general obligation bonds are backed by the full faith and credit of the issuing government
and may be issued with a maturity of up to forty years. In contrast, revenue bonds are typically
paid out of a dedicated stream of revenue and typically have higher interest-related costs than
general obligation bonds. Under the community revitalization program, revenue bonds may be
issued with a maturity of up to thirty years.
Sales and Use Tax. There is a 6.5 percent retail sales tax levied by the state on the selling price
of tangible personal property and certain services purchased at retail. In general, the tax applies
to goods, construction (including labor), repair of tangible personal property, lodging for less
than 30 days, telephone service, and participatory recreational activities. There are some state-shared local taxes in which the local tax is credited against the state sales tax, including 2 percent
hotel/motel tax upon accommodations by cities and counties. This type of local tax does not
represent an additional tax but rather a "sharing" of state receipts with the local jurisdiction.
There is a 6.5 percent use tax on items not subject to the state retail tax. This includes purchases
made from out-of-state sellers, purchases from sellers who are not required to collect Washington
sales tax, items produced for use by the producer, and gifts and prizes. The tax is measured by
the value of the item at the time of the first use within the state, excluding any delivery charges.
Counties and cities may impose several local sales and use taxes at various rates and for various
purposes. The tax base is the same as under the state retail sales and use taxes. The most widely
utilized local sales and use taxes are the basic tax at a rate of 0.5 percent and an optional tax at a
rate of up to 0.5 percent. The basic and optional tax receipts may be used for any general
purpose.
Planned improvements in Gig Harbor. Fransiscan Health System received approval from the
Washington State Department of Health in May 2004 to build a new 80 bed community hospital
in Gig Harbor to meet the health care needs of Gig Harbor, Key Peninsula, and south Kitsap
County residents. As part of the approval process, the Department of Health issued a "certificate
of need." The state Certificate of Need program is intended to allow the development of needed
new healthcare services and facilities to promote competition and growth without destabilizing
the existing system. The new facility is known as St. Anthony Hospital.
In addition to the hospital, the north Gig Harbor area is also the site of the development of a new
business park and retail complex, including a new Costco location.
Traffic analysis of the planned developments in the north Gig Harbor area indicates that the
expected traffic will result in the violation of Growth Management Act requirements with respect
to transportation concurrency. These requirements hold that, as a condition for development
approval, transportation improvements or strategies must be made within six years of the
proposed development completion in order to maintain the level-of-service adopted in the local
comprehensive plan. If a violation occurs, the city may not issue permits for construction until a
proposed remedy is in place.
Summary of Bill:
Local governments may finance certain public improvements within a defined area using revenue
generated through a new sales and use tax, up to $2 million per project per year, credited against
the state sales and use tax, and matched with an equivalent amount of local resources. The
defined area, called a benefit zone, must include a hospital that has received a certificate of need.
The public improvements that may be financed with hospital benefit zone financing include the
same infrastructure projects for which community revitalization financing may be used, such as
street construction and park facility improvements.
Conditions under which hospital benefit zone financing may be utilized are enumerated. Several
are analogous to those under the community revitalization program, concerning the adoption of
an ordinance, the expectation that the improvement will encourage private development, and the
expectation that any related private developments will be consistent with the local
comprehensive plan. In addition, in order to use hospital benefit zone financing, the public
development must be expected to support a hospital that has received a certificate of need, as
well as to increase private investment, employment, and local retail sales and use taxes within the
zone.
To create a benefit zone, a local government must obtain written agreement from another local
government that imposes local sales and use tax within the zone, if the other local government
opts to allocate excess sales and use tax revenues for the purposes of the bill. The sponsoring
jurisdiction must hold a public hearing on the proposal and provide notification of the proposal
through a local newspaper. The jurisdiction must then adopt an ordinance establishing the zone,
with a description of the physical boundaries, expected costs of the improvements and estimates
of expected tax revenue for the resources allocated to the purpose of hospital benefit zone
financing.
A local government that creates a hospital benefit zone may allocate excess excise taxes received
by it from taxable activity within the zone for the purposes of financing public improvements.
The excess excise tax is the amount of local sales and use taxes received by a local government
within the zone over and above the amount received there during the base year. The base year is
the calendar year immediately preceding the creation of the zone and the measurement year is a
calendar year, beginning with the calendar year following the base year, that is used annually to
measure the amount of excess excise taxes required to be used to finance the public improvement
costs.
A local government that utilizes hospital benefit zone financing and receives approval from the
Department of Revenue may impose a new local sales and use tax. The tax is imposed at a 6.5
percent rate and is credited against the full amount of the state sales tax; consumers will not see
an additional tax, rather tax receipts will shift from the state to local governments. The tax may
be first imposed on July 1, 2007. Imposition of the tax is contingent upon receipt of local excess
excise taxes in the prior twelve months, and the tax may no longer be imposed when the bonds
that are issued are retired. The tax must be suspended each fiscal year when the amount collected
during the fiscal year equals either the amount of local matching funds (including local excess
excise taxes), the amount of state sales and use taxes collected in the measurement year over and
above the amount in the base year, or $2 million. Money from the new local tax must be used for
the sole purpose of principal and interest payments on bonds issued for an eligible public
improvement within the zone and must be matched with an amount from local public sources
dedicated through December 20 of the previous calendar year. Local public sources can include
private monetary contributions and as well as excess excise taxes.
The Department of Revenue must approve the amount of the sales and use tax that an applicant
may impose, but no more than $2 million per applicant. The aggregate statewide limit for credit
against the state sale and use tax is $2 million per year.
The local government that utilizes the new financing tool may issue revenue bonds to pay for the
public improvements. The terms and conditions are the same as for the revenue bond authority
under community revitalization financing.
The local government utilizing the new sales and use tax must provide an annual report to the
Department of Revenue by March 1 of each year. The report must include an accounting of
revenues allocated for the purposes of the program, as well as business, employment, and wage
information pertaining to the benefit zone. The department shall make a report available to the
public and the Legislature by June 1 of each year, based on information received from
participating local governments.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Requested on 1/11/06.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect on July 1, 2006.