SENATE BILL REPORT
SHB 2590
As Reported By Senate Committee On:
Natural Resources, Ocean & Recreation, February 20, 2006
Title: An act relating to the excise taxation of nonprofit organizations organized and operated for zoological purposes.
Brief Description: Exempting nonprofit organizations organized for zoological purposes from certain excise taxes.
Sponsors: House Committee on Finance (originally sponsored by Representatives Dickerson and McIntire).
Brief History: Passed House: 2/11/06, 94-2.
Committee Activity: Natural Resources, Ocean & Recreation: 2/20/06 [w/oRec-WM].
SENATE COMMITTEE ON NATURAL RESOURCES, OCEAN & RECREATION
Majority Report: That it be referred to Committee on Ways & Means without recommendation.Signed by Senators Jacobsen, Chair; Doumit, Vice Chair; Oke, Ranking Minority Member; Fraser, Hargrove, Morton, Spanel and Stevens.
Staff: Vic Moon (786-7469)
Background: Business and Occupation Tax. Washington's major business tax is the business
and occupation (B&O) tax. The B&O tax is imposed on the gross receipts of business activities
conducted within the state, without any deduction for the costs of doing business. The tax is
imposed on the gross receipts from all business activities conducted within the state. Revenues
are deposited in the State General Fund. A business may have more than one B&O tax rate,
depending on the types of activities conducted. The tax rate for most types of businesses that
provide services is 1.5 percent.
The B&O tax does not permit deductions for the costs of doing business, such as payments for
raw materials and wages of employees. In addition, nonprofit organizations are also generally
subject to the tax.
Retail Sales and Use Taxes. The retail sales tax applies to the selling price of tangible personal
property and of certain services purchased at retail. The tax is levied at a 6.5 percent rate by the
state. Cities and counties may levy a local tax at a rate up to a maximum of 3.1 percent.
Currently, local rates levied range from 0.5 percent to 2.4 percent. Sales tax is paid by the
purchaser and collected by the seller.
The use tax is imposed on taxable items and services used in the state that were not subject to the
retail sales tax, and includes purchases made in other states and purchases from sellers who do
not collect Washington sales tax. The state and local rates are the same as those imposed under
the retail sales tax. Use tax is paid directly to the Department of Revenue (Department).
All items or services sold or acquired at retail are subject to the retail sales and use taxes unless
specifically exempted otherwise. Tax is due at the time of sale or first use within the state.
Artistic and Cultural Organizations. One category of nonprofit organizations that has been
granted deductions from B&O tax for certain types of income, and an exemption from retail sales
and use taxes for certain purchases, is artistic and cultural organizations. This category is defined
to include only those organizations that are organized and operated exclusively for the purpose
of providing artistic or cultural exhibitions, presentations, or performances, or cultural or art
education programs. Examples of such organizations are performance art companies and art
museums. Such organizations are allowed to deduct income derived from government grants,
tuition for educational programs, items manufactured for artistic or cultural purposes by the
organization, and business activities (such as admissions fees). These organizations are also
exempt from paying sales and use taxes on objects of art, items with cultural value, objects used
to create art, and items used to display art or to present cultural performances.
To qualify for the B&O tax deductions and sales and use tax exemptions, an artistic or cultural
organization must be organized as a nonprofit corporation and must be managed by a board of
at least eight persons, none of whom may be a paid employee of the organization. In addition,
the corporation must satisfy other requirements pertaining to compensation to officers and
members, licensing, use of moneys for which a deduction is sought, and accountability.
Zoological Societies. Zoological societies (zoos) are facilities provided to promote, preserve, and
support wildlife. Zoos may provide a number of services to customers, including animal
exhibitions, educational and outreach programs, and special events, among others. Zoos may
receive funds from admissions, governments, fundraisers, or other means.
Some zoos are owned and/or managed by nonprofit corporations. The nonprofit may own and
operate the zoo directly, such as in the case of Cougar Mountain Zoo in Issaquah, or may contract
with the city that owns the zoo to manage it, such as in the case of Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle.
In July 2005, the state Board of Tax Appeals (Board) upheld a ruling by the Department that the
Woodland Park Zoological Society, the organization that manages Woodland Park Zoo, is not an
artistic or cultural organization for the purposes of state tax law and the respective deductions and
exemptions under the B&O and sales and use taxes. In its ruling, the Board distinguished
between organizations whose primary focus is human art or culture and those whose focus is
animals.
Review of tax preferences. In 1982, the Legislature enacted legislation that initiated a sunset
review of tax preferences, which includes tax exemptions, exclusions, deductions, credits,
deferrals, and preferential rates. 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 (LBC) 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 LBC did not conduct tax preference
reviews. The LBC is now known as the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee.
Summary of Bill: The deductions under the B&O tax and the exemptions under the sales and
use taxes that are allowed to artistic or cultural nonprofit corporations are extended to nonprofit
corporations that are organized for the exclusive purpose of providing zoological exhibitions,
presentations, or performances, or zoological education programs, at a zoological facility that is
publicly owned.
The Department must review the new exemptions and report its findings and recommendations
to the Legislature by December 1, 2016. The Department must provide a recommendation on
whether the exemptions should be continued as is, modified, or discontinued.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.
Effective Date: Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: None.
Testimony Against: None.
Who Testified: No one.