Washington State House of Representatives Office of Program Research |
BILL ANALYSIS |
State Government & Tribal Affairs Committee | |
HB 2008
This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in
their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a
statement of legislative intent.
Brief Description: Creating a cooperative agreement relating to the timber harvest excise taxation of timber harvests within the Quinault Indian Reservation.
Sponsors: Representatives VanDeWege, Kessler, Haigh, Takko and Ericks.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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Hearing Date: 2/26/07
Staff: Colleen Kerr (786-7168).
Background:
Timber Harvest Excise Tax
In 1971, the Legislature excluded timber from property taxation. Instead of a property tax, the
state imposes a timber harvest excise tax, also referred to as the forest excise tax or FET, on
every person in the state who engages in the business of harvesting timber on either public or
private land. Timber owners pay a five percent excise tax on the stumpage value of the timber
when it is harvested.
The person who owns the timber at the time of harvest, in effect the harvester, is responsible for
paying the FET. Anyone who intends to harvest timber on private land must obtain a permit
from the Department of Revenue (DOR), anyone who is not required to obtain a permit must
register with the DOR. When the owner of the timber at the time of harvest cannot be
determined, the landowner at the time of harvest is responsible for the tax. The FET is paid
quarterly on all timber harvested during the previous quarter
Revenue from the FET is split between the counties and State General Fund. Four percent of the
tax is distributed to the counties with the remaining one percent being distributed to the State
General Fund. Under statute, both the state and counties may impose the FET; the 5 percent rate
is inclusive of both levies. The state administers both levies and distributes to the counties.
Timber Harvest Excise Tax Revenue
Thirteen counties have tribal forest-lands within their borders that are subject to the FET. These
counties, and the portion of their distribution that is from forest-lands within the exterior
boundaries of a reservation, are as follows:
County Percentage
Clallam 0.75
Ferry 4
Grays Harbor 2
Jefferson 0.25
Kitsap 0.5
Klickitat 0.5
Mason 0.5
Okanogan 2
Skagit 0.5
Snohomish 0.75
Stevens 1
Whatcom 0.5
Yakima 2
In 2006, the state distributed $38,719,697.96 of FET revenue to all counties. An average 1.1
percent of the states total FET revenue comes from forest-lands within the exterior boundaries of
a reservation. Thirteen million of the total amount was distributed to counties that have taxable
forest-lands within the exterior boundaries of a reservation; of that $13 million, $153,439.60 was
from forest-lands within the exterior boundaries of a reservation.
Other Government-to-Government Agreements
For comparison, since 2001, the state has also entered into government-to-government
agreements with some of the 29 federally recognized tribes regarding cigarette tax. The terms of
such contracts are non-negotiable and set by the Legislature in statute. Since then, 26 contracts
have been executed with the tribes; one contract is pending Legislative authorization. Tribal
cigarette tax contracts are for renewable eight-year periods. The amount of tribal cigarette tax is
equal to the total amount of the state cigarette tax and the state and local sales tax; the tribal
cigarette tax is in lieu of the state cigarette and state and local sales tax.
There are statutory requirements for Tribal cigarette tax contracts:
Summary of Bill:
The Governor may enter into a timber harvest excise tax contracts with the Quinault Nation.
These contracts are for timber harvests on fee land within the exterior boundaries of the
reservation and do not pertain to timber harvests on trust land or land owned by the tribe. The
tribal timber harvest excise tax must be equal to one hundred percent of the state timber harvest
excise tax. Tribal timber harvest excise tax contracts are for renewable eight-year periods. The
Governor may delegate the power to negotiate the timber harvest excise tax to the Department of
Revenue.
Those individuals that are subject to a tribal timber harvest excise tax pursuant to a contract
between the tribe and state are allowed a tax credit against that the state and county timber
harvest excise tax for the amount of the tribal timber harvest excise tax. In effect, individuals
will not be subject to overlapping timber harvest excise tax liabilities.
The state will distribute funds from the state's portion of the timber harvest excise tax revenue to
counties affected by the timber harvest excise tax contracts in an amount equal to that of any
tribal tax credited against the county's portion of the timber harvest excise tax revenue.
Tribal timber harvest excise contracts are subject to the following terms:
Tax revenue retained by the tribe through the timber harvest excise tax may only be used for essential government services. For the purposes of these contracts, essential government services are:
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Available.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.