Farmworker housing providers may use a sales and use tax exemption for building, repairing, decorating, or improving new or existing agricultural employee housing. The tax exemption applies to labor and services related to construction and sales of items that become part of housing structures. Agricultural housing must be used to house agricultural employees for at least five years from the date the housing is approved for occupancy. Housing built for family members and people with an ownership in the farm is not eligible for the tax exemption. Agricultural employee housing includes facilities provided by an agricultural employer on a year-round or seasonal basis to the employer’s agricultural employees.
The farmworker housing sales and use tax exemption applies to new or existing structures in which at least 50 percent of the housing units are used as farmworker housing. An agricultural employer includes any employer engaged in aquaculture. Farmworker housing includes housing occupied by a household with at least one member who is a farmworker, or housing occupied by a farmworker on a seasonal basis where the housing is not used as farmworker housing for a portion of the year. The sales and use tax exemption does not apply to housing built exclusively for workers in the United States on an H-2A visa. If during any agricultural season in the first five years following approval for an exemption the housing is occupied by a farmworker who does not have an H-2A visa, then the housing will be considered not to be exclusively built for workers on an H-2A visa.
The term agricultural employee is replaced with the term farmworker. A farmworker includes a single person, family, or unrelated persons living together with combined incomes derived from farm work of at least $3,000 per year. Farm work is defined to include cultivating the soil, raising or harvesting any agricultural or aquacultural commodity, delivering to market any agricultural or aquacultural commodity, or working in an agricultural processing plant.
The farmworker sales and use tax exemption expires on January 1, 2032.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: Farmworker housing is a critical need in Washington. There are inconsistent definitions not in alignment with other policies and programs for farmworkers, and the changes in the bill align definitions with other programs and makes it easier to administer. The tax incentive benefits both permanent and seasonal farmworker housing. The changes in the bill will provide incentives to build more farmworker housing units.
CON: The ban on housing provided for H-2A workers should be removed. Farmworker housing needs to be flexible to meet the demands for agricultural employers. Costs will increase if housing may not be used for H-2A workers. An agricultural employer must hire all willing and able domestic workers before applying for a H-2A permit. The H-2A program is expensive, and Washington needs to work on fixing the state's labor shortage.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: This bill provides an incentive for agricultural employers to provide employee housing. Expansion of the exemption would allow for a variety of housing types, as occupancy does change throughout the year. Clarity is needed for how the bill treats housing for domestic and foreign farmworkers.
CON: There are concerns with the H-2A housing restrictions. A farmer cannot build housing exclusively for H-2A employees and must offer jobs to domestic workers. It is unclear in the bill if the exemption would be lost if housing was used for H-2A workers.
OTHER: The bill makes Washington a competitive location for farmworkers. The H-2A restrictions may halt the building of farmworker housing. Farmers need flexibility in employee housing options.