WSR 01-17-069

PERMANENT RULES

DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE


[ Filed August 15, 2001, 3:53 p.m. ]

     Date of Adoption: August 15, 2001.

     Purpose: This rule explains the business and occupation (B&O) tax credit program for manufacturers and research and development facilities located in distressed areas as provided by chapter 82.62 RCW. It explains the eligible area criteria, hiring requirements, and reporting and monitoring procedures for the B&O tax credit program provided by chapter 82.62 RCW. It also explains the program's application procedure and review process, how and when to claim approved credits, and the record-keeping requirements of the tax credit program.

     This rule has been revised to incorporate legislative changes to the program (chapter 320, Laws of 2001, effective July 1, 2001); chapter 9, Laws of 1999 1st sp. sess.; chapter 311, Laws of 1999; chapter 164, Laws of 1999; chapter 366, Laws of 1997; chapter 290, Laws of 1996; chapter 1, Laws of 1996; chapter 7, Laws of 1994 1st sp. sess.; and chapter 25, Laws of 1993 1st sp. sess.). In addition, the proposed WAC 458-20-240 has been reorganized in a question and answer format. The department anticipates that this new format will reduce confusion regarding this B&O tax program.

     Citation of Existing Rules Affected by this Order: Amending WAC 458-20-240 Manufacturer's new employee tax credits.

     Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 82.32.300.

     Other Authority: Chapter 82.62 RCW and RCW 82.62.070.

      Adopted under notice filed as WSR 01-13-004 on June 7, 2001.

     Changes Other than Editing from Proposed to Adopted Version: Three editing changes: Deleted the word "comparable" in the first sentence of the second paragraph, subsection (2)(a); switched the order of the last two sentences of subsection (2)(c)(iii); and added to the end of subsection (10) the following sentence, "The interest rates under RCW 82.32.050 can be obtained from the department's internet website at www.dor.wa.gov/reports/rr2000-2.pdf?noframes or by calling the department's information center at 1-800-647-7706."

     Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Comply with Federal Statute: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Federal Rules or Standards: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Recently Enacted State Statutes: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.

     Number of Sections Adopted at Request of a Nongovernmental Entity: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.

     Number of Sections Adopted on the Agency's Own Initiative: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.

     Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Clarify, Streamline, or Reform Agency Procedures: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.

     Number of Sections Adopted Using Negotiated Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0;      Pilot Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Other Alternative Rule Making: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.
     Effective Date of Rule: Thirty-one days after filing.

August 15, 2001

Russell W. Brubaker

Assistant Director

Legislation and Policy Division

OTS-4916.3


AMENDATORY SECTION(Amending Order 88-5, filed 8/16/88)

WAC 458-20-240   Manufacturer's((,)) new employee tax credits.   (1) Introduction. Chapter 82.62 RCW ((establishes a business and occupation tax credits program. Its purpose is to stimulate the economy and create employment opportunities in specific distressed areas of this state. In addition to the tax credit benefits of this program, specific financial incentives to employers who locate or expand business facilities in this state are administered by the Washington state employment security department. The provisions of this section, however, apply only for manufacturing or research and development activities conducted at specific business facilities in announced eligible areas of this state.

     (2) Effective April 1, 1986, persons engaged in manufacturing or research and development activities, who otherwise qualify, will receive credits against their business and occupation tax due under chapter 82.04 RCW. Those credits amount to one thousand dollars for each qualified employment position directly created in an eligible business project, as those terms are defined in this section.

     (3) Definitions. For purposes of the tax credits program the following definitions will apply.

     (a) "Applicant" means a person applying for tax credit under this program.

     (b) "Department" means the department of revenue.

     (c) "Eligible area" means:

     (i) A county in which the average level of unemployment for the three years before the year in which an application is filed exceeds the average state unemployment for those years by twenty percent. The department will publish a list of such eligible areas by May 1 of each year during the life of this program.

     (ii) A metropolitan statistical area, as defined by the Office of Federal Statistical Policy and Standards, United States Department of Commerce, in which the average level of unemployment for the calendar year immediately preceding the year in which an application for credit is filed exceeds the average state unemployment for such calendar year by twenty percent. Applications under this subsection shall be filed by April 30, 1989.

     (d) "Eligible business project" means manufacturing or research and development activities which are conducted by an applicant in an eligible area at a specific facility: Provided, That in order to qualify as an eligible business project, the applicant's average full-time qualified employment positions at the specific facility will be at least fifteen percent greater in the year for which credit is being sought than they were at the same facility in the immediately preceding year.

     (e) The term "eligible business project" defined earlier, does not include any of the following:

     (i) Any business project undertaken by a light and power business;

     (ii) Any portion of a business project creating employment positions outside an eligible area;

     (iii) Any business projects of persons who are receiving sales tax deferrals under chapter 82.61 RCW (see WAC 458-20-24002).

     (f) "Manufacturing" has the meaning given in RCW 82.04.110 and WAC 458-20-136. For purposes of this section the term also includes computer programming, the production of computer software, and other computer-related services, and the activities of research and development and commercial testing laboratories.

     (g) "Research and development" means the development, refinement, testing, marketing, and commercialization of a product, services, or process before commercial sales have begun.

     (h) "Qualified employment position" means a permanent full-time employee, employed in an eligible business project during the entire tax year: Provided, That,

     (i) Once a full-time position is established and filled it will continue to qualify for tax credit purposes so long as it is filled by any person or, during any period of vacancy, the employer is training or actively recruiting a replacement employee;

     (ii) A position will not be deemed to be filled in order to qualify for tax credit if it is vacant for any period in excess of thirty consecutive days;

     (iii) The requirement for employment during the "entire" tax year will be satisfied if the full-time position is filled for a period of twelve consecutive months.

     (i) "Permanent full-time employee" means a person who works for the recipient on a paid basis, at least thirty-five hours per week. It does not include independent contractors, independent representatives, persons compensated exclusively on a commissioned basis, or seasonal and similar employment personnel who work for the recipient for only a part of the year.

     (j) "Tax year" means the calendar year in which taxes are due.

     (k) "Recipient" means a person receiving tax credits under this program.

     (l) "Credit computation year" means the tax year for which credits are being sought. The first credit computation year for which any person can seek and qualify for credit approval under this program is tax year 1987.

     (m) "Base year" means the entire calendar year immediately preceding the credit computation year. The first base year under this program is 1986.

     (4) Application procedures. Application for tax credits under this program must be made using the prescribed application for B&O tax credit on new employees. These forms are available from the department on request. The completed application must be submitted to the department before the actual hiring of qualified employment positions for which credit is sought.

     (5) The department will determine if the information contained on the application qualifies the applicant for tax credits and will either approve or disapprove the application within sixty days. If approved, the department will issue a credit approval notice which will notify the recipient in writing of the dollar amount of tax credits available for use and the credit taking procedures. If disapproved, the department will notify the applicant in writing of the specific reasons for disapproval. The applicant may seek administrative review of any credit disapproval pursuant to the provisions of WAC 458-20-100.

     (6) Under the law, tax credits may be received only for the creation of qualified employment positions at specific facilities within "eligible areas" as defined earlier. For purposes of making application for tax credits the state-wide and county unemployment statistics last published by the department will be used to determine eligible areas. The department will publish such statistics and a list of eligible areas by county, on May 1 of each year.

     (7) A separate application must be submitted for each credit computation year.

     (8) Qualifying for credit. There are three qualifying tests, all of which must be met, in order to receive approval for tax credits under this program.

     (a) The applicant must be a "manufacturing" business as defined earlier; and

     (b) The specific facility at which the manufacturing activities are being conducted must be within an eligible area as defined earlier; and

     (c) The average full-time qualified employment positions at the specific facility during the credit computation year must be at least fifteen percent greater than such employment average for the preceding year.

     (9) Because chapter 116, Laws of 1986 includes an emergency effective date of April 1, 1986, and because the stated intent is to stimulate the economy and create employment opportunities, this tax credits program is effective immediately. Full-time employees expected to be hired after any application for credits is submitted but before January 1, 1987, will be deemed to be employed as of January 1, 1987. They will be includable within the qualified employment position computation for that year. Thus, credits may be available for all positions hired after the effective date of the law if they otherwise qualify and within the dollar limits explained later.

     (10) The threshold, fifteen percent employment increase test (qualifying test number three) is met by:

     (a) Stating in the application the actual average number of full-time employment positions which existed at the facility during the base year;

     (b) Stating the projected number of new positions to be filled during the credit computation year;

     (c) Stating the average number of full-time employment positions for the credit computation year including the new projected positions;

     (d) Achieving an increase of at least fifteen percent of (c) over (a) above.

     (i) Examples. Applicant has no employees at the facility for base year 1986 and intends to hire ten persons, some in 1986 and some in 1987. Because for first year implementation of the program the 1986 hirees will be deemed to be hired January 1, 1987, the applicant's base year average remains zero. Thus, its credit computation year average will always meet the fifteen percent increase test, even if only one new position is hired.

     (ii) Applicant has an average employment of ten positions in base year 1986 and intends to hire two more persons, one yet in 1986 and one in 1987. This applicant must achieve a 1.5 position increase in 1987 to meet the fifteen percent threshold test. Since its new 1986 hiree will be attributed to January 1, 1987, it must project to hire the other new position by July 1, 1987, in order to meet the fifteen percent increase average of 1.5 for that credit computation year.

     (iii) Applicant has an average employment of fifty positions in base year 1986 and intends to hire five more persons by January 1, 1987. This applicant will not qualify for 1987 tax credits because its 1987 average (fifty-five positions) is not at least fifteen percent greater than its base year 1986. In order to qualify for any credits this applicant would have to project hiring of at least eight new positions (a 1987 average of at least 57.5 employment positions) to meet the needed percentage increase.

     (iv) The applicant in the previous example intends to hire ten new positions, five yet in 1986 and the other five sometime in 1987. Since the 1986 hirees will be attributed to January 1, 1987 hiring, this applicant must hire the other five new positions early enough in 1987 to be able to compute a 1987 average of at least 57.5 for that year. Thus, the additional five 1987 hirings would have to be projected to be hired by at least July 1, 1987 in order to qualify for credits.

     (11) Note. The department will be able to advise applicants of their minimum number of hiring needs and the latest time within the credit computation year that the positions must be filled to qualify for credits, based upon the information provided in the application.

     (12) The carry-over of positions hired in 1986 into 1987 is a first year carry-over only. After 1986, all hiring increases must occur during the computation year for purposes of meeting the fifteen percent threshold test. Thus, applications for the 1988 credits computation year will be tested only by the average increase of 1988 employment positions over the 1987 base year average.

     (13) In simplest terms, qualification for tax credits depends upon whether enough new positions are expected to be hired early enough to meet the fifteen percent average increase test.

     (14) The fifteen percent threshold test to qualify for tax credits is a "lookahead" test which has no relationship to the dollar amount of credits which may be available. Also, the test for qualifying for approval of tax credits is unrelated to the end-of-year reporting and verification of credits, the "look-back" test explained later in this section. Rather, the fifteen percent test is a credits qualification test only.

     (15) Applications for tax credits under this program must include the applicant's expected hirings for the full credit computation year for which credits are sought. After an application is approved and tax credits are granted, no adjustment or amendment of the credits approval will be possible for that credit computation year.

     (16) Credits approval and use. Tax credits approved by the department may be used to offset current business and occupation tax liability if the recipient has incurred any such liability during the credit computation year. The credits may be used as soon as actual hiring of the projected qualified employment positions begin. For example, if a recipient has been approved for $10,000.00 of tax credits based upon projections to hire ten new positions, that recipient may use each $1,000.00 of tax credit at the time it hires each new employee.

     (17) The law provides that the tax credits available under this program must be used to offset business and occupation tax which has been paid during the same tax year. However, rather than paying the tax and then seeking a refund in the amount of credits available, the recipient will take the available credits against current tax liability as it accrues.

     (18) The tax credits approved under this program will be taken by the recipients on their regular combined excise tax return for their regular assigned tax reporting period. The amount of credit taken should be filled in on the front of the return form, with a copy of the credit approval notice issued to the recipient attached to that return.

     (19) Credits may be used as hiring is done or may accrue until they are most beneficial for the recipient's use. This is true even for first year credits available for hiring new positions in 1986. As soon as credits are approved and hiring begins, credits may be used, even during the remainder of 1986. No tax refunds will be made for any tax credits which exceed actual tax liability during the life of this program. Under no circumstances may tax credits exceed tax liability.

     (20) If tax credits derived from qualified hiring exceed the recipients' business and occupation tax liability in any one calendar year under this program, they may be carried forward to the next calendar year, on an on-going basis, until used.

     (21) The tax credits approved for a recipient under this program may be used to offset business and occupation tax liability which the recipient owes because of business activity anywhere in this state. The liability for which the credit is used does not have to be incurred or flow from business engaged in at the specific facility in the eligible area.

     (22) Tax credits available in any credit computation year may be used to offset business and occupation tax due on the fourth quarterly return or last monthly return of the tax year, even though that return is not actually filed with the department until January 25 of the following year.

     (23) Credit and program limitations. Except as noted below, the credit application and approval provisions of this program will expire on July 1, 1994. However, credits which become available under approved applications may be used after July 1, 1994, as actual hiring is done. No applications submitted by metropolitan statistical areas as defined in subsection (3)(c)(ii) of this section will be accepted after April 30, 1989.

     (24) No recipient is eligible for tax credits in excess of three hundred thousand dollars during the entire life of this program.

     (25) The total of credits approved for all applicants under this program will not exceed fifteen million dollars per biennium. Any application for credits which is otherwise qualified but which is denied in whole or in part for a biennium because of this total program credit limit, will carry over for approval in the next biennium. However, once the total program credit limit has been met for the next biennium as well, no further tax credits will be approved.

     (26) The law provides that no recipient may use tax credits approved under this program to decertify a union or to displace existing jobs in any community of the state. Thus, the average expected increase of qualified employment positions at the specific facility for which application is made must reflect a gross increase in the applicant's employment of persons at all locations in this state. Transfers of personnel from existing positions outside of an eligible area to new positions at the specific facility within an eligible area will not be allowed for purposes of approving tax credits. Also, layoffs or terminations of employment by the recipient at locations outside an eligible area for the purpose of hiring new positions within an eligible area will result in the withdrawal of any credits taken or approved.

     (27) Perfecting approved credits. In order to perfect its entitlement to any credits approved and legally use such credits against business and occupation tax due, a recipient must actually hire the required number of qualified employment positions to comply with the application upon which tax credits were approved. Such created positions must be maintained for a continuous period of twelve consecutive months. (See the definition of "qualified employment position" at subsection (3)(h) of this section.) The law establishes a "look-back" test at the end of the credit computation year to determine that the tax recipient has complied.

     For purposes of administering this program the department will consider a period of twelve consecutive months of employment to satisfy the definition of "qualified employment position," to perfect the entitlement to tax credits used.

     (28) Reporting and monitoring. All recipients of tax credits under this program must file an annual report with the department reporting their employment activities through December 31 of each credit computation year. This report must be submitted by January 31 of the following year. Based upon this report the department will verify that the recipient is perfecting its entitlement to any tax credits approved by actually employing the required number of new qualified employment positions as represented in the recipient's credit application.

     (29) Because this program is being fully implemented in mid-year 1986, the annual report due on December 31, 1986, will be an informational report only. No tax credits approved, whether actually used in 1986 or not, will be withdrawn or denied based upon this 1986 report. The annual report due on December 31, 1987, will be the first report which may result in tax credits being withdrawn.

     (30) The law provides that if any recipient fails to submit a report or submits an inadequate report, the department may declare the amount of taxes for which credit has been used to be immediately assessed and payable. An inadequate report is one which fails to provide any information in the possession of a recipient which is necessary to confirm that the requisite number of employment positions have been created and maintained for twelve consecutive months. As credits are approved, the department will advise all recipients of the nature of information to be included on their annual reports.

     (31) The department will monitor credit applications and annual reports on an ongoing basis over the life of this credit program. The department will maintain a running tabulation of credits approved for individual recipients as well as program credit totals and will advise applicants and recipients in writing of the program credit limitations which may affect their entitlement.

     (32) Noncompliance -- Withdrawal of credits. The law provides that if the department finds that a recipient is not eligible for tax credits for any reason other than failure to create the required number of qualified employment positions, the amount of taxes for which any credit has been used shall be immediately due. No interest or penalty will be assessed in such cases.

     (33) However, if the department finds that a recipient has failed to create the specified number of qualified employment positions, the department shall assess interest, but not penalties, on the taxes against which the credit has been used. This interest assessment is mandatory and will be assessed at the statutory rate under RCW 82.32.050, retroactively to the date the tax credit was used. Such interest will accrue until the taxes for which the credit was used are fully repaid.

     (34) The administrative review and appeal provisions of chapter 83.32 RCW are available for any actions of the department, under this program, by which any applicant or recipient is adversely affected.

     (35) Disclosure of information. The law provides that information contained in applications, reports, or any other information received by the department in connection with this tax credits program shall not be confidential and shall be subject to disclosure.)) provides business and occupation (B&O) tax credits to certain persons engaged in manufacturing and research and development activities. These credits are intended to stimulate the economy and by creating employment opportunities in specific distressed areas of this state. The credits are as much as $4,000 per qualified employment position. This rule explains the eligibility requirements and application procedures for this program. It is important to note that an application for the tax credits must be submitted to the department of revenue before the actual hiring of qualified employment positions. See subsection (6) of this rule for additional information regarding this application requirement. This tax credit program is a companion to the tax deferral program under chapter 82.60 RCW; however, the eligible geographic areas in the two programs are not identical. The department of employment security and the department of community, trade, and economic development administer programs for distressed areas and job training. These agencies should be contacted directly for information concerning those programs.

     (2) Who is eligible for these tax credits? Subject to certain qualifications, an applicant (person applying for a tax credit under chapter 82.62 RCW) who is engaged in an eligible business project is entitled to the tax credits provided by chapter 82.62 RCW.

     (a) What is an eligible business project? An "eligible business project" means manufacturing, commercial testing, or research and development activities conducted by an applicant in an eligible area at a specific facility, subject to the restriction noted in the following paragraph. An "eligible business project" does not include any portion of a business project undertaken by a light and power business or any portion of a business project creating employment positions outside an eligible area.

     To be considered an "eligible business project," the applicant's number of average full-time qualified employment positions at the specific facility must be at least fifteen percent greater in the calendar year for which credit is being sought than the number of positions at the same facility in the immediately preceding calendar year. Subsection (4) of this rule explains how to determine whether this threshold is satisfied.

     (b) What is an eligible area? As noted above, the facility must be located in an eligible area to be considered an eligible business project. An "eligible area" is:

     (i) A rural county, which is a county with fewer than one hundred persons per square mile as determined annually by the office of financial management and published by the department of revenue effective for the period of July 1st through June 30th (see RCW 82.62.010(3)); or

     (ii) A community empowerment zone (CEZ). CEZ means an area meeting the requirements of RCW 43.31C.020 and officially designated by the director of the department of community, trade, and economic development.

     (iii) How to determine whether an area is an eligible area. Rural county designation information can be obtained from the office of financial management internet website at www.ofm.wa.gov/popden/rural.htm. The department has instituted a geographic information system (GIS) to assist taxpayers in determining taxing jurisdiction boundaries, local tax rates, and a mapping and address lookup system to determine whether a specific address is within a CEZ. The system is available on the department's internet website at www.dor.wa.gov.

     (c) What are manufacturing and research and development activities? Manufacturing or research and development activities must be conducted at the facility to be considered an eligible business project.

     (i) Manufacturing. "Manufacturing" has the meaning given in RCW 82.04.120. In addition, for the purposes of chapter 82.62 RCW "manufacturing" also includes computer programming, the production of computer software, other computer-related services, and the activities performed by research and development laboratories and commercial testing laboratories.

     (ii) Research and development. "Research and development" means the development, refinement, testing, marketing, and commercialization of a product, service, or process before commercial sales have begun. "Commercial sales" does not include sales of prototypes or sales for market testing if the total gross receipts from such sales of the product, service, or process do not exceed one million dollars.

     (iii) Computer-related services. "Computer-related services," for the purposes of chapter 82.62 RCW's definition of "manufacturing," are services that are connected with or interact directly in the manufacture of computer hardware or software or the programming of the manufactured hardware. "Computer-related services" includes the manufacture of hardware such as chips, keyboards, monitors, and any other hardware, and the components of these items. "Computer-related services" also includes creating operating systems and software that will be copied and sold as canned software. The activities performed by the manufacturer to test, correct, revise, or upgrade software or hardware before they are approved for sale to the consumer are considered computer-related services. "Computer-related services" does not include services such as information services.

     (3) What are the hiring requirements? The average full-time qualified employment positions at the specific facility during the calendar year for which credits are claimed must be at least fifteen percent greater than the average full-time qualified employment positions at the same facility for the preceding calendar year.

     (a) What is a qualified employment position? A "qualified employment position" means a position filled by a permanent full-time employee employed at an eligible business project for twelve consecutive months. Once a full-time position is established and filled it will continue to qualify for twelve consecutive periods so long as any person fills the position. The position is considered "filled" even during periods of vacancy, provided these periods do not exceed thirty consecutive days and the employer is training or actively recruiting a replacement employee.

     (b) What is a "permanent full-time employee"? A "permanent full-time employee" is a position that is filled by an employee who satisfies any one of the following minimum thresholds:

     (i) Works thirty-five hours per week for fifty-two consecutive weeks;

     (ii) Works four hundred fifty-five hours, excluding overtime, each quarter for four consecutive quarters; or

     (iii) Works one thousand eight hundred twenty hours, excluding overtime, during a period of twelve consecutive months.

     (c) "Permanent full-time employee" - Seasonal operations. For applicants that regularly operate on a seasonal basis only and that employ more than fifty percent of their employees for less than a full twelve month continuous period, a "permanent full-time employee" is a permanent full-time employee as described above or an equivalent in full time equivalent (FTE) work hours.

     (4) How to determine if the fifteen-percent employment increase requirement is met. Qualification for tax credits depends upon whether the applicant hires enough new positions to meet the fifteen-percent average increase requirement.

     (a) Determining the fifteen-percent increase. To determine the projected number of permanent full-time qualified employment positions necessary to satisfy the fifteen-percent employment increase requirement:

     (i) Determine the average number of permanent full-time qualified employment positions that existed at the facility during the calendar year prior to the year in which tax credit is being claimed.

     (ii) Multiply the average number of full-time positions from subsection (i) by .15 or fifteen percent. The resulting number equals the number of positions that must be filled to meet the fifteen-percent increase. Numbers are rounded up to the nearest whole number at point five (.5).

     (b) When does hiring have to occur? All hiring increases must occur during the calendar year for which credits are being sought for purposes of meeting the fifteen-percent threshold test. Positions hired in a calendar year prior to making an application are not eligible for a credit but the positions are used to calculate whether the fifteen-percent threshold has been met.

     (c) The department will assist applicants to determine their hiring requirements. Accompanying the tax credit application is a worksheet to assist the applicant in determining if the fifteen-percent qualified employment threshold is satisfied. Based upon the information provided in the application, the department will advise applicants of their minimum number of hiring needs for which credits are being sought.

     (d) Examples.

     (i) ABC Company anticipates increasing employment during the 2001 calendar year at a manufacturing facility by an average of 15 full-time qualified employment positions for a total of 113 positions. The average number of full-time qualified employment positions during the 2000 calendar year was 98. To qualify for the tax credit program the minimum average number of full-time qualified employment positions required for the 2001 calendar year is 98 x .15 = 14.7 (rounding up to 15 positions). Therefore, ABC Company's plan to hire 15 full-time qualified employment positions for 2001 meets the 15% employment increase requirement.

     (ii) ABC anticipates increasing employment at this same manufacturing facility by an average of 15 additional full-time qualified employment positions during the 2002 calendar year to a total of 128 positions. To qualify for the tax credit program the minimum average number of full-time qualified employment positions required for the 2002 calendar year is 17 (113 x .15 =16.95, rounding up to 17). Therefore, ABC Company's plan to hire 15 full-time qualified employment positions for 2002 does not meet the 15% employment increase requirement.

     (5) Restriction against displacing existing jobs within Washington. The law provides that no recipient may use tax credits approved under this program to decertify a union or to displace existing jobs in any community of the state. Thus, the average expected increase of employment positions at the specific facility for which application is made must reflect a gross increase in the applicant's employment of persons at all locations in this state. Transfers of personnel from existing positions outside of an eligible area to new positions at the specific facility within an eligible area will not be allowed for purposes of approving tax credits. Also, layoffs or terminations of employment by the recipient at other locations in Washington but outside an eligible area for the purpose of hiring new positions within an eligible area will result in the withdrawal of any credits taken or approved.

     (6) Application procedures. A taxpayer must file an application with and obtain approval from the department of revenue to receive tax credits under this program. A separate application must be submitted for each calendar year for which credits are claimed. RCW 82.62.020 requires that application for the tax credits be made prior to the actual hiring of qualified employment positions. Applications failing to satisfy this statutory requirement will be disapproved.

     (a) How to obtain and file applications. Application forms will be provided by the department upon request either by calling (360) 902-7175 or via the department's internet website at www.dor.wa.gov under forms. The completed application may be sent by FAX to (360) 902-7167 or mailed to the following address:      State of Washington

     Department of Revenue

     Taxpayer Account Administration

     P.O. Box 47476

     Olympia, WA 98504-7476

     The U.S. Post Office postmark or FAX date will be used as the date of application.

     (b) Confidentiality. Information contained in applications, reports, or any other information received by the department in connection with this tax credit program is not confidential and is subject to disclosure. All other taxpayer information is subject to the confidentiality provisions in RCW 82.32.330.

     (c) Department to act upon application within sixty days. The department will determine if the applicant qualifies for tax credits on the basis of the information provided in the application and will approve or disapprove the application within sixty days. If approved, the department will issue a credit approval notice containing the dollar amount of tax credits available for use and the procedures for taking the credit. If disapproved, the department will notify the applicant in writing of the specific reasons for disapproval. The applicant may seek administrative review of the department's disapproval of an application by filing a petition for review with the department. The petition must be filed within thirty days from the date of notice of the disallowance pursuant to the provisions of WAC 458-20-100, Appeals, small claims and settlements.

     (d) No adjustment of credit after approval. After an application is approved and tax credits are granted, no upward adjustment or amendments of the application will be made for that calendar year.

     (7) How much is the tax credit? The amount of tax credit is based on the number of and the wages and benefits paid to qualified employment positions created.

     (a) How much tax credit may I claim for each qualified employment position? The amount of tax credit that may be claimed for each position created is as follows:

     (i) Two thousand dollars for each qualified employment position that pays forty thousand dollars or less in wages and benefits annually and is employed in an eligible business project; and

     (ii) Four thousand dollars for each qualified employment position that pays more than forty thousand dollars in wages and benefits annually and is employed in an eligible business project.

     (b) What qualifies as wages and benefits? For the purposes of chapter 82.62 RCW, "wages" means compensation paid to an individual for personal services, whether denominated as wages, salary, commission, bonus, or otherwise. "Benefits" means compensation not paid as wages and includes Social Security, retirement, health care, life insurance, industrial insurance, unemployment compensation, vacation, holiday, sick leave, military leave, and jury duty. "Benefits" does not include any amount reported as wages.

     (8) How to claim approved credits. The recipients must take the tax credits approved under this program on their regular combined excise tax return for their regular assigned tax reporting period. These tax credits may not exceed the B&O tax liability. The amount of credit taken should be entered into the "credit" section of the return form, with a copy of the credit approval notice issued to the recipient attached to the return.

     (a) When can credits be used? The credits may be used as soon as hiring of the projected qualified employment positions begins or may accrue until they are most beneficial for the recipient's use. For example, if a recipient has been approved for $12,000 of tax credits based upon projections to hire five new positions, that recipient may use $2,000 or $4,000 of tax credit at the time it hires each new employee, depending on the wage/benefit level of the position filled.

     (b) No refunds for unused credits. No tax refunds will be made for any tax credits which exceed tax liability during the life of this program. If tax credits derived from qualified hiring exceed the recipients' business and occupation tax liability in any one calendar year under this program, they may be carried forward to the next calendar year(s), until used.

     (9) Annual report to be filed by recipient. A recipient of tax credits under this program must complete and submit an annual report of employment activities to substantiate that he or she has complied with the hiring and retention requirements for approved credits. RCW 82.62.050. This report must be filed with the department by January 31st of the year following the calendar year for which credit was approved by the department. Based upon this report the department will verify that the recipient is entitled to the tax credits approved by the department when the application was reviewed.

     (a) Verification of annual report. The department will use the same report the recipient provides to the department of employment security, which is known as the quarterly employment security report, to verify the recipient's eligibility for tax credits. The recipient must maintain copies of the quarterly employment report for the year prior to the year for which credits are claimed, the year credits are claimed, and for the four quarters following the hiring of persons to fill the qualified employment positions. (The recipient does not have to forward copies of the quarterly employment report to the department each quarter.) The department may use other wage information provided to the department by the department of employment security. The taxpayer must provide additional information to the department, as the department finds necessary to calculate and verify wage eligibility.

     (b) Failure to file report. The law provides that if any recipient fails to submit a report or submits an inadequate report, the department may declare the amount of taxes for which credit has been used to be immediately due and payable. An inadequate report is one which fails to provide information necessary to confirm that the requisite number of employment positions has been created and maintained for twelve consecutive months.

     (10) What if the required number of positions is not created? The law provides that if the department finds that a recipient is not eligible for tax credits for any reason, other than failure to create the required number of qualified employment positions, the amount of taxes for which any credit has been used will be immediately due. No interest or penalty will be assessed in such cases. However, if the department finds that a recipient has failed to create the specified number of qualified employment positions, the department will assess interest, but not penalties, on the taxes against which the credit has been used. This interest on the assessment is mandatory and will be assessed at the statutory rate under RCW 82.32.050, retroactively to the date the tax credit was used. The interest will accrue until the taxes for which the credit was used are fully repaid. RCW 82.32.050. The interest rates under RCW 82.32.050 can be obtained from the department's internet website at www.dor.wa.gov/reports/rr2000-2.pdf?noframes or by calling the department's information center at 1-800-647-7706.

     (11) Program thresholds. The department cannot approve any credits that will cause the total credits approved to exceed seven million five hundred thousand dollars in any fiscal year. RCW 82.62.030. A "fiscal year" is the twelve-month period of July 1st through June 30th. If all or part of an application for credit is disallowed due to cap limitations, the disallowed portion will be carried over for approval the next fiscal year. However, the applicant's carryover into the next fiscal year is only permitted if the total credits approved for the next fiscal year does not exceed the cap for that fiscal year as of the date on which the department has disallowed the application.

[Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300. 88-17-047 (Order 88-5), § 458-20-240, filed 8/16/88; 87-19-007 (Order ET 87-5), § 458-20-240, filed 9/8/87; 86-14-019 (Order ET 86-13), § 458-20-240, filed 6/24/86; 83-08-026 (Order ET 83-1), § 458-20-240, filed 3/30/83; Order ET 71-1, § 458-20-240, filed 7/22/71; Order ET 70-3, § 458-20-240 (Rule 240), filed 5/29/70, effective 7/1/70.]

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