WSR 15-03-019
PERMANENT RULES
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE
[Filed January 8, 2015, 2:43 p.m., effective February 8, 2015]
Effective Date of Rule: Thirty-one days after filing.
Purpose: The department amends WAC 458-20-261 Commute trip reduction incentive[s], to recognize provisions of ESSB 6001 (chapter 222, Laws of 2014) and SSB 6333 (chapter 97, Laws of 2014). The proposed changes to this rule explain that:
Vehicles must be "primarily" used for commuter ride sharing (subsection (3)(b));
If the program is not extended after June 30, 2015, that commute trip reduction incentive payments paid by employers and property managers from January 1 through June 30, 2015, will not accrue commute trip reduction credits (subsection (4)(h));
Deleting dated language relating to periods prior to a statutory change effective June 30, 2005; and
Clarifying language in an example that there is a maximum credit limit of $60 per employee (subsection (k)(iii)).
Citation of Existing Rules Affected by this Order: Amending WAC 458-20-261.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 82.32.300 and 82.01.060(2).
Other Authority: RCW 82.70.020, 82.70.040, 82.70.900, 82.44.015, 82.08.0287, and 82.12.0282.
Adopted under notice filed as WSR 14-22-068 on October 31, 2014.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Comply with Federal Statute: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Federal Rules or Standards: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Recently Enacted State Statutes: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted at Request of a Nongovernmental Entity: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted on the Agency's Own Initiative: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Clarify, Streamline, or Reform Agency Procedures: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted Using Negotiated Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Pilot Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Other Alternative Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Date Adopted: January 8, 2015.
Dylan Waits
Rules Coordinator
AMENDATORY SECTION (Amending WSR 14-13-096, filed 6/17/14, effective 7/18/14)
WAC 458-20-261 Commute trip reduction incentives.
(1) Introduction. This rule explains the various commute trip reduction incentives that are available. First, RCW 82.04.355 and 82.16.047 provide exemptions from business and occupation (B&O) tax and public utility tax on amounts received from providing commuter ride sharing and ride sharing for persons with special transportation needs. RCW 82.08.0287 and 82.12.0282 provide sales and use tax exemptions for sales or use of passenger motor vehicles as ride-sharing vehicles. Finally, chapter 82.70 RCW provides commute trip reduction incentives in the form of B&O tax or public utility tax credit, effective July 1, 2003, in connection with ride sharing, public transportation, car sharing, and nonmotorized commuting.
(2) B&O tax and public utility tax exemptions on providing commuter ride sharing or ride sharing for persons with special transportation needs. Amounts received in the course of commuter ride sharing or ride sharing for persons with special transportation needs are exempt from the business and occupation tax and from the public utility tax. RCW 82.04.355 and 82.16.047.
(a) What is "commuter ride sharing"? "Commuter ride sharing" means a car pool or van pool arrangement, whereby one or more fixed groups:
(i) Not exceeding fifteen persons each, including the drivers; and
(ii) Either:
(A) Not fewer than five persons, including the drivers; or
(B) Not fewer than four persons, including the drivers, where at least two of those persons are confined to wheelchairs when riding;
Are transported in a passenger motor vehicle with a gross vehicle weight not exceeding ten thousand pounds, excluding any special rider equipment. The transportation must be between their places of residence or near such places of residence, and their places of employment or educational or other institutions. Each group must be in a single daily round trip where the drivers are also on the way to or from their places of employment or educational or other institutions.
(b) What is "ride sharing for persons with special transportation needs"? "Ride sharing for persons with special transportation needs" means an arrangement, whereby a group of persons with special transportation needs, and their attendants, is transported by a public social service agency or a private, nonprofit transportation provider, in a passenger motor vehicle as defined by the department of licensing to include small buses, cutaways, and modified vans not more than twenty-eight feet long. The driver need not be a person with special transportation needs.
(i) What is a "private, nonprofit transportation provider"? A "private, nonprofit transportation provider" is any private, nonprofit corporation providing transportation services for compensation solely to persons with special transportation needs.
(ii) What is "persons with special transportation needs"? "Persons with special transportation needs" are those persons, including their personal attendants, who because of physical or mental disability, income status, or age, are unable to transport themselves or to purchase appropriate transportation.
(3) Retail sales tax and use tax exemptions on sales or use of passenger motor vehicles as ride-sharing vehicles. RCW 82.08.0287 and 82.12.0282 provide retail sales tax and use tax exemptions for sales and use of passenger motor vehicles as ride-sharing vehicles.
(a) What are the requirements? The requirements are that the passenger motor vehicles must be used:
(i) For commuter ride sharing or ride sharing for persons with special transportation needs; and
(ii) As ride-sharing vehicles for thirty-six consecutive months beginning from the date of purchase (retail sales tax exemption) and the date of first use (use tax exemption). If the vehicle is used as a ride-sharing vehicle for less than thirty-six consecutive months, the registered owner must pay the retail sales tax or use tax.
(b) Additional requirements in certain cases. Vehicles ((with five or six passengers, including the driver,)) used primarily for commuter ride sharing must be operated within a county, or a city or town within that county, which has a commute trip reduction plan under chapter 70.94 RCW in order to be exempt from retail sales tax or use tax. In addition, for the exemptions to apply, at least one of the following conditions must apply:
(i) The vehicle must be operated by a public transportation agency for the general public;
(ii) The vehicle must be used by a major employer, as defined in RCW 70.94.524, as an element of its commute trip reduction program for their employees; or
(iii) The vehicle must be owned and operated by individual employees and must be registered either with the employer as part of its commute trip reduction program or with a public transportation agency serving the area where the employees live or work.
Individual-employee owned and operated motor vehicles require certification that the vehicle is registered with a major employer or a public transportation agency. Major employers who own and operate motor vehicles for their employees must certify that the commute ride-sharing arrangement conforms to a car pool/van pool element contained within their commute trip reduction program.
(4) B&O tax or public utility tax credit for ride sharing, public transportation, car sharing, or nonmotorized commuting. Effective July 1, 2003, RCW 82.70.020 provides a credit against B&O tax or public utility tax liability for ride sharing in vehicles carrying two or more persons, for using public transportation, for using car sharing, or for using nonmotorized commuting.
(a) Who is eligible for this credit?
(i) Employers in Washington are eligible for this credit, for amounts paid to or on behalf of their own or other employees, as financial incentives to such employees for ride sharing, for using public transportation, for using car sharing, or for using nonmotorized commuting.
(ii) Property managers who manage worksites in Washington are eligible for this credit, for amounts paid to or on behalf of persons employed at those worksites, as financial incentives to such persons for ride sharing, for using public transportation, for using car sharing, or for using nonmotorized commuting.
(b) What is "ride sharing"? "Ride sharing" means a car pool or van pool arrangement, whereby a group of at least two but not exceeding fifteen persons, including the driver, is transported in a passenger motor vehicle with a gross vehicle weight not exceeding ten thousand pounds, excluding any special rider equipment. The transportation must be between their places of residence or near such places of residence, and their places of employment or educational or other institutions. The driver must also be on the way to or from his or her place of employment or educational or other institution. "Ride sharing" includes ride sharing on Washington state ferries.
(c) What is "public transportation"? "Public transportation" means the transportation of packages, passengers, and their incidental baggage, by means other than by charter bus or sight-seeing bus, together with the necessary passenger terminals and parking facilities or other properties necessary for passenger and vehicular access to and from such people moving systems. "Public transportation" includes passenger services of the Washington state ferries.
(d) What is "car sharing"? "Car sharing" means a membership program intended to offer an alternative to car ownership under which persons or entities that become members are permitted to use vehicles from a fleet on an hourly basis.
(e) What is "nonmotorized commuting"? "Nonmotorized commuting" means commuting to and from the workplace by an employee, by walking or running or by riding a bicycle or other device not powered by a motor. "Nonmotorized commuting" does not include teleworking, which is a program where work functions normally performed at a traditional workplace are instead performed by an employee at his or her home, at least one day a week for the purpose of reducing the number of trips to the employee's workplace.
(f) What is the credit amount? The amount of the credit is equal to the amount paid to or on behalf of each employee multiplied by fifty percent, but may not exceed sixty dollars per employee per fiscal year.
(g) What is a "fiscal year"? A "fiscal year" begins at July 1st of one year and ends on June 30th of the following year.
(h) When will the credit expire? The credit program is scheduled to expire June 30, 2015. If the program is not extended after June 30, 2015, commute trip reduction incentive payments paid by employers and property managers from January 1, 2015 through June 30, 2015, will not accrue commute trip reduction credits.
(i) What are the limitations of the credit? ((For periods after June 30, 2005:))
(i) The credit may not exceed the amount of B&O tax or public utility tax that would otherwise be due for the same fiscal year.
(ii) A person may not receive credit for amounts paid to or on behalf of the same employee under both B&O tax and public utility tax.
(iii) A person may not take a credit for amounts claimed for credit by other persons.
(iv) Total credit received by a person against both B&O tax and public utility tax may not exceed two hundred thousand dollars for a fiscal year. ((This limitation does not apply to credits deferred from prior fiscal years as described in (i)(vii) and (viii) of this subsection.))
(v) Total credit granted to all persons under both B&O tax and public utility tax, including any credits carried forward from prior fiscal years as described in (i)(vii) of this subsection, may not exceed:
(A) Two million seven hundred fifty thousand dollars in any fiscal year through the fiscal year ending June 30, 2013; and
(B) One million five hundred thousand dollars per fiscal year for the period beginning July 1, 2013, through June 30, 2016.
(vi) No credit or portion of a credit denied, because of exceeding the limitations in (i)(iv) or (v) of this subsection, may be used against tax liability for other fiscal years((, subject to (i)(vii) and (viii) of this subsection.
(vii) A person, with B&O tax and public utility tax liability equal to or in excess of the credit for a fiscal year, may use all or part of the credit deferred prior to July 1, 2005, for a period of not more than three fiscal years after the fiscal year in which the credit accrued. No credit deferred under this paragraph (i)(vii) of this subsection may be used after June 30, 2008. The person must submit an application, as provided in (j)(i) of this subsection, in the fiscal year tax credit will be applied, and the credit must be approved by the department before use. This application is subject to eligibility under (i)(v) of this subsection for the fiscal year tax credit will be applied. If a deferred credit is subject to proportional reduction under (j)(iv) of this subsection, the amount of deferred credit reduced may be carried forward as long as the period of deferral does not exceed three years after the year the credit was earned.
(viii) For deferred)).
(vii) Credit approved by the department ((after June 30, 2005, the approved credit)) may be carried forward to subsequent years until used((. The limitation described in (i)(v) of this subsection does not apply to such deferred credit approved after June 30, 2005.
(ix))), except that no person ((is eligible for)) may claim the tax credit((, including the deferred tax credit authorized under (i)(vii) and (viii) of this subsection,)) after June 30, ((2014)) 2015.
(((x))) (viii) No person is eligible for tax credit if the additional revenues for the multimodal transportation account created under RCW 46.68.035(1), 82.08.020(3), 82.12.045(7), 46.16.233(2), and 46.16.690 (((created by the Engrossed Substitute House Bill No. 2231, chapter 361, Laws of 2003))) are terminated.
(j) What are the credit procedures? ((For periods after June 30, 2005:))
(i) Persons applying for the credit must complete an application. The application must be received by the department between January 1 and January 31, following the calendar year in which the applicants made incentive payments. The application must be made to the department in a form and manner prescribed by the department.
(ii) ((An application due by January 31, 2006, must not include incentive payments made from January 1, 2005, to June 30, 2005.
(iii))) The department must ((rule)) make a determination on an application within sixty days of the January 31 deadline. In addition, the department must disapprove an application not received by the January 31 deadline. Once the application is approved and tax credit is granted, the department is not allowed to increase the credit.
(((iv))) (iii) If the total amount of credit applied for by all applicants in a fiscal year exceeds the limitation as provided in (i)(v) of this subsection, the amount of credit allowed for all applicants is proportionally reduced so as not to exceed the limit. The amount reduced may not be carried forward and claimed in subsequent fiscal years((, except as provided in (i)(vii) of this subsection)).
(k) Examples. The following examples identify a number of facts and then state a conclusion. These examples should be used only as a general guide. The tax results of other situations must be determined after a review of all of the facts and circumstances.
(i) An employer pays one hundred eighty dollars for a yearly bus pass for one employee. For another employee, the employer buys a bicycle helmet and bicycle lock for a total of fifty dollars. These are the total expenditures during a fiscal year of amounts paid to or on behalf of employees in support of ride sharing, using public transportation, using car sharing, and using nonmotorized commuting. The employer may claim a credit of sixty dollars for the amount spent for the employee using the bus pass. Fifty percent of one hundred eighty dollars is ninety dollars, but the credit is limited to sixty dollars per employee. The employer may claim a credit of twenty-five dollars (fifty percent of fifty dollars) for the amount spent for the employee who bicycles to work. Even though fifty percent of two hundred thirty dollars, the amount spent on both employees, works out to be less than sixty dollars per employee, the credit is computed by looking at actual spending for each employee and not by averaging the spending for both employees.
(ii) An employer provides parking spaces for the exclusive use of ride-sharing vehicles. Amounts spent for signs, painting, or other costs related to the parking spaces do not qualify for the credit. This is because the credit is for financial incentives paid to or on behalf of employees. While the parking spaces support the use of ride-sharing vehicles, they are not financial incentives and do not involve amounts paid to or on behalf of employees.
(iii) As part of its commute trip reduction program, an employer pays the cab fare for an employee who has an emergency and must leave the workplace but has no vehicle available because he or she commutes by ride-sharing vehicle. The cab fare qualifies for the credit((, if it does not cause the sixty-dollar limitation to be exceeded, because it is an amount paid on behalf of a specific)) but there is a maximum credit limit of sixty dollars per employee.
(iv) An employer pays the property manager for a yearly bus pass for one employee who works at the worksite managed by the property manager. The property manager in turn pays the amount received from the employer to a public transportation agency to purchase the bus pass. Either the employer or the property manager, but not both, may take the credit for this expenditure.