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F I S C A
L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR:
|
Boitano
|
DATE TYPED:
|
3/8/03
|
HB
|
|
SHORT TITLE:
|
Tuition Scholarships Tax Credit
|
SB
|
237
|
|
ANALYST:
|
Neel
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue
|
Subsequent
Years Impact
|
Recurring
or
Non-Rec
|
Fund
Affected
|
FY03
|
FY04
|
|
|
|
|
($6,000.0)
|
($6,000.0)
|
Recurring
|
General
Fund
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
SOURCES
OF INFORMATION
LFC files
Responses
Received From
Taxation
and Revenue Department (TRD)
State
Department of Education (SDE)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
Senate Bill 237 enacts
a new section of the Income Tax Act to allow New
Mexico taxpayers who makes a
contribution to a school tuition organization.
The “tuition scholarship tax credit” may not exceed $500 in any taxable
year (or $250 each for a husband and wife who file separate returns for a
taxable year in which they could have filed a joint return). The tuition scholarship tax credit is not
allowed for a contribution that is included in the taxpayer’s itemized
deductions. For purposes of the tuition
scholarship tax credit, a “qualified school” means an accredited nongovernmental
elementary or secondary school in New
Mexico. The bill does not preclude the taxpayer from
making a contribution that will be used for the direct benefit of the
taxpayer’s dependent.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
TRD notes the
following assumptions:
This
estimate is an approximation. Statistics on the National
Center
for Charitable Statistics web site (http://nccs.urban.org/stcover/1992/stf_NM92.htm)
suggest total annual giving for elementary and secondary institutions in New
Mexico was $17 million in
1992. This amount has probably grown to
over $30 million per year. The estimate assumes 20 percent of these donations
will apply to qualified expenditures under the proposal. As a point of
comparison, I.R.S. data on charitable contributions indicate that contributions
to educational institutions comprise approximately 4% of total itemized
deductions each year. About $3 billion in total itemized deductions are
reported each year in New Mexico.
4% of this amount is $120 million. The estimate thus assumes a small proportion
of total itemized deductions will be converted to credits under the proposal.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
TRD notes minimal
administrative impact
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
SDE has provided the
following background:
- It
appears that SB 237 would allow the establishment of a “school tuition
organization” (“STO”) to benefit the students that attend a specific
nongovernmental elementary or secondary school. SB 237 may allow a parent to donate $500
to an STO for the benefit of his or her child and claim the tax credit.
- The
Education Commission of the States website (www.ecs.org)
notes that Arizona,
Florida,
Illinois,
Iowa,
Minnesota,
Pennsylvania
and Puerto Rico
have adopted either a tax credit or tax deduction program.
- Arizona
Revised Statute § 43-1089 permits state tax credits for contributions to
STOs. The Arizona statute requires
that the organizations spend at least 90% of their revenue on
scholarships, that recipients of the STO’s scholarships must be drawn from
at least two schools, that a taxpayer cannot request that contribution to
an STO be used for the direct benefit of his dependent and that an STO
cannot distribute grants or scholarships to students who attend schools
that discriminate on the basis of race, color, handicap, familial status
or national origin. In Winn v.
Killian, 307 F.3d 1011 (9th Cir. 2002), the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals reversed and remanded a lower court dismissal of a lawsuit by
Arizona taxpayers challenging the constitutionality of the Arizona statute
as relating to contributions supporting parochial schools. The Court concluded that the challenge
was not precluded from challenge in federal court by the Tax Injunction
Act. In a footnote to the opinion,
the Court distinguished a tax credit program from a tax deduction, noting
that “[I]n the case of a tax credit, the taxes due are reduced by the full
amount of the gift.” Winn, 307 P.3d
at 1015. In a earlier challenge to
the Arizona statute, the Supreme Court of Arizona in Kotterman v. Killian,
193 Ariz. 273, 972 P.2d 606 (1999), U.S. cert. denied, US Lx 4825,
concluded that the statute did not violate the Establishment Clause of the
U.S. Constitution in that “the Arizona school tuition tax credit is one of
an extensive assortment of tax saving mechanisms available as part of a
‘genuine system of tax laws.’”
Kotterman, 972 P.2d at 613, quoting Mueller v. Allen, 463 U.S. 388,
396 n. 6, 103 S.Ct. 3062, 77 L.Ed.2d 721 (1983). The Supreme Court of
Arizona did not agree with the position urged by the petitioners that tax
credits are constitutionally different from tax deductions. The Court was not persuaded by the
argument that the tax provision at issue did not provide a credit for
those who wished to support public education, noting that the state tax
code allowed a credit of up to $200 for fees paid by taxpayers in support
of public school extracurricular activities. The Court also rejected challenges under
the Arizona Constitution. As to the
challenge under Article II, Section 12 (“No public money or property shall
be appropriated for or applied to any religious worship, exercise or
instruction, or to the support of any religious establishment”), the Court
rejected the argument that a tax credit constituted public money; the
Court further observed that direct spending programs and tax expenditures
are not fully equated for purposes of an Establishment Clause
analysis. Kotterman, 972 P.2d at
619. With regard to the challenge under
Article IX, Section 7 (“the state shall not ‘give or loan its credit in
the aid of, or make any donation or grant, by subsidy or otherwise, to any
individual, association, or corporation’”), the Court observed that the
history of a constitutional provision influences future
interpretations. The Court
proceeded to note that contemporary tax codes, both state and federal,
permit churches and other religious institutions to acquire tax-free
status and allow deductions for contributions made to such entities. Kotterman, 972 P.2d at 623. The U.S. Supreme Court declined to
review the decision.
·
The Minnesota
statute challenged in Mueller v. Allen permitted state taxpayers to claim a
deduction from gross income for certain expenses of educating their
children. The deduction was limited to
actual expenses incurred for “tuition, textbooks, and transportation” of
dependents attending elementary or secondary schools, was limited in dollar
amount and was available to all parents.
The U.S. Supreme Court distinguished the statue from that held to be
constitutionally infirm in Nyquist, holding that the Establishment Clause
prohibition did not extend to the type of tax deduction envisioned by Minnesota,
i.e., “an attenuated financial benefit, ultimately controlled by the private
choices of individual parents, that eventually flows to the parochial schools
from the neutrally available” tax credits.
Mueller v. Allen, 463 U.S. 388, 103 S.Ct. 3062, 77 Ed.2d 721 (1983) The
Supreme Court found in Mueller that (1) an essential feature of Minnesota’s arrangement
was the fact that the deduction was only one among many available deductions,
such as those for medical expenses and charitable contributions; (2) unlike the
arrangement struck down in Committee for Public Education v. Nyquist, 413 U.S.
756, 93 S.Ct. 2955, 37 L.Ed.2d 99948 (1973), the Minnesota arrangement
permitted all parents – whether their children attended public school or
private – to deduct their children’s educational expenses; and (3) public funds
became available only as the result of numerous private choices of individual
parents of school-age children.
SN/njw:prr