AN ACT
RELATING TO MUNICIPALITIES; AUTHORIZING CERTAIN
MUNICIPALITIES TO IMPOSE A HOSPITALITY FEE ON TOURIST ACCOMMODATIONS FOR
CONVENTION CENTER IMPROVEMENTS AND TOURISM MARKETING AND PROMOTION.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. SHORT TITLE.--This act may be cited as the
"Hospitality Fee Act".
Section 2. DEFINITIONS.--As used in the Hospitality Fee
Act:
A. "gross rent" means the total amount
of rent paid for tourist accommodations, not including the state and local
option gross receipts taxes paid on the rent receipts;
B. "municipality" means a municipality
located in a class A county with a population greater than two hundred fifty
thousand according to the most recent federal decennial census;
C. "person" means a corporation, firm,
other body corporate, partnership, association or individual, including an
executor, administrator, trustee, receiver or other representative appointed
according to law and acting in a representative capacity. "Person" does not include the
United States of America; the state of New Mexico; any corporation, department,
instrumentality or agency of the federal government or the state government; or
any political subdivision of the state;
D. "proprietor" means a person who
furnishes tourist accommodations to a renter;
E. "rent" means the consideration
received by a proprietor in money, credits, property or other consideration
valued in money from renters for tourist accommodations, other than:
(1) consideration received from a renter who has
been a permanent resident of the tourist accommodation for a period of at least
thirty consecutive days or a renter who enters into or has entered into a
written agreement for rental of the tourist accommodation for a period of at
least thirty consecutive days; or
(2) consideration received from a renter for a
room or other unit of accommodation for which the renter has paid less than two
dollars ($2.00) per day;
F. "renter" means a person to whom
tourist accommodations are furnished;
G. "room" means a room or other unit
of accommodation furnished by a proprietor to a renter in a tourist
accommodation; and
H. "tourist accommodation" means a
hotel, apartment, apartment hotel, apartment house, lodge, lodginghouse,
rooming house, motor hotel, guest house, guest ranch, ranch resort, guest
resort, mobile home, motor court, auto court, auto camp, trailer court, trailer
camp, trailer park, tourist camp, cabin or other premises used for
accommodation. "Tourist
accommodation" does not include:
(1) accommodations at religious, charitable,
educational or philanthropic institutions, including summer camps operated by such
institutions;
(2) clinics, hospitals or other medical
facilities;
(3) privately owned and operated convalescent
homes or homes for the aged, infirm, indigent or chronically ill; or
(4) accommodations that do not have at least
three rooms or other units of accommodation.
Section 3. HOSPITALITY FEE AUTHORIZED--RATE--PURPOSE.--
A. A municipality may impose by ordinance a
hospitality fee on the gross rent received by proprietors of tourist
accommodations within the municipality in an amount not to exceed one percent
of the gross rent. The fee imposed by
this subsection may be referred to as the "hospitality fee".
B. Proceeds from the hospitality fee shall be
used as follows:
(1) fifty percent of the proceeds shall be used
to equip and furnish a municipal convention center; and
(2) fifty percent of the proceeds shall be used
by the municipality to contract to purchase advertising that publicizes and
promotes tourist-related attractions, facilities and events in the municipality
and the county and tourist facilities or attractions within the area.
Section 4. COLLECTION OF HOSPITALITY FEE--AUDIT.--
A. Every proprietor of a tourist accommodation
in a municipality imposing a hospitality fee shall collect the hospitality fee
on behalf of the municipality and shall act as a trustee of the fee
revenues. The fee shall be collected
from proprietors in accordance with the ordinance imposing the fee and shall be
charged separately from the rent fixed by the proprietor for the tourist
accommodations.
B. The governing body of a municipality imposing
a hospitality fee shall select for annual random audits one or more proprietors
or tourist accommodations subject to the fee to verify the amount of gross rent
subject to the fee and to ensure that the full amount of the fee on that rent
is collected. Copies of audits completed
shall be filed annually with the local government division of the department of
finance and administration.
Section 5. FINANCIAL REPORTING.--The governing body of a
municipality imposing a hospitality fee shall:
A. furnish to any municipal advisory board
dealing with occupancy, lodging or accommodation taxes or fees information on
that portion of a proposed budget report or audit filed or received by the
governing body pursuant to either Chapter 6, Article 6 NMSA 1978 or the Audit
Act that relates to the expenditure of hospitality fee proceeds within ten days
of the filing or receipt of that proposed budget, report or audit; and
B. report quarterly to the local government
division of the department of finance and administration on the expenditure of hospitality fee proceeds
pursuant to Sections 3‑38‑15 and 3‑38‑21 NMSA 1978.
Section 6. ORDINANCE REQUIREMENTS.--The ordinance
imposing a hospitality fee and, as applicable, any ordinance amending the fee,
shall:
A. set out the procedures for licensing a
proprietor and for suspending or revoking a license or refusing to license a
proprietor after the governing body of the municipality has given the
proprietor an opportunity for a public hearing on the suspension, revocation or
refusal;
B. state the rate of the hospitality fee; the
time, place and method for the payment of the fee to the municipality; the
accounts and other records to be maintained in connection with the fee; a
procedure for making refunds and resolving disputes relating to the fee; the
procedure for preservation and destruction of records pertaining to the fee and
their inspection and investigation; audit requirements; applicable civil and
criminal penalties; and a procedure for liens, distraint and sales to satisfy
such liens; and
C. clearly state any other rights, privileges,
powers, immunities and other details relating to proprietor licensure, the
collection of the hospitality fee and the remittance of the fee proceeds to the
municipality.
Section 7. COLLECTION OF DELINQUENCIES--CIVIL
PENALTY.--
A. A proprietor is liable for the payment of any
amount of the hospitality fee proceeds the proprietor has failed to remit to
the municipality.
B. A municipality shall provide by ordinance for
a civil penalty for failure to remit the hospitality fee due in an amount equal
to the greater of ten percent of the amount of the hospitality fee that was not
remitted to the municipality or one hundred dollars ($100).
C. The municipality may bring an action in law
or equity in the district court for the collection of any amount of hospitality
fee due, including without limitation penalties on that amount, interest on the
unpaid principal amount at a rate of not exceeding one percent a month, the
costs of collection and reasonable attorney fees incurred in connection with
such an action.
Section 8. LIEN FOR HOSPITALITY
FEE--PAYMENT--CERTIFICATE OF LIENS.--
A. The hospitality fee imposed by a municipality
constitutes a lien in favor of that municipality upon the personal and real
property of the proprietor providing tourist accommodations in that
municipality. The lien may be enforced
as provided in Sections 3‑36‑1 through 3‑36‑7 NMSA
1978. Priority of the lien shall be
determined from the date of filing.
B. Under process or order of court, no person
shall sell the property of any proprietor of a tourist accommodation without
first ascertaining from the clerk or treasurer of the municipality in which the
tourist accommodation is located the amount of any hospitality fee due the
municipality. The hospitality fee due
the municipality shall be paid from the proceeds of the sale before payment is
made to the judgment creditor or to any other person with a claim on the sale
proceeds. C. The clerk or treasurer of the municipality
shall furnish upon request to any person a certificate showing the amount of
all liens in the records of the municipality against a proprietor of a tourist
accommodation pursuant to the Hospitality Fee Act.
Section 9. ENFORCEMENT.--
A. An action to enforce the Hospitality Fee
Act may be brought by:
(1) the attorney general or the district attorney
in the county of jurisdiction; or
(2) a proprietor of a tourist accommodation who
is collecting the proceeds of a hospitality fee in the county of
jurisdiction.
B. A district court may issue a writ of mandamus
or order an injunction or other appropriate remedy to enforce the provisions of
the Hospitality Fee Act.
C. The court shall award costs and reasonable
attorney fees to the prevailing party in a court action to enforce the
provisions of the Hospitality Fee Act.
Section 10. PENALTIES--CRIMINAL.--
A. It is a violation of the municipal ordinance
imposing a hospitality fee and providing for collection and administration of
the fee pursuant to the Hospitality Fee Act for any proprietor subject to the
fee to fail to pay the hospitality fee, to fail to remit the proceeds of the fee
to the municipality or to fail to account properly for a tourist accommodation
and the proceeds of the fee pertaining to the accommodation.
B. The governing body of the municipality shall
provide by ordinance that a violation of an ordinance imposing and providing
for collection and enforcement of the hospitality fee pursuant to the
Hospitality Fee Act is a misdemeanor subject to a fine of not more than five
hundred dollars ($500) or imprisonment for not more than ninety days, or both.
Section 11. REVENUE BONDS.--
A. Revenue bonds may be issued at any time by a
municipality to defray wholly or in part the costs of equipping or furnishing a municipal
convention center.
B. The revenue bonds may be payable from and
payment may be secured by a pledge of and lien on the revenues derived from:
(1) the proceeds of the hospitality fee of the
municipality after the deduction of the administrative costs pertaining to the
fee in an amount not to exceed ten percent of the gross rent fees collected by
the municipality in a fiscal year and excluding from the computation of such
costs the administrative costs ultimately recovered from delinquent proprietors
by civil action as penalties, costs of collection and attorney fees, but not as
interest on unpaid principal;
(2) any convention center facility, after
provision is made for the payment of the operation and maintenance expenses of
the convention center; and
(3) a combination of such net revenues from both
sources in Paragraphs (1) and (2) of this subsection.
C. The bonds shall bear interest at a rate or
rates as authorized in the Public Securities Act, and the first interest
payment may be for any period authorized in that act.
D. Except as otherwise provided in the
Hospitality Fee Act, revenue bonds authorized in the Hospitality Fee Act shall
be issued in accordance with the provisions of Sections 3-31-2 through 3-31-6
NMSA 1978.
Section 12. REFUNDING BONDS.--
A. A municipality having issued revenue bonds
pursuant to the Hospitality Fee Act may issue refunding bonds payable from
pledged revenues therein authorized for the payment of revenue bonds at the
time of the refunding or at the time of the issuance of the bonds being refunded
as the governing body of the municipality may determine, notwithstanding that
the revenue sources or the pledge of such revenues, or both, are thereby
modified.
B. Refunding bonds may be issued for the purpose
of refinancing, paying and discharging all or any part of such outstanding
bonds of any one or more or all outstanding issues:
(1) for the acceleration, deceleration or other
modification of the payment of such obligations, including without limitation
any capitalization of any interest thereon in arrears or about to become due
for any period not exceeding one year from the date of the refunding bonds;
(2) for the purpose of reducing interest costs or
effecting other economies;
(3) for the purpose of modifying or eliminating
restrictive contractual limitations pertaining to the issuance of additional
bonds, otherwise concerning the outstanding bonds, or to any facilities
relating thereto; or
(4) for any combination of the foregoing
purposes.
C. The interest on any bond refunded shall not
be increased to a rate in excess of the rate authorized in the Public
Securities Act and shall be paid as authorized in that act.
D. Except as otherwise provided in the
Hospitality Fee Act, refunding bonds authorized in the Hospitality Fee Act
shall be issued in accordance with the provisions of Sections 3‑31-10 and
3-31-11 NMSA 1978.
Section 13. DELAYED REPEAL.--The Hospitality Fee Act is
repealed effective July 1, 2013.