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SPONSOR: |
Beffort |
DATE
TYPED: |
|
HB |
|
||
SHORT
TITLE: |
Income
Tax Credit for Drip Irrigation |
SB |
127/a
SCONC |
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Smith |
|||||
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
(2,000.0)
|
(10,000.0) |
Recurring |
General Fund |
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Responses
Received From
TRD
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SCONC Amendment
The
Senate Conservation Committee Amendment clarifies that the proposal does not
affect a taxpayer’s water rights.
Synopsis of Original Bill
Senate Bill 127 allows tax
credits of up to 75 percent of expenses incurred in purchasing and installing
drip irrigation systems after
The
Soil and Water Conservation Commission is assigned responsibility for
developing rules and guidelines designed to help the Taxation and Revenue
Department determine whether the improve
ments qualify for the credits.
Unused credits are not refundable, but may be carried forward for five years.
They may be taken against personal or corporate income tax obligations.
FISCAL
IMPLICATIONS
TRD assumed that that
1 percent of
TECHNICAL
ISSUES
TRD
notes the technical issues:
·
The bill’s
language is not clear regarding what the $1,000 limitation applies to. Apparent
intent is to limit the credit to $1,000 per project. As written, it would
probably be interpreted as $1,000 per year. Hence a taxpayer could expend
$6,666.67 on a drip irrigation system and deduct three-quarters of the
$6,666.67 or $5,000 in $1,000 increments over a five-year period. By
continuously installing drip irrigation systems, businesses could probably
receive the credits for an indefinite period.
Hence the proposal needs to be more specific on these issues than it
currently is.
·
Intent of
language in the proposal requiring that taxpayers must own or lease water
rights appurtenant to land on which an irrigation system is installed is
unclear, and seems to suggest that the credits are intended for agricultural
users. TRD legal counsel, however, states that residential owners would, in
fact, typically possess these rights by virtue of prior beneficial use of
water, and hence would qualify for the credits. If the proposal’s intent is to
limit the credits to agricultural users, it should be modified accordingly.
·
The measure would
probably not allow owners of S-corporations to share the credit. Owners of S-corporations are co-owners of the
corporation not co-owners of the land. If the intent is for owners of
S-corporations to share the credit, the term “pass-through entity” should be
employed in statute. An example of this type of language would be similar to:
“If a pass-through entity (S-corporation partnership or limited liability
company) owns the land on which an eligible improvement in irrigation systems
or water management method is made, the owners of the entity may claim a pro
rata share of the credit allowed….”.
OTHER
SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
TRD makes the following observations:
·
Without a provision actually guaranteeing reduced
water use--and perhaps a resulting sale to municipalities or environmental
credits for leaving water in rivers--the proposed credits may not achieve their
apparent purpose of water use reduction.
·
The proposed measure would effectively subsidize
taxpayers for making water conservation expenditures that they would make in
absence of the bill’s provisions.
·
Although drip irrigation systems represent effective
mechanisms for conserving water, they are not the only effective procedure
available to taxpayers for doing so, and some limitations apply to their use.
For example, drip irrigation systems often deteriorate in five to ten years.[1]
Hence subsidies provided by legislation similar to those in the proposed
measure may actually produce inefficient use of water by encouraging use of systems
that would not be as cost effective for this purpose as systems that would be
selected in absence of tax subsidies.
SS/njw:yr