HB4812 SFA Smith #1 3-7

Childs  7949

 

Senator Smith moved to amend the bill by striking out everything after the enacting clause and inserting in lieu thereof the following:

CHAPTER 7. COUNTY COMMISSIONS AND OFFICERS.

ARTICLE 1. COUNTY COMMISSIONS GENERALLY.

§7-1-3uu. Health and safety fee.

(a) Each county commission may impose and collect a health and safety fee of up to $1 for any or all of the following tourism and recreation activities within the county, on the basis stated in this section:

(1) The fee for the following activities shall be collected for each day or night of rental of the accommodation or vehicle:

(A) Hotel/motel/cabin/condominium/Airbnb/VRBO rentals;

(B) RV or tent camping rentals or fees;

(C) Automobile rentals;

(D) Boat rentals; and

(E) ATV/motorcycle/bicycle rentals.

(2) The fee for the following activities shall be collected for each ticket purchased or admission paid:

(A) Boat rides;

(B) Ski lift usage;

(C) Whitewater rafting;

(D) Golfing;

(E) Carnival, fair, or amusement park visits;

(F) Train rides;

(G) Museum or historical home tours;

(H) Zip lining, rock climbing, paddle boarding, and similar outdoor adventure activities; and

(I) Concerts or music festivals.

(3) The fee for the following activities shall be collected per person, per day:

(A) Bus excursions/charter; and

(B) Guided fishing or hunting excursions.

(b) The fee shall be collected only once on any seasonal or annual pass purchased for any of the activities to which the fee is applicable: Provided, That the fee shall equal one percent of the purchase price on any seasonal or annual pass for any of the activities to which the fee is applicable if the purchase price is greater than $100.99.

(c) Any fee imposed by a county commission pursuant to this section may not be imposed on, or collected for, activities within the boundaries of a municipal corporation that has levied an amusement tax pursuant to §8-13-6 of this code.

(d) The person to whom the rental is made, or the service or activity is provided, shall pay to the operator or vendor of the activity the amount of the health and safety fee imposed by the county hereunder, which fee shall be added to and shall constitute a part of the consideration paid for the rental, service, or activity, and which fee shall be collectible as such by the operator or vendor who shall account for, and remit to the county, all fees paid by such persons. Operators who are subject to the collection and remittance of hotel occupancy tax pursuant to §7-18-1 et seq. of this code shall remit the fee with the remittance of the hotel occupancy tax but shall separately state the amount of the fee and the tax when remittance is made.

(e) The county commission shall notify the State Fire Marshal and the Office of Emergency Medical Services of its initial decision to impose and collect a health and safety fee. The county shall promulgate, by ordinance, order, rule, or regulation, administrative procedures for the assessment, collection, and refund of the fee authorized by this section. The sheriff of each county shall be the county's agent for administration and collection of the fee and shall have the power to initiate civil suits for the collection of the fee. The county commission may promulgate regulations and return forms as it determines are necessary or desirable for the administration and collection of the fee. In all circumstances, the moneys collected for the fee shall be kept in a discrete account solely for that purpose until they are expended in accordance with the provisions of subsection (g) of this section.

(f) Every county commission imposing a health and safety fee shall report annually on or before 90 days before the end of the fiscal year all collections and expenditures, including an income statement and balance sheet, to the State Auditor, the Joint Committee on Government and Finance, the State Fire Marshal, and the West Virginia Office of Emergency Medical Services.

(g) Sixty percent of the moneys collected for the fee shall be expended only for use in emergency services readiness and shall be appropriated at the discretion of the county commission among emergency medical services providers and volunteer and part-volunteer fire departments located in the county. Forty percent of the moneys collected for the fee shall be expended only for use in emergency services readiness or critical infrastructure projects and shall be appropriated at the discretion of the county commission among emergency medical services providers, volunteer and part-volunteer fire departments, and other critical infrastructure projects, as determined necessary by the county commission, located within the county: Provided, however, That a county may seek a waiver from the State Fire Marshal and the West Virginia Office of Emergency Medical Services allowing it to appropriate up to 100 percent of the moneys collected for use in critical infrastructure projects, if it is determined by the State Fire Marshal and the West Virginia Office of Emergency Medical Services that the county’s emergency services readiness needs will be met during such time as the waiver is in effect. Such waiver may be in effect no longer than three years from the date of its issuance, at which point the county may reapply at the discretion of the county commission. The State Fire Marshal and the West Virginia Office of Emergency Medical Services may promulgate legislative rules in accordance with §29A-3-1 et seq. of this code relating to criteria which must be satisfied to qualify for such waiver.

 

CHAPTER 8. MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS.

ARTICLE 13. TAXATION AND FINANCE.

§8-13-5. Business and occupation or privilege tax; limitation on rates; effective date of tax; exemptions; activity in two or more municipalities; administrative provisions.

(a) Authorization to impose tax. — (1) Whenever any business activity or occupation, for which the state imposed its annual business and occupation or privilege tax under §11-13-1 et seq. of this code, prior to July 1, 1987, is engaged in or carried on within the corporate limits of any municipality, the governing body thereof shall have plenary power and authority, unless prohibited by general law, to impose a similar business and occupation tax thereon for the use of the municipality.

(2) Municipalities may impose a business and occupation or privilege tax upon every person engaging or continuing within the municipality in the business of aircraft repair, remodeling, maintenance, modification, and refurbishing services to any aircraft, or to an engine or other component part of any aircraft as a separate business activity.

(b) Maximum tax rates. — In no case shall the rate of the municipal business and occupation or privilege tax on a particular activity exceed the maximum rate imposed by the state, exclusive of surtaxes, upon any business activities or privileges taxed under §11-13-2a, §11-13-2b, §11-13-2c, §11-13-2d, §11-13-2e, §11-13-2g, §11-13-2h, §11-13-2i, and §11-13-2j of this code, as those rates were in effect under §11-13-1 et seq. of this code, on January 1, 1959, or in excess of one percent of gross income under §11-13-2k of this code, or in excess of three-tenths of one percent of gross value or gross proceeds of sale under §11-13-2m of this code. The rate of municipal business and occupation or privilege tax on the activity described in subdivision (2), subsection (a) of this section shall be ten one-hundredths of one percent. The rate of municipal business and occupation or privilege tax on the activity of a health maintenance organization holding a certificate of authority under the provisions of §33-25A-1 et seq. of this code, shall not exceed one-half of one percent to be applied solely to that portion of gross income received from the Medicaid program pursuant to Title XIX of the Social Security Act, the state employee programs administered by the Public Employees Insurance Agency pursuant to §5-16-1 et seq. of this code, and other federal programs, for health care items or services provided directly or indirectly by the health maintenance organization, that is expended for administrative expenses; and shall not exceed one half of one percent to be applied to the gross income received from enrollees, or from employers on behalf of enrollees, from sources other than Medicaid, state employee programs administered by the Public Employees Insurance Agency, and other federal programs for health care items or services provided directly or indirectly by the health maintenance organization: Provided, That this tax rate limitation shall not extend to that part of the gross income of health maintenance organizations which is received from the use of real property other than property in which any company maintains its office or offices in this state, whether the income is in the form of rentals or royalties. This provision concerning the maximum municipal business and occupation tax rate on the activities of health maintenance organizations is effective beginning after December 31, 1996. Any payments of business and occupation tax made by a health maintenance organization to a municipality for calendar year 1997 is not subject to recovery by the health maintenance organization. Administrative expenses shall include all expenditures made by a health maintenance organization other than expenses paid for claims incurred or payments made to providers for the benefits received by enrollees.

(c) Effective date of local tax. — Any taxes levied pursuant to the authority of this section may be made operative as of the first day of the then current fiscal year or any date thereafter: Provided, That any new imposition of tax or any increase in the rate of tax upon any business, occupation or privilege taxed under §11-2E-1 et seq. §11-13-2e of this code, applies only to gross income derived from contracts entered into after the effective date of the imposition of tax or rate increase, and which effective date shall not be retroactive in any respect: Provided, however, That no tax imposed or revised under this section upon public utility services may be effective unless and until the municipality provides written notice of the same by certified mail to said public utility at least 60 days prior to the effective date of said tax or revision thereof.

(d) Exemptions. —

(1) A municipality shall not impose its business and occupation or privilege tax on any activity that was exempt from the state’s business and occupation tax under the provisions of §11-13-3 of this code, prior to July 1, 1987, and determined without regard to any annual or monthly monetary exemption also specified therein: Provided, That on and after July 1, 2007, a municipality may impose its business and occupation or privilege tax on any activity of a corporation, association, or society organized and operated exclusively for religious or charitable purposes that was exempt from the state’s business and occupation tax under the provisions of §11-13-3 of this code, prior to July 1, 1987, but only to the extent that the income generated by the activity is subject to taxation under the provisions of §511 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

(2) Effective July 1, 2023, the municipal business and occupation or privilege tax on the sale of new automobiles that have never been registered in the name of an individual shall be reduced by 50 percent of the total amount of the tax: Provided, That, effective July 1, 2024, the remaining municipal business and occupation or privilege tax on the sale of new automobiles that have never been registered in the name of an individual shall be reduced by an additional 50 percent of the total amount of the tax: Provided, however, That July 1, 2025, the municipal business and occupation or privilege tax on the sale of new automobiles that have never been registered in the name of an individual shall be completely eliminated.  For the purposes of this section, an automobile is a self-propelled vehicle used on the roads and highways by the use of motor vehicle fuel or propelled by one or more electric motors using energy stored in batteries or a combination thereof.  An automobile shall include a light-duty truck with an enclosed cabin and an open loading area at the rear and a sport utility vehicle.  An automobile does not include a motorcycle.

(e) Activity in two or more municipalities. — Whenever the business activity or occupation of the taxpayer is engaged in or carried on in two or more municipalities of this state, the amount of gross income, or gross proceeds of sales, taxable by each municipality shall be determined in accordance with legislative rules as prescribed by the Tax Commissioner. It is the intent of the Legislature that multiple taxation of the same gross income, or gross proceeds of sale, under the same classification by two or more municipalities shall not be allowed, and that gross income, or gross proceeds of sales, derived from activity engaged in or carried on within this state, that is presently subject to state tax under §11-13-2c or §11-13-2h of this code, which is not taxed or taxable by any other municipality of this state, may be included in the measure of tax for any municipality in this state, from which the activity was directed, or in the absence thereof, the municipality in this state in which the principal office of the taxpayer is located. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed as permitting any municipality to tax gross income or gross proceeds of sales in violation of the Constitution and laws of this state or the United States, or as permitting a municipality to tax any activity that has a definite situs outside its taxing jurisdiction.

(f) Where the governing body of a municipality imposes a tax authorized by this section, the governing body may offer tax credits from the tax as incentives for new and expanding businesses located within the corporate limits of the municipality.

(g) Administrative provisions. — The ordinance of a municipality imposing a business and occupation or privilege tax shall provide procedures for the assessment and collection of the tax, which shall be similar to those procedures in §11-13-1 et seq. of this code, as in existence on June 30, 1978, or to those procedures in §11-10-1 et seq. of this code, and shall conform with such provisions as they relate to waiver of penalties and additions to tax.

(h) Timely payment. — Payments for taxes due under this section that are postmarked after the due date by which they are owed shall be considered late and may be subject to late fees or penalties: Provided, That payments that are received by the municipality after the due date, but that were postmarked on or before the due date shall be considered to be on time and shall not be assessed any late fees or penalties.

(i) Any third-party vendors who contract with a city or municipality to collect business and occupation taxes authorized by this section on behalf of a municipality may not charge for their services more than 20% of the amount of taxes collected.

 

 

 

Adopted

Rejected