HB 1686-FN - AS INTRODUCED

 

 

2024 SESSION

24-2448

02/10

 

HOUSE BILL 1686-FN

 

AN ACT relative to requiring excess revenues raised through the statewide education property tax to be remitted to the education trust fund and prohibiting the department of revenue administration from setting negative local and county tax rates on real property.

 

SPONSORS: Rep. M. Smith, Straf. 10; Rep. S. Smith, Sull. 3; Rep. Noel, Coos 5; Rep. Cascadden, Coos 5; Rep. Muirhead, Graf. 12; Rep. Kenney, Straf. 10; Rep. Rollins, Sull. 3; Rep. B. Sullivan, Sull. 1; Rep. Spilsbury, Sull. 3

 

COMMITTEE: Education

 

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ANALYSIS

 

This bill requires that all of the proceeds of the statewide education property tax be spent by municipalities on the funding of a constitutionally adequate education or be remitted to the state for deposit in the education trust fund.  This bill also prohibits the department of revenue administration from setting negative local or county tax rates.

 

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Explanation: Matter added to current law appears in bold italics.

Matter removed from current law appears [in brackets and struckthrough.]

Matter which is either (a) all new or (b) repealed and reenacted appears in regular type.

24-2448

02/10

 

STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

 

In the Year of Our Lord Two Thousand Twenty Four

 

AN ACT relative to requiring excess revenues raised through the statewide education property tax to be remitted to the education trust fund and prohibiting the department of revenue administration from setting negative local and county tax rates on real property.

 

Be it Enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court convened:

 

1  New Sections; Adequate Education; Excess Statewide Education Property Tax Payment.  Amend RSA 198 by inserting after section 47 the following new sections:

198:47-a  Excess Statewide Education Property Tax Payment.

I.  Any statewide education property tax collected by a municipality pursuant to a warrant issued by the commissioner of the department of revenue administration pursuant to RSA 76:8 that exceeds the amount determined by the department of education to pay for an adequate education in that municipality shall be remitted to the department of revenue administration on or before March 15 of the tax year in which the excess occurs.

II.  The commissioner of the department of revenue administration shall collect from the municipality the excess tax and pay the excess tax over to the state treasurer for deposit in the education trust fund.

III.  The amount of such excess to be remitted shall not include any income derived from the investment of funds by the municipal treasurers under RSA 41:29 and RSA 48:16.  Any funds remaining after full payment of the excess tax required in paragraph I shall become available for unrestricted use by the municipality.

198:47-b  Forms.  The commissioner shall approve and provide forms relative to the reporting and remitting of excess statewide education property tax by the municipalities.

2 Determination of Education Grants.  Amend RSA 198:41, I(b) to read as follows:

(b) Subtract the amount of the education tax warrant to be issued by the commissioner of revenue administration for such municipality reported pursuant to RSA 76:8 for the next tax year, not including the amount of the education tax payment remitted back to the department of revenue administration under 198:47-a; and

3  Assessment of Education Tax; Commissioner's Warrant.  Amend RSA 76:8, II to read as follows:

II.  The commissioner shall issue a warrant under the commissioner's hand and official seal for the amount computed in paragraph I to the selectmen or assessors of each municipality by December 15 directing them to assess such sum and pay it to the municipality for the use of the school district or districts and, if there is an excess statewide education property tax payment pursuant to RSA 198:47-a, directing them to assess the amount of the excess payment and pay it to the department of revenue administration for deposit in the education trust fund.  Such sums shall be assessed at such times as may be prescribed for other taxes assessed by such selectmen or assessors of the municipality.

4  New Paragraph; Setting of Tax Rates by Commissioner; Negative Rates Prohibited.  Amend RSA 21-J:35 by inserting after paragraph II the following new paragraph:

II-a.  The commissioner shall not set negative local, education or county tax rates that offset other taxes on real property.  

5  Effective Date.  This act shall take effect April 1, 2024.

 

LBA

24-2448

Revised 12/19/23

 

HB 1686-FN- FISCAL NOTE

AS INTRODUCED

 

AN ACT relative to requiring excess revenues raised through the statewide education property tax to be remitted to the education trust fund and prohibiting the department of revenue administration from setting negative local and county tax rates on real property.

 

FISCAL IMPACT:      [ X ] State              [ X ] County               [ X ] Local              [    ] None

 

 

Estimated State Impact - Increase / (Decrease)

 

FY 2024

FY 2025

FY 2026

FY 2027

Revenue

$0

$0

$0

$0

Revenue Fund(s)

None

Expenditures

$0

Education Trust Fund - ($29,036,762)

 

General Fund - DRA $300,000

Indeterminable Decrease

Funding Source(s)

General Fund, Education Trust Fund

Appropriations

$0

$0

$0

$0

Funding Source(s)

None

Does this bill provide sufficient funding to cover estimated expenditures? [X] See Below

Does this bill authorize new positions to implement this bill? [X] N/A

 

Estimated Political Subdivision Impact - Increase / (Decrease)

 

FY 2024

FY 2025

FY 2026

FY 2027

County Revenue

$0

Indeterminable Decrease

County Expenditures

$0

$0

$0

$0

Local Revenue

$0

($29,036,762)

Indeterminable Decrease

Local Expenditures

$0

$0

$0

$0

 

METHODOLOGY:

This bill requires excess revenues raised through the statewide education property tax (SWEPT) be remitted to the Department of Revenue Administration (DRA) to deposit into the Education Trust Fund (ETF) and prohibits the DRA from setting negative education tax rates. The DRA has provided the following understanding of this bill’s intent:

 

  • Section 1 enacts a new RSA 198:47-a, requiring a municipality to remit to the DRA by March 15 of the tax year, the amount of SWEPT collected by that municipality in excess of the amount determined by the Department of Education (DOE) to pay for an adequate education in that municipality.  
    • Section 3 of the proposed legislation requires the excess SWEPT amount to be assessed by the municipalities and remitted to the DRA for deposit into the ETF. The excess SWEPT amount to be remitted shall not include income derived from the investment of funds by the municipal treasurer under RSA 41:29 and RSA 48:16. Any funds remaining after full payment of the excess funds shall become available for unrestricted use by the municipality.

 

  • Section 2 amends the calculation of education grants in RSA 198:41, I by excluding the excess SWEPT from the formula.

 

  • Section 4 enacts a new RSA 21-J:35, II-a prohibiting the DRA from setting negative local, education, or county tax rates that offset other taxes on real property.

 

The DRA has provided the following relative to this bill’s potential fiscal impact:

 

  • The SWEPT is currently assessed on each property owner’s municipal property tax bill and is entirely locally retained by the municipality, even if the amount of SWEPT assessed and collected by the municipality is in excess of the total cost of education calculated by the Department of Education. This bill would instead require each municipality that assesses and collects SWEPT in excess of the amount for an adequate education calculated by the Department of Education to remit such excess to DRA for deposit into the ETF. As a result, the proposed legislation would result in an indeterminable increase in revenue to the state ETF and a corresponding indeterminable decrease in revenue to municipalities that currently retain excess SWEPT. The DRA is unable to calculate the effect to state revenues because the total cost of an adequate education is calculated by Department of Education. The DRA is able to compare the SWEPT with the DOE’s calculation of cost of an adequate education for Tax Year 2023 (FY 2024) of $810 million. A comparison made at the municipality level showed municipalities with excess SWEPT totaled approximately $26 million. FY 2025 preliminary estimates indicate this amount would be approximately $29 million (see additional details below).

 

  • The prohibition against the setting of negative local, education, or county tax rates that offsets other taxes on real property would result in an indeterminable increase to local revenues. This prohibition would be effective April 1, 2024 and therefore shall first apply to tax rates set in the Fall of 2024 and impact local revenues for FY 2025.

 

  • The DRA would be responsible for updating all necessary forms related to this proposed legislation, which would not result in any additional administrative costs that could not be absorbed in the DRA operating budget. However, the proposed legislation contemplates that the DRA will bill and collect excess SWEPT.  To administer this new requirement and build out the functionality within the new Revenue Information Management System (RIMS) and on-line user portal Granite Tax Connect (GTC), the estimated cost is $300,000.

 

Lastly, the DRA has provided the following technical comments relative to this bill:

 

  • This bill is effective April 1, 2024 and will first apply to warrants for TY 2024 on instructing the assessment for the 2024 SWEPT and collected via the final property tax bill in the fall of 2024 (TY 2024 running from April 1, 2024 through March 31, 2025). As the 2024 warrants were issued by the DRA in September 2023, the DRA is not able to request for the remittance of any excess SWEPT from the municipalities through the Tax Year 2024 SWEPT warrant as required in Section 3 of this proposed legislation. The DRA suggests additional language to be included in Section 3, amending RSA 76:8, II to allow the DRA to issue a separate warrant to collect the excess SWEPT from Tax Year 2024 that is due by March 15, 2025.

 

  • The DRA suggests that additional language be included to require the Department of Education to provide the information of excess SWEPT to the DRA in sufficient time for DRA to issue the warrants.

 

Section 2 of this bill remits excess Statewide Education Property Tax (SWEPT) collected by municipalities to the education trust fund. While the proposed bill does not explicitly define “excess SWEPT”, the mechanics of how the adequacy formula interacts with SWEPT, makes excess SWEPT revenue equal to SWEPT revenue exceeding the cost of an adequate education. Using this methodology, excess SWEPT is estimated to be $29,036,762 for FY 2025. Since the proposed bill does not reallocate the excess SWEPT funding to another program after being remitted to the education trust fund, the estimated impact is a decrease of $29,036,762 in state expenditures, as the excess would not be kept in the form of a grant, and a decrease in local revenue in the form of a reduced state grant. Based on FY 2025 preliminary data, “excess SWEPT” by municipality is as follows:

State Total

$29,036,762

Alton

$1,321,539

Bartlett

$1,323,865

Bridgewater

$334,983

Cambridge

$15,417

Carroll

$490,340

Center Harbor

$505,349

Clarksville

$14,113

Dix's Grant

$1,650

Dixville

$14,553

Easton

$26,530

Eaton

$23,351

Errol

$90,324

Franconia

$235,814

Freedom

$687,553

Gilford

$146,240

Hale's Location

$99,692

Harrisville

$105,664

Hart's Location

$24,530

Hebron

$279,117

Holderness

$552,461

Jackson

$550,375

Lincoln

$1,584,356

Martin's Location

$105

Meredith

$1,625,279

Millsfield

$7,209

Moultonborough

$5,105,266

New Castle

$1,319,596

New London

$1,179,248

Newbury

$973,964

Newington

$723,992

North Hampton

$493,169

Odell

$4,637

Other Unincorp. Places

$32,514

Pinkham's Grant

$7,480

Pittsburg

$400,467

Portsmouth

$803,917

Randolph

$8,872

Rye

$2,264,409

Sandwich

$284,129

Success

$21,892

Sugar Hill

$72,606

Sunapee

$1,557,735

Tuftonboro

$1,396,872

Washington

$23,342

Waterville Valley

$504,231

Wentworth Location

$13,217

Wolfeboro

$1,784,796

 

AGENCIES CONTACTED:

Department of Education and Department of Revenue Administration