South Carolina General Assembly
115th Session, 2003-2004

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S. 813

STATUS INFORMATION

General Bill
Sponsors: Senators Richardson, Hutto, Ravenel, Kuhn and Branton
Document Path: l:\council\bills\dka\3698dw04.doc

Introduced in the Senate on January 13, 2004
Introduced in the House on February 19, 2004
Last Amended on May 19, 2004
Currently residing in the Senate Committee on Finance

Summary: County option sales tax referendum for capital projects, additional uses of

HISTORY OF LEGISLATIVE ACTIONS

     Date      Body   Action Description with journal page number
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   1/13/2004  Senate  Introduced and read first time SJ-31
   1/13/2004  Senate  Referred to Committee on Judiciary SJ-31
   2/11/2004  Senate  Committee report: Favorable Judiciary SJ-37
   2/12/2004  Senate  Read second time SJ-16
   2/12/2004  Senate  Ordered to third reading with notice of amendments SJ-16
   2/18/2004  Senate  Read third time and sent to House SJ-17
   2/19/2004  House   Introduced and read first time HJ-13
   2/19/2004  House   Referred to Committee on Judiciary HJ-14
   2/25/2004  House   Recalled from Committee on Judiciary HJ-47
   2/25/2004  House   Referred to Committee on Ways and Means HJ-47
   5/13/2004  House   Committee report: Favorable with amendment Ways and 
                        Means HJ-4
   5/17/2004          Scrivener's error corrected
   5/19/2004  House   Objection by Rep. Kennedy and Cobb-Hunter HJ-74
   5/19/2004  House   Requests for debate-Rep(s). JE Smith, Stillle, Loftis, 
                        and Vaughn HJ-74
   5/19/2004  House   Amended HJ-289
   5/19/2004  House   Read second time HJ-301
   5/19/2004  House   Roll call Yeas-73  Nays-26 HJ-301
   5/20/2004  House   Read third time and returned to Senate with amendments 
                        HJ-103
    6/2/2004  Senate  Recommitted to Committee on Finance SJ-35

View the latest legislative information at the LPITS web site

VERSIONS OF THIS BILL

1/13/2004
2/11/2004
5/13/2004
5/17/2004
5/19/2004

(Text matches printed bills. Document has been reformatted to meet World Wide Web specifications.)

Indicates Matter Stricken

Indicates New Matter

AMENDED

May 19, 2004

S. 813

Introduced by Senators Richardson, Hutto, Ravenel and Kuhn

S. Printed 5/19/04--H.

Read the first time February 19, 2004.

            

A BILL

TO AMEND SECTION 4-10-330, CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, RELATING TO THE BALLOT QUESTION SUBMITTED TO THE QUALIFIED ELECTORS OF A COUNTY FOR THE APPROVAL OF THE IMPOSITION OF A SALES AND USE TAX IN THE COUNTY AND THE PURPOSES FOR WHICH THE PROCEEDS OF THE TAX MAY BE USED, SO AS TO ADD PUBLIC PARKING GARAGES AND BEACH ACCESS AND BEACH RENOURISHMENT FOR WHICH THE PROCEEDS OF THE TAX MAY BE USED.

Amend Title To Conform

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina:

PART I

SECTION    1.    Section 4-10-330(A)(1) of the 1976 Code, as added by Act 138 of 1997, is amended to read:

"(1)    the purpose for which the proceeds of the tax are to be used, which may include projects located within or without, or both within and without, the boundaries of the local governmental entities, including the county, municipalities, and special purpose districts located in the county area, and may include the following types of projects:

(a)    highways, roads, streets, and bridges, and public parking garages and related facilities;

(b)    courthouses, administration buildings, civic centers, hospitals, emergency medical facilities, police stations, fire stations, jails, correctional facilities, detention facilities, libraries, coliseums, or any combination of these projects;

(c)    cultural, recreational, or historic facilities, or any combination of these facilities;

(d)    water, sewer, or water and sewer projects;

(e)    flood control projects and storm water management facilities;

(f)    beach access and beach renourishment;

(g)    jointly operated projects of the county, a municipality, special purpose district, and school district, or any combination of those entities, for the projects delineated in subitems (a) through (e) (f) of this subsection;

(g)(h)    any combination of the projects described in subitems (a) through (f) (g) of this item;"

PART II

SECTION    2.    A.        Article 5, Chapter 6, Title 12 of the 1976 Code is amended by adding:

"Section 12-6-515.    (A)    Notwithstanding the rates of taxes imposed pursuant to Section 12-6-510, beginning with taxes due for the 2005 taxable year and continuing each taxable year thereafter, the then applicable top marginal rate of income tax imposed by that section is reduced by .225 until the top marginal rate of income tax attains a permanent rate of 4.75 percent. The department shall make the necessary adjustments to the rates and the brackets otherwise applicable pursuant to Section 12-6-510.

(B)    Notwithstanding the scheduled reductions in the top marginal income tax rate provided in subsection (A) of this section, beginning with the top marginal rate applicable for taxable year 2006, the reduction otherwise scheduled must not be made for that taxable year if estimated general fund revenue growth as established in the February fifteenth revenue forecast of the Board of Economic Advisors is less than two percent of the most recent estimate by the board of general fund revenues for the current fiscal year. No reduction in the top marginal rate made pursuant to this section may exceed .225 for any one taxable year.

In addition, no reductions in the income tax rates provided for in this section for any taxable year may occur unless the Board of Economic Advisors certifies that sufficient general fund revenues for the fiscal year immediately following the reduction will remain available for the General Assembly in the annual general appropriations act for that year to maintain K-12 education funding at the level of the previous year."

B.     This section takes effect July 1, 2005. Adjustments to withholding or estimated tax payments to reflect the lower 2005 taxable year marginal income tax rate may not be made before that date.

PART III

SECTION    3.    A.        Section 12-37-224 of the 1976 Code is amended to read:

"Section 12-37-224.    (A)    A motor home on which the interest portion of indebtedness is deductible pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code as an interest expense on a qualified primary or second residence is also a primary or second residence for purposes of ad valorem property taxation in this State and is considered real property rather than personal property for property tax purposes.

(B)    For all purposes of the property tax, including the assessment ratios provided pursuant to Section (8)(B), Article X of the Constitution of this State, a trailer used in camping and recreational travel, on which the interest portion of purchase money debt is deductible pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 as an interest expense on a qualified primary or second residence, is deemed a private passenger motor vehicle."

B.     This section takes effect upon approval by the Governor and applies for recreation trailer property tax years beginning after 2004.

PART IV

SECTION    4.    Chapter 10, Title 4 of the 1976 Code is amended by adding:

"Article 7

Municipal Capital Projects Sales Tax Act

Section 4-10-710.    This article may be cited as the 'Municipal Capital Project Sales Tax Act'.

Section 4-10-720.    (A)    Subject to the requirements of this article, the municipal governing body may impose a one percent sales and use tax by ordinance, subject to a referendum, within the municipality for a specific purpose or purposes and for a limited amount of time to collect a limited amount of money. The revenues collected pursuant to this article may be used to defray debt service on bonds issued to pay for projects authorized in this article.

(B)    The tax authorized by this article must not be imposed within a municipality that is already subject to a sales tax authorized by Title 4 or within a school district that is already subject to a sales tax authorized by a local act of the General Assembly.

Section 4-10-730.    The governing body of a municipality must consider proposals for funding capital projects within the municipality and formulate the referendum question that is to appear on the ballot pursuant to Section 4-10-740(D).

Section 4-10-740.    (A)    The sales and use tax authorized by this article is imposed by an enacting ordinance of the municipal governing body containing the ballot question formulated by its governing body pursuant to Section 4-10-730, subject to referendum approval in the municipality. The ordinance must specify:

(1)    the purpose for which the proceeds of the tax are to be used, which may include projects located within or without, or both within and without, the boundaries of the municipality and may include the following types of projects:

(a)    highways, roads, streets, and bridges;

(b)    administration buildings, civic centers, hospitals, emergency medical facilities, police stations, fire stations, jails, correctional facilities, detention facilities, libraries, coliseums, parking facilities, or any combination of these projects;

(c)    cultural, recreational, or historic facilities, or any combination of these facilities;

(d)    water, sewer, or water and sewer projects;

(e)    flood control projects and storm water management facilities;

(f)    jointly operated projects of the municipality, county, special purpose district, and school district, or any combination of those entities, for the projects delineated in subitems (a) through (e) of this subsection;

(g)    any combination of the projects described in subitems (a) through (f) of this item;

(2)    the maximum time, stated in terms of calendar or fiscal years or quarters, or a combination thereof, not to exceed seven years from the date of imposition, for which the tax may be imposed;

(3)    the maximum cost of the project or facilities funded from proceeds of the tax and the maximum amount of net proceeds to be raised by the tax; and

(4)    any other condition precedent, as determined by the commission, to the imposition of the sales and use tax authorized by this article or condition or restriction on the use of sales and use tax revenue collected pursuant to this article.

(B)    When the tax authorized by this article is imposed for more than one purpose, the enacting ordinance must set forth the priority in which the net proceeds are to be expended for the purposes stated. The enacting ordinance may set forth a formula or system by which multiple projects are funded simultaneously.

(C)    Upon receipt of the ordinance, the municipal election commission must conduct a referendum on the question of imposing the sales and use tax in the municipality. A referendum for this purpose must be held at the time of the general election. Two weeks before the referendum the election commission must publish in a newspaper of general circulation the question that is to appear on the ballot, with the list of projects and the cost of the projects. This notice is in lieu of any other notice otherwise required by law.

(D)    The referendum question to be on the ballot must read substantially as follows:

'Must a special one percent sales and use tax be imposed in (municipality) for not more than (time) to raise the amounts specified for the following purposes?

(1)    $________ for __________

(2)    $________ for __________

(3)    etc.

Yes    [ ]

No    [ ]'

(E)    All qualified electors desiring to vote in favor of imposing the tax for the stated purposes shall vote 'yes' and all qualified electors opposed to levying the tax shall vote 'no'. If a majority of the votes cast are in favor of imposing the tax, then the tax is imposed as provided in this article and the enacting ordinance. A subsequent referendum on this question must be held on the date prescribed in subsection (C). The election commission shall conduct the referendum under the election laws of this State, mutatis mutandis, and shall certify the result no later than November thirtieth to the municipal governing body and to the Department of Revenue.

(F)    Upon receipt of the returns of the referendum, the municipal governing body, by resolution, must declare the results of the referendum. In this event, the results of the referendum, as declared by resolution of the municipal governing body, are not open to question except by a suit or proceeding instituted within thirty days from the date the resolution is adopted.

Section 4-10-750.    (A)    If the sales and use tax is approved in the referendum, the tax is imposed on the first of May following the date of the referendum. If the certification is not timely made to the Department of Revenue, the imposition is postponed for twelve months.

(B)    The tax terminates on the earlier of:

(1)    the final day of the maximum time period specified for the imposition; or

(2)    the end of the calendar month during which the Department of Revenue determines that the tax has raised revenues sufficient to provide the net proceeds equal to or greater than the amount specified in the referendum question.

(C)    Amounts collected in excess of the required net proceeds must first be applied, if necessary, to complete a project for which the tax was imposed; otherwise, the excess funds must be credited to the general fund of the municipality.

Section 4-10-760.    (A)    The tax levied pursuant to this article must be administered and collected by the Department of Revenue in the same manner that other sales and use taxes are collected. The department may prescribe amounts that may be added to the sales price because of the tax.

(B)    The tax authorized by this article is in addition to all other local sales and use taxes and applies to the gross proceeds of sales in the applicable area that is subject to the tax imposed by Chapter 36 of Title 12 and the enforcement provisions of Chapter 54 of Title 12. The gross proceeds of the sale of items subject to a maximum tax in Chapter 36 of Title 12 are exempt from the tax imposed by this article. The tax imposed by this article also applies to tangible personal property subject to the use tax in Article 13, Chapter 36 of Title 12.

(C)    A taxpayer required to remit taxes under Article 13, Chapter 36 of Title 12 must identify the municipality in which the personal property purchased at retail is stored, used, or consumed in this State.

(D)    A utility is required to report sales in the municipality in which the consumption of the tangible personal property occurs.

(E)    A taxpayer subject to the tax imposed by Section 12-36-920, who owns or manages rental units in more than one municipality, must report separately in his sales tax return the total gross proceeds from business done in each municipality.

(F)    The gross proceeds of sales of tangible personal property delivered after the imposition date of the tax levied under this article in a municipality, either under the terms of a construction contract executed before the imposition date, or a written bid submitted before the imposition date, culminating in a construction contract entered into before or after the imposition date, are exempt from the sales and use tax provided in this article if a verified copy of the contract is filed with the Department of Revenue within six months after the imposition date of the sales and use tax provided for in this article.

(G)    Notwithstanding the imposition date of the sales and use tax authorized pursuant to this chapter, with respect to services that are billed regularly on a monthly basis, the sales and use tax authorized pursuant to this article is imposed beginning on the first day of the billing period beginning on or after the imposition date.

Section 4-10-770.    The revenues of the tax collected under this article must be remitted to the Department of Revenue and placed on deposit with the State Treasurer and credited to a fund separate and distinct from the general fund of the State. After deducting the amount of any refunds made and costs to the Department of Revenue of administering the tax, not to exceed one percent of the revenues, the State Treasurer shall distribute the revenues quarterly to the municipal treasurer and the revenues must be used only for the purposes stated in the imposition ordinance. The State Treasurer may correct misallocations by adjusting subsequent distributions, but these adjustments must be made in the same fiscal year as the misallocations. However, allocations made as a result of city or county code errors must be corrected prospectively.

Section 4-10-780.    The Department of Revenue shall furnish data to the State Treasurer and to the municipal treasurers receiving revenues for the purpose of calculating distributions and estimating revenues. The information that must be supplied to municipalities upon request includes, but is not limited to, gross receipts, net taxable sales, and tax liability by taxpayers. Information about a specific taxpayer is considered confidential and is governed by the provisions of Section 12-54-240. A person violating this section is subject to the penalties provided in Section 12-54-240.

Section 4-10-790.    Annually, and only in the month of June, funds collected by the department from the municipal option capital project sales tax, which are not identified as to the governmental unit due the tax, must be transferred, after reasonable effort by the department to determine the appropriate governmental unit, to the State Treasurer's Office. The State Treasurer shall distribute these funds to the municipal treasurer and the revenues must be used only for the purposes stated in the imposition ordinance."

PART V

SECTION    5.    A.        This section may be cited as the Fiscal Discipline Plan of 2004.

B.     Section 6, Act 356 of 2002, is designated as Section 11-11-180 of the 1976 Code and is amended to read:

"SECTION    6.    Section 11-11-180.    (A)    Upon the close of a fiscal year on June 30, the Comptroller General shall account for general fund revenues and expenditures from a budgetary-based approach no later than August 31 succeeding the end of the fiscal year. If expenditures exceed revenues and an operating deficit is determined, this information must be reported to the State Budget and Control Board before September first, and the matter of the operating deficit must be placed as the first item on the agenda of the first meeting of the State Budget and Control Board following the Comptroller General's closing of the books for the fiscal year.

(B)    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, upon a determination by the Comptroller General that, at the close of a fiscal year, that funds will be are needed to balance the budgetary general fund after the use of the General Reserve Fund as provided in Section 11-11-310(B) of the 1976 Code, the State Budget and Control Board is authorized to borrow the amount needed to balance the budgetary general fund by borrowing from any department of state government any surplus which may be on hand in the Office of the State Treasurer to the credit of any such department. Upon approval by the board of a repayment schedule, the State Treasurer is authorized to transfer to the board from the general fund the amount necessary to repay the loan with interest no later than June 30 of the following fiscal year. This provision takes effect upon signature of the Governor."

C.     (A)    Before the close of the state's books for fiscal year 2003-2004, the State Treasurer shall transfer an amount of fiscal year 2003-2004 General Reserve Fund revenue up to fifty million dollars to repay general depository accounts used to offset the fiscal year 2001-2002 operating deficit.

(B)    To the extent revenues in the Capital Reserve Fund for fiscal years 2004-2005 and 2005-2006 are available for appropriation by the General Assembly, as provided in Article III, Section 36(B)(2) of the Constitution of this State and Section 11-11-320 of the 1976 Code, it is the intent of the General Assembly to make additional repayments of any remaining accumulated operating deficit for fiscal year 2001-2002 in an amount not to exceed fifty million dollars a year, if so much is necessary, as the first order of priority in the appropriation of Capital Reserve Fund revenues for fiscal years 2004-2005 and 2005-2006.

(C)    The General Assembly declares that the term "other nonrecurring purposes" under Article III, Section 36(B)(2) of the Constitution of this State includes operating deficits from previous fiscal years.

D.     (A)    In addition to all other applicable limitations on general fund appropriations and notwithstanding any other provisions of law, for fiscal years 2004-2005 through 2008-2009, total general fund appropriations for the fiscal year may not exceed such appropriations for the preceding fiscal year by more than three percent. The Office of State Budget shall certify to the Governor and the chairmen respectively of the House Ways and Means Committee and Senate Finance Committee the total general fund appropriations allowed for a fiscal year pursuant to this section. In calculating the limitation, there must be removed from general fund appropriations for the preceding year any amounts determined by the Office of the State Budget to be nonrecurring. Before the Governor may submit the proposed budget for these fiscal years, the proposal must include the certificate of the Director of the Office of State Budget that the proposed budget conforms to the limitation imposed by this section. The annual general appropriations bill may not be given third reading in the House of Representatives and Senate unless a similar certificate is received by the presiding officer in each house from the Director of the Office of State Budget before the bill is given third reading.

(B)    Notwithstanding any other provisions of law providing for the uses of surplus general fund revenues, after the close of books for fiscal years 2003-2004 through 2008-2009, to the extent any fiscal year 2001-2002 accumulated operating deficit remains:

(1)    the State Treasurer first shall transfer to the appropriate depository accounts as much of the surplus as is necessary to eliminate the deficit;

(2)    should any surplus remain after item (1) is accomplished, the remaining surplus must be applied to restore any amounts previously withdrawn from the general reserve fund and not previously restored; and

(3)    should any surplus remain after items (1) and (2) are accomplished, the balance is deemed Capital Reserve Fund revenues and must be appropriated in the manner and used for the purposes provided by law for the Capital Reserve Fund.

E.     For fiscal years 2004-2005 through 2008-2009, amounts required to be transferred to the General Reserve Fund established pursuant to Article III, Section 34(A) of the Constitution of this State and Section 11-11-310 of the 1976 Code, including amounts necessary to restore previously withdrawn amounts, are deemed to be recurring general fund appropriations except that this budgetary treatment of these transfers does not affect the calculations of any spending formulas based on a percentage of general fund revenues.

PART VI

SECTION    6.    Unless otherwise provided for, this act takes effect upon approval by the Governor.

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