| HB 30 | Public Transit Districts Annexation Amendments |
|---|---|
| HB 136 | County Option Sales and Use Tax for Highways, Fixed Guideways, or Systems for Public Transit |
| HB 221 | Extending the Sales and Use Tax Exemption for Pollution Control Facilities |
| HB 271 | Airport to University of Utah Light Rail Restricted Account Amendments |
| HB 294 | County Option Funding for Botanical, Cultural, Recreational, and Zoological Organizations or Facilities Amendments |
| SB 17 | Sales and Use Tax - Exemption for Semiconductor Fabricating or Processing Materials |
| SB 23 | State and Local Taxes, Fees, and Charges Related to Telecommunications |
| SB 147 | Streamlined Sales Tax Project Amendments |
| SB 213 | Amendments to Sales and Use Tax (Cable and Satellite Providers) |
| 2002 HB 249 | Sales and Use Tax - Location of Transactions |
| 2001 SB 174 | Sales and Use Tax - Exemption for Semiconductor Fabricating or Processing Materials |
Requires counties, cities, and towns to obtain voter approval to incorporate a public or mass transit district in which a sales and use tax is imposed to fund the public transportation system.
Authorizes qualifying counties, by voter approval, to impose a .25% local option sales and use tax beginning on or after 4/1/04 for highways, fixed guideways, or systems for public or mass transit. To qualify, a county, or a city or town within that county, must have no additional public or mass transit tax. Currently, only Davis, Salt Lake, and Weber counties impose the additional .25% mass transit tax. Therefore, as an example, these counties, or cities or towns within these counties, may not impose the tax.
This county option tax does not qualify for a vendor discount (Utah Code §59-12-108(3)).
Extends the expiration of the sales and use tax exemption to create, construct, or install a pollution control facility from June 30, 2004 to June 30, 2009.
Stops the deposit of 1/64% of local sales and use tax revenues into the Airport to University of Utah Light Rail Restricted Account. Requires the Division of Finance to distribute remaining funds to municipalities that have a portion of the rail constructed within their boundaries by June 30, 2003.
Modifies the formula by which counties allocate and distribute sales and use taxes collected under this section to ensure adequate and predictable support to a fixed number of organizations. The bill also expands the potential recipients of such funding.
Extends the exemption for a sale or lease of semiconductor fabricating or processing materials from June 30, 2004 to June 30, 2007. Also see 2001 SB 174 which increases the amount of the exemption.
Modifies Utah Municipal Code (§10-1-203) which pertains to licensing fees and taxes imposed by cities and towns to enact the Municipal Telecommunications License Tax Act (§10-1-401 to 10-1-410) and amends the Emergency Telephone Service Law (69-2-5).
The location of a transaction for telephone service will be determined by the nine-digit zip code of the residential or primary business street address of the purchaser. If a zip code is shared by a county, city, or town, the lowest combined tax rate will apply. The location of a transaction for mobile telecommunication service will be determined by the place of primary use of the transaction and to the extent as defined in the Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing Act, 4 U.S.C. Sec. 124 (click here to read section of U.S. Code).
A municipality may only implement, change, or repeal the license tax or 911 fee on the first day of a calendar quarter and after a 75-day period beginning on the date the Tax Commission was notified.
To simplify and modernize Utahs sales and use tax taxes and to reduce the burden of compliance for all sellers and all types of commerce, the Tax Commission is authorized to enter into an agreement with one or more states to establish uniform standards. The Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Agreement will amend and modify Utah Tax Code, Title 10, Part 3, of the Municipal Energy Sales and Use Tax Act and Title 59, of Revenue and Taxation, which contains Utahs Sales and Use Tax Act.
The amendments provide for a refundable income tax credit for certain purchases made on or after July 1, 2004, that are effective 1/1/2004. For taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2004, a taxpayer may claim a refundable income tax credit against sales and use tax paid in an amount equal to the amount of income tax paid for:
The credit may not be carried forward or back and taxpayers must retain a copy of the purchase receipt to show the amount of tax paid for record keeping purposes.
Taxes the purchaser for amounts paid for multi-channel video and audio services provided by a multi-channel video or audio service provider within the state and to the extent permitted by federal law. The provider or seller of services is responsible for accounting, collecting, reporting, and remitting the tax to the Tax Commission.
The transaction of a sale for multi-channel video or audio service takes place at the delivery location for which a person or entity contracts with the provider. The nine-digit zip code of the customer's "place of primary use" shall determine the delivery location for taxing purposes.
A multi-channel video or audio service provider is defined as any person or group of persons that:
Providers include the following except those specifically exempted by state or federal law:
Federal law prohibits localities within states from taxing "direct to home" satellite services. This means that satellite service provided to homes (residential) can only be subject to the state tax and not any of the local taxes.
Legislation in 2001 created an exemption for semiconductor materials that was to be phased in over a three-year period. From 7/1/03 to 6/30/2004, 100% of a qualified sale or lease of seminconductor fabricating or processing materials is exempt. Also see SB 17 (2003) which extends the sunset date of this exemption.