94-030

Response March 29, 1995

 

 

 

Request

November 30, 1994

 

Val Oveson

Commission Chairman

Utah State Tax Commission

1950 West 210 North

Salt Lake City, Utah 84134

 

[RE: Seeking an Advisory Opinion Letter - Clarification of Certified Tax Rate Calculation when a RDA triggers the tax increment.]

 

Dear Chairman Oveson,

 

Following the advice of the Property Tax Division, we are writing this letter. As a city, we are seeking understanding concerning the calculation of a taxing entity's “Certified Tax Rate” for property tax. The perplexity happens when a redevelopment agency (RDA) triggers the tax increment for a certain area.

 

It is our understanding the certified tax rate is calculated as follows:

 

Current Year Collections

---------------------------------- = Certified Tax Rate (%)

199X “adjusted” property value

 

The numerator is the actual dollars collected that year. The denominator is the value of the property which is adjusted for a “couple of items”: (appeals, collection %, new growth, and redevelopment agencies). RDA’s only affect the denominator of the equation. There is not a problem with the equation as long as the RDA's “base year” and “trigger year” are the same year. (base year = RDA creation year; trigger year = year to start taking tax increment) In reality, this will never be the same year. It usually takes one to three years for the projects to develop enough to generate a big enough increment to trigger. After the creation of the RDA area and prior to the trigger year, the property taxes collected in that area are remitted to the different taxing entities (City, School District, County, State,..).

 

The problem: If any of the taxing entities receive any incremental property tax prior to the trigger year, they are guaranteed that property tax even though it is part of the increment that should (and does) go to the RDA. The result is a phantom tax increase that is given to the taxing entities. The RDA gets the increment by taking the incremental property value out of the denominator and apply the combined tax rates. The taxing entities get the same taxes by guaranteeing the numerator to be the same. By keeping the numerator the same and reducing the denominator, forces each taxing entity's certified tax rate to increase with no public hearing.

 

The City of XXXXX has two RDA project areas and one EDA (Economic Development Area) project area. Our first RDA area was created in XXXXX. This year is the first year we are triggering the increment to come to the RDA for the XXXXX RDA. Through the process of setting the City's tax rate this year, we discovered the confusion within the calculation of the Certified Tax Rate.

 

We as the City are the creators of the RDAs & EDAs. They are valuable tools available to the City to stimulate economic growth. It is not the City's intent to take advantage of it's taxpaying citizens by imposing a phantom rate increase through the taxing entities. After numerous phone calls with county and state officials, it is explained to us the formula is established by legislation and it is being carried out correctly.

 

We as the City are concerned the intent of the legislation is not being carried out. Why would we need to meet and get approval from the taxing entities to establish an area if the taxing entities are guaranteed, as a minimum, the prior year's tax collected. Even when a portion of that amount is the increment that goes to the RDA. Thus, the increment will be collected twice; 1) the property owners within the RDA area pay the county and the county remits the “increment portion” to the RDA. 2) the taxing entities are guaranteed they will receive at least the amount of tax they received in the prior year. The certified tax rates of each of the taxing entities are forced higher because the numerator stays the same and the denominator is lowered. The result is all the taxpayers within the different taxing entity's boundaries pay that incremental difference.

 

We as the City are seeking clarification from the Tax Commission the following items:

 

1. Is the “equation” being calculated and carried out correctly?

2. Is the legislative intent being followed?

 

This is the first year we will trigger an increment. We are planning to trigger the other two areas in the next three years. We feel this issue is big enough to get direction and clarification on before it goes any further.

 

We would appreciate your opinion on this issue.

 

Thank you,

 

XXXXX

 

 

March 29, 1995

 

Re: Advisory Opinion - - Redevelopment Agency Tax Increments and Their Effect on Truth-in-Taxation

 

Dear XXXXX:

 

This letter is in response to your request for the Tax Commission to issue an advisory opinion concerning the tax increment a redevelopment agency (RDA) in XXXXX will receive in XXXXX. As I understand the specific facts of your situation, you have asked for our determination of whether the payment of this tax increment will result in a tax increase for other taxing entities that share the same boundary with the RDA.

 

Since the RDA has not taken its tax increment in the past, this revenue has instead gone to the taxing entities. Now that the RDA is going to take its tax increment, you are concerned that the tax rate will increase to provide both the RDA its tax increment and the taxing entities the same revenue they received last year. You express a conviction that this situation should be considered a tax increase under the truth-in-taxation statutes. The Commission is prepared to advise you on the consequences of the tax increment for purposes of truth-in-taxation under current law.

 

Our research indicates as follows:

 

1. The truth-in-taxation laws are designed to “provide the same ad valorem property tax revenue for each taxing entity as was collected for the prior year.” Section 59-2-924 (2) (a) Utah Code Ann.

 

a. To insure this, the Commission includes a deduction to value due to RDA tax increments when calculating an entity's certified tax rate. Rule §§424P-24 (L) (1) Utah Admin. R.

 

b. As a result, the certified tax rate for each taxing entity within an RDA's boundary will allow the entity to retain its property tax revenue at the previous year's level, even when an RDA receives a tax increment.

 

 

2. Subsection 924 (2) (a) states that the certified rate is based on last year's collections to be used when calculating a certified tax rate. There is no exclusion related to the increased revenue a taxing may receive when an RDA delays in taking its tax increment. This statutory construction would indicate that there was no intent to exclude these proceeds from the last year's collections amount for each taxing entity.

 

3. Neither does the Commission find, as you assert, that taxing entities are required to approve the creation of an RDA only because they will lose the future revenue equal to all possible tax increments. Even though the taxing entities may retain their past revenues when an RDA takes its first tax increment later than its initial year of eligibility, they experience at least two other detriments for which the approval requirement could reasonably be inferred.

 

a. The taxing entities are forced to set higher tax rates to produce the same amount of revenue, which may be politically undesirable.

 

b. The taxing entities may not benefit from any new growth that occurs in the RDA area once the RDA does begin to take the tax increment.

 

As you can see under the situation you have presented, the tax area in which the RDA is located will experience an increase in taxes from the previous year. However, the truth-in taxation laws are designed to ensure that revenue generated by a tax entity does not increase without a public hearing, not that the revenue within a tax area does not increase. No tax entity will experience a tax increase because of the tax increment, and legislative intent is met by the current application of the certified tax rate process. This opinion is based upon the facts presented in this opinion. Obviously, if there are deviation from these facts, this opinion may be negated.

 

If you do not agree with this determination, you may appeal to the Tax Commission for a formal hearing. The results for that hearing would constitute a declaratory judgment and be appealable to the Utah State Supreme Court. A notice of Appeal Rights and a copy of the Utah Taxpayer Bill of Rights are attached.

 

For The Commission,

 

Alice Shearer

Commissioner