1-1 AN ACT
1-2 relating to the exemption from ad valorem taxation of property
1-3 owned by certain charitable organizations performing certain
1-4 functions.
1-5 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
1-6 SECTION 1. Section 11.18(d), Tax Code, is amended to read as
1-7 follows:
1-8 (d) A charitable organization must be organized exclusively
1-9 to perform religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or
1-10 educational purposes and, except as permitted by Subsection (h) of
1-11 this section, engage exclusively in performing one or more of the
1-12 following charitable functions:
1-13 (1) providing medical care without regard to the
1-14 beneficiaries' ability to pay, which in the case of a nonprofit
1-15 hospital or hospital system means providing charity care and
1-16 community benefits as set forth in Paragraph (A), (B), (C), (D),
1-17 (E), (F), (G), or (H):
1-18 (A) charity care and government-sponsored
1-19 indigent health care are provided at a level which is reasonable in
1-20 relation to the community needs, as determined through the
1-21 community needs assessment, the available resources of the hospital
1-22 or hospital system, and the tax-exempt benefits received by the
1-23 hospital or hospital system;
1-24 (B) charity care and government-sponsored
2-1 indigent health care are provided in an amount equal to at least
2-2 four percent of the hospital's or hospital system's net patient
2-3 revenue;
2-4 (C) charity care and government-sponsored
2-5 indigent health care are provided in an amount equal to at least
2-6 100 percent of the hospital's or hospital system's tax-exempt
2-7 benefits, excluding federal income tax;
2-8 (D) a nonprofit hospital that has been
2-9 designated as a disproportionate share hospital under the state
2-10 Medicaid program in the current year or in either of the previous
2-11 two fiscal years shall be considered to have provided a reasonable
2-12 amount of charity care and government-sponsored indigent health
2-13 care and shall be deemed in compliance with the standards in this
2-14 subsection;
2-15 (E) for tax years before 1996, charity care and
2-16 community benefits are provided in a combined amount equal to at
2-17 least five percent of the hospital's or hospital system's net
2-18 patient revenue, provided that charity care and
2-19 government-sponsored indigent health care are provided in an amount
2-20 equal to at least three percent of net patient revenue;
2-21 (F) beginning with the hospital's or hospital
2-22 system's tax year starting after 1995, charity care and community
2-23 benefits are provided in a combined amount equal to at least five
2-24 percent of the hospital's or hospital system's net patient revenue,
2-25 provided that charity care and government-sponsored indigent health
2-26 care are provided in an amount equal to at least four percent of
2-27 net patient revenue;
3-1 (G) a hospital operated on a nonprofit basis
3-2 that is located in a county with a population of less than 50,000
3-3 and in which the entire county or the population of the entire
3-4 county has been designated as a health professionals shortage area
3-5 is considered to be in compliance with the standards provided by
3-6 this subsection; or
3-7 (H) a hospital providing health care services to
3-8 inpatients or outpatients without receiving any payment for
3-9 providing those services from any source, including the patient or
3-10 person legally obligated to support the patient, third-party
3-11 payors, Medicare, Medicaid, or any other state or local indigent
3-12 care program but excluding charitable donations, legacies,
3-13 bequests, or grants or payments for research, is considered to be
3-14 in compliance with the standards provided by this subsection;
3-15 (2) providing support or relief to orphans,
3-16 delinquent, dependent, or handicapped children in need of
3-17 residential care, abused or battered spouses or children in need of
3-18 temporary shelter, the impoverished, or victims of natural disaster
3-19 without regard to the beneficiaries' ability to pay;
3-20 (3) providing support to elderly persons or the
3-21 handicapped without regard to the beneficiaries' ability to pay;
3-22 (4) preserving a historical landmark or site;
3-23 (5) promoting or operating a museum, zoo, library,
3-24 theater of the dramatic or performing arts, or symphony orchestra
3-25 or choir;
3-26 (6) promoting or providing humane treatment of
3-27 animals;
4-1 (7) acquiring, storing, transporting, selling, or
4-2 distributing water for public use;
4-3 (8) answering fire alarms and extinguishing fires with
4-4 no compensation or only nominal compensation to the members of the
4-5 organization;
4-6 (9) promoting the athletic development of boys or
4-7 girls under the age of 18 years;
4-8 (10) preserving or conserving wildlife;
4-9 (11) promoting educational development through loans
4-10 or scholarships to students;
4-11 (12) providing halfway house services pursuant to a
4-12 certification as a halfway house by the Board of Pardons and
4-13 Paroles;
4-14 (13) providing permanent housing and related social,
4-15 health care, and educational facilities for persons who are 62
4-16 years of age or older without regard to the residents' ability to
4-17 pay;
4-18 (14) promoting or operating an art gallery, museum, or
4-19 collection, in a permanent location or on tour, that is open to the
4-20 public;
4-21 (15) providing for the organized solicitation and
4-22 collection for distributions through gifts, grants, and agreements
4-23 to nonprofit charitable, education, religious, and youth
4-24 organizations that provide direct human, health, and welfare
4-25 services;
4-26 (16) performing biomedical or scientific research or
4-27 biomedical or scientific education for the benefit of the public;
5-1 (17) operating a television station that produces or
5-2 broadcasts educational, cultural, or other public interest
5-3 programming and that receives grants from the Corporation for
5-4 Public Broadcasting under 47 U.S.C. Section 396 and its subsequent
5-5 amendments;
5-6 (18) providing housing for low-income and
5-7 moderate-income families, for unmarried individuals 62 years of age
5-8 or older, for handicapped individuals, and for families displaced
5-9 by urban renewal, through the use of trust assets that are
5-10 irrevocably and, pursuant to a contract entered into before
5-11 December 31, 1972, contractually dedicated on the sale or
5-12 disposition of the housing to a charitable organization that
5-13 performs charitable functions described by Subdivision (9); [or]
5-14 (19) providing housing and related services to persons
5-15 who are 62 years of age or older in a retirement community, if the
5-16 retirement community provides independent living services, assisted
5-17 living services, and nursing services to its residents on a single
5-18 campus:
5-19 (A) without regard to the residents' ability to
5-20 pay; or
5-21 (B) in which at least four percent of the
5-22 retirement community's combined net resident revenue is provided in
5-23 charitable care to its residents; or
5-24 (20) providing housing on a cooperative basis to
5-25 students of an institution of higher education if:
5-26 (A) the organization is exempt from federal
5-27 income taxation under Section 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code
6-1 of 1986, and its subsequent amendments, by being listed as an
6-2 exempt entity under Section 501(c)(3) of that code;
6-3 (B) membership in the organization is open to
6-4 all students enrolled in the institution and is not limited to
6-5 those chosen by current members of the organization;
6-6 (C) the organization is governed by its members;
6-7 and
6-8 (D) the members of the organization share the
6-9 responsibility for managing the housing.
6-10 For purposes of satisfying Paragraph (F) of Subdivision (1),
6-11 a hospital or hospital system may not change its existing fiscal
6-12 year unless the hospital or hospital system changes its ownership
6-13 or corporate structure as a result of a sale or merger.
6-14 For purposes of this subsection, a hospital that satisfies
6-15 Paragraph (A), (D), (G), or (H) of Subdivision (1) shall be
6-16 excluded in determining a hospital system's compliance with the
6-17 standards provided by Paragraph (B), (C), (E), or (F) of
6-18 Subdivision (1).
6-19 For purposes of this subsection, the terms "charity care,"
6-20 "government-sponsored indigent health care," "health care
6-21 organization," "hospital system," "net patient revenue," "nonprofit
6-22 hospital," and "tax-exempt benefits" have the meanings set forth in
6-23 Sections 311.031 and 311.042, Health and Safety Code. A
6-24 determination of the amount of community benefits and charity care
6-25 and government-sponsored indigent health care provided by a
6-26 hospital or hospital system and the hospital's or hospital system's
6-27 compliance with the requirements of Section 311.045, Health and
7-1 Safety Code, shall be based on the most recently completed and
7-2 audited prior fiscal year of the hospital or hospital system.
7-3 The providing of charity care and government-sponsored
7-4 indigent health care in accordance with Paragraph (A) of
7-5 Subdivision (1) shall be guided by the prudent business judgment of
7-6 the hospital which will ultimately determine the appropriate level
7-7 of charity care and government-sponsored indigent health care based
7-8 on the community needs, the available resources of the hospital,
7-9 the tax-exempt benefits received by the hospital, and other factors
7-10 that may be unique to the hospital, such as the hospital's volume
7-11 of Medicare and Medicaid patients. These criteria shall not be
7-12 determinative factors, but shall be guidelines contributing to the
7-13 hospital's decision along with other factors which may be unique to
7-14 the hospital. The formulas contained in Paragraphs (B), (C), (E),
7-15 and (F) of Subdivision (1) shall also not be considered
7-16 determinative of a reasonable amount of charity care and
7-17 government-sponsored indigent health care.
7-18 The requirements of this subsection shall not apply to the
7-19 extent a hospital or hospital system demonstrates that reductions
7-20 in the amount of community benefits, charity care, and
7-21 government-sponsored indigent health care are necessary to maintain
7-22 financial reserves at a level required by a bond covenant, are
7-23 necessary to prevent the hospital or hospital system from
7-24 endangering its ability to continue operations, or if the hospital
7-25 or hospital system, as a result of a natural or other disaster, is
7-26 required substantially to curtail its operations.
7-27 In any fiscal year that a hospital or hospital system,
8-1 through unintended miscalculation, fails to meet any of the
8-2 standards in Subdivision (1), the hospital or hospital system shall
8-3 not lose its tax-exempt status without the opportunity to cure the
8-4 miscalculation in the fiscal year following the fiscal year the
8-5 failure is discovered by both meeting one of the standards and
8-6 providing an additional amount of charity care and
8-7 government-sponsored indigent health care that is equal to the
8-8 shortfall from the previous fiscal year. A hospital or hospital
8-9 system may apply this provision only once every five years.
8-10 SECTION 2. This Act takes effect January 1, 2000.
8-11 SECTION 3. The importance of this legislation and the
8-12 crowded condition of the calendars in both houses create an
8-13 emergency and an imperative public necessity that the
8-14 constitutional rule requiring bills to be read on three several
8-15 days in each house be suspended, and this rule is hereby suspended.
_______________________________ _______________________________
President of the Senate Speaker of the House
I certify that H.B. No. 2269 was passed by the House on May
11, 1999, by a non-record vote.
_______________________________
Chief Clerk of the House
I certify that H.B. No. 2269 was passed by the Senate on May
26, 1999, by the following vote: Yeas 30, Nays 0.
_______________________________
Secretary of the Senate
APPROVED: _____________________
Date
_____________________
Governor