LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
FISCAL NOTE, 77th Regular Session
February 26, 2001
TO: Honorable Frank Madla, Chair, Senate Committee on
Intergovernmental Relations
FROM: John Keel, Director, Legislative Budget Board
IN RE: SB607 by Van de Putte (Relating to the creation of a
municipal development corporation to provide educational
and job training; authorizing the imposition of certain
local taxes and the issuance of local bonds; providing
an administrative penalty.), As Introduced
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* No fiscal implication to the State is anticipated. *
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Local Government Impact
The bill would authorize a city to create a municipal development
corporation to provide education and job training. The bill would also
authorize the imposition of a local sales tax upon voter approval and the
issuance of revenue bonds. A city could not adopt this local sales tax
if the combined rate of all local sales taxes is two percent in any
location in the city. Additionally, the bill would require the board of
directors of a municipal development corporation to submit an annual
report to the Comptroller detailing the corporation's total revenue,
expenditures, and capital assets. The Comptroller would be authorized to
impose an administrative penalty of $200 a day if the report is
delinquent. The bill would require the Comptroller to submit a report on
the use of this local sales tax to the Legislature each biennium. The
bill would take effect immediately if it were to receive approval by
two-thirds vote in both houses; otherwise, it would take effect September
1, 2001.
Texas has approximately 1,200 incorporated cities that would have the
option to create a municipal development corporation. To create a
corporation, cities would be required to hold an election in order to
impose a sales tax to fund the corporation and file an incorporation fee.
The imposition of a sales tax, if approved by voters, would self-fund
the corporation and could not exceed one-half of one percent. Cities that
are currently at the legal cap for sales tax rate could still create a
municipal development corporation by holding an election to decrease the
rate of another sales tax and impose this sales tax.
If an incorporated city was to choose to hold an election to impose a
sales tax to create and fund a corporation, the city would either incur
the costs of a special election or could avoid additional costs by
including the issue in a regularly scheduled election.
Source Agencies: 320 Texas Workforce Commission, 304 Comptroller
of Public Accounts
LBB Staff: JK, DB