TO: | Honorable Rene Oliveira, Chair, House Committee on Ways & Means |
FROM: | John S. O'Brien, Director, Legislative Budget Board |
IN RE: | HB1324 by Rios Ybarra (Relating to the municipal hotel occupancy tax imposed in certain municipalities.), As Introduced |
Fiscal Year | Probable Net Positive/(Negative) Impact to General Revenue Related Funds |
---|---|
2010 | $0 |
2011 | $0 |
2012 | $0 |
2013 | $0 |
2014 | $0 |
Fiscal Year | Probable Revenue Gain/(Loss) from City of South Padre Island |
---|---|
2010 | $674,000 |
2011 | $777,000 |
2012 | $815,000 |
2013 | $856,000 |
2014 | $899,000 |
The bill would amend Chapter 351 of the Tax Code, regarding the municipal hotel occupancy tax.
The bill would set the maximum allowable municipal hotel occupancy tax rate for an "eligible barrier island costal municipality" at 8.5 percent of the price paid for a room. The bill would allow the municipality to use some or all of this tax revenue for a variety of specified purposes, but must use the amount of revenue collected from one-half of one percentage point of the tax rate for erosion control projects.
The bill would take effect immediately upon enactment, if it receives two-thirds vote in each house. Otherwise, the bill would take effect September 1, 2009.
Based on geographical limitations set forth in the bill, the City of South Padre Island would be the only eligible municipality. To estimate the potential maximum fiscal impact of this bill, data on taxable hotel receipts for the City of South Padre Island were gathered from Comptroller tax files, which were then multiplied by 1.5 percent (the difference between the city's current seven percent rate and the maximum rate should this bill become law). The fiscal impact was adjusted for the effective date and extrapolated through 2014.
The table above assumes adoption of the maximum 8.5 percent municipal hotel occupancy tax rate at the earliest possible date.
Source Agencies: | 304 Comptroller of Public Accounts
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LBB Staff: | JOB, MN, SD, TP
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