South Carolina General Assembly
117th Session, 2007-2008

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Bill 3008

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Indicates New Matter


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Indicates Matter Stricken

Indicates New Matter

AMENDED

May 17, 2007

H. 3008

Introduced by Reps. Ballentine, Haskins, Cotty and Lowe

S. Printed 5/17/07--H.

Read the first time January 9, 2007.

            

A BILL

TO AMEND SECTION 12-37-220, AS AMENDED, CODE OF LAWS OF SOUTH CAROLINA, 1976, RELATING TO PROPERTY TAX EXEMPTIONS, SO AS TO EXEMPT REAL PROPERTY OWNED BY A CHARITABLE ORGANIZATION WHICH IS NOT USED FOR THE ORGANIZATION'S MEETINGS OR THE ORGANIZATION'S TAX EXEMPT PURPOSES BUT WHICH IS HELD FOR FUTURE USE BY THE ORGANIZATION IN PURSUIT OF ITS EXEMPT PURPOSES OR WHICH IS HELD BY THE ORGANIZATION FOR INVESTMENT IN PURSUIT OF THE ORGANIZATION'S EXEMPT PURPOSES IF THIS REAL PROPERTY WHILE HELD IS NOT RENTED OR LEASED FOR A PURPOSE UNRELATED TO THE ORGANIZATION'S EXEMPT PURPOSES AND THE USE OF THE REAL PROPERTY DOES NOT INURE TO THE BENEFIT OF ANY PRIVATE STOCKHOLDER OR INDIVIDUAL.

Amend Title To Conform

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of South Carolina:

SECTION    1.    Section 12-37-220(B)(16) of the 1976 Code is amended by adding a new subitem at the end of the item to read:

"(c)    The exemption allowed pursuant to subitem (a) of this item extends to real property owned by an organization described in subitem (a) and which qualifies as a tax exempt organization pursuant to Internal Revenue Code Section 501(c)(3), when the real property is held for a future use by the organization that would qualify for the exemption allowed pursuant to subitem (a) of this item or held for investment by the organization in sole pursuit of the organization's exempt purposes and while held this real property is not rented or leased for a purpose unrelated to the exempt purposes of the organization and the use of the real property does not inure to the benefit of any private stockholder or individual. Real property donated to the organization which receives the exemption allowed pursuant to this subitem is allowed the exemption for no more than three consecutive property tax years. If real property acquired by the organization by purchase receives the exemption allowed pursuant to this subitem and is subsequently sold without ever having been put to the exempt use, the exemption allowed pursuant to this subitem is deemed terminated as of December thirty-first preceding the year of sale and the property is subject to property tax for the year of sale to which must be added a recapture amount equal to the property tax that would have been due on the real property for not more than the four preceding years in which the real property received the exemption allowed pursuant to this subitem. The recapture amount is deemed property tax for all purposes for payment and collection."

SECTION    2.    Section 4-12-30(C), (D), and (K) of the 1976 Code, as last amended by Act 384 of 2006, is further amended to read:

"(C)(1)    From the end of the property tax year in which the sponsor and the county execute an inducement agreement, the sponsor has five years in which to enter into an initial lease agreement with the county.

(2)    From the end of the property tax year in which the sponsor and the county execute the initial lease agreement, the sponsor has five years in which to complete its investment for purposes of qualifying for this section. If the sponsor does not anticipate completing the project within five years, the sponsor may apply to the county before the end of the five-year period for making the minimum investment for an extension of time to complete the project. If the county agrees to grant the extension, the county must do so in writing, and a copy must be delivered to the department within thirty days of the date the extension was granted. The extension may not exceed five years. There is no extension allowed for the five-year period in which to meet the minimum level of investment. If the minimum level of investment is not met within five years, all property under the lease agreement or agreements, reverts retroactively to the payments required by Section 4-12-20. The difference between the fee actually paid by the sponsor and the payment which is due under Section 4-12-20 is subject to interest, as provided in Section 12-54-25(D). To the extent necessary to determine if a sponsor or sponsor affiliate has met its investment requirements, any statute of limitations that might apply pursuant to Section 12-54-85 is suspended for all sponsors and sponsor affiliates during the time period allowed to make the required investment and the department or county may seek collection of any amount that may be due pursuant to this subsection. Any property placed in service after the five-year period, or ten-year period in the case of a project which has received an extension, is not part of the fee agreement under subsection (D)(2) and is subject to the payments required by Section 4-12-20 if the county has title to the property, or to ad valorem property taxes, if the sponsor has title to the property. For purposes of those sponsors qualifying under subsection (D)(4), the five-year period referred to in this subsection is eight years.

(3)    For those sponsors that, after qualifying pursuant to (D)(4), have more than five hundred million dollars in capital invested in this State and employ more than one thousand people in this State, the five-year period referred to in this subsection is ten years, and the ten-year period for completing the project is fifteen years.

(4)    The annual fee provided by subsection (D)(2) is available for no more than twenty years for an applicable piece of property, unless extended for up to an additional ten years by resolution of the county. For projects completed and placed in service during more than one year, each year's investment may be subject to the fee in subsection (D)(2) for twenty years, unless extended for up to an additional ten years as provided in this item, to a maximum total of thirty forty years for the fee for a single project which has been granted an extension. For those sponsors qualifying under subsection (D)(4), the annual fee is available for no more than thirty years for an applicable piece of property and for those projects placed in service in more than one year the annual fee is available for a maximum of forty years, or for those sponsors qualifying pursuant to subsection (C)(3), forty-five years.

(5)    Annually, during the time period allowed to meet the minimum investment level, the sponsor shall provide the total amount invested to the appropriate county official.

(D)The inducement agreement must provide for fee payments, to the extent applicable, as follows:

(1)(a)    Any property is subject to an annual fee payment, as provided in Section 4-12-20.

(b)    Any undeveloped land before being developed and placed in service, is subject to an annual fee payment as provided in Section 4-12-20. The time during which fee payments are made under Section 4-12-20 is not considered part of the maximum periods provided in subsections (C)(2) through (C)(4), and a lease is not considered an "initial lease agreement" for purposes of this subsection until the first day of the calendar year for which a fee payment is due under item (2) in connection with the lease.

(2)    After property qualifying under subsection (B) is placed in service, an annual fee payment determined in accordance with one of the following is due:

(a)    an annual payment in an amount not less than the property taxes that would be due on the project if it were taxable, but using an assessment ratio of not less than six percent, or four percent of those projects qualifying pursuant to subsection (D)(4), a fixed millage rate as provided in subsection (G), and a fair market value estimate determined by the department as follows:

(i)    for real property, using the original income tax basis for South Carolina income tax purposes without regard to depreciation, if real property is constructed for the fee or is purchased in an arm's length transaction; otherwise, the property must be reported at its fair market value for ad valorem property tax purposes as determined by appraisal. The fair market value estimate established for the first year of the fee remains the fair market value of the real property for the life of the fee; and

(ii)    for personal property, using the original tax basis for South Carolina income tax purposes less depreciation allowable for property tax purposes, except that the sponsor is not entitled to any extraordinary obsolescence.

(b)    an annual payment as provided in subsection (D)(2)(a), except that every fifth year the applicable millage rate is allowed to increase or decrease in step with the average actual millage rate applicable in the district where the project is located based on the preceding five-year period.

(3)    At the conclusion of the payments determined pursuant to items (1) and (2) of this subsection, an annual payment equal to the taxes is due on the project as if it were taxable. When the property is no longer subject to the fee under subsection (D)(2), the fee or property taxes must be assessed:

(a)    with respect to real property, based on the fair market value as of the latest reassessment date for similar taxable property; and

(b)    with respect to personal property, based on the then depreciated value applicable to such property under the fee, and thereafter continuing with the South Carolina property tax depreciation schedule.

(4)(a)    The assessment ratio may not be lower than four percent:

(i)    in the case of a single sponsor investing at least one hundred fifty million dollars, resulting in a total investment of at least three hundred million dollars when added to previous investments by a sponsor, and creating at least one hundred twenty-five new full-time jobs at a project;

(ii)    in the case of a single sponsor investing at least four six hundred million dollars and which is creating at least two hundred new full-time jobs at a project in this State;

(iii)    in the case of a business including a corporation, its subsidiaries, and its limited liability company members, that builds a project consisting of gas-fired combined-cycle power facility and invests at least four hundred million dollars and creates at least twenty-five full-time jobs as defined in Section 12-6-3360(M) at that project; or

(iv)    in the case of a project that satisfies the requirements of Section 11-41-30(2)(a), and for which the Secretary of Commerce has delivered certification pursuant to Section 11-41-70(2)(a).

(b)    The new full-time jobs requirement of this item does not apply in the case of a sponsor which for more than the twenty-five years ending on the date of the agreement paid more than fifty percent of all property taxes actually collected in the county.

(c)    In an instance in which the governing body of a county has by contractual agreement provided for a change in fee in lieu of taxes arrangements conditioned on a future legislative enactment, any new enactment shall not bind the original parties to the agreement unless the change is ratified by the governing body of the county.

(5)    Notwithstanding the use of the term "assessment ratio", a sponsor qualifying for the fee may negotiate an inducement agreement with a county using differing assessment ratios for different assessment years or levels of investment covered by the inducement agreement. However, the lowest assessment ratio allowed is the lowest ratio for which the sponsor may qualify under this section.

(K)(1)    For a project not located in an industrial development park, as defined in Section 4-1-170, distribution of the fee in lieu of taxes on the project must be made in the same manner and proportion that the millage levied for school and other purposes would be distributed if the property were taxable, but without regard to an exemption otherwise available to the project pursuant to Section 12-37-220 for that year.

(2)    For a project located in an industrial development park, as defined in Section 4-1-170, distribution of the fee in lieu of taxes on the project must be made in the manner provided for by the agreement establishing the industrial development park.

(3)(a)    A county or municipality or special purpose district that receives and retains revenues from a payment in lieu of taxes may use a portion of this revenue for the purposes outlined in Section 4-29-68 without the requirement of issuing special source revenue bonds or the requirements of Section 4-29-68(A)(4) to offset improvement costs by providing a credit against the fee due from a sponsor. A direct payment of cash may not be made to the sponsor:

(i)    for a project not located in an industrial development park, to the extent that the cumulative credit taken does not exceed the lesser of:

A.        the improvement costs of the project; or

B.        the county's share of fees distributed from the project pursuant to Section 4-12-30(B);

(ii)    for a project located within an industrial development park, to the extent that the cumulative credit taken does not exceed the lesser or:

A.        the improvement costs of the project; or

B.        the total amount of fees the county is entitled to retain pursuant to the industrial development park agreement.

(b)    For purposes of item (3), improvement costs include the cost of designing, acquiring, constructing, improving, or expanding:

(i)    the infrastructure serving the project; and

(ii)    improved and unimproved real property, buildings, and structural components of buildings used in the operation of a project in order to enhance economic development.

(4)    Misallocations of the distribution of the fee in lieu of taxes on the project pursuant to this chapter may be corrected by adjusting later distributions, but these adjustments must be made in the same fiscal year as the misallocations. To the extent distributions are made improperly in previous years, a claim for adjustment must be made within one year of the distribution."

SECTION    3.    Section 4-29-67(D)(4) of the 1976 Code, as last amended by Act 384 of 2006, is further amended to read:

"(4)(a)    The assessment ratio may not be lower than four percent:

(i)    in the case of a single sponsor investing at least one hundred fifty million dollars, resulting in a total investment of at least three hundred million dollars when added to previous investments by a sponsor, and which is creating at least one hundred twenty-five new full-time jobs at the project;

(ii)    in the case of a single sponsor investing at least four six hundred million dollars and which is creating at least two hundred new full-time jobs at the project in this State;

(iii)    in the case of a business including a corporation, its subsidiaries, and its limited liability company members, that builds a project consisting of gas-fired combined-cycle power facility and invests at least four hundred million dollars and creates at least twenty-five full-time jobs as defined in Section 12-6-3360(M) at that project; or

(iv)    in the case of a project that satisfies the requirements of Section 11-41-30(2)(a), and for which the Secretary of Commerce has delivered certification pursuant to Section 11-41-70(2)(a).

(b)    The new full-time jobs requirement of this item does not apply in the case of a business that paid more than fifty percent of all property taxes actually collected in the county for more than the twenty-five years ending on the date of the inducement agreement.

(c)    In an instance in which the governing body of a county has provided, by contractual agreement, for a change in fee in lieu of taxes arrangements conditioned on a future legislative enactment, a new enactment does not bind the original parties to the agreement unless the change is ratified by the governing body of the county."

SECTION    4.    Section 12-6-3620(A) of the 1976 Code, as added by Act 386 of 2006, is amended to read:

"(A)    For taxable years beginning after 2006, there is allowed a tax credit against the tax imposed pursuant to Section 12-6-530 for twenty-five percent of the costs incurred by a taxpayer for use of methane gas taken from a landfill to provide power energy for a manufacturing facility."

SECTION    5.    A.        Section 12-36-2120(67) of the 1976 Code, as added by Act 384 of 2006, is amended to read:

"(67)    effective July 1, 2011, construction materials used in the construction of a single new or expanded manufacturing and or distribution facility with a capital investment of at least one hundred million in real and personal property at a single site in the State over an eighteen-month period. The taxpayer must provide notice of the exemption, and the Department of Revenue may assess taxes owing in the manner provided in Section 12-36-2120(51)."

B.        Notwithstanding the sales and use tax rates imposed pursuant to Chapter 36, Title 12 of the 1976 Code, the rate of tax imposed pursuant to that chapter on the gross proceeds of qualifying construction materials used in the construction of a new or expanded manufacturing or distribution facility, created by this section, is four percent for sales from July 1, 2007, through June 30, 2008, three percent for sales from July 1, 2008, through June 30, 2009, two percent for sales from July 1, 2009, through June 30, 2010, and one percent for sales from July 1, 2010, through June 30, 2011.

SECTION    6.    Section 12-43-220(a) of the 1976 Code is amended to read:

"(a)    All real and personal property owned by or leased to manufacturers and utilities and used by the manufacturer or utility in the conduct of the business must be taxed on an assessment equal to ten and one-half percent of the fair market value of the property.

(1)    Real property owned by or leased to a manufacturer and used primarily for research and development is not considered used by a manufacturer in the conduct of the business of the manufacturer for purposes of classification of property under item (a) of this section. The term "research and development" means basic and applied research in the sciences and engineering and the design and development of prototypes and processes.

(2)    Real property owned by or leased to a manufacturer and used primarily as an office building is not considered used by a manufacturer in the conduct of the business of the manufacturer for purposes of classification of property under item (a) of this section if the office building is not located on the premises of or contiguous to the plant site of the manufacturer.

(3)    Real property owned by or leased to a manufacturer and used primarily for warehousing and wholesale distribution of clothing and wearing apparel is not considered used by a manufacturer in the conduct of the business of the manufacturer for purposes of classification of property under item (a) of this section if the property is not located on the premises of or contiguous to the manufacturing site of the manufacturer."

SECTION    7.    A.        Section 12-44-10 of the 1976 Code is amended to read:

"Section 12-44-10.    This act may be cited as the 'Fee in Lieu of Tax Simplification Act' of 1997."

B.        Section 12-44-30(7), (14), and (20) of the 1976 Code, as last amended by Act 161 of 2005, is further amended to read:

"(7)(a)    'Enhanced investment' means a project which results in a total investment:

(a)(i)    by a single sponsor of at least two hundred million dollars, resulting in a total investment of at least four hundred million dollars when added to the previous investments, and creating at least two hundred investing at least one hundred fifty million dollars and creating at least one hundred twenty-five new full-time jobs at the project;

(b)(ii)    by a single sponsor investing at least four hundred million dollars and which is creating at least two hundred new full-time jobs at the project;

(c)    by a single sponsor investing at least six hundred million dollars in this State;

(d)(iii)    at least four hundred million dollars in the building of a project consisting of gas-fired combined-cycle power facility by a sponsor which creates at least twenty-five full-time jobs as defined in Section 12-6-3360(M) at that project and invests an additional five hundred million dollars in this State. The investment must be made by a sponsor which consists of a corporation, its subsidiaries, and its limited liability companies. The new full-time jobs requirement of this subsection does not apply to a taxpayer which paid more than fifty percent of all property taxes actually collected in the county for more than twenty-five years ending on the date of the fee agreement; or

(e)(iv)    that satisfies the requirements of Section 11-41-30(2)(a), and for which the Secretary of Commerce has delivered certification pursuant to Section 11-41-70(2)(a).

(b)    The new full-time jobs requirement of this item does not apply in the case of a sponsor which, for more than the twenty-five years ending on the date of the fee agreement, paid more than fifty percent of all property taxes actually collected in the county.

(14)    'Minimum investment' means a project that results in a total level of investment by a sponsor of not less than five in the project of at least two and one-half million dollars that must be invested within the investment period. If a county has an average annual unemployment rate of at least twice the state average during the last twenty-four month period based on data available on the most recent November first, the minimum investment is one million dollars. The department shall designate these reduced investment counties by December thirty-first of each year using data from the South Carolina Employment Security Commission and the United States Department of Commerce. The designations are effective for a sponsor whose fee agreement is signed in the calendar year following the county designation. For all purposes of this chapter, the minimum investment may include amounts expended by a sponsor or sponsor affiliate as a nonresponsible party in a voluntary cleanup contract on the property pursuant to Article 7, Chapter 56 of Title 44, the Brownfields Voluntary Cleanup Program, if the Department of Health and Environmental Control certifies completion of the cleanup. If the amounts under the Brownfields Voluntary Cleanup Program equal at least one million dollars, the investment threshold requirement of this chapter is deemed to have been met.

(20)    'Termination date' means the date which is the last day of a property tax year which is the nineteenth year following the first property tax year in which an applicable piece of economic development property is placed in service, unless otherwise extended for up to an additional ten years by resolution of the county. With respect to a fee agreement involving an enhanced investment, the termination date is the last day of a property tax year which is the twenty-ninth year following the first property tax year in which an applicable piece of economic development property is placed in service. If the fee agreement is terminated in accordance with Section 12-44-140, the termination date is the date the agreement is terminated."

C.        Section 12-44-40(E) of the 1976 Code, as last amended by Act 69 of 2003, is further amended to read:

"(E)    If a fee agreement is not executed within five years after the inducement resolution agreement is adopted executed by the sponsor and the county council, the real property or tangible personal property of a sponsor for which expenditures have been incurred by the sponsor with respect to the project do not qualify as economic development property."

SECTION    8.    This act takes effect upon approval by the Governor.

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