Arizona 2023 2023 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SB1246 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 06/29/2023

                    Assigned to TAT 	AS VETOED 
 
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Sixth Legislature, First Regular Session 
 
VETOED 
 
AMENDED 
FACT SHEET FOR S.B. 1246 
 
electronic certificates of title 
(NOW: election; transportation tax; Maricopa County) 
As passed the Senate, S.B. 1246 prohibited the Director of the Arizona Department of 
Transportation (ADOT) from prohibiting an authorized third party from using an electronic 
certificates of title system to print an electronic certificate of title or a registration card. 
The House of Representatives adopted a strike-everything amendment that does the 
following: 
Purpose 
 Directs the board of supervisors (BOS) in a county with a population of 3,000,000 persons 
or more (Maricopa County) to call a countywide election for the continuation of the .495 cents of 
the current .5 cents county transportation excise tax (transportation tax). Prescribes the levy and 
distribution of the transportation tax if approved by the voters and outlines requirements for 
participants and agencies.  
Background 
In 2004, Maricopa County voters approved a countywide transportation tax levied at a rate 
of up to 10 percent of the state transaction privilege tax (one-half cent transportation tax). Revenues 
from the one-half cent transportation tax are deposited into the Regional Area Road Fund (RARF) 
and distributed to transportation projects as follows: 1) 56.2 percent for freeways and other routes 
in the state highway system; 2) 10.5 percent for major arterial streets and intersection 
improvements; and 3) 33.3 percent to public transportation. Laws 2003, Chapter 217 established 
the Regional Planning Agency Transportation Policy Committee (TPC) which is tasked with the 
approval of a 20-year comprehensive, performance-based, multimodal and coordinated Regional 
Transportation Plan (Plan) for Maricopa County. The current one-half cent transportation tax in 
Maricopa County expires on January 1, 2026. 
The Maricopa Association of Governments (MAG) is a council of governments that serves 
as the regional planning and policy agency for the metropolitan Phoenix area. MAG is the 
designated metropolitan planning organization for transportation planning in the greater Phoenix 
metropolitan region, including the Phoenix urbanized area and the contiguous urbanized area in 
Pinal County (MAG). Monies collected from voter-approved transportation taxes are deposited 
into MAG's RARF to be used by MAG for the maintenance and capital expenses of freeways and 
the state highway system (A.R.S. § 42-6105). 
 There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this 
legislation.  FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 2 
 
 
Provisions 
Maricopa County Transportation Tax 
(Effective if approved by the qualified electors at an election) 
1. Requires, beginning January 1, 2026, if approved by the qualified electors voting at a 
countywide election, Maricopa County to levy, and ADOT to collect, a transportation tax
relating to freeways, public transit and arterial streets (transportation tax) for a term of 20 years.  
2. Requires the transportation tax to be levied and collected: 
a) at a rate of up to 8.6 percent of the state transaction privilege tax (TPT) rate on January 1, 
1990;  
b) at a rate of up to 8.6 percent of the jet fuel excise tax rate; and  
c) on the use or consumption of electricity or natural gas by customers in the county who are 
subject to use tax at a rate of up to 8.6 percent of the state TPT rate that applies to persons 
engaging in the county in the utilities TPT classification.  
3. Directs the annual net revenues of the transportation tax to be distributed and deposited for use 
as specified by the Plan, as follows: 
a) 53.5 percent to the RARF for freeways and other routes in the state highway system, 
including capital expense and maintenance; 
b) 18.5 percent to the RARF for major arterial streets, intersection improvements and regional 
programs, including capital expense and implementation studies; and 
c) 28 percent to the Public Transportation Fund (PTF) for capital costs, maintenance and 
operation of public transportation mode classifications.  
4. Requires at least 13.5 percent of the 18.5 percent distribution to the RARF to be distributed for 
major arterial streets and intersection improvements. 
5. Prohibits the following transportation tax distributions from being decreased: 
a) 53.5 percent distribution to the RARF; and  
b) 18.5 percent distribution to the RARF and the dedicated 13.5 percent minimum of the 18.5 
percent distribution. 
6. Prohibits any transportation tax revenues from being:  
a) used for any light rail, commuter rail, street cars or trollies; 
b) used to influence the outcome of an election;  
c) spent on polling; 
d) spent on any project that will result in a reduction in existing lane miles on a highway or 
state highway;  
e) spent on any project that will result in a reduction in existing lane miles on a street or 
roadway, unless a third-party engineering study determines that a lane mile reduction is 
necessary to reduce congestion and the findings are presented in a public hearing;  
f) spent on active transportation projects; and  
g) used to extend light rail between 7th Avenue and 19th Avenue and Adams Street and 
Jefferson Street in Phoenix.  
7. Reestablishes, beginning January 1, 2026, the Maricopa County Regional Public 
Transportation Authority (RPTA), if a transportation tax has been approved.   FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 3 
 
 
Maricopa County Public Transit Tax 
(Effective if approved by the qualified electors at an election) 
8. Requires, beginning January 1, 2026, if approved by the qualified electors voting at a 
countywide election, Maricopa County to levy, and ADOT to collect, a transportation tax 
relating to expanding public transit offerings, including light rail (public transit tax) for a term 
of 20 years.  
9. Requires the public transit tax to be levied and collected: 
a) at a rate of up to 1.3 percent of the state TPT rate on January 1, 1990;  
b) at a rate of up to 1.3 percent of the jet fuel excise tax rate; and  
c) on the use or consumption of electricity or natural gas by customers in the county who are 
subject to use tax at a rate of up to 1.3 percent of the state TPT rate that applies to persons 
engaging in the county in the utilities TPT classification.  
10. Directs the annual net revenues of the public transit tax to be distributed and deposited in the 
PFT for: 
a) capital costs, maintenance and operation of public transportation mode classifications; and  
b) capital costs and utility relocation costs associated with a light rail public transit system.  
11. Caps, at 25 percent, the amount of public transit revenues that may be used for capital 
rehabilitation of the light rail system. 
12. Prohibits public transit tax revenues from being:  
a) used to influence the outcome of an election; 
b) spent on polling; 
c) spent on any project that will result in a reduction in existing lane miles on a highway or 
state highway, unless a third-party engineering study determines that a lane mile reduction 
is necessary to reduce congestion and the findings are presented in a public hearing;  
d) used for any light rail extension or commuter rail, street cars or trollies; and 
e) used to extend light rail between 7th Avenue and 19th Avenue and Adams Street and 
Jefferson Street in Phoenix.  
Countywide Election 
13. Directs the Maricopa County BOS to call a countywide election for the continuation of the 
transportation tax and public transit tax, during the year-long period beginning four years 
before the existing transportation tax would otherwise be discontinued and ending two years 
before the existing transportation tax would otherwise be discontinued, which is between 
January 1, 2022, and January 1, 2024.  
14. Requires Maricopa County to conduct an election on a consolidated election date at least one 
year before the existing transportation tax would otherwise be discontinued, which is January 
1, 2025.  
15. Prescribes printed ballot requirements, including: 
a) the designation of the measure as relating to county transportation excise (sales) taxes; 
b) the title of the measure as Regional Strategic Transportation Infrastructure Investment 
Plan;  
c) a description of the ballot measure;   FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 4 
 
 
d) instructions directing the voter to the full text of the official and descriptive titles containing 
the summary, as printed in the sample ballot and posted in the polling place; and 
e) the ballot questions submitted to the voters that explain the effect that the approval or 
disapproval of the continuation of .43 cents for transportation projects and .07 cents for 
public transit projects of the current .5 cents transportation tax would have.  
16. Stipulates that the description of the ballot measure must read:  
"A measure continuing .495 cents of the current .5 cents transportation excise (sales) tax 
to address the regional transportation system.   
.43 cents of the current .5 cents transportation excise (sales) tax will address building new 
freeways, expanding existing freeways with additional access and capacity, constructing 
streets and intersections, continuing transit offerings and expanding transit frequency and 
coverage based on demand. Revenues from this portion of the tax will be allocated as follows:  
(a) 53.5 percent to freeways.  
(b) 28 percent to public transit.  
(c) 18.5 percent to arterial streets.  
.065 cents of the current .5 cents transportation excise (sales) tax will address expanding 
public transit offerings, including maintenance and extension of light rail. Revenues from this 
portion of the tax will be allocated for those purposes."  
17. Allows the ballot to include a summary of the Plan.  
18. Requires the Maricopa County BOS to prepare, print and mail a publicity pamphlet concerning 
the ballot question and directs the mailing of the pamphlet.  
19. Requires the publicity pamphlet to contain: 
a) a summary of the principal provisions of the issue, including the transportation tax and 
public transit tax rates, the number of years the taxes will be in effect and the projected 
annual and cumulative revenues for each tax; 
b) a statement describing the purposes for which the revenues of each tax may be spent, 
including: 
i. a summary of the Plan; 
ii. a map of proposed routes and transportation corridors of all major projects; 
iii. the estimated amount of tax's revenues, together with other identified revenues, 
dedicated for each transportation mode; and  
iv. the Maricopa County Elections Department website address for additional information 
on the Plan;  
c) the form of the ballot; and 
d) arguments for each questions on the measure in the order received, followed by arguments 
against each questions on the measure in the order received.  
20. Allows a person, at a time determined by Maricopa County, to file with the Maricopa County 
Elections Director (Director) a signed argument of no more than 300 words for or against the 
ballot measure.  
21. Requires the person submitting an argument to pay a publication fee prescribed by the 
Maricopa County BOS to the Director, which constitutes sponsorship of the argument.   FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 5 
 
 
22. Requires an argument that is sponsored by one or more: 
a) individuals, to be signed by each sponsoring individual; 
b) organizations, to be signed by two executive officers of each organization; 
c) political committees, to be signed by each committee's chairperson or treasurer.  
23. Require the Maricopa County Elections Officer to account for costs specifically incurred with 
respect to the ballot issue.  
24. Requires the State Treasurer, on submission of the bill by the Elections Officer and regardless 
of the election outcome, to pay the costs incurred with request to the ballot issue from RARF 
monies, including: 
a) costs of mailing, publishing, posting and printing ballots, publicity pamphlets, notices, 
election materials and other matters concerning the election; 
b) legal and other consulting fees and costs; 
c) telecommunications costs; 
d) compensation of the Election Board, County Election Officers and employees and other 
labor costs incurred to administer, hold, canvass and announce the results of the election; 
and 
e) any other costs attributable to the election.  
25. Specifies that the election for the continuation of the transportation tax must be:  
a) conducted as nearly as practicable in the manner of a general election; and  
b) except as specifically provided, in accordance with the general laws relating to elections.  
26. States that the prescribed election requirements do not constitute a submission of any provision 
of law to the people for approval under the power of the referendum.  
County Transportation Excise Tax 
27. Raises the population threshold, from 1,200,000 to 3,000,000 or more persons, over which a 
county must collect a transportation excise tax.  
28. Prohibits transportation tax revenues for a county with a population of 1,200,000 or more 
persons from being used to extend light rail between 7th Avenue and 19th Avenue and Adams 
Street and Jefferson Street in Phoenix.  
29. Allows the 10.5 percent distribution of transportation tax revenues to the RARF for a county 
with a population of 1,200,000 or more persons to be used for regional programs.  
30. Requires the SBT to separately account for transportation tax and public transit tax revenues 
allocated to the PFT for:  
a) a light rail public transit system;  
b) capital costs for other public transportation; and  
c) operation and maintenance costs for other public transportation.  
Maricopa County Regional Planning Agency (RPA) 
31. Requires the RPA to develop and adopt a Plan in cooperation with state and local transportation 
authorities and operators and in coordination with ADOT.   FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 6 
 
 
32. Directs, beginning FY 2024, the RPA to adopt a budget process that ensures the estimated cost 
of each transportation mode classification does not exceed the total amount of revenues 
estimated to be available over the 20-year term of the transportation and public transit taxes. 
33. Requires the RPA to coordinate with implementing partners on the budget process, including:  
a) ADOT for freeways and other routes in the state highway system; and  
b) the county RPTA for the public transportation system.  
34. Specifies that the RPA-adopted budget process does not apply to the annual operating budget 
of the county RPTA.  
35. Requires the RPA to: 
a) determine the use of transportation tax and public transit tax revenues collected for capital 
projects through the Transportation Improvement Program;  
b) consult on any bond issued against the proceeds of transportation tax and public transit tax 
collections; and  
c) annually report on the status of projects funded by the transportation and public transit 
taxes and post the report on the RPA's website.  
36. Requires the RPA to consider truck parking availability when considering the construction, 
expansion or modification of freeways or other routes in the state highway system.  
37. Requires the RPA, by December 31, 2045, to allocate at least $90,000,000 for the 
implementation of commercial motor vehicle parking that is consistent with a regionally 
adopted truck parking plan, including funding for construction, land acquisition, lease, 
maintenance or operations or entry into a public-private partnership agreement.  
Transportation Planning Committee (TPC) 
38. Directs the TPC, through the RPA and by a majority vote of TPC members, to develop the 
Plan in cooperation with the RPTA and ADOT and in consultation with the Maricopa County 
BOS, Indian communities and cities and town in the county.  
39. Requires TPC, through the RPA and by a majority vote of TPC members, to recommend 
approval, disapproval or modification of:  
a) the Plan;  
b) changes to the allocations of transportation excise tax revenues between RARF for 
freeways, RARF for arterial streets and PTF for public transit;  
c) the RPA-adopted budget process; and  
d) funding awarded through the regional programs process. 
 
40. Increases the number, from 6 to 12, of the TPC members who represent regionwide business 
interest, including:  
a) 2 members, rather than 1 member, who represent transit interests; 
b) 2 members, rather than 1 member, who represent freight interests; 
c) 2 members who represent commercial real estate interest; and 
d) 2 members, rather than 1 member, who represent construction interests.   FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 7 
 
 
41. Adds, beginning in FY 2025, the following members to the TPC to serve six-year terms: 
a) two members who represent unincorporated areas of Maricopa County and who are 
appointed jointly by the Senate President and the Speaker of the House;  
b) two members who represent taxpayer organizations and are jointly appointed by the 
President and Speaker; and  
c) one member who represents residential housing development interests and is jointly 
appointed by the President and Speaker.   
Transportation Tax Plan 
42. Redefines Plan as the comprehensive, performance-based, multimodal and coordinated 
regional strategic transportation infrastructure investment plan approved for the county, as 
amended or otherwise modified.  
43. Requires the Plan to:  
a) reflect the allocation of transportation tax and public transit tax revenues collected through 
December 31, 2025; and 
b) specify the distribution of transportation taxes in the RARF or the PTF. 
44. Removes the following as required components of the Plan: 
a) the provision of a suggested construction schedule for the transportation projects contained 
in the Plan; and 
b) to be developed to meet federal air quality requirements.  
45. Requires the transportation element of the Plan to include: 
a) a farebox operating ratio standard for existing bus route extensions that are in existence on 
the effective date of this legislation and are funded in whole or in part from transportation 
tax and public transit tax revenues that are distributed to the PFT; and 
b) a farebox recovery ratio standard for existing bus routes that are in existence on the 
effective date of this legislation and are funded in whole or in part from transportation tax 
and public transit tax revenues that are distributed to the PFT.  
46. Requires the farebox operating ratio standard for bus route extensions and bus routes to:  
a) be presented on an annual basis; and 
b) by any measures necessary, achieve the following percentages for each existing bus route 
that is in existence on the effective date of this legislation: 
i. 13 percent for FYs 2026 through 2028; 
ii. 16 percent for FYs 2029 through 2031; and 
iii. 19 percent for FY 2032 and all subsequent fiscal years.  
 
47. Requires, if the RPTA fails to meet the prescribed farebox ratio performance standards, the: 
a) excess costs to be allocated among the affected member municipalities according to the 
proportion of the bus route that is located in each municipality; and  
b) the affected member municipalities to pay the monies from their respective general funds 
to the PTF in the fiscal year following the fiscal year in which the shortfall was incurred.  FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 8 
 
 
48. Requires, if the RPTA fails to meet the farebox ratio performance standard of 19 percent for 
FY 2032 and all subsequent fiscal years, the RPTA to: 
a) proceed with a public bid for operation of the failing bus route; and  
b) be prohibited from submitted a proposal to bid.  
49. Requires the RPTA, for all new bus routes identified in the Plan, to conduct a public bid to 
contract the operations, according to the statutory requirements for competitive sealed bidding.  
50. Requires the bid to require prospective operators to demonstrate compliance with the following 
farebox operating ratio standards: 
a) 13 percent within the first year of operating; 
b) 16 percent within the fourth year of operation; and  
c) 19 percent within the seventh year of operation and every subsequent year.  
51. Authorizes, if an operator fails to meet the performance standard of 19 percent within the 
seventh year of operation and every subsequent year, any of the following: 
a) conducting a new public bid; 
b) eliminating the failing bus route; or 
c) redesigning a new bus route followed by a public bid.  
52. Excludes the prescribed farebox recovery ratio standards from being applied to transportation 
services mandated by the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.  
53. Requires the Plan to allocate $0.43 transportation tax revenues:  
a) in the Regional Area Road Fund for freeways and other routes in the state highway system, 
including capital expense and maintenance; 
b) in the Regional Area Road Fund for major arterial streets, intersection improvements and 
regional programs, including capital expense and implementation studies; and 
c) in the Public Transportation Fund for capital costs, maintenance and operation of public 
transportation mode classifications.  
54. Requires the Plan to allocate public transit tax revenues in the PTF for both: 
a) capital costs, maintenance and operation of public transportation mode classifications; and  
b) capital costs and utility relocation costs associated with the light rail system.  
55. Requires the Auditor General to conduct a performance audit of the Plan and projects 
scheduled during the next five years. 
56. Removes the Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records from the entities required to 
receive a copy of the performance audit.  
57. Requires requests for changes to transportation projects funded in the Plan that would 
materially increase costs to be submitted:  
a) to the RPA for approval; and  
b) by the RPA to the TPC and the State Transportation Board for approval.  
58. Requires the RPA to:  
a) post on the RPA's website a public notice on any proposed amendment to the Plan that 
requires a new air quality conformity determination; and  
b) make the results of the air quality conformity analysis publicly available.   FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 9 
 
 
RARF 
59. Requires the Five-Year Transportation Facilities Construction Program to include a plan for 
the use of monies expected to be deposited in a county RARF that is: 
a) consistent with the Plan; 
b) consistent with the RPA-adopted budget process for freeway and other route projects; and 
c) annually updated.  
60. Allows monies in the Bond Proceeds Account to be obligated or spent as directed by the State 
Transportation Board, according to the Plan, for the design, right-of-way purchase or 
construction related to new, or improvements to, regional programs included in the Plan.  
61. Requires ADOT to separately account for transportation tax revenues deposited in the Bond 
Account and Construction Account to identify how revenues are used for:  
a) freeways and other routes in the state highway system; and  
b) major arterial streets, intersection improvements and regional programs identified in the 
Plan, including capital expense and implementation studies.  
62. Requires the State Treasurer to divide the monies deposited in the Construction Account of the 
RARF and annually distribute: 
a) $2,500,000 to the PTF; and  
b) $1,625,000 to the local RPA for planning and administering the Plan.  
63. Requires, beginning FY 2025, the annual distribution of Construction Account monies to be 
adjusted by the annual percentage change for the previous calendar year in the GDP price 
deflator.  
64. Removes the requirement for RARF Construction Account budgets to be approved annually.   
65. Removes determining public opinion before the election is called as an authorized use of 
monies from any Account in the RARF.  
Definitions 
66. Removes the definition of major amendment.  
67. Defines major arterial as an interconnected thoroughfare whose primary function is to link 
areas in the region and to distribute traffic to and from controlled access highways, generally 
of regionwide significance and of varying capacity depending on the travel demand for the 
specific direction and adjacent land uses. 
68. Defines capital rehabilitation of the light rail system as capital maintenance, repair or 
improvements that ensure that ensure regional assets remain in a state of good repair to 
preserve the safety and reliability of the light rail system. 
69. Defines regional programs as transportation projects that are selected through a 
performance-based process for arterial improvements, emerging technologies and the 
following air quality measures in areas proximately located near nonattaining air quality 
monitors: 
a) paving unpaved roads; and  
b) procuring street sweepers.   FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 10 
 
 
70. Defines performance-based asRPA processes and practices that are consistent with federal 
metropolitan transportation planning requirements and state law, including transportation 
system performance factors. 
71. Defines farebox operating ratio as the performance standard determined by the approximate 
percentage of the RPTA's operating expenses paid for by passenger fare revenue and fare 
reimbursements.  
72. Defines farebox recovery ratio as the performance standard determined by the percentage of 
operating and long-term expenses paid for by passenger fare revenue and fare reimbursements.  
73. Defines long-term expenses as including depreciation for equipment and facilities, interest 
expenses on bonds and capital rehabilitation.  
Miscellaneous 
74. Requires, if monies are appropriated by the Legislature for a Plan project, the use of 
construction monies to be:  
a) advanced as appropriate to reflect the estimated construction start date; and  
b) used in the same modal classification specified in the Plan.  
75. Requires, if a city or town pays for public transportation service in an adjacent municipality or 
unincorporated area of a county, the cost of the service to be eligible for reimbursement from 
transportation tax or public transit tax revenues.  
76. Specifies that public transportation service includes circulator service.  
77. Prohibits public monies from being used to extend light rail between Seventh Avenue and 19th 
Avenue and Adams Street and Jefferson Street in Phoenix.  
78. Restricts the speed limit for all types of motor vehicles to at least 65 miles per hour on the 
interstate system highways located in a county that has a population of 3,000,000 million or 
more persons.  
79. Prohibits the state or a city, town, county or political subdivision of the state from restricting 
the use or sale of a device based on the energy source that is used to power the device or 
consumed by the device.  
80. Stipulates that a device is powered by or consumes an energy source if any significant function 
of the device uses or consumes that energy source to accomplish the function.  
81. Declares the Legislature's intent that: 
a) the development of State Route 30 between State Route 85 and Loop 303 will begin in the 
first phase of the Plan to allow right-of-way acquisition and construction of the facility to 
advance as monies become available; and 
b) the freeway allocations will fund repavement of State Route 51 where need is identified.   FACT SHEET – Amended/Vetoed 
S.B. 1246 
Page 11 
 
 
82. States that this legislation does not invalidate an action by an RPTA formed before the effective 
date.  
83. Contains a severability clause.  
84. Makes technical and conforming changes. 
85. Becomes effective on the general effective date, except as otherwise noted. 
Amendments Adopted by the House of Representatives  
• Adopted the strike-everything amendment relating to a Maricopa County Transportation Tax. 
Governor's Veto Message 
The Governor indicates in her veto message that S.B. 1246 fails to meet the everyday needs 
of Arizonans by excluding the plan put forth by mayors and community leaders across Maricopa 
County and jeopardizes not only Maricopa County's economic vitality, but that of the state, setting 
Arizona back for decades. 
House Action 
TI 3/16/23 DPA/SE 7-4-0-0 
3
rd
 Read 6/13/23  31-26-3 
Vetoed by the Governor 6/20/23 
Prepared by Senate Research 
June 29, 2023 
KJA/sr