Kansas 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Kansas House Bill HB2364 Introduced / Fiscal Note

                    Division of the Budget 
Landon State Office Building 	Phone: (785) 296-2436 
900 SW Jackson Street, Room 504 	adam.c.proffitt@ks.gov 
Topeka, KS  66612 	http://budget.kansas.gov 
 
Adam Proffitt, Director 	Laura Kelly, Governor 
Division of the Budget 
 
March 6, 2023 
 
 
 
 
The Honorable Adam Smith, Chairperson 
House Committee on Taxation 
300 SW 10th Avenue, Room 346-S 
Topeka, Kansas  66612 
 
Dear Representative Smith: 
 
 SUBJECT: Fiscal Note for HB 2364 by Representative V. Miller, et al. 
 
 In accordance with KSA 75-3715a, the following fiscal note concerning HB 2364 is 
respectfully submitted to your committee. 
 
 Under current law, in Tax Year 2022, the first $40,000 of appraised residential property 
valuation is exempt from the 20-mill property tax.  Then, in Tax Year 2023 and in each subsequent 
year, the $40,000 exemption amount is adjusted to reflect the average percentage change in the 
statewide residential valuation for the preceding ten years. HB 2364 would exempt the first 
$65,000 of appraised residential property valuation in Tax Year 2024, with subsequent annual 
adjustments based on the average percentage change in the statewide residential valuation for the 
preceding ten years. The bill would become effective on January 1, 2024. 
 
 According to the Department of Revenue, with the enactment of HB 2364, raising the 
exemption to $65,000 in Tax Year 2024 (FY 2025) would reduce revenues generated from the 20-
mill school levy by approximately $55.6 million, $58.8 million in FY 2026, and $62.3 million in 
FY 2027. 
 
 The Division of the Budget notes that the estimated reduction in revenues from the 20-mill 
school levy would require an offsetting appropriation for State Foundation Aid from the State 
General Fund to keep the Base Aid for Student Excellence (BASE) in the school finance formula 
at $5,421 for FY 2025, as included in The FY 2024 Governor’s Budget Report. If HB 2364 would 
be enacted without a corresponding increase to the State General Fund appropriation for State 
Foundation Aid, the Department of Education would have to prorate the BASE by reducing state 
aid to school districts by approximately $81 per weighted FTE student, using an estimated 682,380 
weighted FTE students (excluding weighting for special education FTE students) in FY 2025  The Honorable Adam Smith, Chairperson 
Page 2—HB 2364 
 
 
($55,600,000 / 682,380 FTE students = $81 proration). Any fiscal effect associated with HB 2364 
is not reflected in The FY 2024 Governor’s Budget Report.  
 
 
 
 
 	Sincerely, 
 
 
 
 	Adam Proffitt 
 	Director of the Budget 
 
 
 
cc: Lynn Robinson, Department of Revenue 
 Craig Neuenswander, Department of Education