Kansas 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Kansas Senate Bill SB96 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 
 
January 31, 2023 
 
 
 
 
The Honorable Caryn Tyson, Chairperson 
Senate Committee on Assessment and Taxation 
300 SW 10th Avenue, Room 548-S 
Topeka, Kansas  66612 
 
Dear Senator Tyson: 
 
 SUBJECT: Fiscal Note for SB 96 by Senate Committee on Assessment and Taxation 
 
 In accordance with KSA 75-3715a, the following fiscal note concerning SB 96 is 
respectfully submitted to your committee. 
 
 SB 96 would allow contributions to eligible charitable organizations operating pregnancy 
centers or residential maternity facilities to receive a 70.0 percent tax credit beginning in tax year 
2023.  Eligible charitable organizations would be required to be exempt from federal income 
taxation and a nonprofit organization organized under the laws of this state.  The pregnancy center 
or residential maternity facility would be required to maintain a dedicated phone number for 
clients; maintain in this state its primary physical office, clinic, or residential home that is open for 
clients for a minimum of 20 hours a week, excluding state holidays; offer services, at no cost to 
the client, that provide assistance to women in order to carry their pregnancy to term, encourage 
parenting or adoption, prevent abortion, and promote healthy childbirth; and utilize trained and 
licensed medical professionals to perform any available medical procedures. 
 
 Tax credits would be limited to $10.0 million per tax year and tax credits for contributions 
to a single eligible charitable organization would be limited to $5.0 million per tax year.  If the tax 
credit amount exceeds the taxpayer’s Kansas adjusted gross income for that taxable year, then the 
amount that exceeds the Kansas adjusted gross income could be carried forward for up to five 
years. The bill includes administrative requirements and procedures for the qualification and 
certification of an eligible charitable organization, the allocation of tax credits if the aggregate 
amount of tax credits requested is above the limit, and the reallocation of any unused tax credits. 
 
 The Department of Revenue indicates that there is no information to accurately estimate 
the number of taxpayers that would claim this new tax credit or the amount of contributions to 
eligible charitable organizations to accurately estimate the fiscal effect of SB 96.  However, the  The Honorable Caryn Tyson, Chairperson 
Page 2—SB 96 
 
 
bill limits the maximum credits allowed to $10.0 million per tax year.  For each $1.0 million in 
contributions to eligible charitable organizations, then $700,000 in tax credits could be claimed.  
 
 The Department indicates that the bill would require $142,868 from the State General Fund 
in FY 2024 to implement the bill and to modify the automated tax system. The required 
programming for this bill by itself would be performed by existing staff of the Department of 
Revenue.  In addition, if the combined effect of implementing this bill and other enacted legislation 
exceeds the Department’s programming resources, or if the time for implementing the changes is 
too short, additional expenditures for outside contract programmer services beyond the 
Department’s current budget may be required. Any fiscal effect associated with SB 96 is not 
reflected in The FY 2024 Governor’s Budget Report. 
 
 
 
 
 	Sincerely, 
 
 
 
 	Adam Proffitt 
 	Director of the Budget 
 
 
cc: Lynn Robinson, Department of Revenue 
 Bobbi Mariani, Insurance Department