Texas 2015 84th Regular

Texas House Bill HB3883 Introduced / Fiscal Note

Filed 02/02/2025

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                    LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD    Austin, Texas      FISCAL NOTE, 84TH LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION            April 13, 2015      TO: Honorable Dennis Bonnen, Chair, House Committee on Ways & Means      FROM: Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board     IN RE:HB3883 by Schaefer (Relating to the authority of certain municipalities to pledge revenue from the municipal hotel occupancy tax for the payment of obligations related to hotel projects.), As Introduced   Estimated Two-year Net Impact to General Revenue Related Funds for HB3883, As Introduced: an impact of $0 through the biennium ending August 31, 2017. 

LEGISLATIVE BUDGET BOARD
Austin, Texas
FISCAL NOTE, 84TH LEGISLATIVE REGULAR SESSION
April 13, 2015





  TO: Honorable Dennis Bonnen, Chair, House Committee on Ways & Means      FROM: Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board     IN RE:HB3883 by Schaefer (Relating to the authority of certain municipalities to pledge revenue from the municipal hotel occupancy tax for the payment of obligations related to hotel projects.), As Introduced  

TO: Honorable Dennis Bonnen, Chair, House Committee on Ways & Means
FROM: Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board
IN RE: HB3883 by Schaefer (Relating to the authority of certain municipalities to pledge revenue from the municipal hotel occupancy tax for the payment of obligations related to hotel projects.), As Introduced

 Honorable Dennis Bonnen, Chair, House Committee on Ways & Means 

 Honorable Dennis Bonnen, Chair, House Committee on Ways & Means 

 Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board

 Ursula Parks, Director, Legislative Budget Board

HB3883 by Schaefer (Relating to the authority of certain municipalities to pledge revenue from the municipal hotel occupancy tax for the payment of obligations related to hotel projects.), As Introduced

HB3883 by Schaefer (Relating to the authority of certain municipalities to pledge revenue from the municipal hotel occupancy tax for the payment of obligations related to hotel projects.), As Introduced

Estimated Two-year Net Impact to General Revenue Related Funds for HB3883, As Introduced: an impact of $0 through the biennium ending August 31, 2017. 

Estimated Two-year Net Impact to General Revenue Related Funds for HB3883, As Introduced: an impact of $0 through the biennium ending August 31, 2017.

General Revenue-Related Funds, Five-Year Impact:  Fiscal Year Probable Net Positive/(Negative) Impact to General Revenue Related Funds  2016 $0   2017 $0   2018 ($335,000)   2019 ($670,000)   2020 ($700,000)    


2016 $0
2017 $0
2018 ($335,000)
2019 ($670,000)
2020 ($700,000)

 All Funds, Five-Year Impact:  Fiscal Year Probable Revenue Gain/(Loss) fromGeneral Revenue Fund1    2016 $0   2017 $0   2018 ($335,000)   2019 ($670,000)   2020 ($700,000)   

  Fiscal Year Probable Revenue Gain/(Loss) fromGeneral Revenue Fund1    2016 $0   2017 $0   2018 ($335,000)   2019 ($670,000)   2020 ($700,000)  


2016 $0
2017 $0
2018 ($335,000)
2019 ($670,000)
2020 ($700,000)

Fiscal Analysis

The bill would amend Section 351.102 of the Tax Code which authorizes a municipality to pledge municipal hotel occupancy tax revenue to repay bond debt related to hotel projects.  The bill would amend Subsection (b) to extend its application to 1) a municipality with a population of 173,000 that is located in more than two counties, and 2) a municipality with a population of 96,000 or more that is located in a county that borders Lake Palestine. The bill would amend the subsection to provide that a hotel project must be located on land owned or that will be owned by the municipality, and to expand the facilities ancillary to the hotel for which hotel tax revenue may be pledged to include meeting spaces, public spaces including open public spaces used for connectivity, plazas, and street and water and sewer infrastructure.The bill would take effect immediately assuming that it received the requisite two-thirds majorityvotes in both houses. Otherwise, it would take effect September 1, 2015.

Methodology

The City of Tyler has acquired land and begun planning for a convention center and hotel that would be a qualified hotel project; the planned hotel would include 250 rooms and is not expected to be completed and operational before November, 2017 at the earliest. Consequently the municipality would not be expected to be entitled to receive state hotel tax and state sales tax revenue under Section 151.429(h), Tax Code, until sometime in fiscal 2018. In fiscal 2014, a total of $11,308,406 in state tax revenue was allocated for qualified hotel projects. Currently the cities of Dallas, Fort Worth and San Antonio receive allocations of state sales and use tax and state hotel tax associated with qualified hotel projects.  This estimate is based on the planned or an average room size for the prospective convention center hotels, an assumed average nightly room rate and annual average occupancy rate, an incremental gain in room nights sold in the state, and the ratio of state sales tax to state hotel tax revenues paid to the owners of the extant qualified hotel projects.

Local Government Impact

The City of Tyler would be entitled to state sales tax and state hotel tax associated with a qualified hotel project under Section 151.429(h) of the Tax Code via Section 351.102(b) and (c) of the Tax Code. Such funds must be deposited in a suspense account outside the state treasury to be paid to the owner of the qualified hotel project. 

Source Agencies: 304 Comptroller of Public Accounts

304 Comptroller of Public Accounts

LBB Staff: UP, KK, SD, AG

 UP, KK, SD, AG