TO: Honorable Mayor and Council
FROM: Gregory A Smothers, Interim Administrative Services Director
SUBJECT:Title
Adopt Resolution No.15-2945 Approving an Intergovernmental Agreement with the Arizona Department of Revenue Related to Uniform Administration of the City's Transaction Privilege Tax
Body
FUNDING SOURCE:
N/A
PURPOSE:
To adopt a resolution approving an Intergovernmental Agreement regarding the administration, collection, audit and/or licensing of transaction privilege tax, use tax, severance tax, jet fuel excise and use taxes and rental occupancy taxes imposed by the State, cities or towns.
BACKGROUND:
To supersede and replace all previous intergovernmental agreements, including amendments thereto, entered into by the Arizona Department of Revenue and Lake Havasu City regarding the administration, collection, audit and/or licensing of transaction privilege tax, use tax, severance tax, jet fuel excise and use taxes and rental occupancy taxes imposed by the State, cities or towns.
This intergovernmental agreement (IGA) was negotiated with the Department of Revenue (DOR) by city representatives included a finance director, a tax administrator, and two attorneys, along with assistance from the League of Arizona Cities and Towns. Additionally, several attorneys and tax experts from many cities and towns reviewed and commented on the language during the process, resulting in a document that provides the maximum level of information and assurances for the cities possible.
Local Transaction Privilege Tax (TPT) administration is governed by A.R.S. § 42-6001. This statute was recently modified for the purpose of tax simplification with the passage of House Bill 2111 in 2013 and House Bill 2389 in 2014. This statute now requires the Arizona Department of Revenue (DOR) to administer the transaction privilege and use taxes imposed by all cities and towns and to enter into a new inter-governmental agreement (IGA) with each city and town to reflect these changes and clearly define the working relationship between DOR and Arizona cities and towns.
State administration for the current self-collecting cities is predicated on DOR having the capability to provide an electronic means for collecting and distributing detailed taxpayer information including specific gross receipts and deductions by classification and by business location. This IGA intends to cover all aspects of administration after DOR takes over for all cities and towns, but it also includes language allowing self-collecting cities to continue their own tax and license programs until such time that DOR is able to perform the administrative functions documented in statute.
Although tax simplification will have the greatest impact on those cities and towns that are currently self-collecting local taxes, there are also considerable improvements for cities and towns in the State collection program as a result of simplification, particularly in the form of receiving much more detailed taxpayer data.
The IGA covers all aspects of local tax administration. First and foremost, the IGA addresses confidentiality, including the authorized handling of confidential taxpayer information, expectations for the discreet use of taxpayer data to prevent unauthorized disclosure, and the process we will follow in the event of a disclosure. There is also clarified and simplified guidance on the use of aggregated taxpayer data for public reporting and analysis.
The IGA includes clear direction regarding the sharing of general taxpayer license information, legal interpretations and written guidance, rate and fee tables, and any other pertinent tax information that needs to be shared between the cities and towns and DOR.
Importantly, the IGA identifies exactly which license and tax return data fields must be provided by DOR, and identifies in detail a series of new reports DOR will soon provide to all cities, both of which will serve to greatly expand the data available to the city for analysis purposes.
The first changes related to tax simplification that went into effect were new rules dealing with auditing, which DOR and the cities began following in January 2015. The IGA formalizes both the concepts included in statute and the main concepts used in practice by auditors in the field.
Key factors include a commitment to audit for all jurisdictions whenever any audit is being done; the continued authority for any city or town to perform an audit of a taxpayer that is engaged in business only in their town; the general guidance that DOR will lead all multi-jurisdictional audits, coupled with the option for DOR to delegate actual audit performance to a city or town when circumstances indicate it would be the most efficient means of completing the audit.
The IGA also provides guidance for handling voluntary disclosure by taxpayers, closing agreements in lieu of litigation, and sets up the responsibilities and authorities of both parties in terms of code or statute interpretations and legal support for protests.
Most importantly, the new IGA provides for a formal review process using the new "State and Local Uniformity Group" made up of four city and four DOR tax experts who will work together to iron out any problems or conflicts between the cities and the State.
The terms of this IGA run an annual basis from July 1, 2015 through June 30, 2016 and it renews automatically each year. Either party has the right to reopen and renegotiate the terms according to provisions within the agreement.
COMMUNITY IMPACT:
N/A
FISCAL IMPACT:
N/A
ATTACHMENTS:
Resolution No. 15-2945
Intergovernmental Agreement between the State of Arizona and Lake Havasu City
Appendix A - Arizona Department of Revenue Confidentiality Requirements
Arizona Joint Tax Application - (JT-2)
Transaction Privilege, Use, and Severance Tax Return - (TPT-2)
SUGGESTED MOTION:Recommended Action
I move to adopt Resolution No. 15-2945 approving an Intergovernmental Agreement with the Arizona Department of Revenue related to uniform administration of the City's Transaction Privilege Tax.