2023 -- S 0862 | |
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LC001655 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2023 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO TAXATION -- PROPERTY SUBJECT TO TAXATION | |
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Introduced By: Senator Tiara T. Mack | |
Date Introduced: March 30, 2023 | |
Referred To: Senate Finance | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Section 44-3-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-3 entitled "Property |
2 | Subject to Taxation" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 44-3-3. Property exempt. |
4 | (a) The following property is exempt from taxation: |
5 | (1) Property belonging to the state, except as provided in § 44-4-4.1; |
6 | (2) Lands ceded or belonging to the United States; |
7 | (3) Bonds and other securities issued and exempted from taxation by the government of |
8 | the United States or of this state; |
9 | (4) Real estate, used exclusively for military purposes, owned by chartered or incorporated |
10 | organizations approved by the adjutant general and composed of members of the national guard, |
11 | the naval militia, or the independent, chartered-military organizations; |
12 | (5) Buildings for free public schools, buildings for religious worship, and the land upon |
13 | which they stand and immediately surrounding them, to an extent not exceeding five (5) acres so |
14 | far as the buildings and land are occupied and used exclusively for religious or educational |
15 | purposes; |
16 | (6) Dwellings houses and the land on which they stand, not exceeding one acre in size, or |
17 | the minimum lot size for zone in which the dwelling house is located, whichever is the greater, |
18 | owned by, or held in trust for, any religious organization and actually used by its officiating clergy; |
19 | provided, further, that in the town of Charlestown, where the property previously described in this |
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1 | paragraph is exempt in total, along with dwelling houses and the land on which they stand in |
2 | Charlestown, not exceeding one acre in size, or the minimum lot size for zone in which the dwelling |
3 | house is located, whichever is the greater, owned by, or held in trust for, any religious organization |
4 | and actually used by its officiating clergy, or used as a convent, nunnery, or retreat center by its |
5 | religious order; |
6 | (7) Intangible personal property owned by, or held in trust for, any religious or charitable |
7 | organization, if the principal or income is used or appropriated for religious or charitable purposes; |
8 | (8) Buildings and personal estate owned by any corporation used for a school, academy, or |
9 | seminary of learning, and of any incorporated public charitable institution, and the land upon which |
10 | the buildings stand and immediately surrounding them to an extent not exceeding one acre, so far |
11 | as they are used exclusively for educational purposes, but no property or estate whatever is hereafter |
12 | exempt from taxation in any case where any part of its income or profits, or of the business carried |
13 | on there, is divided among its owners or stockholders; provided, however, that unless any private |
14 | nonprofit corporation organized as a college or university located in the town of Smithfield reaches |
15 | a memorandum of agreement with the town of Smithfield, the town of Smithfield shall bill the |
16 | actual costs for police, fire, and rescue services supplied, unless otherwise reimbursed, to said |
17 | corporation commencing March 1, 2014; |
18 | (9) Estates, persons, and families of the president and professors for the time being of |
19 | Brown University for not more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for each officer, the officer’s |
20 | estate, person, and family included, but only to the extent that any person had claimed and utilized |
21 | the exemption prior to, and for a period ending, either on or after December 31, 1996; |
22 | (10) Property especially exempt by charter unless the exemption has been waived in whole |
23 | or in part; |
24 | (11) Lots of land exclusively for burial grounds; |
25 | (12) Property, real and personal, held for, or by, an incorporated library, society, or any |
26 | free public library, or any free public library society, so far as the property is held exclusively for |
27 | library purposes, or for the aid or support of the aged poor, or poor friendless children, or the poor |
28 | generally, or for a nonprofit hospital for the sick or disabled; |
29 | (13) Real or personal estate belonging to, or held in trust for, the benefit of incorporated |
30 | organizations of veterans of any war in which the United States has been engaged, the parent body |
31 | of which has been incorporated by act of Congress, to the extent of four hundred thousand dollars |
32 | ($400,000) if actually used and occupied by the association; provided, that the city council of the |
33 | city of Cranston may by ordinance exempt the real or personal estate as previously described in |
34 | this subdivision located within the city of Cranston to the extent of five hundred thousand dollars |
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1 | ($500,000); |
2 | (14) Property, real and personal, held for, or by, the fraternal corporation, association, or |
3 | body created to build and maintain a building or buildings for its meetings or the meetings of the |
4 | general assembly of its members, or subordinate bodies of the fraternity, and for the |
5 | accommodation of other fraternal bodies or associations, the entire net income of which real and |
6 | personal property is exclusively applied or to be used to build, furnish, and maintain an asylum or |
7 | asylums, a home or homes, a school or schools, for the free education or relief of the members of |
8 | the fraternity, or the relief, support, and care of worthy and indigent members of the fraternity, their |
9 | wives, widows, or orphans, and any fund given or held for the purpose of public education, |
10 | almshouses, and the land and buildings used in connection therewith; |
11 | (15) Real estate and personal property of any incorporated volunteer fire engine company |
12 | or incorporated volunteer ambulance or rescue corps in active service; |
13 | (16) The estate of any person who, in the judgment of the assessors, is unable from infirmity |
14 | or poverty to pay the tax; provided, that in the towns of Burrillville and West Greenwich, the tax |
15 | shall constitute a lien for five (5) years on the property where the owner is entitled to the exemption. |
16 | At the expiration of five (5) years, the lien shall be abated in full. Provided, if the property is sold |
17 | or conveyed, or if debt secured by the property is refinanced during the five-year (5) period, the |
18 | lien immediately becomes due and payable; any person claiming the exemption aggrieved by an |
19 | adverse decision of an assessor shall appeal the decision to the local board of tax review and |
20 | thereafter according to the provisions of § 44-5-26; |
21 | (17) Household furniture and family stores of a housekeeper in the whole, including |
22 | clothing, bedding, and other white goods, books, and all other tangible personal property items that |
23 | are common to the normal household; |
24 | (18) Improvements made to any real property to provide a shelter and fallout protection |
25 | from nuclear radiation, to the amount of one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500); provided, that |
26 | the improvements meet applicable standards for shelter construction established, from time to time, |
27 | by the Rhode Island emergency management agency. The improvements are deemed to comply |
28 | with the provisions of any building code or ordinance with respect to the materials or the methods |
29 | of construction used and any shelter or its establishment is deemed to comply with the provisions |
30 | of any zoning code or ordinance; |
31 | (19) Aircraft for which the fee required by § 1-4-6 has been paid to the tax administrator; |
32 | (20) Manufacturer’s inventory. |
33 | (i) For the purposes of §§ 44-4-10, 44-5-3, 44-5-20, and 44-5-38, a person is deemed to be |
34 | a manufacturer within a city or town within this state if that person uses any premises, room, or |
| LC001655 - Page 3 of 39 |
1 | place in it primarily for the purpose of transforming raw materials into a finished product for trade |
2 | through any or all of the following operations: adapting, altering, finishing, making, and |
3 | ornamenting; provided, that public utilities; non-regulated power producers commencing |
4 | commercial operation by selling electricity at retail or taking title to generating facilities on or after |
5 | July 1, 1997; building and construction contractors; warehousing operations, including distribution |
6 | bases or outlets of out-of-state manufacturers; and fabricating processes incidental to warehousing |
7 | or distribution of raw materials, such as alteration of stock for the convenience of a customer; are |
8 | excluded from this definition; |
9 | (ii) For the purposes of this section and §§ 44-4-10 and 44-5-38, the term “manufacturer’s |
10 | inventory,” or any similar term, means and includes the manufacturer’s raw materials, the |
11 | manufacturer’s work in process, and finished products manufactured by the manufacturer in this |
12 | state, and not sold, leased, or traded by the manufacturer or its title or right to possession divested; |
13 | provided, that the term does not include any finished products held by the manufacturer in any retail |
14 | store or other similar selling place operated by the manufacturer whether or not the retail |
15 | establishment is located in the same building in which the manufacturer operates the manufacturing |
16 | plant; |
17 | (iii) For the purpose of § 44-11-2, a “manufacturer” is a person whose principal business |
18 | in this state consists of transforming raw materials into a finished product for trade through any or |
19 | all of the operations described in paragraph (i) of this subdivision. A person will be deemed to be |
20 | principally engaged if the gross receipts that person derived from the manufacturing operations in |
21 | this state during the calendar year or fiscal year mentioned in § 44-11-1 amounted to more than |
22 | fifty percent (50%) of the total gross receipts that person derived from all the business activities in |
23 | which that person engaged in this state during the taxable year. For the purpose of computing the |
24 | percentage, gross receipts derived by a manufacturer from the sale, lease, or rental of finished |
25 | products manufactured by the manufacturer in this state, even though the manufacturer’s store or |
26 | other selling place may be at a different location from the location of the manufacturer’s |
27 | manufacturing plant in this state, are deemed to have been derived from manufacturing; |
28 | (iv) Within the meaning of the preceding paragraphs of this subdivision, the term |
29 | “manufacturer” also includes persons who are principally engaged in any of the general activities |
30 | coded and listed as establishments engaged in manufacturing in the Standard Industrial |
31 | Classification Manual prepared by the Technical Committee on Industrial Classification, Office of |
32 | Statistical Standards, Executive Office of the President, United States Bureau of the Budget, as |
33 | revised from time to time, but eliminating as manufacturers those persons, who, because of their |
34 | limited type of manufacturing activities, are classified in the manual as falling within the trade |
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1 | rather than an industrial classification of manufacturers. Among those thus eliminated, and |
2 | accordingly also excluded as manufacturers within the meaning of this paragraph, are persons |
3 | primarily engaged in selling, to the general public, products produced on the premises from which |
4 | they are sold, such as neighborhood bakeries, candy stores, ice cream parlors, shade shops, and |
5 | custom tailors, except, that a person who manufactures bakery products for sale primarily for home |
6 | delivery, or through one or more non-baking retail outlets, and whether or not retail outlets are |
7 | operated by the person, is a manufacturer within the meaning of this paragraph; |
8 | (v) The term “Person” means and includes, as appropriate, a person, partnership, or |
9 | corporation; and |
10 | (vi) The department of revenue shall provide to the local assessors any assistance that is |
11 | necessary in determining the proper application of the definitions in this subdivision; |
12 | (21) Real and tangible personal property acquired to provide a treatment facility used |
13 | primarily to control the pollution or contamination of the waters or the air of the state, as defined |
14 | in chapter 12 of title 46 and chapter 25 of title 23, respectively, the facility having been constructed, |
15 | reconstructed, erected, installed, or acquired in furtherance of federal or state requirements or |
16 | standards for the control of water or air pollution or contamination, and certified as approved in an |
17 | order entered by the director of environmental management. The property is exempt as long as it is |
18 | operated properly in compliance with the order of approval of the director of environmental |
19 | management; provided, that any grant of the exemption by the director of environmental |
20 | management in excess of ten (10) years is approved by the city or town in which the property is |
21 | situated. This provision applies only to water and air pollution control properties and facilities |
22 | installed for the treatment of waste waters and air contaminants resulting from industrial |
23 | processing; furthermore, it applies only to water or air pollution control properties and facilities |
24 | placed in operation for the first time after April 13, 1970; |
25 | (22) Manufacturing machinery and equipment acquired or used by a manufacturer after |
26 | December 31, 1974. Manufacturing machinery and equipment is defined as: |
27 | (i) Machinery and equipment used exclusively in the actual manufacture or conversion of |
28 | raw materials or goods in the process of manufacture by a manufacturer, as defined in subdivision |
29 | (20), and machinery, fixtures, and equipment used exclusively by a manufacturer for research and |
30 | development or for quality assurance of its manufactured products; |
31 | (ii) Machinery and equipment that is partially used in the actual manufacture or conversion |
32 | of raw materials or goods in process of manufacture by a manufacturer, as defined in subdivision |
33 | (20), and machinery, fixtures, and equipment used by a manufacturer for research and development |
34 | or for quality assurance of its manufactured products, to the extent to which the machinery and |
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1 | equipment is used for the manufacturing processes, research and development, or quality assurance. |
2 | In the instances where machinery and equipment is used in both manufacturing and/or research and |
3 | development and/or quality assurance activities and non-manufacturing activities, the assessment |
4 | on machinery and equipment is prorated by applying the percentage of usage of the equipment for |
5 | the manufacturing, research and development, and quality-assurance activity to the value of the |
6 | machinery and equipment for purposes of taxation, and the portion of the value used for |
7 | manufacturing, research and development, and quality assurance is exempt from taxation. The |
8 | burden of demonstrating this percentage usage of machinery and equipment for manufacturing and |
9 | for research and development and/or quality assurance of its manufactured products rests with the |
10 | manufacturer; and |
11 | (iii) Machinery and equipment described in §§ 44-18-30(7) and 44-18-30(22) that was |
12 | purchased after July 1, 1997; provided that the city or town council of the city or town in which the |
13 | machinery and equipment is located adopts an ordinance exempting the machinery and equipment |
14 | from taxation. For purposes of this subsection, city councils and town councils of any municipality |
15 | may, by ordinance, wholly or partially exempt from taxation the machinery and equipment |
16 | discussed in this subsection for the period of time established in the ordinance and may, by |
17 | ordinance, establish the procedures for taxpayers to avail themselves of the benefit of any |
18 | exemption permitted under this section; provided, that the ordinance does not apply to any |
19 | machinery or equipment of a business, subsidiary, or any affiliated business that locates or relocates |
20 | from a city or town in this state to another city or town in the state; |
21 | (23) Precious metal bullion, meaning any elementary metal that has been put through a |
22 | process of melting or refining, and that is in a state or condition that its value depends upon its |
23 | content and not its form. The term does not include fabricated precious metal that has been |
24 | processed or manufactured for some one or more specific and customary industrial, professional, |
25 | or artistic uses; |
26 | (24) Hydroelectric power-generation equipment, which includes, but is not limited to, |
27 | turbines, generators, switchgear, controls, monitoring equipment, circuit breakers, transformers, |
28 | protective relaying, bus bars, cables, connections, trash racks, headgates, and conduits. The |
29 | hydroelectric power-generation equipment must have been purchased after July 1, 1979, and |
30 | acquired or used by a person or corporation who or that owns or leases a dam and utilizes the |
31 | equipment to generate hydroelectric power; |
32 | (25) Subject to authorization by formal action of the council of any city or town, any real |
33 | or personal property owned by, held in trust for, or leased to an organization incorporated under |
34 | chapter 6 of title 7, as amended, or an organization meeting the definition of “charitable trust” set |
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1 | out in § 18-9-4, as amended, or an organization incorporated under the not-for-profits statutes of |
2 | another state or the District of Columbia, the purpose of which is the conserving of open space, as |
3 | that term is defined in chapter 36 of title 45, as amended, provided the property is used exclusively |
4 | for the purposes of the organization; |
5 | (26) Tangible personal property, the primary function of which is the recycling, reuse, or |
6 | recovery of materials (other than precious metals, as defined in § 44-18-30(24)(ii) and (iii)), from, |
7 | or the treatment of “hazardous wastes,” as defined in § 23-19.1-4, where the “hazardous wastes” |
8 | are generated primarily by the same taxpayer and where the personal property is located at, in, or |
9 | adjacent to a generating facility of the taxpayer. The taxpayer may, but need not, procure an order |
10 | from the director of the department of environmental management certifying that the tangible |
11 | personal property has this function, which order effects a conclusive presumption that the tangible |
12 | personal property qualifies for the exemption under this subdivision. If any information relating to |
13 | secret processes or methods of manufacture, production, or treatment is disclosed to the department |
14 | of environmental management only to procure an order, and is a “trade secret” as defined in § 28- |
15 | 21-10(b), it shall not be open to public inspection or publicly disclosed unless disclosure is |
16 | otherwise required under chapter 21 of title 28 or chapter 24.4 of title 23; |
17 | (27) Motorboats as defined in § 46-22-2 for which the annual fee required in § 46-22-4 has |
18 | been paid; |
19 | (28) Real and personal property of the Providence Performing Arts Center, a non-business |
20 | corporation as of December 31, 1986; |
21 | (29) Tangible personal property owned by, and used exclusively for the purposes of, any |
22 | religious organization located in the city of Cranston; |
23 | (30) Real and personal property of the Travelers Aid Society of Rhode Island, a nonprofit |
24 | corporation, the Union Mall Real Estate Corporation, and any limited partnership or limited liability |
25 | company that is formed in connection with, or to facilitate the acquisition of, the Providence YMCA |
26 | Building; |
27 | (31) Real and personal property of Meeting Street Center or MSC Realty, Inc., both not- |
28 | for-profit Rhode Island corporations, and any other corporation, limited partnership, or limited |
29 | liability company that is formed in connection with, or to facilitate the acquisition of, the properties |
30 | designated as the Meeting Street National Center of Excellence on Eddy Street in Providence, |
31 | Rhode Island; |
32 | (32) The buildings, personal property, and land upon which the buildings stand, located on |
33 | Pomham Island, East Providence, currently identified as Assessor’s Map 211, Block 01, Parcel |
34 | 001.00, that consists of approximately twenty-one thousand three hundred (21,300) square feet and |
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1 | is located approximately eight hundred sixty feet (860′), more or less, from the shore, and limited |
2 | exclusively to these said buildings, personal estate and land, provided that said property is owned |
3 | by a qualified 501(c)(3) organization, such as the American Lighthouse Foundation, and is used |
4 | exclusively for a lighthouse; |
5 | (33) The Stadium Theatre Performing Arts Centre building located in Monument Square, |
6 | Woonsocket, Rhode Island, so long as said Stadium Theatre Performing Arts Center is owned by |
7 | the Stadium Theatre Foundation, a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation; |
8 | (34) Real and tangible personal property of St. Mary Academy — Bay View, located in |
9 | East Providence, Rhode Island; |
10 | (35) Real and personal property of East Bay Community Action Program and its |
11 | predecessor, Self Help, Inc; provided, that the organization is qualified as a tax-exempt corporation |
12 | under § 501(c)(3) of the United States Internal Revenue Code; |
13 | (36) Real and personal property located within the city of East Providence of the Columbus |
14 | Club of East Providence, a Rhode Island charitable nonprofit corporation; |
15 | (37) Real and personal property located within the city of East Providence of the Columbus |
16 | Club of Barrington, a Rhode Island charitable nonprofit corporation; |
17 | (38) Real and personal property located within the city of East Providence of Lodge 2337 |
18 | BPO Elks, a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation; |
19 | (39) Real and personal property located within the city of East Providence of the St. |
20 | Andrews Lodge No. 39, a Rhode Island charitable nonprofit corporation; |
21 | (40) Real and personal property located within the city of East Providence of the Trustees |
22 | of Methodist Health and Welfare service a/k/a United Methodist Elder Care, a Rhode Island |
23 | nonprofit corporation; |
24 | (41) Real and personal property located on the first floor of 90 Leonard Avenue within the |
25 | city of East Providence of the Zion Gospel Temple, Inc., a religious nonprofit corporation; |
26 | (42) Real and personal property located within the city of East Providence of the Cape |
27 | Verdean Museum Exhibit, a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation; |
28 | (43) The real and personal property owned by a qualified 501(c)(3) organization that is |
29 | affiliated and in good standing with a national, congressionally chartered organization and thereby |
30 | adheres to that organization’s standards and provides activities designed for recreational, |
31 | educational, and character building purposes for children from ages six (6) years to seventeen (17) |
32 | years; |
33 | (44) Real and personal property of the Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra and Music |
34 | School; provided, that the organization is qualified as a tax-exempt corporation under § 501(c)(3) |
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1 | of the United States Internal Revenue Code; |
2 | (45) The real and personal property located within the town of West Warwick at 211 |
3 | Cowesett Avenue, Plat 29-Lot 25, which consists of approximately twenty-eight thousand seven |
4 | hundred fifty (28,750) square feet and is owned by the Station Fire Memorial Foundation of East |
5 | Greenwich, a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation; |
6 | (46) Real and personal property of the Comprehensive Community Action Program, a |
7 | qualified tax-exempt corporation under § 501(c)(3) of the United States Internal Revenue Code; |
8 | (47) Real and personal property located at 52 Plain Street, within the city of Pawtucket of |
9 | the Pawtucket Youth Soccer Association, a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation; |
10 | (48) Renewable energy resources, as defined in § 39-26-5, used in residential systems and |
11 | associated equipment used therewith in service after December 31, 2015; |
12 | (49) Renewable energy resources, as defined in § 39-26-5, if employed by a manufacturer, |
13 | as defined in subsection (a) of this section, shall be exempt from taxation in accordance with |
14 | subsection (a) of this section; |
15 | (50) Real and personal property located at 415 Tower Hill Road within the town of North |
16 | Kingstown, of South County Community Action, Inc., a qualified tax-exempt corporation under § |
17 | 501(c)(3) of the United States Internal Revenue Code; |
18 | (51) As an effort to promote business growth, tangible business or personal property, in |
19 | whole or in part, within the town of Charlestown’s community limits, subject to authorization by |
20 | formal action of the town council of the town of Charlestown; |
21 | (52) All real and personal property located at 1300 Frenchtown Road, within the town of |
22 | East Greenwich, identified as assessor’s map 027, plat 019, lot 071, and known as the New England |
23 | Wireless and Steam Museum, Inc., a qualified tax-exempt corporation under § 501(c)(3) of the |
24 | United States Internal Revenue Code; |
25 | (53) Real and tangible personal property of Mount Saint Charles Academy located within |
26 | the city of Woonsocket, specifically identified as the following assessor’s plats and lots: Logee |
27 | Street, plat 23, lot 62, Logee Street, plat 24, lots 304 and 305; Welles Street, plat 23, lot 310; |
28 | Monroe Street, plat 23, lot 312; and Roberge Avenue, plat 24, lot 47; |
29 | (54) Real and tangible personal property of Steere House, a Rhode Island nonprofit |
30 | corporation, located in Providence, Rhode Island; |
31 | (55) Real and personal property located within the town of West Warwick of Tides Family |
32 | Services, Inc., a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation; |
33 | (56) Real and personal property of Tides Family Services, Inc., a Rhode Island nonprofit |
34 | corporation, located in the city of Pawtucket at 242 Dexter Street, plat 44, lot 444; |
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1 | (57) Real and personal property located within the town of Middletown of Lucy’s Hearth, |
2 | a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation; |
3 | (58) Real and tangible personal property of Habitat for Humanity of Rhode Island— |
4 | Greater Providence, Inc., a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation, located in Providence, Rhode |
5 | Island; |
6 | (59) Real and personal property of the Artic Playhouse, a Rhode Island nonprofit |
7 | corporation, located in the town of West Warwick at 1249 Main Street; |
8 | (60) Real and personal property located at 321 Main Street, within the town of South |
9 | Kingstown, of the Contemporary Theatre Company, a qualified, tax-exempt corporation under § |
10 | 501(c)(3) of the United States Internal Revenue Code; |
11 | (61) Real and personal property of The Samaritans, Inc., a Rhode Island nonprofit § |
12 | 501(c)(3) corporation located at 67 Park Place, Pawtucket, Rhode Island, to the extent the city |
13 | council of Pawtucket may from time to time determine; |
14 | (62) Real and personal property of North Kingstown, Exeter Animal Protection League, |
15 | Inc., dba “Pet Refuge,” 500 Stony Lane, a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation, located in North |
16 | Kingstown, Rhode Island; |
17 | (63) Real and personal property located within the city of East Providence of Foster |
18 | Forward (formerly the Rhode Island Foster Parents Association), a Rhode Island charitable |
19 | nonprofit corporation; |
20 | (64) Real and personal property located at 54 Kelly Avenue within the town of East |
21 | Providence, of the Associated Radio Amateurs of Southern New England, a Rhode Island nonprofit |
22 | corporation; |
23 | (65) Real and tangible personal property of Providence Country Day School, a Rhode |
24 | Island nonprofit corporation, located in East Providence, Rhode Island and further identified as plat |
25 | 406, block 6, lot 6, and plat 506, block 1, lot 8; |
26 | (66) As an effort to promote business growth, tangible business or personal property, in |
27 | whole or in part, within the town of Bristol’s community limits, subject to authorization by formal |
28 | action of the town council of the town of Bristol; |
29 | (67) Real and tangible personal property of the Heritage Harbor Foundation, a Rhode |
30 | Island nonprofit corporation, located at 1445 Wampanoag Trail, Suites 103 and 201, within the city |
31 | of East Providence; |
32 | (68) Real property of Ocean State Community Wellness, Inc., a qualified tax-exempt |
33 | corporation under § 501(c)(3) of the United States Internal Revenue Code, located in North |
34 | Kingstown, Rhode Island, with a physical address of 7450 Post Road, and further identified as plat |
| LC001655 - Page 10 of 39 |
1 | 108, lot 83; |
2 | (69) Real and tangible personal property of St. John Baptist De La Salle Institute, d/b/a La |
3 | Salle Academy, a Rhode Island domestic nonprofit corporation, located in Providence, Rhode |
4 | Island denominated at the time this subsection was adopted as Plat 83 Lot 276 by the tax assessor |
5 | for the city of Providence comprising approximately 26.08 acres of land along with all buildings |
6 | and improvements that have been or may be made; |
7 | (70) Real and tangible personal property of The Providence Community Health Centers, |
8 | Inc., a Rhode Island domestic nonprofit corporation, located in Providence, Rhode Island; |
9 | (71) In the city of Central Falls and the city of Pawtucket, real property and tangible |
10 | personal property located on or in the premise acquired or leased by a railroad entity and for the |
11 | purpose of providing boarding and disembarking of railroad passengers and the supporting |
12 | passenger railroad operations and services. For the purpose of this section, a railroad entity shall be |
13 | any incorporated entity that has been duly authorized by the Rhode Island public utilities |
14 | commission to provide passenger railroad services; |
15 | (72) Real and tangible personal property of the American Legion Riverside Post Holding |
16 | Company, d/b/a American Legion Post 10, a Rhode Island nonprofit corporation, located at 830 |
17 | Willet Avenue, within the city of East Providence on Map 513, Block 27, Parcel 001.00 as long as |
18 | said property is owned by American Legion Post 10; |
19 | (73) Real and tangible personal property of the Holy Rosary Band Society, a Rhode Island |
20 | nonprofit corporation, located at 328 Taunton Avenue, within the city of East Providence on Map |
21 | 306, Block 01, Parcel 012.00; |
22 | (74) Real and tangible personal property of Foster Forward, a Rhode Island domestic |
23 | nonprofit corporation, located within the city of Pawtucket, at 16 North Bend Street, and further |
24 | identified as assessor’s plat 21, lot 312; |
25 | (75) Real and tangible personal property of the Old and Ancient Rowers Society of Rhode |
26 | Island, a Rhode Island domestic nonprofit corporation, located at 166 Walmsley Lane, within the |
27 | town of North Kingstown on Plat 004/Lot 019; |
28 | (76) Real and tangible personal property of the Rhode Island Public Health Foundation, a |
29 | domestic nonprofit corporation or any other entity formed by the Rhode Island Public Health |
30 | Foundation in connection with, or to facilitate the acquisition of, one property to be owned by the |
31 | Rhode Island Public Health Foundation or such entity, located in the city of Providence; |
32 | (77) Real and tangible personal property of the Manissean Tribal Council, a Rhode Island |
33 | nonprofit corporation, located in the town of New Shoreham, Rhode Island; |
34 | (78) Real and tangible personal property of Sophia Academy located at 582 Elmwood |
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1 | Avenue, the San Miguel Education Center located at 525 Branch Avenue, and the Community |
2 | Preparatory School, Inc. located at 135 Prairie Avenue, all of which are domestic nonprofit |
3 | corporations, and all of which are located within the city of Providence; and |
4 | (79) Real and tangible personal property of Cape Verdean Museum Exhibit, a Rhode Island |
5 | domestic nonprofit corporation, located at 617 Prospect Street, within the city of Pawtucket on |
6 | Assessors’ Plat 37, Lot 434.; and |
7 | (80) Real and tangible personal property of urban and small farmers. |
8 | (i) For purposes of this subsection: |
9 | (A) An “urban farmer” is a taxpayer that produces or grows food in a city or other heavily |
10 | populated areas; and |
11 | (B) A “small farmer” is a taxpayer that farms agricultural land up to five (5) acres. |
12 | (b) Except as provided below, when a city or town taxes a for-profit hospital facility, the |
13 | value of its real property shall be the value determined by the most recent full revaluation or |
14 | statistical property update performed by the city or town; provided, however, in the year a nonprofit |
15 | hospital facility converts to or otherwise becomes a for-profit hospital facility, or a for-profit |
16 | hospital facility is initially established, the value of the real property and personal property of the |
17 | for-profit hospital facility shall be determined by a valuation performed by the assessor for the |
18 | purpose of determining an initial assessed value of real and personal property, not previously taxed |
19 | by the city or town, as of the most recent date of assessment pursuant to § 44-5-1, subject to a right |
20 | of appeal by the for-profit hospital facility which shall be made to the city or town tax assessor with |
21 | a direct appeal from an adverse decision to the Rhode Island superior court business calendar. |
22 | A “for-profit hospital facility” includes all real and personal property affiliated with any |
23 | hospital as identified in an application filed pursuant to chapter 17 or 17.14 of title 23. |
24 | Notwithstanding the above, a city or town may enter into a stabilization agreement with a for-profit |
25 | hospital facility under § 44-3-9 or other laws specific to the particular city or town relating to |
26 | stabilization agreements. In a year in which a nonprofit hospital facility converts to, or otherwise |
27 | becomes, a for-profit hospital facility, or a for-profit hospital facility is otherwise established, in |
28 | that year only the amount levied by the city or town and/or the amount payable under the |
29 | stabilization agreement for that year related to the for-profit hospital facility shall not be counted |
30 | towards determining the maximum tax levy permitted under § 44-5-2. |
31 | (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, in an effort to provide relief |
32 | for businesses, including small businesses, and to promote economic development, a city, town, or |
33 | fire district may establish an exemption for tangible personal property within its geographic limits |
34 | by formal action of the appropriate governing body within the city, town, or fire district, which |
| LC001655 - Page 12 of 39 |
1 | exemptions shall be uniformly applied and in compliance with local tax classification requirements. |
2 | Exemptions established pursuant to this subsection shall conform to the requirements of § 44-5- |
3 | 12.2. |
4 | SECTION 2. Section 44-11-11 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-11 entitled "Business |
5 | Corporation Tax" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
6 | 44-11-11. “Net income” defined. |
7 | (a)(1) “Net income” means, for any taxable year and for any corporate taxpayer, the taxable |
8 | income of the taxpayer for that taxable year under the laws of the United States, plus: |
9 | (i) Any interest not included in the taxable income; |
10 | (ii) Any specific exemptions; |
11 | (iii) The tax imposed by this chapter; |
12 | (iv) For any taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2020, the amount of any Paycheck |
13 | Protection Program loan forgiven for federal income tax purposes as authorized by the Coronavirus |
14 | Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act and/or the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 and/or |
15 | any other subsequent federal stimulus relief packages enacted by law, to the extent that the amount |
16 | of the loan forgiven exceeds $250,000; and minus: |
17 | (v) Interest on obligations of the United States or its possessions, and other interest exempt |
18 | from taxation by this state; and |
19 | (vi) The federal net operating loss deduction.; and |
20 | (vii) Income from the production of food by urban and small farmers. |
21 | (A) For purposes of this subsection: |
22 | (I) An “urban farmer” is a taxpayer that produces or grows food in a city or other heavily |
23 | populated areas; and |
24 | (II) A “small farmer” is a taxpayer that farms agricultural land up to five (5) acres. |
25 | (2) All binding federal elections made by or on behalf of the taxpayer applicable either |
26 | directly or indirectly to the determination of taxable income shall be binding on the taxpayer except |
27 | where this chapter or its attendant regulations specifically modify or provide otherwise. Rhode |
28 | Island taxable income shall not include the “gross-up of dividends” required by the federal Internal |
29 | Revenue Code to be taken into taxable income in connection with the taxpayer’s election of the |
30 | foreign tax credit. |
31 | (b) A net operating loss deduction shall be allowed, which shall be the same as the net |
32 | operating loss deduction allowed under 26 U.S.C. § 172, except that: |
33 | (1) Any net operating loss included in determining the deduction shall be adjusted to reflect |
34 | the inclusions and exclusions from entire net income required by subsection (a) of this section and |
| LC001655 - Page 13 of 39 |
1 | § 44-11-11.1; |
2 | (2) The deduction shall not include any net operating loss sustained during any taxable year |
3 | in which the taxpayer was not subject to the tax imposed by this chapter; and |
4 | (3) The deduction shall not exceed the deduction for the taxable year allowable under 26 |
5 | U.S.C. § 172; provided, that the deduction for a taxable year may not be carried back to any other |
6 | taxable year for Rhode Island purposes but shall only be allowable on a carry forward basis for the |
7 | five (5) succeeding taxable years. |
8 | (c) “Domestic international sales corporations” (referred to as DISCs), for the purposes of |
9 | this chapter, will be treated as they are under federal income tax law and shall not pay the amount |
10 | of the tax computed under § 44-11-2(a). Any income to shareholders of DISCs is to be treated in |
11 | the same manner as it is treated under federal income tax law as it exists on December 31, 1984. |
12 | (d) A corporation that qualifies as a “foreign sales corporation” (FSC) under the provisions |
13 | of subchapter N, 26 U.S.C. § 861 et seq., and that has in effect for the entire taxable year a valid |
14 | election under federal law to be treated as a FSC, shall not pay the amount of the tax computed |
15 | under § 44-11-2(a). Any income to shareholders of FSCs is to be treated in the same manner as it |
16 | is treated under federal income tax law as it exists on January 1, 1985. |
17 | (e) For purposes of a corporation’s state tax liability, any deduction to income allowable |
18 | under 26 U.S.C. § 1400Z-2(c) may be claimed in the case of any investment held by the taxpayer |
19 | for at least seven years. The division of taxation shall promulgate, in its discretion, rules and |
20 | regulations relative to the accelerated application of deductions under 26 U.S.C. § 1400Z-2(c). |
21 | SECTION 3. Section 44-18-30 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-18 entitled "Sales and |
22 | Use Taxes — Liability and Computation" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
23 | 44-18-30. Gross receipts exempt from sales and use taxes. |
24 | There are exempted from the taxes imposed by this chapter the following gross receipts: |
25 | (1) Sales and uses beyond constitutional power of state. From the sale and from the storage, |
26 | use, or other consumption in this state of tangible personal property the gross receipts from the sale |
27 | of which, or the storage, use, or other consumption of which, this state is prohibited from taxing |
28 | under the Constitution of the United States or under the constitution of this state. |
29 | (2) Newspapers. |
30 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of any |
31 | newspaper. |
32 | (ii) “Newspaper” means an unbound publication printed on newsprint that contains news, |
33 | editorial comment, opinions, features, advertising matter, and other matters of public interest. |
34 | (iii) “Newspaper” does not include a magazine, handbill, circular, flyer, sales catalog, or |
| LC001655 - Page 14 of 39 |
1 | similar item unless the item is printed for, and distributed as, a part of a newspaper. |
2 | (3) School meals. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this |
3 | state of meals served by public, private, or parochial schools, school districts, colleges, universities, |
4 | student organizations, and parent-teacher associations to the students or teachers of a school, |
5 | college, or university whether the meals are served by the educational institutions or by a food |
6 | service or management entity under contract to the educational institutions. |
7 | (4) Containers. |
8 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of: |
9 | (A) Non-returnable containers, including boxes, paper bags, and wrapping materials that |
10 | are biodegradable and all bags and wrapping materials utilized in the medical and healing arts, |
11 | when sold without the contents to persons who place the contents in the container and sell the |
12 | contents with the container. |
13 | (B) Containers when sold with the contents if the sale price of the contents is not required |
14 | to be included in the measure of the taxes imposed by this chapter. |
15 | (C) Returnable containers when sold with the contents in connection with a retail sale of |
16 | the contents or when resold for refilling. |
17 | (D) Keg and barrel containers, whether returnable or not, when sold to alcoholic beverage |
18 | producers who place the alcoholic beverages in the containers. |
19 | (ii) As used in this subdivision, the term “returnable containers” means containers of a kind |
20 | customarily returned by the buyer of the contents for reuse. All other containers are “non-returnable |
21 | containers.” |
22 | (5)(i) Charitable, educational, and religious organizations. From the sale to, as in defined |
23 | in this section, and from the storage, use, and other consumption in this state, or any other state of |
24 | the United States of America, of tangible personal property by hospitals not operated for a profit; |
25 | “educational institutions” as defined in subdivision (18) not operated for a profit; churches, |
26 | orphanages, and other institutions or organizations operated exclusively for religious or charitable |
27 | purposes; interest-free loan associations not operated for profit; nonprofit, organized sporting |
28 | leagues and associations and bands for boys and girls under the age of nineteen (19) years; the |
29 | following vocational student organizations that are state chapters of national vocational student |
30 | organizations: Distributive Education Clubs of America (DECA); Future Business Leaders of |
31 | America, Phi Beta Lambda (FBLA/PBL); Future Farmers of America (FFA); Future Homemakers |
32 | of America/Home Economics Related Occupations (FHA/HERD); Vocational Industrial Clubs of |
33 | America (VICA); organized nonprofit golden age and senior citizens clubs for men and women; |
34 | and parent-teacher associations; and from the sale, storage, use, and other consumption in this state, |
| LC001655 - Page 15 of 39 |
1 | of and by the Industrial Foundation of Burrillville, a Rhode Island domestic nonprofit corporation. |
2 | (ii) In the case of contracts entered into with the federal government, its agencies, or |
3 | instrumentalities, this state, or any other state of the United States of America, its agencies, any |
4 | city, town, district, or other political subdivision of the states; hospitals not operated for profit; |
5 | educational institutions not operated for profit; churches, orphanages, and other institutions or |
6 | organizations operated exclusively for religious or charitable purposes, the contractor may purchase |
7 | such materials and supplies (materials and/or supplies are defined as those that are essential to the |
8 | project) that are to be utilized in the construction of the projects being performed under the contracts |
9 | without payment of the tax. |
10 | (iii) The contractor shall not charge any sales or use tax to any exempt agency, institution, |
11 | or organization but shall in that instance provide his or her suppliers with certificates in the form |
12 | as determined by the division of taxation showing the reason for exemption and the contractor’s |
13 | records must substantiate the claim for exemption by showing the disposition of all property so |
14 | purchased. If any property is then used for a nonexempt purpose, the contractor must pay the tax |
15 | on the property used. |
16 | (6) Gasoline. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state |
17 | of: (i) Gasoline and other products taxed under chapter 36 of title 31 and (ii) Fuels used for the |
18 | propulsion of airplanes. |
19 | (7) Purchase for manufacturing purposes. |
20 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of computer |
21 | software, tangible personal property, electricity, natural gas, artificial gas, steam, refrigeration, and |
22 | water, when the property or service is purchased for the purpose of being manufactured into a |
23 | finished product for resale and becomes an ingredient, component, or integral part of the |
24 | manufactured, compounded, processed, assembled, or prepared product, or if the property or |
25 | service is consumed in the process of manufacturing for resale computer software, tangible personal |
26 | property, electricity, natural gas, artificial gas, steam, refrigeration, or water. |
27 | (ii) “Consumed” means destroyed, used up, or worn out to the degree or extent that the |
28 | property cannot be repaired, reconditioned, or rendered fit for further manufacturing use. |
29 | (iii) “Consumed” includes mere obsolescence. |
30 | (iv) “Manufacturing” means and includes: manufacturing, compounding, processing, |
31 | assembling, preparing, or producing. |
32 | (v) “Process of manufacturing” means and includes all production operations performed in |
33 | the producing or processing room, shop, or plant, insofar as the operations are a part of and |
34 | connected with the manufacturing for resale of tangible personal property, electricity, natural gas, |
| LC001655 - Page 16 of 39 |
1 | artificial gas, steam, refrigeration, or water and all production operations performed insofar as the |
2 | operations are a part of and connected with the manufacturing for resale of computer software. |
3 | (vi) “Process of manufacturing” does not mean or include administration operations such |
4 | as general office operations, accounting, collection, or sales promotion, nor does it mean or include |
5 | distribution operations that occur subsequent to production operations, such as handling, storing, |
6 | selling, and transporting the manufactured products, even though the administration and |
7 | distribution operations are performed by, or in connection with, a manufacturing business. |
8 | (8) State and political subdivisions. From the sale to, and from the storage, use, or other |
9 | consumption by, this state, any city, town, district, or other political subdivision of this state. Every |
10 | redevelopment agency created pursuant to chapter 31 of title 45 is deemed to be a subdivision of |
11 | the municipality where it is located. |
12 | (9) Food and food ingredients. From the sale and storage, use, or other consumption in this |
13 | state of food and food ingredients as defined in § 44-18-7.1(l). |
14 | For the purposes of this exemption “food and food ingredients” shall not include candy, |
15 | soft drinks, dietary supplements, alcoholic beverages, tobacco, food sold through vending |
16 | machines, or prepared food, as those terms are defined in § 44-18-7.1, unless the prepared food is: |
17 | (i) Sold by a seller whose primary NAICS classification is manufacturing in sector 311, |
18 | except sub-sector 3118 (bakeries); |
19 | (ii) Sold in an unheated state by weight or volume as a single item; |
20 | (iii) Bakery items, including: bread, rolls, buns, biscuits, bagels, croissants, pastries, |
21 | donuts, danish, cakes, tortes, pies, tarts, muffins, bars, cookies, tortillas; and |
22 | is not sold with utensils provided by the seller, including: plates, knives, forks, spoons, |
23 | glasses, cups, napkins, or straws. |
24 | (10) Medicines, drugs, and durable medical equipment. From the sale and from the storage, |
25 | use, or other consumption in this state, of: |
26 | (i) “Drugs” as defined in § 44-18-7.1(h)(i), sold on prescriptions, medical oxygen, and |
27 | insulin whether or not sold on prescription. For purposes of this exemption drugs shall not include |
28 | over-the-counter drugs and grooming and hygiene products as defined in § 44-18-7.1(h)(iii). |
29 | (ii) Durable medical equipment as defined in § 44-18-7.1(k) for home use only, including, |
30 | but not limited to: syringe infusers, ambulatory drug delivery pumps, hospital beds, convalescent |
31 | chairs, and chair lifts. Supplies used in connection with syringe infusers and ambulatory drug |
32 | delivery pumps that are sold on prescription to individuals to be used by them to dispense or |
33 | administer prescription drugs, and related ancillary dressings and supplies used to dispense or |
34 | administer prescription drugs, shall also be exempt from tax. |
| LC001655 - Page 17 of 39 |
1 | (11) Prosthetic devices and mobility enhancing equipment. From the sale and from the |
2 | storage, use, or other consumption in this state, of prosthetic devices as defined in § 44-18-7.1(t), |
3 | sold on prescription, including, but not limited to: artificial limbs, dentures, spectacles, eyeglasses, |
4 | and artificial eyes; artificial hearing devices and hearing aids, whether or not sold on prescription; |
5 | and mobility enhancing equipment as defined in § 44-18-7.1(p), including wheelchairs, crutches, |
6 | and canes. |
7 | (12) Coffins, caskets, urns, shrouds and burial garments. From the sale and from the |
8 | storage, use, or other consumption in this state of coffins, caskets, burial containers, urns, urn liners, |
9 | urn vaults, grave liners, grave vaults, burial tent setups, prayer cards, shrouds, and other burial |
10 | garments that are ordinarily sold by a funeral director as part of the business of funeral directing. |
11 | (13) Motor vehicles sold to nonresidents. |
12 | (i) From the sale, subsequent to June 30, 1958, of a motor vehicle to a bona fide nonresident |
13 | of this state who does not register the motor vehicle in this state, whether the sale or delivery of the |
14 | motor vehicle is made in this state or at the place of residence of the nonresident. A motor vehicle |
15 | sold to a bona fide nonresident whose state of residence does not allow a like exemption to its |
16 | nonresidents is not exempt from the tax imposed under § 44-18-20. In that event, the bona fide |
17 | nonresident pays a tax to Rhode Island on the sale at a rate equal to the rate that would be imposed |
18 | in his or her state of residence not to exceed the rate that would have been imposed under § 44-18- |
19 | 20. Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, a licensed motor vehicle dealer shall add and |
20 | collect the tax required under this subdivision and remit the tax to the tax administrator under the |
21 | provisions of chapters 18 and 19 of this title. When a Rhode Island licensed, motor vehicle dealer |
22 | is required to add and collect the sales and use tax on the sale of a motor vehicle to a bona fide |
23 | nonresident as provided in this section, the dealer in computing the tax takes into consideration the |
24 | law of the state of the nonresident as it relates to the trade-in of motor vehicles. |
25 | (ii) The tax administrator, in addition to the provisions of §§ 44-19-27 and 44-19-28, may |
26 | require any licensed motor vehicle dealer to keep records of sales to bona fide nonresidents as the |
27 | tax administrator deems reasonably necessary to substantiate the exemption provided in this |
28 | subdivision, including the affidavit of a licensed motor vehicle dealer that the purchaser of the |
29 | motor vehicle was the holder of, and had in his or her possession a valid out-of-state motor vehicle |
30 | registration or a valid out-of-state driver’s license. |
31 | (iii) Any nonresident who registers a motor vehicle in this state within ninety (90) days of |
32 | the date of its sale to him or her is deemed to have purchased the motor vehicle for use, storage, or |
33 | other consumption in this state, and is subject to, and liable for, the use tax imposed under the |
34 | provisions of § 44-18-20. |
| LC001655 - Page 18 of 39 |
1 | (14) Sales in public buildings by blind people. From the sale and from the storage, use, or |
2 | other consumption in all public buildings in this state of all products or wares by any person |
3 | licensed under § 40-9-11.1. |
4 | (15) Air and water pollution control facilities. From the sale, storage, use, or other |
5 | consumption in this state of tangible personal property or supplies acquired for incorporation into |
6 | or used and consumed in the operation of a facility, the primary purpose of which is to aid in the |
7 | control of the pollution or contamination of the waters or air of the state, as defined in chapter 12 |
8 | of title 46 and chapter 23 of title 23, respectively, and that has been certified as approved for that |
9 | purpose by the director of environmental management. The director of environmental management |
10 | may certify to a portion of the tangible personal property or supplies acquired for incorporation |
11 | into those facilities or used and consumed in the operation of those facilities to the extent that that |
12 | portion has as its primary purpose the control of the pollution or contamination of the waters or air |
13 | of this state. As used in this subdivision, “facility” means any land, facility, device, building, |
14 | machinery, or equipment. |
15 | (16) Camps. From the rental charged for living quarters, or sleeping, or housekeeping |
16 | accommodations at camps or retreat houses operated by religious, charitable, educational, or other |
17 | organizations and associations mentioned in subsection (5), or by privately owned and operated |
18 | summer camps for children. |
19 | (17) Certain institutions. From the rental charged for living or sleeping quarters in an |
20 | institution licensed by the state for the hospitalization, custodial, or nursing care of human beings. |
21 | (18) Educational institutions. From the rental charged by any educational institution for |
22 | living quarters, or sleeping, or housekeeping accommodations or other rooms or accommodations |
23 | to any student or teacher necessitated by attendance at an educational institution. “Educational |
24 | institution” as used in this section means an institution of learning not operated for profit that is |
25 | empowered to confer diplomas, educational, literary, or academic degrees; that has a regular |
26 | faculty, curriculum, and organized body of pupils or students in attendance throughout the usual |
27 | school year; that keeps and furnishes to students and others records required and accepted for |
28 | entrance to schools of secondary, collegiate, or graduate rank; and no part of the net earnings of |
29 | which inures to the benefit of any individual. |
30 | (19) Motor vehicle and adaptive equipment for persons with disabilities. |
31 | (i) From the sale of: (A) Special adaptations; (B) The component parts of the special |
32 | adaptations; or (C) A specially adapted motor vehicle; provided that the owner furnishes to the tax |
33 | administrator an affidavit of a licensed physician to the effect that the specially adapted motor |
34 | vehicle is necessary to transport a family member with a disability or where the vehicle has been |
| LC001655 - Page 19 of 39 |
1 | specially adapted to meet the specific needs of the person with a disability. This exemption applies |
2 | to not more than one motor vehicle owned and registered for personal, noncommercial use. |
3 | (ii) For the purpose of this subsection the term “special adaptations” includes, but is not |
4 | limited to: wheelchair lifts, wheelchair carriers, wheelchair ramps, wheelchair securements, hand |
5 | controls, steering devices, extensions, relocations, and crossovers of operator controls, power- |
6 | assisted controls, raised tops or dropped floors, raised entry doors, or alternative signaling devices |
7 | to auditory signals. |
8 | (iii) From the sale of: (a) Special adaptations, (b) The component parts of the special |
9 | adaptations, for a “wheelchair accessible taxicab” as defined in § 39-14-1, and/or a “wheelchair |
10 | accessible public motor vehicle” as defined in § 39-14.1-1. |
11 | (iv) For the purpose of this subdivision the exemption for a “specially adapted motor |
12 | vehicle” means a use tax credit not to exceed the amount of use tax that would otherwise be due on |
13 | the motor vehicle, exclusive of any adaptations. The use tax credit is equal to the cost of the special |
14 | adaptations, including installation. |
15 | (20) Heating fuels. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this |
16 | state of every type of heating fuel. |
17 | (21) Electricity and gas. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in |
18 | this state of electricity and gas. |
19 | (22) Manufacturing machinery and equipment. |
20 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of tools, dies, |
21 | molds, machinery, equipment (including replacement parts), and related items to the extent used in |
22 | an industrial plant in connection with the actual manufacture, conversion, or processing of tangible |
23 | personal property, or to the extent used in connection with the actual manufacture, conversion, or |
24 | processing of computer software as that term is utilized in industry numbers 7371, 7372, and 7373 |
25 | in the standard industrial classification manual prepared by the Technical Committee on Industrial |
26 | Classification, Office of Statistical Standards, Executive Office of the President, United States |
27 | Bureau of the Budget, as revised from time to time, to be sold, or that machinery and equipment |
28 | used in the furnishing of power to an industrial manufacturing plant. For the purposes of this |
29 | subdivision, “industrial plant” means a factory at a fixed location primarily engaged in the |
30 | manufacture, conversion, or processing of tangible personal property to be sold in the regular |
31 | course of business; |
32 | (ii) Machinery and equipment and related items are not deemed to be used in connection |
33 | with the actual manufacture, conversion, or processing of tangible personal property, or in |
34 | connection with the actual manufacture, conversion, or processing of computer software as that |
| LC001655 - Page 20 of 39 |
1 | term is utilized in industry numbers 7371, 7372, and 7373 in the standard industrial classification |
2 | manual prepared by the Technical Committee on Industrial Classification, Office of Statistical |
3 | Standards, Executive Office of the President, United States Bureau of the Budget, as revised from |
4 | time to time, to be sold to the extent the property is used in administration or distribution operations; |
5 | (iii) Machinery and equipment and related items used in connection with the actual |
6 | manufacture, conversion, or processing of any computer software or any tangible personal property |
7 | that is not to be sold and that would be exempt under subdivision (7) or this subdivision if purchased |
8 | from a vendor or machinery and equipment and related items used during any manufacturing, |
9 | converting, or processing function is exempt under this subdivision even if that operation, function, |
10 | or purpose is not an integral or essential part of a continuous production flow or manufacturing |
11 | process; |
12 | (iv) Where a portion of a group of portable or mobile machinery is used in connection with |
13 | the actual manufacture, conversion, or processing of computer software or tangible personal |
14 | property to be sold, as previously defined, that portion, if otherwise qualifying, is exempt under |
15 | this subdivision even though the machinery in that group is used interchangeably and not otherwise |
16 | identifiable as to use. |
17 | (23) Trade-in value of motor vehicles. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
18 | consumption in this state of so much of the purchase price paid for a new or used automobile as is |
19 | allocated for a trade-in allowance on the automobile of the buyer given in trade to the seller, or of |
20 | the proceeds applicable only to the automobile as are received from the manufacturer of |
21 | automobiles for the repurchase of the automobile whether the repurchase was voluntary or not |
22 | towards the purchase of a new or used automobile by the buyer. For the purpose of this subdivision, |
23 | the word “automobile” means a private passenger automobile not used for hire and does not refer |
24 | to any other type of motor vehicle. |
25 | (24) Precious metal bullion. |
26 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of precious |
27 | metal bullion, substantially equivalent to a transaction in securities or commodities. |
28 | (ii) For purposes of this subdivision, “precious metal bullion” means any elementary |
29 | precious metal that has been put through a process of smelting or refining, including, but not limited |
30 | to: gold, silver, platinum, rhodium, and chromium, and that is in a state or condition that its value |
31 | depends upon its content and not upon its form. |
32 | (iii) The term does not include fabricated precious metal that has been processed or |
33 | manufactured for some one or more specific and customary industrial, professional, or artistic uses. |
34 | (25) Commercial vessels. From sales made to a commercial ship, barge, or other vessel of |
| LC001655 - Page 21 of 39 |
1 | fifty (50) tons burden or over, primarily engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, and from the |
2 | repair, alteration, or conversion of the vessels, and from the sale of property purchased for the use |
3 | of the vessels including provisions, supplies, and material for the maintenance and/or repair of the |
4 | vessels. |
5 | (26) Commercial fishing vessels. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
6 | consumption in this state of vessels and other watercraft that are in excess of five (5) net tons and |
7 | that are used exclusively for “commercial fishing,” as defined in this subdivision, and from the |
8 | repair, alteration, or conversion of those vessels and other watercraft, and from the sale of property |
9 | purchased for the use of those vessels and other watercraft including provisions, supplies, and |
10 | material for the maintenance and/or repair of the vessels and other watercraft and the boats nets, |
11 | cables, tackle, and other fishing equipment appurtenant to or used in connection with the |
12 | commercial fishing of the vessels and other watercraft. “Commercial fishing” means taking or |
13 | attempting to take any fish, shellfish, crustacea, or bait species with the intent of disposing of it for |
14 | profit or by sale, barter, trade, or in commercial channels. The term does not include subsistence |
15 | fishing, i.e., the taking for personal use and not for sale or barter; or sport fishing; but shall include |
16 | vessels and other watercraft with a Rhode Island party and charter boat license issued by the |
17 | department of environmental management pursuant to § 20-2-27.1 that meet the following criteria: |
18 | (i) The operator must have a current United States Coast Guard (U.S.C.G.) license to carry |
19 | passengers for hire; (ii) U.S.C.G. vessel documentation in the coast wide fishery trade; (iii) |
20 | U.S.C.G. vessel documentation as to proof of Rhode Island home port status or a Rhode Island boat |
21 | registration to prove Rhode Island home port status; and (iv) The vessel must be used as a |
22 | commercial passenger carrying fishing vessel to carry passengers for fishing. The vessel must be |
23 | able to demonstrate that at least fifty percent (50%) of its annual gross income derives from charters |
24 | or provides documentation of a minimum of one hundred (100) charter trips annually; and (v) The |
25 | vessel must have a valid Rhode Island party and charter boat license. The tax administrator shall |
26 | implement the provisions of this subdivision by promulgating rules and regulations relating thereto. |
27 | (27) Clothing and footwear. From the sales of articles of clothing, including footwear, |
28 | intended to be worn or carried on or about the human body for sales prior to October 1, 2012. |
29 | Effective October 1, 2012, the exemption will apply to the sales of articles of clothing, including |
30 | footwear, intended to be worn or carried on or about the human body up to two hundred and fifty |
31 | dollars ($250) of the sales price per item. For the purposes of this section, “clothing or footwear” |
32 | does not include clothing accessories or equipment or special clothing or footwear primarily |
33 | designed for athletic activity or protective use as these terms are defined in § 44-18-7.1(f). In |
34 | recognition of the work being performed by the streamlined sales and use tax governing board, |
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1 | upon passage of any federal law that authorizes states to require remote sellers to collect and remit |
2 | sales and use taxes, this unlimited exemption will apply as it did prior to October 1, 2012. The |
3 | unlimited exemption on sales of clothing and footwear shall take effect on the date that the state |
4 | requires remote sellers to collect and remit sales and use taxes. |
5 | (28) Water for residential use. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
6 | consumption in this state of water furnished for domestic use by occupants of residential premises. |
7 | (29) Bibles. [Unconstitutional; see Ahlburn v. Clark, 728 A.2d 449 (R.I. 1999); see Notes |
8 | to Decisions.] From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in the state of any |
9 | canonized scriptures of any tax-exempt nonprofit religious organization including, but not limited |
10 | to, the Old Testament and the New Testament versions. |
11 | (30) Boats. |
12 | (i) From the sale of a boat or vessel to a bona fide nonresident of this state who does not |
13 | register the boat or vessel in this state or document the boat or vessel with the United States |
14 | government at a home port within the state, whether the sale or delivery of the boat or vessel is |
15 | made in this state or elsewhere; provided, that the nonresident transports the boat within thirty (30) |
16 | days after delivery by the seller outside the state for use thereafter solely outside the state. |
17 | (ii) The tax administrator, in addition to the provisions of §§ 44-19-27 and 44-19-28, may |
18 | require the seller of the boat or vessel to keep records of the sales to bona fide nonresidents as the |
19 | tax administrator deems reasonably necessary to substantiate the exemption provided in this |
20 | subdivision, including the affidavit of the seller that the buyer represented himself or herself to be |
21 | a bona fide nonresident of this state and of the buyer that he or she is a nonresident of this state. |
22 | (31) Youth activities equipment. From the sale, storage, use, or other consumption in this |
23 | state of items for not more than twenty dollars ($20.00) each by nonprofit Rhode Island |
24 | eleemosynary organizations, for the purposes of youth activities that the organization is formed to |
25 | sponsor and support; and by accredited elementary and secondary schools for the purposes of the |
26 | schools or of organized activities of the enrolled students. |
27 | (32) Farm equipment. From the sale and from the storage or use of machinery and |
28 | equipment used directly for commercial farming and agricultural production; including, but not |
29 | limited to: tractors, ploughs, harrows, spreaders, seeders, milking machines, silage conveyors, |
30 | balers, bulk milk storage tanks, trucks with farm plates, mowers, combines, irrigation equipment, |
31 | greenhouses and greenhouse coverings, graders and packaging machines, tools and supplies and |
32 | other farming equipment, including replacement parts appurtenant to or used in connection with |
33 | commercial farming and tools and supplies used in the repair and maintenance of farming |
34 | equipment. “Commercial farming” means the keeping or boarding of five (5) or more horses or the |
| LC001655 - Page 23 of 39 |
1 | production within this state of agricultural products, including, but not limited to, field or orchard |
2 | crops, livestock, dairy, and poultry, or their products, where the keeping, boarding, or production |
3 | provides at least two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) in annual gross sales to the operator, |
4 | whether an individual, a group, a partnership, or a corporation for exemptions issued prior to July |
5 | 1, 2002. For exemptions issued or renewed after July 1, 2002, there shall be two (2) levels. Level I |
6 | shall be based on proof of annual, gross sales from commercial farming of at least twenty-five |
7 | hundred dollars ($2,500) and shall be valid for purchases subject to the exemption provided in this |
8 | subdivision except for motor vehicles with an excise tax value of five thousand dollars ($5,000) or |
9 | greater. Level II shall be based on proof of annual gross sales from commercial farming of at least |
10 | ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or greater and shall be valid for purchases subject to the exemption |
11 | provided in this subdivision including motor vehicles with an excise tax value of five thousand |
12 | dollars ($5,000) or greater. For the initial issuance of the exemptions, proof of the requisite amount |
13 | of annual gross sales from commercial farming shall be required for the prior year; for any renewal |
14 | of an exemption granted in accordance with this subdivision at either level I or level II, proof of |
15 | gross annual sales from commercial farming at the requisite amount shall be required for each of |
16 | the prior two (2) years. Certificates of exemption issued or renewed after July 1, 2002, shall clearly |
17 | indicate the level of the exemption and be valid for four (4) years after the date of issue. This |
18 | exemption applies even if the same equipment is used for ancillary uses, or is temporarily used for |
19 | a non-farming or a non-agricultural purpose, but shall not apply to motor vehicles acquired after |
20 | July 1, 2002, unless the vehicle is a farm vehicle as defined pursuant to § 31-1-8 and is eligible for |
21 | registration displaying farm plates as provided for in § 31-3-31. |
22 | (33) Compressed air. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in the |
23 | state of compressed air. |
24 | (34) Flags. From the sale and from the storage, consumption, or other use in this state of |
25 | United States, Rhode Island or POW-MIA flags. |
26 | (35) Motor vehicle and adaptive equipment to certain veterans. From the sale of a motor |
27 | vehicle and adaptive equipment to and for the use of a veteran with a service-connected loss of or |
28 | the loss of use of a leg, foot, hand, or arm, or any veteran who is a double amputee, whether service |
29 | connected or not. The motor vehicle must be purchased by and especially equipped for use by the |
30 | qualifying veteran. Certificate of exemption or refunds of taxes paid is granted under rules or |
31 | regulations that the tax administrator may prescribe. |
32 | (36) Textbooks. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state |
33 | of textbooks by an “educational institution,” as defined in subsection (18) of this section, and any |
34 | educational institution within the purview of § 16-63-9(4), and used textbooks by any purveyor. |
| LC001655 - Page 24 of 39 |
1 | (37) Tangible personal property and supplies used in on-site hazardous waste recycling, |
2 | reuse, or treatment. From the sale, storage, use, or other consumption in this state of tangible |
3 | personal property or supplies used or consumed in the operation of equipment, the exclusive |
4 | function of which is the recycling, reuse, or recovery of materials (other than precious metals, as |
5 | defined in subdivision (24)(ii) of this section) from the treatment of “hazardous wastes,” as defined |
6 | in § 23-19.1-4, where the “hazardous wastes” are generated in Rhode Island solely by the same |
7 | taxpayer and where the personal property is located at, in, or adjacent to a generating facility of the |
8 | taxpayer in Rhode Island. The taxpayer shall procure an order from the director of the department |
9 | of environmental management certifying that the equipment and/or supplies as used or consumed, |
10 | qualify for the exemption under this subdivision. If any information relating to secret processes or |
11 | methods of manufacture, production, or treatment is disclosed to the department of environmental |
12 | management only to procure an order, and is a “trade secret” as defined in § 28-21-10(b), it is not |
13 | open to public inspection or publicly disclosed unless disclosure is required under chapter 21 of |
14 | title 28 or chapter 24.4 of title 23. |
15 | (38) Promotional and product literature of boat manufacturers. From the sale and from the |
16 | storage, use, or other consumption of promotional and product literature of boat manufacturers |
17 | shipped to points outside of Rhode Island that either: (i) Accompany the product that is sold; (ii) |
18 | Are shipped in bulk to out-of-state dealers for use in the sale of the product; or (iii) Are mailed to |
19 | customers at no charge. |
20 | (39) Food items paid for by food stamps. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
21 | consumption in this state of eligible food items payment for which is properly made to the retailer |
22 | in the form of U.S. government food stamps issued in accordance with the Food Stamp Act of 1977, |
23 | 7 U.S.C. § 2011 et seq. |
24 | (40) Transportation charges. From the sale or hiring of motor carriers as defined in § 39- |
25 | 12-2(12) to haul goods, when the contract or hiring cost is charged by a motor freight tariff filed |
26 | with the Rhode Island public utilities commission on the number of miles driven or by the number |
27 | of hours spent on the job. |
28 | (41) Trade-in value of boats. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption |
29 | in this state of so much of the purchase price paid for a new or used boat as is allocated for a trade- |
30 | in allowance on the boat of the buyer given in trade to the seller or of the proceeds applicable only |
31 | to the boat as are received from an insurance claim as a result of a stolen or damaged boat, towards |
32 | the purchase of a new or used boat by the buyer. |
33 | (42) Equipment used for research and development. From the sale and from the storage, |
34 | use, or other consumption of equipment to the extent used for research and development purposes |
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1 | by a qualifying firm. For the purposes of this subsection, “qualifying firm” means a business for |
2 | which the use of research and development equipment is an integral part of its operation and |
3 | “equipment” means scientific equipment, computers, software, and related items. |
4 | (43) Coins. From the sale and from the other consumption in this state of coins having |
5 | numismatic or investment value. |
6 | (44) Farm structure construction materials. Lumber, hardware, and other materials used in |
7 | the new construction of farm structures, including production facilities such as, but not limited to: |
8 | farrowing sheds, free stall and stanchion barns, milking parlors, silos, poultry barns, laying houses, |
9 | fruit and vegetable storages, rooting cellars, propagation rooms, greenhouses, packing rooms, |
10 | machinery storage, seasonal farm worker housing, certified farm markets, bunker and trench silos, |
11 | feed storage sheds, and any other structures used in connection with commercial farming. |
12 | (45) Telecommunications carrier access service. Carrier access service or |
13 | telecommunications service when purchased by a telecommunications company from another |
14 | telecommunications company to facilitate the provision of telecommunications service. |
15 | (46) Boats or vessels brought into the state exclusively for winter storage, maintenance, |
16 | repair, or sale. Notwithstanding the provisions of §§ 44-18-10, 44-18-11 and 44-18-20, the tax |
17 | imposed by § 44-18-20 is not applicable for the period commencing on the first day of October in |
18 | any year up to and including the 30th day of April next succeeding with respect to the use of any |
19 | boat or vessel within this state exclusively for purposes of: (i) Delivery of the vessel to a facility in |
20 | this state for storage, including dry storage and storage in water by means of apparatus preventing |
21 | ice damage to the hull, maintenance, or repair; (ii) The actual process of storage, maintenance, or |
22 | repair of the boat or vessel; or (iii) Storage for the purpose of selling the boat or vessel. |
23 | (47) Jewelry display product. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
24 | consumption in this state of tangible personal property used to display any jewelry product; |
25 | provided that title to the jewelry display product is transferred by the jewelry manufacturer or seller |
26 | and that the jewelry display product is shipped out of state for use solely outside the state and is not |
27 | returned to the jewelry manufacturer or seller. |
28 | (48) Boats or vessels generally. Notwithstanding the provisions of this chapter, the tax |
29 | imposed by §§ 44-18-20 and 44-18-18 shall not apply with respect to the sale and to the storage, |
30 | use, or other consumption in this state of any new or used boat. The exemption provided for in this |
31 | subdivision does not apply after October 1, 1993, unless prior to October 1, 1993, the federal ten |
32 | percent (10%) surcharge on luxury boats is repealed. |
33 | (49) Banks and regulated investment companies interstate toll-free calls. Notwithstanding |
34 | the provisions of this chapter, the tax imposed by this chapter does not apply to the furnishing of |
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1 | interstate and international, toll-free terminating telecommunication service that is used directly |
2 | and exclusively by or for the benefit of an eligible company as defined in this subdivision; provided |
3 | that an eligible company employs on average during the calendar year no less than five hundred |
4 | (500) “full-time equivalent employees” as that term is defined in § 42-64.5-2. For purposes of this |
5 | section, an “eligible company” means a “regulated investment company” as that term is defined in |
6 | the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. § 851, or a corporation to the extent the service is |
7 | provided, directly or indirectly, to or on behalf of a regulated investment company, an employee |
8 | benefit plan, a retirement plan or a pension plan, or a state-chartered bank. |
9 | (50) Mobile and manufactured homes generally. From the sale and from the storage, use, |
10 | or other consumption in this state of mobile and/or manufactured homes as defined and subject to |
11 | taxation pursuant to the provisions of chapter 44 of title 31. |
12 | (51) Manufacturing business reconstruction materials. |
13 | (i) From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of lumber, |
14 | hardware, and other building materials used in the reconstruction of a manufacturing business |
15 | facility that suffers a disaster, as defined in this subdivision, in this state. “Disaster” means any |
16 | occurrence, natural or otherwise, that results in the destruction of sixty percent (60%) or more of |
17 | an operating manufacturing business facility within this state. “Disaster” does not include any |
18 | damage resulting from the willful act of the owner of the manufacturing business facility. |
19 | (ii) Manufacturing business facility includes, but is not limited to, the structures housing |
20 | the production and administrative facilities. |
21 | (iii) In the event a manufacturer has more than one manufacturing site in this state, the sixty |
22 | percent (60%) provision applies to the damages suffered at that one site. |
23 | (iv) To the extent that the costs of the reconstruction materials are reimbursed by insurance, |
24 | this exemption does not apply. |
25 | (52) Tangible personal property and supplies used in the processing or preparation of floral |
26 | products and floral arrangements. From the sale, storage, use, or other consumption in this state of |
27 | tangible personal property or supplies purchased by florists, garden centers, or other like producers |
28 | or vendors of flowers, plants, floral products, and natural and artificial floral arrangements that are |
29 | ultimately sold with flowers, plants, floral products, and natural and artificial floral arrangements |
30 | or are otherwise used in the decoration, fabrication, creation, processing, or preparation of flowers, |
31 | plants, floral products, or natural and artificial floral arrangements, including descriptive labels, |
32 | stickers, and cards affixed to the flower, plant, floral product, or arrangement, artificial flowers, |
33 | spray materials, floral paint and tint, plant shine, flower food, insecticide, and fertilizers. |
34 | (53) Horse food products. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption |
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1 | in this state of horse food products purchased by a person engaged in the business of the boarding |
2 | of horses. |
3 | (54) Non-motorized recreational vehicles sold to nonresidents. |
4 | (i) From the sale, subsequent to June 30, 2003, of a non-motorized recreational vehicle to |
5 | a bona fide nonresident of this state who does not register the non-motorized recreational vehicle |
6 | in this state, whether the sale or delivery of the non-motorized recreational vehicle is made in this |
7 | state or at the place of residence of the nonresident; provided that a non-motorized recreational |
8 | vehicle sold to a bona fide nonresident whose state of residence does not allow a like exemption to |
9 | its nonresidents is not exempt from the tax imposed under § 44-18-20; provided, further, that in |
10 | that event the bona fide nonresident pays a tax to Rhode Island on the sale at a rate equal to the rate |
11 | that would be imposed in his or her state of residence not to exceed the rate that would have been |
12 | imposed under § 44-18-20. Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, a licensed, non-motorized |
13 | recreational vehicle dealer shall add and collect the tax required under this subdivision and remit |
14 | the tax to the tax administrator under the provisions of chapters 18 and 19 of this title. Provided, |
15 | that when a Rhode Island licensed, non-motorized recreational vehicle dealer is required to add and |
16 | collect the sales and use tax on the sale of a non-motorized recreational vehicle to a bona fide |
17 | nonresident as provided in this section, the dealer in computing the tax takes into consideration the |
18 | law of the state of the nonresident as it relates to the trade-in of motor vehicles. |
19 | (ii) The tax administrator, in addition to the provisions of §§ 44-19-27 and 44-19-28, may |
20 | require any licensed, non-motorized recreational vehicle dealer to keep records of sales to bona fide |
21 | nonresidents as the tax administrator deems reasonably necessary to substantiate the exemption |
22 | provided in this subdivision, including the affidavit of a licensed, non-motorized recreational |
23 | vehicle dealer that the purchaser of the non-motorized recreational vehicle was the holder of, and |
24 | had in his or her possession a valid out-of-state non-motorized recreational vehicle registration or |
25 | a valid out-of-state driver’s license. |
26 | (iii) Any nonresident who registers a non-motorized recreational vehicle in this state within |
27 | ninety (90) days of the date of its sale to him or her is deemed to have purchased the non-motorized |
28 | recreational vehicle for use, storage, or other consumption in this state, and is subject to, and liable |
29 | for, the use tax imposed under the provisions of § 44-18-20. |
30 | (iv) “Non-motorized recreational vehicle” means any portable dwelling designed and |
31 | constructed to be used as a temporary dwelling for travel, camping, recreational, and vacation use |
32 | that is eligible to be registered for highway use, including, but not limited to, “pick-up coaches” or |
33 | “pick-up campers,” “travel trailers,” and “tent trailers” as those terms are defined in chapter 1 of |
34 | title 31. |
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1 | (55) Sprinkler and fire alarm systems in existing buildings. From the sale in this state of |
2 | sprinkler and fire alarm systems; emergency lighting and alarm systems; and the materials |
3 | necessary and attendant to the installation of those systems that are required in buildings and |
4 | occupancies existing therein in July 2003 in order to comply with any additional requirements for |
5 | such buildings arising directly from the enactment of the Comprehensive Fire Safety Act of 2003 |
6 | and that are not required by any other provision of law or ordinance or regulation adopted pursuant |
7 | to that act. The exemption provided in this subdivision shall expire on December 31, 2008. |
8 | (56) Aircraft. Notwithstanding the provisions of this chapter, the tax imposed by §§ 44- |
9 | 18-18 and 44-18-20 shall not apply with respect to the sale and to the storage, use, or other |
10 | consumption in this state of any new or used aircraft or aircraft parts. |
11 | (57) Renewable energy products. Notwithstanding any other provisions of Rhode Island |
12 | general laws, the following products shall also be exempt from sales tax: solar photovoltaic |
13 | modules or panels, or any module or panel that generates electricity from light; solar thermal |
14 | collectors, including, but not limited to, those manufactured with flat glass plates, extruded plastic, |
15 | sheet metal, and/or evacuated tubes; geothermal heat pumps, including both water-to-water and |
16 | water-to-air type pumps; wind turbines; towers used to mount wind turbines if specified by or sold |
17 | by a wind turbine manufacturer; DC to AC inverters that interconnect with utility power lines; and |
18 | manufactured mounting racks and ballast pans for solar collector, module, or panel installation. Not |
19 | to include materials that could be fabricated into such racks; monitoring and control equipment, if |
20 | specified or supplied by a manufacturer of solar thermal, solar photovoltaic, geothermal, or wind |
21 | energy systems or if required by law or regulation for such systems but not to include pumps, fans |
22 | or plumbing or electrical fixtures unless shipped from the manufacturer affixed to, or an integral |
23 | part of, another item specified on this list; and solar storage tanks that are part of a solar domestic |
24 | hot water system or a solar space heating system. If the tank comes with an external heat exchanger |
25 | it shall also be tax exempt, but a standard hot water tank is not exempt from state sales tax. |
26 | (58) Returned property. The amount charged for property returned by customers upon |
27 | rescission of the contract of sale when the entire amount exclusive of handling charges paid for the |
28 | property is refunded in either cash or credit, and where the property is returned within one hundred |
29 | twenty (120) days from the date of delivery. |
30 | (59) Dietary supplements. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption |
31 | of dietary supplements as defined in § 44-18-7.1(l)(v), sold on prescriptions. |
32 | (60) Blood. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other consumption of human blood. |
33 | (61) Agricultural products for human consumption. From the sale and from the storage, |
34 | use, or other consumption of livestock and poultry of the kinds of products that ordinarily constitute |
| LC001655 - Page 29 of 39 |
1 | food for human consumption and of livestock of the kind the products of which ordinarily constitute |
2 | fibers for human use. |
3 | (62) Diesel emission control technology. From the sale and use of diesel retrofit |
4 | technology that is required by § 31-47.3-4. |
5 | (63) Feed for certain animals used in commercial farming. From the sale of feed for |
6 | animals as described in subsection (61) of this section. |
7 | (64) Alcoholic beverages. From the sale and storage, use, or other consumption in this |
8 | state by a Class A licensee of alcoholic beverages, as defined in § 44-18-7.1, excluding beer and |
9 | malt beverages; provided, further, notwithstanding § 6-13-1 or any other general or public law to |
10 | the contrary, alcoholic beverages, as defined in § 44-18-7.1, shall not be subject to minimum |
11 | markup. |
12 | (65) Seeds and plants used to grow food and food ingredients. From the sale, storage, use, |
13 | or other consumption in this state of seeds and plants used to grow food and food ingredients as |
14 | defined in § 44-18-7.1(l)(i). “Seeds and plants used to grow food and food ingredients” shall not |
15 | include marijuana seeds or plants. |
16 | (66) Feminine hygiene products. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
17 | consumption of tampons, panty liners, menstrual cups, sanitary napkins, and other similar products |
18 | the principal use of which is feminine hygiene in connection with the menstrual cycle. |
19 | (67) “Breast pump collection and storage supplies” means items of tangible personal |
20 | property used in conjunction with a breast pump to collect milk expressed from a human breast and |
21 | to store collected milk until it is ready for consumption. “Breast pump collection and storage |
22 | supplies” include, but are not limited to, breast shields and breast shield connectors; breast pump |
23 | tubes and tubing adaptors; breast pump valves and membranes; backflow protectors and backflow |
24 | protector adaptors; bottles and bottle caps specific to the operation of the breast pump; breast milk |
25 | storage bags; and related items sold as part of a breast pump kit pre-packaged by the breast pump |
26 | manufacturer. “Breast pump collection and storage supplies” does not include: bottles and bottle |
27 | caps not specific to the operation of the breast pump; breast pump travel bags and other similar |
28 | carrying accessories, including ice packs, labels, and other similar products, unless sold as part of |
29 | a breast pump kit pre-packed by the breast pump manufacturer; breast pump cleaning supplies, |
30 | unless sold as part of a breast pump kit pre-packaged by the breast pump manufacturer; nursing |
31 | bras, bra pads, breast shells, and other similar products; and creams, ointments, and other similar |
32 | products that relieve breastfeeding-related symptoms or conditions of the breasts or nipples. |
33 | (68) Trade-in value of motorcycles. From the sale and from the storage, use, or other |
34 | consumption in this state of so much of the purchase price paid for a new or used motorcycle as is |
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1 | allocated for a trade-in allowance on the motorcycle of the buyer given in trade to the seller, or of |
2 | the proceeds applicable only to the motorcycle as are received from the manufacturer of |
3 | motorcycles for the repurchase of the motorcycle whether the repurchase was voluntary or not |
4 | towards the purchase of a new or used motorcycle by the buyer. For the purpose of this subsection, |
5 | the word “motorcycle” means a motorcycle not used for hire and does not refer to any other type |
6 | of motor vehicle. |
7 | (69) From the sale, storage, use, or other consumption in this state of farm products used |
8 | to grow food by urban and small farmers. |
9 | (i) For purposes of this subsection: |
10 | (A) An “urban farmer” is a taxpayer that produces or grows food in a city or other heavily |
11 | populated areas; and |
12 | (B) A “small farmer” is a taxpayer that farms agricultural land up to five (5) acres. |
13 | SECTION 4. Section 44-30-12 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-30 entitled "Personal |
14 | Income Tax" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
15 | 44-30-12. Rhode Island income of a resident individual. |
16 | (a) General. The Rhode Island income of a resident individual means his or her adjusted |
17 | gross income for federal income tax purposes, with the modifications specified in this section. |
18 | (b) Modifications increasing federal adjusted gross income. There shall be added to |
19 | federal adjusted gross income: |
20 | (1) Interest income on obligations of any state, or its political subdivisions, other than |
21 | Rhode Island or its political subdivisions; |
22 | (2) Interest or dividend income on obligations or securities of any authority, commission, |
23 | or instrumentality of the United States, but not of Rhode Island or its political subdivisions, to the |
24 | extent exempted by the laws of the United States from federal income tax but not from state income |
25 | taxes; |
26 | (3) The modification described in § 44-30-25(g); |
27 | (4)(i) The amount defined below of a nonqualified withdrawal made from an account in |
28 | the tuition savings program pursuant to § 16-57-6.1. For purposes of this section, a nonqualified |
29 | withdrawal is: |
30 | (A) A transfer or rollover to a qualified tuition program under Section 529 of the Internal |
31 | Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 529, other than to the tuition savings program referred to in § 16-57- |
32 | 6.1; and |
33 | (B) A withdrawal or distribution that is: |
34 | (I) Not applied on a timely basis to pay “qualified higher education expenses” as defined |
| LC001655 - Page 31 of 39 |
1 | in § 16-57-3(12) of the beneficiary of the account from which the withdrawal is made; |
2 | (II) Not made for a reason referred to in § 16-57-6.1(e); or |
3 | (III) Not made in other circumstances for which an exclusion from tax made applicable by |
4 | Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 529, pertains if the transfer, rollover, |
5 | withdrawal, or distribution is made within two (2) taxable years following the taxable year for |
6 | which a contributions modification pursuant to subsection (c)(4) of this section is taken based on |
7 | contributions to any tuition savings program account by the person who is the participant of the |
8 | account at the time of the contribution, whether or not the person is the participant of the account |
9 | at the time of the transfer, rollover, withdrawal or distribution; |
10 | (ii) In the event of a nonqualified withdrawal under subsection (b)(4)(i)(A) or (b)(4)(i)(B) |
11 | of this section, there shall be added to the federal adjusted gross income of that person for the |
12 | taxable year of the withdrawal an amount equal to the lesser of: |
13 | (A) The amount equal to the nonqualified withdrawal reduced by the sum of any |
14 | administrative fee or penalty imposed under the tuition savings program in connection with the |
15 | nonqualified withdrawal plus the earnings portion thereof, if any, includible in computing the |
16 | person’s federal adjusted gross income for the taxable year; and |
17 | (B) The amount of the person’s contribution modification pursuant to subsection (c)(4) of |
18 | this section for the person’s taxable year of the withdrawal and the two (2) prior taxable years less |
19 | the amount of any nonqualified withdrawal for the two (2) prior taxable years included in |
20 | computing the person’s Rhode Island income by application of this subsection for those years. Any |
21 | amount added to federal adjusted gross income pursuant to this subdivision shall constitute Rhode |
22 | Island income for residents, nonresidents and part-year residents; |
23 | (5) The modification described in § 44-30-25.1(d)(3)(i); |
24 | (6) The amount equal to any unemployment compensation received but not included in |
25 | federal adjusted gross income; |
26 | (7) The amount equal to the deduction allowed for sales tax paid for a purchase of a |
27 | qualified motor vehicle as defined by the Internal Revenue Code § 164(a)(6); and |
28 | (8) For any taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2020, the amount of any Paycheck |
29 | Protection Program loan forgiven for federal income tax purposes as authorized by the Coronavirus |
30 | Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act and/or the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 and/or |
31 | any other subsequent federal stimulus relief packages enacted by law, to the extent that the amount |
32 | of the loan forgiven exceeds $250,000, including an individual’s distributive share of the amount |
33 | of a pass-through entity’s loan forgiveness in excess of $250,000. |
34 | (c) Modifications reducing federal adjusted gross income. There shall be subtracted |
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1 | from federal adjusted gross income: |
2 | (1) Any interest income on obligations of the United States and its possessions to the extent |
3 | includible in gross income for federal income tax purposes, and any interest or dividend income on |
4 | obligations, or securities of any authority, commission, or instrumentality of the United States to |
5 | the extent includible in gross income for federal income tax purposes but exempt from state income |
6 | taxes under the laws of the United States; provided, that the amount to be subtracted shall in any |
7 | case be reduced by any interest on indebtedness incurred or continued to purchase or carry |
8 | obligations or securities the income of which is exempt from Rhode Island personal income tax, to |
9 | the extent the interest has been deducted in determining federal adjusted gross income or taxable |
10 | income; |
11 | (2) A modification described in § 44-30-25(f) or § 44-30-1.1(c)(1); |
12 | (3) The amount of any withdrawal or distribution from the “tuition savings program” |
13 | referred to in § 16-57-6.1 that is included in federal adjusted gross income, other than a withdrawal |
14 | or distribution or portion of a withdrawal or distribution that is a nonqualified withdrawal; |
15 | (4) Contributions made to an account under the tuition savings program, including the |
16 | “contributions carryover” pursuant to subsection (c)(4)(iv) of this section, if any, subject to the |
17 | following limitations, restrictions and qualifications: |
18 | (i) The aggregate subtraction pursuant to this subdivision for any taxable year of the |
19 | taxpayer shall not exceed five hundred dollars ($500) or one thousand dollars ($1,000) if a joint |
20 | return; |
21 | (ii) The following shall not be considered contributions: |
22 | (A) Contributions made by any person to an account who is not a participant of the account |
23 | at the time the contribution is made; |
24 | (B) Transfers or rollovers to an account from any other tuition savings program account or |
25 | from any other “qualified tuition program” under section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 |
26 | U.S.C. § 529; or |
27 | (C) A change of the beneficiary of the account; |
28 | (iii) The subtraction pursuant to this subdivision shall not reduce the taxpayer’s federal |
29 | adjusted gross income to less than zero (0); |
30 | (iv) The contributions carryover to a taxable year for purpose of this subdivision is the |
31 | excess, if any, of the total amount of contributions actually made by the taxpayer to the tuition |
32 | savings program for all preceding taxable years for which this subsection is effective over the sum |
33 | of: |
34 | (A) The total of the subtractions under this subdivision allowable to the taxpayer for all |
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1 | such preceding taxable years; and |
2 | (B) That part of any remaining contribution carryover at the end of the taxable year which |
3 | exceeds the amount of any nonqualified withdrawals during the year and the prior two (2) taxable |
4 | years not included in the addition provided for in this subdivision for those years. Any such part |
5 | shall be disregarded in computing the contributions carryover for any subsequent taxable year; |
6 | (v) For any taxable year for which a contributions carryover is applicable, the taxpayer |
7 | shall include a computation of the carryover with the taxpayer’s Rhode Island personal income tax |
8 | return for that year, and if for any taxable year on which the carryover is based the taxpayer filed a |
9 | joint Rhode Island personal income tax return but filed a return on a basis other than jointly for a |
10 | subsequent taxable year, the computation shall reflect how the carryover is being allocated between |
11 | the prior joint filers; |
12 | (5) The modification described in § 44-30-25.1(d)(1); |
13 | (6) Amounts deemed taxable income to the taxpayer due to payment or provision of |
14 | insurance benefits to a dependent, including a domestic partner pursuant to chapter 12 of title 36 or |
15 | other coverage plan; |
16 | (7) Modification for organ transplantation. |
17 | (i) An individual may subtract up to ten thousand dollars ($10,000) from federal adjusted |
18 | gross income if he or she, while living, donates one or more of his or her human organs to another |
19 | human being for human organ transplantation, except that for purposes of this subsection, “human |
20 | organ” means all or part of a liver, pancreas, kidney, intestine, lung, or bone marrow. A subtract |
21 | modification that is claimed hereunder may be claimed in the taxable year in which the human |
22 | organ transplantation occurs. |
23 | (ii) An individual may claim that subtract modification hereunder only once, and the |
24 | subtract modification may be claimed for only the following unreimbursed expenses that are |
25 | incurred by the claimant and related to the claimant’s organ donation: |
26 | (A) Travel expenses. |
27 | (B) Lodging expenses. |
28 | (C) Lost wages. |
29 | (iii) The subtract modification hereunder may not be claimed by a part-time resident or a |
30 | nonresident of this state; |
31 | (8) Modification for taxable Social Security income. |
32 | (i) For tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2016: |
33 | (A) For a person who has attained the age used for calculating full or unreduced Social |
34 | Security retirement benefits who files a return as an unmarried individual, head of household, or |
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1 | married filing separate whose federal adjusted gross income for the taxable year is less than eighty |
2 | thousand dollars ($80,000); or |
3 | (B) A married individual filing jointly or individual filing qualifying widow(er) who has |
4 | attained the age used for calculating full or unreduced Social Security retirement benefits whose |
5 | joint federal adjusted gross income for the taxable year is less than one hundred thousand dollars |
6 | ($100,000), an amount equal to the Social Security benefits includible in federal adjusted gross |
7 | income. |
8 | (ii) Adjustment for inflation. The dollar amount contained in subsections (c)(8)(i)(A) and |
9 | (c)(8)(i)(B) of this section shall be increased annually by an amount equal to: |
10 | (A) Such dollar amount contained in subsections (c)(8)(i)(A) and (c)(8)(i)(B) of this section |
11 | adjusted for inflation using a base tax year of 2000, multiplied by; |
12 | (B) The cost-of-living adjustment with a base year of 2000. |
13 | (iii) For the purposes of this section the cost-of-living adjustment for any calendar year is |
14 | the percentage (if any) by which the consumer price index for the preceding calendar year exceeds |
15 | the consumer price index for the base year. The consumer price index for any calendar year is the |
16 | average of the consumer price index as of the close of the twelve-month (12) period ending on |
17 | August 31, of such calendar year. |
18 | (iv) For the purpose of this section the term “consumer price index” means the last |
19 | consumer price index for all urban consumers published by the department of labor. For the purpose |
20 | of this section the revision of the consumer price index which is most consistent with the consumer |
21 | price index for calendar year 1986 shall be used. |
22 | (v) If any increase determined under this section is not a multiple of fifty dollars ($50.00), |
23 | such increase shall be rounded to the next lower multiple of fifty dollars ($50.00). In the case of a |
24 | married individual filing separate return, if any increase determined under this section is not a |
25 | multiple of twenty-five dollars ($25.00), such increase shall be rounded to the next lower multiple |
26 | of twenty-five dollars ($25.00); |
27 | (9) Modification of taxable retirement income from certain pension plans or |
28 | annuities. |
29 | (i) For tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2017, until the tax year beginning January |
30 | 1, 2022, a modification shall be allowed for up to fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000), and for tax |
31 | years beginning on or after January 1, 2023, a modification shall be allowed for up to twenty |
32 | thousand dollars ($20,000), of taxable pension and/or annuity income that is included in federal |
33 | adjusted gross income for the taxable year: |
34 | (A) For a person who has attained the age used for calculating full or unreduced Social |
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1 | Security retirement benefits who files a return as an unmarried individual, head of household, or |
2 | married filing separate whose federal adjusted gross income for such taxable year is less than the |
3 | amount used for the modification contained in subsection (c)(8)(i)(A) of this section an amount not |
4 | to exceed $15,000 for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2017, until the tax year beginning |
5 | January 1, 2022, and an amount not to exceed twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) for tax years |
6 | beginning on or after January 1, 2023, of taxable pension and/or annuity income includible in |
7 | federal adjusted gross income; or |
8 | (B) For a married individual filing jointly or individual filing qualifying widow(er) who |
9 | has attained the age used for calculating full or unreduced Social Security retirement benefits whose |
10 | joint federal adjusted gross income for such taxable year is less than the amount used for the |
11 | modification contained in subsection (c)(8)(i)(B) of this section an amount not to exceed $15,000 |
12 | for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2017, until the tax year beginning January 1, 2022, |
13 | and an amount not to exceed twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) for tax years beginning on or after |
14 | January 1, 2023, of taxable pension and/or annuity income includible in federal adjusted gross |
15 | income. |
16 | (ii) Adjustment for inflation. The dollar amount contained by reference in subsections |
17 | (c)(9)(i)(A) and (c)(9)(i)(B) of this section shall be increased annually for tax years beginning on |
18 | or after January 1, 2018, by an amount equal to: |
19 | (A) Such dollar amount contained by reference in subsections (c)(9)(i)(A) and (c)(9)(i)(B) |
20 | of this section adjusted for inflation using a base tax year of 2000, multiplied by; |
21 | (B) The cost-of-living adjustment with a base year of 2000. |
22 | (iii) For the purposes of this section, the cost-of-living adjustment for any calendar year is |
23 | the percentage (if any) by which the consumer price index for the preceding calendar year exceeds |
24 | the consumer price index for the base year. The consumer price index for any calendar year is the |
25 | average of the consumer price index as of the close of the twelve-month (12) period ending on |
26 | August 31, of such calendar year. |
27 | (iv) For the purpose of this section, the term “consumer price index” means the last |
28 | consumer price index for all urban consumers published by the department of labor. For the purpose |
29 | of this section, the revision of the consumer price index which is most consistent with the consumer |
30 | price index for calendar year 1986 shall be used. |
31 | (v) If any increase determined under this section is not a multiple of fifty dollars ($50.00), |
32 | such increase shall be rounded to the next lower multiple of fifty dollars ($50.00). In the case of a |
33 | married individual filing a separate return, if any increase determined under this section is not a |
34 | multiple of twenty-five dollars ($25.00), such increase shall be rounded to the next lower multiple |
| LC001655 - Page 36 of 39 |
1 | of twenty-five dollars ($25.00). |
2 | (vi) For tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2022, the dollar amount contained by |
3 | reference in subsection (c)(9)(i)(A) shall be adjusted to equal the dollar amount contained in |
4 | subsection (c)(8)(i)(A), as adjusted for inflation, and the dollar amount contained by reference in |
5 | subsection(c)(9)(i)(B) shall be adjusted to equal the dollar amount contained in subsection |
6 | (c)(8)(i)(B), as adjusted for inflation; |
7 | (10) Modification for Rhode Island investment in opportunity zones. For purposes of |
8 | a taxpayer’s state tax liability, in the case of any investment in a Rhode Island opportunity zone by |
9 | the taxpayer for at least seven (7) years, a modification to income shall be allowed for the |
10 | incremental difference between the benefit allowed under 26 U.S.C. § 1400Z-2(b)(2)(B)(iv) and |
11 | the federal benefit allowed under 26 U.S.C. § 1400Z-2(c); |
12 | (11) Modification for military service pensions. |
13 | (i) For purposes of a taxpayer’s state tax liability, a modification to income shall be allowed |
14 | as follows: |
15 | (A) For the tax years beginning on January 1, 2023, a taxpayer may subtract from federal |
16 | adjusted gross income the taxpayer’s military service pension benefits included in federal adjusted |
17 | gross income; |
18 | (ii) As used in this subsection, the term “military service” shall have the same meaning as |
19 | set forth in 20 C.F.R. § 212.2; |
20 | (iii) At no time shall the modification allowed under this subsection alone or in conjunction |
21 | with subsection (c)(9) exceed the amount of the military service pension received in the tax year |
22 | for which the modification is claimed; and |
23 | (12) Any rebate issued to the taxpayer pursuant to § 44-30-103 to the extent included in |
24 | gross income for federal tax purposes.; and |
25 | (13) Modification for urban and small farmers income. For tax years beginning on or after |
26 | January 1, 2024, a modification shall be allowed for the taxable income that is included in federal |
27 | adjusted gross income for urban and small farmers. |
28 | (i) For purposes of this subsection: |
29 | (A) An “urban farmer” is a taxpayer that produces or grows food in a city or other heavily |
30 | populated areas; and |
31 | (B) A “small farmer” is a taxpayer that farms agricultural land up to five (5) acres. |
32 | (d) Modification for Rhode Island fiduciary adjustment. There shall be added to, or |
33 | subtracted from, federal adjusted gross income (as the case may be) the taxpayer’s share, as |
34 | beneficiary of an estate or trust, of the Rhode Island fiduciary adjustment determined under § 44- |
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1 | 30-17. |
2 | (e) Partners. The amounts of modifications required to be made under this section by a |
3 | partner, which relate to items of income or deduction of a partnership, shall be determined under § |
4 | 44-30-15. |
5 | SECTION 5. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO TAXATION -- PROPERTY SUBJECT TO TAXATION | |
*** | |
1 | This act would exempt urban and small farmers from sales taxes, real, tangible and personal |
2 | property taxes and income taxes. This act would also define urban and small farmers. |
3 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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