The Honorable Mike Jackson Chair, Committee on Economic Development Tex as State Senate Post Office Box 12068 Austin, Texas 78711-2068
Re: Restrictions on a municipality's use of certain reserve funds originally generated from a hotel occupancy tax (RQ-0924-GA)
Dear Senator Jackson:
You request an opinion "regarding how the City of Galveston may use surplus funds received from the City's convention center operating agreement."1 You tell us the City of Galveston ("City") has a development agreement with a third party under which the third party manages and operates the City's convention center.See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. You state that the City's hotel occupancy tax revenues, pledged to service the convention center debt, flow through a complicated arrangement set out by the development agreement and that some amount is "eventually placed in reserve funds with the excess deposited in a surplus fund." Id. You indicate that from this surplus fund half of the money is given to the third-party operator and the other half is given to the City. See id. You state that the "City would like to know if [its] portion of these surplus funds receives the same restrictions under state law placed on the hotel occupancy taxes or [whether] these funds [can] be used for spending on general city purposes[.]" Id.
As a home-rule city, the City2 possesses "the full power of self government and Iook[s] to the Legislature not for grants of power, but only for limitations on [its] power." In reSanchez,
Chapter 351, Tax Code, governs municipal hotel occupancy taxes.See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. §§ 351.001-. 110 (West 2008 Supp. 2010); see alsoid. § 302.102(b) (West 2008) ("A home-rule municipality may collect taxes that are authorized by the charter of the municipality or by law. . . ."). Section 351.002 authorizes municipalities to impose a tax on the use or possession of a hotel room. See id. § 351.002(a) (West 2008). Chapter 351 also contains express limitations on the use of revenues derived from the hotel occupancy tax. Section 351.101 provides that the revenue "may be used only to promote tourism and the convention and hotel industry, and that use is limited to" an exclusive list of specific convention center and hotel and tourism purposes.Id. § 351.101(a)(1)-(8)3
(West Supp. 2010). Section 351.101 also provides that the revenue from the tax "shall be expended in a manner directly enhancing and promoting tourism and the convention and hotel industry as permitted in Subsection (a)." Id. § 351.101(b); see also
Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
Moreover, nothing in chapter 351 indicates that an agreement between a municipality and a third-party operator may change the character of the funds from tax revenues to general funds. The statute protects the tax revenue character of the funds until they have been "expended." TEX. TAX CODE ANN. §
For these reasons, we conclude that the surplus funds the City receives pursuant to the development agreement may not be used for general City purposes.5 *Page 4
Hotel occupancy tax revenues collected under chapter 351, Tax Code, must be expended only as authorized by the chapter. Chapter 351 prohibits hotel occupancy tax revenues, including any surplus funds, from being expended for general city purposes.
Very truly yours
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
DANIEL T. HODGE First Assistant Attorney General
DAVID J. SCHENCK Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
JASON BOATRIGHT Chair, Opinion Committee
Charlotte M. Harper Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
