The Honorable Jim Argue State Senator 5300 Evergreen Drive Little Rock, AR 72205-1814
Dear Senator Argue:
I am writing in response to your request for my expedited opinion on the following question:
RESPONSEDoes Amendment 78 allow the future revenue growth from the uniform rate of tax1 levied pursuant to Amendment 74 to be redirected to a local redevelopment project?
Under current legislation, the answer to this question is "no." The General Assembly has defined the term "taxing unit" as used in Ark. Const. amend.
Amendment 78 § (1)(d) provides:
The General Assembly may provide that the ad valorem taxes levied by any taxing unit, in which is located all or part of an area included in a redevelopment district, may be divided so that all or part of the ad valorem taxes levied against any increase in the assessed value of property in the area obtaining after the effective date of the ordinance approving the redevelopment plan for the district shall be used to pay any indebtedness incurred for the redevelopment project; provided, however, there shall be excluded from the division all ad valorem taxes for debt service approved by voters in a taxing unit prior to the effective date of this amendment.
(Emphasis added.) This provision permits, but does not oblige, the legislature to direct that some or all of the increase in property taxes levied by a "taxing unit" that contains all or part of a redevelopment district be used to defray the redevelopment district's bonded indebtedness.
As discussed in detail in the attached Ark. Op. Att'y Gen. No.
As I discussed in detail in Opinions Nos.
Having ventured this opinion, I should note that the question remains whether the legislature might in fact authorize such a diversion if it were inclined to do so. I believe answering this question would entail interpreting the scope of the term "taxing unit" as used in Amendment 78, as my predecessor did in Opinion No.
If the uniform rate is "levied" by the state, a question arises as to whether the "state" or its collective voters comprise a "taxing unit" within the contemplation of Amendment 78 such that its revenues may be "divided." The common meaning of the term "unit" is a "single thing or person or group that is a constituent of a whole." Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary (1972) at 970. Ordinarily, therefore, the state itself would not be thought of as a taxing "unit" with reference to state or local taxation. It is more commonly thought of as the "whole" for these purposes. But cf. Board of Commissioners of Shawnee County v. Brookover,
198 Kan. 70 ,422 P.2d 906 (1967) (the state as a whole comprises a "taxing unit" for the purpose of levy and collection of state general taxes).. . . [W]hether . . . the state is included in the meaning of the term" taxing unit" for purposes of Amendment 78 . . . [is] amenable to a fair debate. I cannot predict with any certainty how four of the seven members of the Arkansas Supreme Court would determine the issue. I cannot opine conclusively, therefore, whether Amendment 78 itself authorizes the General Assembly to divert the uniform rate of tax to support redevelopment districts. The Amendment does not mention or take account of the uniform rate and the general language used is ambiguous on the question.
See the attached Ark. Op. Att'y Gen. No
I subscribe to my predecessor's conclusion in Opinion No.
Without presuming to resolve this ambiguity, I will again point out that the legislature to date has elected to apply the term narrowly only to local political subdivisions, school districts and community colleges. I will further note that this construction of the term accords with the constitutional use of the term "taxing unit" in Amendment 59, which mandates a rollback of taxes under specified circumstances in a "taxing unit" defined as a "city or town, county, school district, and community college district." Ark. Const. art.
Assistant Attorney General Jack Druff prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
MIKE BEEBE Attorney General
MB:JD/cyh Enclosures
