Bill Text: CA AB1951 | 2021-2022 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Sales and use tax: exemptions: manufacturing.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 11-0)
Status: (Vetoed) 2022-09-15 - Vetoed by Governor. [AB1951 Detail]
Download: California-2021-AB1951-Amended.html
Amended
IN
Assembly
April 27, 2022 |
Introduced by Assembly Members Grayson, Cooley, Cooper, Daly, Gipson, Petrie-Norris, Quirk-Silva, Ramos, Salas, Villapudua, and Wood |
February 10, 2022 |
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
This bill would recast and restate these provisions to clarify the application of the exemption provided, and update certain definitions to correspond to current federal guidelines. The bill would also
The Sales and Use Tax Law requires the Department of Finance and the California Department
of Tax and Fee Administration to make specified annual reports to the Legislature. That law also requires the annual transfer of specified moneys from the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund to the General Fund based on that report.
This bill would eliminate this reporting requirement, and terminate the specified annual transfer of moneys.
Digest Key
Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NOBill Text
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
SECTION 1.
The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:SEC. 2.
Section 6377.1 of the Revenue and Taxation Code is amended to read:6377.1.
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (e), on or after July 1, 2014, and before(a)On and after January 1, 2023, there are exempted from the taxes imposed by this part the gross receipts from the sale in this state of, and the storage, use, or other consumption in this state of, qualified tangible personal property used for manufacturing, research and development, or both, by a qualified person.
(b)For purposes of this section, the following shall apply.
(1)“Department” means the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration.
(2)“Distribution” means to effectively carry electric power, regardless of the source of the electric power, to consumers at a voltage level that can be delivered
directly to consumers. Distribution does not include the transmission of electric power.
(3)“Fabricating” means to make, build, create, produce, or assemble components or tangible personal property to work in a new or different manner.
(4)“Generation or production” means the activity of making, producing, creating, or converting electric power from sources other than a conventional power source, as defined in Section 2805 of the Public Utilities Code. Generation or production may also include manufacturing, research and development, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling activities that further the state’s climate change and emissions reductions goals.
(5)“Local agency” means a city, county, city and county, or redevelopment agency.
(6)“Manufacturing” means the activity of converting or conditioning tangible personal property by changing the form, composition, quality, or character of the property for ultimate sale at retail or use in the manufacturing of a product to be ultimately sold at retail. Manufacturing includes any improvements to tangible personal property that result in a greater service life or greater functionality than that of the original property.
(7)“Primarily” means 50 percent or more of the time.
(8)“Process” means the period beginning at the point at which any raw materials are received by the qualified person and introduced into the manufacturing, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling activity of the qualified person and ending at the point at which the manufacturing, processing, refining,
fabricating, or recycling activity of the qualified person has altered tangible personal property to its completed form, including packaging, if required. Raw materials shall be considered to have been introduced into the process when the raw materials are stored on the same premises where the qualified person’s manufacturing, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling activity is conducted. Raw materials that are stored on premises other than where the qualified person’s manufacturing, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling activity is conducted shall not be considered to have been introduced into the manufacturing, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling process. “Process” also includes the period of handling of raw materials or parts from the point of receipt or preproduction storage or of a completed product, to or from storage, to or from packaging, or to the place from which the completed product will be shipped.
(9)“Processing” means the physical application of the materials and labor necessary to modify or change the characteristics of tangible personal property.
(10)“Qualified person” means a person that is primarily engaged in those lines of business described in Codes 3111 to 3399, inclusive, 221111 to 221118, inclusive, 221122, 511210, or 541713 to 541715, inclusive, of the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) published by the United States Office of Management and Budget (OMB), 2017 edition.
(11)(A)“Qualified tangible personal property” includes, but is not limited to, the following:
(i)Tangible personal property purchased for use by a qualified
person to be used primarily in any stage of the manufacturing, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling of tangible personal property, beginning at the point any raw materials are received by the qualified person and introduced into the process and ending at the point at which the manufacturing, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling has altered tangible personal property to its completed form, including packaging, if required.
(ii)Tangible personal property purchased for use by a qualified person to be used primarily in research and development.
(iii)Tangible personal property purchased for use by a qualified person to be used primarily to maintain, repair, measure, or test any qualified tangible personal property described in clause (i) or (ii).
(iv)Tangible personal property purchased for use by
a contractor purchasing that property for use in the performance of a construction contract for the qualified person that will use that property as an integral part of the manufacturing, research and development, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling process, the generation, production, or storage and distribution of electric power, or as a research or storage facility for use in connection with those processes.
(v)Tangible personal property purchased for the generation or production, or storage and distribution, of electric power, regardless of the source of electric power. There shall be a rebuttable presumption that qualified tangible personal property is used for distribution if the accounting or other records of the qualified person list the qualified tangible personal property as a distribution asset. For the avoidance of doubt, the accounting or other classification of the qualified tangible personal property as a distribution
asset is not a requirement and its classification in the records of the qualified person is not determinative.
(vi)Machinery and equipment, including component parts and contrivances such as belts, shafts, moving parts, and operating structures.
(vii)Equipment or devices used or required to operate, control, regulate, or maintain the machinery, including, but not limited to, computers, data processing equipment, and computer software, together with all repair and replacement parts, whether purchased separately or in conjunction with a complete machine and regardless of whether the machine or component parts are assembled by the qualified person or another party, and regardless of the life expectancy of the property or whether such property is expensed for income tax purposes.
(viii)Special purpose buildings and foundations used as an integral part of the manufacturing, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling process, or that constitute a research or storage facility used during those processes. Buildings used solely for warehousing purposes after completion of those processes are not included.
(ix)Tangible personal property used in pollution control that meets standards established by this state or any local or regional governmental agency within this state.
(x)Tangible personal property used for manufacturing, research and development, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling, or the generation, production, or storage and distribution of electric power, that furthers the state’s climate change and emissions
reductions goals.
(B)“Qualified tangible personal property” shall not include any of the following:
(i)Consumables with a useful life of less than one year but excluding catalysts, solvents, water, acids, oil, and similar consumables that interact with the product and that are an integral part of the manufacturing operation.
(ii)Equipment used to store finished products that have completed the manufacturing, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling process except for equipment used to store electric power.
(iii)Tangible personal property used primarily in administration, general management, or marketing.
(12)“Qualified tangible personal property lease” means a lease of qualified tangible personal property classified as “continuing sales” and “continuing purchases” in accordance with Sections 6006.1 and 6010.1 and includes a lease of less than one year of consecutive months but no less than six months.
(13)“Refining” means the process of converting a natural resource to an intermediate or finished product.
(14)“Research and development” means those activities that are described in Section 174 of the Internal Revenue Code or in any regulations thereunder.
(15)“Storage and distribution” means storing or distributing through
the electric grid, but not transmission of, electric power to consumers regardless of source. Storage and distribution may also include manufacturing, research and development, processing, refining, fabricating, or recycling activities that further the state’s climate change and emissions reductions goals.
(c)An exemption shall not be allowed under this section unless the purchaser furnishes the retailer with an exemption certificate, completed in accordance with any instructions or regulations as the department may prescribe, and the retailer retains the exemption certificate in its records and furnishes it to the department upon request.
(d)(1)The exemption provided by this section shall not apply to the sale or storage,
use, or other consumption of property that, within one year from the date of purchase, is removed from California, converted from an exempt use under this section to some other use not qualifying for exemption, or used in a manner not qualifying for exemption.
(2)If a purchaser certifies in writing to the seller that the tangible personal property purchased without payment of the tax will be used in a manner entitling the seller to regard the gross receipts from the sale as exempt from the sales tax, and within one year from the date of the purchase, the purchaser removes that property from California, converts that property for use in a manner not qualifying for the exemption, or uses that property in a manner not qualifying for the exemption, the purchaser shall be liable for the payment of sales tax, with applicable interest, as if the purchaser were a retailer making a retail sale of the tangible personal property at the time the tangible
personal property is so removed, converted, or used, and the cost of the tangible personal property to the purchaser shall be deemed the gross receipts from that retail sale.
(e)This section shall apply to qualified tangible personal property leases. The exemption established by this section shall apply to the rentals payable pursuant to the lease, provided the lessee is a qualified person and the tangible personal property is used in an activity described in this section.
(f)Any money received by a local agency from the state due to the sales and use tax exemption provided in this section, shall be considered a “state subvention” as defined in Section 7903 of the Government Code.
(g)This section shall be liberally construed to accomplish its purposes and objectives of increasing investment in the state of
California and providing an incentive for California employers.
(h)This section shall take effect on January 1, 2023, and shall be operative until January 1, 2033, and as of that date is repealed.