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2022 Session

Budget Amendments - SB30 (Committee Approved)

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Direct Aid - Supplemental GF Payment in Lieu of One Percent Sales Tax on Food and Personal Hygiene Products

Item 137 #1s

Item 137 #1s

First Year - FY2023 Second Year - FY2024
Education
Direct Aid to Public Education FY2023 ($7,596) FY2024 ($18,760) GF

Language
Page 140, line 5, strike "$9,353,567,746" and insert "$9,353,560,150".
Page 140, line 5, strike "$9,071,830,605" and insert "$9,071,811,845".

Page 141, after line 26, insert:

"Supplemental GF Payment in Lieu of Sales Tax on Food and Personal Hygiene Products     $104,100,000       $257,200,000".

Page 141, strike lines 27 - 28.

Page 144, line 3, strike "and" and insert ",".

Page 144, line 4, after "Fund", insert "and the amounts distributed in Item 137.C.5.b.2) for fiscal year 2023 and fiscal year 2024".

Page 144, line 5, strike "both of".

Page 144, line 17, after "education", insert "and the amounts distributed in Item 137.C.5.b.2) for fiscal year 2023 and fiscal year 2024"

Page 151, line 32, strike "b." and insert "b. 1)".

Page 151, line 33, after "tax", insert "and the amounts distributed in Item 137.C.5.b.2) for fiscal year 2023 and fiscal year 2024".

Page 151 after line 36, insert:

"b.2) $104,100,000 the first year and $257,200,000 the second year from the general fund shall be distributed to localities on the basis of the latest yearly estimate of school age population provided by the Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service as specified in this Item. These funds represent the reduction to divisions from the exemption of the state sales and use tax on food for human consumption and essential personal hygiene products."

Page 177, strike lines 50 - 53.

Page 178, strike lines 1 - 11.



Explanation

(This amendment provides $104.1 million GF the first year and $257.2 million GF the second for the equivalent distribution of the one percent sales tax revenue from food and essential personal hygiene products. These payments are distributed to localities based on the estimate of school age population consistent with sales tax. The funding for this amendment is fully contained within the introduced budget since the introduced budget contained a hold harmless payment for the loss in dedicated K-12 sales tax from exempting food after the Basic Aid offset and contained the entire distribution of sales tax from essential personal hygiene products. The reductions reflected in this amendment are related to rounding variances when distributing these payments based on school age population and then calculating the Basic Aid state and local shares of cost based on the local composite index.)