Report Title:
School Repair and Maintenance; Hawaii 3R's
Description:
Establishes the Hawaii school repair and maintenance trust fund as a separate fund of Hawaii 3R's (a project of America's Promise, a nonprofit organization) for coordination of private and federal efforts to repair and maintain public schools. Establishes a tax credit for in-kind contributions. (SD1)
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
472 |
TWENTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2001 |
H.D. 2 |
|
STATE OF HAWAII |
S.D. 1 |
|
|
A BILL FOR AN ACT
relating to public schools.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the backlog of repair and maintenance projects for public schools across the State is now estimated at more than $640,000,000. This accumulation of work has occurred because of tight budgets over the last decade, when an average of only $22,000,000 a year was appropriated for the upkeep of elementary, middle, and high school campuses, even though they required an estimated $66,000,000 in maintenance each year.
The legislature further finds that no public school in the State is ever given sufficient funds to cover all of its repair and maintenance needs, so the deterioration and degradation of each campus compounds with each passing school year. The general practice has been to repair only the most critical, health-threatening conditions, or to tackle the least-involved projects in order to keep facilities operating.
The governor has proposed that the sum of $50,000,000 be included in the capital improvements project budget for the repair and maintenance of our schools. While clearly a substantial sum that is much needed, it pales in comparison to the total deferred maintenance requirements of the system.
As a consequence, if those moneys are handled in the manner that is typical of the system, they will be governed by the priority matrix and handled in a way that dissipates them throughout the whole of the system and leaves no single place readied and prepared to provide the physical environment in which powerful learning can occur. Its impact will be marginalized and no school will receive the critical infusion necessary to adequately address all its repair and maintenance needs. No school will receive anything more than crisis management treatment. There will be no visible or obvious impact in any locale, and no campus will be restored to the status of an intact and healthy learning environment.
The legislature finds that education is universally recognized as the key to Hawaii's future in a global, high-tech economy. However, except for the State's most modern campuses, such as at Kapolei, Kapaa, or Keeau, the legislature finds that schools statewide will never support the kind of teaching our children deserve if facilities continue to be rundown, unhealthy, and even dangerous.
The legislature finds that one of the components of school repair and maintenance is the development of a "sweat-equity" program, spearheaded by America's Promise Hawaii, that consists of professional and community work hours, materials, and design contributions, local business donations, military participation, and other in-kind endowments, that would be the basis for restoration projects within geographical regions defined by their kindergarten through grade twelve school districts. The intent of this program is to place parents and immediate communities on the front line for their respective schools.
Finally, the legislature finds that there is a need to develop a public-private partnership to mobilize the community by involving stakeholders in Hawaii's public educational system, including parents of students, alumni, teachers, business, and government, as well as the students themselves, to actually complete the repair and maintenance projects.
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to begin to work towards eliminating the $640,000,000 repair and maintenance backlog for Hawaii's public schools. This is to be accomplished through:
(1) The development of a public-private partnership for school maintenance and repair, to be placed administratively within the department of accounting and general services, to assist in the public-private funding of public school repair and maintenance projects;
(2) Providing for state appropriations, and encouraging federal and private contributions, to a trust fund established as a separate fund of Hawaii 3R's, a project of America's Promise, a nonprofit organization, to provide public-private funding of these backlogged projects through grants. Hawaii 3R's is to seek funding and financial grants to supplement state funding wherever available, including special program grants from the federal government, and private-sector contributions from sources such as the travel, construction, development, or high technology industries. These funds would be used to award grants and purchase services and materials beyond the department of accounting and general services' budgeting to support proposals from schools and communities. However, the intent is not to supplant the department's budget for the routine, day-to-day maintenance and emergency repair of public schools. An advisory board of Hawaii 3R's is to review grant proposals and rate them according to pre-determined criteria to select the projects it would support with appropriate funding. The department of accounting and general services already has extensive data on the long-delayed repairs needed by the schools, with engineering and design work sometimes already performed; and
(3) Authorizing contractors, architects, engineers, surveyors and landscape architects, licensed under chapters 444 and 464, who provide professional services for the repair and maintenance of Hawaii's public schools through Hawaii 3R's, to take an income tax credit as an incentive to provide such services.
SECTION 2. Hawaii school repair and maintenance trust fund. (a) There is established the Hawaii school repair and maintenance trust fund (hereinafter, "trust fund") as a separate fund of Hawaii 3R's, a project of America's Promise, a nonprofit organization. Moneys received from the state, county, or federal government, private contributions of cash or other property, and the income and capital gains earned by the trust fund shall constitute its assets. The purpose of the trust fund shall be to develop and support a public-private partnership to supplement publicly funded school maintenance and repair efforts.
(b) The department of accounting and general services shall contract with Hawaii 3R's to provide grants to organizations from the trust fund, enter into contracts funded by the trust with private vendors for the repair and maintenance of public schools in Hawaii, and to administer fund assets in accordance with this section and the purposes of this Act.
(c) The trust fund may receive contributions, grants, endowments, or gifts in cash or otherwise from all sources, including corporations or other businesses, foundations, government, individuals, and other interested parties. The legislature intends that the public and private sectors work together as partners in securing contributions for the trust fund, and that Hawaii 3R's assist the public and private sectors in investigating and reviewing all potential funding sources. The State may donate moneys to the trust fund by legislative appropriation; provided that any appropriations made by the State are not intended to supplant the funding of any existing public school repair and maintenance programs, including school-level minor repairs and maintenance accounts established under section 302A-1504, Hawaii Revised Statutes.
(d) Hawaii 3R's shall appoint the members of the Hawaii school maintenance and repair advisory board, which shall be responsible for:
(1) Soliciting and otherwise raising funds for the trust fund;
(2) Establishing criteria for the expenditure of funds; and
(3) Making recommendations for grants and other specific expenditures.
Members of the advisory board shall be stakeholders in Hawaii's public educational system, including students, parents, alumni, principals, community and business leaders, and representatives from the department of education and the department of accounting and general services, who shall be represented on the advisory board.
(e) The aggregate principal sum deposited in the trust fund, and any income and capital gains earned by the trust fund but not expended for administration or for purposes under section 2, shall be invested in accordance with the provisions of Hawaii 3R's in a manner intended to maximize the rate of return on investment of the trust fund consistent with the objective of preserving the trust fund's principal.
(f) There shall be an endowment component of the trust fund.
(g) The use of state funds shall be restricted as provided by legislation appropriating these funds to the trust fund.
(h) All state funds appropriated to the trust fund by this Act shall be matched by private, federal, county, or other contributions. The requirement of matching private contributions shall be deemed satisfied by any of the following:
(1) Cash, including the United States dollar equivalent of foreign currency;
(2) Interest in and title to real and personal property, including securities, the cash value of life insurance policies, and real property valued by appraisal, market quotations, or other generally accepted valuation methods;
(3) The fair market value of in-kind technical or professional services or labor contributed to Hawaii 3R's projects in lieu of cash payment to the fund; or
(4) A pledge of cash, or of interest in, and title to, real or personal property, to be received by the fund not later than five full years following the date that the pledge is matched by state funds; provided that a pledgor shall at the end of the five year period owe the State the amount of the matching State appropriation that is not matched by actual payment of the pledge within the five-year period.
(i) To be eligible for trust fund moneys, an organization shall at the time of application:
(1) Be a for-profit organization duly registered under the laws of the State, or a nonprofit organization determined by the Internal Revenue Service to be exempt from federal income tax, or an agency of the State or a county;
(2) In the case of a nonprofit organization, possess a governing board whose members have no material conflict of interest with the trust fund and which members serve without compensation;
(3) In the case of an applicant that is not a state or county government agency, have bylaws or policies that describe the manner in which business is conducted and policies that relate to the management of potential conflict of interest situations;
(4) Have experience with the project or in the program area for which the proposal is being made; and
(5) Be licensed, accredited, or otherwise qualified, in accordance with federal, state, and county requirements.
(j) The public-private partnership for school maintenance and repair shall assist Hawaii 3R's in the implementation of this section by providing assistance in seeking sources of funding and in other relevant areas as requested by Hawaii 3R's.
(k) Organizations or agencies to which trust fund moneys are awarded shall agree to comply with the following conditions before receiving the award:
(1) Employ or have under contract persons qualified to engage in the activity to be funded;
(2) Comply with applicable federal, state, and county laws; and
(3) Comply with any other requirements prescribed by Hawaii 3R's to ensure an award recipient's adherence to applicable federal, state, and county laws and the purposes of section 2 of this Act.
(l) The advisory board of Hawaii 3R's shall review grant proposals utilizing criteria established by Hawaii 3R's.
(m) The trust fund shall be audited annually by an independent auditor. The results of each annual audit shall be submitted to the department of the attorney general not later than thirty days from the date Hawaii 3R's receives the audit results. In addition, Hawaii 3R's shall retain any documents, papers, books, and other records pertinent to the trust fund for a period of three years and provide the department of the attorney general, the department of accounting and general services, the department of education, state legislators, and the auditor, or their duly authorized representatives, access to inspect these records.
(n) In the event of termination of the trust fund or the dissolution of Hawaii 3R's, any unexpended and unencumbered state appropriations shall revert back to the State. Any other amounts remaining in the trust fund shall be distributed in accordance with the purposes of the fund and as recommended by the board of Hawaii 3R's.
(o) The trust fund shall not be placed in the state treasury, and the State shall neither administer the fund, nor shall the State be liable for its operation or solvency.
SECTION 3. Chapter 235, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§235- Credit for school repair and maintenance. (a) There shall be allowed to each taxpayer licensed under chapter 444 or 464, who is subject to the tax imposed by this chapter, and does not owe the State delinquent taxes, penalties, or interest, a credit for contributions of in-kind services for the repair and maintenance of public schools provided by the taxpayer in Hawaii. The credit shall be deductible from the taxpayer's net income tax liability, if any, imposed by this chapter for the taxable year in which the credit is properly claimed.
(b) The amount of the credit determined under this section for the taxable year shall be equal to ten per cent of the value of contributions of in-kind services to the Hawaii school repair and maintenance trust fund for that taxable year up to a maximum of $40,000.
(c) For purposes of this section:
"Value of contributions of in-kind services" means the fair market value of uncompensated labor as determined by the Hawaii school maintenance and repair advisory board and certified by the department of accounting and general services.
"Public schools" has the same meaning as defined in section 302A-101.
(d) The credit allowed under this section shall be claimed against net income tax liability for the taxable year. A tax credit under this section which exceeds the taxpayer's income tax liability may be used as a credit against the taxpayer's income tax liability in subsequent years until exhausted.
(e) All claims for tax credits under this section, including any amended claims, shall be filed on or before the end of the twelfth month following the close of the taxable year for which the credits may be claimed. Failure to comply with the foregoing provision shall constitute a waiver of the right to claim the credit.
(f) No tax credit shall be allowed for that portion of a contribution for which a deduction is taken under section 62 (with respect to adjusted gross income defined) of the Internal Revenue Code.
(g) The Hawaii school maintenance and repair advisory board shall maintain records of the names of taxpayers eligible for the credit and the total value of in-kind services contributed for the repair and maintenance of public schools for the taxable year. All contributions shall be verified by the department of accounting and general services. The department of accounting and general services shall total all contributions that the department certifies. Upon each determination, the department of accounting and general services shall issue a certificate to the taxpayer certifying:
(1) The amount of the contribution and the amount of the tax credit;
(2) That the taxpayer is licensed under chapter 444 or 464; and
(3) That the taxpayer has obtained a current and valid certificate signed by the director of taxation, showing that the taxpayer does not owe the State any delinquent taxes, penalties, or interest.
The taxpayer shall file the certificate with the taxpayer's tax return with the department of taxation. When the total amount of certified tax credits reach $250,000, the department of accounting and general services shall immediately discontinue certifying contributions or tax credits and notify the department of taxation. In no instance shall the total amount of certified tax credits exceed $250,000 for each taxable year.
(h) The State shall provide no more than $250,000 in tax credits for contributions of in-kind services in Hawaii for the repair and maintenance of public schools.
(i) The director of taxation shall prepare forms as may be necessary to allow a credit to be claimed under this section."
SECTION 4. The state comptroller shall submit reports of the progress of the public-private partnership for school maintenance and repair and the Hawaii school repair and maintenance trust fund no later than twenty days prior to the convening of the regular sessions of 2002, 2003, and 2004.
SECTION 5. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $1 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2001-2002 as a grant-in-aid to be expended under chapter 42F, Hawaii Revised Statutes. The sum appropriated shall be expended by the department of accounting and general services through the grant-in-aid process for deposit into the Hawaii school repair and maintenance trust fund established under section 2 of this Act. The state moneys in the repair and maintenance trust fund shall be matched by private sector donations and contributions from the federal government in accordance with this Act, including start-up supplies for the public-private partnership for school maintenance and repair.
SECTION 6. There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii the sum of $1 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year 2001-2002 for one full-time equivalent (1.00 FTE) staff position within the department of accounting and general services to coordinate public and private efforts to repair and maintain public schools.
The sum appropriated shall be expended by the department of accounting and general services for the purposes of this Act.
SECTION 7. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act, which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
SECTION 8. It is the intent of this Act not to jeopardize the receipt of any federal aid nor to impair the obligation of the State or any agency thereof to the holders of any bond issued by the State or by any such agency, and to the extent, and only to the extent, necessary to effectuate this intent, the governor may modify the strict provisions of this Act, but shall promptly report any such modification with reasons therefor to the legislature at its next session thereafter for review by the legislature.
SECTION 9. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 10. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2001; provided that section 4 of this Act, upon its approval, shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2000.