SENATE BILL 198

49th legislature - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - second session, 2010

INTRODUCED BY

Pete Campos

 

 

 

 

 

AN ACT

RELATING TO TAXATION; PROVIDING FOR THE EQUAL OPPORTUNITY SCHOLARSHIP TAX CREDIT FOR CONTRIBUTIONS MADE TO CERTAIN ORGANIZATIONS FOR SCHOLARSHIPS FOR LOW-INCOME STUDENTS IN NONPUBLIC SCHOOLS; MAKING APPROPRIATIONS.

 

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:

     Section 1. A new section of the Income Tax Act is enacted to read:

     "[NEW MATERIAL] EQUAL OPPORTUNITY SCHOLARSHIP TAX CREDIT.--

          A. A taxpayer who files an individual New Mexico income tax return and is not a dependent of another taxpayer may claim a credit for a contribution made to a scholarship granting organization for educational scholarships for eligible students at a qualified school. The credit may be claimed in an amount equal to the total contributions made during the taxable year for which the credit is claimed, but shall not exceed five hundred dollars ($500) in a taxable year for an individual or one thousand dollars ($1,000) for a married couple filing jointly. The credit provided by this section shall be known as the "equal opportunity scholarship tax credit". 

          B. A taxpayer may receive a credit pursuant to this section only if the taxpayer has a receipt from the scholarship granting organization certifying that the taxpayer's contribution will be used for educational scholarships for eligible students at a qualified school and that the taxpayer has not designated an individual student as the intended beneficiary of the contribution.

          C. A husband and wife who file separate returns for a taxable year in which they could have filed a joint return may each claim only one-half of the equal opportunity scholarship tax credit that would have been allowed on a joint return.  

          D. The equal opportunity scholarship tax credit shall not be allowed for a contribution that is included in the taxpayer's itemized deductions, as defined in Section 63 of the Internal Revenue Code, for the taxable year.

          E. The equal opportunity scholarship tax credit provided in this section may only be deducted from the taxpayer's New Mexico income tax liability for the taxable year in which the contribution is made.

          F. A scholarship granting organization shall:

                (1) notify the department of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools;

                (2) demonstrate to the department that it has been granted an exemption from the federal income tax pursuant to Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;

                (3) provide a department-approved receipt to taxpayers for contributions made to the organization;

                (4) ensure that at least ninety percent of its revenue from contributions is spent on educational scholarships, and that all revenue from interest or investments is spent on educational scholarships;

                (5) cooperate with the public education department to conduct criminal background checks on all of its employees and board members and exclude from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds;

                (6) ensure that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and can be used at any qualified school that accepts an eligible student according to a parent's wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship amount may be prorated;

                (7) demonstrate its financial accountability by submitting a financial information report for the organization that complies with uniform financial accounting standards established by the department;

                (8) ensure that a qualified school that accepts its educational scholarships will:

                     (a) comply with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to nonpublic schools;

                     (b) hold a valid occupancy permit if required by its municipality;

                     (c) certify that it will not discriminate in admissions on the basis of race, national origin or ethnicity; and

                     (d) provide academic accountability to parents of the students in the program by regularly reporting to the parents on the student's progress;

                (9) not provide educational scholarships for qualified students to attend any school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization;

                (10) publicly report to the department by June 1 of each year the following information regarding its educational scholarships for the previous calendar year:

                     (a) the name and address of the scholarship granting organization;

                     (b) the total number and total dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year; and

                     (c) the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year;

                (11) provide educational scholarships to more than one qualified school; and

                (12) provide academic accountability to parents and taxpayers by ensuring that participating schools that accept its scholarships shall:

                     (a) annually administer either the state achievement tests or nationally recognized norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in mathematics and language arts to all participating students in grades that require testing under the state's accountability testing laws for public schools;

                     (b) allow the costs of the testing requirements to be covered by the scholarships distributed by the scholarship granting organizations;

                     (c) provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the test results on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing;

                     (d) provide the test results to the department or an organization chosen by the state on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing;

                     (e) report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level and race; and

                     (f) provide graduation rates of participating students to the department or an organization chosen by the state in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.

          G. The department shall:

                (1) adopt rules as necessary to implement equal opportunity scholarship tax credits;

                (2) provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a taxpayer to indicate the value of a contribution received. The department may require a taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming an equal opportunity scholarship tax credit;

                (3) provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required pursuant to Paragraph (10) of Subsection F of this section;

                (4) have the authority to conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if possessing evidence of fraud;

                (5) bar a scholarship granting organization from participating in the program if the department establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally and substantially failed to comply with the requirements set forth in Subsection F of this section. If the department decides to bar a scholarship granting organization from the program, it shall notify affected scholarship students and their parents of this decision as quickly as possible;

                (6) ensure compliance with all student privacy laws;

                (7) collect all test results;

                (8) provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public via a state web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the students' grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program and race; and

                (9) develop a mechanism that limits the total amount of equal opportunity scholarship tax credits granted in the Income Tax Act and the Corporate Income and Franchise Tax Act to ten million dollars ($10,000,000) annually. The mechanism will use a first-come, first-served basis for determining which donations will qualify for a tax credit.

          H. All qualified schools shall:

                (1) operate in New Mexico;

                (2) comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a nonpublic school; and

                (3) fill available spaces by a random selection process, except that a qualified school may give preference to siblings of enrolled students and previously enrolled scholarship students, if a qualified school has more eligible students applying than spaces available.

          I. As used in this section:

                (1) "educational scholarships" means grants to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school;

                (2) "eligible student" means a student who:

                     (a) is a member of a household whose total annual income does not exceed an amount used to qualify for a reduced-price lunch through the federal school lunch programs established pursuant to 42 USCA Sections 1751 through 1770, as amended. Once a student receives a scholarship pursuant to the program, the student shall remain eligible regardless of household income until the student graduates from high school or reaches twenty-one years of age;

                     (b) attended a New Mexico public school in the preceding semester or is starting school in New Mexico for the first time; and

                     (c) resides in New Mexico while receiving a scholarship from a scholarship granting organization;

                (3) "qualified school" means an accredited nonpublic elementary or secondary school in New Mexico that:

                     (a) does not discriminate in admissions or treatment of students on the basis of a student's race, national origin or ethnicity;

                     (b) demonstrates to the department that it has been granted exemption from the federal income tax as an organization qualified pursuant to Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;

                     (c) requires students to take an annual academic test with individual scores provided to the parents of students; and

                     (d) satisfies the requirements set forth in Subsection H of this section; and

                (4) "scholarship granting organization" means an organization that:

                     (a) demonstrates to the department that it has been granted exemption from the federal income tax as an organization qualified pursuant to Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;

                     (b) provides financial assistance for the education of children in the form of educational scholarships to eligible students allowing them to attend any qualified school of their parents' choice;

                     (c) expends at least ninety percent of its equal opportunity scholarship tax credit qualifying contributions for educational scholarships for children enrolled in qualified schools;

                     (d) provides one hundred percent of its educational scholarships to children who at the time of initial application for the scholarship qualify for free or reduced- price lunches through the federal school lunch programs established pursuant to 42 USCA Sections 1751 through 1770, as amended; and

                     (e) satisfies the requirements set forth in Subsection F of this section."

     Section 2. A new section of the Corporate Income and Franchise Tax Act is enacted to read:

     "[NEW MATERIAL] EQUAL OPPORTUNITY SCHOLARSHIP TAX CREDIT.--

          A. A taxpayer that files a New Mexico corporate income tax return may claim a credit for a contribution made to a scholarship granting organization for educational scholarships for eligible students at qualified schools. The credit may be claimed in an amount equal to the total contributions made during the taxable year for which the credit is claimed, but shall not exceed fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) in a taxable year. The credit provided by this section shall be known as the "equal opportunity scholarship tax credit". 

          B. A taxpayer may receive a credit pursuant to this section only if the taxpayer has a receipt from the scholarship granting organization certifying that the taxpayer's contribution will be used for educational scholarships for eligible students at qualified schools and that the taxpayer has not designated an individual student as the intended beneficiary of the contribution.

          C. The equal opportunity scholarship tax credit shall not be allowed for a contribution that is included in a claim for a deduction or credit pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code.

          D. The equal opportunity scholarship tax credit provided in this section may only be deducted from the taxpayer's New Mexico corporate income tax liability for the taxable year in which the contribution is made.

          E. A scholarship granting organization shall:

                (1) notify the department of its intent to provide educational scholarships to eligible students attending qualified schools;

                (2) demonstrate to the department that it has been granted an exemption from the federal income tax pursuant to Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;

                (3) provide a department-approved receipt to taxpayers for contributions made to the organization;

                (4) ensure that at least ninety percent of its revenue from contributions is spent on educational scholarships,

and that all revenue from interest or investments is spent on educational scholarships;

                (5) cooperate with the public education department to conduct criminal background checks on all of its employees and board members and exclude from employment or governance any individual who might reasonably pose a risk to the appropriate use of contributed funds;

                (6) ensure that educational scholarships are portable during the school year and can be used at any qualified school that accepts an eligible student according to a parent's wishes. If an eligible student moves to a new qualified school during a school year, the educational scholarship amount may be prorated;

                (7) demonstrate its financial accountability by submitting a financial information report for the organization that complies with uniform financial accounting standards established by the department;

                (8) ensure that a qualified school that accepts its educational scholarships will:

                     (a) comply with all health and safety laws or codes that apply to nonpublic schools;

                     (b) hold a valid occupancy permit if required by its municipality;

                     (c) certify that it will not discriminate in admissions on the basis of race, national origin or ethnicity; and

                     (d) provide academic accountability to parents of the students in the program by regularly reporting to the parents on the student's progress;

                (9) not provide educational scholarships for qualified students to attend any school with paid staff or board members, or relatives thereof, in common with the scholarship granting organization;

                (10) publicly report to the department by June 1 of each year the following information regarding its educational scholarships for the previous calendar year:

                     (a) the name and address of the scholarship granting organization;

                     (b) the total number and total dollar amount of contributions received during the previous calendar year; and

                     (c) the total number and total dollar amount of educational scholarships awarded during the previous calendar year;

                (11) provide educational scholarships to more than one qualified school; and

                (12) provide academic accountability to parents and taxpayers by ensuring that participating schools that accept its scholarships shall:

                     (a) annually administer either the state achievement tests or nationally recognized norm-referenced tests that measure learning gains in mathematics and language arts to all participating students in grades that require testing under the state's accountability testing laws for public schools;

                     (b) allow the costs of the testing requirements to be covered by the scholarships distributed by the scholarship granting organizations;

                     (c) provide the parents of each student who was tested with a copy of the test results on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing;

                     (d) provide the test results to the department or an organization chosen by the state on an annual basis, beginning with the first year of testing;

                     (e) report student information that would allow the state to aggregate data by grade level, gender, family income level and race; and

                     (f) provide graduation rates of participating students to the department or an organization chosen by the state in a manner consistent with nationally recognized standards.

          F. The department shall:

                (1) adopt rules as necessary to implement equal opportunity scholarship tax credits;

                (2) provide a standardized format for a receipt to be issued by a scholarship granting organization to a taxpayer to indicate the value of a contribution received. The department may require a taxpayer to provide a copy of this receipt when claiming an equal opportunity scholarship tax credit;

                (3) provide a standardized format for scholarship granting organizations to report the information required pursuant to Paragraph (10) of Subsection E of this section;

                (4) have the authority to conduct either a financial review or audit of a scholarship granting organization if possessing evidence of fraud; and

                (5) bar a scholarship granting organization from participating in the program if the department establishes that the scholarship granting organization has intentionally and substantially failed to comply with the requirements set forth in Subsection E of this section. If the department decides to bar a scholarship granting organization from the program, it shall notify affected scholarship students and their parents of this decision as quickly as possible.

          G. All qualified schools shall:

                (1) operate in New Mexico;

                (2) comply with all state laws that apply to nonpublic schools regarding criminal background checks for employees and exclude from employment any person not permitted by state law to work in a nonpublic school;

                (3) fill available spaces by a random selection process, except that a qualified school may give preference to siblings of enrolled students and previously enrolled scholarship students, if a qualified school has more eligible students applying than spaces available;

                (4) ensure compliance with all student privacy laws;

                (5) collect all test results;

                (6) provide the test results and associated learning gains to the public via a state web site after the third year of test and test-related data collection. The findings shall be aggregated by the students' grade level, gender, family income level, number of years of participation in the scholarship program and race; and

                (7) develop a mechanism that limits the total amount of equal opportunity scholarship tax credits granted in the Income Tax Act and the Corporate Income and Franchise Tax Act to ten million dollars ($10,000,000) annually. The mechanism will use a first-come, first-served basis for determining which donations will qualify for a tax credit.

          H. As used in this section:

                (1) "educational scholarships" means grants to eligible students to cover all or part of the tuition and fees at a qualified school;

                (2) "eligible student" means a student who:

                     (a) is a member of a household whose total annual income does not exceed an amount used to qualify for a reduced-price lunch through the federal school lunch programs established pursuant to 42 USCA Sections 1751 through 1770, as amended. Once a student receives a scholarship pursuant to the program, the student will remain eligible regardless of household income until the student graduates from high school or reaches twenty-one years of age;

                     (b) attended a New Mexico public school in the preceding semester or is starting school in New Mexico for the first time; and  

                     (c) resides in New Mexico while receiving

a scholarship from a scholarship granting organization;

                (3) "qualified school" means an accredited nonpublic elementary or secondary school in New Mexico that:

                     (a) does not discriminate in admissions or treatment of students on the basis of a student's race, national origin or ethnicity;

                     (b) demonstrates to the department that it has been granted exemption from the federal income tax as an organization qualified pursuant to Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;

                     (c) requires students to take an annual academic test with individual scores provided to the parents of students; and

                     (d) satisfies the requirements set forth in Subsection G of this section; and

                (4) "scholarship granting organization" means an organization that:

                     (a) demonstrates to the department that it has been granted exemption from the federal income tax as an organization qualified pursuant to Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code;

                     (b) provides financial assistance for the education of children in the form of educational scholarships or tuition grants to eligible students allowing them to attend any qualified school of their parents' choice;

                     (c) expends at least ninety percent of its equal opportunity scholarship tax credit qualifying contributions for educational scholarships or tuition grants for children enrolled in a qualified school;

                     (d) provides one hundred percent of its educational scholarships to children who at the time of initial application for the scholarship qualify for free or reduced- price lunches through the federal school lunch programs established pursuant to 42 USCA Sections 1751 through 1770, as amended; and

                     (e) satisfies the requirements set forth in Subsection E of this section."

     Section 3. APPROPRIATION.--One million two hundred thousand dollars ($1,200,000) is appropriated from the general fund to the public education department for expenditure in fiscal year 2011 to make annual grants on a competitive basis for innovative efforts by educational providers to reduce the dropout rate for minority students. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall revert to the general fund.

     Section 4. APPROPRIATION.--Five million dollars ($5,000,000) is appropriated from the general fund to the public education department for expenditure in fiscal year 2011 to aid public schools to reflect the savings achieved through the equal opportunity scholarship tax credit program. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of fiscal year 2011 shall revert to the general fund.

     Section 5. APPLICABILITY.--The provisions of this act apply to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2011 but before January 1, 2015.

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