Bill

Bill > S1210


NJ S1210

NJ S1210
Limits amount of real property that may be exempt from property taxation under "Long Term Tax Exemption Law."


summary

Introduced
02/03/2022
In Committee
02/03/2022
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/08/2024

Introduced Session

2022-2023 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill would limit the amount of real property that can be property tax exempt under the "Long Term Tax Exemption Law." The bill would require that the governing body of a municipality in which the long term tax exemption threshold is greater than five percent of the sum of the municipality's net valuation taxable and the value of properties already exempted under the "Long Term Tax Exemption Law," shall not enter into any further financial agreements while that threshold remains above five percent. The long term tax exemption threshold is calculated by dividing the value of property already subject to a financial agreement, by the sum of the value of property already subject to a financial agreement plus the net valuation taxable, and that quotient multiplied by 100. If a tax exemption under the "Long Term Tax Exemption is denied because the municipality's long term tax exemption threshold is greater than five percent, but in a later year, the municipality's long term tax exemption threshold becomes lower than five percent, the municipality may at its sole discretion permit the tax exemption upon reapplication to the extent that the tax exemption does not increase the municipality's long term tax exemption threshold past the five percent limit.

AI Summary

This bill would limit the amount of real property that can be property tax exempt under the "Long Term Tax Exemption Law." The bill requires that the governing body of a municipality in which the long-term tax exemption threshold is greater than 5% of the sum of the municipality's net valuation taxable and the value of properties already exempted under the law, shall not enter into any further financial agreements while that threshold remains above 5%. The long-term tax exemption threshold is calculated by dividing the value of property already subject to a financial agreement by the sum of the value of property already subject to a financial agreement plus the net valuation taxable, and multiplying that quotient by 100. If a tax exemption is denied because the threshold is above 5%, the municipality may later permit the exemption if the threshold drops below 5%, as long as the exemption does not increase the threshold past the 5% limit.

Committee Categories

Housing and Urban Affairs

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Community and Urban Affairs Committee (on 02/03/2022)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...
Loading...