|
|
|
Revenue
Sharing Programs
|
| State
Revenue Sharing Program |
|
Contents
Introduction
Frequently Asked Questions
Narrative
Additional Resources
Applicable Laws
|
|
| Introduction Back
to Top |
|
Funding for this program was eliminated from the
FY 2004 State Budget
The State Revenue Sharing (SRS)
program, administered by the Department of Community and Economic
Development (Commerce), provides financial assistance to municipalities,
eligible unincorporated communities, and eligible volunteer
fire departments to help fund public services. These services
include education, water and sewer, police, road maintenance,
health care and fire protection.
In 1980 the State Revenue Sharing
Program was revised from the "categorical aid program" implemented
in 1969 into the current program which includes two accounts
from which payments are distributed: the Tax
Equalization Account and the Municipal
Services Account. The Tax Equalization Account
rewards municipalities for generating revenue by distributing
money on the basis of a formula that includes locally generated
revenues, property values and population, and provides for
a minimum
entitlement for municipalities of $25,000, plus
a geographic cost
of living adjustment. The Municipal Services Account provides
money to municipalities for public and ice road maintenance,
health facilities, and hospitals. The Municipal Services Account
also provides funding to unincorporated communities and volunteer
fire departments in the unorganized borough.
|
|
|
| Frequently
Asked
Questions Back
to
Top |
|
Who is eligible to receive
State Revenue Sharing payments?
An eligible applicant must be
either an incorporated
municipality, an unincorporated
community within the unorganized borough, or a
volunteer
fire department within the unorganized borough.
Only unincorporated communities located within the unorganized
borough are eligible, and they must have either a non-profit
corporation or Native village council that will agree to receive
and spend the payment. Additionally, only volunteer fire departments
registered with the State
Fire Marshal serving areas outside an incorporated
municipality are eligible.
How does an entity qualify
for payment?
Depending on whether the applicant
is a municipality, unincorporated community, or volunteer
fire department, the requirements vary. However, all applicants must
apply using forms provided by Commerce by November 1, in order to preserve
the right to appeal the entitlement determination; otherwise,
no later than December 1 (3
AAC 130.011).
- For a municipality to qualify
for a State Revenue Sharing payment, it must submit an approved
application, a copy of its current year operating budget,
and its audit or certified financial statement from two
years ago to Commerce (3
AAC 130.021(a), (b)(1), (b)(2)). In addition, the municipality
must have conducted an election during the preceding state
fiscal year and reported the results to Commerce, held regular
meetings and maintained a record of the proceedings, and
must have codified its ordinances (AS
29.60.290).
- An unincorporated community
must submit an approved application, program budget, and
funding agreement resolution in a form approved by Commerce
(3 AAC 130.021(b)(3) and (f)). In
addition, the applicant must agree to dedicate the money
for public purposes, hold a public meeting to discuss the
use of the funds and agree not to discriminate in provision
of the public service (3 AAC 130.055).
- A volunteer fire department (VFD)
must submit an approved application and program budget in
a form approved by Commerce (3 AAC 130.021(b)(4) and (f)). In addition, a VFD must
be registered with the State Fire Marshal and agree to spend
20% of the funds received on fire protection services (3
AAC 130.054).
What are the application
deadlines?
Commerce mails the State Revenue
Sharing applications to eligible applicants on July 31. The
filing deadline for applications is November 1, if an entity
wants to preserve the right to appeal the entitlement determination,
or no later than December 1 of the computation year. Applicant
budgets and certified financial statements are due the following
June 30, except a municipality operating under a calendar
fiscal year must file a certificate of estimated locally generated
revenue by January 10, of the computation year (3
AAC 130.011).
How are community populations
determined for State Revenue Sharing?
On January 15, the department
notifies each municipality in writing of its preliminary population
determination for the upcoming Revenue Sharing program year.
These are population estimates by the State Demographer, Department
of Labor and Workforce Development (Labor),
and are based largely on Alaska Permanent Fund Dividend applications,
Internal Revenue Service records, and other administrative
information.
Although not required, a community may conduct its own population census
as evidence that Labor's estimate does not accurately reflect the population.
If a municipality chooses to conduct a local census, it must follow department
standards and submit all required documentation by April 1. Commerce
publishes local
census instructions annually in the "Head Count Census Manual" and the "Housing Unit
Method Manual" (see "Publications" below.) An extension
of the deadline may be requested in writing. The Director of the Division of Community and Regional Affairs may approve or deny the municipality's
request for population adjustment (AS 29.60.020
and 3 AAC 130.010-150.)
When are State Revenue Sharing
payments made?
State Revenue Sharing payments
are made on July 31 of each fiscal year, if the application
and other required documentation is submitted on time (AS
29.60.310).
What can State Revenue Sharing
payments be used for?
Generally, state revenue sharing
funds may be spent on any public purpose for which the recipient
is legally authorized to spend. If claimed in the application,
however, at least 20% of the funds received by a municipality
for road maintenance must be spent for that service, and 100%
of the funds received for health services must be spent on
that service. Unincorporated communities may spend their payment
on any public purpose, while volunteer fire departments must
spend their payment on fire protection services (3
AAC 130.052, .053, .054 and .055).
|
|
|
| Narrative Back
to Top |
|
The purpose of the State Revenue
Sharing Program is to help finance the delivery of local
services
and to "assure that no municipality suffers impoverishment
of necessary public services, relative to other municipalities,
because of the chance location of taxable wealth in the state." (Chapter
155, SLA 1980)
Despite the 79% reduction in
funding to
this program over the years ($60,350,000 in FY 85 to $12,855,200
in FY 02), this program still represents a significant source
of funding for many of Alaska's communities, especially the
smaller rural communities. Recent studies show that 25 cities
rely on state revenue sharing for over 20% of their operating
budgets (with a high of over 71%).
|
|
|
| Additional
Resources Back
to
Top |
Applications and Forms
Publications
Web Sites
Other Resources
|
|
|
| Applicable
Laws Back
to
Top |
|
Alaska Statutes
- AS
29.60.010 - State equalization of tax resources
for municipal services, formula for computing tax unit
entitlement,
definitions of locally generated revenue
- AS
29.60.020 - Determination of population
- AS
29.60.030 - Determination of millage rate equivalent
- AS
29.60.040 - Reports, financial reporting period,
budget
- AS
29.60.050 - Limitation on computation and use
of payments
- AS
29.60.060 - Tax equalization account, allocation
- AS
29.60.070 - Administration, adoption of regulations,
content of regulations
- AS
29.60.080 - Definitions
- AS
29.60.100 - State aid to municipalities for
roads,
entitlement formula, ice roads, waterways
- AS
29.60.120 - State aid to municipalities and
other
eligible recipients for health facilities and hospitals,
certification requirements, definition of health facility
- AS
29.60.130 - State aid to volunteer fire departments
not in organized municipality, state fire marshal approval
- AS
29.60.140 - State aid to unincorporated communities,
qualified entity, waiver of sovereign immunity
- AS
29.60.150 - Population determination
- AS
29.60.160 - Area cost-of-living differential,
formula, determination of differential areas
- AS
29.60.170 - Municipal services account, distribution
- AS
29.60.180 - Regulations, minimum qualification
standards
- AS
29.60.280 - Allocation and distribution
- AS
29.60.290 - Qualification for minimum payment,
election, regular meetings, budget, codified ordinances,
determination of differential areas, determination of minimum
payment
- AS
29.60.300 - Proration of payments, formula
- AS
29.60.310 - Time of payment
Alaska Administrative Code
See
Alaska Administrative Code:
- 3 AAC 130.011 - Application
for state aid filing deadline
- 3 AAC 130.021 - Financial
reports, budget, audit or financial statement,
- 3 AAC 130.042 - Population
determination, determination methods,
- 3 AAC 130.043 - Request for
adjustment of population determination, request deadline,
- 3 AAC 130.044 - Appeal of
population determination to the commissioner
- 3 AAC 130.052 - Standards
for payments of state aid to municipalities for roads,
20%
expenditure, map requirement
- 3 AAC 130.053 - Standards
for payments of state aid to municipalities and other eligible
recipients for health facilities and hospitals, 20% expenditure
requirement
- 3 AAC 130.054 - Standards
for payments of state aid to volunteer fire departments
not in an organized municipality, 20% expenditure requirement
- 3 AAC 130.055 - Standards
for payments of state aid to unincorporated communities,
dedication to public purpose, meeting and notice requirements,
non-discrimination requirement
- 3 AAC 130.061 - Standards
for payment of state aid under former AS 29.90
- 3 AAC 130.071 - Standards
for minimum payments under AS 29.60.290
- 3 AAC 130.072 - Violation
of payment standard
- 3 AAC 130.092 - Full and
true assessed property value determination, determination
deadline, appeal, appeal deadline, judicial review
- 3 AAC 130.093 - Determination
of social unit
- 3 AAC 130.094 - Determination
of most qualified entity, appeal, appeal deadline
- 3 AAC 130.097 - Determination
of millage rate equivalent and data elements
- 3 AAC 130.102 - Appeal of
determination to the commissioner, appeal deadline
- 3 AAC 130.112 - Notice of
entitlement
- 3 AAC 130.113 - Request for
recalculation of entitlements, request deadline
- 3 AAC 130.121 - Overpayment
and adjustment
- 3 AAC 130.122 - Underpayment
and adjustment, adjustment request deadline
- 3 AAC 130.131 - Incorporation
or dissolution of an applicant, eligibility
- 3 AAC 130.135 - Waiver for
good cause
- 3 AAC 130.150 - Definitions
Revised 10/1/02
|
|
|
| Back
to Top
|
|
|
PRINTING
NOTE TO
USER:
Some
printers
do
not
capture
the
full
page
when
printing.
To
adjust
for
this,
select "Landscape" in
the print
properties
window when
printing
one
of
the
LOGON
chapters. |
|
| |
|
|
|