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Bill

HB 1575

A BILL for an Act to create and enact two new sections to chapter 54-27, two new sections to chapter 57-02, and a new subdivision to subsection 1 of section 57-55-10 of the North Dakota Century Code, relating to a legacy earnings fund, a legacy property tax relief fund, a state reimbursed taxable valuation reduction for residential, agricultural, and commercial property, limitations on taxable valuation increases, and voter-approved excess levy authority; to amend and reenact section 6-09.4-10.1, subsection 1 of section 21-10-06, section 54-27-19.3, subdivision c of subsection 1 of section 57-02-08.1, subdivision b of subsection 2 of section 57-02-08.1, and section 57-02-08.10, of the North Dakota Century Code, relating to funds invested by the state investment board, the homestead tax credit and renters refund, and the primary residence credit certification and state reimbursement; to repeal sections 21-10-12, 21-10-13, and 57-02-08.9 of the North Dakota Century Code, relating to legacy fund definitions, the legacy earnings fund, and the primary residence credit; to provide an appropriation; to provide for a transfer; to provide an effective date; and to provide an expiration date.

69th Legislative Assembly (2025-26) Introduced by Mike Beltz and 9 co-sponsors

Creates a Legacy Earnings Fund to fund debt service, highways, and property tax relief, plus higher homestead/renter caps and limits on valuation increases.

Second reading, failed to pass, yeas 0 nays 46
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · HB 1575

Summary — HB 1575 (North Dakota, 2025 session)

Status (per provided information)
- Introduced: February 25, 2025.
- Most recent status: Second reading — failed to pass (yeas 0, nays 46).
- Bill would create new legacy-related funds, change property‑tax relief programs, and amend related code sections; it also contains appropriation/transfer and effective/expiration date language.

Purpose / intent
- To establish a dedicated “legacy earnings” distribution mechanism from the state’s Legacy Fund and to create a Legacy Property Tax Relief Fund to provide state-funded reductions to taxable valuations for certain property classes.
- To revise existing homeowner and renter tax‑relief provisions (homestead tax credit / renter refund), update investment/fund reporting and investment authority language, and adjust how certain Legacy Fund earnings are allocated (including highway funding and debt service).
- To limit taxable valuation increases (and provide for voter approval/extra levy authority) and repeal some existing Legacy/primary residence credit provisions.

Key provisions (text excerpts and specified amounts)
- Creates a Legacy Earnings Fund in the state treasury. Distribution schedule:
- On July 1 of each odd‑numbered year the distribution equals 7% of the five‑year average Legacy Fund balance (average of year‑end balances over the last five fiscal years).
- Allocation order (each odd‑year July):
1. Up to $102,624,000 (or an amount equal to biennial appropriation from the Legacy Sinking & Interest Fund for debt service, whichever is less) to the Legacy Sinking and Interest Fund for public finance authority debt service.
2. $100,000,000 to a Legacy Earnings Highway Distribution Fund (then split to state highways, township aid, public transportation, and cities/counties per specified percentages).
3. Remaining amount to a newly created Legacy Property Tax Relief Fund.
- Creates a Legacy Property Tax Relief Fund (receives amounts allocated above and other legislative transfers/appropriations).
- Adds the Legacy Earnings Fund to the list of funds the State Investment Board invests.
- Changes to homestead / renters programs:
- Homestead income thresholds shown in amendment: earlier $40,000 → $50,000; $70,000 → $80,000 (affecting eligibility/benefit tiers).
- Renters refund language increases the possible refund cap from $400 to $600 and retains a $5 minimum payment when the calculated refund is under $5.
- Broad policy goals (from committee bill language): create a state‑reimbursed taxable valuation reduction for residential, agricultural and commercial property owned by in‑state residents/entities; restrict taxable valuation increases without voter approval; establish voter‑approved excess levy authority. (Detailed implementing provisions in the bill text were truncated in the provided material.)

Who would be affected
- Property owners (primary residential owners, other residential, agricultural and commercial owners) — via changes in taxable valuation relief and limits on valuation increases.
- Renters and lower‑income homeowners — by adjusted thresholds and caps for renter refunds and homestead reductions.
- Local governments (counties, cities, townships) — receive highway distributions and would be affected by state reimbursement mechanics and any limits on taxable valuation growth or local levy changes.
- State treasury entities — state treasurer (allocation duties), State Investment Board, Public Finance Authority.

Procedural / timing notes
- Distribution mechanics are tied to July 1 of odd‑numbered years and based on a five‑year average Legacy Fund balance reported by the State Investment Board.
- The bill also repeals existing statutory sections concerning the prior Legacy Earnings Fund and the primary residence credit (exact repeals listed in the bill header).
- The bill text available is incomplete in places (some implementing sections truncated), so detailed operational mechanics (eligibility rules, application/claim procedures, exact valuation‑reduction formulas, and any appropriation totals beyond the amounts above) are not fully shown in the provided excerpts.

Fiscal implications (high‑level)
- The bill directs large, specified sums for debt service and highways ($102.624 million cap for debt service and $100 million for highways) before any remainder goes to property tax relief — limiting how much is available for property‑tax reduction in any distribution cycle.
- Net impact on local tax levies and state general fund spending depends on implementation details and the size of remaining Legacy distributions; those specifics are not fully present in the provided text.

Note: The provided document set included materials and legislative actions from multiple jurisdictions and some truncated sections. This summary focuses on the North Dakota HB 1575 material (Legacy Fund / property tax relief) contained in the supplied text.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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