Note: the materials you provided contain multiple, different bills from different jurisdictions that share the number “SB 566.” The primary bill text and legislative digest in the packet appear to be a California measure (authored by Grove) dealing with property tax exemptions and a renters’ credit. Other documents in the packet (Maryland, Michigan, Arkansas, Illinois) are entirely different bills that happen to use the same bill number in their respective legislatures. Below I summarize the California SB 566 (the bill whose text appears in the Legislative Counsel’s Digest and bill text you included). At the end I list the other distinct SB 566 items in the packet so you can tell which is which.
Summary — California SB 566 (Grove)
Purpose and intent
- Raise the amount of the homeowners’ property tax exemption for certain homeowners and provide a comparable increase in renter benefits (as required by the California Constitution when homeowner exemptions increase).
- Add information and intent statements related to tax-expenditure reporting requirements and address state reimbursement for any local revenue impacts.
Key provisions and changes
1. Homeowners’ exemption (Revenue & Taxation Code §218)
- Current baseline: $7,000 exemption of full value of a dwelling.
- Change: Beginning with the lien date for the 2026–27 fiscal year, increase the exemption to $50,000 of full value — but limited to homeowners age 62 or older.
- Clarifies occupancy exceptions (disaster-damaged homes, confinement in care facilities, cooperative ownership, etc.), preserving existing eligibility rules.
Renter’s credit (Personal Income Tax Law §17053.5)
- Because the California Constitution requires renters receive comparable benefits, the bill increases the refundable/ nonrefundable renter credit for “qualified renters” for taxable years beginning Jan 1, 2026:
- For spouses filing joint returns, heads of household, and surviving spouses (AGI ≤ $50,000 as adjusted for inflation): increase credit to $550.
- For other individuals (AGI ≤ $25,000 as adjusted for inflation): increase credit to $275.
- Continues Franchise Tax Board’s annual inflation adjustments to AGI thresholds.
Tax-expenditure information and state-mandated costs
- States legislative intent to provide the detailed goals, performance indicators, and data collection associated with creating a new tax expenditure (per existing law).
- Provides that if the Commission on State Mandates finds the bill creates reimbursable state mandates, reimbursement will follow existing statutory procedures.
State reimbursement for lost local property tax revenues
- The bill expressly provides that, notwithstanding existing law that reimburses local agencies for certain property tax revenue losses from exemptions, “no appropriation is made” and the state shall not reimburse local agencies for property tax revenues lost because of this bill.
Effective date and classification
- The bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy. Homeowner exemption change applies beginning with the 2026–27 lien date; renter credit changes apply for taxable years beginning Jan 1, 2026.
Who would be affected
- Homeowners age 62 or older who occupy their dwelling as principal residence: would be eligible for a much larger homeowner exemption ($50,000 v. $7,000), lowering assessed value for property tax purposes.
- Qualified renters meeting the income thresholds: would receive a substantially larger renter credit ($550 or $275 depending on filing status), reducing state income tax liability or increasing refund.
- Local tax assessors and county officials: additional administrative duties linked to implementing the larger homeowners’ exemption — this is identified as a state‑mandated local program.
- Local governments/school districts: would experience reduced property tax revenues from the larger exemption; the bill states the state will not reimburse those revenue losses.
- State finances: increased costs from expanded renter credits and no reimbursement appropriation structure could have fiscal implications; the bill required fiscal committee review.
Procedural / timeline aspects and status
- Introduced February 20, 2025.
- Would apply to lien date 2026–27 for the homeowner exemption and taxable years beginning Jan 1, 2026, for the renter credit.
- Legislative status in your packet: (S) Died in Process (failed to advance prior to adjournment / sine die).
Other distinct SB 566 items in your packet (not the CA bill above)
- Maryland SB 566: Increases residential foreclosure filing fee (references increase from $300 to $450 or $600 in various drafts); fiscal note and enacted chapter appear in materials.
- Michigan SB 566 / SB-566 (multiple entries): Workers’ Disability Compensation Act amendments to permit the Workers’ Disability Compensation Agency to set filing fees and remove/modify certain fees; committee reports and fiscal analyses included.
- Arkansas SB 566: One draft funds $250 million for correctional facility expansion and county jail grants.
- Illinois SB 566: Minor technical amendment to the Empowering Public Participation Act (typo/short-title fix).
- Several other procedural fragments referencing companion bills (HB 796, HB 1474) and assorted versions/amendments.
If you want, I can:
- Produce a focused fiscal impact brief for the California SB 566 (estimate state cost and local revenue loss implications) given available data; or
- Summarize any of the other jurisdictional SB 566 bills in detail (Maryland, Michigan, Arkansas, Illinois) — tell me which one.