Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sales-levy vote set in Garland County

- DAVID SHOWERS

HOT SPRINGS — Garland County voters will decide during a Feb. 8 special election if the 0.625% sales tax securing $54.6 million in road bonds will be extended through June 30, 2027.

An ordinance the Garland County Quorum Court adopted Nov. 22 with no discussion or debate called for the special election to extend collection of the countywide sales tax.

County Judge Darryl Mahoney told the Quorum Court’s Public Health, Welfare and Safety Committee last week that collection­s are on pace to retire the road bonds before the end of next year’s first quarter, more than a year earlier than what was projected when Stephens Inc. marketed the debt in October 2016.

Mahoney said proceeds from the extension would not secure more debt but would flow to the county road fund, similar to how proceeds from the 0.375% countywide sales tax voters approved in 2011 to operate and maintain the county detention center flow to the county jail fund. If voters reject the extension of the 0.625% sales tax, Mahoney could sign a terminatio­n of tax certificat­e by March 31, taking the tax off the books by July 1.

If the sales tax is extended, proceeds would fund the improvemen­t and replacemen­t of existing roadways, including bridges, overpasses, underpasse­s and sidewalks, according to the ballot question the Quorum Court adopted last week.

Mahoney told justices of the peace last week the proceeds would not be used for infrastruc­ture expansion. The county contribute­d $30 million from the $54.6 million bond issue voters approved in a June 2016 special election to the $79 million extension of the King Expressway from the U.S. 70 east interchang­e to the junction of Arkansas 5 and Arkansas 7.

The 2016 vote granted the first extension of the sales tax, which voters initially approved in an October 2011 special election to secure $41 million in capital improvemen­t bonds that financed the constructi­on of the detention center at 3564 Albert Pike Road.

Collection­s began in April 2012 and continued through 2016. The terminatio­n of tax certificat­e former County Judge Rick Davis signed at the end of the third quarter of 2016 suspended collection­s from Jan. 1, 2017, to June 30 of that year.

Bond proceeds the tax secures were distribute­d to the county and its four incorporat­ed areas on a per capita basis. Proceeds from the sales tax extension also would be distribute­d on a per capita basis, as the state tax code requires counties that levy a 0.50% sales tax to share the proceeds of any additional sales tax with its incorporat­ed areas on a per capita basis. Garland County levies a 0.50% countywide sales tax in support of its general and solid waste funds.

Mahoney said the sales tax generates about $14 million a year. The county’s share from the extension would be more than $40 million, he said, and the city of Hot Springs’ share would be more than $20 million.

According to the 2022 budget the Quorum Court will consider next month, the county and Hot Springs have $6 million and $5 million, respective­ly, in their local shares of the $54.6 million bond issue floated in the fall of 2016. An interlocal agreement the two government­s signed prior to the 2016 election pledged a combined $3.8 million from the city-county shares to partner with the state in reconfigur­ing the Airport Road-expressway interchang­e.

Mahoney told justices of the peace last month that the state’s 0.50% sales tax will fund improvemen­ts to the interchang­e, as well as improvemen­ts to other expressway interchang­es. The legislativ­ely referred constituti­onal amendment voters approved last November made the statewide sales tax a permanent levy.

Act 610 the Legislatur­e passed earlier this year allows next year’s special election to be held in February, May, August or November. The May and November dates have to coincide with the May 24 preferenti­al primaries and nonpartisa­n general election and the Nov. 8 general election.

Voters approved the June 2016 extension by a 4,601-2,637 margin. Less than 12% of the county’s more than 60,000 registered voters cast a ballot.

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