Pubdate: Fri, 12 Feb 2010 Source: Broomfield Enterprise (CO) Contact: 2010 MediaNews Group Website: http://www.broomfieldenterprise.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5129 Author: Michael Davidson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/dispensaries Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?253 (Cannabis - Medicinal - U.S.) BROOMFIELD OKS REBATE FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY ITEMS Broomfield residents and businesses soon will be eligible for a tax rebate for installing solar panels or wind turbines thanks to changes to the city sales tax code approved last week. The changes also waive the requirement that schools, booster associations and parent-teacher organizations collect city sales tax when they host school fundraisers. City Council approved the changes Tuesday in a 10-0 vote. It is the first time since 2001 that Broomfield will change the code. The rebate program, which will run through 2014, will refund use tax residents and businesses pay on equipment such as solar panels, wind turbines and support structures needed to build solar or wind power systems. It parallels a rebate offered by the state. The rebates won't put much of a dent in the tax base, according to projections from the city. Through the first 10 months of 2009, the city collected $25,250 in use tax on renewable energy equipment, a tiny fraction of the $34.1 million Broomfield collected in that time frame. When the program was proposed in January, some council members were concerned about people claiming a rebate for construction material that had nothing to do with renewable energy generation. The Building Department reviewed the policy and signed off on it, City and County Attorney Bill Tuthill said. "They're comfortable that within these definitions they'll be able to determine what's eligible and what isn't," Tuthill said. To be eligible for the rebate, approval must be received in advance from the Building Department, Finance Director Pat Soderberg said after the meeting. The department will estimate the cost of the materials and calculate the use tax when it issues a building permit, which is required for all substantial home or commercial renovation projects. After the project is installed, the builder will fill out paperwork with the Finance Department to claim the rebate, Soderberg said. Eliminating the requirement that schools collect sales tax during fundraisers will cost the city less than the renewable energy rebates. Through the first 10 months of 2009, the city collected $11,100 from school fundraisers. The elimination of the sales tax mirrors a change to the state tax code approved by the Legislature in 2008, and was spurred by parents at Meridian Elementary who wrote letters to the city pushing for the change. The changes also contain provisions that would apply to medical marijuana dispensaries should City Council decide to allow them after a 180-day moratorium expires. The moratorium also was approved Tuesday. One provision would tax marijuana paraphernalia such as pipes and vaporizers. More troublesome to some council members was a provision that would have prevented the city from issuing a sales tax license to "a business which engages or proposes to engage in transactions that are prohibited by local, state or federal law." That would in effect prohibit the city from licensing medical marijuana dispensaries because federal law makes marijuana use illegal, Councilman Kevin Jacobs said. "We are effectively making a decision right now that we will not allow dispensaries," Jacobs said. "That's not what my intent was in supporting the moratorium." The provision requiring businesses comply with federal law was removed. If City Council wants to put it back into the code it could do so after a policy is decided on medical marijuana providers, Tuthill said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake