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2020 SESSION
20105088DBe it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That §§ 58.1-3833, 58.1-3834, and 58.1-3842 of the Code of Virginia are amended and reenacted as follows:
§ 58.1-3833. County food and beverage tax.
A. 1. Any county is hereby authorized to levy a tax on food
and beverages sold, for human consumption, by a restaurant, as such term is
defined in § 35.1-1, not to exceed four
percent of the amount charged for such food and beverages.
Such tax shall not be levied on food and beverages sold through vending machines
or by (i) boardinghouses that do not accommodate transients; (ii) cafeterias
operated by industrial plants for employees only; (iii) restaurants to their
employees as part of their compensation when no charge is made to the employee;
(iv) volunteer fire departments and volunteer emergency medical services
agencies; nonprofit churches or other religious bodies; or educational,
charitable, fraternal, or benevolent organizations the first three times per
calendar year and, beginning with the fourth time, on the first $100,000 of
gross receipts per calendar year from sales of food and beverages (excluding
gross receipts from the first three times), as a fundraising activity, the
gross proceeds of which are to be used by such church, religious body or organization
exclusively for nonprofit educational, charitable, benevolent, or religious
purposes; (v) churches that serve meals for their members as a regular part of
their religious observances; (vi) public or private elementary or secondary
schools or institutions of higher education to their students or employees;
(vii) hospitals, medical clinics, convalescent homes, nursing homes, or other
extended care facilities to patients or residents thereof; (viii) day care
centers; (ix) homes for the aged, infirm, handicapped, battered women, narcotic
addicts, or alcoholics; or (x) age-restricted apartment complexes or residences
with restaurants, not open to the public, where meals are served and fees are
charged for such food and beverages and are included in rental fees. Also, the
tax shall not be levied on food and beverages: (a) when used or consumed and
paid for by the Commonwealth, any political subdivision of the Commonwealth, or
the United States; or (b) provided by a public or private nonprofit charitable organization
or establishment to elderly, infirm, blind, handicapped, or needy persons in
their homes, or at central locations; or (c) provided by private establishments
that contract with the appropriate agency of the Commonwealth to offer food,
food products, or beverages for immediate consumption at concession prices to
elderly, infirm, blind, handicapped, or needy persons in their homes or at
central locations.
2. Grocery stores and convenience stores selling prepared foods ready for human consumption at a delicatessen counter shall be subject to the tax, for that portion of the grocery store or convenience store selling such items.
3.
This tax shall be levied only if the tax is approved in
a referendum within the county which shall be held in accordance with §
24.2-684 and initiated either by a resolution of the board of supervisors or on
the filing of a petition signed by a number of registered voters of the county
equal in number to 10 percent of the number of voters registered in the county,
as appropriate on January 1 of the year in which the petition is filed with the
court of such county. However, no referendum initiated by a resolution of the
board of supervisors shall be authorized in a county in the three calendar
years subsequent to the electoral defeat of any referendum held pursuant to
this section in such county. The clerk of the circuit court shall publish
notice of the election in a newspaper of general circulation in the county once
a week for three consecutive weeks prior to the election. If the voters affirm
the levy of a local meals tax, the tax shall be effective in an amount and on
such terms as the governing body may by ordinance prescribe. If such resolution
of the board of supervisors or such petition states for what projects and/or purposes
the revenues collected from the tax are to be used, then the question on the
ballot for the referendum shall include language stating for what projects
and/or purposes the revenues collected from the tax are to be used.
4. Any referendum
held for the purpose of approving a county food and beverage tax pursuant to
this section shall, in the language of the ballot question presented to voters,
contain the following text in a paragraph unto itself: "If this food and
beverage tax is adopted and a maximum tax rate of four percent is imposed, then
the total tax imposed on all prepared food and beverage shall be ..."
followed by the total, expressed as a percentage, of all existing ad valorem
taxes applicable to the transaction added to the four percent county food and
beverage tax to be approved by the referendum.
5. Notwithstanding
any other provision of this section, if a county that has not imposed a county
food and beverage tax adopts an ordinance or resolution pursuant to subdivision
1 of § 15.2-2607 providing for the payment of the principal and premium, if
any, and interest on bonds issued in accordance with the Public Finance Act (§
15.2-2600 et seq.) from revenue collected from a county food and beverage tax,
then the ballot may provide, as a single question:
a. The purpose or
purposes of the bonds to be issued;
b. The estimated
maximum amount of such bonds proposed in the notice required in subsection A of
§ 15.2-2606;
c. The request for
approval by the voters of a county food and beverage tax authorized and levied
in accordance with subdivision 3;
d. The language
required to be included in the ballot question as set forth in subdivision 4;
and
e. An explanation
that the bonds shall be issued only if the county food and beverage tax is
approved in the referendum.
Any referendum placed
on the ballot pursuant to this subdivision 5 shall be submitted according to
the procedures specified in § 24.2-684.
The term B. For the purposes of this section, "beverage" as set forth herein shall mean means alcoholic beverages as
defined in § 4.1-100 and nonalcoholic beverages served as part of a meal. The
tax shall be in addition to the sales tax currently imposed by the county
pursuant to the authority of Chapter 6 (§ 58.1-600 et seq.). Collection of such
tax shall be in a manner prescribed by the governing body.
B. Notwithstanding
the provisions of subsection A, Roanoke County, Rockbridge County, Frederick
County, Arlington County, and Montgomery County are hereby authorized to levy a
tax on food and beverages sold for human consumption by a restaurant, as such
term is defined in § 35.1-1 and as modified in subsection A and subject to the
same exemptions, not to exceed four percent of the amount charged for such food
and beverages, provided that the governing body of the respective county holds
a public hearing before adopting a local food and beverage tax, and the
governing body by unanimous vote adopts such tax by local ordinance. The tax
shall be effective in an amount and on such terms as the governing body may by ordinance
prescribe.
C. Nothing herein contained shall affect any authority heretofore granted to any county, city or town to levy a meals tax. The county tax limitations imposed pursuant to § 58.1-3711 shall apply to any tax levied under this section, mutatis mutandis. All food and beverage tax collections and all meals tax collections shall be deemed to be held in trust for the county, city or town imposing the applicable tax. The wrongful and fraudulent use of such collections other than remittance of the same as provided by law shall constitute embezzlement pursuant to § 18.2-111.
D. No county which
has heretofore adopted an ordinance pursuant to subsection A shall be required
to submit an amendment to its meals tax ordinance to the voters in a referendum.
E. D. Notwithstanding
any other provision of this section, no locality shall levy any tax under this
section upon (i) that portion of the amount paid by the purchaser as a
discretionary gratuity in addition to the sales price; (ii) that portion of the
amount paid by the purchaser as a mandatory gratuity or service charge added by
the restaurant in addition to the sales price, but only to the extent that such
mandatory gratuity or service charge does not exceed 20 percent of the sales
price; or (iii) alcoholic beverages sold in factory sealed containers and
purchased for off-premises consumption or food purchased for human consumption
as "food" is defined in the Food Stamp Act of 1977, 7 U.S.C. § 2012,
as amended, and federal regulations adopted pursuant to that act, except for
the following items: sandwiches, salad bar items sold from a salad bar,
prepackaged single-serving salads consisting primarily of an assortment of
vegetables, and nonfactory sealed beverages.
§ 58.1-3834. Apportionment of food and beverage or meals tax.
In any case where a business is located partially within two
or more local jurisdictions by reason of the boundary line between the local
jurisdictions passing through such place of business, and one or more of the
local jurisdictions imposes the food and beverage or meals tax, the tax rate
shall be computed by applying the apportionment formula in § 58.1-3709 to the
food and beverage or meals tax rate of each applicable local jurisdiction. Such
apportioned rate shall be rounded to the nearest one-half percent; provided, the total tax rate shall not exceed the
rate authorized in § 58.1-3833.
§ 58.1-3842. Combined transient occupancy and food and beverage tax.
A. Rappahannock County and Madison County, by duly adopted ordinance, are hereby authorized to levy a tax on occupancy in a bed and breakfast establishment on which the county is authorized to levy a transient occupancy tax under § 58.1-3819 and on food and beverages sold for human consumption within such establishment on which the county is authorized to levy a food and beverage tax under § 58.1-3833, when the charges for the occupancy of the room or space and for the sale of food and beverages are assessed in the aggregate and not separately stated. Such tax shall not exceed four percent of the total amount charged for the occupancy of the room or space occupied and for the food and beverages. Such tax shall be in such amount and on such terms as the governing body may, by ordinance, prescribe. The tax shall be in addition to the sales tax currently imposed by the county pursuant to the authority of Chapter 6 (§ 58.1-600 et seq.). Collection of such tax shall be in a manner prescribed by the governing body. All taxes collected under the authority of this article shall be deemed to be held in trust for the county imposing the tax.
B. If a bed and breakfast establishment separately states charges for the occupancy of the room or space and for the sale of food and beverages, a transient occupancy tax levied under § 58.1-3819 and a food and beverage tax levied under § 58.1-3833 shall apply to such separately stated charges, as applicable.
C. Any tax imposed pursuant to this article shall not apply within the limits of any town located in such county, where such town now, or hereafter, imposes a town meals tax or a town transient occupancy tax on the same subject. If the governing body of any town within a county, however, provides that a county tax authorized by this article shall apply within the limits of such town, then such tax may be imposed within such towns.
D. This
tax shall be levied only if a food and beverage tax has been approved in a
referendum within the county as provided by subsection A of § 58.1-3833. No
county in which the levy of a food and beverage tax has been approved in a
referendum pursuant to subsection A of § 58.1-3833 shall be required to submit
an amendment to its meals tax ordinance or a further question to the voters in
a referendum prior to adopting an ordinance adopting or amending the tax authorized
by this article.
E.
Nothing herein contained shall affect any authority heretofore granted to any
county to levy a food and beverage tax or a transient occupancy tax.