Earlier this week, the United States
congress passed a much-discussed Fiscal Cliff Resolution, an 11th-hour
move that delayed (at least temporarily) widespread tax increases for the
middle class and monstrous spending cuts. The resolution was also riddled with
a number of otherwise unrelated fiscal appropriations, one of which will allow
the owners of motorsports facilities to reduce their tax burden over the next
two years by approximately $70 million.
The “NASCAR Provision,” as it was
erroneously labeled by many members of the mainstream media, is nothing new. It
is simply the latest extension of a program that has been in existence for many
years.
Under the provision, track operators
will be allowed to depreciate the cost of facility upgrades, construction,
remodeling and infrastructure improvements over a seven-year period, rather
than over the lifetime of the facility. The legislation keeps motorsports
facilities in the same category as baseball, football, basketball and hockey
arenas, as well as amusement parks; all of which benefitted from a similar
provision for decades before motorsports facilities were finally included as
part of the Job Creation Act of 2004. The provision has been extended multiple
times over the years, most recently in 2011.
In stark contrast to what
taxpayer-funded National Public Radio and other media outlets reported this
week, the United States government is not “giving” $70 million to NASCAR. In
fact, they’re not “giving” anything, to anyone.
In his article, 'Rum
Cliff' And Other Close Shaves In The Tax, Spending Deal,” NPR’s Scott
Neuman erroneously wrote, “Section 312 of the bill extends a provision that
places National Association of Stock Car Auto Racing tracks in the same
category as amusement parks for tax purposes. Estimates are that the tax break
is worth $70 million
to Daytona Beach, Fla.-based NASCAR."
That statement is patently untrue, since NASCAR does not currently own or operate
any race tracks, and never has. What the provision will do is allow permanent
motorsports venues to depreciate certain investments over a shorter period of
time, saving them approximately $70 million less tax revenue in the next two
years and $34 million between now and 2019. A number of tracks that host NASCAR Sprint
Cup, Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series events will absolutely benefit
from this provision. So will literally thousands of drag strips, dirt tracks,
road courses and short tracks from coast to coast.
But for the record, when that
seven-year period expires, track owners will actually pay approximately $25
million in additional taxes between 2020 and 2022. In fact, sources say
the same amount of tax revenue will be generated, but over a longer period of
time.
That’s not nearly as scandalous as
some ill-informed members of the media would like you to believe, now is it?
Thanks for the clarification, Dave - now it makes sense. When I heard ramblings about this in the news, I wasn't quite sure what to make of it...
ReplyDeleteIt never is depression value is no where near as scandalous sounding as a TAX MONEY GIVE AWAY.
ReplyDeleteI really hate it when people call them tax increases. There were no new taxes increases. They were tax cuts that were going to expire.
ReplyDeleteYou also failed to mention that while Nascar doesn't own any tracks, the France family does and the France family owns Nascar. You can try and spin it anyway you want, but the truth of the matter is Nascar benefits from this.