►
Description
House Finance, Ways & Means Subcommittee House Hearing Room 3
A
A
A
Right,
thank
you
very
much.
Members
welcome.
Are
there
any
personal
orders
that
anyone
has
before
we
begin
all
right,
seeing
none?
We
have
a
total
of
three
bills
on
our
calendar
today.
So
item
number
one
we'll
go
ahead
and
get
started
item
number
one
on
our
calendars
house
bill
75
by
representative
calfi,
so
you
are
recognized.
C
Thank
you,
mr
chairman.
This
is
concerns
the
the
revenue
from
selling
some
state
property
that
goes
in
the
trust
fund
for
the
didd
and
the
the
other
mental
health
institution
is
total
of
about
4.2
million,
and
it's
a
one-time
expenditure.
A
All
right,
thank
you
for
this
members
need
a
discussion
on
the
bill.
Questions
have
been
called
any
objection
to
calling
the
question,
seeing
none
we're
now
voting
on
sending
house
bill
75
to
full
finance,
all
those
in
favor
say
aye,
all
those
opposed,
no
the
eyes
have
it
house
bill
75
moves
on
to
full
finance.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
All
right
members
item
number
two
on
our
calendar
is
house
bill
84
by
representative
manus.
Has
he
made
it
in
yet?
I
don't
think
so.
I
think
he
is
in
another
committee.
He
was
going
to.
They
were
going
to
take
roll
and
then
I
think
he
was
coming
this
way.
So
without
objection
we're
going
to
roll
one
spot.
D
Thank
you
and
item
number
three
on
our
calendar
is
house
bill
76
by
chairman
hicks,
chairman
hicks,
you're,
recognized
motion.
We
have
a
second
and
there
is
an
amendment
on
this
bill.
It's
drafting
code,
zero,
zero,
three,
eight,
eight
zero
filed
by
leader
lambreth,
I
think
chairman
hicks,
is
gonna
present.
This
motion
on
the
amendment
motion
and
a
second
chairman,
hicks
you're,
recognized
on
the
amendment.
A
D
Okay,
question's
been
called
objections.
All
in
favor
calling
the
questions
say:
aye
okay,
questions
are
called.
The
amendment
has
been
passed
and
we're
we're
now
discussing
the
bill
as
amended
chairman.
A
Hicks
all
right,
thank
you,
sir.
So
current
law
requires
all
state
agencies
that
receive
state
funds,
to
immediately
deposit
into
state
treasury
and
to
the
state
treasury
and
to
a
designated
state
account
without
any
deductions
on
account
of
salaries,
fees,
costs,
charges,
expenses,
refunds,
claims
or
demands
of
any
description
whatsoever.
This
bill
would
create
an
exception
to
that
general
law
which
would
allow
for
net
remittance
arrangements
with
contractors
when
they
would
benefit
the
state.
A
That
is
the
original
bill.
Then,
with
the
amendment,
it
basically
put
oversight
just
to
make
sure
that
someone
was
checking
in
to
make
sure
that
that
we
could
see
as
a
body
to
see
all
the
occurrences
of
this
exact
thing
happening
these
transactions.
So
there
will
be
if
you
go
back
and
look
the
amendment
that
the
the
chairman
will
actually
finances,
we'll
receive
that
report
so
that
we
can
see
that
and
see
all
the
occurrences.
D
Chairman
hicks,
I
apologize.
We
voted
on
calling
the
questions
we
need
to
vote
on
the
amendment.
My
mistake,
all
in
favor
of
amendment
zero,
three
eight
eight
zero
say:
aye
opposed
amendment
passes
and
now
we're
on
the
bill.
Sorry
about.
A
D
A
D
Question
and
we
do
have
a
couple
of
questions
first,
chairman,
I
think
first
on
my
list
is
chairman
todd.
E
A
My
understanding
this
is
for
a
faith
only
that's
the
only
thing
that
I
see
I'm
glad
to
go
out
of
session
if
you'd
like
to
to
hear
from
fna.
If
you
want
more
description,
but
that's
pretty
much
all
it
will
be
so
for
a
third
party
vendor,
it
really
goes
back
and
you
look
at
ecd
and
some
at
the
governor's
conference,
and
so
the
folks
that
set
up
these
the
the
management
that
set
up
ecd,
which
is
a
third
party,
the
ecd
governor's
conference.
A
They
actually
do
all
the
management
setup
and
so
what
they
do
is
they
receive
the
funds
from
from
those
from
that
event,
and
so
what
they
would
do,
then
they
remit
that
to
the
state.
And
so
that's
simply
all
this
is
doing.
It
allows
them
to
take
their
cut
before
they
send
it
to
the
state,
so
it
really
streamlines
the
process
is
all
this
is
doing.
E
Chairman
todd,
thank
you,
and
I
appreciate
that
explanation
I
just
did
want
to
get
on
the
record
that
this
is
not
going
to
authorize
third
party
vendors
to
go
around
collecting
these
taxes
from
businesses
and
individuals
around
the
state
and
and
then
collect
a
fee
out
of
that.
So
that's
that's
really
what
I
wanted
to
get
firmly
on
the
record.
Thank
you.
F
Thank
you,
chairman
bob,
and
thank
you
chairman
hicks,
and
certainly
support
the
legislation.
The
the
bill
gives
me
an
opportunity
to
talk
about.
This
is
somewhat
of
an
apples
and
oranges
comparison,
but
but
we've
got
entities
out
there
that
that
are
sales,
tax
collectors
and
and
I'll
focus
on
that
for
for
the
moment,
if
you
want
to
call
them
third
party
vendor
or
whatever
they
are
they're
they're,
actually,
the
folks
that
are
collecting
the
tennessee
sales
taxes
for
us
to
keep
our
budget
document
going.
F
20
years
ago,
we
had
such
a
thing
called
vendors
compensation,
which
was,
which
was
something
that
that
retailers
at
the
time
it
was
not
anything
to
keep
them
whole
in
terms
of
what
they
were
investing
to
become
a
sales
tax
collector
for
the
state,
but
but
we're
looking
at
what
is
the
potential
of
returning
vendors
compensation
to
our
retail
community?
F
So
it
is
somewhat
of
an
apples
and
oranges
comparison,
but
as
we're
talking
about
third-party
vendors
and
just
want
to
remind
our
our
subcommittee,
the
folks
who
are
actually
out
there
doing
this
work
on
a
day-in
day-out
basis,
not
on
a
special
occasion
like
this
is
sounding
like
it
is
here,
but
there's
an
opportunity
and
a
piece
of
legislation
we
may
see
in
days
to
come.
So
thank
you
for
your
indulgence,
chairman
baum.
Thank
you,
chairman
hicks,
for
the
bill.
Thank
you.
D
A
All
right
committee,
that
brings
us
back
to
item
number
two
in
our
calendar
item
number
two
and
I
think
representative
mannis
did
show
up
there.
He
comes.
This
is
out
of
number
two
and
your
calendar
house
bill
84
by
representative
mandis,
sir.
You
are
recognized.
We
do
have
a
motion.
A
second,
please
continue
with
just
a
brief
description.
G
Let's
see
thank
you
and
thank
you,
members
of
the
committee.
I
am
here
this
morning.
Yes
still
morning
to
present
this
historic,
we
got
a
motion
segment.
G
Sorry
to
present
this
historic
house
bill
84
historic
only
in
the
fact
that
this
is
my
first
bill
ever
to
present.
G
So
just
just
briefly,
this
bill
addresses
the
statute
of
limitations
for
collection
of
tax
liabilities
from
taxpayers
that
are
involved
in
bankruptcy
in
bankruptcy.
Currently,
there
is
a
six-year
statute
of
limitations
for
collection
of
tax
liabilities
if
a
taxpayer
is
in
bankruptcy,
probate,
receivership
or
an
assignment
for
the
benefit
of
creditors.
Proceeding
that
six-year
statute
of
limitations
continues
running
house
bill
84
will
stop
the
statute
of
limitations
during
the
bankruptcy
probate
receivership
or
an
assignment
for
the
benefits
of
creditors.
Proceeding.
A
All
right,
thank
you
very
much
members.
Any
discussion
question
has
been
called
any
objection,
calling
the
question
hearing
none,
seeing
none
we're
now
voting
on
sending
house
bill,
84
onto
full
finance,
all
those
in
favor
say:
aye,
all
those
opposed.
No,
the
eyes
have
house
bill
84
moves
in
full
finance.
Thank
you,
sir.
Thank
you,
members
that
completes
our
calendar
for
today.
Do
we
have
any
further
business
coming
for
the
committee,
seeing
none
entertain
a
motion
with
germ
all
right
motion
segment,
we're
adjourned.