Results for snohomish county lodging tax


9,313 results

Sort by date / relevance

What Will It Mean for California? The Tobacco Settlement

The local share will be further split between the counties and specified cities. Under the terms of the MOU, the state's 58 counties will receive 90 percent of the local share, or $11.25 billion. These monies will be distributed to the counties based on population.
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/011499_tobacco_settlement.html

A Special Session Guide to K-12 Reform

Another constitutional issue is the restriction on property taxes established by Proposition 13. The initiative resulted in separating financial responsibility (held by the state) and program responsibility (held by school districts).
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/0199_k-12_reform4.html

CalWORKs Community Service--What Does It Mean for California?

The Vermont program recognizes that recipients in wage-based community service must pay FICA taxes of 7.65 percent and fac e other work expenses such as transportation. As noted previously, Vermont set its disregard at $90 for all families for the purpose of covering these costs.
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/020499_calworks.html

[PDF] An LAO CalWORKs Community Service What Does It Mean for California?

(January 14, 1999) An Overview of the 1999-00 Governor’s Budget (January 15, 1999) California Update: State Reached Settlement on Contracting Out for Seismic Retrofit (January 21, 1999) State Corporate Taxation of Sales to the Federal Government (January 21, 1999) Shifting Gears: Rethinking Property Tax Shift Relief (February 2, 1999) Forthcoming Publications Analysis of the 1999-00 Budget Bill (February 16, 1999) The 1999-00 Budget: Perspectives and Issues (February 16, 1999)
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/020499_calworks.pdf

[PDF] A K-12 Master Plan

State entities include the Governor, Legislature, state SPI, State SBE, county Boards of Education, the state Controller, the Commission on Teacher Credentialing (CTC), and the State Allocation Board.
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/0599_k-12_master_plan.pdf

Substance Abuse Treatment in California: Services Are Cost-Effective to Society

Counties receive an annual allocation of federal and state funds from DADP, a portion of which must be matched using county funds. In 1999-00, the department will allocate more th an $300 million to counties for the provision of substance abuse treatment.
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/0799_substance_abuse/0799_substance_abuse.html

[PDF] An LAO Services Are Cost-Effective to Society Substance Abuse Treatment in California

The department also esti- mates that it would cost $63 million annually (subsumed in the preced- ing estimate) to create enough new treatment slots to serve all persons currently on the counties’ waiting lists for these services.
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/0799_substance_abuse/0799_substance_abuse.pdf

Higher Education "Compacts": An Assessment

The Legislature would have had to find this funding either by redirecting it from other programs or by increasing taxes. Capital Outlay Budget Implications Our analysis of Compact II's capital outlay funding model raises serious concerns about its ability to target resources to the state's most pressing needs.
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/082699_compacts/082699_hied_compacts.html

The Role of Water Transfers in Meeting California's Water Needs

In fact, Yolo County filed a claim against the state for what it believed to be significantly increased social services costs due to fallowing-related farm une mployment. Local Support Crucial for Transfers.
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/090899_water_transfers/090899_water_transfers.html

10-27-1999 Follow-Up to Commission on State Mandates

In a ddition, Supplemental Claimants, Riverside County Superintendent of Schools, and Long Beach Unified School District each provided the commission responses to our document on or abo ut October 25 th or 26 th .
https://lao.ca.gov/1999/102799_special_ed_mandate_followup.html