HONOLULU — Hawaii’s four counties will receive a total of $10 million more in annual hotel tax revenue under a plan state lawmakers have approved. ADVERTISING HONOLULU — Hawaii’s four counties will receive a total of $10 million more in
HONOLULU — Hawaii’s four counties will receive a total of $10 million more in annual hotel tax revenue under a plan state lawmakers have approved.
Since 2011, the counties’ share has been capped at $93 million. They had sought a return to splitting 44.8 percent of the state’s transient accommodations taxes. That would have brought in an estimated $72 million more for the counties next year.
The Honolulu Star-Advertiser reports that state lawmakers decided to raise the cap rather than revive the old sharing structure.
Rep. Tom Brower, a Democrat representing Waikiki and Ala Moana, tells the paper the bill will also fund a study of how visitors use county resources. He says any future raises might require that counties demonstrate the money will pay for county operations used by visitors.