Bill Text: HI SB1499 | 2023 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating To Taro.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2023-02-10 - Report adopted; Passed Second Reading and referred to WAM. [SB1499 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2023-SB1499-Introduced.html
THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
1499 |
THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO TARO.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The
legislature finds that Hawaii imports eighty-five per cent of its food and is
considered highly vulnerable in issues of food security. Climate change significantly increases this
vulnerability with sea level rise and intensified weather patterns in the
Pacific, such as droughts, hurricanes, and floods. In the search for proactive adaptive
mechanisms to mitigate climate change and increase food security in Hawaii, the
legislature finds that kalo, or taro, and loi kalo, or wetland taro systems, are recognized for their culturally-grounded
foundational role in food security and their functionality and resilience as
riparian buffers and sediment
retention basins. Underground foods, such as taro, can often
survive hurricane or flood events
and be harvested to address immediate food
shortages where the capacity to store and cook food can be retained.
The legislature additionally finds that
the department of agriculture has
identified staple starches as the
greatest food security risk in the State. Taro is one of Hawaii's highest yielding
staple starch food crops, producing
ten thousand pounds and twenty thousand pounds
per acre per annum under wet and dry cultivation, respectively. As a
hypoallergenic complex carbohydrate, taro plays
an essential role in the health of families,
particularly for native Hawaiians,
in its traditional forms of cooked taro, poi, luau, laulau, and kulolo. Yet, the cost of these foods remains
inaccessible to families most in
need of these important staple starch foods. In 2016, at the
International Union of Conservation of Nature World Conservation Congress, the governor
pledged to double food production in Hawaii by
2030 as part of Hawaii's
commitment to its residents and the world and in order to begin to address this inequity at home. Significant headway has yet to be made
towards this goal.
The legislature further finds that taro is
severely underproduced in the State.
The 2021 marketing survey of
the Hawaii department of agriculture reported four hundred eighteen acres of
taro in wetland and dryland
production. An equal amount of acreage
is estimated to be unreported or in subsistence taro cultivation. Annual
reported production averages four million
tons. However, imported taro exceeds two
million, leaving a wide gap between in-state production, out-of-state imports,
and local demand.
The legislature also finds that small
farms on twenty acres or less, inclusive of taro and all other types of
vegetable and fruit production, make up the majority of farms in Hawaii (ninety-six
per cent) and produce a significant
portion of locally-grown and locally-consumed
food on each island.
The 2017 census of agriculture reports that the average small-scale farmer in Hawaii makes less than $40,000
per year, with losses of almost
$10,000 annually due to the highly inflated costs of farming, including
imported equipment, materials and inputs, land, lease rent rates, and water. There is
an urgent need to better support
small farmers.
The legislature further finds that, in
its report to the 2010 legislature, the taro security and purity task force made several recommendations to make taro farming affordable, including improving access to land,
water, mentoring, and economic incentives. The counties of Maui and Kauai have enacted
ordinances that exempt kuleana lands
in active taro production from county taxes.
These ordinances provide limited relief to some taro farms but are not
available in all counties or to all taro growers and are insufficient for young farmers to offset the typically
low incomes experienced in taro farming.
The legislature affirms that taro is
inextricably linked to Hawaiian identity and cultural integrity. The ongoing survival and revitalization of
taro production is vital to family and community health and well-being in the
Native Hawaiian community and beyond. Taro
farming and taro farms are an iconic visual image for Hawaii that demands
protection. Pursuant to section 5-15.5,
Hawaii Revised Statutes, taro is recognized as the official plant of the State
for these reasons and more. Cooked taro,
poi, luau, laulau, and kulolo are locally-made traditional food products that
are unique to Hawaii and Hawaiian culture, with the exception of cooked taro
known in the Pacific, Asia, and other parts of the world.
The legislature additionally finds that, in 1901, the
first legislature of the Territory of
Hawaii recognized the role that taro played in feeding the nation by passing Senate Bill No. 87 to encourage the
cultivation of taro by exempting
taro and the cultivation of taro from all
state taxes. While Senate Bill No. 87 was never signed
into law, its intentions were clear
in encouraging the production of more
taro.
The legislature also finds that, in recognition of the
critical importance of protecting and
perpetuating the traditional practice of taro farming as part of Hawaii's cultural identity and its
role in local food security, there
is a compelling interest in enacting a law
in the present day that is similar to Senate Bill No. 87.
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to create
stronger economic incentives to protect the Hawaiian traditions of taro and
taro farming, to encourage new taro farmers, improve the livelihoods of existing taro farmers, and reduce the
cost of poi and other healthy taro-based foods for local families by:
(1) Exempting income derived from the business of
taro cultivation or production of taro products from the income tax; and
(2) Exempting from the general excise tax the
gross proceeds or income received from the sale of any product resulting from
the cultivation and production of unprocessed taro.
SECTION 2. Chapter 235, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§235- Taro
cultivation and production; exemption. (a) Except as provided in section 235-2.4
(relating to "unrelated business taxable income") and sections 235-61
to 235-67 (relating to withholding and collection of tax at source), the income
of qualified taxpayers engaged in the business of taro cultivation and
production of taro products shall not be taxable; provided that the exemption
provided under this section shall not apply to the sale or proceeds of the sale
of taro lands.
(b) For the purposes of this
section, taro cultivation and production of taro products include the following
activities:
(1) The cultivation of taro plants, taro
corm, leaf, and taro huli on taro farms or portions of farms dedicated to taro
plants, taro corm, leaf, and taro huli;
(2) The planting of taro on taro lands,
including the practice of rotating between fallow lands to lands in active taro
production by each individual grower; and
(3) The preparation of taro products
produced with taro and taro leaf.
(c) The department of taxation may consult with the office of Hawaiian affairs in the administration of the exemption provided under this section.
(d)
For the purposes of this section:
"Cooked taro" means raw taro
that is steamed, baked, or boiled to render it edible and safe to eat.
"Kulolo" means a traditional Hawaiian food consisting primarily of grated taro, coconut milk, and sugar or honey, which is baked or steamed into a dense pudding.
"Laulau" means a traditional Hawaiian food consisting of meat or starch that is wrapped in taro leaves, which may or may not be wrapped in ti leaf, and steamed.
"Luau" means raw taro
leaf. "Luau" or "luau
stew" also means a traditional Hawaiian food, consisting primarily of
cooked taro leaf and Hawaiian salt, which may also contain meat or meat broth
and other ingredients.
"Poi" means a traditional
Hawaiian staple food, made from cooked taro and water, and milled or pounded
into a paste.
"Qualified taxpayer" means an
individual engaged in:
(1) The
production of taro or taro products for sale, or the use of land for taro farming; and
(2) The
manufacturing, compounding, canning, preserving, milling, processing, refining,
or preparing taro for sale.
"Raw taro" means uncooked taro
corm.
"Taro corm" means the starchy
underground portion of the taro plant.
"Taro corm" is known as "kalo" in the Hawaiian
language.
"Taro huli" means a taro top,
as used for planting, where the upright stem is cut below the leaf and below
the top of the corm of the taro, such that it includes a piece of the corm at
its base where roots can emerge.
"Taro products" includes taro
huli, raw or cooked taro, and the traditional Hawaiian foods of poi, luau,
laulau, and kulolo."
SECTION 3. Chapter 237, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"§237-
Exemption for the cultivation and
production of unprocessed taro. (a) There shall be exempted from, and excluded
from the measure of, the taxes imposed by this chapter all of the gross
proceeds or income received from the sale of any product resulting from the cultivation
and production of unprocessed taro, or of any taro product of which the primary
ingredient is taro or taro leaf. This
exemption shall solely and only apply to farmers and direct producers of taro
and taro products.
(b)
As used in this section:
"Cooked taro" means raw taro
that is steamed, baked, or boiled to render it edible and safe to eat.
"Kulolo" means a traditional Hawaiian food consisting primarily of grated taro, coconut milk, and sugar or honey, which is baked or steamed into a dense pudding.
"Laulau" means a traditional Hawaiian food consisting of meat or starch that is wrapped in taro leaves, which may or may not be wrapped in ti leaf, and steamed.
"Luau" means raw taro
leaf. "Luau" or "luau
stew" also means a traditional Hawaiian food, consisting primarily of
cooked taro leaf and Hawaiian salt, which may also contain meat or meat broth
and other ingredients.
"Poi" means a traditional
Hawaiian staple food, made from cooked taro and water, and milled or pounded
into a paste.
"Primary ingredient" means the
ingredient of highest percentage in a product and listed first on the product's
label.
"Raw taro" means uncooked taro
corm.
"Taro corm" means the starchy
underground portion of the taro plant.
"Taro corm" is known as "kalo" in the Hawaiian
language.
"Taro huli" means a taro top,
as used for planting, where the upright stem is cut below the leaf and below the
top of the corm of the taro, such that it includes a piece of the corm at its
base where roots can emerge.
"Taro products" includes taro huli, raw or cooked taro, and the traditional Hawaiian foods of poi, luau, laulau, and kulolo."
SECTION 4. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect on January 1, 2024; provided that section 2 shall apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2023.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Taro; Cultivation and Production; Traditional Hawaiian foods; Income Tax; General Excise Tax; Exemption
Description:
Exempts income derived from the business of taro cultivation or production of taro products from the income tax. Exempts from the general excise tax the gross proceeds or income received from the sale of any product resulting from the cultivation and production of unprocessed taro.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.