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HB 4148Allows net local transient lodging tax revenue to be used for resiliency grants for small businesses in the restaurant and lodging industry.

Congress · introduced 2026-01-18

<b>Digest: The Act would let local transient lodging tax money be used for grants to small dining and lodging businesses. The Act would also let the tax money be used for services provided by a special district in lieu of a city or county. The Act would change the split of tax uses from at least 70 percent for tourism and no more than 30 percent for local services to at least 50 percent and no more than 50 percent. The Act would let local governments with grandfathered tax laws use the tax money in the new split ratios. The Act would make local governments file a tax revenue report every other year for LRO to combine and submit to the legislature. The Act would have LRO study the uses of the net revenue as allowed under the Act and turn its findings in to the legislature. (Flesch Readability Score: 61.6).</b> [<i>Digest: The Act would let local transient lodging tax money be used for city or county services provided by a special district in lieu of the city or county. The Act would change the split of tax uses from at least 70 percent for tourism and no more than 30 percent for local services to at least 40 percent and no more than 60 percent. The Act would let local governments with grandfathered tax laws use the new provisions of the Act. The Act would make local governments file a tax revenue report every other year. (Flesch Readability Score: 60.7).</i>] <b>Allows net local transient lodging tax revenue to be used for resiliency grants for small businesses in the restaurant and lodging industry.</b> Allows city and county services for which net local transient lodging tax revenue may be used to be provided either directly by the city or county or indirectly by a special district. Changes the division of allowable uses of net local transient lodging tax revenue from at least 70 percent for tourism-related expenses and no more than 30 percent for city or county services, to at least [<i>40</i>] <b>50</b> percent and no more than [<i>60</i>]<b> 50</b> percent, respectively. Allows units of local government with restricted grandfathered local transient lodging tax regimes to take advantage of the new provisions of the Act. Establishes biennial reporting by local governments of amounts and uses of local transient lodging tax revenue<b>, the reported information to be aggregated by the Legislative Revenue Officer and submitted to the Legislative Assembly</b>.<b> Directs the Legislative Revenue Officer to conduct a study of the percentage requirements for allowable uses of local transient lodging tax revenue as amended by the Act and to submit the findings to the Legislative Assembly.</b> Takes effect on the 91st day following adjournment sine die.

Latest action: Chapter Number Assigned

Sponsors

Action timeline

  1. · state_lower First reading. Referred to Speaker's desk.
  2. · state_lower Referred to Revenue.
  3. · state_lower Public Hearing held.
  4. · state_lower Work Session held.
  5. · state_lower Work Session held.
  6. · state_lower Recommendation: Do pass with amendments and be printed A-Engrossed.
  7. · state_lower Second reading.
  8. · state_lower Third reading. Carried by Javadi, Walters. Passed.
  9. · state_upper First reading. Referred to President's desk.
  10. · state_upper Referred to Finance and Revenue.
  11. · state_upper Public Hearing held.
  12. · state_upper Work Session held.
  13. · state_upper Recommendation: Do pass the A-Eng bill.
  14. · state_upper Minority Recommendation: Do pass with different amendments. (Printed B-Eng. Minority)
  15. · state_upper Second reading.
  16. · state_upper Minority Report withdrawn.
  17. · state_upper Third reading. Carried by Weber. Passed.
  18. · state_lower Speaker signed.
  19. · state_upper President signed.
  20. · state_lower Governor signed.
  21. · state_lower Chapter 121, (2026 Laws): Effective date June 5, 2026.

Text versions

No text versions on file yet — same ingest as the action timeline populates these. Each version has direct links to the XML / HTML / PDF at govinfo.gov.

Who matters

Members ranked by combined influence on this bill: role (sponsor 5 / cosponsor 1), capped speech count from the Congressional Record, and recorded-vote engagement.

#MemberRoleSpeechesVotedScore
1Javadi, Cyrus (D, state_lower OR-32)sponsor05
2Neron Misslin, Courtney (D, state_upper OR-13)sponsor05
3Walters, Jules (D, state_lower OR-37)sponsor05
4Weber, Suzanne (R, state_upper OR-16)sponsor05
5Campos, Wlnsvey (D, state_upper OR-18)cosponsor01
6Frederick, Lew (D, state_upper OR-22)cosponsor01
7Gamba, Mark (D, state_lower OR-41)cosponsor01
8Grayber, Dacia (D, state_lower OR-28)cosponsor01
9Helm, Ken (D, state_lower OR-27)cosponsor01
10Manning Jr., James (D, state_upper OR-7)cosponsor01
11McDonald , Sarah (D, state_lower OR-16)cosponsor01

Predicted vote

Aggregated from: actual roll-call votes (when present) → sponsor → cosponsor → party median (predicts YES when ≥25% of the caucus sponsored/cosponsored). Each row labels its confidence tier so you can see why a position was predicted.

0 predicted yes (0%) · 543 predicted no (100%) · 0 unknown (0%)

By party: · R: 0 yes / 277 no · D: 0 yes / 263 no · I: 0 yes / 3 no

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