The coronavirus shutdown included the entire fourth quarter of Fiscal Year 2019-20, and the loss of Transient Occupancy Tax revenue for the April through June period contributed to a full-year decline from 2018-19 of $1,611,590.45, or 27.9 percent.
The county collected $5,784,173.63 of TOT revenue for 2018-19 and $4,172,583.18 for 2019-20. The county’s 2017-18 annual revenue was $5,105,749.14. The fourth-quarter decrease of $914,496.83 from $1,344,106.50 in 2019 to $429,609.67 during 2020 equates to a 68.0 percent drop; the county had collected $1,131,140.09 of fourth-quarter TOT revenue in 2018.
“The Covid-19 really did play a role in business losses,” said San Diego County Treasurer- Tax Collector Dan McAllister.
“It’s the most logical explanation for the dip, there’s no question about that,” McAllister said. “They’re off significantly in many sectors.”
Various reasons other than decreased lodging can cause a decline of TOT revenue on a quarterly or annual basis from one year to the next. A facility may be closed for renovations or may outright cease business. A timeshare unit used by an ownership partner or an owner’s guest is not subject to the TOT, although if a unit is rented to the general public it is subject to the tax for that period, and if a private campground has a membership program a member or a member’s guest is exempt from the TOT. A late payment or a payment postmarked by the deadline but not processed by the sixth of the following month will be reported for the following quarter, which can cause annual fluctuations. The TOT is not collected for lodging facilities on Indian reservations or other areas where the county has no taxing power, and during Fiscal Year 2013-14 unincorporated El Cajon lost its entire TOT revenue when the Singing Hills Resort became part of the Sycuan Indian Reservation trust land.
Some community losses for 2019-20 are due to a revision in the community definitions rather than to losses for a specific establishment. One of the revisions separated Valley Center and Palomar Mountain from Pauma Valley; fourth-quarter revenue for the combined three communities in 2020 actually exceeded the total for what was called Pauma in 2019.
For the fourth quarter of 2018- 19 the largest TOT collections were $337,775.24 in Rancho Santa Fe, $227,456.20 from Borrego Springs lodgers, $165,836.52 generated in unincorporated Escondido, and $144,185.33 for unincorporated San Marcos. For the fourth quarter of 2019-20 collections fell by 86.8 percent to $44,492.08 in San Marcos, 84.7 percent to $34,802.01 for Borrego Springs, and 71.9 percent to $40,466.35 in unincorporated San Marcos.
Unincorporated Escondido revenue for the fourth quarter dropped by 44.8 percent to $91,619.22, which made Escondido the community with the largest TOT revenue for the fourth quarter of 2019-20. Because the Welk Resort provides much of unincorporated Escondido’s revenue generation and because increased use by timeshare ownership partners decreases available rentals to the general public which are subject to the TOT, fluctuations in unincorporated Escondido revenue are often due to that factor. Excluding communities not listed in the 2018-19 report Escondido was one of three communities whose third-quarter revenue increased for 2020.
The $49,354.05 paid by Alpine lodgers during the fourth quarter of 2018-19 ranked ninth. Alpine experienced an 83.9 percent decrease to $7,948.88 for the fourth quarter of 2019-20. Alpine’s annual total dropped 38.7 percent from $204,855.96 to $125,677.56.
The Transient Occupancy Tax, which was reduced from 9 percent of the unit rate to 8 percent in October 2007, is collected from occupants of hotels, motels, bed and breakfast venues, mobile home parks, private campgrounds, and other structures occupied or intended for occupancy by non-residents for lodging or sleeping purposes. Campgrounds at county parks are not subject to the TOT. A Federal or State of California officer or employee on official business does not pay the TOT, nor does any foreign government officer or employee exempt under Federal law or international treaty. The tax is not collected if the regular rent is four dollars a day or less of if the lodger receives a free room where the only compensation received is publicity for the lodging site. A unit which is occupied or rented by the same person for more than 30 consecutive days is not subject to the TOT.
The county has been issuing housing vouchers which allow homeless residents to stay in motels or hotels. The agreement between the city or county and the facility may limit the amount the establishment can charge per room, but that amount would include all fees and taxes charged for a stay. Thus a housing voucher for no more than 30 consecutive days is subject to the TOT.
Other than what was Pauma for 2019 and the combination of Pauma Valley, Valley Center, and Palomar Mountain for 2020 Jamul was the only other area to have a fourth-quarter increase over 2019. Collections from Jamul were $744.00 in 2019 and $4,082.93 for 2020.
The Jamul increase is likely due to late-processed payments since the collection for the first quarter of 2019-20 was $22,838.69 and Jamul had an annual drop from $30,041.60 for 2017-18 to $19,720.95 in 2018-19. “It was lower than it should have been in terms of reporting,” McAllister said.
The 2019-20 Jamul collections for all four quarters gave the county $40,236.82, and Jamul was one of the three communities which had a third-quarter increase from 2018-19. “We had one new rental in Jamul,” McAllister said. “That would probably account for it logically.”
The county benefitted from the novelty as well as the additional source of TOT revenue. “When the new unit came online it made a difference,” McAllister said. “People wanted to try it out.”
Boulevard, Pine Valley, and what was reclassified from Mountain Empire to Mount Laguna had fourth-quarter drops smaller than the county average, so the appeal of the backcountry may be another factor which reduced the revenue losses. “People have been trying to get out, get away from the cities,” McAllister said.
Pine Valley’s fourth quarter decrease was from $4,507.15 to $2,963.11, and the annual drop was from $21,975.20 to $15,502.55. Boulevard collected $11,634.65 in 2018-19, including $1,972.22 during the fourth quarter, and $10,100.22 for 2019- 20 including $1,572.30 in the April through June quarter. The $5,312.16 from Descanso establishments during 2018- 19 included $1,202.21 of fourth quarter payments while Descanso’s 2019-20 total of $3,523.12 reflected $656.37 of fourth quarter revenue.