According to the Legislative Budget Board (LBB), SJR 60 is anticipated to have no fiscal implication for the State of Texas beyond the standard cost of placing a constitutional amendment on the statewide ballot. According to the Legislative Budget Board (LBB), the estimated cost for publication of the resolution is $191,689, which is a routine expenditure associated with constitutional amendments placed before voters.
The resolution itself would not result in a direct revenue loss or expenditure because it only provides the framework for local counties to opt into granting property tax exemptions for the value attributable to rainwater harvesting or graywater systems. It does not create an automatic or statewide exemption and thus does not impact the state’s tax base or collections directly.
Any fiscal impact that could occur, such as a potential reduction in local property tax revenues, would depend entirely on enabling legislation (notably, SB 1633) and whether individual counties choose to adopt the optional exemption. Therefore, local governments are not expected to face any fiscal impact solely from the passage of SJR 60. Future financial effects, if any, would need to be evaluated in the context of that subsequent legislation and local decision-making.
SJR 60 seeks to promote water conservation by authorizing counties to exempt from property taxation the portion of a property’s value attributed to the installation of rainwater harvesting or graywater systems. While the policy goal is well-meaning, the mechanism used—expanding property tax exemptions—raises several substantive concerns that justify a recommendation against the measure.
First, SJR 60 continues a trend of using the property tax code as a tool to incentivize specific behaviors. While this approach may be effective in some cases, it introduces unintended fiscal consequences. Each exemption chips away at the tax base, requiring local governments to increase rates or shift the burden to other taxpayers. This creates equity concerns, particularly for residents who cannot afford or do not have the ability to install such systems, such as renters, lower-income homeowners, or residents in high-density urban areas where these systems may be impractical. The result is an unequal distribution of tax burdens, where tax relief is granted to a subset of property owners at the expense of others.
Second, the proposed exemption represents a form of market distortion by using the tax system to influence private investment decisions. While the state has used similar strategies for renewable energy, the core principle of free enterprise is best supported when markets, not government preferences, determine which technologies thrive. Granting favored tax treatment to specific types of property improvements risks crowding out more comprehensive, technology-neutral approaches to conservation and infrastructure resilience.
Third, although the resolution is permissive—it allows but does not require counties to offer the exemption—it still introduces administrative complexity. Counties that choose to implement the exemption must evaluate eligibility, verify installation, and administer the carve-out, adding to their operational burden. Furthermore, discretionary implementation could result in an uneven landscape of taxation across counties, complicating statewide policy consistency and potentially leading to perceptions of unfairness among taxpayers.
In conclusion, while SJR 60 advances a commendable environmental goal, it does so through a policy mechanism that undermines core principles of tax neutrality, equity, and fiscal sustainability. Lawmakers and taxpayers alike should be cautious about further narrowing the property tax base, particularly when better-aligned tools are available to support conservation and infrastructure resilience. For these reasons, Texas Policy Research recommends that lawmakers vote NO on SJR 60.