(1) Definitions - The following terms and
phrases when used in this rule have the meaning ascribed to them except where
the context clearly indicates a different meaning:
(a) "Fixed location" means a location or
plant site that is used, or intended to be used, for an extended or indefinite
period of time for spaceport activities or for manufacturing, processing,
compounding, or producing items of tangible personal property for sale. The
term also includes a location where a portable plant is set up for a period of
not less than six months in a stationary manner so as to perform the same
industrial manufacturing, processing, compounding or production process that
could be performed at a permanent location or plant site. The geographical
limits of the fixed location for purposes of this rule are limited to the
immediate permanent location or plant site. Facilities or plant units that are
within the same building, or that are on the same parcel of land if not
contained in a building, are considered to be one fixed location.
(b) "Industrial machinery and equipment"
means tangible personal property or other property with a depreciable life of 3
years or more that is used as an integral part in the manufacturing,
processing, compounding, or production of tangible personal property for sale
or is exclusively used in spaceport activities. Buildings and their structural
components are not industrial machinery and equipment unless the building or
structural component is so closely related to the industrial machinery and
equipment that it houses or supports that the building or structural component
can be expected to be replaced when the machinery and equipment itself is
replaced. Heating and air conditioning systems are not considered industrial
machinery and equipment, unless the sole justification for their installation
is to meet the requirements of the production process, even though the system
may provide incidental comfort to employees, or serves, to an insubstantial
degree, nonproduction activities. For example, a dehumidifier installed for the
sole purpose of conditioning air in a factory, where the manufacturing of
electronic components requires a controlled-humidity environment, will be
considered industrial machinery and equipment. (See subsection (8) of this
rule.)
(c) "Integral to" means that
the machinery and equipment provides a significant function within the
production process, such that the production process could not be complete
without that machinery and equipment.
(d) "Manufacture, process, compound, or
produce for sale" means the various industrial operations of a business where
raw materials will be put through a series of steps to make an item of tangible
personal property that will be sold. The industrial operations must bring about
a change in the composition or physical nature of the raw materials. Where
materials are merely repackaged or redistributed, those operations are not
manufacturing, processing, compounding, or producing for sale. The item of
tangible personal property may be sold to another manufacturer for further
processing or for inclusion as a part in another item of tangible personal
property that will be sold, or the item may be sold as a finished product to a
wholesaler or an end consumer. The business performing the manufacturing,
processing, compounding, or production process may or may not own the raw
materials. However, the phrase "manufacture, process, compound, or produce for
sale" does not include fabrication, alteration, modification, cleaning, or
repair services performed on items of tangible personal property belonging to
others where such items of tangible personal property are not for
sale.
(e) "Physically comparable"
means the similarity or equivalency of the characteristics of the items of
tangible personal property being manufactured, processed, compounded or
produced. Physical comparability applies to the units used to measure the
increase in productive output of an expanding business.
1. Example: All models of microwave ovens
made by a manufacturer, regardless of specific features, would be physically
comparable. However, if the manufacturer also made coffee makers, the coffee
makers would not be physically comparable to microwave ovens, even though both
items are generally considered small kitchen appliances.
2. Example: A beverage manufacturer produces
a variety of soft drinks in various sized cans and bottles. The production of
the various sized cans and bottles of soft drinks is not physically comparable.
However, production is physically comparable when converted to a common
physical unit, such as gallons of product.
(f) "Production process" or "production line"
means those industrial activities beginning when raw materials are delivered to
the new or expanding business' fixed location and generally ending when the
items of tangible personal property have been packaged for sale, or are in
saleable form if packaging is not done. However, the production process may
include quality control activities after the items have been packaged (or are
in salable form if packaging is normally not done), such as good manufacturing
practices as mandated by the Federal Food and Drug Administration to detect
adulterated food or food that has been prepared, packaged, or held under
unsanitary conditions.
1. The production
process may encompass more than one fixed location if the business transfers
work-in-process from one fixed location to a second fixed location for further
manufacturing, processing, compounding, or production. For example, a company
purchases machinery and equipment to produce raw orange juice at one fixed
location, and this raw orange juice is transferred as work-in-process to a
second fixed location where the company will use the raw orange juice to make
five different products.
2. A
production process does not include natural processes occurring before raw
material is delivered to the receiving operation or after the packaging
operation. For example, the natural transformation of grass or feed into raw
milk by dairy cows is not part of the production process. In this case, the
production process begins with the milking parlor. The planting, growing, or
harvesting of crops, and the raising of livestock or poultry are not part of
the production process. The natural aging or fermentation of alcoholic
beverages or other food products, after they have been packaged, is also not
part of the production process. The production process ends when the alcoholic
beverage or other food product has been packaged for sale.
3. The production process does not include
product design activities. For example, the computer aided design of a product
where the final design program or computer file for that product will be sent
to or downloaded to industrial machinery and equipment for the physical
creation of the product is not a part of the production process. Similarly, the
production process for printed materials does not include the initial
conception or creation of the written matter. For example, the writing of a
story by a reporter for subsequent printing in a newspaper is not a part of the
production process. (See subsection (8) of this rule regarding machinery and
equipment and the production process.)
(g) "Productive output" ordinarily means the
number of units actually produced by a single plant or operation in a single
continuous 12-month period. The increase in productive output shall be measured
by the output for 12 continuous months, as selected by the expanding business,
following the completion of the installation of machinery and equipment for the
expansion project as compared to the productive output of 12 continuous months
immediately preceding the beginning of the installation of machinery and
equipment for the expansion project. However, the 12 continuous months post
installation measurement period, as selected by the expanding business, must
begin within 24 months following the completion of installation of qualifying
machinery and equipment. Productive output may not be measured by sales dollars
or by production labor hours for the purposes of this exemption.
(h) "Purchase, " "purchases, " or
"purchasing" means the transfer of title or possession, or both, of industrial
machinery and equipment for a consideration. The terms also include the
acquisition of industrial machinery and equipment under a lease or rental
agreement.
(i) "Purchase agreement"
means a document, in the form of a purchase order issued by the purchaser, a
contract for purchase with a seller or vendor, a memorandum of understanding,
or a lease or rental agreement with a lessor.
(j) "Spaceport activities" means those
activities as defined in Section
212.02, F.S.
(2) New Business.
(a) The purchase of industrial machinery and
equipment, parts and accessories, and the installation labor thereof, is exempt
from tax when purchased by a new business which uses such machinery and
equipment at a fixed location in this state for exclusive use in spaceport
activities, or to manufacture, process, compound, or produce items of tangible
personal property for sale.
(b)
Machinery and equipment must be purchased, or purchase agreement made, before
the new business begins spaceport activities or starts production, and delivery
of the purchased items must be made within 12 months from the beginning of
spaceport activities or the start of production.
(c) The date of purchase of the machinery and
equipment is established by the date of the purchase agreement. If no purchase
agreement was made, or in the absence of proof that a purchase agreement was
made prior to the determined beginning of spaceport activities or the start of
production, the machinery and equipment vendor's sales invoice will be the
controlling document for determining whether the machinery and equipment
qualifies for the exemption. No exemption will be allowed even though delivery
of machinery and equipment is made within 12 months from the beginning of
spaceport activities or the start of production if the machinery and equipment
was ordered after the beginning of spaceport activities or the start of
production. If a purchase agreement that was made prior to the start of
production is amended or changed after the start of production, any amendments
or changes that increase the quantity of an item of machinery or equipment will
not qualify for the exemption. Any amendments or change orders to that purchase
agreement that provide for the substitution of a like kind item of machinery or
equipment will qualify for the exemption.
(d)
1. The
start of production is the date that a product is manufactured, processed,
compounded, or produced where such product will be inventoried for sale or will
be immediately sold. However, if this date does not reflect the actual start of
production, the date of the start of production will be determined by the
Executive Director or the Executive Director's designee on a-case-by case
basis. In such cases, the business is required to maintain sufficient records
to enable the Executive Director or the Executive Director's designee to make a
proper determination as to the initial production activities of the new
facility. (See subsection (6) of this rule for record keeping requirements.)
a. Initial test or trial runs necessary to
calibrate or evaluate the operation of machinery and equipment, where the
products made are scrapped or sold for salvage value, are not considered to be
the start of production. The operation of machinery and equipment at less than
full capacity, where the products made are inventoried or immediately sold, is
considered to be the start of production.
b. Production is considered to have started
even though the production line may not be complete, if any part(s) of the
production process is subcontracted to others and a finished product can be
inventoried or immediately sold.
2. The beginning of spaceport activities is
the date that industrial machinery and equipment is first exclusively used for
that purpose. However, if this does not reflect the actual beginning of
spaceport activities, the date will be determined by the Executive Director or
the Executive Director's designee on a case-by-case basis. In such cases, the
business is required to maintain sufficient records to enable the Executive
Director or the Executive Director's designee to make a proper determination as
to the beginning of spaceport activities of the new facility. (See subsection
(6) of this rule for record keeping requirements.)
(e) The Executive Director or the Executive
Director's designee will determine if a business qualifies for exemption as a
new business, based on the facts in each particular case.
1. A new business means a newly-formed
company that opens a facility or plant, at a fixed location in this state, to
manufacture, process, compound, or produce items of tangible personal property
for sale, or to exclusively use industrial machinery and equipment in spaceport
activities.
2. A new business means
an addition to, or the enlargement of, an existing facility or plant, or the
installation of additional machinery and equipment, for the purpose of
manufacturing, processing, compounding, or producing items of tangible personal
property for sale that represent a distinct and separate economic activity from
other items that have been or are being produced at that same fixed location,
or to exclusively use industrial machinery and equipment in distinct and
separate spaceport activities. For example, a company that currently
manufactures washing machines would be considered a new business for the
purpose of installing a dedicated assembly line for the manufacturing of
refrigerators. A new business does not mean an addition to, or the enlargement
of, an existing facility or plant, or the installation of additional machinery
and equipment at an existing facility or plant, for the purpose of
manufacturing, processing, compounding, or producing component parts that were
previously purchased from, or fabricated by, outside sources for inclusion in
that business' finished items of tangible personal property for sale. (See
subsection (4) of this rule regarding manufacturing business classification
factors.)
3. A new business means
opening a new facility or plant, at a fixed location in this state, to
manufacture, process, compound, or produce an item of tangible personal
property for sale, or to exclusively use industrial machinery and equipment in
spaceport activities, provided no other facility or plant in this state that
manufactured, processed, compounded, or produced the same or a similar item of
tangible personal property, or performed the same or a similar spaceport
activity, at a fixed location in this state, was closed to open the new
facility or plant, or will be closed within 12 months. However, this limitation
concerning the closure of a facility or plant is not applicable to a mining
activity when a mine is closed due to the exhaustion or depletion of the mined
resource such that mining is no longer economically feasible at that
location.
4. A new business does
not mean the change of ownership of an existing facility or plant, at a fixed
location in this state, that manufactures, processes, compounds, or produces
items of tangible personal property for sale, or exclusively uses industrial
machinery and equipment in spaceport activities, by a purchase arrangement,
merger, or some other similar means, unless such facility or plant ceased doing
productive operations for a period of not less than 12
months.
(3)
Expanding Business.
(a) The purchase of
industrial machinery and equipment, parts and accessories, and the installation
thereof, is exempt from tax when purchased by an expanding business that uses
such machinery and equipment at a fixed location in this state to increase the
productive output of tangible personal property that is manufactured,
processed, compounded, or produced for sale by not less than 5 percent, or for
exclusive use in spaceport activities.
(b) The Executive Director or the Executive
Director's designee will determine whether a business qualifies for exemption
as an expanding business, based upon the facts of each case using the following
guidelines:
1.
a. An expanding business means an addition
to, or the modernization or enlargement of, an existing facility or the
installation of additional machinery and equipment to manufacture, process,
compound, or produce an item of tangible personal property that is already
being produced at that fixed location in this state or is similar to an item of
tangible personal property that is already being produced at that fixed
location.
b. An expanding business
means an addition to, or the modernization or enlargement of, an existing
facility or the installation of additional machinery and equipment to begin
manufacturing, processing, compounding, or producing a component item of
tangible personal property that will be incorporated into a finished item of
tangible personal property for sale that is already being produced at that
fixed location. When the component item of tangible personal property is
manufactured, processed, compounded, or produced, the completion of the first
component item meets the required productive output increase. When the business
manufactures, processes, compounds, or produces that component for sale to
others and incorporates that component in other items of tangible personal
property for sale, the business would be classified as a new
business.
c. For example, a washing
machine manufacturer that previously purchased water pumps from an outside
supplier as component parts for the washing machines would be considered an
expanding business, rather than a new business, when it purchases machinery and
equipment to begin manufacturing its own component water pumps and does not
offer the water pumps for sale to others. When the first component water pump
is produced, the manufacturer, as an expanding business, meets the required
productive output increase.
d. An
expanding business means an addition to, or the modernization or enlargement
of, an existing facility or the installation of additional machinery and
equipment to perform a spaceport activity that is already being performed, or
is similar to an activity that is already being performed, at that fixed
location.
2. An expanding
business means closing an existing plant or an operation in a plant in this
state and moving it to a new location in this state within 12 months of the
closing.
3. An expanding business
means the purchase of an existing facility to manufacture, process, compound,
or produce an item of tangible personal property that is already being produced
at that facility or is similar to an item of tangible personal property that is
already being produced at that facility.
(c)
1. To
qualify for exemption as an expanding business, the taxpayer is required to
provide information to the satisfaction of the Executive Director or the
Executive Director's designee that the items purchased will be or have been
used to increase the productive output of the existing facility or specific
product line(s) by not less than 5 percent. An expanding business is allowed to
specify whether the 5 percent increase in productive output is for the entire
plant or for specific product line(s). However, where the increase in
productive output applies to a product or component that becomes part of
different product lines, the increase in productive output will be determined
by measuring the increase in the combined output of the different product
lines. Similarly, if the additional machinery and equipment affects the
productive output of more than one product line, the increase in productive
output must be measured by all of the product lines that have been affected.
a. Example: If a company purchases machinery
and equipment that increases its production of raw orange juice by 25 percent,
and this raw orange juice is used by the company to make five different
products, the increase in productive output would be determined by measuring
the volume increase in the combined output of all five different
products.
b. Example: A beverage
manufacturer that currently produces a variety of soft drinks in 12-ounce cans
purchases machinery and equipment to begin making plastic bottles and also
purchases additional mixing machinery and equipment to make more syrup for
overall beverage production. Effectively, there are two separate expansion
projects for this manufacturer. The plastic bottle expansion project will meet
the required productive output increase requirement upon production of the
first bottle. However, the productive output increase requirement for the
additional mixing machinery and equipment must be measured by the amount of
beverages produced at the plant.
c.
Example: A manufacturer of coffeemakers, toasters, and microwave ovens
purchases replacement machinery and equipment that is only used to make
components for the coffeemakers. The productive output increase may be measured
just on the production of coffeemakers.
2. The physical productive output measurement
must be based on physical production data, which is directly relevant to the
business and/or the product(s) being produced. A physical productive output
measurement based on indirect or minor, variable components is not a relevant
measurement. For example, a relevant measurement for a furniture manufacturer
would be the number of pieces of furniture manufactured, not the amount of
glue, paint, stain, or varnish used in the manufacturing of
furniture.
3. Expanding spaceport
activities are not subject to the increase in productive output
requirement.
(4) Manufacturing Business Classification
Factors.
(a) When an additional product is
made at an existing fixed location, the determination whether that business is
classified for the exemption as a new business or as an expanding business will
depend upon whether the additional product represents an economic activity that
is distinct and separate from a product, or a group of products, that is
already being manufactured, processed, compounded, or produced at that fixed
location.
(b) The Executive
Director or the Executive Director's designee will make a determination
regarding the classification of a business' application for exemption on a
case-by-case basis. The Department will be guided by the following factors when
making a determination:
1. The general nature
of the applicant's predominant existing business;
2. The Standard Industrial Classification
(SIC) or North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) industry number
of the existing product(s) versus the additional product;
3. The raw materials or components used to
make the existing product(s) versus the additional product;
4. Whether the additional product is an
alternative to, or represents a replacement for, the existing
product(s);
5. The differences in
machinery and equipment needed to make the existing product(s) versus the
additional product; and
6. The
units used to measure production of the existing product(s) versus the
additional product.
(c)
No single factor within paragraph (b) will decide whether the additional
product represents a distinct and separate economic activity.
(d) Additional products that merely differ in
size, color, flavor, style, packaging, or model line, or existing products that
merely incorporate newer technology, are not considered to be a distinct and
separate economic activity. For example, the manufacturing of electronic
products based on digital technology is not a distinct and separate economic
activity from the manufacturing of electronic products based on analog
technology.
(e) The business
claiming an exemption as a new business has the burden of demonstrating that
the additional product represents a distinct and separate economic activity
from a product, or group of products, that is already being manufactured,
processed, compounded, or produced at the fixed location.
(5) Temporary Tax Exemption Permit - Refund
or Credit.
(a) To receive the exemption
provided under subsection (2) or (3), a qualifying business entity must apply
to the Florida Department of Revenue, Technical Assistance and Dispute
Resolution, Post Office Box 7443, Tallahassee, Florida 32314-7443, for a
temporary tax exemption permit. The business entity seeking a temporary tax
exemption must file an Application for Temporary Tax Exemption Permit (Form
DR-1214) with the Department prior to receiving a permit or refund for the new
or expanded business. Upon a tentative affirmative determination of the
business's qualification for exemption by the Executive Director or the
Executive Director's designee, a temporary tax exemption permit will be issued
to, or a refund authorized for, the business entity.
(b)
1. A
temporary tax exemption permit may be issued only to the qualified business
entity which will use the qualifying machinery and equipment at a fixed
location in this state in manufacturing, processing, compounding, or producing
tangible personal property for sale, or for exclusive use in spaceport
activities. Such permit may be extended by the business entity to its vendor(s)
or to its authorized contractor(s) operating under lump sum, cost plus, fixed
fee, guaranteed price, or any other type of contract executed for the purpose
of constructing a new or expanded business. The authorized contractor(s) may,
likewise, extend the temporary tax exemption permit to its vendor(s) for use in
purchasing qualifying machinery and equipment tax exempt. The business entity
that extends the temporary tax exemption permit to a contractor or
subcontractor for the purpose of authorizing that contractor or subcontractor
to purchase qualifying machinery and equipment tax exempt will be responsible
for paying the sales and use tax on any nonqualified items purchased tax exempt
by the contractor or subcontractor.
2. Upon completion of purchases of qualifying
machinery and equipment, the temporary tax exemption permit is required to be
delivered to the Department or returned by certified or registered mail. If the
permit is returned by mail, the permit should be mailed to the Florida
Department of Revenue, Technical Assistance and Dispute Resolution, P.O. Box
7443, Tallahassee, Florida 32314-7443.
(c)
1. If a
qualifying business entity fails to apply for a temporary tax exemption permit
before purchasing qualifying machinery and equipment for a new or expanded
business, or if the initial determination by the Executive Director or the
Executive Director's designee is negative, the exemptions provided by
subsections (2) and (3) above may be obtained only by a refund to the business
entity of previously paid taxes. Refunds will not be allowed until information
has been provided to the satisfaction of the Executive Director or the
Executive Director's designee that such machinery and equipment meets the
requirements of this rule and is used as designated herein. Only the qualified
business entity that will use the qualifying machinery and equipment at a fixed
location in this state in manufacturing, processing, compounding, or producing
tangible personal property for sale, or for exclusive use in spaceport
activities is entitled to request a refund of sales or use taxes paid on
qualifying industrial machinery and equipment, or installation
thereof.
2. Before the owners of a
qualifying new or expanded business under subsection (2) or (3) may request a
refund of sales or use taxes paid by their contractors on qualifying industrial
machinery and equipment, or installation thereof, the following certified
statement(s) must be executed:
a. If a
subcontractor was involved, the subcontractor must obtain a certified statement
from its supplier(s) or other subcontractor(s) certifying that the supplier or
other subcontractor has remitted the tax to the State, or certifying that the
subcontractor has remitted use tax directly to the State. The subcontractor
must then extend the statement(s) it has executed or obtained from suppliers or
other subcontractors to the prime contractor; and
b. The prime contractor must obtain a
certified statement from its supplier(s) and subcontractor(s) certifying that
the supplier or subcontractor has remitted the tax to the State, or certifying
that the prime contractor has remitted use tax directly to the State. The prime
contractor must then extend the statement(s) it has executed or obtained from
its supplier(s) or subcontractor(s) to the qualifying new or expanded business
entity to support the refund claim.
(d)
1. The
following is a suggested format for a certified statement that tax has been
remitted to the State of Florida:
COMPANY, incorporated in the state of STATE, its undersigned
officer who is duly authorized, hereby certifies to QUALIFYING NEW OR EXPANDING
BUSINESS, OR CONTRACTOR, OR SUBCONTRACTOR it has paid sales tax to the
Department of Revenue, State of Florida, totaling the sum of $_________. Said
taxes were collected by COMPANY upon the sales of tangible personal property as
evidenced by the attached invoice(s).
The company further certifies the sales tax for the attached
invoice(s) was paid to the State of Florida in the month following the date of
sale under sales tax number _________.
Dated at ________ County _______, Florida, this ___ day of
___ 20___.
AUTHORIZED OFFICER OF COMPANY
BY: _______________________________
TITLE: ____________________________
2. The above certified statement will not be
necessary where the business entity claiming the refund has self-accrued and
remitted the tax directly to the State of Florida. However, documentation that
the tax has been remitted to the State of Florida in a timely manner is
required.
(e) The right
to a refund of, or credit for, sales or use taxes.
1. An application for refund by a new
business must be filed within 3 years after the date the tax was paid in
accordance with the timing provisions of Section
215.26(2), F.S.
However, an application for refund will not be considered complete pursuant to
Sections
213.255(2) and
(3), F.S., and Rule
12-26.003, F.A.C., and a refund
will not be approved, before the date the new business first places a product
in inventory or immediately sells a product, or before the date a new business
engaged in spaceport activities begins those activities.
2. An application for refund by an expanding
business must be filed within 3 years after the date the tax was paid in
accordance with the timing provisions of Section
215.26(2), F.S.
However, an application for refund will not be considered complete pursuant to
Sections
213.255(2) and
(3), F.S., and Rule
12-26.003, F.A.C., and a refund
will not be approved, before the date an expanding business can substantiate
that the business expansion has increased the productive output at the existing
facility by not less than 5 percent, or for an expanding business engaged in
spaceport activities, before the date of completion of the installation of the
machinery and equipment.
(6) Record Keeping Requirements. The
applicant is required to maintain all necessary books and records to support
the exemption. All such books, invoices, certified statements, and other
records must be open for inspection by the Department at all reasonable hours
at the qualifying business entity's location in this state. Any qualifying
business entity that maintains such books and records at a point outside this
state is required to make such books and records available for inspection by
the Department where the general records are kept.
(7) Exclusions.
(a) The exemptions provided by subsections
(2) and (3) do not apply to machinery and equipment purchased or used by
electric utility companies; communication companies; oil or gas exploration or
production operations; publishing firms that do not export at least 50 percent
of their finished product out of the state; any firm subject to regulation by
the Division of Hotels and Restaurants of the Department of Business and
Professional Regulation; or any firm which does not manufacture, process,
compound, or produce items of tangible personal property for sale, or
exclusively use machinery and equipment in spaceport activities.
(b) If a publishing firm is also the printer
of the finished product, the Department will consider the business to be a
printer for the purpose of the exemption. Therefore, the above indicated 50
percent requirement would not apply to such a business.
(8) Types of industrial machinery and
equipment that will or will not qualify for the exemption.
(a) For the purpose of this exemption,
industrial machinery and equipment includes:
1. Special foundations required for the
support of such qualifying machinery and equipment;
2. Electrical wiring from the nearest power
panel or disconnect box to the qualifying machinery and equipment; and,
3. Plumbing connections necessary
to connect the machinery and equipment to the nearest water supply or drain
line.
(b) The exemption
for industrial machinery and equipment ends at that stage of the production
process where the product produced is placed in a package (or is in salable
form if packaging is normally not done) to be sold to the wholesaler, retailer,
or other purchaser. Machinery and equipment for the refrigerated, frozen,
heated, or otherwise temperature-controlled storage or warehousing of packaged
finished goods inventory, solely for preservation purposes, prior to shipment
or delivery to customers, is not a part of the production process.
1. Example: A manufacturer's cold storage
facility that is used solely for the warehousing of processed and packaged
foods is not a part of the production process regardless of the fact that
custom palletized orders may be assembled within the cold storage facility for
customers.
2. Example: A
manufacturer produces a product that must be frozen to be in a salable
condition. The facility that performs the freezing function also stores the
product prior to shipment. The freezing facility will qualify as a part of the
production process.
3. Example:
Customer accessible refrigerated cases containing prepackaged meats in a
butcher shop are not a part of the production process, regardless of the fact
that a customer may request that a package of meat be recut, trimmed, or
ground.
4. Example: Refrigerated
cases containing meats or seafood that are only accessible by employees, where
such meats or seafood may be further processed by packaging, cutting, grinding,
or steaming or otherwise cooked, are a part of the production
process.
5. Example: Bakery display
cases where the baked goods are only accessible by bakery shop personnel for
slicing or packaging are a part of the production process.
6. Example: Refrigerated or heated display
cases or preparation units for deli items that are only accessible by deli
personnel are a part of the production process.
7. Example: A citrus juice manufacturer is
prohibited by federal regulations from selling its inventory of processed juice
before required post-production microbial tests are performed. Accordingly, the
refrigerated or frozen storage of processed juice is a part of the
manufacturing process.
(c) Quality control equipment installed
within the production line and required to perform quality checks on each item,
article, or batch produced before the item, article, or batch can be sold
qualifies for the exemption.
(d)
Preproduction, random, or postproduction quality control equipment qualifies as
industrial machinery and equipment, if it is an integral part of the production
process.
(e) Industrial machinery
and equipment that is an integral part of the production process, as well as in
postproduction, such as a forklift, will qualify for the exemption.
(f) Pollution control equipment, or
sanitizing and sterilizing equipment, that is an integral part of the
production process qualifies for exemption.
(g) Monitoring machinery and equipment, such
as computers, video, or other sensing systems or devices that are essential to
the production process, qualifies for exemption.
(h) Machinery and equipment used to remove
waste materials away from industrial machinery and equipment, where the removal
is required to maintain the operation of the production process, will qualify
for exemption. For example, equipment used to remove wood chips and sawdust
from around a qualified industrial wood lathe will qualify for
exemption.
(i) Parts and
accessories for industrial machinery and equipment purchased for replacement,
maintenance, or repair purposes do not qualify for this exemption unless
purchased by:
1. A new business before
production or spaceport activities begin, and delivery is made within 12 months
from the start of production or spaceport activities; or
2. An expanding business before the
completion of the expansion project.
3. Parts and accessories purchased for
replacement, maintenance, or repair that have already received an exemption
pursuant to Section 212.08(7)(xx),
F.S., are not entitled to an exemption as provided in this
rule.
(j) Conveyers or
related equipment used to transport raw materials from the storage area located
at the fixed location to the production line, or to transport work-in-process
within the production line at the fixed location, will qualify for
exemption.
(k) Computers and
computer equipment.
1. Computers and computer
equipment, such as computer aided manufacturing (CAM) systems used to direct
and control the functions of exempt industrial machinery and equipment will
qualify for exemption.
2. Computers
and computer equipment, such as computer aided design (CAD) systems used in the
conception or design of a product and computers and computer equipment used to
input original images or data into a publishing system are not a part of the
production process and will not qualify for exemption.
3. Computers and computer equipment used in
an ancillary function, such as data storage or backup, are not a part of the
production process and will not qualify for exemption.
4. Portable computers, such as laptops and
similar portable devices, including digital cameras, will not qualify for
exemption unless such items are exclusively used at the fixed
location.
5. The initial purchase
of software for qualifying computers and computer equipment will qualify for
exemption. However, software license renewals will not qualify for
exemption.
(l) Masks,
molds, jigs, or templates, where such property is integral to the production
process, will qualify for exemption. The machinery and equipment that is
integral to the creation or maintenance of those masks, molds, jigs, or
templates will also qualify for exemption, even though such machinery and
equipment is not a direct part of the production process.
(m) Machinery and equipment used in the
general repair or maintenance of the plant or production machinery and
equipment, such as welders, gear-pullers, or bench grinders, does not qualify
for the exemption. However, specialized machinery and equipment that is
continuously required to keep production machinery and equipment calibrated or
in optimum condition, such as a sharpening machine in a sawmill, will qualify
for the exemption.
(n) Scales at
the start of, or within, the production process that are necessary to weigh raw
materials or ingredients, or finished goods at the time of packaging, will
qualify for the exemption.
(o)
Office equipment, such as copy machines, typewriters, fax machines, desktop
printers, or calculators, will not qualify for the exemption.
(p) Equipment used for communications
purposes, such as telephones, radios, intercom systems, video or television
equipment, or public address systems, will not qualify for exemption.
(q) Security systems for surveillance or to
prevent or restrict access to the fixed location or areas within the fixed
location will not qualify for exemption.
(r) Furniture items for office or production
personnel will not qualify for the exemption.
(s) General or task lighting fixtures will
not qualify for the exemption.
(t)
Installation labor charges qualify for exemption. However, other installation
costs, such as equipment rental or expendable supplies, which do not become a
physical part of qualifying machinery and equipment, will not qualify for
exemption.
(u) Motor vehicles, as
defined in Section 320.01, F.S., do not qualify for
exemption.
(v) Locomotives or
railroad cars that do not remain at the fixed location will not qualify for
exemption.
(9) Leases of
Machinery and Equipment.
(a) When a qualifying
new or expanding business entity leases industrial machinery, equipment, or
parts thereof, the exemption from tax only applies to the original term of the
lease agreement. Any subsequent renewal or extensions of the original term of
the lease agreement are subject to tax.
(b) The exercise of a purchase option in an
operating lease is considered to be a purchase made after the start of
production for a new business, or a purchase made outside the expansion project
period for an expanding business, and is subject to tax.
(c) In the case of a capital lease,
sales-type lease, or direct financing lease, such leases will be considered to
be sales and purchases at their inception.