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Trinity County advisory board advances plan for countywide tourism development district, sets 3% assessment and nonprofit structure

3800105 · June 6, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The Trinity County advisory board reviewed and advanced the plan to form a countywide tourism development district and the nonprofit that would administer it, agreeing to a proposed 3% assessment rate (with a written option to raise the rate up to 5% over the district term) and asking staff and consultants to draft the initial management district plan for review at the next meeting.

The Trinity County advisory board reviewed and advanced the plan to form a countywide tourism development district and the nonprofit that would administer it, agreeing to a proposed 3% assessment rate (with a written option to raise the rate up to 5% over the district term) and asking staff and consultants to draft the initial management district plan for review at the next meeting.

The discussion matters because the assessment — if approved through a petition process that requires lodging-owner signatures representing over 50% of assessed value and later a public hearing — would create a new, ongoing revenue stream dedicated to tourism marketing and destination projects. Board members, county staff and the consultant walked through incorporation, tax-exemption steps, outreach strategy and a draft budget that uses a $200,000 example to show how funds might be allocated.

Consultant Katie, who led the presentation, outlined the corporation-formation timeline the group would follow if it chooses to form a new nonprofit: draft and approve articles of incorporation and bylaws, file with the California Secretary of State, submit IRS Form SS-4 to obtain an Employer Identification Number, prepare and file a federal tax-exempt application (the speaker said the IRS review typically takes five to 10 months), then obtain state tax-exempt recognition from the California Franchise Tax Board. Katie told the board the advisory will…

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