State tax rebate for Knoxville Raceway extended to 2030
June 28th, 2023 by Ric Hanson
(Radio Iowa) – Managers of the Knoxville Raceway are getting five more years to accumulate a state tax break of up to one-point-eight MILLION dollars to finance facility improvements. Iowa lawmakers originally approved a sales tax rebate nearly a decade ago, letting the track keep state sales taxes charged on services and goods sold at the track. Senator Julian Garrett of Indianola, who represents Knoxville, says the rebate was set to end in 2025.
“We all know what happened. COVID came along and that really disrupted things,” Garrett says. “Some of their big races they were not able to have and the ones they did have had very limited attendance, so they’re way behind in what they would have normally had in the amount of money collected from these rebates.” A state law that goes into effect Saturday extends the state sales tax rebate for the Knoxville track until 2030.
“In a way, you could say it’s not really changing anything,” Garrett says. “It’s just giving them a little more time to collect the money they would have been able to collect by 2025 had it not been for COVID and some of these other things.” One of them was a dispute with the Iowa Department of Revneue. It prevented the track from claiming the sales tax rebate for a couple of years. Knoxville’s population of about 75-hundred will swell to more than 30-thousand during each of the four days of racing for the Knoxville Nationals in August.
Senator Bill Dotzler says the races attract sprint car racing fans from around the world. “These are cultural events. They mean something,” Dotzler says. “People in Iowa love racing.” Weekly stock car racing began in 1954 on the Marion County Fairgrounds, but a few years later lighter weight sprint cars began racing on the track. The first Knoxville Nationals were held in 1961.