
Nicholas Fulford
32:35 - 33:22
"That's a good summary. What I would say is that that remaining 2 mils, from what I understand, And I don't have detailed numbers on this, but from what I understand, through various other tax exemptions and local arrangements, I think most of the rest of that 2 mils disappears as well. So I think you could almost regard Louisiana as being a full property tax holiday for 10 years"
“That's a good summary. What I would say is that that remaining 2 mils, from what I understand, And I don't have detailed numbers on this, but from what I understand, through various other tax exemptions and local arrangements, I think most of the rest of that 2 mils disappears as well. So I think you could almost regard Louisiana as being a full property tax holiday for 10 years”
That's a good summary. What I would say is that that remaining 2 mils, from what I understand, And I don't have detailed numbers on this, but from what I understand, through various other tax exemptions and local arrangements, I think most of the rest of that 2 mils disappears as well. So I think you could almost regard Louisiana as being a full property tax holiday for 10 years, even though notionally 20% is still payable. And the 10-year kickoff is when gas first flows. I believe that's correct, Chair Hoffman.