Home » Kentucky contracts with vendor to process motor carriers’ fuel tax returns

Kentucky contracts with vendor to process motor carriers’ fuel tax returns

Will lead a six-state consortium, also will save taxpayer money

FRANKFORT, Ky. (Jan. 28, 2014) – The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) has contracted with a Minnesota company to process its International Fuel Tax Agreement (IFTA) returns, saving money for taxpayers.

IFTA, an agreement among 48 states and 10 Canadian provinces, simplifies the reporting of fuel used by interstate and interjurisdictional motor carriers. The fuel taxes they pay go to fund infrastructure in the cooperating states.

The new contractor, Explore Information Services LLC, on a winning bid of $5.35 million, will create a web-based application to monitor fuel tax returns. The company also will be responsible for annual maintenance and service, including emergency service with all parts, materials, equipment and supplies for the first five years. Costs will be shared by Kentucky and five other states, which will be known as the IFTA Processing Consortium (IPC). Kentucky will save an estimated $60,000 in the second year of the contract.

Kentucky’s fuel tax reports had been processed by a regional center in Albany, N.Y., since 1996. But in 2012, New York announced it would discontinue managing the database for the regional center and sever its IFTA tax processing relationship with Kentucky and several other states by Dec. 31, 2014.

Kentucky then joined with five other states – California, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Michigan and Maryland – to form the IPC. Kentucky is the lead state, and, with the Explore contract, is the first state to subcontract with an outside vendor to process IFTA returns as a consortium with formal agreements with other states.

The initiative was announced during the newly formed IPC’s kick-off conference last week in Louisville.

Other states have taken notice of what Kentucky has accomplished and have inquired how to duplicate the system in their own territories. Kentucky officials are working with those states to get them started on the right foot.