Bill Text: MA H3608 | 2009-2010 | 186th General Court | Introduced
Bill Title: Provide for neighborhood stabilization tax credits
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2009-01-20 - Public Hearing date 9/23 at 1:00 PM in Hearing Room B2 [H3608 Detail]
Download: Massachusetts-2009-H3608-Introduced.html
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_______________
PRESENTED BY:
Kevin G. Honan
_______________
To the
Honorable Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts in General
Court assembled:
The undersigned legislators and/or citizens respectfully petition for the passage of the accompanying bill:
An Act to stabilize neighborhoods.
_______________
PETITION OF:
Name: |
District/Address: |
Kevin G. Honan |
17th Suffolk |
Gloria L. Fox |
7th Suffolk |
Willie Mae Allen |
6th Suffolk |
Christine E. Canavan |
10th Plymouth |
Stephen L. DiNatale |
3rd Worcester |
Barry R. Finegold |
17th Essex |
Anthony D. Galluccio |
Middlesex, Suffolk and Essex |
William Lantigua |
16th Essex |
Michael J. Moran |
18th Suffolk |
Denis E. Guyer |
2nd Berkshire |
The Commonwealth of
Massachusetts
_______________
In the Year Two Thousand and Nine
_______________
An Act to stabilize neighborhoods.
Be
it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court
assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
Chapter 63 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2006 official edition, is hereby amended by inserting after section 38T the following new section-
Section 38U. Rehabilitation of foreclosed properties, credit
(a) For purposes of this section, the following terms shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly requires otherwise:
“Certified
rehabilitation”, the rehabilitation of a qualified stabilization property that
has been approved and certified by the department of housing and community
development as necessary to enable the rehabilitation and preservation of
qualified stabilization properties.
“Qualified rehabilitation expenditure”, any amount properly chargeable to a
capital account, as well as legal fees and other development costs unrelated to
acquisition, incurred in connection with the certified rehabilitation of a qualified
stabilization property.
“Qualified stabilization property”, any building or structure, or group thereof, located within the commonwealth that is in the possession of a mortgage lender or municipality as a result of foreclosure or forfeiture, or that is vacant, abandoned, distressed, out of compliance with sanitary and building code, or is in receivership. Qualified stabilization property shall be property, where all or any portion of which is owned, in whole or in part, by the taxpayer.
“Stabilization
target area”, areas determined by the department to be eligible for
neighborhood stabilization tax credits. The department may consider criteria
including but not limited to; high concentration of foreclosed properties as
determined by a given number per thousand housing units, definition as a weak
market area determined by a given percentage of change in median sales prices,
high concentration of vacant or abandoned properties, high concentration of
assisted housing or low homeownership rates, blighted open, decadent or
substandard areas as defined in MGL c. 121A § 1, or designation under section
42(d)(5)(c) of the Internal Revenue Code as a qualified census tract, or
designation under section 5305(c)(2)(A)(ii) of the Housing and Community
Development Act of 1974 as an area where not less than 51 percent of the
residents are persons of low and moderate income.
“Substantial rehabilitation” and “substantially rehabilitated”, the qualified
rehabilitation expenditures of the building or buildings during the 24-month
period selected by the taxpayer ending with or within the taxable year exceed
25 per cent of the taxpayer's adjusted basis in such building and its
structural components as of the beginning of such period. In the case of any
rehabilitation that may reasonably be expected to be completed in phases set
forth in architectural plans and specifications completed before the
rehabilitation begins, the applicable period referred to in this paragraph
shall be 60 months.
“Taxpayer”, a corporation or other entity subject to an excise imposed by this
chapter.
(b)(1) There shall be a Massachusetts neighborhood stabilization tax credit.
(i) The commissioner, in consultation with the Massachusetts department of
housing and community development, shall authorize annually, for the 5 year
period beginning January 1, 2009 and ending December 31, 2013 under this
section together with section, an amount not to exceed $15,000,000 per year.
The Massachusetts department of housing and community development shall determine
the criteria for eligibility for the credit, the criteria to be set forth in
regulations promulgated under this section; and, to the greatest extent
possible, the tax credits shall be allocated projects that contain
owner-occupied or affordable rental housing whenever possible and are also
consistent with the criteria for designating qualified stabilization property.
Further, the department shall administer the credits and shall ensure that
credits are distributed in such a manner that prevents the deterioration of
properties, stabilizes target areas and promotes reinvestment through
homeownership and redevelopment for affordable rental housing. To this end,
regulations and recapture requirements should ensure expeditious redevelopment
and minimum owner-occupant residency period of at least 7 years. If disposition
through homeownership is not feasible, affordable rental leases and rent-to-own
arrangements may be allowed with the approval of the department. Selection
criteria shall include a preference for properties that are affirmatively
marketed to graduates of homeownership-counseling programs.
(ii) A taxpayer that incurs qualified rehabilitation expenditures may be
allowed a credit, to be computed as hereinafter provided, against the excise
imposed by this chapter. The credit shall be equal to a percentage, not to
exceed 25 per cent, of the qualified rehabilitation expenditures made by the
taxpayer with respect to a qualified stabilization property which has received
final certification and has been placed in service as provided for in this
section. The Massachusetts department of housing and community development
shall administer and determine eligibility for the Massachusetts neighborhood
stabilization tax credit and allocate the credit in accordance with this
section; but, the Massachusetts department of housing and community development
may impose a fee for the processing of applications for the certification of
any rehabilitation under this section.
(2) The credit allowable under this section shall be allowed for the taxable
year in which the substantially rehabilitated property is placed in service,
that is, when occupancy of the entire structure or some identifiable portion of
the structure is permitted. The tax credit shall be taken against the taxes
imposed under this chapter and shall, at the election of the taxpayer, be
refundable to a similar extent as provided for in section 32E. A
taxpayer allowed a credit under this section for a taxable year may carry over
and apply to the excise imposed by this chapter in any of the succeeding 10
taxable years, the portion, as reduced from year to year, of those credits
which exceed the excise for the taxable year.
(i) Credits allowed under this section which are provided to multiple owners of
property shall be passed through to the persons designated as partners, members
or owners, respectively, pro rata or pursuant to an executed agreement among
the persons designated as partners, members or owners documenting an
alternative distribution method without regard to their sharing of other tax or
economic attributes of the entity.
(ii) Taxpayers eligible for the Massachusetts neighborhood stabilization tax
credit may, with prior notice to and in accordance with regulations adopted by
the commissioner, transfer the credits, in whole or in part, to an individual
or entity, and the transferee shall be entitled to apply the credits against
the excise with the same effect as if the transferee had incurred the qualified
rehabilitation expenditures itself. The transferee shall use the credit in the
year it is transferred. If the credit allowable for any taxable year exceeds
the transferee's excise liability for that tax year, the transferee may carry
forward and apply in any subsequent taxable year, the portion, as reduced from
year to year, of those credits which exceed such excise for the taxable year;
but the carryover period shall not exceed 10 taxable years after the close of
the taxable year during which the qualified stabilization property received
final certification and was placed in service as provided for in this section.
An owner, transferee or assignee desiring to make a transfer, sale or
assignment shall submit to the commissioner a statement which describes the
amount of tax credit for which the transfer, sale or assignment of tax credit
is eligible. The owner, transferee or assignee shall provide to the
commissioner such information as the commissioner may require for the proper
allocation of the credit. The commissioner shall provide to the taxpayer a certificate
of eligibility to transfer, sell or assign the tax credits. A tax credit shall
not be transferred, sold or assigned without a certificate.
(iii) The
department may provide that upon application for state tax credits issued by
the department, such taxpayer may elect to receive such state tax credit in the
form of a loan generated by transferring the credit to the department or its
designee on terms specified by the department. Neither a direct tax refund nor
a loan received as the result of the transfer of the credit shall be considered
taxable income under this chapter.
(iv) The department may pursue methods of enhancing the efficiency of the
Massachusetts neighborhood stabilization tax credit program including but not
limited to; pursuing opinions from the United States department of treasury's
internal revenue service in the form of general counsel memoranda, private
letter rulings and other notices, rulings or guidelines and reviewing other
state low income housing tax programs which utilize an option for taxpayers to
receive such tax credit in the form of a loan generated by transferring the
credit to a designated state entity.
(v) The credit allowed under this section shall not be subject to the
limitations of section 32C; but, the credit allowed by this section shall not
reduce the excise due under this chapter below the minimum excise provided by
subsection (b) of section 32 and subsection (b) of section 39.
(c)(1) A certified rehabilitation shall require:
(i) an initial certification by the Massachusetts department of housing and
community development that the structure meets the definition of qualified
stabilization property, and that if completed as proposed, the rehabilitation
work will meet the standards required for a certified rehabilitation; and
(ii) a final certification by the Massachusetts department of housing and
community development, issued when construction is completed, certifying that
the work was completed as proposed and that the costs are consistent with the
work completed. Such final certification shall be acceptable as proof that the
expenditures related to such construction qualify as qualified rehabilitation
expenditures for purposes of the credit allowed under this section.
(2) A rehabilitation shall not be treated as complete before the date of the
certification referred to in clause (ii) of paragraph (1).
(d) A taxpayer who leases its property shall be treated as the owner thereof if
the remaining term of the lease as of the date determined under regulations
prescribed by the commissioner of revenue is not less than such minimum period
as the regulations require.
(e) For any
qualified stabilization property, qualified rehabilitation expenditures shall
be treated for purposes of this section as made:
(i) on the date the qualified stabilization property is placed in service, when
occupancy of the entire structure or some identifiable portion of the structure
is permitted, or
(ii) to the extent provided by the commissioner of the department of housing
and community development by regulation, when such expenditures are properly
chargeable to a capital account.
(f)(1) If,
before the end of the 10 year period beginning on the date on which the
qualified stabilization property received final certification and was placed in
service, the taxpayer disposes of the taxpayer's interest in the structure, or
the property otherwise ceases to meet the criteria of a qualified stabilization
property, the taxpayer's tax for the taxable year in which the disposition
occurs shall be increased by the recapture amount. A carry forward credit shall
be adjusted by reason of the disposition. Regulations under this paragraph
shall include a rule similar to the rule under section 50(a)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code, as amended and in effect for the taxable year, relating to
recapture if property ceases to qualify for progress expenditures. In the
event that recapture of the credit is required, any statement submitted to the
commissioner shall include the proportion of the Massachusetts low-income
housing tax credit required to be recaptured, the identity of each transferee
subject to recapture and the amount of credit previously transferred to such
transferee.
(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), the recapture amount shall equal the amount
of the credit taken by the taxpayer, including any credit transferred by the
taxpayer, minus the credit allowed for ownership, but not less than zero. The
credit allowed for ownership shall be the product of the amount of credit allowed
multiplied by a ratio, the numerator of which is the number of months the
rehabilitated structure is owned by the taxpayer, and the denominator of which
is 60.
(g) For purposes of this section, if a credit is allowed under this section for
any expenditure with respect to any property, the increase in the basis of such
property which would, but for this paragraph, result from such expenditure
shall be reduced by the amount of the credit so allowed.
(h) The commissioner, in consultation with the department of housing and
community development, shall prescribe regulations necessary to carry out this
section.
(i) The department, in consultation with the commissioner, shall monitor and oversee compliance with the Massachusetts neighborhood stabilization tax credit program and may promulgate regulations requiring the filing of additional documentation deemed necessary to determine continuing eligibility for the Massachusetts neighborhood stabilization tax credit. The department or the commissioner shall report specific occurrences of noncompliance to appropriate state, federal and local authorities. The department shall report annually to Ways and Means as to the number of qualified stabilization properties, number of housing units assisted, and credit allocated per unit.