AB 2669, as introduced, Campos. Property taxation: welfare exemption.
Existing property tax law, in accordance with the California Constitution, provides for a “welfare exemption” for property used exclusively for religious, hospital, scientific, or charitable purposes and that is owned or operated by certain types of nonprofit entities, if certain qualifying criteria are met.
This bill would make nonsubstantive changes to this provision.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
Section 214 of the Revenue and Taxation Code
2 is amended to read:
(a) Property used exclusively for religious, hospital,
4scientific, or charitable purposes owned and operated by
5community chests, funds, foundations, limited liability companies,
6or corporations organized and operated for religious, hospital,
7scientific, or charitable purposes is exempt from taxation, including
8ad valorem taxes to pay the interest and redemption charges on
P2 1any indebtedness approved by the voters prior to July 1, 1978, or
2any bonded indebtedness for the acquisition or improvement of
3real property approved on or after July 1, 1978, by two-thirds of
4the votes cast by the voters voting on the proposition,begin delete if:end deletebegin insert if all of
5the following conditions are met:end insert
6(1) The owner is not organized or operated for profit. However,
7in the case of hospitals, the organization shall not be deemed to
8be organized or operated for profit if, during the immediately
9preceding fiscal year, operating revenues, exclusive of gifts,
10endowments and grants-in-aid, did not exceed operating expenses
11by an amount equivalent to 10 percent of those operating expenses.
12As used herein, operating expenses include depreciation based on
13cost of replacement and amortization of, and interest on,
14indebtedness.
15(2) No part of the net earnings of the owner inures to the benefit
16of any private shareholder or individual.
17(3) The property is used for the actual operation of the exempt
18activity, and does not exceed an amount of property reasonably
19necessary to the accomplishment of the exempt purpose.
20(A) For the purposes of determining whether the property is
21used for the actual operation of the exempt activity, consideration
22shall not be given to use of the property for either or both of the
23following described activities if that use is occasional:
24(i) The owner conducts fundraising activities on the property
25and the proceeds derived from those activities are not unrelated
26business taxable income, as defined in Section 512 of the Internal
27Revenue Code, of the owner and are used to further the exempt
28activity of the owner.
29(ii) The owner permits any other organization that meets all of
30the requirements of this subdivision, other than ownership of the
31property, to conduct fundraising activities on the property and the
32proceeds derived from those activities are not unrelated business
33taxable income, as defined in
Section 512 of the Internal Revenue
34Code, of the organization, are not subject to the tax on unrelated
35business taxable income that is imposed by Section 511 of the
36Internal Revenue Code, and are used to further the exempt activity
37of the organization.
38(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A):
39(i) “Occasional use” means use of the property on an irregular
40or intermittent basis by the qualifying owner or any other qualifying
P3 1organization described in clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) that is
2incidental to the primary activities of the owner or the other
3organization.
4(ii) “Fundraising activities” means both activities involving the
5direct solicitation of money or other property and the anticipated
6exchange of goods or services for money between the soliciting
7organization and the organization or person solicited.
8(C) Subparagraph (A) shall have no application in determining
9whether paragraph (3) has been satisfied unless the owner of the
10property and any other organization using the property as provided
11in subparagraph (A) have filed with the assessor a valid
12organizational clearance certificate issued pursuant to Section
13254.6.
14(D) For the purposes of determining whether the property is
15used for the actual operation of the exempt activity, consideration
16shall not be given to the use of the property for meetings conducted
17by any other organization if the meetings are incidental to the other
18organization’s primary activities, are not fundraising meetings or
19activities as defined in subparagraph (B), are held no more than
20once per week, and the other organization and its use of the
21property meet all other requirements of paragraphs (1) to (5),
22inclusive, of this subdivision. The owner or the
other organization
23also shall file with the assessor a copy of a valid, unrevoked letter
24or ruling from the Internal Revenue Service or the Franchise Tax
25Board stating that the other organization, or the national
26organization of which it is a local chapter or affiliate, qualifies as
27an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(4) of
28the Internal Revenue Code or Section 23701d, 23701f, or 23701w.
29(E) Nothing in subparagraph (A), (B), (C), or (D) shall be
30construed to either enlarge or restrict the exemption provided for
31in subdivision (b) of Section 4 and Section 5 of Article XIII of the
32California Constitution and this section.
33(4) The property is not used or operated by the owner or by any
34other person so as to benefit any officer, trustee, director,
35shareholder, member, employee, contributor, or bondholder of the
36owner or operator, or any other person, through the
distribution
37of profits, payment of excessive charges or compensations, or the
38more advantageous pursuit of their business or profession.
39(5) The property is not used by the owner or members thereof
40for fraternal or lodge purposes, or for social club purposes except
P4 1where that use is clearly incidental to a primary religious, hospital,
2scientific, or charitable purpose.
3(6) The property is irrevocably dedicated to religious, charitable,
4scientific, or hospital purposes and upon the liquidation,
5dissolution, or abandonment of the owner will not inure to the
6benefit of any private person except a fund, foundation, or
7corporation organized and operated for religious, hospital,
8scientific, or charitable purposes.
9(7) The property, if used exclusively for scientific purposes, is
10used by a foundation or institution that,
in addition to complying
11with the foregoing requirements for the exemption of charitable
12organizations in general, has been chartered by the Congress of
13the United States (except that this requirement shall not apply
14when the scientific purposes are medical research), and whose
15objects are the encouragement or conduct of scientific
16investigation, research, and discovery for the benefit of the
17community at large.
18The exemption provided for herein shall be known as the
19“welfare exemption.” This exemption shall be in addition to any
20other exemption now provided by law, and the existence of the
21exemption provision in paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section
22202 shall not preclude the exemption under this section for museum
23or library property. Except as provided in subdivision (e), this
24section shall not be construed to enlarge the college exemption.
25(b) Property used exclusively for school purposes of
less than
26collegiate grade and owned and operated by religious, hospital, or
27charitable funds, foundations, limited liability companies, or
28corporations, which property and funds, foundations, limited
29liability companies, or corporations meet all of the requirements
30of subdivision (a), shall be deemed to be within the exemption
31provided for in subdivision (b) of Section 4 and Section 5 of Article
32XIII of the California Constitution and this section.
33(c) Property used exclusively for nursery school purposes and
34owned and operated by religious, hospital, or charitable funds,
35foundations, limited liability companies, or corporations, which
36property and funds, foundations, limited liability companies, or
37corporations meet all the requirements of subdivision (a), shall be
38deemed to be within the exemption provided for in subdivision
39(b) of Section 4 and Section 5 of Article XIII of the California
40Constitution and this section.
P5 1(d) Property used exclusively for a noncommercial educational
2FM broadcast station or an educational television station, and
3owned and operated by religious, hospital, scientific, or charitable
4funds, foundations, limited liability companies, or corporations
5meeting all of the requirements of subdivision (a), shall be deemed
6to be within the exemption provided for in subdivision (b) of
7Section 4 and Section 5 of Article XIII of the California
8Constitution and this section.
9(e) Property used exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific,
10or hospital purposes and owned and operated by religious, hospital,
11scientific, or charitable funds, foundations, limited liability
12companies, or corporations or educational institutions of collegiate
13grade, as defined in Section 203, which property and funds,
14foundations, limited liability companies, corporations, or
15educational institutions meet
all of the requirements of subdivision
16(a), shall be deemed to be within the exemption provided for in
17subdivision (b) of Section 4 and Section 5 of Article XIII of the
18California Constitution and this section. As to educational
19institutions of collegiate grade, as defined in Section 203, the
20requirements of paragraph (6) of subdivision (a) shall be deemed
21to be met if both of the following are met:
22(1) The property of the educational institution is irrevocably
23dedicated in its articles of incorporation to charitable and
24educational purposes, to religious and educational purposes, or to
25educational purposes.
26(2) The articles of incorporation of the educational institution
27provide for distribution of its property upon its liquidation,
28dissolution, or abandonment to a fund, foundation, or corporation
29organized and operated for religious, hospital, scientific, charitable,
30or
educational purposes meeting the requirements for exemption
31provided by Section 203 or this section.
32(f) Property used exclusively for housing and related facilities
33for elderly or handicapped families and financed by, including,
34but not limited to, the federal government pursuant to Section 202
35of Public Law 86-372 (12 U.S.C. Sec. 1701q), as amended, Section
36231 of Public Law 73-479 (12 U.S.C. Sec. 1715v), Section 236 of
37Public Law 90-448 (12 U.S.C. Sec. 1715z), or Section 811 of
38Public Law 101-625 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 8013), and owned and
39operated by religious, hospital, scientific, or charitable funds,
40foundations, limited liability companies, or corporations meeting
P6 1all of the requirements of this section shall be deemed to be within
2the exemption provided for in subdivision (b) of Section 4 and
3Section 5 of Article XIII of the California Constitution and this
4section.
5The amendment of this paragraph
made by Chapter 1102 of the
6Statutes of 1984 does not constitute a change in, but is declaratory
7of, existing law. However, no refund of property taxes shall be
8required as a result of this amendment for any fiscal year prior to
9the fiscal year in which the amendment takes effect.
10Property used exclusively for housing and related facilities for
11elderly or handicapped families at which supplemental care or
12services designed to meet the special needs of elderly or
13handicapped residents are not provided, or that is not financed by
14the federal government pursuant to Section 202 of Public Law
1586-372 (12 U.S.C. Sec. 1701q), as amended, Section 231 of Public
16Law 73-479 (12 U.S.C. Sec. 1715v), Section 236 of Public Law
1790-448 (12 U.S.C. Sec. 1715z), or Section 811 of Public Law
18101-625 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 8013), shall not be entitled to exemption
19pursuant to this subdivision unless the property is used for housing
20and related facilities for low- and moderate-income elderly or
21
handicapped families. Property that would otherwise be exempt
22pursuant to this subdivision, except that it includes some housing
23and related facilities for other than low- or moderate-income elderly
24or handicapped families, shall be entitled to a partial exemption.
25The partial exemption shall be equal to that percentage of the value
26of the property that is equal to the percentage that the number of
27low- and moderate-income elderly and handicapped families
28represents of the total number of families occupying the property.
29As used in this subdivision, “low and moderate income” has the
30same meaning as the term “persons and families of low or moderate
31income” as defined by Section 50093 of the Health and Safety
32Code.
33(g) (1) Property used exclusively for rental housing and related
34facilities and owned and operated by religious, hospital, scientific,
35or charitable funds, foundations,
limited liability companies, or
36corporations, including limited partnerships in which the managing
37general partner is an eligible nonprofit corporation or eligible
38limited liability company, meeting all of the requirements of this
39section, or by veterans’ organizations, as described in Section
40215.1, meeting all the requirements of paragraphs (1) to (7),
P7 1inclusive, of subdivision (a), shall be deemed to be within the
2exemption provided for in subdivision (b) of Section 4 and Section
35 of Article XIII of the California Constitution and this section
4and shall be entitled to a partial exemption equal to that percentage
5of the value of the property that is equal to the percentage that the
6number of units serving lower income households represents of
7the total number of residential units in any year in which any of
8the following criteria applies:
9(A) The acquisition, rehabilitation, development, or operation
10of the property, or any combination of
these factors, is financed
11with tax-exempt mortgage revenue bonds or general obligation
12bonds, or is financed by local, state, or federal loans or grants and
13the rents of the occupants who are lower income households do
14not exceed those prescribed by deed restrictions or regulatory
15agreements pursuant to the terms of the financing or financial
16assistance.
17(B) The owner of the property is eligible for and receives
18low-income housing tax credits pursuant to Section 42 of the
19Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as added by Public Law 99-514.
20(C) In the case of a claim, other than a claim with respect to
21property owned by a limited partnership in which the managing
22general partner is an eligible nonprofit corporation, that is filed
23for the 2000-01 fiscal year or any fiscal year thereafter, 90 percent
24or more of the occupants of the property are lower income
25households whose rent does not
exceed the rent prescribed by
26Section 50053 of the Health and Safety Code. The total exemption
27amount allowed under this subdivision to a taxpayer, with respect
28to a single property or multiple properties for any fiscal year on
29the sole basis of the application of this subparagraph, may not
30exceed twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) of tax.
31(D) (i) The property was previously purchased and owned by
32the Department of Transportation pursuant to a consent decree
33requiring housing mitigation measures relating to the construction
34of a freeway and is now solely owned by an organization that
35qualifies as an exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the
36Internal Revenue Code.
37(ii) This subparagraph shall not apply to property owned by a
38limited partnership in which the managing partner is an eligible
39nonprofit corporation.
P8 1(2) In order to be eligible for the exemption provided by this
2subdivision, the owner of the property shall do both of the
3following:
4(A) (i) For any claim filed for the 2000-01 fiscal year or any
5fiscal year thereafter, certify and ensure, subject to the limitation
6in clause (ii), that there is an enforceable and verifiable agreement
7with a public agency, a recorded deed restriction, or other legal
8document that restricts the project’s usage and that provides that
9the units designated for use by lower income households are
10continuously available to or occupied by lower income households
11at rents that do not exceed those prescribed by Section 50053 of
12the Health and Safety Code, or, to the extent that the terms of
13federal, state, or local financing or financial assistance conflicts
14with Section 50053, rents that do not exceed those prescribed by
15the terms of the
financing or financial assistance.
16(ii) In the case of a limited partnership in which the managing
17general partner is an eligible nonprofit corporation, the restriction
18and provision specified in clause (i) shall be contained in an
19enforceable and verifiable agreement with a public agency, or in
20a recorded deed restriction to which the limited partnership
21certifies.
22(B) Certify that the funds that would have been necessary to
23pay property taxes are used to maintain the affordability of, or
24reduce rents otherwise necessary for, the units occupied by lower
25income households.
26(3) As used in this subdivision:
27(A) “Lower income households” has the same meaning as the
28term “lower income households” as defined by Section 50079.5
29of the Health and Safety
Code.
30(B) “Related facilities” means any manager’s units and any and
31all common area spaces that are included within the physical
32boundaries of the rental housing development, including, but not
33limited to, common area space, walkways, balconies, patios,
34clubhouse space, meeting rooms, laundry facilities and parking
35areas, except any portions of the overall development that are
36nonexempt commercial space.
37(C) “Units serving lower income households” shall mean units
38that are occupied by lower income households at an affordable
39rent, as defined in Section 50053 of the Health and Safety Code
40or, to the extent that the terms of federal, state, or local financing
P9 1or financial assistance conflicts with Section 50053, rents that do
2not exceed those prescribed by the terms of the financing or
3financial assistance. Units reserved for lower income households
4at an affordable rent that are
temporarily vacant due to tenant
5turnover or repairs shall be counted as occupied.
6(h) Property used exclusively for an emergency or temporary
7shelter and related facilities for homeless persons and families and
8owned and operated by religious, hospital, scientific, or charitable
9funds, foundations, limited liability companies, or corporations
10meeting all of the requirements of this section shall be deemed to
11be within the exemption provided for in subdivision (b) of Section
124 and Section 5 of Article XIII of the California Constitution and
13this section. Property that otherwise would be exempt pursuant to
14this subdivision, except that it includes housing and related
15facilities for other than an emergency or temporary shelter, shall
16be entitled to a partial exemption.
17As used in this subdivision, “emergency or temporary shelter”
18means a facility that would be eligible for funding pursuant to
19Chapterbegin delete 11end deletebegin insert
11.5end insert (commencing with Section 50800) of Part 2 of
20Division 31 of the Health and Safety Code.
21(i) Property used exclusively for housing and related facilities
22for employees of religious, charitable, scientific, or hospital
23organizations that meet all the requirements of subdivision (a) and
24owned and operated by funds, foundations, limited liability
25companies, or corporations that meet all the requirements of
26subdivision (a) shall be deemed to be within the exemption
27provided for in subdivision (b) of Section 4 and Section 5 of Article
28XIII of the California Constitution and this section to the extent
29the residential use of the property is institutionally necessary for
30the operation of the organization.
31(j) For purposes of this section, charitable purposes include
32educational purposes. For purposes of this subdivision,
33“educational purposes” means those
educational purposes and
34activities for the benefit of the community as a whole or an
35unascertainable and indefinite portion thereof, and do not include
36those educational purposes and activities that are primarily for the
37benefit of an organization’s shareholders. Educational activities
38include the study of relevant information, the dissemination of that
39information to interested members of the general public, and the
40participation of interested members of the general public.
P10 1(k) In the case of property used exclusively for the exempt
2purposes specified in this section, owned and operated by limited
3liability companies that are organized and operated for those
4purposes, the State Board of Equalization shall adopt regulations
5to specify the ownership, organizational, and operational
6requirements for those companies to qualify for the exemption
7provided by this section.
8(l) The amendments made by Chapter 354 of the Statutes of
92004 shall apply with respect to lien dates occurring on and after
10January 1, 2005.
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