SB 377,
as amended, Beall. begin deleteAccessible housing. end deletebegin insertIncome taxes: credits: low-income housing: sale of credit.end insert
Existing law establishes a low-income housing tax credit program pursuant to which the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee provides procedures and requirements for the allocation of state insurance, income, and corporation tax credit amounts among low-income housing projects based on federal law.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2016, allow a taxpayer that is allowed a low-income housing tax credit to sell all or a portion of that credit to one or more unrelated parties for each taxable year in which the credit is allowed.
end insertbegin insertExisting law, in the case of a partnership, requires the allocation of the credits, on or after January 1, 2009, and before January 1, 2016, to partners based upon the partnership agreement, regardless of how the federal low-income housing tax credit, as provided, is allocated to the partners, or whether the allocation of the credit under the terms of the agreement has substantial economic effect, as specified.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would eliminate the January 1, 2016, date.
end insertbegin insertThis bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy.
end insertExisting law establishes various programs under the Department of Housing and Community Development, including the California Housing Rehabilitation Program for the development of low-income and multifamily rental housing in the state. Existing law creates the Multifamily Housing Program under the department to provide a standardized set of program rules and features applicable to all housing types based on the existing California Housing Rehabilitation Program. Among other things, the program provides financial assistance to fund projects for the development and construction of new, and rehabilitation or acquisition and rehabilitation of, existing, transitional, or rental housing developments. Existing law also requires the department to establish a program for the purpose of housing assistance for the physically or developmentally disabled, or mentally disordered.
end deleteThe bill would require the owners and managers of multifamily housing projects that have received a department grant or loan, and that have accessible units, to adopt suitable means to ensure that information regarding the availability of accessible residential dwelling units reaches eligible individuals with disabilities, and would require the owners and managers to give priority for those units to persons with disabilities, as specified.
end deleteVote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
begin insertSection 12206 of the end insertbegin insertRevenue and Taxation Codeend insert
2begin insert is amended to read:end insert
(a) (1) There shall be allowed as a credit against the
4begin delete “tax” (asend deletebegin insert “tax,” asend insert described by Sectionbegin delete 12201)end deletebegin insert 12201,end insert a state
5low-income housing tax credit in an amount equal to the amount
6determined in subdivision (c), computed in accordance with Section
742 of the Internal Revenue Code,begin insert relating to low-income housing
8credit,end insert
except as otherwise provided in this section.
9(2) “Taxpayer,” for purposes of this section, means the sole
10owner in the case of a “C” corporation, the partners in the case of
11a partnership, and the shareholders in the case of an “S”
12corporation.
13(3) “Housing sponsor,” for purposes of this section, means the
14sole owner in the case of a “C” corporation, the partnership in the
P3 1case of a partnership, and the “S” corporation in the case of an “S”
2corporation.
3(b) (1) The amount of the credit allocated to any housing
4sponsor shall be authorized by the California Tax Credit Allocation
5Committee, or any successor thereof, based on a project’s need
6for the credit for economic feasibility in accordance with the
7requirements of this section.
8(A) Except for projects to provide farmworker housing, as
9defined in subdivision (h) of Section 50199.7 of the Health and
10Safety Code, that are allocated credits solely under the set-aside
11described in subdivision (c) of Section 50199.20 of the Health and
12Safety Code, the low-income housing project shall be located in
13California and shall meet either of the following requirements:
14(i) The project’s housing sponsorbegin delete shall haveend deletebegin insert hasend insert been allocated
15by the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee a credit for
16federal income tax purposes under Section 42 of the Internal
17Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing creditend insert.
18(ii) Itbegin delete shall qualifyend deletebegin insert qualifiesend insert
for a credit under Section
1942(h)(4)(B) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to special rule
20where 50 percent or more of building is financed with tax-exempt
21bonds subject to volume capend insert.
22(B) The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee shall not
23require fees for the credit under this section in addition to those
24fees required for applications for the tax credit pursuant to Section
2542 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
26creditend insert. The committee may require a fee if the application for the
27credit under this section is submitted in a calendar year after the
28year the application is submitted for the federal tax credit.
29(C) (i) For a project that receives a preliminary reservation of
30the state low-income housing tax credit, allowed pursuant to
31subdivision (a), on or after January 1, 2009,begin delete and before January 1, the credit shall be allocated to the partners of a partnership
322016,end delete
33owning the project in accordance with the partnership agreement,
34regardless of how the federal low-income housing tax credit with
35respect to the project is allocated to the partners, or whether the
36allocation of the credit under the terms of the agreement has
37substantial economic effect, within the meaning of Section 704(b)
38of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to determination of
39distributive shareend insert.
P4 1(ii) This subparagraph shall not apply to a project that
receives
2a preliminary reservation of state low-income housing tax credits
3under the set-aside described in subdivision (c) of Section 50199.20
4of the Health and Safety Code unless the project also receives a
5preliminary reservation of federal low-income housing tax credits.
6(iii) This subparagraph shall cease to be operative with respect
7to any project that receives a preliminary reservation of a credit
8on or after January 1, 2016.
9(2) (A) The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee shall
10certify to the housing sponsor the amount of tax credit under this
11section allocated to the housing sponsor for each credit period.
12(B) In the case of a
partnership or an “S” corporation, the
13housing sponsor shall provide a copy of the California Tax Credit
14Allocation Committee certification to the taxpayer.
15(C) The taxpayer shall attach a copy of the certification to any
16return upon which a tax credit is claimed under this section.
17(D) In the case of a failure to attach a copy of the certification
18for the year to the return in which a tax credit is claimed under this
19section, no credit under this section shall be allowed for that year
20until a copy of that certification is provided.
21(E) All elections made by the taxpayer pursuant to Section 42
22of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
23credit,end insert shall apply to this section.
24(F) (i) Except as described in clause (ii), for buildings located
25in designated difficult development areas (DDAs) or qualified
26census tracts (QCTs), as defined in Section 42(d)(5)(B) of the
27Internal Revenue Code,begin insert
relating to increase in credit for buildings
28in high-cost areas,end insert credits may be allocated under this section in
29the amounts prescribed in subdivision (c), provided that the amount
30of credit allocated under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
31relating to low-income housing credit,end insert is computed on 100 percent
32of the qualified basis of the building.
33(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), the California Tax Credit
34Allocation Committee may allocate the credit for buildings located
35in DDAs or QCTs that are restricted to having 50 percent of its
36occupants be special needs households, as defined in the California
37Code of Regulations by the California Tax Credit Allocation
38Committee, even if the taxpayer receives federal credits pursuant
39to Section 42(d)(5)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code,begin insert
relating to
40increase in credit for buildings in high-cost areas,end insert provided that
P5 1the credit allowed under this section shall not exceed 30 percent
2of the eligible basis of the building.
3(G) (i) The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee may
4allocate a credit under this section in exchange for a credit allocated
5pursuant to Section 42(d)(5)(B) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
6relating to increase in credit for buildings in high-cost areas,end insert in
7amounts up to 30 percent of the eligible basis of a building if the
8credits allowed under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
9relating to low-income housing credit,end insert are reduced by an equivalent
10amount.
11(ii) An equivalent amount shall be determined by the California
12Tax Credit Allocation Committee based upon the relative amount
13required to produce an equivalent state tax credit to the taxpayer.
14(c) Section 42(b) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
15applicable percentage,end insert shall be modified as follows:
16(1) In the case of any qualified low-income building that receives
17an allocation after 1989 and is a new building not federally
18subsidized, the term “applicable percentage” means the following:
19(A) For each of the first three years, the percentage prescribed
20by the Secretary of the Treasury for new buildings that are not
21federally subsidized for
the taxable year, determined in accordance
22with the requirements of Section 42(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue
23Code,begin insert relating to temporary minimum credit rate for non-federally
24subsidized new buildings,end insert in lieu of the percentage prescribed in
25Section 42(b)(1)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code.
26(B) For the fourth year, the difference between 30 percent and
27the sum of the applicable percentages for the first three years.
28(2) In the case of any qualified low-income building that receives
29an allocation after 1989 and that is a new building that is federally
30subsidized or that is an existing building that is “at risk of
31conversion,” the term “applicable percentage” means the following:
32(A) For each of the first three
years, the percentage prescribed
33by the Secretary of the Treasury for new buildings that are federally
34subsidized for the taxable year.
35(B) For the fourth year, the difference between 13 percent and
36the sum of the applicable percentages for the first three years.
37(3) For purposes of this section, the term “at risk of conversion,”
38with respect to an existing property means a property that satisfies
39all of the following criteria:
P6 1(A) The property is a multifamily rental housing development
2in which at least 50 percent of the units receive governmental
3assistance pursuant to any of the following:
4(i) New construction, substantial rehabilitation, moderate
5rehabilitation, property disposition, and loan management set-aside
6programs, or any other program
providing project-based assistance
7pursuant to Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937,
8Section 1437f of Title 42 of the United States Code, as amended.
9(ii) The Below-Market-Interest-Rate Program pursuant to
10Section 221(d)(3) of the National Housing Act, Sections
111715l(d)(3) and (5) of Title 12 of the United States Code.
12(iii) Section 236 of the National Housing Act, Section 1715z-1
13of Title 12 of the United States Code.
14(iv) Programs for rent supplement assistance pursuant to Section
15101 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965, Section
161701s of Title 12 of the United States Code, as amended.
17(v) Programs pursuant to Section 515 of the Housing Act of
181949, Section 1485 of Title 42 of the United States Code, as
19amended.
20(vi) The low-income housing credit program set forth in Section
2142 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
22creditend insert.
23(B) The restrictions on rent and income levels will terminate or
24thebegin delete federalend deletebegin insert federallyend insert insured mortgage on the property is eligible
25for prepayment any time within five years before or after the date
26of application to the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee.
27(C) The entity acquiring the property enters into a regulatory
28agreement that requires the property to be operated in accordance
29
with the requirements of this section for a period equal to the
30greater of 55 years or the life of the property.
31(D) The property satisfies the requirements of Section 42(e) of
32the Internal Revenue Codebegin delete regardingend deletebegin insert relating toend insert rehabilitation
33expendituresbegin insert treated as a separate new buildingend insert, except that the
34provisions of Section 42(e)(3)(A)(ii)(I) shall not apply.
35(d) The term “qualified low-income housing project” as defined
36in Section 42(c)(2) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
37qualified
low-income building,end insert is modified by adding the following
38requirements:
P7 1(1) The taxpayer shall be entitled to receive a cash distribution
2from the operations of the project, after funding required reserves,
3begin delete which,end deletebegin insert
that,end insert at the election of the taxpayer, is equal to:
4(A) An amount not to exceed 8 percent of the lesser of:
5(i) The owner equitybegin insert,end insert which shall include the amount of the
6capital contributions actually paid to the housing sponsor and shall
7not include any amounts until they are paid on an investor note.
8(ii) Twenty percent of the adjusted basis of the building as of
9the close of the first taxable year of the credit period.
10(B) The amount of the cashflow from those units in the building
11that are not low-income units. For purposes of computing cashflow
12under this subparagraph, operating costs shall be
allocated to the
13low-income units using the “floor space fraction,” as defined in
14Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income
15housing creditend insert.
16(C) Any amount allowed to be distributed under subparagraph
17(A) that is not available for distribution during the first five years
18of the compliance period maybegin delete accumulate andend delete
bebegin insert accumulated andend insert
19 distributed any time during the first 15 years of the compliance
20period but not thereafter.
21(2) The limitation on return shall apply in the aggregate to the
22partners if the housing sponsor is a partnership and in the aggregate
23to the shareholders if the housing sponsor is an “S” corporation.
24(3) The housing sponsor shall apply any cash available for
25distribution in excess of the amount eligible to be distributed under
26paragraph (1) to reduce the rent on rent-restricted units or to
27increase the number of rent-restricted units subject to the tests of
28Section 42(g)(1) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to in
29generalend insert.
30(e) The provisions of Section 42(f) of the Internal Revenue
31Codebegin insert, relating to definition and special rules relating to credit
32period,end insert shall be modified as follows:
33(1) The term “credit period” as defined in Section 42(f)(1) of
34the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to credit period defined,end insert is
35modified by substituting “four taxable years” for “10 taxable
36years.”
37(2) The special rule for the first taxable year of the credit period
38under Section 42(f)(2) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
39special rule for 1st year of credit
period,end insert shall not apply to the tax
40credit under this section.
P8 1(3) Section 42(f)(3) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
2determination of applicable percentage with respect to increases
3in qualified basis after 1st year of credit period,end insert is modified to
4read:
5If, as of the close of any taxable year in the compliance period,
6after the first year of the credit period, the qualified basis of any
7building exceeds the qualified basis of that building as of the close
8of the first year of the credit period, the housing sponsor, to the
9extent of its tax credit allocation, shall be eligible for a credit on
10the excess in an amount equal to the applicable percentage
11determined pursuant to subdivision (c) for the four-year period
12beginning with the later of the taxable years in
which the increase
13in qualified basis occurs.
14(f) The provisions of Section 42(h) of the Internal Revenue
15Codebegin insert, relating to limitation on aggregate credit allowable with
16respect to projects located in a state,end insert shall be modified as follows:
17(1) Section 42(h)(2) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
18allocated credit amount to apply to all taxable years ending during
19or after credit allocation year,end insert shall not be applicable and instead
20the following provisions shall be applicable:
21The total amount for the four-year credit period of the housing
22credit dollars allocated in a calendar year to any building shall
23reduce the
aggregate housing credit dollar amount of the California
24Tax Credit Allocation Committee for the calendar year in which
25the allocation is made.
26(2) Paragraphs (3), (4), (5), (6)(E)(i)(II), (6)(F), (6)(G), (6)(I),
27(7), and (8) of Section 42(h) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating
28to limitation on aggregate credit allowable with respect to projects
29located in a state,end insert shall not be applicable.
30(g) The aggregate housing credit dollar amount that may be
31allocated annually by the California Tax Credit Allocation
32Committee pursuant to this section, Section 17058, and Section
3323610.5 shall be an amount equal to the sum of all the following:
34(1) Seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) for the 2001 calendar
35year, and,
for the 2002 calendar year and each calendar year
36thereafter, seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) increased by the
37percentage, if any, by which the Consumer Price Index for the
38preceding calendar year exceeds the Consumer Price Index for the
392001 calendar year. For the purposes of this paragraph, the term
40“Consumer Price Index” means the last Consumer Price Index for
P9 1All Urban Consumers published by the federal Department of
2Labor.
3(2) The unused housing credit ceiling, if any, for the preceding
4calendar years.
5(3) The amount of housing credit ceiling returned in the calendar
6year. For purposes of this paragraph, the amount of housing credit
7dollar amount returned in the calendar year equals the housing
8credit dollar amount previously allocated to any project that does
9not become a qualified low-income housing project within the
10period required by this section or to any project
with respect to
11which an allocation is canceled by mutual consent of the California
12Tax Credit Allocation Committee and the allocation recipient.
13(4) Five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) per calendar year
14for projects to provide farmworker housing, as defined in
15subdivision (h) of Section 50199.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
16(5) The amount of any unallocated or returned credits under
17former Sections 17053.14, 23608.2, and 23608.3, as those sections
18read prior to January 1, 2009, until fully exhausted for projects to
19provide farmworker housing, as defined in subdivision (h) of
20Section 50199.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
21(h) The term “compliance period” as defined in Section 42(i)(1)
22of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
compliance period,end insert is
23modified to mean, with respect to any building, the period of 30
24consecutive taxable years beginning with the first taxable year of
25the credit period with respect thereto.
26(i) (1) Section 42(j) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
27recapture of credit,end insert shall not be applicable and the provisions in
28paragraph (2) shall be substituted in its place.
29(2) The requirements of this section shall be set forth in a
30regulatory agreement between the California Tax Credit Allocation
31Committee and the housing sponsor,begin delete whichend deletebegin insert
and thisend insert agreement
32shall be subordinated, when required, to any lien or encumbrance
33of any banks or other institutional lenders to the project. The
34regulatory agreement entered into pursuant to subdivision (f) of
35Section 50199.14 of the Health and Safety Code, shall apply,
36begin delete providingend deletebegin insert provided thatend insert the agreement includes all of the following
37provisions:
38(A) A term not less than the compliance period.
P10 1(B) A requirement that the agreement be recorded in the official
2records of the county in which the qualified low-income housing
3project is located.
4(C) A provision stating which state and
local agencies can
5enforce the regulatory agreement in the event the housing sponsor
6fails to satisfy any of the requirements of this section.
7(D) A provision that the regulatory agreement shall be deemed
8a contract enforceable by tenants as third-party beneficiaries thereto
9andbegin delete whichend deletebegin insert thatend insert allows individuals, whether prospective, present,
10or former occupants of the building, who meet the income
11limitation applicable to the building, the right to enforce the
12regulatory agreement in any state court.
13(E) A provision incorporating the requirements of Section 42
14of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income
housing
15credit,end insert as modified by this section.
16(F) A requirement that the housing sponsor notify the California
17Tax Credit Allocation Committee or its designee and the local
18agency that can enforce the regulatory agreement if there is a
19determination by the Internal Revenue Service that the project is
20not in compliance with Section 42(g) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
21relating to qualified low-income housing projectend insert.
22(G) A requirement that the housing sponsor, as security for the
23performance of the housing sponsor’s obligations under the
24regulatory agreement, assign the housing sponsor’s interest in rents
25that it receives from the project, provided that until there is a
26default under the regulatory agreement, the housing sponsor is
27entitled to collect
and retain the rents.
28(H) begin deleteThe end deletebegin insertA provision that the end insertremedies available in the event of
29a default under the regulatory agreement that is not cured within
30a reasonable curebegin delete period,end deletebegin insert periodend insert
include, but are not limited to,
31allowing any of the parties designated to enforce the regulatory
32agreement to collect all rents with respect to the project; taking
33possession of the project and operating the project in accordance
34with the regulatory agreement until the enforcer determines the
35housing sponsor is in a position to operate the project in accordance
36with the regulatory agreement; applying to any court for specific
37performance; securing the appointment of a receiver to operate
38the project; or any other relief as may be appropriate.
39(j) (1) The committee shall allocate the housing credit on a
40regular basis consisting of two or more periods in each calendar
P11 1year during which applications may be filed and considered. The
2committee shall establish application filing deadlines, the maximum
3percentage of federal and state low-income housing tax credit
4ceiling that may be allocated by the committee
in that period, and
5the approximate date on which allocations shall be made. If the
6enactment of federal or state law, the adoption of rules or
7regulations, or other similar events prevent the use of two allocation
8periods, the committee may reduce the number of periods and
9adjust the filing deadlines, maximum percentage of credit allocated,
10and the allocation dates.
11(2) The committee shall adopt a qualified allocation plan, as
12provided in Section 42(m)(1) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
13relating to plans for allocation of credit among projectsend insert. In
14adopting this plan, the committee shall comply with the provisions
15of Sections 42(m)(1)(B) and 42(m)(1)(C) of the Internal Revenue
16Codebegin insert, relating to qualified allocation plan and relating to certain
17selection
criteria must be used, respectivelyend insert.
18(3) Notwithstanding Section 42(m) of the Internal Revenue
19Code,begin insert
relating to responsibilities of housing credit agencies,end insert the
20California Tax Credit Allocation Committee shall allocate housing
21credits in accordance with the qualified allocation plan and
22regulations, which shall include the following provisions:
23(A) All housing sponsors, as defined by paragraph (3) of
24subdivision (a), shall demonstrate at the time the application is
25filed with the committee that the project meets the following
26threshold requirements:
27(i) The housing sponsor shall demonstratebegin insert thatend insert there is a need
28and demand for low-income housing in the community or region
29for which it is proposed.
30(ii) The project’s proposed financing, including tax credit
31proceeds,
shall be sufficient to complete the project and that the
32proposed operating income shall be adequate to operate the project
33for the extended use period.
34(iii) The project shall have enforceable financing commitments,
35either construction or permanent financing, for at least 50 percent
36of the total estimated financing of the project.
37(iv) The housing sponsor shall have and maintain control of the
38site for the project.
39(v) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate that the project
40complies with all applicable local land use and zoning ordinances.
P12 1(vi) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate that the project
2development team has the experience and the financial capacity
3to ensure project completion and operation for the extended use
4period.
5(vii) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate the amount of tax
6credit that is necessary for the financial feasibility of the project
7and its viability as a qualified low-income housing project
8throughout the extended use period, taking into account operating
9expenses, a supportable debt service, reserves, funds set aside for
10rentalbegin delete subsidies,end deletebegin insert subsidiesend insert and required equity, and a development
11fee that does not exceed a specified percentage of the eligible basis
12of the project prior to inclusion of the development fee in the
13eligible basis, as determined by the committee.
14(B) The committee shall give a preference to those projects
15satisfying all of the threshold requirements of subparagraph (A)
16if
both of the following apply:
17(i) The project serves the lowest income tenants at rents
18affordable to those tenants.
19(ii) The project is obligated to serve qualified tenants for the
20longest period.
21(C) In addition to the provisions of subparagraphs (A) and (B),
22the committee shall use the following criteria in allocating housing
23credits:
24(i) Projects serving large families in which a substantial number,
25as defined by the committee, of all residential unitsbegin delete is comprised begin insert areend insert low-income units with three and more bedrooms.
26ofend delete
27(ii) Projects providing single-room occupancy units serving
28very low income tenants.
29(iii) Existing projects that are “at risk of conversion,” as defined
30by paragraph (3) of subdivision (c).
31(iv) Projects for which a public agency provides direct or indirect
32long-term financial support for at least 15 percent of the total
33project development costs or projects for which the owner’s equity
34constitutes at least 30 percent of the total project development
35costs.
36(v) Projects that provide tenant amenities not generally available
37to residents of low-income housing projects.
38(4) For purposes of allocating credits pursuant to this section,
39the committee shall not give preference to any project by virtue
P13 1
of the date of submission of its application except to break a tie
2when two or more of the projects have an equal rating.
3(k) Section 42(l) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
4certifications and other reports to secretary,end insert shall be modified as
5follows:
6The term “secretary” shall be replaced by the termbegin delete “California begin insert “Franchiseend insert Tax Board.”
7Franchiseend delete
8(l) In the case where thebegin delete stateend delete credit allowed under this section
9exceeds the “tax,” the excess may be
carried over to reduce the
10“tax” in the following year, and succeeding years if necessary,
11until the credit has been exhausted.
12(m) The provisions of Section 11407(a) of Public Law 101-508,
13relating to the effective date of the extension of the low-income
14housing credit, shall apply to calendar years after 1993.
15(n) The provisions of Section 11407(c) of Public Law 101-508,
16relating to election to accelerate credit, shall not apply.
17(o) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for any credits awarded
18under this section for taxable years beginning on or after January
191, 2016, a taxpayer may sell all or any portion of any credit
20allowed under this section to one or more unrelated parties for
21each taxable year in which the
credit is allowed.
22(2) (A) The sale authorized by paragraph (1) may be
23documented based on any method selected by the taxpayer that
24originally receives the credit.
25(B) The sale authorized by paragraph (1) may be changed for
26any subsequent taxable year if the sale is expressly shown on each
27of the returns of both the transferor and the transferee that sell
28and receive the credit.
29(C) The taxpayer that originally received the credit shall report
30to the Franchise Tax Board prior to the sale of the credit, in the
31form and manner specified by the Franchise Tax Board, all
32required
information regarding the purchase and sale of the credit,
33including the social security or other taxpayer identification
34number of the unrelated party to whom the credit has been sold,
35the face amount of the credit sold, and the amount of consideration
36received by the taxpayer for the sale of the credit.
37(D) A subsequent taxpayer that holds the credit shall report to
38the Franchise Tax Board prior to the sale of the credit, in the form
39and manner specified by the Franchise Tax Board, all required
40information regarding the purchase and sale of the credit,
P14 1including the social security or other taxpayer identification
2number of the unrelated party to whom the credit has been sold
3and the face amount of the credit sold.
4(3) A credit may be sold pursuant to this subdivision to
more
5than one unrelated party, and may be resold by the unrelated party
6to another taxpayer or other party.
7(4) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the taxpayer
8that originally received the credit that is sold pursuant to
9paragraph (1) shall remain solely liable for all obligations and
10liabilities imposed on the taxpayer by this section with respect to
11the credit, none of which shall apply to any party to whom the
12credit has been sold or subsequently transferred. Parties who
13purchase credits pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be entitled to
14utilize the purchased credits in the same manner in which the
15taxpayer that originally received the credit could utilize them.
16(5) A
taxpayer shall not sell a credit allowed by this section if
17the taxpayer was allowed the credit on any tax return of the
18taxpayer.
19(o)
end delete
20begin insert(p)end insert This section shall remain in effect for as long as Section 42
21of the Internal Revenue Code, relating to low-income housing
22begin delete credits,end deletebegin insert credit,end insert remains in effect.
begin insertSection 17058 of the end insertbegin insertRevenue and Taxation Codeend insertbegin insert is
24amended to read:end insert
(a) (1) There shall be allowed as a credit against the
26“netbegin delete tax” (asend deletebegin insert tax,” asend insert defined in Sectionbegin delete 17039)end deletebegin insert 17039,end insert a state
27low-income housingbegin insert taxend insert
credit in an amount equal to the amount
28determined in subdivision (c), computed in accordance withbegin delete the
Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code,begin insert relating
29provisions ofend delete
30to low-income housing credit,end insert
except as otherwise provided in this
31section.
32(2) begin delete“Taxpayer” end deletebegin insert“Taxpayer,” end insertfor purposes of thisbegin delete sectionend deletebegin insert section,end insert
33 means the sole owner in the case of an individual, the partners in
34the case of a partnership, and the shareholders in the case of an
35“S” corporation.
36(3) “Housingbegin delete sponsor”end deletebegin insert sponsor,”end insert
for purposes of thisbegin delete sectionend delete
37begin insert section,end insert means the sole owner in the case of an individual, the
38partnership in the case of a partnership, and the “S” corporation
39in the case of an “S” corporation.
P15 1(b) (1) The amount of the credit allocated to any housing
2sponsor shall be authorized by the California Tax Credit Allocation
3Committee, or any successor thereof, based on a project’s need
4for the credit for economic feasibility in accordance with the
5requirements of this section.
6(A) The low-income housing project shall be located in
7California and shall meet either of the following requirements:
8(i) Except for projects to provide farmworker housing, as defined
9in subdivision (h) of Section 50199.7 of the Health and Safety
10Code, that are allocated credits solely under the set-aside described
11in subdivision (c) of Section 50199.20 of the Health and Safety
12Code, the project’s housing sponsor has been allocated by the
13California Tax Credit Allocation Committee a credit for federal
14income tax purposes under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue
15Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing creditend insert.
16(ii) It qualifies for a credit under Section 42(h)(4)(B) of the
17Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to special rule where 50 percent
18or more of building is financed with tax-exempt bonds subject to
19volume capend insert.
20(B) The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee shall not
21require fees for the credit under this section in addition to those
22fees required for applications for the tax credit pursuant to Section
2342 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
24creditend insert. The committee may require a fee if the application for the
25credit under this section is submitted in a calendar year after the
26year the application is submitted for the federal tax credit.
27(C) (i) For a project that receives a preliminary reservation of
28the state low-income housing tax credit, allowed pursuant to
29subdivision (a), on or after January 1, 2009,begin delete and before January 1, the credit shall be
allocated to the partners of a partnership
302016,end delete
31owning the project in accordance with the partnership agreement,
32regardless of how the federal low-income housing tax credit with
33respect to the project is allocated to the partners, or whether the
34allocation of the credit under the terms of the agreement has
35substantial economic effect, within the meaning of Section 704(b)
36of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to determination of
37distributive shareend insert.
38(ii) To the extent the allocation of the credit to a partner under
39this section lacks substantial economic effect, any loss or deduction
40otherwise allowable under this part that is attributable to the sale
P16 1or other disposition of that partner’s partnership interest made prior
2to the expiration of the federal credit shall not be allowed in the
3taxable year in which the sale or other disposition
occurs, but shall
4instead be deferred until and treated as if it occurred in the first
5taxable year immediately following the taxable year in which the
6federal credit period expires for the project described in clause (i).
7(iii) This subparagraph shall not apply to a project that receives
8a preliminary reservation of state low-income housing tax credits
9under the set-aside described in subdivision (c) of Section 50199.20
10of the Health and Safety Code unless the project also receives a
11preliminary reservation of federal low-income housing tax credits.
12(iv) This subparagraph shall cease to be operative with respect
13to any project that receives a preliminary reservation of a credit
14on or after January 1, 2016.
15(2) (A) The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee shall
16certify to the housing sponsor the amount of tax credit under this
17section allocated to the housing sponsor for each credit period.
18(B) In the case of a partnership or an “S” corporation, the
19housing sponsor shall provide a copy of the California Tax Credit
20Allocation Committee certification to the taxpayer.
21(C) The taxpayer shall, upon request, provide a copy of the
22certification to the Franchise Tax Board.
23(D) All elections made by the taxpayer pursuant to Section 42
24of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
25credit,end insert shall apply to this section.
26(E) (i) Except as described in clause (ii), for buildings located
27in designated difficult development areas (DDAs) or qualified
28census tracts (QCTs), as defined in Section 42(d)(5)(B) of the
29Internal Revenue Code,begin insert relating to increase in credit for buildings
30in high-cost areas,end insert credits may be allocated under this section in
31the amounts prescribed in subdivision (c), provided that the amount
32of credit allocated under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
33relating to low-income housing credit,end insert is computed on 100 percent
34of the qualified basis of the building.
35(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), the California Tax Credit
36Allocation Committee may
allocate the credit for buildings located
37in DDAs or QCTs that are restricted to having 50 percent of its
38occupants be special needs households, as defined in the California
39Code of Regulations by the California Tax Credit Allocation
40Committee, even if the taxpayer receives federal credits pursuant
P17 1to Section 42(d)(5)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code,begin insert relating to
2increase in credit for buildings in high-cost areas,end insert
provided that
3the credit allowed under this section shall not exceed 30 percent
4of the eligible basis of the building.
5(G) (i) The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee may
6allocate a credit under this section in exchange for a credit allocated
7pursuant to Section 42(d)(5)(B) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
8relating to increase in credit for buildings in high-cost areas,end insert in
9amounts up to 30 percent of the eligible basis of a building if the
10credits allowed under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
11relating to low-income housing credit,end insert are reduced by an equivalent
12amount.
13(ii) An equivalent amount shall be determined by
the California
14Tax Credit Allocation Committee based upon the relative amount
15required to produce an equivalent state tax credit to the taxpayer.
16(c) Section 42(b) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
17applicable percentage,end insert shall be modified as follows:
18(1) In the case of any qualified low-income building placed in
19service by the housing sponsor during 1987, the term “applicable
20percentage” means 9 percent for each of the first three years and
213 percent for the fourth year for new buildings (whether or not the
22building is federally subsidized) and for existing buildings.
23(2) In the case of any qualified low-income building that receives
24an allocation after 1989 and is a new building not federally
25
subsidized, the term “applicable percentage” means the following:
26(A) For each of the first three years, the percentage prescribed
27by the Secretary of the Treasury for new buildings that are not
28federally subsidized for the taxable year, determined in accordance
29with the requirements of Section 42(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue
30Code,begin insert relating to temporary minimum credit rate for non-federally
31subsidized new buildings,end insert in lieu of the percentage prescribed in
32Section 42(b)(1)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code.
33(B) For the fourth year, the difference between 30 percent and
34the sum of the applicable percentages for the first three years.
35(3) In the case of any qualified low-income building that receives
36an allocation
after 1989 and that is a new building that is federally
37subsidized or that is an existing building that is “at risk of
38conversion,” the term “applicable percentage” means the following:
P18 1(A) For each of the first three years, the percentage prescribed
2by the Secretary of the Treasury for new buildings that are federally
3subsidized for the taxable year.
4(B) For the fourth year, the difference between 13 percent and
5the sum of the applicable percentages for the first three years.
6(4) For purposes of this section, the term “at risk of conversion,”
7with respect to an existing property means a property that satisfies
8all of the following criteria:
9(A) The property is a multifamily rental housing development
10in which at least 50 percent of the units receive
governmental
11assistance pursuant to any of the following:
12(i) New construction, substantial rehabilitation, moderate
13rehabilitation, property disposition, and loan management set-aside
14programs, or any other program providing project-based assistance
15pursuant to Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937,
16Section 1437f of Title 42 of the United States Code, as amended.
17(ii) The Below-Market-Interest-Rate Program pursuant to
18Section 221(d)(3) of the National Housing Act, Sections
191715l(d)(3) and (5) of Title 12 of the United States Code.
20(iii) Section 236 of the National Housing Act, Section 1715z-1
21of Title 12 of the United States Code.
22(iv) Programs for rent supplement assistance pursuant to Section
23101 of the Housing and Urban
Development Act of 1965, Section
241701s of Title 12 of the United States Code, as amended.
25(v) Programs pursuant to Section 515 of the Housing Act of
261949, Section 1485 of Title 42 of the United States Code, as
27amended.
28(vi) The low-income housing credit program set forth in Section
2942 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
30creditend insert.
31(B) The restrictions on rent and income levels will terminate or
32thebegin delete federalend deletebegin insert federallyend insert insured mortgage on the property is eligible
33for prepayment any time within five years
before or after the date
34of application to the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee.
35(C) The entity acquiring the property enters into a regulatory
36agreement that requires the property to be operated in accordance
37with the requirements of this section for a period equal to the
38greater of 55 years or the life of the property.
39(D) The property satisfies the requirements of Section 42(e) of
40the Internal Revenue Codebegin delete regardingend deletebegin insert relating toend insert rehabilitation
P19 1expendituresbegin insert treated as a separate new buildingend insert, except that the
2provisions of Section 42(e)(3)(A)(ii)(I) shall not apply.
3(d) The term “qualified low-income housing project” as defined
4in Section 42(c)(2) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
5qualified low-income building,end insert is modified by adding the following
6requirements:
7(1) The taxpayer shall be entitled to receive a cash distribution
8from the operations of the project, after funding required reserves,
9that, at the election of the taxpayer, is equal to:
10(A) An amount not to exceed 8 percent of the lesser of:
11(i) The owner equitybegin delete thatend deletebegin insert, whichend insert
shall include the amount of the
12capital contributions actually paid to the housing sponsor and shall
13not include any amounts until they are paid on an investor note.
14(ii) Twenty percent of the adjusted basis of the building as of
15the close of the first taxable year of the credit period.
16(B) The amount of the cashflow from those units in the building
17that are not low-income units. For purposes of computing cashflow
18under this subparagraph, operating costs shall be allocated to the
19low-income units using the “floor space fraction,” as defined in
20Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income
21housing creditend insert.
22(C) Any amount allowed to be distributed under subparagraph
23(A) that is
not available for distribution during the first five years
24of the compliance period may be accumulated and distributed any
25time during the first 15 years of the compliance period but not
26thereafter.
27(2) The limitation on return shall apply in the aggregate to the
28partners if the housing sponsor is a partnership and in the aggregate
29to the shareholders if the housing sponsor is an “S” corporation.
30(3) The housing sponsor shall apply any cash available for
31distribution in excess of the amount eligible to be distributed under
32paragraph (1) to reduce the rent on rent-restricted units or to
33increase the number of rent-restricted units subject to the tests of
34Section 42(g)(1) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to in
35generalend insert.
36(e) The provisions of Section 42(f) of the Internal Revenue
37Codebegin insert, relating to definition and special rules relating to credit
38period,end insert shall be modified as follows:
39(1) The term “credit period” as defined in Section 42(f)(1) of
40the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to credit period defined,end insert is
P20 1modified by substituting “four taxable years” for “10 taxable
2years.”
3(2) The special rule for the first taxable year of the credit period
4under Section 42(f)(2) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
5special rule for 1st year of credit period,end insert shall not apply
to the tax
6credit under this section.
7(3) Section 42(f)(3) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
8determination of applicable percentage with respect to increases
9in qualified basis after 1st year of credit period,end insert is modified to
10read:
11If, as of the close of any taxable year in the compliance period,
12after the first year of the credit period, the qualified basis of any
13building exceeds the qualified basis of that building as of the close
14of the first year of the credit period, the housing sponsor, to the
15extent of its tax credit allocation, shall be eligible for a credit on
16the excess in an amount equal to the applicable percentage
17determined pursuant to subdivision (c) for the four-year period
18beginning with the taxable year in which the increase in qualified
19basis occurs.
20(f) The provisions of Section 42(h) of the Internal Revenue
21Codebegin insert, relating to limitation on aggregate credit allowable with
22respect to projects located in a state,end insert shall be modified as follows:
23(1) Section 42(h)(2) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
24allocated credit amount to apply to all taxable years ending during
25or after credit allocation year,end insert shall not be applicable and instead
26the following provisions shall be applicable:
27The total amount for the four-yearbegin insert creditend insert period of the housing
28credit dollars allocated
in a calendar year to any building shall
29reduce the aggregate housing credit dollar amount of the California
30Tax Credit Allocation Committee for the calendar year in which
31the allocation is made.
32(2) Paragraphs (3), (4), (5), (6)(E)(i)(II), (6)(F), (6)(G), (6)(I),
33(7), and (8) of Section 42(h) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating
34to limitation on aggregate credit allowable with respect to projects
35located in a state,end insert shall not be applicablebegin delete to this sectionend delete.
36(g) The aggregate housing credit dollar amount that may be
37allocated annually by the California Tax Credit Allocation
38Committee pursuant to this section, Section 12206, and Section
3923610.5 shall be an amount equal to the sum of all the
following:
P21 1(1) Seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) for the 2001 calendar
2year, and, for the 2002 calendar year and each calendar year
3thereafter, seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) increased by the
4percentage, if any, by which the Consumer Price Index for the
5preceding calendar year exceeds the Consumer Price Index for the
62001 calendar year. For the purposes of this paragraph, the term
7“Consumer Price Index” means the last Consumer Price Index for
8All Urban Consumers published by the federal Department of
9Labor.
10(2) The unused housing credit ceiling, if any, for the preceding
11calendar years.
12(3) The amount of housing credit ceiling returned in the calendar
13year. For purposes of this paragraph, the amount of housing credit
14dollar amount returned in the calendar year equals the housing
15credit dollar amount
previously allocated to any project that does
16not become a qualified low-income housing project within the
17period required by this section or to any project with respect to
18which an allocation is canceled by mutual consent of the California
19Tax Credit Allocation Committee and the allocation recipient.
20(4) Five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) per calendar year
21for projects to provide farmworker housing, as defined in
22subdivision (h) of Section 50199.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
23(5) The amount of any unallocated or returned credits under
24former Sections 17053.14, 23608.2, and 23608.3, as those sections
25read prior to January 1, 2009, until fully exhausted for projects to
26provide farmworker housing, as defined in subdivision (h) of
27Section 50199.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
28(h) The term “compliance period” as
defined in Section 42(i)(1)
29of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to compliance period,end insert is
30modified to mean, with respect to any building, the period of 30
31consecutive taxable years beginning with the first taxable year of
32the credit period with respect thereto.
33(i) Section 42(j) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
34recapture of credit,end insert shall not be applicable and the following
35requirements of this section shall be set forth in a regulatory
36agreement between the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee
37and the housing sponsor,begin delete whichend deletebegin insert and thisend insert
agreement shall be
38subordinated, when required, to any lien or encumbrance of any
39banks or other institutional lenders to the project. The regulatory
40agreement entered into pursuant to subdivision (f) of Section
P22 150199.14 of the Health and Safety Code shall apply, provided that
2the agreement includes all of the following provisions:
3(1) A term not less than the compliance period.
4(2) A requirement that the agreement be recorded in the official
5records of the county in which the qualified low-income housing
6project is located.
7(3) A provision stating which state and local agencies can
8enforce the regulatory agreement in the event the housing sponsor
9fails to satisfy any of the requirements of this section.
10(4) A provision that the
regulatory agreement shall be deemed
11a contract enforceable by tenants as third-party beneficiaries thereto
12and that allows individuals, whether prospective, present, or former
13occupants of the building, who meet the income limitation
14applicable to the building, the right to enforce the regulatory
15agreement in any state court.
16(5) A provision incorporating the requirements of Section 42
17of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
18credit,end insert as modified by this section.
19(6) A requirement that the housing sponsor notify the California
20Tax Credit Allocation Committee or its designee if there is a
21determination by the Internal Revenue Service that the project is
22not in compliance with Section 42(g) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
23
relating to qualified low-income housing projectend insert.
24(7) A requirement that the housing sponsor, as security for the
25performance of the housing sponsor’s obligations under the
26regulatory agreement, assign the housing sponsor’s interest in rents
27that it receives from the project, provided that until there is a
28default under the regulatory agreement, the housing sponsor is
29entitled to collect and retain the rents.
30(8) begin deleteThe end deletebegin insertA provision that the end insertremedies available in the event of
31a default under the regulatory agreement that is not cured within
32a reasonable curebegin delete period,end deletebegin insert
periodend insert include, but are not limited to,
33allowing any of the parties designated to enforce the regulatory
34agreement to collect all rents with respect to the project; taking
35possession of the project and operating the project in accordance
36with the regulatory agreement until the enforcer determines the
37housing sponsor is in a position to operate the project in accordance
38with the regulatory agreement; applying to any court for specific
39performance; securing the appointment of a receiver to operate
40the project; or any other relief as may be appropriate.
P23 1(j) (1) The committee shall allocate the housing credit on a
2regular basis consisting of two or more periods in each calendar
3year during which applications may be filed and considered. The
4committee shall establish application filing deadlines, the maximum
5percentage of federal and state low-income housing tax credit
6ceiling that may
be allocated by the committee in that period, and
7the approximate date on which allocations shall be made. If the
8enactment of federal or state law, the adoption of rules or
9regulations, or other similar events prevent the use of two allocation
10periods, the committee may reduce the number of periods and
11adjust the filing deadlines, maximum percentage of credit allocated,
12and the allocation dates.
13(2) The committee shall adopt a qualified allocation plan, as
14provided in Section 42(m)(1) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
15relating to plans for allocation of credit among projectsend insert. In
16adopting this plan, the committee shall comply with the provisions
17of Sections 42(m)(1)(B) and 42(m)(1)(C) of the Internal Revenue
18Codebegin insert, relating to qualified allocation plan and
relating to certain
19selection criteria must be used, respectivelyend insert.
20(3) Notwithstanding Section 42(m) of the Internal Revenue
21Code,begin insert relating to responsibilities of housing credit agencies,end insert the
22California Tax Credit Allocation Committee shall allocate housing
23credits in accordance with the qualified allocation plan and
24regulations, which shall include the following provisions:
25(A) All housing sponsors, as defined by paragraph (3) of
26subdivision (a), shall demonstrate at the time the application is
27filed with the committee that the project meets the following
28threshold requirements:
29(i) The housing sponsor shall demonstratebegin insert
thatend insert there is a need
30and demand for low-income housing in the community or region
31for which it is proposed.
32(ii) The project’s proposed financing, including tax credit
33proceeds, shall be sufficient to complete the project and that the
34proposed operating income shall be adequate to operate the project
35for the extended use period.
36(iii) The project shall have enforceable financing commitments,
37either construction or permanent financing, for at least 50 percent
38of the total estimated financing of the project.
39(iv) The housing sponsor shall have and maintain control of the
40site for the project.
P24 1(v) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate that the project
2complies with all applicable local land use and zoning
ordinances.
3(vi) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate that the project
4development team has the experience and the financial capacity
5to ensure project completion and operation for the extended use
6period.
7(vii) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate the amount of tax
8credit that is necessary for the financial feasibility of the project
9and its viability as a qualified low-income housing project
10throughout the extended use period, taking into account operating
11expenses, a supportable debt service, reserves, funds set aside for
12rental subsidies and required equity, and a development fee that
13does not exceed a specified percentage of the eligible basis of the
14project prior to inclusion of the development fee in the eligible
15basis, as determined by the committee.
16(B) The committee shall give a preference to those
projects
17satisfying all of the threshold requirements of subparagraph (A)
18if both of the following apply:
19(i) The project serves the lowest income tenants at rents
20affordable to those tenants.
21(ii) The project is obligated to serve qualified tenants for the
22longest period.
23(C) In addition to the provisions of subparagraphs (A) and (B),
24the committee shall use the following criteria in allocating housing
25credits:
26(i) Projects serving large families in which a substantial number,
27as defined by the committee, of all residential unitsbegin delete is comprised begin insert
areend insert low-income units with three and more bedrooms.
28ofend delete
29(ii) Projects providing single-room occupancy units serving
30very low income tenants.
31(iii) Existing projects that are “at risk of conversion,” as defined
32by paragraph (4) of subdivision (c).
33(iv) Projects for which a public agency provides direct or indirect
34long-term financial support for at least 15 percent of the total
35project development costs or projects for which the owner’s equity
36constitutes at least 30 percent of the total project development
37costs.
38(v) Projects that provide tenant amenities not generally available
39to residents of low-income housing projects.
P25 1(4) For purposes of
allocating credits pursuant to this section,
2the committee shall not give preference to any project by virtue
3of the date of submission of its application.
4(k) Section 42(l) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
5certifications and other reports to secretary,end insert shall be modified as
6follows:
7The term “secretary” shall be replaced by the termbegin delete “California begin insert “Franchiseend insert Tax Board.”
8Franchiseend delete
9(l) In the case where the credit allowed under this section
10exceeds the net tax, the excessbegin delete creditend delete
may be carried over to reduce
11the net tax in the following year, and succeedingbegin delete taxable
years,end delete
12begin insert yearsend insert if necessary, until the credit has been exhausted.
13(m) A project that received an allocation of a 1989 federal
14housing credit dollar amount shall be eligible to receive an
15allocation of a 1990 state housing credit dollar amount, subject to
16all of the following conditions:
17(1) The project was not placed in service prior to 1990.
18(2) To the extent the amendments made to this section by the
19Statutes of 1990 conflict with any provisions existing in this section
20prior to those amendments, the prior provisions of law shall prevail.
21(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), a project applying for an
22allocation under this subdivision shall
be subject to the
23requirements of paragraph (3) of subdivision (j).
24(n) The credit period with respect to an allocation of credit in
251989 by the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee of which
26any amount is attributable to unallocated credit from 1987 or 1988
27shall not begin until after December 31, 1989.
28(o) The provisions of Section 11407(a) of Public Law 101-508,
29relating to the effective date of the extension of the low-income
30housing credit, shall apply to calendar years after 1989.
31(p) The provisions of Section 11407(c) of Public Law 101-508,
32relating to election to accelerate credit, shall not apply.
33(q) Any unused credit may continue to be carried forward, as
34provided in subdivision (l), until the credit has been exhausted.
35This section shall remain in effect on and after December 1,
361990, for as long as Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code,
37relating to low-income housingbegin delete credits,end deletebegin insert
credit,end insert remains in effect.
38(r) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for any credits awarded
39under this section for taxable years beginning on or after January
401, 2016, a taxpayer may sell all or any portion of any credit
P26 1allowed under this section to one or more unrelated parties for
2each taxable year in which the credit is allowed.
3(2) (A) The sale authorized by paragraph (1) may be
4documented based on any method selected by the taxpayer that
5originally receives the credit.
6(B) The sale authorized by paragraph (1) may be changed for
7any
subsequent taxable year if the sale is expressly shown on each
8of the returns of both the transferor and the transferee that sell
9and receive the credit.
10(C) The taxpayer that originally received the credit shall report
11to the Franchise Tax Board prior to the sale of the credit, in the
12form and manner specified by the Franchise Tax Board, all
13required information regarding the purchase and sale of the credit,
14including the social security or other taxpayer identification
15number of the unrelated party to whom the credit has been sold,
16the face amount of the credit sold, and the amount of consideration
17received by the taxpayer for the sale of the credit.
18(D) A subsequent
taxpayer that holds the credit shall report to
19the Franchise Tax Board prior to the sale of the credit, in the form
20and manner specified by the Franchise Tax Board, all required
21information regarding the purchase and sale of the credit,
22including the social security or other taxpayer identification
23number of the unrelated party to whom the credit has been sold
24and the face amount of the credit sold.
25(3) A credit may be sold pursuant to this subdivision to more
26than one unrelated party, and may be resold by the unrelated party
27to another taxpayer or other party.
28(4) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the taxpayer
29that originally received the credit that is sold pursuant to
30paragraph (1) shall remain solely liable for all obligations and
31liabilities imposed on the
taxpayer by this section with respect to
32the credit, none of which shall apply to any party to whom the
33credit has been sold or subsequently transferred. Parties who
34purchase credits pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be entitled to
35utilize the purchased credits in the same manner in which the
36taxpayer that originally received the credit could utilize them.
37(5) A taxpayer shall not sell a credit allowed by this section if
38the taxpayer was allowed the credit on any tax return of the
39taxpayer.
40(r)
end delete
P27 1begin insert(s)end insert The amendments to this section made bybegin delete the act adding this begin insert Chapter 1222 of the Statutes of 1993end insert shall apply only
2subdivisionend delete
3to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 1994.
begin insertSection 23610.5 of the end insertbegin insertRevenue and Taxation Codeend insertbegin insert is
5amended to read:end insert
(a) (1) There shall be allowed as a credit against the
7begin delete “tax” (asend deletebegin insert “tax,” asend insert defined by Sectionbegin delete 23036)end deletebegin insert 23036,end insert a state
8low-income housing tax credit in an amount equal to the amount
9determined in subdivision (c), computed in accordance with Section
1042 of the Internal Revenuebegin delete Code of 1986,end deletebegin insert
Code, relating to
11low-income housing credit,end insert except as otherwise provided in this
12section.
13(2) “Taxpayer,” for purposes of this section, means the sole
14owner in the case of a “C” corporation, the partners in the case of
15a partnership, and the shareholders in the case of an “S”
16corporation.
17(3) “Housing sponsor,” for purposes of this section, means the
18sole owner in the case of a “C” corporation, the partnership in the
19case of a partnership, and the “S” corporation in the case of an “S”
20corporation.
21(b) (1) The amount of the credit allocated to any housing
22sponsor shall be authorized by the California Tax Credit Allocation
23Committee, or any successor thereof, based on a project’s need
24for the credit for economic feasibility in accordance with the
25
requirements of this section.
26(A) The low-income housing project shall be located in
27California and shall meet either of the following requirements:
28(i) Except for projects to provide farmworker housing, as defined
29in subdivision (h) of Section 50199.7 of the Health and Safety
30Code, that are allocated credits solely under the set-aside described
31in subdivision (c) of Section 50199.20 of the Health and Safety
32Code, the project’s housing sponsor has been allocated by the
33California Tax Credit Allocation Committee a credit for federal
34income tax purposes under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue
35Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing creditend insert.
36(ii) It qualifies for a credit under Section 42(h)(4)(B) of the
37Internal
Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to special rule where 50 percent
38or more of building is financed with tax-exempt bonds subject to
39volume capend insert.
P28 1(B) The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee shall not
2require fees for the credit under this section in addition to those
3fees required for applications for the tax credit pursuant to Section
442 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
5creditend insert. The committee may require a fee if the application for the
6credit under this section is submitted in a calendar year after the
7year the application is submitted for the federal tax credit.
8(C) (i) For a project that receives a preliminary reservation
of
9the state low-income housing tax credit, allowed pursuant to
10subdivision (a), on or after January 1, 2009,begin delete and before January 1, the credit shall be allocated to the partners of a partnership
112016,end delete
12owning the project in accordance with the partnership agreement,
13regardless of how the federal low-income housing tax credit with
14respect to the project is allocated to the partners, or whether the
15allocation of the credit under the terms of the agreement has
16substantial economic effect, within the meaning of Section 704(b)
17of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to determination of
18distributive shareend insert.
19(ii) To the extent the allocation of the credit to a partner under
20this section lacks substantial economic effect, any loss or deduction
21otherwise allowable
under this part that is attributable to the sale
22or other disposition of that partner’s partnership interest made prior
23to the expiration of the federal credit shall not be allowed in the
24taxable year in which the sale or other disposition occurs, but shall
25instead be deferred until and treated as if it occurred in the first
26taxable year immediately following the taxable year in which the
27federal credit period expires for the project described in clause (i).
28(iii) This subparagraph shall not apply to a project that receives
29a preliminary reservation of state low-income housing tax credits
30under the set-aside described in subdivision (c) of Section 50199.20
31of the Health and Safety Code unless the project also receives a
32preliminary reservation of federal low-income housing tax credits.
33(iv) This subparagraph shall cease to be operative with respect
34to any project that receives a preliminary reservation of a credit
35on or after January 1, 2016.
36(2) (A) The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee shall
37certify to the housing sponsor the amount of tax credit under this
38section allocated to the housing sponsor for each credit period.
P29 1(B) In the case of a partnership or an “S” corporation, the
2housing sponsor shall provide a copy of the California Tax Credit
3Allocation Committee certification to the taxpayer.
4(C) The taxpayer shall, upon request, provide a copy of the
5certification to the Franchise Tax Board.
6(D) All elections made by the taxpayer pursuant to Section 42
7of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
8credit,end insert shall apply to this section.
9(E) (i) Except as described in clause (ii), for buildings located
10in designated difficult development areas (DDAs) or qualified
11census tracts (QCTs), as defined in Section 42(d)(5)(B) of the
12Internal Revenue Code,begin insert
relating to increase in credit for buildings
13in high-cost areas,end insert credits may be allocated under this section in
14the amounts prescribed in subdivision (c), provided that the amount
15of credit allocated under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
16relating to low-income housing credit,end insert is computed on 100 percent
17of the qualified basis of the building.
18(ii) Notwithstanding clause (i), the California Tax Credit
19Allocation Committee may allocate the credit for buildings located
20in DDAs or QCTs that are restricted to having 50 percent of its
21occupants be special needs households, as defined in the California
22Code of Regulations by the California Tax Credit Allocation
23Committee, even if the taxpayer receives federal credits pursuant
24to Section 42(d)(5)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code,begin insert
relating to
25increase in credit for buildings in high-cost areas,end insert provided that
26the credit allowed under this section shall not exceed 30 percent
27of the eligible basis of the building.
28(G) (i) The California Tax Credit Allocation Committee may
29allocate a credit under this section in exchange for a credit allocated
30pursuant to Section 42(d)(5)(B) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
31relating to increase in credit for buildings in high-cost areas,end insert in
32amounts up to 30 percent of the eligible basis of a building if the
33credits allowed under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
34relating to low-income housing credit,end insert are reduced by an equivalent
35amount.
36(ii) An equivalent amount shall be determined by the California
37Tax Credit Allocation Committee based upon the relative amount
38required to produce an equivalent state tax credit to the taxpayer.
39(c) Section 42(b) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
40applicable percentage,end insert shall be modified as follows:
P30 1(1) In the case of any qualified low-income building placed in
2service by the housing sponsor during 1987, the term “applicable
3percentage” means 9 percent for each of the first three years and
43 percent for the fourth year for new buildings (whether or not the
5building is federally subsidized) and for existing buildings.
6(2) In the case of any
qualified low-income building that receives
7an allocation after 1989 and is a new building not federally
8subsidized, the term “applicable percentage” means the following:
9(A) For each of the first three years, the percentage prescribed
10by the Secretary of the Treasury for new buildings that are not
11federally subsidized for the taxable year, determined in accordance
12with the requirements of Section 42(b)(2) of the Internal Revenue
13Code,begin insert relating to temporary minimum credit rate for non-federally
14subsidized new buildings,end insert in lieu of the percentage prescribed in
15Section 42(b)(1)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code.
16(B) For the fourth year, the difference between 30 percent and
17the sum of the applicable percentages for the first three years.
18(3) In the case of any qualified low-income building that receives
19an allocation after 1989 and that is a new building that is federally
20subsidized or that is an existing building that is “at risk of
21conversion,” the term “applicable percentage” means the following:
22(A) For each of the first three years, the percentage prescribed
23by the Secretary of the Treasury for new buildings that are federally
24subsidized for the taxable year.
25(B) For the fourth year, the difference between 13 percent and
26the sum of the applicable percentages for the first three years.
27(4) For purposes of this section, the term “at risk of conversion,”
28with respect to an existing property means a property that satisfies
29all of the following criteria:
30(A) The property is a multifamily rental housing development
31in which at least 50 percent of the units receive governmental
32assistance pursuant to any of the following:
33(i) New construction, substantial rehabilitation, moderate
34rehabilitation, property disposition, and loan management set-aside
35programs, or any other program providing project-based assistance
36pursuant to Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937,
37Section 1437f of Title 42 of the United States Code, as amended.
38(ii) The Below-Market-Interest-Rate Program pursuant to
39Section 221(d)(3) of the National Housing Act, Sections
401715l(d)(3) and (5) of Title 12 of the United States Code.
P31 1(iii) Section 236 of the National Housing Act, Section 1715z-1
2of Title 12 of the United States
Code.
3(iv) Programs for rent supplement assistance pursuant to Section
4101 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965, Section
51701s of Title 12 of the United States Code, as amended.
6(v) Programs pursuant to Section 515 of the Housing Act of
71949, Section 1485 of Title 42 of the United States Code, as
8amended.
9(vi) The low-income housing credit program set forth in Section
1042 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to low-income housing
11creditend insert.
12(B) The restrictions on rent and income levels will terminate or
13the federally insured mortgage on the property is eligible for
14prepayment any time within five years before or after the date of
15
application to the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee.
16(C) The entity acquiring the property enters into a regulatory
17agreement that requires the property to be operated in accordance
18with the requirements of this section for a period equal to the
19greater of 55 years or the life of the property.
20(D) The property satisfies the requirements of Section 42(e) of
21the Internal Revenue Codebegin delete regardingend deletebegin insert relating toend insert rehabilitation
22expendituresbegin insert treated as a separate new buildingend insert, except that the
23provisions of Section 42(e)(3)(A)(ii)(I) shall not apply.
24(d) The term “qualified low-income housing project” as defined
25in Section 42(c)(2) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
26qualified low-income building,end insert is modified by adding the following
27requirements:
28(1) The taxpayer shall be entitled to receive a cash distribution
29from the operations of the project, after funding required reserves,
30begin delete thatend deletebegin insert that,end insert at the election of the taxpayer, is equal to:
31(A) An amount not to exceed 8 percent of the lesser of:
32(i) The
owner equity,begin delete thatend deletebegin insert whichend insert shall include the amount of the
33capital contributions actually paid to the housing sponsor and shall
34not include any amounts until they are paid on an investor note.
35(ii) Twenty percent of the adjusted basis of the building as of
36the close of the first taxable year of the credit period.
37(B) The amount of the cashflow from those units in the building
38that are not low-income units. For purposes of computing cashflow
39under this subparagraph, operating costs shall be allocated to the
40low-income units using the “floor space fraction,” as defined in
P32 1Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
relating to low-income
2housing creditend insert.
3(C) Any amount allowed to be distributed under subparagraph
4(A) that is not available for distribution during the first five years
5of the compliance period may be accumulated and distributed any
6time during the first 15 years of the compliance period but not
7thereafter.
8(2) The limitation on return shall apply in the aggregate to the
9partners if the housing sponsor is a partnership and in the aggregate
10to the shareholders if the housing sponsor is an “S” corporation.
11(3) The housing sponsor shall apply any cash available for
12distribution in excess of the amount eligible to be distributed under
13paragraph (1) to reduce the rent on rent-restricted units or to
14increase the number of rent-restricted units subject to the tests of
15Section 42(g)(1) of the
Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to in
16generalend insert.
17(e) The provisions of Section 42(f) of the Internal Revenue
18Codebegin insert, relating to definition and special rules relating to credit
19period,end insert
shall be modified as follows:
20(1) The term “credit period” as defined in Section 42(f)(1) of
21the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to credit period defined,end insert is
22modified by substituting “four taxable years” for “10 taxable
23years.”
24(2) The special rule for the first taxable year of the credit period
25under Section 42(f)(2) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
26special rule for 1st year of credit period,end insert shall not apply to the tax
27credit under this section.
28(3) Section 42(f)(3) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
relating to
29determination of applicable percentage with respect to increases
30in qualified basis after 1st year of credit period,end insert
is modified to
31read:
32If, as of the close of any taxable year in the compliance period,
33after the first year of the credit period, the qualified basis of any
34building exceeds the qualified basis of that building as of the close
35of the first year of the credit period, the housing sponsor, to the
36extent of its tax credit allocation, shall be eligible for a credit on
37the excess in an amount equal to the applicable percentage
38determined pursuant to subdivision (c) for the four-year period
39beginning with the later of the taxable years in which the increase
40in qualified basis occurs.
P33 1(f) The provisions of Section 42(h) of the Internal Revenue
2Codebegin insert, relating to limitation on aggregate credit allowable with
3respect to projects located in a state,end insert shall be modified as follows:
4(1) Section 42(h)(2) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
5allocated credit amount to apply to all taxable years ending during
6or after credit allocation year,end insert shall not be applicable and instead
7the following provisions shall be applicable:
8The total amount for the four-year credit period of the housing
9credit dollars allocated in a calendar year to any building shall
10reduce the aggregate housing credit dollar amount of the California
11Tax Credit Allocation Committee for the calendar year in which
12the allocation is made.
13(2) Paragraphs (3), (4), (5), (6)(E)(i)(II), (6)(F), (6)(G), (6)(I),
14(7), and (8) of Section 42(h) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
relating
15to limitation on aggregate credit allowable with respect to projects
16located in a state,end insert shall not be applicable.
17(g) The aggregate housing credit dollar amount that may be
18allocated annually by the California Tax Credit Allocation
19Committee pursuant to this section, Section 12206, and Section
2017058 shall be an amount equal to the sum of all the following:
21(1) Seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) for the 2001 calendar
22year, and, for the 2002 calendar year and each calendar year
23thereafter, seventy million dollars ($70,000,000) increased by the
24percentage, if any, by which the Consumer Price Index for the
25preceding calendar year exceeds the Consumer Price Index for the
262001 calendar year. For the purposes of this paragraph, the term
27“Consumer Price Index” means the last Consumer Price Index for
28All Urban Consumers published by the federal
Department of
29Labor.
30(2) The unused housing credit ceiling, if any, for the preceding
31calendar years.
32(3) The amount of housing credit ceiling returned in the calendar
33year. For purposes of this paragraph, the amount of housing credit
34dollar amount returned in the calendar year equals the housing
35credit dollar amount previously allocated to any project that does
36not become a qualified low-income housing project within the
37period required by this section or to any project with respect to
38which an allocation is canceled by mutual consent of the California
39Tax Credit Allocation Committee and the allocation recipient.
P34 1(4) Five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) per calendar year
2for projects to provide farmworker housing, as defined in
3subdivision (h) of Section 50199.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
4(5) The amount of any unallocated or returned credits under
5former Sections 17053.14, 23608.2, and 23608.3, as those sections
6read prior to January 1, 2009, until fully exhausted for projects to
7provide farmworker housing, as defined in subdivision (h) of
8Section 50199.7 of the Health and Safety Code.
9(h) The term “compliance period” as defined in Section 42(i)(1)
10of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to compliance period,end insert is
11modified to mean, with respect to any building, the period of 30
12consecutive taxable years beginning with the first taxable year of
13the credit period with respect thereto.
14(i) Section 42(j) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
relating to
15recapture of credit,end insert shall not be applicable and the following shall
16be substituted in its place:
17The requirements of this section shall be set forth in a regulatory
18agreement between the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee
19and the housing sponsor, and this agreement shall be subordinated,
20when required, to any lien or encumbrance of any banks or other
21institutional lenders to the project. The regulatory agreement
22entered into pursuant to subdivision (f) of Section 50199.14 of the
23Health and Safety Code shall apply, provided that the agreement
24includes all of the following provisions:
25(1) A term not less than the compliance period.
26(2) A requirement that the agreement be recorded in the official
27records of the county in which the qualified low-income housing
28project is located.
29(3) A provision stating which state and local agencies can
30enforce the regulatory agreement in the event the housing sponsor
31fails to satisfy any of the requirements of this section.
32(4) A provision that the regulatory agreement shall be deemed
33a contract enforceable by tenants as third-party beneficiaries
34begin delete thereto,end deletebegin insert theretoend insert and that allows individuals, whether prospective,
35present, or former occupants of the building, who meet the income
36limitation applicable to the building, the right to enforce the
37regulatory agreement in any state court.
38(5) A provision incorporating the requirements of Section 42
39of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
relating to low-income housing
40credit,end insert as modified by this section.
P35 1(6) A requirement that the housing sponsor notify the California
2Tax Credit Allocation Committee or its designee if there is a
3determination by the Internal Revenue Service that the project is
4not in compliance with Section 42(g) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
5relating to qualified low-income housing projectend insert.
6(7) A requirement that the housing sponsor, as security for the
7performance of the housing sponsor’s obligations under the
8regulatory agreement, assign the housing sponsor’s interest in rents
9that it receives from the project, provided that until there is a
10default under the regulatory agreement, the housing sponsor is
11entitled to collect and retain the rents.
12(8) A provision that the remedies available in the event of a
13default under the regulatory agreement that is not cured within a
14reasonable cure period include, but are not limited to, allowing
15any of the parties designated to enforce the regulatory agreement
16to collect all rents with respect to the project; taking possession of
17the project and operating the project in accordance with the
18regulatory agreement until the enforcer determines the housing
19sponsor is in a position to operate the project in accordance with
20the regulatory agreement; applying to any court for specific
21performance; securing the appointment of a receiver to operate
22the project; or any other relief as may be appropriate.
23(j) (1) The committee shall allocate the housing credit on a
24regular basis consisting of two or more periods in each calendar
25year during which applications may be filed and
considered. The
26committee shall establish application filing deadlines, the maximum
27percentage of federal and state low-income housing tax credit
28ceiling that may be allocated by the committee in that period, and
29the approximate date on which allocations shall be made. If the
30enactment of federal or state law, the adoption of rules or
31regulations, or other similar events prevent the use of two allocation
32periods, the committee may reduce the number of periods and
33adjust the filing deadlines, maximum percentage of credit allocated,
34andbegin insert
theend insert allocation dates.
35(2) The committee shall adopt a qualified allocation plan, as
36provided in Section 42(m)(1) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert,
37relating to plans for allocation of credit among projectsend insert. In
38adopting this plan, the committee shall comply with the provisions
39of Sections 42(m)(1)(B) and 42(m)(1)(C) of the Internal Revenue
P36 1Codebegin insert, relating to qualified allocation plan and relating to certain
2selection criteria must be used, respectivelyend insert.
3(3) Notwithstanding Section 42(m) of the Internal Revenue
4Code,begin insert relating to responsibilities of
housing credit agencies,end insert
the
5California Tax Credit Allocation Committee shall allocate housing
6credits in accordance with the qualified allocation plan and
7regulations, which shall include the following provisions:
8(A) All housing sponsors, as defined by paragraph (3) of
9subdivision (a), shall demonstrate at the time the application is
10filed with the committee that the project meets the following
11threshold requirements:
12(i) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate that there is a need
13for low-income housing in the community or region for which it
14is proposed.
15(ii) The project’s proposed financing, including tax credit
16proceeds, shall be sufficient to complete the project and shall be
17adequate to operate the project for the extended use period.
18(iii) The project
shall have enforceable financing commitments,
19either construction or permanent financing, for at least 50 percent
20of the total estimated financing of the project.
21(iv) The housing sponsor shall have and maintain control of the
22site for the project.
23(v) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate that the project
24complies with all applicable local land use and zoning ordinances.
25(vi) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate that the project
26development team has the experience and the financial capacity
27to ensure project completion and operation for the extended use
28period.
29(vii) The housing sponsor shall demonstrate the amount of tax
30credit that is necessary for the financial feasibility of the project
31and its viability as a qualified low-income housing project
32
throughout the extended use period, taking into account operating
33expenses, a supportable debt service, reserves, funds set aside for
34rental subsidies and required equity, and a development fee that
35does not exceed a specified percentage of the eligible basis of the
36project prior to inclusion of the development fee in the eligible
37basis, as determined by the committee.
38(B) The committee shall give a preference to those projects
39satisfying all of the threshold requirements of subparagraph (A)
40if both of the following apply:
P37 1(i) The project serves the lowest income tenants at rents
2affordable to those tenants.
3(ii) The project is obligated to serve qualified tenants for the
4longest period.
5(C) In addition to the provisions of subparagraphs (A) and (B),
6
the committee shall use the following criteria in allocating housing
7credits:
8(i) Projects serving large families in which a substantial number,
9as defined by the committee, of all residential units are low-income
10units with three and more bedrooms.
11(ii) Projects providing single-room occupancy units serving
12very low income tenants.
13(iii) Existing projects that are “at risk of conversion,” as defined
14by paragraph (4) of subdivision (c).
15(iv) Projects for which a public agency provides direct or indirect
16long-term financial support for at least 15 percent of the total
17project development costs or projects for which the owner’s equity
18constitutes at least 30 percent of the total project development
19costs.
20(v) Projects that provide tenant amenities not generally available
21to residents of low-income housing projects.
22(4) For purposes of allocating credits pursuant to this section,
23the committee shall not give preference to any project by virtue
24of the date of submission of its application except to break a tie
25when two or more of the projects have an equal rating.
26(5) Not less than 20 percent of the low-income housing tax
27credits available annually under this section, Section 12206, and
28Section 17058 shall be set aside for allocation to rural areas as
29defined in Section 50199.21 of the Health and Safety Code. Any
30amount of credit set aside for rural areas remaining on or after
31October 31 of any calendar year shall be available for allocation
32to any eligible project. No amount of credit set aside for rural areas
33shall be
considered available for any eligible project so long as
34there are eligible rural applications pending on October 31.
35(k) Section 42(l) of the Internal Revenue Codebegin insert, relating to
36certifications and other reports to secretary,end insert shall be modified as
37follows:
38The term “secretary” shall be replaced by the termbegin delete “California begin insert “Franchiseend insert Tax Board.”
39Franchiseend delete
P38 1(l) In the case where thebegin delete stateend delete credit allowed under this section
2exceeds the “tax,” the excess may
be carried over to reduce the
3“tax” in the following year, and succeeding years if necessary,
4until the credit has been exhausted.
5(m) A project that received an allocation of a 1989 federal
6housing credit dollar amount shall be eligible to receive an
7allocation of a 1990 state housing credit dollar amount, subject to
8all of the following conditions:
9(1) The project was not placed in service prior to 1990.
10(2) To the extent the amendments made to this section by the
11Statutes of 1990 conflict with any provisions existing in this section
12prior to those amendments, the prior provisions of law shall prevail.
13(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), a project applying for an
14allocation under this subdivision shall be subject to the
15requirements of paragraph (3) of
subdivision (j).
16(n) The credit period with respect to an allocation of credit in
171989 by the California Tax Credit Allocation Committee of which
18any amount is attributable to unallocated credit from 1987 or 1988
19shall not begin until after December 31, 1989.
20(o) The provisions of Section 11407(a) of Public Law 101-508,
21relating to the effective date of the extension of the low-income
22housing credit, shall apply to calendar years after 1989.
23(p) The provisions of Section 11407(c) of Public Law 101-508,
24relating to election to accelerate credit, shall not apply.
25(q) (1) A corporation may elect to assign any portion of any
26credit allowed under this section to one or more affiliated
27corporations for each taxable year in which the
credit is allowed.
28For purposes of this subdivision, “affiliated corporation” has the
29meaning provided in subdivision (b) of Section 25110, as that
30section was amended by Chapter 881 of the Statutes of 1993, as
31of the last day of the taxable year in which the credit is allowed,
32except that “100 percent” is substituted for “more than 50 percent”
33wherever it appears in the section, as that section was amended by
34Chapter 881 of the Statutes of 1993, and “voting common stock”
35is substituted for “voting stock” wherever it appears in the section,
36as that section was amended by Chapter 881 of the Statutes of
371993.
38(2) The election provided in paragraph (1):
39(A) May be based on any method selected by the corporation
40that originally receives the credit.
P39 1(B) Shall be irrevocable for the taxable year the credit is allowed,
2once
made.
3(C) May be changed for any subsequent taxable year if the
4election to make the assignment is expressly shown on each of the
5returns of the affiliated corporations that assign and receive the
6credits.
7(r) Any unused credit may continue to be carried forward, as
8provided in subdivision (l), until the credit has been exhausted.
9This section shall remain in effect on and after December 1,
101990, for as long as Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code,
11relating to low-income housingbegin delete credits,end deletebegin insert credit,end insert remains in effect.
12(s) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, for any credits awarded
13under this section for taxable year beginning on or after January
141, 2016, a taxpayer may sell all or any portion of any credit
15allowed under this section to one or more unrelated parties for
16each taxable year in which the credit is allowed.
17(2) (A) The sale authorized by paragraph (1) may be
18documented based on any method selected by the taxpayer that
19originally receives the credit.
20(B) The sale authorized by paragraph (1) may be changed for
21any subsequent taxable year if the sale is expressly shown on each
22of the returns of both the transferor and the transferee that sell
23and receive the credit.
24(C) The taxpayer that originally received the credit shall report
25to the Franchise Tax Board prior to the sale of the credit, in the
26form and manner specified by the Franchise Tax Board, all
27required information regarding the purchase and sale of the credit,
28including the social security or other taxpayer identification
29number of the unrelated party to whom the credit has been sold,
30the face amount of the credit sold, and the amount of consideration
31received by the taxpayer for the sale of the credit.
32(D) A subsequent taxpayer that holds the credit shall report to
33the Franchise Tax Board prior to the sale of the credit, in the form
34and manner specified by the Franchise
Tax Board, all required
35information regarding the purchase and sale of the credit,
36including the social security or other taxpayer identification
37number of the unrelated party to whom the credit has been sold
38and the face amount of the credit sold.
P40 1(3) A credit may be sold pursuant to this subdivision to more
2than one unrelated party, and may be resold by the unrelated party
3to another taxpayer or other party.
4(4) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the taxpayer
5that originally received the credit that is sold pursuant to
6paragraph (1) shall remain solely liable for all obligations and
7liabilities imposed on the taxpayer by this section with respect to
8the credit, none of which shall apply to any party to whom the
9credit has been sold or subsequently transferred.
Parties who
10purchase credits pursuant to paragraph (1) shall be entitled to
11utilize the purchased credits in the same manner in which the
12taxpayer that originally received the credit could utilize them.
13(5) A taxpayer shall not sell a credit allowed by this section if
14the taxpayer was allowed the credit on any tax return of the
15taxpayer.
16(s)
end delete
17begin insert(t)end insert The amendments to this section made bybegin delete the act adding this begin insert
Chapter 1222 of the Statutes of 1993end insert shall apply only
18subdivisionend delete
19to taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 1994, except that
20paragraph (1) of subdivision (q), as amended, shall apply to taxable
21years beginning on or after January 1, 1993.
This act provides for a tax levy within the meaning of
23Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into immediate effect.
Section 50466 is added to the Health and Safety
25Code, to read:
In order to give priority for accessible units to persons
27with disabilities in multifamily housing projects that have received
28a Department of Housing and Community Development grant or
29loan, and that have accessible units, all of the following shall apply:
30(a) Owners and managers of these multifamily housing projects
31shall adopt suitable means to ensure that information regarding
32the availability of accessible residential dwelling units reaches
33eligible individuals with disabilities and take reasonable,
34nondiscriminatory steps to maximize the use of those units by
35eligible disabled individuals who require the accessibility of the
36particular unit.
37(b) When an accessible unit becomes vacant, an owner or
38
manager shall offer the unit:
39(1) First, to a current occupant of another unit, within the same
40project or within a comparable project under common control,
P41 1with a disability and who requires the accessibility feature of the
2vacant unit, but is occupying a unit that does not have those
3features, or if no such current occupant exists.
4(2) Second, to an eligible qualified applicant, currently on the
5owner’s or manager’s waiting list, if one exists, with a disability
6and who requires the accessibility features of the vacant unit.
7(c) After compliance with subdivision (b), if an accessible unit
8is offered by an owner or manager to an applicant who does not
9have a disability and who does not require accessibility
features
10of the unit, the offer shall be made subject to the condition that the
11applicant agree to move to a nonaccessible unit if the accessible
12unit is needed for a person with a disability.
13(d) The Department of Housing and Community Development
14shall adopt regulations to implement this section.
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