BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    




                   Senate Appropriations Committee Fiscal Summary
                           Senator Christine Kehoe, Chair

                                           996 (Lowenthal)
          
          Hearing Date:  05/27/2010           Amended: 05/12/2010
          Consultant: Mark McKenzie       Policy Vote: Rev&Tax 5-0
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          ____
          BILL SUMMARY:   SB 996 would refund property taxes previously  
          paid on specified low-income housing rental properties that were  
          granted a "welfare exemption" from property taxation pursuant to  
          recent special legislation.
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          ____
                            Fiscal Impact (in thousands)

           Major Provisions         2010-11      2011-12       2012-13     Fund
           
          Property tax refund    $226                             General
          (state impact)
          __________
          Staff notes that the total property tax refund would be  
          approximately $550,000.  In Los Angeles County, 41.1% of local  
          property taxes are allocated to schools and this bill would  
          require school entities to refund about $226,050.  The General  
          Fund would backfill this amount pursuant to Proposition 98.
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          ____

          STAFF COMMENTS:  SUSPENSE FILE.
          
          Existing law provides for an unlimited property tax exemption  
          ("welfare exemption") for projects owned and operated by a  
          nonprofit organization, subject to the following conditions:   
          the nonprofit receives low-income housing tax credits or  
          government financing for the property; the property is subject  
          to legal restrictions limiting its use to low-income housing  
          purposes; savings are used to maintain affordability or reduce  
          rents of units occupied by low-income tenants.  Partial and  
          limited welfare exemptions are also authorized under certain  
          conditions related to the percentage of units serving low-income  
          households, and restrictions on the use of savings related to  
          the exemption.

          The Long Beach Affordable Housing Coalition (LBAHC) purchased 12  










          affordable housing developments in 2004 that had been created in  
          pursuant to a consent decree to mitigate housing that was  
          demolished to build the Century Freeway (I-105) in Los Angeles  
          County.  The "Century Freeway Housing Program" was a state run  
          program under the Department of Housing and Community  
          Development until 1995, when it was privatized and transferred  
          to the nonprofit Century Housing Coalition.  These properties  
          had always qualified for a property tax exemption until  
          purchased by LBAHC in 2004.  LBAHC did not qualify for the  
          "welfare exemption" because the properties were purchased with  
          conventional financing, rather than government financing, and  
          LBAHC does not receive low-income housing tax credits on the  
          properties.  The enactment of SB 1284 (Lowenthal), Chapter 524  
          of 2008, cancelled any outstanding tax debt imposed on these  
          consent decree rental housing projects between January 1, 2002  
          and January 1, 2009, as specified.  That bill was limited to  
          cancellations of outstanding tax because at the time it was  
          understood that no taxes had been paid on the properties 
          Page 2
          SB 996 (Lowenthal)

          while the issue of welfare exemption eligibility was being  
          pursued.  However, some property tax payments had been made by  
          financiers of the projects on behalf of the nonprofit  
          organization owner to avoid the sale of the projects for tax  
          delinquency.  LBAHC lenders are now demanding a refund of the  
          property taxes it paid prior to the application of retroactive  
          eligibility for the welfare exemption.

          SB 996 would provide for the refund of any tax, interest, or  
          penalty that has been paid on the LBAHC properties.

          The Los Angeles County Assessor's Office estimates these parcels  
          have a total assessed value of $16,772,000.  The L.A. County Tax  
          Collector indicates that approximately $665,000 in property  
          taxes have been paid on the properties.  This bill would require  
          local agencies to refund the property taxes paid, not including  
          the amounts collected to pay for debt service tax rates in  
          excess of the general one percent levy.  The total amount that  
          would be refunded as a result of this bill is approximately  
          $550,000.  As indicated above, approximately 226,000 of this  
          amount would be refunded by schools, which the General Fund  
          would be obligated to backfill.