Bill Text: TX SB931 | 2013-2014 | 83rd Legislature | Introduced


Bill Title: Relating to tax credits for investments in economically distressed communities.

Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2013-04-18 - Left pending in subcommittee [SB931 Detail]

Download: Texas-2013-SB931-Introduced.html
 
 
  By: Hancock S.B. No. 931
 
 
 
   
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to tax credits for investments in economically distressed
  communities.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Chapter 481, Government Code, is amended by
  adding Subchapter C to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER C.  CREDIT FOR BUSINESS GROWTH IN ECONOMICALLY
  DISTRESSED COMMUNITIES
         Sec. 481.031.  SHORT TITLE.  This subchapter shall be known
  and may be cited as the "Texas New Markets Jobs Act."
         Sec. 481.032.  DEFINITIONS.  In this subchapter:
               (1)  "Administrator" means the Economic Development
  and Tourism Division of the office of the governor.
               (2)  "Applicable percentage" means zero percent for the
  first two credit allowance dates, seven percent for the third
  credit allowance date, and eight percent for the next four credit
  allowance dates.
               (3)  "Credit allowance date" means, with respect to any
  qualified equity investment:
                     (A)  the date on which the investment is initially
  made; and
                     (B)  each of the first six anniversary dates after
  that date.
               (4)  "Long-term debt security" means any debt
  instrument issued by a qualified community development entity, at
  par value or a premium, with an original maturity date of at least
  seven years from the date of its issuance, with no acceleration of
  repayment, amortization, or prepayment features before its
  original maturity date.  The qualified community development entity
  that issues the debt instrument may not make cash interest payments
  on the debt instrument during the period beginning on the date of
  issuance and ending on the final credit allowance date in an amount
  that exceeds the cumulative operating income, as defined by
  regulations adopted under Section 45D, Internal Revenue Code of
  1986, as amended, of the qualified community development entity for
  that period before giving effect to the expense of such cash
  interest payments. The provisions of this subdivision in no way
  limit the holder's ability to accelerate payments on the debt
  instrument in situations where the issuer has defaulted on
  covenants designed to ensure compliance with this subchapter or
  Section 45D, Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
               (5)  "Purchase price" means the amount paid to the
  issuer of a qualified equity investment for the qualified equity
  investment.
               (6)  "Qualified active low-income community business"
  has the meaning assigned by Section 45D, Internal Revenue Code of
  1986, as amended, and 26 C.F.R. Sec. 1.45D-1, but limited to the
  businesses meeting the size eligibility standards of the Small
  Business Administration established in 13 C.F.R. 121.101-201 at the
  time the qualified low-income community investment is made.  A
  business is considered a qualified active low-income community
  business for the duration of the qualified community development
  entity's investment in, or loan to, the business if the entity
  reasonably expects, at the time it makes the investment or loan,
  that the business will continue to satisfy the requirements for
  being a qualified active low-income community business, other than
  the size standards of the Small Business Administration, throughout
  the entire period of the investment or loan.  The term excludes any
  business that derives or projects to derive 15 percent or more of
  its annual revenue from the rental or sale of real estate.  This
  exclusion does not apply to a business that is controlled by, or
  under common control with, another business if the second business:
                     (A)  does not derive or project to derive 15
  percent or more of its annual revenue from the rental or sale of
  real estate; and
                     (B)  is the primary tenant of the real estate
  leased from the first business.
               (7)  "Qualified community development entity" has the
  meaning assigned by Section 45D, Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
  amended, provided that the entity has entered into, for the current
  year or any prior year, an allocation agreement with the Community
  Development Financial Institutions Fund of the United States
  Department of the Treasury with respect to credits authorized by
  Section 45D, Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, which
  includes the state of Texas within the service area designated in
  the allocation agreement. The term includes subsidiary community
  development entities of any qualified community development entity
  described by this subdivision.
               (8)  "Qualified equity investment" means an equity
  investment in, or long-term debt security issued by, a qualified
  community development entity that:
                     (A)  is acquired after October 1, 2013, at its
  original issuance solely in exchange for cash;
                     (B)  has used an amount equal to at least 100
  percent of the cash purchase price of the investment to make
  qualified low-income community investments in qualified active
  low-income community businesses located in this state not later
  than the first anniversary of the initial credit allowance date;
  and
                     (C)  is designated by the issuer as a qualified
  equity investment under this subchapter and is certified by the
  administrator as not exceeding the limitation under Section
  481.035(e).  The term includes any qualified equity investment that
  does not meet the requirements of Paragraph (A) if the investment
  was a qualified equity investment in the hands of a prior holder.
               (9)  "Qualified low-income community investment" means
  a capital or equity investment in, or loan to, any qualified active
  low-income community business in which:
                     (A)  a federal qualified active low-income
  community investment of some amount is made at the same time; and
                     (B)  the annual reporting information submitted
  to the United States Department of the Treasury for that federal
  qualified active low-income community investment is also submitted
  to the administrator.
               (10)  "State premium tax liability" means any liability
  incurred by an entity under Chapters 221 through 226, Insurance
  Code, or, if the tax liability under any of those chapters is
  eliminated or reduced, the term also includes any tax liability
  imposed on an insurance company or other person that had premium tax
  liability under the laws of this state.
         Sec. 481.033.  CREDIT ESTABLISHED.  Any entity that makes a
  qualified equity investment earns a vested right to credit against
  the entity's state premium tax liability on a premium tax report
  filed under Subtitle B, Title 3, Insurance Code, which may be used
  as follows:
               (1)  on each credit allowance date of the qualified
  equity investment, the entity, or the subsequent holder of the
  qualified equity investment, is entitled to use a portion of the
  credit, during the taxable year that includes the credit allowance
  date, equal to the applicable percentage for that credit allowance
  date multiplied by the purchase price paid to the issuer of the
  qualified equity investment;
               (2)  the amount of the credit claimed by an entity may
  not exceed the amount of the entity's state premium tax liability
  for the tax year for which the credit is claimed; and
               (3)  any amount of tax credit that the entity is
  prohibited from claiming in a taxable year under the provisions of
  this subchapter may be carried forward for use in any subsequent
  taxable year.
         Sec. 481.034.  TRANSFERABILITY.  No tax credit claimed
  under this subchapter is refundable or saleable on the open market.
  Tax credits earned by a partnership, limited liability company, S
  corporation, or other pass-through entity may be allocated to the
  partners, members, or shareholders of that entity for their direct
  use in accordance with the provisions of any agreement among those
  partners, members, or shareholders. An allocation under this
  section is not considered a sale for the purposes of this
  subchapter.
         Sec. 481.035.  CERTIFICATION OF QUALIFIED EQUITY
  INVESTMENTS.  (a)  A qualified community development entity that
  seeks to have an equity investment or long-term debt security
  designated as a qualified equity investment and eligible for tax
  credits under this subchapter shall apply to the administrator.  
  The administrator shall begin accepting applications on October 2,
  2013. In its application, the qualified community development
  entity shall include the following:
               (1)  evidence of the applicant's certification as a
  qualified community development entity, including evidence of the
  service area of the entity that includes this state;
               (2)  a copy of the allocation agreement executed by the
  applicant, or its controlling entity, and the Community Development
  Financial Institutions Fund;
               (3)  a certificate executed by an executive officer of
  the applicant attesting that the allocation agreement remains in
  effect and has not been revoked or canceled by the Community
  Development Financial Institutions Fund;
               (4)  a description of the proposed amount, structure,
  and purchaser of the qualified equity investment;
               (5)  identifying information for any entity that will
  earn tax credits as a result of the issuance of the qualified equity
  investment;
               (6)  examples of the types of qualified active
  low-income community businesses in which the applicant, its
  controlling entity, or affiliates of its controlling entity have
  invested under the federal New Markets Tax Credit Program;
  applicants are not required to identify qualified active low-income
  community businesses in which they will invest when submitting an
  application;
               (7)  a nonrefundable application fee of $5,000, which
  is to be paid to the administrator and is required for each
  application submitted; and
               (8)  the refundable performance fee of $500,000
  required by Section 481.038(a).
         (b)  Not later than 30 days after the date of receipt of a
  completed application containing the information required under
  Subsection (a), including the payment of the application fee and
  the refundable performance fee, the administrator shall grant or
  deny the application in full or in part.  If the administrator
  denies any part of the application, the administrator shall inform
  the qualified community development entity of the grounds for the
  denial.  If the entity provides any additional information required
  by the administrator or otherwise completes its application within
  15 days after receiving notice of denial, the application shall be
  considered completed as of the original date of submission.  If the
  qualified community development entity fails to provide the
  information or complete its application within the 15-day period,
  the application remains denied and must be resubmitted in full with
  a new submission date.
         (c)  If the application is complete, the administrator shall
  certify the proposed equity investment or long-term debt security
  as a qualified equity investment that is eligible for tax credits
  under this subchapter, subject to the limitations provided by
  Subsection (e).  The administrator shall provide written notice of
  the certification to the qualified community development entity and
  to the comptroller.  The notice must include the names of the
  entities that earned the credits and their respective credit
  amounts.  If the names of the entities that are eligible to use the
  credits change because of a transfer of a qualified equity
  investment or an allocation under Section 481.034, the qualified
  community development entity shall notify the administrator of the
  change and the administrator shall notify the comptroller.
         (d)  The administrator shall certify qualified equity
  investments in the order it receives applications under this
  section.  Applications received on the same day are considered to
  have been received simultaneously.  For applications that are
  complete and received on the same day, the administrator shall
  certify, consistent with remaining qualified equity investment
  capacity, the qualified equity investments in proportionate
  percentages based on the ratio of the amount of qualified equity
  investment requested in an application to the total amount of
  qualified equity investments requested in all applications
  received on the same day.
         (e)  The administrator shall certify $750 million in
  qualified equity investments.  If a pending request cannot be fully
  certified because of this limit, the administrator shall certify
  the portion of the qualified equity investment requested that may
  be certified, unless the qualified community development entity
  elects to withdraw its request rather than receive a partial
  certification.
         (f)  An approved applicant may transfer all or a portion of
  its certified qualified equity investment authority to its
  controlling entity, or any subsidiary qualified community
  development entity of the controlling entity, provided that the
  applicant provides the information required in the application with
  respect to the transferee and notifies the administrator of the
  transfer not later than the 30th day after the date of the transfer.
         (g)  Not later than the 30th day after the date the applicant
  receives notice of certification, the qualified community
  development entity or any transferee under Subsection (f) shall
  issue the qualified equity investment and receive cash in the
  amount of the certified amount.  The qualified community
  development entity or transferee under Subsection (f) must provide
  the administrator with evidence of the receipt of the cash
  investment not later than the 10th day after the date of receipt.
  If the qualified community development entity or any transferee
  under Subsection (f) does not receive the cash investment and issue
  the qualified equity investment by the 30th day following the date
  of receipt of the certification notice, the certification lapses
  and the entity may not issue the qualified equity investment
  without reapplying to the administrator for certification.  Lapsed
  certifications revert to the administrator and shall be reissued,
  first, pro rata to other applicants whose qualified equity
  investment allocations were reduced under Subsection (e) and,
  thereafter, in accordance with the application process.
         Sec. 481.036.  RECAPTURE. (a)  The comptroller shall
  recapture, from the entity that claimed the credit on a return, the
  tax credit allowed under this subchapter if:
               (1)  any amount of a federal tax credit available with
  respect to a qualified equity investment that is eligible for a
  credit under this subchapter is recaptured under Section 45D,
  Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, in which event, the
  comptroller's recapture shall be proportionate to the federal
  recapture with respect to the qualified equity investment;
               (2)  the issuer redeems or makes principal repayment
  with respect to a qualified equity investment before the seventh
  anniversary of the date of issuance of the qualified equity
  investment, in which event the comptroller's recapture shall be
  proportionate to the amount of the redemption or repayment with
  respect to such qualified equity investment;
               (3)  the issuer fails to invest an amount equal to 100
  percent of the purchase price of the qualified equity investment in
  qualified low-income community investments in the state not later
  than 12 months after the date of issuance of the qualified equity
  investment and to maintain at least 100 percent of such level of
  investment in qualified low-income community investments in the
  state until the last credit allowance date for the qualified equity
  investment; or
               (4)  at any time prior to the final credit allowance
  date of a qualified equity investment, the issuer uses the cash
  proceeds of the qualified equity investment to make qualified
  low-income community investments in any qualified active
  low-income community business, including affiliated qualified
  active low-income community businesses, exclusive of reinvestments
  of capital returned or repaid with respect to earlier investments
  in such qualified active low-income community business and its
  affiliates, in excess of 25 percent of such cash proceeds.
         (b)  For the purposes of this subchapter, an investment shall
  be considered held by an issuer even if the investment has been sold
  or repaid if the issuer reinvests an amount equal to the capital
  returned to or recovered by the issuer from the original
  investment, exclusive of any profits realized, in another qualified
  low-income community investment not later than 12 months after the
  date of the receipt of such capital.  An issuer is not required to
  reinvest capital returned from qualified low-income community
  investments after the sixth anniversary of the date of issuance of
  the qualified equity investment, the proceeds of which were used to
  make the qualified low-income community investment, and the
  qualified low-income community investment shall be considered held
  by the issuer through the seventh anniversary of the date of the
  qualified equity investment's issuance.
         Sec. 481.037.  NOTICE OF NONCOMPLIANCE.  Enforcement of each
  recapture provision is subject to a six-month cure period. A
  recapture may not occur until the qualified community development
  entity has been given notice of noncompliance and given six months
  from the date of the notice to correct the noncompliance.
         Sec. 481.038.  REFUNDABLE PERFORMANCE FEE.  (a)  A qualified
  community development entity that has an equity investment or
  long-term debt security designated as a qualified equity investment
  and eligible for tax credits under this subchapter must pay a fee in
  the amount of $500,000 to the comptroller for deposit in the new
  markets performance guarantee account if:
               (1)  the qualified community development entity and its
  subsidiary qualified community development entities fail to issue
  the total amount of qualified equity investments certified by the
  administrator and receive cash in the total amount certified under
  Section 481.035(c); or
               (2)  the qualified community development entity or any
  subsidiary qualified community development entity that issues a
  qualified equity investment certified under this section fails to
  meet the investment requirement under Section 481.036(a)(3) by the
  second credit allowance date of the qualified equity investment.  
  Forfeiture of the fee under this subdivision shall be subject to the
  six-month period provided under Section 481.037.
         (b)  The fee required under Subsection (a) shall be paid to
  the comptroller and held in the new markets performance guarantee
  account until compliance with this subsection has been established.  
  The qualified community development entity may request a refund of
  the fee from the comptroller not earlier than 30 days after the date
  the entity meets all the requirements of Subsection (a). The
  comptroller has 30 days to comply with the request or to give notice
  of noncompliance.
         Sec. 481.039.  LETTER RULINGS.  (a)  The administrator or
  the comptroller shall issue letter rulings regarding the tax credit
  program authorized under this subchapter, subject to the terms and
  conditions provided by this section.  For the purposes of this
  subchapter, the term "letter ruling" means a written interpretation
  of law to a specific set of facts provided by the applicant
  requesting a letter ruling.
         (b)  The administrator or comptroller shall respond to a
  request for a letter ruling not later than the 60th day after the
  date of receipt of the request.  The applicant may provide a draft
  letter ruling for the administrator's or comptroller's
  consideration. The applicant may withdraw the request for a letter
  ruling, in writing, before the issuance of the letter ruling. The
  administrator or comptroller may refuse to issue a letter ruling
  for good cause but must list the specific reasons for refusing to
  issue the letter ruling.  Good cause includes cases in which:
               (1)  the applicant requests that the administrator or
  comptroller determine whether a statute is constitutional or a
  regulation is lawful;
               (2)  the applicant's request involves a hypothetical
  situation or alternative plans;
               (3)  the facts or issues presented in the request are
  unclear, overbroad, insufficient, or otherwise inappropriate as a
  basis on which to issue a letter ruling; and
               (4)  the issue is currently being considered in a
  rulemaking procedure, contested case, or other agency or judicial
  proceeding that may definitively resolve the issue.
         (c)  Letter rulings shall bind the administrator and
  comptroller and their agents and successors until the entity or its
  shareholders, members, or partners, as applicable, claim all tax
  credits on a Texas tax return or report, subject to the terms and
  conditions provided in properly published regulations.  The letter
  ruling shall apply only to the applicant.  In making determinations
  under this subchapter, the administrator or comptroller shall, to
  the extent applicable, look for guidance to Section 45D, Internal
  Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and the rules and regulations
  issued under that section.
         Sec. 481.040.  RETALIATORY TAX.  (a)  An entity claiming a
  tax credit under this subchapter is not required to pay any
  additional retaliatory tax levied under Chapter 281, Insurance
  Code, as a result of claiming that credit.
         (b)  In addition to the exemption under Subsection (a), an
  entity claiming a tax credit under this subchapter is not required
  to pay any additional tax that may arise from claiming the credit.
         SECTION 2.  This Act applies only to a tax report originally
  due on or after the effective date of this Act.
         SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2013.
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