Bill Text: CA AB1015 | 2013-2014 | Regular Session | Introduced


Bill Title: School facilities: joint occupancy: high-performance grants and tax credits.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2014-02-03 - From committee: Filed with the Chief Clerk pursuant to Joint Rule 56. [AB1015 Detail]

Download: California-2013-AB1015-Introduced.html
BILL NUMBER: AB 1015	INTRODUCED
	BILL TEXT


INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member Hagman

                        FEBRUARY 22, 2013

   An act to add Section 17524.5 to, and to add Article 10.7
(commencing with Section 17077.50) to Chapter 12.5 of Part 10 of
Division 1 of Title 1 of, the Education Code, relating to school
facilities.



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 1015, as introduced, Hagman. School facilities: joint
occupancy: high-performance grants and tax credits.
   (1) The Kindergarten-University Public Education Facilities Bond
Act of 2006 (bond act), approved by the voters as Proposition 1D at
the November 7, 2006, statewide general election, authorizes the
issuance and sale of a total of $10,416,000,000 in general obligation
bonds. The bond act requires that $100,000,000 of the proceeds from
the sale of those bonds be allocated for purposes of incentive grants
to promote the use of designs and materials in new construction and
modernization projects that include attributes of high-performance
schools.
   Existing law authorizes a school district to enter into leases and
agreements relating to real property and buildings to be used
jointly by the school district and any private person, firm, local
governmental agency, or corporation, requires the governing board of
a school district to own the site upon which a building is to be used
in this manner before entering into a lease or agreement, and
requires a lease or agreement to include a provision requiring the
private person, firm, local governmental agency, or corporation to
construct, or provide for the construction, on the demised premises
of a building or buildings for the joint use of the school district
and the private person, firm, local governmental agency, or
corporation.
   This bill would authorize the State Allocation Board to provide an
incentive grant to school districts to fund the use of designs and
materials characteristic of high-performance schools for school
districts executing a joint-occupancy agreement and would authorize
the incentive grant to be used for high-performance components of a
new construction or modernization project at any schoolsite within
the school district. The bill would provide that incentive grant
eligibility is established by entering into a joint-occupancy lease
and agreement and would require the agreement to generate income for
the school district within 7 years after the agreement is entered
into.
   (2) The Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law
authorize various credits against the taxes imposed by those law,
including a credit for the startup expenses of constructing a child
care facility, as specified.
   This bill would authorize a specified tax credit, as applicable,
for a developer, contractor, investor, or combination of private
sector partners that execute a joint occupancy agreement with school
districts, as described above, or execute an agreement with the
governing board of a school district to purchase, lease, or exchange
school property in accordance with specified requirements. The bill
would authorize the tax credit to be a specified percentage of the
total cost to the developer, contractor, investor, or combination of
private sector partners of the joint-occupancy project for up to 7
taxable years. The bill would authorize a school district or county
office of education to establish a foundation with the authority to
accept tax-deductible donations from a private sector entity that is
a party to a joint-occupancy agreement. The bill would also authorize
a governing board of a school district to enter into an agreement
with a private sector entity or nonprofit entity for purposes of
improving educational facilities and would authorize that agreement
to include provisions authorizing the private sector entity or
nonprofit entity to use the improved educational facilities at times
that do not conflict with operations or extracurricular activities of
the school district if the private sector entity or nonprofit entity
contributes substantial resources to improving the educational
facilities, as specified.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Article 10.7 (commencing with Section 17077.50) is
added to Chapter 12.5 of Part 10 of Division 1 of Title 1 of the
Education Code, to read:

      Article 10.7.  Joint-Occupancy Facilities


   17077.50.  (a) With funds made available for purposes of this
article, the board may provide incentive grants to fund the use of
designs and materials characteristic of high-performance schools for
those school districts executing a joint-occupancy agreement for
facilities on schoolsites for kindergarten and grades 1 to 12,
inclusive.
   (b) A school district with a joint-occupancy agreement entered
into pursuant to Article 8 (commencing with Section 17515) of Chapter
4 of Part 10.5 may apply to the board for an incentive grant under
this article. The incentive grant may be used for high-performance
components of new construction or modernization projects at a
schoolsite within the school district.
   (c) A school district is not required to apply for state funding
of a new construction or modernization project pursuant to this
chapter in order to be eligible for an incentive grant.
   (d) Eligibility for an incentive grant is established by entering
into a joint-occupancy agreement pursuant to Article 8 (commencing
with Section 17515) of Chapter 4 of Part 10.5.
   (e) A joint-occupancy agreement entered into pursuant to Article 8
(commencing with Section 17515) of Chapter 4 of Part 10.5 shall
generate income for the school district within seven years after the
joint-occupancy agreement is entered into.
   17077.55.  The board may provide an incentive grant for
high-performance components of a new construction or modernization
project funded in whole or in part with proceeds from the sale or
lease of surplus property by a school district.
   17077.60.  For purposes of this article, high-performance
components include, but are not limited to, designs and materials
that promote the efficient use of energy and water, the maximum use
of natural lighting, improved indoor air quality, the use of recycled
materials and materials that emit a minimum of toxic substances, the
use of acoustics conducive to teaching and learning, and other
characteristics of high-performance schools.
  SEC. 2.  Section 17524.5 is added to the Education Code, to read:
   17524.5.  (a) For taxable years beginning on or after January 1,
2014, there shall be allowed to a developer, contractor, investor, or
combination of private sector partners that execute a
joint-occupancy agreement with the governing board of a school
district pursuant to Section 17524 a credit against the "net tax," as
defined in Section 17039 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, or "tax,"
as defined in Section 23036 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, as
applicable, as follows:
   (1) Commencing in the first taxable year of construction, as
demonstrated by a construction contract for all or a portion of the
joint-occupied property of the school district, 8 percent of the
total cost to the developer, contractor, investor, or combination of
private sector partners of the joint-occupancy project for the first
four taxable years and 6 percent of the total cost to the developer,
contractor, investor, or combination of private sector partners of
the joint-occupancy project for three subsequent taxable years if the
joint-occupancy agreement requires the developer, contractor,
investor, or combination of private sector partners to contribute at
least 50 percent of the cost for any of the following:
   (A) Certified rehabilitation of certified historic structures on
the schoolsite of the joint-occupancy facility or at a different
schoolsite location within the geographical boundaries of the school
district or county office of education.
   (B) Renewing, rehabilitating, repairing, or replacing non-historic
schools, classrooms, ancillary facilities, and structures built
before 1976 on the schoolsite of the joint-occupancy facility or at a
different schoolsite location within the geographical boundaries of
the school district or county office of education.
   (2) Commencing in the first taxable year of construction of a
joint-occupancy project, 8 percent of the total cost to the
developer, contractor, investor, or combination of private sector
partners of the joint-occupancy project for the first four taxable
years and 6 percent of the total cost to the developer, contractor,
investor, or combination of private sector partners of the
joint-occupancy project for three subsequent taxable years.
   (b) (1) For taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2014,
there shall be allowed to a developer, contractor, investor, or
combination of private sector partners that execute an agreement with
the governing board of a school district to purchase, lease, or
exchange, school property, consistent with applicable provisions of
law, a credit against the "net tax," as defined in Section 17039 of
the Revenue and Taxation Code, or "tax," as defined in Section 23036
of the Revenue and Taxation Code, as applicable, and as described in
paragraph (2), if the agreement requires the developer, contractor,
investor, or combination of private sector partners to provide
financing, preconstruction services, or construction services that
address infrastructure needs at one or more properties of the school
district.
   (2) Commencing in the first taxable year of an agreement for
services related to infrastructure needs of the school district that
include, but are not limited to, financing, environmental or seismic
investigations, architectural or engineering services, or
construction, 8 percent of the total cost to the developer,
contractor, investor, or combination of private sector partners of
the services required by the agreement for the first four taxable
years and 6 percent of the total cost to the developer, contractor,
investor, or combination of private sector partners of the services
required by the agreement for three subsequent taxable years.
   (c) A school district or county office of education may establish
a nonprofit organization exempt from taxation pursuant to Section 501
(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code for purposes of receiving and
managing tax-deductible donations to the school district or county
office of education from a private sector entity that has entered
into a joint-occupancy agreement with the school district or county
office of education. The donations may be used for furthering the
purposes of the joint-occupancy agreement.
   (d) (1) This chapter shall not prohibit the governing board of a
school district from entering into a collaborative agreement with a
private sector entity or nonprofit entity for purposes of improving
schoolsite infrastructure, including, but not limited to, the
construction of new buildings, the renewal, modernization, repair, or
replacement of existing buildings, or the construction or
installation of equipment within a building or on a schoolsite.
   (2) A private sector entity or nonprofit entity may be authorized,
pursuant to an agreement described in paragraph (1), to use the
school buildings, grounds, or equipment included within the
agreement, if the use does not conflict with the operations or
extracurricular activities of the school district and if any of the
following apply:
   (A) The private sector entity or nonprofit entity has, pursuant to
the agreement, contributed substantial resources, including, but not
limited to, funding, building construction, schoolsite construction,
construction materials, labor, or instructional materials.
   (B) The private sector entity or nonprofit entity will, pursuant
to the agreement, contribute future one-time or ongoing maintenance
of school buildings, grounds, or equipment.   
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