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| Georgia General Assembly |
HB118.html
02 LC 18
1907TS
(SCS)
The Senate Finance and Public
Utilities Committee offered the following substitute to HB
118:
A BILL TO BE
ENTITLED
AN ACT
To amend Article 2 of Chapter 7 of Title 48 of the Official
Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to the imposition, rate, and computation of
income tax, so as to provide for tax credits with respect to rehabilitation of
historic structures; to provide for conditions and limitations; to provide for
powers, duties, and authority of the state revenue commissioner, the Department
of Revenue and the Department of Natural Resources; to provide for an effective
date; to provide for applicability; to repeal conflicting laws; and for other
purposes.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF
GEORGIA:
SECTION 1.
Article 2 of Chapter 7 of Title 48 of the Official Code of
Georgia Annotated, relating to the imposition, rate, and computation of income
tax, is amended by adding a new Code section immediately following Code Section
48-7-29.7, to be designated Code Section 48-7-29.8, to read as
follows:
"48-7-29.8.
(a)
As used in this Code section, the term:
(1) 'Certified
rehabilitation' means repairs or alterations to a certified structure which are
certified by the Department of Natural Resources as meeting the United States
Secretary of the Interior´s Standards for Rehabilitation or the Georgia
Standards for Rehabilitation as provided by the Department of Natural
Resources.
(2) 'Certified structure' means a historic
building or structure that is individually listed in the Georgia Register of
Historic Places or is certified by the Department of Natural Resources as
contributing to the historic significance of a Georgia Register Historic
District.
(3) 'Historic home' means a certified
structure which, or any portion of which is or will, within a reasonable period,
be owned and used as the principal residence of the person claiming the tax
credit allowed under this Code section. Historic home shall include any
structure or group of structures that constitute a multifamily or multipurpose
structure, including a cooperative or condominium. If only a portion of a
building is used as such person´s principal residence, only those qualified
rehabilitation expenditures that are properly allocable to such portion shall be
deemed to be made to a historic home.
(4) 'Qualified
rehabilitation expenditure' means any amount properly chargeable to a capital
account expended in the substantial rehabilitation of a structure that by the
end of the taxable year in which the certified rehabilitation is completed is a
certified structure. This term does not include the cost of acquisition of the
certified structure, the cost attributable to enlargement or additions to an
existing building, site preparation, or personal
property.
(5) 'Substantial rehabilitation' means
rehabilitation of a certified structure for which the qualified rehabilitation
expenditures, at least 5 percent of which must be allocable to the exterior
during the 24 month period selected by the taxpayer ending with or within the
taxable year, exceed:
(A) For a historic home, the
lesser of $25,000.00 or 50 percent of the adjusted basis of the property as
defined in subparagraph (a)(1)(B) of Code Section 48-5-7.2; or, in the case of a
historic home located in a target area $5,000.00;
or
(B) For any other certified structure, the greater
of $5,000.00 or the adjusted basis of the property.
(6)
'Target area' means a qualified census tract under Section 42 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, found in the United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development document number N-94-3821;
FR-3796-N-01.
(b) A taxpayer shall be allowed a tax
credit against the tax imposed by this chapter for the taxable year in which the
certified rehabilitation is completed:
(1) In the case
of a historic home, equal to 10 percent of qualified rehabilitation
expenditures, except that, in the case of a historic home located within a
target area, an additional credit equal to 5 percent of qualified rehabilitation
expenditures shall be allowed; and
(2) In the case of
any other certified structure, equal to 20 percent of qualified rehabilitation
expenditures.
(c) In no event shall credits for a
historic home or certified structure exceed $5,000.00 in any 120 month
period.
(d) In order to be eligible to receive the
credit authorized under subsection (b) of this Code section, a taxpayer must
attach to the taxpayer´s state tax return a copy of the certification of
the Department of Natural Resources verifying that the improvements to the
certified structure are consistent with the Department of Natural Resources
Standards for Rehabilitation.
(e)(1) If the credit
allowed under this Code section in any taxable year exceeds the total tax
otherwise payable by the taxpayer for that taxable year, the taxpayer may apply
the excess as a credit for succeeding years until the earlier
of:
(A) The full amount of the excess is used;
or
(B) The expiration of the tenth taxable year after
the taxable year in which the certified rehabilitation has been
completed.
(2) No such credit shall be allowed the
taxpayer against prior years´ tax liability.
(f)
In the case of any rehabilitation which may reasonably be expected to be
completed in phases set forth in architectural plans and specifications
completed before the rehabilitation begins, a 60 month period may be substituted
for the 24 month period provided for in paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of this
Code section.
(g)(1) Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (h) of this Code section, in the event a tax credit under this Code
section has been claimed and allowed the taxpayer, upon the sale or transfer of
the certified structure, the taxpayer shall be authorized to transfer the
remaining unused amount of such credit to the purchaser of such certified
structure. If a historic home for which a certified rehabilitation has been
completed by a nonprofit corporation is sold or transferred, the full amount of
the credit to which the nonprofit corporation would be entitled if taxable shall
be transferred to the purchaser or transferee at the time of sale or
transfer.
(2) Such purchaser shall be subject to the
limitations of subsection (e) of this Code section. Such purchaser shall file
with such purchaser´s tax return a copy of the approval of the
rehabilitation by the Department of Natural Resources as provided in
subsection (d) and a copy of the form evidencing the transfer of the tax
credit.
(3) Such purchaser shall be entitled to rely
in good faith on the information contained in and used in connection with
obtaining the approval of the credit including, without limitation, the amount
of qualified rehabilitation expenditures.
(h)(1) If an
owner other than a nonprofit corporation sells a historic home within three
years of receiving the credit, the seller shall recapture the credit to the
Department of Revenue as follows:
(A) If the property
is sold within one year of receiving the credit, the recapture amount will equal
the lesser of the credit or the net profit of the
sale;
(B) If the property is sold within two years of
receiving the credit, the recapture amount will equal the lesser of two-thirds
of the credit or the net profit of the sale; or
(C) If
the property is sold within three years of receiving the credit, the recapture
amount will equal the lesser of one-third of the credit or the net profit of the
sale.
(2) The recapture provisions of this subsection
shall not apply to a sale resulting from the death of the
owner.
(i) The tax credit allowed under this Code
section, and any recaptured tax credit, shall be allocated among some or all of
the partners, members, or shareholders of the entity owning the project in any
manner agreed to by such persons, whether or not such persons are allocated or
allowed any portion of any other tax credit with respect to the
project.
(j) The Department of Natural Resources and
the Department of Revenue shall prescribe such regulations as may be appropriate
to carry out the purposes of this Code section.
(k)
The Department of Natural Resources shall report, on an annual basis, on the
overall economic activity, usage, and impact to the state from the
rehabilitation of eligible properties for which credits provided by this Code
section have been
allowed."
SECTION 2.
This Act shall become effective on January 1, 2004, and
shall be applicable to all taxable years beginning on or after that
date.
SECTION 3.
All laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are
repealed.