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New Markets Tax Credit is one of Many Credits Expiring at End of Year- What do You Need to Do?

Joseph Coupal - Tuesday, September 13, 2011

...by Warren Kirshenbaum

The Community Renewal Tax Relief Act was passed in 2000. Part of that act is the New Markets Tax Credit, the purpose of which is to spur approximately $15 billion in investments into privately managed investment institutions (CDE) who in turn will make loans and capital investments to businesses in low-income communities.

The New Markets Tax Credit is one of several key business tax breaks that are set to expire at year end unless Congress acts. Businesses should be aware of the expiring tax provision. Businesses interested in investigating or applying for the New Markets Tax Credit should consult with a commercial real estate tax lawyer to determine whether they should take advantage of this tax break  and/or if they need to plan for the expiration of other tax credits which they have previously taken advantage of.

What is New Markets Tax Credit ("NMTC")? A taxpayer who holds a qualified equity investment in a qualified community development entity ("CDE") may be entitled to a NMTC of 39% of the qualified equity investment during a seven-year credit period. Under current law, the last NMTC dollar limitation is for 2011.

Treasury Announces $3.5 Billion in Awards for Economic Development and Community Revitalization

Joseph Coupal - Monday, March 07, 2011

... By Warren Kirshenbaum

Baltimore Area Institutions to Receive Over $155 Million in New Markets Tax Credit Awards

BALTIMORE, MD - In an effort to highlight the Obama Administration’s key investments in broad-based economic growth and commitment to the revitalization of communities stricken by the economic crisis, Community Development Financial Institutions Fund Director Donna Gambrell today visited a job training and human services organization in Baltimore benefiting from private sector investments made possible through the New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC). Speaking alongside Representative Elijah Cummings, Director Gambrell announced the selection of 99 organizations nationwide to receive NMTC allocation awards under the 2010 program round. These 99 awards will leverage billions of dollars of investment into businesses and real estate projects to create jobs and promote growth in communities with high rates of poverty and unemployment.

“The New Markets Tax Credit continues to be a tool for job-creation and economic revitalization in areas that struggle to attract investment because of poverty, unemployment and a lack of opportunity” said Director Gambrell. “I am honored to announce the 2010 New Markets Tax Credit Award allocations with Representative Cummings here in Baltimore, where our partners have demonstrated why this tool has been so effective in making literally thousands of projects possible across the country and give Americans a chance to make a living, to start a business and to build a better future in areas that need it most.”

The NMTC, established by Congress in December 2000, permits individual and corporate taxpayers to receive a credit against federal income taxes for making equity investments in investment vehicles known as Community Development Entities (CDEs). The credit provided to the investor totals 39 percent of the cost of the investment and is claimed over a seven-year period. CDEs must apply to the Treasury Department’s Community Development Financial Institutions Fund (CDFI Fund) to compete for this allocation authority. The 99 organizations receiving awards were selected from a pool of 250 applicants that requested over $23.5 billion. They are headquartered in 27 different states and the District of Columbia; but have identified principal service areas that will cover nearly every state in the country, as well the District of Columbia.

“By helping our partners in community development secure critical funding for job-creating projects, the New Markets Tax Credit is helping to bring opportunity and drive investment in our local businesses and communities,” said Representative Cummings. “In these tough economic times Baltimore welcomes the support of the CDFI Fund, and we will continue working to ensure that we're reaching the hardest hit.”

Director Gambrell’s and Representative Cummings’ announcement was made today at Humanim Inc., a nonprofit organization that provides workforce development and rehabilitation services to individuals with disabilities and other barriers to employment. An award winning human services organization, Humanim provides a ground-breaking model for delivering expanded employment services that gives those individuals in greatest need the opportunity to build a career and attain financial independence. Over $14 million in NMTC financing provided by City First Bank of DC and the National Trust Community Investment Corporation allowed Humanim to convert a large brewery that sat abandoned for 35 years in one of the poorest neighborhoods in Baltimore into its headquarters. Humanim reaches individuals of all ages with comprehensive vocational services.

Having benefitted from funding under the NMTC, Humanim highlights the effectiveness of the NMTC in leveraging private investment to complete economic and community development projects that help revitalize communities with high rates of poverty and unemployment. In total, five institutions in Maryland will receive funds in this NMTC award round to invest in development projects.

To date, over $20 billion of private-sector capital has been invested through the NMTC into urban and rural communities throughout the country, helping to create or retain hundreds of thousands of jobs and to provide low-income community residents with access to quality education, health care, job training, housing and critical retail services in their communities.

2010 NMTC Program Awards

2010 NMTC Program Award List
2010 NMTC Program Highlights
2010 NMTC Program Allocatee Profiles
2010 NMTC Program Award Booklet

A complete list of the 99 organizations selected and additional information on the NMTC Program can be found on the CDFI Fund’s web site at: http://www.cdfifund.gov.

Pittsburgh URA Awarded $35 Million in Development Tax Credits

Joseph Coupal - Monday, February 28, 2011
Pittsburgh URA awarded $35 million in development tax credits

The U.S. Treasury Department has awarded Pittsburgh's Urban Redevelopment Authority $35 million in tax credits to stimulate investment in low-income communities.

The URA was one of 99 applicants to receive the New Market Tax Credits; more than 250 government entities, nonprofits and other groups applied.

The tax credits will go to investors in "Community Development Entities," groups formed to undertake projects in low-income neighborhoods. The cedits are designed to draw private investment into those communities.

"This is great news for Pittsburgh," Mayor Luke Ravenstahl said in a statement. "This award will leverage millions of dollars of investment into businesses and real estate projects to create jobs and promote growth in our neighborhoods."

U.S. Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., and Rep. Mike Doyle, D-Forest Hills, supported the URA's application.

By Joe Smydo, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Orchestra's New Home

Joseph Coupal - Friday, February 18, 2011
Orchestra of St. Luke's new DiMenna Center
Rob Bennett for The Wall Street Journal

... By Warren Kirshenbaum

Construction is nearly complete on a $37 million classical music center for Orchestra of St. Luke's slated to open in Hell's Kitchen in March.

Complete with rehearsal and recording space to accommodate a full symphony orchestra and chorus, a music library café and even showers for musicians, the 20,000-square-foot building will be the orchestra's first permanent home since its debut in 1974.

The center will also serve dozens of arts groups that rent space in the city's increasingly crowded rehearsal and performance spaces, including the New York Pops and the American Symphony Orchestra.

Raising money for building projects in the past few years hasn't been easy for the city's nonprofits. Decreases in donations and a tightening grip on public dollars have hurt funding for capital projects by charities in particular. Many donors also have focused their attention on emergency programs for the hungry and homeless.

With traditional funding harder to obtain, the Orchestra of St. Luke's became one of a growing number of nonprofits turning to a federal tax program for capital financing. This week, it will announce it has received a $4.6 million equity infusion from financial institutions including Goldman Sachs Group Inc.'s Urban Investment Group, Solomon Hess and United Fund Advisors through a federal program that provides tax credits to investors putting money into community development projects.
[ORCHEST2] Rob Bennett for The Wall Street Journal

Street view of the center at 450 W. 37th St., which is also home to the Baryshnikov Arts Center.

"We needed these tax credits to ensure the project would happen on time and as planned," says Zev Greenfield, the orchestra's vice president of finance and Operations. "While we received $4.6 million directly, we saved millions more on financing and fund-raising costs."

In 2008, the orchestra and the Baryshnikov Dance Foundation closed on a three-party deal for 450 W. 37th St., which formerly housed a consortium of theaters. The orchestra paid $16.6 million for 20,000 square feet, taking on a $7 million mortgage and a $5 million line of credit from M&T Bank.

To fund the deal, the orchestra had received multimillion-dollar pledges from donors including financiers Joe DiMenna and Victor Elmaleh, and an $8.5 million pledge from the city's Department of Cultural Affairs. However, when the financial crisis deepened, additional fund-raising slowed and donations were delayed.

"Donors were supporting the project but needed to do it over a longer period of time, and that's why the credits became such an essential piece of the puzzle," says Katy Clark, the orchestra's president and executive director.

To fill the funding gaps, the orchestra hired a consultant and applied for the federal New Markets Tax Credit Program, rushing to close on financing before the end of 2010. Created in 2000 to spur economic revitalization through private sector investment, the program allows financial institutions to provide equity to projects in depressed neighborhoods and receive federal tax deductions in return.

The interest in tax credits heightened after the financial crisis hit, leaving cities eager for ways to tap the federal funding faucet to spur economic growth.

The New York City Economic Development Corp. partnered with financial-services company United Fund Advisors in 2008 to stimulate more projects using tax credits in the city.

Since then, they have financed more than $500 million of development costs, utilizing $89 million in New Markets tax credits.

The credits have allowed the city's nonprofits to raise financing for other large capital projects such as a new 75,000 square-foot museum and condo for the Museum for African Art on Fifth Avenue.

Slated to open this year, the museum received $18.8 million in New Markets tax credits. Other projects include a $13 million conversion of warehouse space in Lower Manhattan into a recreational sport facility called Basketball City USA, to be completed this summer.

The city and United Fund Advisors hope to obtain an additional $135 million allocation in tax credits later this year.

Still, nonprofits say qualifying for the tax credits generally requires the use of paid consultants, months of paperwork and complicated financing structures.

"It's an incredibly complex set of processes," Mr. Greenfield says. "You have to really spend the time to delve into the details."

Auditor to Look at Evergreen Incentives as Part of Broader Review

Joseph Coupal - Friday, January 28, 2011

Solar Energy DevelopmentState Auditor Suzanne Bump intends to review public subsidies for Evergreen Solar, the energy company that recently announced plans to shutter its Devens plant and move more 800 jobs elsewhere despite receiving millions of dollars in public funds, as part of a broader review of the state’s entire system of tax incentives.

With the Patrick administration saying it could recoup $13 million of the $31 million the state invested in Evergreen Solar, the News Service asked Bump if she was considering an examination of the public subsidies in the company.

Bump’s press secretary Christopher Thompson responded with a statement noting that before she took office, Bump had described reviewing the state’s broad system of tax incentives as a priority.

“She has developed an internal team and a strategy to evaluate these investments with a focus on accountability and tax payer [sic] benefit,” Thompson said. “The Auditor’s review will take a broad look at many different tax incentives, and the tax incentives granted to Evergreen Solar will be reviewed in this broader context.”

On the campaign trail last year, Bump talked up plans to examine tax incentives, saying they should be measured by the benefits provided to Massachusetts citizens and taxpayers and that accountability for public investments “must be built into state government.”

As a candidate, Bump said that all state tax incentives and credits should be reviewed for effectiveness and that she would begin with economic development tax incentives. She estimated state government would forego $1.7 billion in fiscal 2011 due to tax incentives and credits.

Bump also pledged to conduct audits of agencies charged with providing or documenting tax incentives to determine whether agency managers used appropriate procedures, provided objective analysis, measured outcomes as intended, and held recipients accountable for performance.

State Housing and Economic Development Secretary Greg Bialecki said last week that Evergreen had received $21 million in cash grants - $20 million to help build its facility and $1 million for workforce training - $7.5 million in investment tax credits and a long-term lease on state land valued at $2.7 million.

Evergreen has received other forms of public aid, but Bialecki said he did not count in his estimate $13 million in state grants used to build road and utilities infrastructure at Devens and some state taxes the company avoided when paying for equipment.

Bialecki estimated the state can recoup $13 million, including the $7.5 million investment tax credit, which he said won’t be claimed, $3 million in state grants that were tied to a job creation formula, and land costs.

"We’re looking very carefully at what happened here and what lessons can be learned," Bialecki said last week. "This wasn’t so much an investment in Evergreen Solar as it was in the clean energy sector. The purpose wasn’t to benefit a company but to grow an industry and the investment really put us on the map."

In announcing its Devens plant closing plans, Evergreen Solar President Michael El-Hillow said the firm’s production costs in Devens were “much higher than those of our low cost competitors in China.”

“Solar manufacturers in China have received considerable government and financial support and, together with their low manufacturing costs, have become price leaders within the industry,” El-Hillow said in a statement. “While the United States and other western industrial economies are beneficiaries of rapidly declining installation costs of solar energy, we expect the United States will continue to be at a disadvantage from a manufacturing standpoint.”

MassGOP Chairman Jennifer Nassour has called the state’s investments in Evergreen “reckless policy” and urged the Patrick administration to offer a more broad-based approach to economic incentives for companies.

House Minority Leader Brad Jones has said that the Evergreen case should serve as a “lesson to Governor Patrick that throwing money at companies in industries he approves of won’t necessarily translate into success.” Jones said Patrick and Lt. Gov. Tim Murray “should turn their attention to creating an economic climate where all businesses can succeed and thrive.”

Gov. Deval Patrick has defended his administration in light of the Evergreen controversy, saying the process of doling out incentives to individual companies or industries "works well."

"I am disappointed that we are losing these manufacturing jobs to China, but Evergreen produced over 900 jobs for each of the years in question (two or three times what they promised) and that was good for the workers who got those jobs," Patrick said during a recent online chat.

"Evergreen did not use about half of the benefits that were offered to them and we have recovered or will recover most of the rest. Beyond that, we need to ask ourselves whether we are serious about competing for jobs on the same playing field as other states. Far more often than not, we win in a competition. But we have to compete to win."

Senate President Therese Murray told WCVB-TV Sunday that Evergreen “paid us back” $11 million based on an initial state investment of $2.5 million. “I think that’s pretty good,” Murray said.

But Murray added, “Probably their five or ten-year plan was a little aggressive . . . It’s still a loss. There should have been a bit more due diligence. I would have had a bigger clawback - that if the jobs left that the money came back.”

Murray said she’s been told that “solar doesn’t make a profit,” adding, “I’m still grappling with that.”

House Speaker Robert DeLeo, who has also called into question the Evergreen investments, on Wednesday reiterated his support for tax incentives aimed at stimulating film industry business. DeLeo noted that “The Social Network,” “The Town” and “The Fighter,” which all have a Massachusetts connection, tallied 16 Oscar nominations this week.

“These movies, filmed right here in Massachusetts, are a good reminder of how important the film tax credit has been to our state’s economy in these challenging times,” DeLeo said in a statement, referencing House votes from nearly a year ago to block efforts to reduce incentives available to the film industry.

A Department of Revenue report released this month found that the film tax credit cost the state $82.4 million for productions filmed in 2009 and generated $319 million in spending, of which $104 million was spent in Massachusetts. Of the $215 million spent outside of Massachusetts, $82 million paid salaries of $1 million or more to actors, according to the report.

Over the four years in which the tax credit program has been on the books, the total credit-eligible spending for 449 productions claiming the tax credit was $1.047 billion, with 32 percent or $335.5 million paid to Massachusetts residents and 68 percent or $712.3 million paid to non-residents or out-of-state businesses, according to the Department of Revenue.

On Wednesday, Patrick said his newly unveiled budget proposal included a continuation of the film tax credit program.

The Increased Amounts of New Income Tax Credits are Being Awarded

Joseph Coupal - Friday, January 21, 2011
Massachussetts Real Estate Development

by Warren Kirshenbaum

The Community Development Financial Institutions Fund (“CDFI Fund”), a program of the U.S. Department of Treasury released its 2010 Performance and Accountability Report on January 18, 2011, providing key insight into economic revitalization in 2010. The CDFI Fund promotes economic revitalization and community development through investment in, and assistance to community development financial institutions.

The Performance and Accountability Report demonstrated a continued level of interest in investment into low-income communities and showed a substantial increase in rewarded tax credits over 2009. In 2010, the CDFI Fund, which administers the New Markets Tax Credit Program (“NMTC”) distributed all $26 billion in its authority in 495 separate awards.

The NMTC was created as part of the Community Renewal Tax Relief Act of 2000 to provide a tax credit to taxpayers who provide investments to businesses in low-income communities.

Specifically, the NMTC stimulates capital investment in low-income communities by providing tax credits against federal income taxes to taxpayers who make equity investments (referred to as “QEI’s” or “qualified equity investments”) into a designated community development entity (“CDE”). Substantially all of the investments made by the taxpayer must be used to benefit low income communities in order to receive the tax credit, and that determination is made by reference to census tracts. The Performance and Accountability Report of 2010 announced that the demand for the NMTC is increasing. In 2010 over two thousand applications were submitted, containing requests totaling $202.6 billion in tax credit allocation. Accordingly, only 27% of applicants were selected to receive the awards with the average tax credit allocation award being $52.5 million. The tax credit allocations are limited, so they are approved by a competitive application process. This process of approving tax credit allocation is set up so that the most qualified organizations receive first consideration.

This past year also saw another record for investments raised – in the first three quarters of 2010, $3.1 billion in qualified equity investments were raised, surpassing the $2.8 billion raised for all of 2009. Furthermore, tax credit recipients reported making $3.5 billion of loans and investments in Qualified Active Low Income Community Businesseses – 64% of which went into real estate businesses. Lastly, in 2010, recipients also reported making over $168 million in direct investments into other CDE’s, and providing $12 million in financial counseling and other services to 7,139 businesses in low-income communities.

The 2010 report announced by the CDFI Fund shows the growing demand for investment capital in low-income communities. In sum, since the program’s inception, there has been a total of $15.8 billion of cumulative investments made via the New Market Tax Credit Program. If you are interested in how to qualify for these or any other potential tax credits, please call Warren today or fill out a Contact Us form.


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