The IRS recently released two revenue procedures that provide guidance about temporary disaster relief for qualified developments that were financed by the LIHTC or tax-exempt bonds. The new revenue procedures modify similar guidance that the IRS issued in 2007, in Revenue Procedure 2007-54. The old guidance: (1) provided relief from the carryover allocation provisions; (2) clarified the consequences if an owner failed to restore a building within a reasonable restoration period; (3) provided relief from certain compliance monitoring requirements; (4) allowed agencies to provide relief for buildings severely damaged or destroyed in the first year of the credit period; and (5) described the amount of credit allowable for a restored building.
Revenue Procedure 2007-54 also allowed owners to rely on the self-certification of income eligibility of an individual who was displaced from his or her principal residence as a result of a “major disaster” and whose principal residence was in a city, county, or other local jurisdiction designated for individual assistance by FEMA as a result of the major disaster. The self-certification couldn’t extend for more than four months beyond the date of the president’s major disaster declaration. During the four-month self-certification period, the self-certified tenant was deemed a qualified low-income tenant. After the four-month self-certification period, the self-certified tenant was treated as a qualified low-income tenant only if the owner obtained all documentation required under Section 42 to support the tenant’s continued status as a qualified low-income individual.
The recently released Revenue Procedure 2014-49 offers key modifications to Revenue Procedure 2007-54. These include: