The National Council of State Housing Agencies (NCSHA) recently sent the IRS and the Treasury Department a letter urging them to extend the temporary Housing Credit relief provided by IRS Notice 2020-53 and to make other necessary program accommodations in light of the continuing disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In July, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the IRS announced it was providing low-income housing tax credit participants temporary relief from key program requirements. The temporary relief package included deadline extensions, income recertification and compliance monitoring waivers, and other program accommodations.
With the notice, the IRS delayed several deadlines until Dec. 31, 2020. These include the following:
10 percent deadline extension. The 10 percent test requirement is found in Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 42(h)(1)(E) and (F). A site that receives a credit allocation must be “placed in service” (completed and occupied) in the year that the allocation is received.
But it’s commonplace for state agencies to issue “carryover allocations,” which extend the required placed-in-service date to the end of the second calendar year after the allocation was issued. To qualify for the carryover allocation, a site must incur at least 10 percent of its anticipated costs within the calendar year in which the allocation was received or six months after the date of the carryover.
The 10 percent requirement was deemed satisfied if the site owner incurs more than 10 percent of the reasonably expected basis no later than the expiration of that extension or Dec. 31, 2020.
24-month minimum rehab expenditure period. An LIHTC is allowable for costs associated with the substantial rehabilitation of a building. There are minimum expenditures to qualify, and rehabilitation expenditures incurred during any 24-month period must meet certain expenditure value criteria. With the notice, the last day for an owner to incur the minimum rehabilitation expenditures with respect to a substantially rehabbed building is postponed to Dec. 31, 2020.
Restoration period extension after casualty loss. Owners may have loss of property from a sudden unexpected event such as a fire or hurricane. Under IRS rules, LIHTC recapture can be avoided if the unit or building is returned to good condition within a reasonable period. Good condition means habitable and suitable for occupancy.
However, tax credits are lost while the units or buildings are offline. If your building or unit is offline due to a natural disaster and the government or FEMA declares your area a natural disaster area, then the credit clock stops until you return the units or buildings to good condition. Therefore, you don’t lose any credits—there’s no recapture.
The notice allowed for an extension to Dec. 31 if a building suffered a casualty loss and the reasonable restoration period ended. The same extension applied to LIHTC buildings that suffered a casualty loss due to a prior major disaster.
Set-asides for qualified rental projects. The notice extends to Dec. 31, 2020, the following periods related to qualified residential rental property financed by certain bonds.
In the letter, NCSHA pointed out that COVID-19 cases are still increasing nationally and the pandemic continues to negatively impact construction material supplies, the timing of permitting and local approvals, and the availability of skilled construction workers. In addition, the pandemic continues to limit the ability of managers to interact with residents for regular site operations and restricts the ability of state agencies to complete approvals and compliance monitoring.
As such, the NCSHA asked the IRS to extend the relief provided by Notice 2020-53. Specifically, the letter asks the following:
In addition to extending relief provided by IRS Notice 2020-53, the letter urges the IRS and Treasury to make the following critical additional accommodations to keep the program operating effectively during the pandemic: