Questions & Answers on Renewal Community Businesses
What
is a Renewal Community Business?
In general, a Renewal Community Business is a corporation,
partnership, or sole proprietorship that, for each taxable year, meets the
following tests:
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Except with respect to a sole
proprietorship, every trade or business of the entity is actively
conducted in a RC (legally separate entities are not aggregated with
related entities for these tests).
-
At least 50 percent of the total gross
income of the entity is derived from the active conduct of business
within a RC.
-
A substantial portion of the use of
the tangible property of the entity (whether owned or leased) is
within a RC.
-
A substantial portion of the
intangible property of the business is used in the active conduct of
the business.
-
A substantial portion of the services
performed for the employer by its employees occur within a RC.
-
At least 35 percent of the employees
reside in a RC.
-
No more than 5 percent of the property
is nonqualified financial property (such as debt, stock, and various
financial instruments) except for reasonable amounts of working
capital held in cash, cash equivalents, or debt instruments with a
term of 18 months or less and certain accounts receivable arising from
sales of inventory.
-
No more than 5 percent of the property
is works of art or other collectibles unless held for sale to
customers.
How
does a business know whether its building is in the RC?
The local RC entity can provide businesses with
information on its boundaries, or businesses may obtain the information
over the Internet at www.hud.gov/offices/cpd/ezec
Are
there any types of businesses that cannot be Renewal Community Businesses?
Yes. The tax laws exclude certain businesses from the
definition, including liquor stores, golf courses, racetracks, gambling
facilities, country clubs, residential rental properties, businesses that
predominantly hold or develop intangibles for sale or license, or
businesses that rent personal property, such as car rental agencies
(unless at least 50 percent of the rentals are to a Renewal Community
Businesses or to RC residents). Non-profit organizations are not
automatically precluded merely because the activities carried on by
the organization are conducted on a non-profit basis..
Can
a high-technology company qualify as a Renewal Community Business?
The answer depends on its operations. The tax law states
that no business consisting predominantly of the development or holding of
intangibles for sale or license can qualify as a Renewal Community
Business.
Can
a real estate developer qualify as a Renewal Community Business?
A business that develops and owns commercial real estate can qualify only
if at least 50 percent of its gross rental income from real property is
from a Renewal Community Businesses. The owner is permitted to accept
certifications of lessees in determining whether the lessee is a Renewal
Community Business. If the project is residential rental property, the
business is automatically excluded by statute from the definition of a
Renewal Community Business.
Is
farming a qualified business for purposes of the Renewal Community
Business definition?
Farming is a qualified business only if the sum of the
value of the assets owned or leased by the employer for use in the farming
business does not exceed $500,000. The definition of farming and the
method for calculating the value of the assets are found in the tax laws.
An employer should consult its legal advisor on this matter.
How
does a business apply the tests if it has several locations?
The tests generally apply to legally separate entities. If
a single business entity has locations both within and outside a RC, all
of the tests apply to the overall operations. If the various locations are
operated by legally separate entities, the tests apply only to that
location's operations even if the various legal entities are related for
Federal tax purposes. For example, if a national chain store or restaurant
set up operations in a RC, the tests would be measured with respect to the
RC location store only if that store or restaurant was separately
incorporated from other stores or restaurants in the chain.
What
does it mean that "legally separate entities are not aggregated with
related entities for the Renewal Community Business tests?"
This rule permits businesses to set up separate
corporations or partnerships to conduct business in a RC. All Renewal
Community Business tests would be measured based on the RC business, and a
business would not have to include any activities of other related
entities outside of the RC. Many other tax law provisions treat related
entities as one business and require adding together the activities of all
entities. This rule for and Renewal Community Businesses is more lenient
than other tax rules.
How
does a business apply the active conduct of business within a RC test if
raw materials and customers come from outside the RC?
The tax regulations relating to Enterprise Facility Bonds
describe a mail-order clothing business that is located in an EZ. The
business purchases the supplies for its clothing business from suppliers
located both within and outside the EZ and expects that orders will be
received both from customers who will reside or work within the EZ and
from others outside the EZ. All orders are received, filled at, and
shipped from the clothing business located in the EZ. The income generated
from the sales would be treated as gross income derived from the active
conduct of business within an EZ. The same would apply to a Renewal
Community.
How
do the tests apply if a business makes deliveries inside and outside a RC?
The tax regulations for Enterprise Facility Bonds give an
example of a printing operation located in an EZ. All orders are taken and
completed, and all billing and accounting activities are performed, at the
print shop located in the EZ. The business, on occasion, uses its
equipment (including its trucks) and employees to deliver large print jobs
to customers who reside outside the EZ. As long as the business is able to
establish that its trucks are used in the EZ a substantial portion of the
time and that its employees perform a substantial portion of their
services for the business in the the business meets the requirements with
respect to the use of tangible property and location of services performed
by employees. The same test would apply to Renewal Communities.
How
does a business calculate the requirement that 35% of its employees be RC
residents?
The tax regulations relating to tax-exempt bonds permit
calculation either on a per-employee fraction or an employee actual
work-hour fraction. In the per-employee fraction method, the business
would compare the number of RC resident employees in a taxable year to the
total number of employees during the same taxable year. Employees include
persons employed for at least 90 days and who work at least 15 hours per
week. The employee actual work-hour fraction seeks to accommodate
businesses with full-and part-time workers and compares actual hours
worked by RC residents to total employee hours worked in a taxable year. A
business must apply the same method consistently over the period of the
tax incentive once a method is selected. The same methods of determining
whether the 35-percent test is met may apply for purposes of the other RC
incentives and the incentives that require a Renewal Community Business,
but the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has not formally extended the rules
Are
there any waivers for businesses that meet requirements in all other areas
but the "35% rule" for RC employees?
The 35-percent RC employee requirement is statutory and
cannot be waived. For purposes of tax-exempt financing, the is permitted
to average yearly percentages over a rolling, consecutive 5-year period.
There are no tax regulations on whether the averaging provision applies to
any of the other RC incentives.
Do
employees contracted through a temporary agency meet the definition of
employee for purposes of the Renewal Community Business tests? Do
employees who are also relatives meet the definition of employee for this
purpose?
The tax laws do not directly address these issues with
respect to the Renewal Community Business definition. If the business
treats the individuals as employees for other Federal tax purposes, the
business presumably could treat them as employees for this purpose.
How
does a business know it qualifies as a Renewal Community Business?
There is no formal application or certification process
for being a Renewal Community Business. A business must analyze the
requirements in light of its own operations and use the same standards it
applies for taking any position on its Federal tax return. This requires a
legal determination, so a business should consult a tax attorney or its
tax preparer. The business should retain documents that establish that it
is a Renewal Community Business, such as statements that an employee is a
RC resident, in case of an audit by the IRS.
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