Sec. 10-416. (Formerly Sec. 10-320j). Tax credits for rehabilitation of historic homes.
Sec. 10-416. (Formerly Sec. 10-320j). Tax credits for rehabilitation of historic
homes. (a) As used in this section, the following terms shall have the following meanings
unless the context clearly indicates another meaning:
(1) "Commission" means the Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism
established under section 10-392;
(2) "Historic home" means a building that: (A) Will contain one-to-four dwelling
units of which at least one unit will be occupied as the principal residence of the owner
for not less than five years following the completion of rehabilitation work, (B) is located
in a targeted area, and (C) is (i) listed individually on the National or State Register of
Historic Places, or (ii) located in a district listed on the National or State Register of
Historic Places, and has been certified by the commission as contributing to the historic
character of such district;
(3) "Nonprofit corporation" means a nonprofit corporation incorporated pursuant
to chapter 602 or any predecessor statutes thereto, having as one of its purposes the
construction, rehabilitation, ownership or operation of housing and having articles of
incorporation approved by the Commissioner of Economic and Community Development in accordance with regulations adopted pursuant to section 8-79a or 8-84;
(4) "Owner" means any taxpayer filing a state of Connecticut tax return who possesses title to an historic home, or prospective title to an historic home in the form of a
purchase agreement or option to purchase, or a nonprofit corporation that possesses
such title or prospective title;
(5) "Targeted area" means: (A) A federally designated "qualified census tract" in
which seventy per cent or more of the families have a median income of eighty per cent
or less of the state-wide median family income, (B) a state designated and federally
approved area of chronic economic distress, or (C) an urban and regional center as
identified in the Connecticut Conservation and Development Policies Plan;
(6) "Qualified rehabilitation expenditures" means any costs incurred for the physical construction involved in the rehabilitation of an historic home, but excludes: (A)
The owner's personal labor, (B) the cost of site improvements, unless to provide building
access to persons with disabilities, (C) the cost of a new addition, except as may be
required to comply with any provision of the State Building Code or the State Fire Safety
Code, (D) any cost associated with the rehabilitation of an outbuilding, unless such
building contributes to the historical significance of the historic home, and (E) any
nonconstruction cost such as architectural fees, legal fees and financing fees;
(7) "Rehabilitation plan" means any construction plans and specifications for the
proposed rehabilitation of an historic home in sufficient detail to enable the commission
to evaluate compliance with the standards developed under the provisions of subsections
(b) to (d), inclusive, of this section; and
(8) "Occupancy period" means a period of five years during which one or more
owners occupy an historic home as their primary residence. The occupancy period begins
on the date the tax credit voucher is issued by the commission.
(b) The commission shall administer a system of tax credit vouchers within the
resources, requirements and purposes of this section for owners rehabilitating historic
homes or taxpayers making contributions to qualified rehabilitation expenditures. For
tax years commencing on or after January 1, 2000, any owner shall be eligible for a
tax credit voucher in an amount equal to thirty per cent of the qualified rehabilitation
expenditures.
(c) The commission shall develop standards for the approval of rehabilitation of
historic homes for which a tax credit voucher is sought. Such standards shall take into
account whether the rehabilitation of an historic home will preserve the historic character
of the building.
(d) The commission shall, in consultation with the Commissioner of Revenue Services, adopt regulations in accordance with chapter 54 to carry out the purposes of this
section.
(e) Prior to beginning any rehabilitation work on an historic home, the owner shall
submit a rehabilitation plan to the commission for a determination of whether such
rehabilitation work meets the standards developed under the provisions of subsections
(b) to (d), inclusive, of this section and shall also submit to the commission an estimate
of the qualified rehabilitation expenditures.
(f) If the commission certifies that the rehabilitation plan conforms to the standards
developed under the provisions of subsections (b) to (d), inclusive, of this section, the
commission shall reserve for the benefit of the owner an allocation for a tax credit
equivalent to thirty per cent of the projected qualified rehabilitation expenditures.
(g) Following the completion of rehabilitation of an historic home, the owner shall
notify the commission that such rehabilitation has been completed. The owner shall
provide the commission with documentation of work performed on the historic home
and shall certify the cost incurred in rehabilitating the home. The commission shall
review such rehabilitation and verify its compliance with the rehabilitation plan. Following such verification, the commission shall issue a tax credit voucher to either the owner
rehabilitating the historic home or to the taxpayer named by the owner as contributing
to the rehabilitation. The tax credit voucher shall be in an amount equivalent to the lesser
of the tax credit reserved upon certification of the rehabilitation plan under the provisions
of subsection (f) of this section or thirty per cent of the actual qualified rehabilitation
expenditures. In order to obtain a credit against any state tax due that is specified in
subsections (j) to (m), inclusive, of this section, the holder of the tax credit voucher shall
file the voucher with the holder's state tax return.
(h) Before the commission issues a tax credit voucher, the owner shall deliver a
signed statement to the commission which provides that: (1) The owner shall occupy
the historic home as the owner's primary residence during the occupancy period, or (2)
the owner shall convey the historic home to a new owner who will occupy it as the new
owner's primary residence during the occupancy period, or (3) an encumbrance shall
be recorded, in favor of the local, state or federal government or other funding source,
that will require the owner or the owner's successors to occupy the historic home as the
primary residence of the owner or the owner's successors for a period equal to or longer
than the occupancy period. A copy of any such encumbrance shall be attached to the
signed statement.
(i) The owner of an historic home shall not be eligible for a tax credit voucher
under subsections (b) to (d), inclusive, of this section, unless the owner incurs qualified
rehabilitation expenditures exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars.
(j) The Commissioner of Revenue Services shall grant a tax credit to a taxpayer
holding the tax credit voucher issued under subsections (e) to (i), inclusive, of this section
against any tax due under chapter 207, 208, 209, 210, 211 or 212 in the amount specified
in the tax credit voucher. The commission shall provide a copy of the voucher to the
Commissioner of Revenue Services upon the request of said commissioner.
(k) In no event shall a credit allowed under this section exceed thirty thousand
dollars per dwelling unit for an historic home.
(l) The tax credit issued under subsection (j) of this section shall be taken by the
holder of the tax credit voucher in the same tax year in which the voucher is issued.
Any unused portion of such credit may be carried forward to any or all of the four taxable
years following the year in which the tax credit voucher is issued.
(m) The aggregate amount of all tax credits which may be reserved by the commission upon certification of rehabilitation plans under subsections (b) to (d), inclusive, of
this section shall not exceed three million dollars in any one fiscal year.
(P.A. 99-173, S. 34-37, 65; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, S. 230; P.A. 04-205, S. 5; May Sp. Sess. P.A. 04-2, S. 30;
P.A. 06-159, S. 2.)
History: P.A. 99-173 effective June 23, 1999, and applicable to tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2000 (Revisor's
note: In codifying sections 34 to 37, inclusive, of P.A. 99-173 as a single section, the Revisors codified all internal references
accordingly and treated a reference to "this act" in Sec. 35(a) of the act as though the reference had been to "sections 34
to 37, inclusive, of this act"); June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6 amended Subsec. (a)(1) to substitute Connecticut Commission
on Arts, Tourism, Culture, History and Film for Connecticut Historical Commission, effective August 20, 2003; P.A. 04-205, effective June 3, 2004, and May Sp. Sess. P.A. 04-2, effective May 12, 2004, both replaced Connecticut Commission on
Arts, Tourism, Culture, History and Film with Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism; Sec. 10-320j transferred to
Sec. 10-416 in 2005; P.A. 06-159 amended Subsec. (j) to require commission to submit voucher rather than taxpayer,
effective June 6, 2006, and applicable to taxable years commencing on or after January 1, 2006.