E2SHB 1563 -
By Committee on Financial Institutions, Housing & Insurance
NOT CONSIDERED
Strike everything after the enacting clause and insert the following:
"NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 The legislature recognizes that many local
governmental entities are experiencing financial challenges, and
understands the multiple needs of local governmental entities to
provide important services. It is the intent of the legislature to
provide flexibility to local governmental entities regarding the
disposition of surplus property for the development of affordable
housing and to allow sufficient discretion to local governmental
entities to balance these competing needs.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 2 (1) A governmental entity may sell, lease,
or exchange surplus property to an eligible organization at a price
that is less than fair market value, or may create beneficial sales
terms including, but not limited to, extended closings, if the
affordable housing to be developed on the property will be occupied
primarily by extremely low-income, very low-income, federally qualified
low-income, or low-income households. The governmental entity must
document that the amount of any sale, lease, or exchange that is less
than fair market value is commensurate with the level of affordable
housing provided on the property.
(2) A governmental entity disposing of surplus property under
subsection (1) of this section must: (a) Enter into a recorded
covenant with the eligible organization or a loan note in the name of
the governmental entity, to ensure that the property will meet the
required income, rent, and sales price restrictions; and (b) monitor
compliance with the covenant or loan note.
(3) An eligible organization may obtain surplus property through
purchase, lease, or exchange, under reasonable option and conveyance
conditions, in return for: (a) A recorded covenant to provide rental
housing for extremely low-income, very low-income, federally qualified
low-income, or low-income households for at least forty years; or (b)
a loan note in the name of a governmental entity for homeownership
programs in which the homeowners are extremely low-income, very low-income, federally qualified low-income, or low-income.
(4) As an alternative to the requirements of this section,
counties, cities, and towns may sell surplus property at a discount for
affordable housing that may be part of mixed-income or mixed-use
developments, provided that the affordable housing complies with the
guidelines for affordable housing, income levels, affordable rents,
affordable sales prices, and minimum terms of affordability under RCW
36.70A.540 for affordable housing incentive programs.
(5) The authority granted to counties, cities, and towns in this
section is in addition to, and must not be construed to limit, any
existing authority.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 The definitions in this section apply
throughout this chapter unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Affordable housing" means residential housing that is rented
or owned by a person who qualifies as an extremely low-income, very
low-income, federally qualified low-income, or low-income household or
who is from a special needs population, and for which monthly housing
costs, including utilities other than telephone, do not exceed thirty
percent of the household's maximum allowed monthly income for the
housing unit. "Affordable housing" also means farmworker housing.
(2) "Eligible organization" means a county, city, or town
government, local housing authority, public development authority,
community renewal agency, nonprofit community or neighborhood-based
organization, federally recognized Indian tribe in the state of
Washington, or nonprofit housing assistance organization, including
such entities materially participating as a general partner or managing
members of a partnership, limited liability company, or equivalent
organization.
(3) "Extremely low-income household" means a single person, family,
or unrelated persons living together whose income is at or below thirty
percent of the county area median income where the affordable housing
is located, adjusted for household size.
(4) "Federally qualified low-income household" means a single
person, family, or unrelated persons living together whose income is
more than fifty percent but is at or below sixty percent of the county
area median income where the affordable housing is located, adjusted
for household size.
(5) "Governmental entity" means a county, city, or town government,
or regional transit authority.
(6) "Low-income household" means a single person, family, or
unrelated persons living together whose income is more than sixty
percent but is at or below eighty percent of the county area median
income where the affordable housing is located, adjusted for household
size.
(7) "Moderate-income household" means a single person, family, or
unrelated persons living together whose income is more than eighty
percent but is at or below one hundred fifteen percent of the county
area median income where the affordable housing is located.
(8) "Primarily" means fifty-one percent or more.
(9) "Real property" means land, buildings, or buildings and land.
"Real property" also includes air rights.
(10) "Surplus property" means real property, or any interest in
real property, that is not required for the governmental entity's needs
or the discharge of its responsibilities. "Surplus property" includes,
but is not limited to, real property, or any interest in real property,
declared surplus by a governmental entity under that entity's own
policies and procedures. However, "surplus property" does not include
real property, or any interest in real property, that is subject to
federal prohibitions on the governmental entity's authority to sell,
lease, or exchange the property at a price that is less than fair
market value.
(11) "Very low-income household" means a single person, family, or
unrelated persons living together whose income is at or below fifty
percent of the county area median income for the county where the
affordable housing is located, adjusted for household size.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 4 A new section is added to chapter 35.21 RCW
to read as follows:
Every city and town, including every code city operating under
Title 35A RCW, may sell, lease, or exchange surplus property to an
eligible organization for the purpose of affordable housing as
specified in chapter 39.-- RCW (the new chapter created in section 10
of this act). The authority granted to cities and towns, including
code cities, in this section is in addition to, and must not be
construed to limit, any existing authority.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 A new section is added to chapter 36.34 RCW
to read as follows:
Every county may sell, lease, or exchange surplus property to an
eligible organization for the purpose of affordable housing as
specified in chapter 39.-- RCW (the new chapter created in section 10
of this act). The authority granted to counties in this section is in
addition to, and must not be construed to limit, any existing
authority.
Sec. 6 RCW 81.112.080 and 1992 c 101 s 8 are each amended to read
as follows:
An authority shall have the following powers in addition to the
general powers granted by this chapter:
(1) To carry out the planning processes set forth in RCW
81.104.100;
(2) To acquire by purchase, condemnation, gift, or grant and to
lease, construct, add to, improve, replace, repair, maintain, operate,
and regulate the use of high capacity transportation facilities and
properties within authority boundaries including surface, underground,
or overhead railways, tramways, busways, buses, bus sets, entrained and
linked buses, ferries, or other means of local transportation except
taxis, and including escalators, moving sidewalks, personal rapid
transit systems or other people-moving systems, passenger terminal and
parking facilities and properties, and such other facilities and
properties as may be necessary for passenger, vehicular, and vessel
access to and from such people-moving systems, terminal and parking
facilities and properties, together with all lands, rights-of-way,
property, equipment, and accessories necessary for such high capacity
transportation systems. When developing specifications for high
capacity transportation system operating equipment, an authority shall
take into account efforts to establish or sustain a domestic
manufacturing capacity for such equipment. The right of eminent domain
shall be exercised by an authority in the same manner and by the same
procedure as or may be provided by law for cities of the first class,
except insofar as such laws may be inconsistent with the provisions of
this chapter. Public transportation facilities and properties which
are owned by any city, county, county transportation authority, public
transportation benefit area, or metropolitan municipal corporation may
be acquired or used by an authority only with the consent of the agency
owning such facilities. Such agencies are hereby authorized to convey
or lease such facilities to an authority or to contract for their joint
use on such terms as may be fixed by agreement between the agency and
the authority.
The facilities and properties of an authority whose vehicles will
operate primarily within the rights-of-way of public streets, roads, or
highways, may be acquired, developed, and operated without the corridor
and design hearings that are required by RCW 35.58.273 for mass transit
facilities operating on a separate right-of-way;
(3) To dispose of any real or personal property acquired in
connection with any authority function and that is no longer required
for the purposes of the authority, in the same manner as provided for
cities of the first class. When an authority determines that a
facility or any part thereof that has been acquired from any public
agency without compensation is no longer required for authority
purposes, but is required by the agency from which it was acquired, the
authority shall by resolution transfer it to such agency;
(4) To sell, lease, or exchange surplus property to an eligible
organization for the purpose of affordable housing as specified in
chapter 39.-- RCW (the new chapter created in section 10 of this act);
(5) To fix rates, tolls, fares, and charges for the use of such
facilities and to establish various routes and classes of service.
Fares or charges may be adjusted or eliminated for any distinguishable
class of users.
Sec. 7 RCW 36.34.135 and 1993 c 461 s 6 are each amended to read
as follows:
If a county owns property that is located anywhere within the
county, including within the limits of a city or town, and that is
suitable for affordable housing, the legislative authority of the
county may, by negotiation, lease the property for affordable housing
for a term not to exceed seventy-five years to any public housing
authority or nonprofit organization that has demonstrated its ability
to construct or operate housing for very low-income, low-income, or
moderate-income households as defined in ((RCW 43.63A.510)) section 3
of this act and special needs populations. Leases for housing for very
low-income, low-income, or moderate-income households and special needs
populations shall not be subject to any requirement of periodic rental
adjustments, as provided in RCW 36.34.180, but shall provide for such
fixed annual rents as appear reasonable considering the public, social,
and health benefits to be derived by providing an adequate supply of
safe and sanitary housing for very low-income, low-income, or moderate-income households and special needs populations.
Sec. 8 RCW 39.102.020 and 2010 c 164 s 11 are each amended to
read as follows:
The definitions in this section apply throughout this chapter
unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Annual state contribution limit" means seven million five
hundred thousand dollars statewide per fiscal year.
(2) "Assessed value" means the valuation of taxable real property
as placed on the last completed assessment roll.
(3) "Board" means the community economic revitalization board under
chapter 43.160 RCW.
(4) "Demonstration project" means one of the following projects:
(a) Bellingham waterfront redevelopment project;
(b) Spokane river district project at Liberty Lake; and
(c) Vancouver riverwest project.
(5) "Department" means the department of revenue.
(6) "Fiscal year" means the twelve-month period beginning July 1st
and ending the following June 30th.
(7) "Local excise tax allocation revenue" means an amount of local
excise taxes equal to some or all of the sponsoring local government's
local excise tax increment, amounts of local excise taxes equal to some
or all of any participating local government's excise tax increment as
agreed upon in the written agreement under RCW 39.102.080(1), or both,
and dedicated to local infrastructure financing.
(8) "Local excise tax increment" means an amount equal to the
estimated annual increase in local excise taxes in each calendar year
following the approval of the revenue development area by the board
from taxable activity within the revenue development area, as set forth
in the application provided to the board under RCW 39.102.040, and
updated in accordance with RCW 39.102.140(1)(f).
(9) "Local excise taxes" means local revenues derived from the
imposition of sales and use taxes authorized in RCW 82.14.030.
(10) "Local government" means any city, town, county, port
district, and any federally recognized Indian tribe.
(11) "Local infrastructure financing" means the use of revenues
received from local excise tax allocation revenues, local property tax
allocation revenues, other revenues from local public sources, and
revenues received from the local option sales and use tax authorized in
RCW 82.14.475, dedicated to pay either the principal and interest on
bonds authorized under RCW 39.102.150 or to pay public improvement
costs on a pay-as-you-go basis subject to RCW 39.102.195, or both.
(12) "Local property tax allocation revenue" means those tax
revenues derived from the receipt of regular property taxes levied on
the property tax allocation revenue value and used for local
infrastructure financing.
(13) "Low-income housing" means residential housing for low-income
persons or families who lack the means which is necessary to enable
them, without financial assistance, to live in decent, safe, and
sanitary dwellings, without overcrowding. For the purposes of this
subsection, "low income" means income that does not exceed eighty
percent of the median family income for the standard metropolitan
statistical area in which the revenue development area is located.
(14) "Ordinance" means any appropriate method of taking legislative
action by a local government.
(15) "Participating local government" means a local government
having a revenue development area within its geographic boundaries that
has entered into a written agreement with a sponsoring local government
as provided in RCW 39.102.080 to allow the use of all or some of its
local excise tax allocation revenues or other revenues from local
public sources dedicated for local infrastructure financing.
(16) "Participating taxing district" means a local government
having a revenue development area within its geographic boundaries that
has entered into a written agreement with a sponsoring local government
as provided in RCW 39.102.080 to allow the use of some or all of its
local property tax allocation revenues or other revenues from local
public sources dedicated for local infrastructure financing.
(17) "Property tax allocation revenue base value" means the
assessed value of real property located within a revenue development
area less the property tax allocation revenue value.
(18)(a)(i) "Property tax allocation revenue value" means
seventy-five percent of any increase in the assessed value of real
property in a revenue development area resulting from:
(A) The placement of new construction, improvements to property, or
both, on the assessment roll, where the new construction and
improvements are initiated after the revenue development area is
approved by the board;
(B) The cost of new housing construction, conversion, and
rehabilitation improvements, when such cost is treated as new
construction for purposes of chapter 84.55 RCW as provided in RCW
84.14.020, and the new housing construction, conversion, and
rehabilitation improvements are initiated after the revenue development
area is approved by the board;
(C) The cost of rehabilitation of historic property, when such cost
is treated as new construction for purposes of chapter 84.55 RCW as
provided in RCW 84.26.070, and the rehabilitation is initiated after
the revenue development area is approved by the board.
(ii) Increases in the assessed value of real property in a revenue
development area resulting from (a)(i)(A) through (C) of this
subsection are included in the property tax allocation revenue value in
the initial year. These same amounts are also included in the property
tax allocation revenue value in subsequent years unless the property
becomes exempt from property taxation.
(b) "Property tax allocation revenue value" includes seventy-five
percent of any increase in the assessed value of new construction
consisting of an entire building in the years following the initial
year, unless the building becomes exempt from property taxation.
(c) Except as provided in (b) of this subsection, "property tax
allocation revenue value" does not include any increase in the assessed
value of real property after the initial year.
(d) There is no property tax allocation revenue value if the
assessed value of real property in a revenue development area has not
increased as a result of any of the reasons specified in (a)(i)(A)
through (C) of this subsection.
(e) For purposes of this subsection, "initial year" means:
(i) For new construction and improvements to property added to the
assessment roll, the year during which the new construction and
improvements are initially placed on the assessment roll;
(ii) For the cost of new housing construction, conversion, and
rehabilitation improvements, when such cost is treated as new
construction for purposes of chapter 84.55 RCW, the year when such cost
is treated as new construction for purposes of levying taxes for
collection in the following year; and
(iii) For the cost of rehabilitation of historic property, when
such cost is treated as new construction for purposes of chapter 84.55
RCW, the year when such cost is treated as new construction for
purposes of levying taxes for collection in the following year.
(19) "Public improvement costs" means the cost of: (a) Design,
planning, acquisition including land acquisition, site preparation
including land clearing, construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation,
improvement, and installation of public improvements; (b) demolishing,
relocating, maintaining, and operating property pending construction of
public improvements; (c) the local government's portion of relocating
utilities as a result of public improvements; (d) financing public
improvements, including interest during construction, legal and other
professional services, taxes, insurance, principal and interest costs
on general indebtedness issued to finance public improvements, and any
necessary reserves for general indebtedness; (e) assessments incurred
in revaluing real property for the purpose of determining the property
tax allocation revenue base value that are in excess of costs incurred
by the assessor in accordance with the revaluation plan under chapter
84.41 RCW, and the costs of apportioning the taxes and complying with
this chapter and other applicable law; (f) administrative expenses and
feasibility studies reasonably necessary and related to these costs;
and (g) any of the above-described costs that may have been incurred
before adoption of the ordinance authorizing the public improvements
and the use of local infrastructure financing to fund the costs of the
public improvements.
(20) "Public improvements" means:
(a) Infrastructure improvements within the revenue development area
that include:
(i) Street, bridge, and road construction and maintenance,
including highway interchange construction;
(ii) Water and sewer system construction and improvements,
including wastewater reuse facilities;
(iii) Sidewalks, traffic controls, and streetlights;
(iv) Parking, terminal, and dock facilities;
(v) Park and ride facilities of a transit authority;
(vi) Park facilities and recreational areas, including trails; and
(vii) Storm water and drainage management systems;
(b) Expenditures for facilities and improvements that support
affordable housing as defined in ((RCW 43.63A.510)) section 3 of this
act.
(21) "Real property" has the same meaning as in RCW 84.04.090 and
also includes any privately owned improvements located on publicly
owned land that are subject to property taxation.
(22) "Regular property taxes" means regular property taxes as
defined in RCW 84.04.140, except: (a) Regular property taxes levied by
public utility districts specifically for the purpose of making
required payments of principal and interest on general indebtedness;
(b) regular property taxes levied by the state for the support of the
common schools under RCW 84.52.065; and (c) regular property taxes
authorized by RCW 84.55.050 that are limited to a specific purpose.
"Regular property taxes" do not include excess property tax levies that
are exempt from the aggregate limits for junior and senior taxing
districts as provided in RCW 84.52.043.
(23) "Relocating a business" means the closing of a business and
the reopening of that business, or the opening of a new business that
engages in the same activities as the previous business, in a different
location within a one-year period, when an individual or entity has an
ownership interest in the business at the time of closure and at the
time of opening or reopening. "Relocating a business" does not include
the closing and reopening of a business in a new location where the
business has been acquired and is under entirely new ownership at the
new location, or the closing and reopening of a business in a new
location as a result of the exercise of the power of eminent domain.
(24) "Revenue development area" means the geographic area adopted
by a sponsoring local government and approved by the board, from which
local excise and property tax allocation revenues are derived for local
infrastructure financing.
(25)(a) "Revenues from local public sources" means:
(i) Amounts of local excise tax allocation revenues and local
property tax allocation revenues, dedicated by sponsoring local
governments, participating local governments, and participating taxing
districts, for local infrastructure financing; and
(ii) Any other local revenues, except as provided in (b) of this
subsection, including revenues derived from federal and private
sources.
(b) Revenues from local public sources do not include any local
funds derived from state grants, state loans, or any other state moneys
including any local sales and use taxes credited against the state
sales and use taxes imposed under chapter 82.08 or 82.12 RCW.
(26) "Small business" has the same meaning as provided in RCW
19.85.020.
(27) "Sponsoring local government" means a city, town, or county,
and for the purpose of this chapter a federally recognized Indian tribe
or any combination thereof, that adopts a revenue development area and
applies to the board to use local infrastructure financing.
(28) "State contribution" means the lesser of:
(a) One million dollars;
(b) The total amount of local excise tax allocation revenues, local
property tax allocation revenues, and other revenues from local public
sources, that are dedicated by a sponsoring local government, any
participating local governments, and participating taxing districts, in
the preceding calendar year to the payment of principal and interest on
bonds issued under RCW 39.102.150 or to pay public improvement costs on
a pay-as-you-go basis subject to RCW 39.102.195, or both;
(c) The amount of project award granted by the board in the notice
of approval to use local infrastructure financing under RCW 39.102.040;
or
(d) The highest amount of state excise tax allocation revenues and
state property tax allocation revenues for any one calendar year as
determined by the sponsoring local government and reported to the board
and the department as required by RCW 39.102.140.
(29) "State excise tax allocation revenue" means an amount equal to
the annual increase in state excise taxes estimated to be received by
the state in each calendar year following the approval of the revenue
development area by the board, from taxable activity within the revenue
development area as set forth in the application provided to the board
under RCW 39.102.040 and periodically updated and reported as required
in RCW 39.102.140(1)(f).
(30) "State excise taxes" means revenues derived from state retail
sales and use taxes under RCW 82.08.020(1) and 82.12.020 at the rate
provided in RCW 82.08.020(1), less the amount of tax distributions from
all local retail sales and use taxes, other than the local sales and
use taxes authorized by RCW 82.14.475 for the applicable revenue
development area, imposed on the same taxable events that are credited
against the state retail sales and use taxes under chapters 82.08 and
82.12 RCW.
(31) "State property tax allocation revenue" means an amount equal
to the estimated tax revenues derived from the imposition of property
taxes levied by the state for the support of common schools under RCW
84.52.065 on the property tax allocation revenue value, as set forth in
the application submitted to the board under RCW 39.102.040 and updated
annually in the report required under RCW 39.102.140(1)(f).
(32) "Taxing district" means a government entity that levies or has
levied for it regular property taxes upon real property located within
a proposed or approved revenue development area.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 9 The following acts or parts of acts are each
repealed:
(1) RCW 43.19.19201 (Affordable housing -- Inventory of suitable
property) and 2011 1st sp.s. c 43 s 218, 1995 c 399 s 64, & 1993 c 461
s 7;
(2) RCW 43.20A.037 (Affordable housing -- Inventory of suitable
housing) and 1995 c 399 s 65 & 1993 c 461 s 8;
(3) RCW 43.63A.510 (Affordable housing -- Inventory of state-owned
land) and 1993 c 461 s 2 & 1990 c 253 s 6;
(4) RCW 47.12.064 (Affordable housing -- Inventory of suitable
property) and 1995 c 399 s 121 & 1993 c 461 s 10; and
(5) RCW 72.09.055 (Affordable housing--Inventory of suitable
property) and 1995 c 399 s 202 & 1993 c 461 s 12.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 10 Sections 1 through 3 of this act constitute
a new chapter in Title
E2SHB 1563 -
By Committee on Financial Institutions, Housing & Insurance
NOT CONSIDERED
On page 1, line 2 of the title, after "housing;" strike the remainder of the title and insert "amending RCW 81.112.080, 36.34.135 and 39.102.020; adding a new section to chapter 35.21 RCW; adding a new section to chapter 36.34 RCW; adding a new chapter to Title 39 RCW; and repealing RCW 43.19.19201, 43.20A.037, 43.63A.510, 47.12.064, and 72.09.055."
EFFECT: (1) "Surplus property" does not include property subject
to federal prohibitions on its disposal for less than fair market
value.
(2) The bill does not apply to state-owned surplus property.
(3) Surplus property cannot be donated under this bill.
(4) Any sale, lease, or exchange that is less than fair market
value must be documented by the selling governmental entity to indicate
that the value received is commensurate with the level of affordable
housing provided on the property.