File #: 2023-0905    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Consent Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 11/22/2023 In control: City Council
On agenda: 12/5/2023 Final action:
Title: CONSIDER TAKING A POSITION OF SUPPORT AND SENDING A CORRESPONDING LETTER REGARDING H.R. 6438 (BROWNFIELDS REDEVELOPMENT TAX INCENTIVE REAUTHORIZATION ACT OF 2023) TO ALLOW DEVELOPERS TO FULLY DEDUCT THEIR CLEANUP EXPENSES ON CONTAMINATED PROPERTY (CITY COUNCIL)
Attachments: 1. Letter Regarding H.R. 6438
Date Ver.Action ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsVideo
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Report to Mayor and City Council
Tuesday, December 05, 2023
Consent


SUBJECT:
Title
CONSIDER TAKING A POSITION OF SUPPORT AND SENDING A CORRESPONDING LETTER REGARDING H.R. 6438 (BROWNFIELDS REDEVELOPMENT TAX INCENTIVE REAUTHORIZATION ACT OF 2023) TO ALLOW DEVELOPERS TO FULLY DEDUCT THEIR CLEANUP EXPENSES ON CONTAMINATED PROPERTY (CITY COUNCIL)

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I. SUMMARY

This item transmits a request for City Council to consider taking a position of support and directing staff to send a corresponding letter (included as Exhibit 1) regarding H.R. 6438, the "Brownfields Redevelopment Tax Incentive Reauthorization Act of 2023. The letter requests for the Honorable Congresswoman Barragan to support and cosponsor the bill designed to aid developers and landowners with the costs of cleanup in contaminated sites.

II. RECOMMENDATION
Recommendation

SUPPORT H.R. 6438 and DIRECT staff to transmit a corresponding letter of support.


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III. ALTERNATIVES

TAKE another action the City Council deems appropriate and that is consistent with applicable laws.

IV. BACKGROUND

According to the National Brownfields Coalition, the federal Brownfield Tax Incentive was first passed in 1997 to allow parties who voluntarily investigated and remediated contaminated properties to deduct all cleanup costs on their federal income tax return in the year they spent the money on cleanup. By allowing for expensing rather than requiring remediation deductions to be spread out over ten years, the tax incentive was a powerful driver of private investment in the economic revitalization of brownfields. Before it expired in 2012, this deduction was used more than 625 times in more than 40 states and was gaining momentum. Developers used the cash savings from this incentive to invest in their next brownfield project, exactly the behavior needed to accelerate cleanup of the nation's contaminated sites. The National Brownfields Coalition issued a report in 2015 showing that this deduction dramatically ...

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