Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
Laws of Minnesota 1990
CHAPTER 552-H.F.No. 2457
An act relating to public financing; allocating low
income housing credits; allocating authority to issue
tax exempt revenue bonds; regulating use of bond
proceeds; restricting loans from proceeds of mortgage
revenue bonds under certain circumstances; amending
Minnesota Statutes 1988, sections 462A.222,
subdivision 3; 474A.02, subdivisions 6, 8, and by
adding a subdivision; 474A.03; 474A.061, subdivision
3, and by adding subdivisions; 474A.091, subdivisions
1, 4, and 5; 474A.131, subdivision 2; and 474A.14;
Minnesota Statutes Second 1989 Supplement, sections
474A.061, subdivisions 1 and 4; and 474A.091,
subdivisions 2 and 3; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 474A; repealing Minnesota
Statutes 1988, sections 474A.081, subdivisions 1, 2,
and 4; and 474A.091, subdivision 4a; Minnesota
Statutes Second 1989 Supplement, section 474A.061,
subdivision 2.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 462A.222,
subdivision 3, as amended by Laws 1990, chapter 368, section 6,
is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [ALLOCATION PROCEDURE.] (a) Projects will be
awarded tax credits in three competitive rounds on an annual
basis. The date for applications for each round must be
determined by the agency. No allocating agency may award tax
credits prior to the application dates established by the agency.
(b) Each allocating agency must meet the requirements of
section 42(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended
through December 31, 1989, for the allocation of tax credits and
the selection of projects.
(c) In For applications submitted for the first round, an
allocating agency may allocate tax credits only to the following
types of projects:
(1) single-room occupancy projects which are affordable by
households whose income does not exceed 30 percent of the median
income;
(2) family housing projects in which at least 75 percent of
the units contain two or more bedrooms and at least 25 one-third
of the 75 percent contain three or more bedrooms;
(3) projects in which at least 50 percent of the units are
for mentally ill, mentally retarded, drug dependent,
developmentally disabled, or physically handicapped persons;
(4) projects which preserve existing subsidized housing
which is subject to prepayment if the use of tax credits is
necessary to prevent conversion to market rate use; or
(5) projects financed by the Farmers Home Administration
which meet statewide distribution goals.
(d) Before the date for applications for the second round,
the allocating agencies other than the agency shall return all
uncommitted and unallocated tax credits to the pool from which
they were allocated, along with copies of any allocation or
commitment. In the second round, the agency shall allocate the
remaining credits from the regional pools to projects from the
respective regions.
(e) In the third round, all unallocated tax credits must be
transferred to a unified pool for allocation by the agency on a
statewide basis.
(f) Unused portions of the state ceiling for low-income
housing tax credits reserved to cities and counties for
allocation may be returned at any time to the agency for
allocation.
Sec. 2. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.02,
subdivision 6, is amended to read:
Subd. 6. [DEPARTMENT; DEPARTMENT OF TRADE AND ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT FINANCE.] "Department" means the department of trade
and economic development finance.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.02,
subdivision 8, is amended to read:
Subd. 8. [FEDERAL TAX LAW.] "Federal tax law" means those
provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended
through December 31, 1989, that limit the aggregate amount of
obligations of a specified type or types which may be issued by
an issuer during a calendar year whose interest is excluded from
gross income for purposes of federal income taxation.
Sec. 4. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.02, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 22b. [PUBLIC FACILITIES PROJECT.] "Public facilities
project" means any publicly owned facility that is eligible to
be financed with the proceeds of public facilities bonds as
defined under section 474A.02, subdivision 23a.
Sec. 5. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.03, is
amended to read:
474A.03 [DETERMINATION OF ANNUAL VOLUME CAP.]
Subdivision 1. [ANNUAL VOLUME CAP UNDER FEDERAL TAX LAW;
POOL ALLOCATIONS.] At the beginning of each calendar year after
December 31, 1987 1990, the commissioner shall determine the
aggregate dollar amount of the annual volume cap under federal
tax law for the calendar year, and of this amount the
commissioner shall make the following allocation:
(1) $74,000,000 $75,000,000 to the manufacturing pool;
(2) $30,000,000 $46,000,000 to the multifamily housing
pool;
(3) $21,000,000 $10,000,000 to the public facilities pool;
and
(4) amounts to be allocated as provided in subdivision 2a.
If the annual volume cap is greater or less than the amount
of bonding authority allocated under clauses (1) to (4) and
subdivision 2a, paragraph (a), clauses (1) to (3), the
allocation must be adjusted so that each adjusted allocation is
the same percentage of the annual volume cap as each original
allocation is of the total bonding authority originally
allocated.
Subd. 2a. [ENTITLEMENT ISSUER ALLOCATION.] (a) The
commissioner shall make the following allocation to the
Minnesota housing finance agency and the following cities:
(1) $50,000,000 $51,000,000 per year to the Minnesota
housing finance agency, less any amount received in the previous
year under section 474A.091, subdivision 6;
(2) $20,000,000 per year to the city of Minneapolis; and
(3) $15,000,000 per year to the city of Saint Paul.; and
(4) $3,000,000 to each of the cities of the first class
located outside of the metropolitan area as defined in section
473.121, subdivision 2, or an amount equal to the amount of
mortgage bonds or residential rental project bonds that each
city permanently issued in the previous calendar year, whichever
amount is less. If a city is eligible to receive an entitlement
allocation under this clause, the amount of the allocation is
deducted from the allocations made under clauses (1), (2), and
(3) in proportion to the total amount of allocations made in
clauses (1), (2), and (3).
(b) Allocations provided under this subdivision must be
used for mortgage bonds, mortgage credit certificates, or
residential rental project bonds, except that entitlement cities
may also use their allocations for public facility bonds.
Sec. 6. [474A.045] [SCORING SYSTEM FOR MANUFACTURING
PROJECTS.]
The following criteria must be used in determining the
allocation of small issue bonds for manufacturing projects. The
issuer must prepare and submit to the commissioner a public
purpose scoring worksheet that presents the data and methods
used in determining the total score under this section. The
total score is the sum of the following:
(1) the number of net direct new jobs in the state
generated by the proposed project for the next two years per
$100,000 of proposed allocation multiplied by 15;
(2) the number of direct jobs retained in the state due to
the proposed project per $100,000 of proposed allocation
multiplied by 15;
(3) the quotient of the total increase in net payroll
generated in the state by the proposed project divided by the
proposed bond allocation, multiplied by 100;
(4) the quotient of the estimated total net increase in
property taxes generated in the state by the project in the
first full year of operation divided by the proposed bond
allocation, multiplied by 500; and
(5) the unemployment rate in the community where the
proposed project is located measured as a percent of the state's
unemployment rate, multiplied by ten.
The community unemployment rate used in determining the
points under clause (5) must be the rate for the county in which
the proposed project is located unless an accurate rate may be
estimated for a smaller geographic area or census tract. The
commissioner of jobs and training must approve the rate used
when an unemployment rate other than that for a county is used.
If the manufacturing project will retain jobs and the total
score includes points calculated under clause (2), the issuer
must certify to the commissioner that the proceeds of the small
issue bonds are required to retain those jobs. The commissioner
shall submit the information relating to the retaining of jobs
to the commissioner of trade and economic development. The
commissioner of trade and economic development must verify that
the proceeds of the small issue bonds are required to retain the
jobs referred to in the certification prior to the awarding of
any points under this section.
Sec. 7. [474A.047] [RESIDENTIAL RENTAL BONDS;
LIMITATIONS.]
Subdivision 1. [ELIGIBILITY.] An issuer may only use the
proceeds from residential rental bonds if the proposed project
meets one of the following:
(a) The proposed project is a single room occupancy project
and all the units of the project will be occupied by individuals
whose incomes at the time of their initial residency in the
project are 50 percent or less of the greater of the statewide
or county median income adjusted for household size as
determined by the federal Department of Housing and Urban
Development; or
(b) The proposed project is a multifamily project where at
least 75 percent of the units have two or more bedrooms and at
least one-third of the 75 percent have three or more bedrooms.
At least 75 percent of the units of the multifamily project must
be occupied by individuals or families whose incomes at the time
of their initial residency in the project are 60 percent or less
of the greater of the statewide or county median income adjusted
for household size as determined by the federal Department of
Housing and Urban Development.
The maximum rent for a proposed single room occupancy unit
under paragraph (a) is 30 percent of the amount equal to 30
percent of the greater of the statewide or county median income
for a one-member household as determined by the federal
Department of Housing and Urban Development. The maximum rent
for a multifamily project under paragraph (b) is 30 percent of
the amount equal to 50 percent of the greater of the statewide
or county median income as determined by the federal Department
of Housing and Urban Development based on a household size with
one person per bedroom.
Subd. 2. [15-YEAR AGREEMENT.] Prior to the issuance of
residential rental bonds, the developer of the project for which
the bond proceeds will be used must enter into a 15-year
agreement with the issuer that specifies the maximum rental
rates of the units in the project and the income levels of the
residents of the project. The rental rates and income levels
must be within the limitations established under subdivision 1.
The developer must annually certify to the issuer over the term
of the agreement that the rental rates are within the
limitations under subdivision 1. The issuer may request
individual certification of the income of all residents of the
project. The commissioner may request from the issuer a copy of
the annual certification prepared by the developer. The
commissioner may require the issuer to request individual
certification of all residents of the project.
Subd. 3. [PENALTY.] If a project is found out of
compliance with the rental rate or income level requirements
under subdivision 1, the owner or owners of the project shall
pay a penalty to the commissioner equal to one-half of one
percent of the total amount of bonds issued for the project
under this chapter. For each additional year a project is out
of compliance, the annual penalty must be increased by one-half
of one percent of the total amount of bonds issued under this
chapter for the project. The commissioner shall deposit any
penalties collected under this subdivision in the housing trust
fund account established under section 462A.201.
Sec. 8. [474A.048] [SINGLE FAMILY MORTGAGE BONDS;
LIMITATIONS.]
Subdivision 1. [DEFINITIONS.] (a) For purposes of this
section the following terms have the meaning given them.
(b) "City" means a city as defined in section 462C.02,
subdivision 6.
(c) "Existing housing" means single family housing that (i)
has been previously occupied prior to the first day of the
origination period; or (ii) has been available for occupancy for
at least 12 months but has not been previously occupied.
(d) "Metropolitan area" means the Minneapolis-St. Paul
metropolitan statistical area as defined by the United States
Department of Commerce's Bureau of the Census.
(e) "New housing" means single family housing that has not
been previously occupied.
(f) "Origination period" means the period that loans
financed with the proceeds of qualified mortgage revenue bonds
are available for the purchase of single family housing. The
origination period begins when financing actually becomes
available to the borrowers for loans.
(g) "Redevelopment area" means a compact and contiguous
area within which the city finds by resolution that 70 percent
of the parcels in the area are occupied by buildings, streets,
utilities, or other improvements and more than 25 percent of the
buildings, not including outbuildings, are structurally
substandard to a degree requiring substantial renovation or
clearance.
(h) "Single family housing" means dwelling units eligible
to be financed from the proceeds of qualified mortgage revenue
bonds under federal law.
(i) "Structurally substandard" means containing defects in
structural elements or a combination of deficiencies in
essential utilities and facilities, light, ventilation, fire
protection including adequate egress, layout and condition of
interior partitions, or similar factors, which defects or
deficiencies are of sufficient total significance to justify
substantial renovation or clearance.
Subd. 2. [LIMITATION; ORIGINATION PERIOD.] During the
first ten months of an origination period, the Minnesota housing
finance agency or a city may make loans financed with proceeds
of mortgage bonds for the purchase of existing housing. Loans
financed with the proceeds of mortgage bonds for new housing in
the metropolitan area may be made during the first ten months of
an origination period only if at least one of the following
conditions is met:
(1) the new housing is located in a redevelopment area and
is replacing a structurally substandard structure or structures;
(2) the new housing is located on a parcel purchased by the
city or conveyed to the city under section 282.01, subdivision
1; or
(3) the new housing is part of a housing affordability
initiative, other than those financed with the proceeds from the
sale of bonds, in which federal, state, or local assistance is
used to substantially improve the terms of the financing or to
substantially write down the purchase price of the new housing.
Upon expiration of the first ten-month period, the agency
or a city may make loans financed with the proceeds of mortgage
bonds for the purchase of new and existing housing.
Subd. 3. [NONMETROPOLITAN AREA.] The Minnesota housing
finance agency and cities shall initiate steps in the
nonmetropolitan areas of the state similar to those required for
the metropolitan area under subdivision 2 to encourage loans for
existing housing or for new housing under the conditions
specified in subdivision 2.
Subd. 4. [REDEVELOPMENT AREA.] A city must submit to the
Minnesota housing finance agency the resolution adopted by the
governing body of the city finding an area to be a redevelopment
area and a map of the redevelopment area.
Subd. 5. [LIMITATION; COMMITMENTS AND LOANS TO BUILDERS
AND DEVELOPERS.] The Minnesota housing finance agency or a city
may not make available, provide set asides, or commit to make
available proceeds of mortgage bonds for the exclusive use of
builders or developers for loans to eligible purchasers for new
housing except for new housing described in subdivision 2,
clauses (1) to (3). This prohibition is in effect for the total
origination period.
Subd. 6. [REPORTING REQUIREMENT.] The Minnesota housing
finance agency and any city that provides loans for new housing
financed with the proceeds of mortgage bonds shall report to the
chairs of the appropriate housing related standing committees or
divisions of the state senate and house of representatives by
January 1 of each year detailing new housing activity financed
with the proceeds of mortgage bonds, including a description of
affordable housing initiatives, the number of loans, the average
purchase price, average borrower income, and steps taken to
encourage loan activity as required in subdivision 3.
Sec. 9. Minnesota Statutes Second 1989 Supplement, section
474A.061, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [APPLICATION.] (a) An issuer may apply for
an allocation under this section by submitting to the department
an application on forms provided by the department, accompanied
by (1) a preliminary resolution, (2) a statement of bond counsel
that the proposed issue of obligations requires an allocation
under this chapter, (3) the type of qualified bonds to be
issued, and (4) an application deposit in the amount of one
percent of the requested allocation before the last Monday in
August, or in the amount of two percent of the requested
allocation on or after the last Monday in August, and (5) a
public purpose scoring worksheet for small issue
applications. An issuer applying for an allocation from the
multifamily housing pool who does not sign an agreement
requiring that the project comply with the gross rent
restrictions of the low-income housing credit program under
section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended
through December 31, 1988, must submit an additional application
deposit in the amount of two percent of the requested allocation
before the last Monday in August, or in the amount of one
percent of the requested allocation on or after the last Monday
in August. The issuer must pay the application deposit by
check. The Minnesota housing finance agency may apply for and
receive an allocation under this section without submitting an
application deposit.
(b) An entitlement issuer may not apply for an allocation
from the multifamily housing pool or from the public facilities
pool unless it has either permanently issued bonds equal to the
amount of its entitlement allocation for the current year plus
any amount of bonding authority carried forward from previous
years or returned for reallocation all of its unused entitlement
allocation. For purposes of this subdivision, its entitlement
allocation includes an amount obtained under section 474A.04,
subdivision 6.
(c) If an application is rejected under this section, the
commissioner must notify the applicant and return the
application deposit to the applicant within 30 days unless the
applicant requests in writing that the application be
resubmitted. The granting of an allocation of bonding authority
under this section must be evidenced by a certificate of
allocation.
Sec. 10. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.061, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 2a. [HOUSING POOL ALLOCATION.] (a) On the first
business day that falls on a Monday of the calendar year and on
the first Monday in April, the commissioner shall allocate
available bonding authority in the housing pool to applications
received by the Monday of the previous week for residential
rental projects that meet the eligibility criteria under section
7. After April 1, and until April 15, the Minnesota housing
finance agency may accept applications from cities for
single-family housing programs which meet program requirements
as follows:
(1) the housing program must meet a locally identified
housing need and be economically viable;
(2) the adjusted income of home buyers cannot exceed the
agency's income limits, except in the Minneapolis-St. Paul
metropolitan statistical area as determined by the United States
Department of Commerce where the adjusted income limits of home
buyers may not exceed the greater of the agency's income limits
or 80 percent of the area median income as published by the
Department of Housing and Urban Development;
(3) house price limits may not exceed the greater of agency
house price limits or 90 percent of the median purchase price in
the city for which the bonds are to be sold up to a maximum of
80 percent of the safe harbor limitations for existing housing
provided under section 143(e) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended through December 31, 1989, except that house
price limits may be 80 percent of the safe harbor limitation for
existing housing if subsidy is used to reduce the effective
purchase price of the property to the above levels. Data
establishing the median purchase price in the city must be
included in the application by a city requesting house price
limits higher than the housing finance agency's house price
limits;
(4) the housing program meets the requirements of section
8; and
(5) an application deposit equal to one percent of the
requested allocation must be submitted with the city's
application. The agency shall submit the application and
application deposit to the commissioner when requesting an
allocation from the housing pool.
The Minnesota housing finance agency may accept
applications from July 1 to July 15 from cities for
single-family housing programs which meet program requirements
specified under clauses (1) to (5) if bonding authority is
available in the housing pool. The agency and a representative
for each applicant shall negotiate the terms of an agreement
regarding the allocation of available authority among the
applicants. The agreement must allot available bonding
authority among the applicants. For purposes of paragraphs (a)
to (d), "city" has the meaning given it in section 462C.02,
subdivision 6, and "agency" means the Minnesota housing finance
agency.
(b) Upon reaching agreement with participating cities, the
agency shall forward to the commissioner the amounts allotted to
each applicant pursuant to the agreement. The agency may issue
bonds on behalf of participating cities. The agency shall
request an allocation from the commissioner for all applicants
who choose to have the agency issue bonds on their behalf and
the commissioner shall allocate the requested amount to the
agency. The agency may request an allocation at any time
between the first Tuesday after the first Monday in April and
the last Monday in August, but may request an allocation no
later than the last Monday in August. The commissioner shall
return any application deposit to a city that paid an
application deposit under paragraph (a), clause (5), but was not
part of the agreement forwarded to the commissioner under this
paragraph.
(c) A city may choose to issue bonds on its own behalf or
through a joint powers agreement and may request an allocation
from the commissioner. If the total amount requested by all
applicants exceeds the amount available in the pool, the city
may not receive a greater allocation than the amount it would
have received under the agreement forwarded by the Minnesota
housing finance agency to the commissioner. No city may request
or receive an allocation from the commissioner until the
agreement under paragraph (b) has been forwarded to the
commissioner. Between the first Monday in April and the last
Monday in August, no city may receive an allocation from the
housing pool which has not first applied to the Minnesota
housing finance agency. The commissioner shall allocate the
requested amount to the city or cities subject to the
limitations under this paragraph.
(d) If a city issues mortgage bonds from an allocation
received under paragraph (c), the issuer must provide for the
recycling of funds into new loans. If the issuer is not able to
provide for recycling, the issuer must notify the commissioner
in writing of the reason that recycling was not possible and the
reason the issuer elected not to have the Minnesota housing
finance agency issue the bonds. "Recycling" means the use of
money generated from the repayment and prepayment of loans for
further eligible loans or for the redemption of bonds and the
issuance of current refunding bonds.
(e) The total amount of allocation for mortgage bonds for
one city is limited to the lesser of (i) $4,000,000 or (ii) 20
percent of the total amount available for allocation for
mortgage bonds from the housing pool after the first Monday in
April.
Sec. 11. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.061, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 2b. [MANUFACTURING POOL ALLOCATION.] From the
beginning of the calendar year until the last Monday in August,
the commissioner shall allocate available bonding authority from
the manufacturing pool on Monday of each week to applications
received on or before the Monday of the preceding week. The
amount of allocation provided to an issuer for a specific
manufacturing project will be based on the number of points
received for the proposed project under the scoring system under
section 6. Proposed projects that receive 50 points or more are
eligible for all of the proposed allocation. Proposed projects
that receive less than 50 points are eligible to receive a
proportionally reduced share of the proposed authority.
If there are two or more applications for manufacturing
projects from the manufacturing pool and there is insufficient
bonding authority to provide allocations for all projects in any
one week after all eligible bonding authority has been
transferred as provided in section 474A.081, the available
bonding authority shall be awarded by lot unless otherwise
agreed to by the respective issuers.
Sec. 12. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.061, is
amended by adding a subdivision to read:
Subd. 2c. [PUBLIC FACILITIES POOL ALLOCATION.] From the
beginning of the calendar year until the last Monday in August,
the commissioner shall allocate available bonding authority from
the public facilities pool on Monday of each week to
applications for eligible public facilities projects received on
or before the Monday of the preceding week. If there are two or
more applications for public facilities projects from the pool
and there is insufficient bonding authority to provide
allocations for all projects in any one week after all eligible
bonding authority has been transferred as provided in section
474A.081, the available bonding authority shall be awarded by
lot unless otherwise agreed to by the respective issuers.
Sec. 13. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.061,
subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [ADDITIONAL DEPOSIT.] An issuer which has
received an allocation under this section may retain any unused
portion of the allocation after the first Monday Tuesday in
September only if the issuer has submitted to the department
before the first Monday Tuesday in September a letter stating
its intent to issue obligations pursuant to the allocation
before the end of the calendar year or within the time period
permitted by federal tax law and a deposit in addition to that
provided under subdivision 1, equal to one percent of the amount
of allocation to be retained. The Minnesota housing finance
agency may retain an unused portion of an allocation after the
first Tuesday in September without submitting an additional
deposit.
Sec. 14. Minnesota Statutes Second 1989 Supplement,
section 474A.061, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [RETURN OF ALLOCATION; DEPOSIT REFUND.] (a) If an
issuer that receives an allocation under this section determines
that it will not issue obligations equal to all or a portion of
the allocation received under this section by the end of the
current year within 90 days of allocation or within the time
period permitted by federal tax law, whichever is less, the
issuer must notify the department. If the issuer notifies the
department or the 90-day period since allocation has expired
prior to the last Monday in August, the amount of allocation is
canceled and returned must be reallocated for reallocation
through the pool from which it was originally allocated. If the
issuer notifies the department or the 90-day period since
allocation has expired on or after the last Monday in August,
the amount of allocation is canceled and returned must be
reallocated for reallocation through the unified pool. If the
issuer notifies the department after the last Monday in
November, the amount of allocation is canceled and returned must
be reallocated for reallocation to the Minnesota housing finance
agency.
(b) An issuer that returns for reallocation all or a
portion of an allocation received under this section within 90
days of allocation shall receive within 30 days a refund of all
of its application deposits equal to:
(1) one-half of the amount on application deposit for the
amount of bonding authority returned before the first Monday in
November within 30 days of receiving allocation;
(2) one-fourth of the amount on application deposit for the
amount of bonding authority returned on or after the first
Monday in November and before the third Monday in
November between 31 and 60 days of receiving allocation; and
(3) one-eighth of the amount on application deposit for the
amount of bonding authority returned on or after the third
Monday in November and before the last Monday in
November between 61 and 90 days of receiving allocation.
No refund shall be available for allocations returned on or
after the last Monday in November 90 or more days after
receiving the allocation. This subdivision does not apply to
the Minnesota housing finance agency.
Sec. 15. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.091,
subdivision 1, is amended to read:
Subdivision 1. [UNIFIED POOL AMOUNT.] On the day after the
last Monday in August any bonding authority remaining
unallocated from the manufacturing pool, the multifamily housing
pool, and the public facilities pool is transferred to the
unified pool and must be reallocated as provided in this section.
Sec. 16. Minnesota Statutes Second 1989 Supplement,
section 474A.091, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [APPLICATION.] An issuer may apply for an
allocation under this section by submitting to the department an
application on forms provided by the department accompanied by
(1) a preliminary resolution, (2) a statement of bond counsel
that the proposed issue of obligations requires an allocation
under this chapter, (3) the type of qualified bonds to be
issued, and (4) an application deposit in the amount of two
percent of the requested allocation, and (5) a public purpose
scoring worksheet for small issue applications. An issuer
applying for an allocation for residential rental project bonds
who does not sign an agreement requiring that the project comply
with the gross rent restrictions of the low-income housing
credit program under section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986, as amended through December 31, 1988, must submit an
additional application deposit in the amount of one percent of
the requested allocation. The issuer must pay the application
deposit by check. An entitlement issuer may not apply for an
allocation for public facility bonds, residential rental project
bonds, or mortgage bonds under this section unless it has either
permanently issued bonds equal to the amount of its entitlement
allocation for the current year plus any amount carried forward
from previous years or returned for reallocation all of its
unused entitlement allocation. For purposes of this
subdivision, its entitlement allocation includes an amount
obtained under section 474A.04, subdivision 6.
The Minnesota housing finance agency may not apply for an
allocation for mortgage bonds under this section until after the
last Monday in September. Notwithstanding the restrictions
imposed on unified pool allocations after October 1 under
subdivision 3, paragraph (c)(2), the Minnesota housing finance
agency may be awarded allocations for mortgage bonds from the
unified pool after October 1. The Minnesota housing finance
agency may apply for and receive an allocation under this
section without submitting an application deposit.
Sec. 17. Minnesota Statutes Second 1989 Supplement,
section 474A.091, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
Subd. 3. [ALLOCATION PROCEDURE.] (a) The commissioner
shall allocate available bonding authority under this section on
the Monday of every other week beginning with the first Monday
in September through and on the last Monday in November.
Applications for allocations must be received by the department
by the Monday preceding the Monday on which allocations are to
be made. If a Monday falls on a holiday, the allocation will be
made or the applications must be received by the next business
day after the holiday.
(b) On or before October 1, allocations shall be awarded
from the unified pool in the following order of priority:
(1) applications for small issue bonds, with preference
given to projects to be located in distressed counties
designated under section 297A.257;
(2) applications for residential rental project bonds, with
preference given to issuers agreeing to require that the project
comply with the gross rent restrictions of the low-income
housing credit program under section 42 of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended through December 31, 1988;
(3) applications for public facility projects funded by
public facility bonds;
(4) applications for redevelopment bonds;
(5) applications for mortgage bonds; and
(6) applications for governmental bonds.
Allocations for residential rental projects may only be
made during the first allocation in September. The amount of
allocation provided to an issuer for a specific manufacturing
project will be based on the number of points received for the
proposed project under the scoring system under section 6.
Proposed manufacturing projects that receive 50 points or more
are eligible for all of the proposed allocation. Proposed
manufacturing projects that receive less than 50 points under
section 6 are only eligible to receive a proportionally reduced
share of the proposed authority. If there are two or more
applications for manufacturing projects from the unified pool
and there is insufficient bonding authority to provide
allocations for all manufacturing projects in any one allocation
period, the available bonding authority shall be awarded based
on the number of points awarded a project under section 6 with
those projects receiving the greatest number of points receiving
allocation first.
(c)(1) On the first Monday in October, $20,000,000 of
bonding authority or an amount equal to the total annual amount
of bonding authority allocated to the manufacturing pool under
section 474A.03, subdivision 1, less the amount allocated to
issuers from the manufacturing pool for that year, whichever is
less, is reserved within the unified pool for small issue
bonds. On the first Monday in October, $5,000,000 $2,500,000 of
bonding authority or an amount equal to the total annual amount
of bonding authority allocated to the public facilities pool
under section 474A.03, subdivision 1, less the amount allocated
to issuers from the public facilities pool for that year,
whichever is less, is reserved within the unified pool for
public facility bonds. If sufficient bonding authority is not
available to reserve the required amounts for both small issue
bonds and public facility bonds, three-fourths seven-eighths of
the remaining available bonding authority is reserved for small
issue bonds and one-fourth one-eighth of the remaining available
bonding authority is reserved for public facility bonds.
(2) The total amount of allocations for mortgage bonds from
the housing pool and the unified pool may not exceed:
(i) $10,000,000 for any one city; or
(ii) $20,000,000 for any number of cities in any one
county; or
(iii) 60 percent of the amount initially allocated to the
unified pool.
An allocation for mortgage bonds may be used for mortgage
credit certificates.
After October 1, allocations shall be awarded from the
unified pool only for the following types of qualified bonds:
small issue bonds, with preference given to manufacturing
projects to be located in distressed counties designated under
section 297A.257, public facility bonds, and residential rental
project bonds.
(d) If there is insufficient bonding authority to fund all
projects within any qualified bond category, allocations shall
be awarded by lot unless otherwise agreed to by the respective
issuers. If an application is rejected, the commissioner must
notify the applicant and return the application deposit to the
applicant within 30 days unless the applicant requests in
writing that the application be resubmitted. The granting of an
allocation of bonding authority under this section must be
evidenced by issuance of a certificate of allocation.
Sec. 18. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.091,
subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [MORTGAGE BOND SUNSET BONDS.] If federal tax law
is not amended to permit the issuance of tax-exempt mortgage
bonds after December 31, 1988, All remaining bonding authority
available for allocation under this section on December 1, 1988,
is allocated to the Minnesota housing finance agency. For
purposes of this subdivision, "city" has the meaning given it in
section 462C.02, subdivision 6. The Minnesota housing finance
agency shall reallocate at least 50 percent of the remaining
bonding authority available for allocation to cities requesting
an allocation on or before November 1, 1988, for the issuance of
mortgage bonds. A city may apply for an allocation under this
subdivision by submitting to the Minnesota housing finance
agency an application on or before November 1, 1988, on forms
provided by the agency. After December 1, 1988, any unallocated
bonding authority remaining after all city requests are filled
is reallocated to the Minnesota housing finance agency for
issuance by the agency or for reallocation to a city requesting
an allocation on or before November 1, 1988.
Sec. 19. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.091,
subdivision 5, is amended to read:
Subd. 5. [RETURN OF ALLOCATION; DEPOSIT REFUND.] (a) If an
issuer that receives an allocation under this section determines
that it will not issue obligations equal to all or a portion of
the allocation received under this section by the end of the
current year within 90 days of the allocation or within the time
period permitted by federal tax law, whichever is less, the
issuer must notify the department. If the issuer notifies the
department or the 90-day period since allocation has expired
prior to the last Monday in November, the amount of
allocation is canceled and returned must be reallocated for
reallocation through the unified pool.
(b) An issuer that returns for reallocation all or a
portion of an allocation received under this section within 90
days of the allocation shall receive within 30 days a refund of
its application deposit equal to:
(1) one-half of the amount on application deposit for the
amount of bonding authority returned before the first Monday in
November within 30 days of receiving the allocation;
(2) one-fourth of the amount on application deposit for the
amount of bonding authority returned on or after the first
Monday in November and before the third Monday in
November between 31 and 60 days of receiving the allocation; and
(3) one-eighth of the amount on application deposit for the
amount of bonding authority returned on or after the third
Monday in November and before the last Monday in
November between 61 and 90 days of receiving the allocation.
No refund of the application deposit shall be available for
allocations returned on or after the last Monday in
November. This subdivision does not apply to the Minnesota
housing finance agency.
Sec. 20. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.131,
subdivision 2, is amended to read:
Subd. 2. [CARRYFORWARD NOTICE.] If an issuer intends to
carry forward an allocation received under this chapter, it must
notify the department in writing before the last Monday of
December. If the written notice of carryforward is not provided
within the time required, one-quarter of the amount of
the application deposit eligible for refund upon filing of the
notice of issue under this section is forfeited.
Sec. 21. Minnesota Statutes 1988, section 474A.14, is
amended to read:
474A.14 [NOTICE OF AVAILABLE AUTHORITY.]
The department shall publish in the State Register at least
twice monthly, a notice of the amount of bonding authority, if
any, available for allocation pursuant to sections 474A.061 and
474A.091 in the housing, manufacturing, and public facilities
pools as soon after January 1 as possible. The department shall
publish in the State Register a notice of the amount of bonding
authority available for allocation in the unified pool as soon
after september 1 as possible.
Sec. 22. [SUNSET OF QUALIFIED BONDS.]
Subdivision 1. [TRANSFER.] If federal tax law is not
amended by May 31, 1990, to permit the issuance of tax exempt
mortgage bonds or small issue bonds past September 30, 1990, all
remaining bonding authority available for allocation in the
multifamily housing, manufacturing, and public facilities pools
is transferred to the unified pool on the first business day in
June and must be reallocated as provided in this section.
Subd. 2. [APPLICATION.] An issuer may apply for an
allocation under this section by submitting to the department an
application on forms provided by the department accompanied by
(1) a preliminary resolution, (2) a statement of bond counsel
that the proposed issue of obligations requires an allocation
under this chapter, (3) the type of qualified bonds to be
issued, and (4) an application deposit in the amount of two
percent of the requested allocation. The issuer must pay the
application deposit by check. An entitlement issuer may not
apply for an allocation for public facility bonds, residential
rental project bonds, or mortgage bonds under this section
unless it has either permanently issued bonds equal to the
amount of its entitlement allocation for the current year plus
any amount carried forward from previous years or returned for
reallocation all of its unused entitlement allocation. For
purposes of this subdivision, its entitlement allocation
includes an amount obtained under Minnesota Statutes, section
474A.04, subdivision 6.
The Minnesota housing finance agency may not apply for an
allocation for mortgage bonds under this section until after the
last Monday in June. Notwithstanding the restrictions imposed
on the unified pool allocations after July 1 under subdivision
3, paragraph (c), clause (2), the agency may be awarded
allocations for mortgage bonds from the unified pool after July
1. The agency may apply for and receive an allocation under
this section without submitting an application deposit.
Subd. 3. [ALLOCATION PROCEDURE.] (a) The commissioner
shall allocate available bonding authority under this section on
the Monday of every other week beginning with the first Monday
in June through and on the last Monday in August. Applications
for allocations must be received by the department by the Monday
preceding the Monday on which allocations are to be made. If a
Monday falls on a holiday, the allocation will be made or the
applications must be received by the next business day.
(b) On or before July 1, allocations shall be awarded from
the unified pool in the following order of priority:
(1) applications for small issue bonds;
(2) applications for residential rental project bonds;
(3) applications for public facilities projects financed
with public facility bonds;
(4) applications for redevelopment bonds;
(5) applications for mortgage bonds; and
(6) applications for governmental bonds.
Allocations for residential rental projects may only be
made during the first allocation in June and must meet the
eligibility requirements of section 7. If an application is
rejected, the commissioner must notify the applicant and return
the application deposit to the applicant within 30 days unless
the applicant requests in writing that the application be
resubmitted. The granting of an allocation of bonding authority
under this section must be evidenced by issuance of a
certificate of allocation.
(c)(1) On the first Monday in July, $20,000,000 of bonding
authority or an amount equal to the total annual amount of
bonding authority allocated to the manufacturing pool under
Minnesota Statutes, section 474A.03, subdivision 1, less the
amount allocated to issuers from the manufacturing pool for that
year, whichever is less, is reserved within the unified pool for
small issue bonds. On the first Monday in July, $2,500,000 of
bonding authority or an amount equal to the total annual amount
of bonding authority allocated to the public facilities pool
under Minnesota Statutes, section 474A.03, subdivision 1, less
the amount allocated to issuers from the public facilities pool
for that year, whichever is less, is reserved within the unified
pool for public facility bonds. If sufficient bonding authority
is not available to reserve the required amounts for both small
issue bonds and public facility bonds, seven-eighths of the
remaining available bonding authority is reserved for small
issue bonds and one-eighth of the remaining available bonding
authority is reserved for public facility bonds.
(2) Allocations for mortgage bonds from the unified pool
may not exceed:
(i) $10,000,000 for any one city;
(ii) $20,000,000 for any number of cities in any one
county; or
(iii) 60 percent of the amount initially allocated to the
unified pool.
An allocation for mortgage bonds may be used for mortgage
credit certificates.
After July 1, allocations shall be awarded from the unified
pool only for the following types of qualified bonds: small
issue bonds, public facility bonds, and residential rental
project bonds.
(d) If there is insufficient bonding authority to fund all
projects within any qualified bond category, allocations shall
be awarded by lot unless otherwise agreed to by the respective
issuers. If an application is rejected, the commissioner must
notify the applicant and return the application deposit to the
applicant within 30 days unless the applicant requests in
writing that the application be resubmitted. The granting of an
allocation of bonding authority under this section must be
evidenced by issuance of a certificate of allocation.
Subd. 4. [REMAINING ALLOCATION.] Any remaining bonding
authority that has not been allocated by September 1 in the
unified pool shall be allocated to the Minnesota housing finance
agency.
Subd. 5. [RETURN OF ALLOCATION; DEPOSIT REFUND.] (a) If an
issuer that receives an allocation under this section determines
that it will not issue obligations equal to all or a portion of
the allocation received under this section within 90 days of the
allocation or within the time period permitted by federal tax
law, whichever is less, the issuer must notify the department.
If the issuer notifies the department or the 90-day period since
allocation has expired prior to the last Monday in August, the
amount of allocation is canceled and returned for reallocation
through the unified pool.
(b) An issuer that returns for reallocation all or a
portion of an allocation received under this section within 90
days of the allocation shall receive within 30 days a refund
equal to:
(1) one-half of the application deposit for the amount of
bonding authority returned within 30 days of receiving the
allocation;
(2) one-fourth of the application deposit for the amount of
bonding authority returned between 31 and 60 days of receiving
the allocation; and
(3) one-eighth of the application deposit for the amount of
bonding authority returned between 61 and 90 days of receiving
the allocation.
No refund of the application deposit shall be available for
allocations returned on or after the last Monday in August.
Sec. 23. [TAX CREDIT PROJECTS RECEIVING ALLOCATION PRIOR
TO MARCH 31, 1990.]
Projects eligible for federal low-income tax credits that
received bonding allocation under Minnesota Statutes, chapter
474A, prior to the effective date of Laws 1990, chapter 368, are
subject to the following conditions:
(a) The requirements of Laws 1990, chapter 368, section 6,
paragraph (c), do not apply.
(b) The requirements of the applicable qualified allocation
plan for the second and third rounds for federal low-income tax
credits must apply.
Sec. 24. [REPEALER.]
Minnesota Statutes 1988, sections 474.081, subdivisions 1,
2 and 4, and 474A.091, subdivision 4a; and Minnesota Statutes
Second 1989 Supplement, section 474A.061, subdivision 2, are
repealed. Section 22 is repealed January 1, 1991.
Sec. 25. [EFFECTIVE DATE.]
Sections 2 to 6, 8 to 21, and 24 are effective January 1,
1991. Section 7 applies to projects that receive an allocation
of bonding authority after the day of final enactment. Sections
1, 7, 22, and 23 are effective the day following final enactment.
Presented to the governor April 26, 1990
Signed by the governor May 4, 1990, 11:29 p.m.
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes