Statutorily Mandated Designation of Difficult Development Areas and Qualified Census Tracts for 2024, 65188-65194 [2023-20478]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 182 / Thursday, September 21, 2023 / Notices
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Discussion
The Coast Guard Office of Standards
Evaluation and Development (CG–REG)
is endeavoring to provide to the public
as much U.S. Coast Guard data as
possible and practicable—resource
permitting—in implementation of Title
II within the Evidence-Based
Policymaking Act of 2018, named the
Open Government Data Act. The Open
Government Data Act guides federal
agencies to make data open by default,
subject to certain provisions such as (i)
risks and restrictions related to the
disclosure of personally identifiable
information and (ii) security
considerations. This notice shares
several U.S. Coast Guard websites where
our data resources are available to the
public.
The ‘‘Annual Vessel Statistics’’ page
provides the public with access to the
universe of commercial vessels the U.S.
Coast Guard regulates. The statistics
available at the time of this notice are
for 2021 and 2022; future year statistics
will be provided as available. This page
also allows you to download a list of
publicly available information of these
vessels by the vessel’s commercial
service. On this page, we present the
aggregated information. We have also
analyzed this information and created a
dashboard which help any user quickly
understand the scale and change in
vessel populations by routes,
responsible districts, and classification.
The web address for the ‘‘Annual Vessel
Statistics’’ page is https://
dco.uscg.afpims.mil/Our-Organization/
Assistant-Commandant-for-PreventionPolicy-CG-5P/Commercial-Regulations-
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Standards-CG-5PS/Office-of-StandardsEvaluation-and-Development-CG-REG/
Annual-Vessel-Statistics/2022-AnnualVessel-Statistics/.
In addition, we have created an
interactive geospatial dashboard on
ArcGIS Pro that displays significant
maritime incidents that involved the
U.S. Coast Guard from 2012 to 2022.
This dashboard defines a significant
maritime incident as an incident that
resulted in at least $100,000 of property
damage or an incident that resulted in
three or more injuries or one fatality.
This data comes from the Coast Guard’s
Marine Investigation Safety and Law
Enforcement (MISLE) database. This
information is displaying publicly
available information from the Coast
Guard’s Port State Information
eXchange system: https://
cgmix.uscg.mil/PSIX/Default.aspx. The
web address for the Significant
Maritime Incident GIS Dashboard is
https://dco.uscg.afpims.mil/OurOrganization/Assistant-Commandantfor-Prevention-Policy-CG-5P/
Commercial-Regulations-Standards-CG5PS/Office-of-Standards-Evaluationand-Development-CG-REG/AnnualVessel-Statistics/GIS/.
This Significant Maritime Incident
Dashboard is a visual aid which can
help end users better understand
specific aspects of the affected
populations for the ongoing Coast Guard
rulemakings that are on the Unified
Agenda of Regulatory and Deregulatory
Actions (https://www.reginfo.gov). The
data may be useful for public
participation in our current Unified
Agenda regulatory actions, such as
Claims Procedures Under the Oil
Pollution Act of 1990 (Regulatory
Identification Number: 1625–AA03),
Marine Casualty Reporting on the Outer
Continental Shelf (1625–AB99),
Shipping Safety Fairways Along the
Atlantic Coast (1625–AC57), Safety
Management Systems for Domestic
Passenger Vessels (1625–AC65), and
Towing Vessel Firefighting Training
(1625–AC64).
We encourage you to submit
comments describing your data needs to
participate more effectively in Coast
Guard rulemaking. In particular, the
U.S. Coast Guard requests responses to
the following questions:
1. What data could the U.S. Coast
Guard provide that would encourage
your participation in rulemakings?
2. What data could the U.S. Coast
Guard provide that would help your
academic research to inform future
rulemakings?
3. In addition to the Unified Agenda,
how do you recommend the U.S. Coast
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Guard publicize information about
rulemaking activities?
Based on public comment, other
factors, and available USCG resources,
we may continue to expand the
availability of U.S. Coast Guard data
resources that may be useful for
participating in the rulemaking process.
This notice is issued under authority
of 44 U.S. Code 3506(b)(6).
T. Brown,
Office Chief, U.S. Coast Guard, Standards
Evaluation and Development.
[FR Doc. 2023–20477 Filed 9–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–6427–N–01]
Statutorily Mandated Designation of
Difficult Development Areas and
Qualified Census Tracts for 2024
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Policy Development and
Research, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This document designates
‘‘Difficult Development Areas’’ (DDAs)
and ‘‘Qualified Census Tracts’’ (QCTs)
for purposes of the Low-Income
Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) under
Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section 42.
The United States Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
makes new DDA and QCT designations
annually.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
questions on how areas are designated
and on geographic definitions, contact
Michael K. Hollar, Senior Economist,
Public Finance and Regulatory Analysis
Division, Office of Policy Development
and Research, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh
Street SW, Room 8216, Washington, DC
20410–6000; telephone number 202–
402–5878, or send an email to
Michael.K.Hollar@hud.gov. For specific
legal questions pertaining to section 42,
Office of the Associate Chief Counsel,
Passthroughs and Special Industries,
Internal Revenue Service, 1111
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20224; telephone number 202–317–
4137. For questions about the
‘‘HUBZone’’ program, contact Lori
Gillen, Director, HUBZone Program,
Office of Government Contracting and
Business Development, U.S. Small
Business Administration, 409 Third
Street SW, Suite 8800, Washington, DC
20416; telephone number 202–386–
7382, or send an email to hubzone@
sba.gov. (These are not toll-free
SUMMARY:
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telephone numbers). Additional copies
of this notice are available through HUD
User at, toll-free, 800–245–2691 for a
small fee to cover duplication and
mailing costs. HUD welcomes and is
prepared to receive calls from
individuals who are deaf or hard of
hearing, as well as individuals with
speech or communication disabilities.
To learn more about how to make an
accessible telephone call, please visit
https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/
telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
Copies Available Electronically: This
notice and additional information about
DDAs and QCTs, including the lists of
DDAs and QCTs, are available
electronically on the internet at https://
www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/
qct.html.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. This Notice
Under IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(iii)(I),
for purposes of the LIHTC, the Secretary
of HUD must designate DDAs, which are
areas with high construction, land, and
utility costs relative to area median
gross income (AMGI). This notice
designates DDAs for each of the 50
States, the District of Columbia, Puerto
Rico, American Samoa, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S.
Virgin Islands. HUD makes the
designations of DDAs in this notice
based on modified Fiscal Year (FY) 2023
Small Area Fair Market Rents (Small
Area FMRs, SAFMRs), FY 2023
nonmetropolitan county FMRs, FY 2023
income limits, and 2020 Census
population counts, as explained below.
Similarly, under IRC section
42(d)(5)(B)(ii)(I), the Secretary of HUD
must designate QCTs, which are areas
where either 50 percent or more of the
households have an income less than 60
percent of the AMGI or have a poverty
rate of at least 25 percent. This notice
designates QCTs based on new income
and poverty data released in the
American Community Survey (ACS).
Specifically, HUD relies on the most
recent three sets of ACS data to ensure
that anomalous estimates, due to
sampling, do not affect the QCT status
of tracts.
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II. Data Used To Designate DDAs
HUD uses data from the 2020 Census
on total population of metropolitan
areas, metropolitan ZIP Code Tabulation
Areas (ZCTAs),1 and nonmetropolitan
areas in the designation of DDAs. The
1 The 2024 SDDAs follow the 2010 ZCTA
boundaries in order to remain consistent with the
FY2023 FMRs. The method HUD used to allocate
population counts from the 2020 Census to these
ZCTAs is described below.
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Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) published updated metropolitan
areas in OMB Bulletin No. 18–04 on
September 14, 2018.2 3 FY 2023 FMRs
and FY 2023 income limits HUD uses to
designate DDAs are based on these
metropolitan statistical area (MSA)
definitions, with modifications to
account for substantial differences in
rental housing markets (and, in some
cases, median family income levels)
within MSAs. HUD calculates Small
Area FMRs for the ZCTAs, or portions
of ZCTAs within the metropolitan areas
defined by OMB Bulletin No. 18–04.
III. Data HUD Uses To Designate QCTs
HUD uses data from the 2020 Census
on total population of census tracts,
metropolitan areas, and the
nonmetropolitan parts of States in the
designation of QCTs. The FY 2023
income limits HUD uses to designate
QCTs are based on these MSA
definitions with modifications to
account for substantial differences in
rental housing markets (and in some
cases median family income levels)
within MSAs. In this QCT designation,
HUD uses the OMB metropolitan area
definitions published in OMB Bulletin
No. 18–04, without modification for
purposes of evaluating how many
census tracts can be designated under
the population cap but uses the HUDmodified definitions and their
associated area median family incomes
for determining QCT eligibility.
Because the 2020 Decennial Census
did not include questions on respondent
household income, HUD uses ACS data
to designate QCTs. The ACS tabulates
data collected over 5 years to provide
estimates of socioeconomic variables for
small areas containing fewer than
65,000 persons, such as census tracts.
Due to sample-related anomalies in
estimates from year to year, HUD
utilizes three sets of ACS tabulations to
ensure that anomalous estimates do not
affect QCT status.
IV. Background
The U.S. Department of the Treasury
(Treasury) and the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) are authorized to interpret
and enforce the provisions of IRC
section 42. In order to assist in
understanding HUD’s mandated
designation of DDAs and QCTs for use
in administering IRC section 42, a
2 Available at: www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2018/09/Bulletin-18-04.pdf.
3 The OMB metropolitan area definitions released
on March 6, 2020 (OMB Bulletin No. 20–01) will
be used for the first time in the calculations of
income limits in FY 2024 and thus used for QCT
and DDA designations for the first time in the 2025
designations.
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summary of the section is provided
below. The following summary does not
purport to bind Treasury or the IRS in
any way, nor does it purport to bind
HUD, since HUD has authority to
interpret or administer the IRC only in
instances where it receives explicit
statutory delegation.
V. Summary of the Low-Income
Housing Tax Credit
A. Determining Eligibility
The LIHTC is a tax incentive intended
to increase the availability of lowincome rental housing. IRC section 42
provides an income tax credit to certain
owners of newly constructed or
substantially rehabilitated low-income
rental housing projects. The dollar
amount of the LIHTC available for
allocation by each State (credit ceiling)
is limited by population. Section 42
allows each State a credit ceiling based
on a statutory formula indicated at IRC
section 42(h)(3). States may carry
forward unallocated credits derived
from the credit ceiling for one year;
however, to the extent such unallocated
credits are not used by then, the credits
go into a national pool to be allocated
to qualified States as additional credit.
State and local housing agencies
allocate the State’s credit ceiling among
low-income housing buildings whose
owners have applied for the credit.
Besides IRC section 42 credits derived
from the credit ceiling, States may also
provide IRC section 42 credits to owners
of buildings based on the percentage of
certain building costs financed by taxexempt bond proceeds. Credits provided
based on the use of tax-exempt bond
proceeds do not reduce the credits
available from the credit ceiling. See
IRC section 42(h)(4).
The credits allocated to a building are
based on the cost of units placed in
service as low-income units under
particular minimum occupancy and
maximum rent criteria. Prior to the
enactment of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2018 (the 2018
Act), under IRC section 42(g), a building
was required to meet one of two tests to
be eligible for the LIHTC; either: (1) 20
percent of the units must be rentrestricted and occupied by tenants with
incomes no higher than 50 percent of
AMGI, or (2) 40 percent of the units
must be rent-restricted and occupied by
tenants with incomes no higher than 60
percent of AMGI. A unit is ‘‘rentrestricted’’ if the gross rent, including an
allowance for tenant-paid utilities, does
not exceed 30 percent of the imputed
income limitation (i.e., 50 percent or 60
percent of AMGI) applicable to that
unit. The rent and occupancy thresholds
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remain in effect for at least 15 years, and
building owners are required to enter
into agreements to maintain the lowincome character of the building for at
least an additional 15 years.
The 2018 Act added a third test, the
average income test. See IRC section
42(g)(1), as amended by Public Law
115–141, Division T, section 103(a)(1)
(March 23, 2018). A building meets the
minimum requirements of the average
income test if 40 percent or more (25
percent or more in the case of a project
located in a high-cost housing area as
described in IRC section 142(d)(6)) of
the residential units in such project are
both rent-restricted and occupied by
individuals whose income does not
exceed the imputed income limitation
designated by the taxpayer with respect
to the respective unit. The taxpayer
designates the imputed income
limitation for each unit. The designated
imputed income limitation of any unit
is determined in 10-percentage-point
increments, and may be designated as
20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, or 80 percent of
AMGI. The average of the imputed
income limitations designated must not
exceed 60 percent of AMGI. See IRC
section 42(g)(1)(C).
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B. Calculating the LIHTC
The LIHTC reduces income tax
liability dollar-for-dollar. It is taken
annually for a term of 10 years and is
intended to yield a present value of
either: (1) 70 percent of the ‘‘qualified
basis’’ for new construction or
substantial rehabilitation expenditures
that are not federally subsidized (as
defined in IRC section 42(i)(2)), or (2) 30
percent of the qualified basis for the cost
of acquiring certain existing buildings or
projects that are federally subsidized.
The tax credit rates are determined
monthly under procedures specified in
IRC section 42 and cannot be less than
9 percent for new buildings that are not
federally subsidized, and cannot be less
than 4 percent for buildings that are
federally subsidized. Individuals can
use the credits up to a deduction
equivalent of $25,000 (the actual
maximum amount of credit that an
individual can claim depends on the
individual’s marginal tax rate). For
buildings placed in service after
December 31, 2007, individuals can use
the credits against the alternative
minimum tax. Corporations, other than
S or personal service corporations, can
use the credits against ordinary income
tax, and, for buildings placed in service
after December 31, 2007, against the
alternative minimum tax. These
corporations also can deduct losses from
the project.
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The qualified basis represents the
product of the building’s ‘‘applicable
fraction’’ and its ‘‘eligible basis.’’ The
applicable fraction is based on the
number of low-income units in the
building as a percentage of the total
number of units, or based on the floor
space of low-income units as a
percentage of the total floor space of
residential units in the building. The
eligible basis is the adjusted basis
attributable to acquisition,
rehabilitation, or new construction costs
(depending on the type of LIHTC
involved). These costs include amounts
chargeable to a capital account that are
incurred prior to the end of the first
taxable year in which the qualified lowincome building is placed in service or,
at the election of the taxpayer, the end
of the succeeding taxable year. In the
case of buildings located in designated
DDAs or designated QCTs, or for credits
awarded from the State’s per capita
allocation, to buildings designated by
the State agency, eligible basis may be
increased up to 130 percent from what
it would otherwise be. This means that
the available credits also may be
increased by up to 30 percent. For
example, if a 70 percent credit is
available, it effectively could be
increased to as much as 91 percent (70
percent × 130 percent).
C. Defining Difficult Development Areas
(DDAs) and Qualified Census Tracts
(QCTs)
As stated above, IRC section 42
defines a DDA as an area designated by
the Secretary of HUD that has high
construction, land, and utility costs
relative to the AMGI. All designated
DDAs in metropolitan areas (taken
together) may not contain more than 20
percent of the aggregate population of
all metropolitan areas, and all
designated areas not in metropolitan
areas may not contain more than 20
percent of the aggregate population of
all nonmetropolitan areas. See IRC
section 42(d)(5)(B)(iii).
Similarly, IRC section 42 defines a
QCT as an area designated by the
Secretary of HUD where, for the most
recent year for which census data are
available on household income in such
tract, either 50 percent or more of the
households in the tract have an income
which is less than 60 percent of the
AMGI or the tract’s poverty rate is at
least 25 percent. All designated QCTs in
a single metropolitan area or
nonmetropolitan area (taken together)
may not contain more than 20 percent
of the population of that metropolitan or
nonmetropolitan area. Thus, unlike the
restriction on DDA designations, QCTs
are restricted by the total population of
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each individual area as opposed to the
aggregate population across all
metropolitan areas and nonmetropolitan
areas. See IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(ii).
IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(v) allows
States to award an increase in basis up
to 30 percent to buildings located
outside of federally designated DDAs
and QCTs if the increase is necessary to
make the building financially feasible.
This State discretion applies only to
buildings allocated credits under the
State housing credit ceiling and is not
permitted for buildings receiving credits
in connection with tax-exempt bonds.
Rules for such designations shall be set
forth in the LIHTC-allocating agencies’
qualified allocation plans (QAPs). See
IRC section 42(m).
VI. Explanation of HUD Designation
Method
A. 2024 Difficult Development Areas
In developing the 2024 list of DDAs,
as required by IRC section
42(d)(5)(B)(iii), HUD compared housing
costs with incomes. HUD used 2020
Census population for ZCTAs, and
nonmetropolitan areas, and the MSA
definitions, as published in OMB
Bulletin 18–04 on September 14, 2018,
with modifications, as described below.
In keeping with past practice of basing
the coming year’s DDA designations on
data from the preceding year, the basis
for these comparisons is the FY 2023
HUD income limits for very low-income
households (very low-income limits, or
VLILs), which are based on 50 percent
of AMGI, and modified FMRs based on
the FY 2023 FMRs used for the Housing
Choice Voucher (HCV) program. For
metropolitan DDAs, HUD used Small
Area FMRs based on three annual
releases of ACS data, to compensate for
statistical anomalies which affect
estimates for some ZCTAs. For nonmetropolitan DDAs, HUD used the FY
2023 FMRs published on September 1,
2022 and effective on October 1, 2022
(87 FR 53761), as updated by the March
20, 2023 publication effective April 19,
2023 (88 FR 16647).
In formulating the FY 2023 FMRs and
VLILs, HUD modified the current OMB
definitions of MSAs to account for
differences in rents among areas within
each current MSA that were in different
FMR areas under definitions used in
prior years. HUD formed these ‘‘HUD
Metro FMR Areas’’ (HMFAs) in cases
where one or more of the parts of newly
defined MSAs were previously in
separate FMR areas. All counties added
to metropolitan areas are treated as
HMFAs with rents and incomes based
on their own county data, where
available. HUD no longer requires
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recent-mover rents to differ by five
percent or more in order to form a new
HMFA. All HMFAs are contained
entirely within MSAs. All
nonmetropolitan counties are outside of
MSAs and are not broken up by HUD for
purposes of setting FMRs and VLILs.
(Complete details on HUD’s process for
determining FY 2023 FMR areas and
FMRs are available at https://
www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/
fmr.html#2023. Complete details on
HUD’s process for determining FY 2023
income limits are available at https://
www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/
il.html#2023). HUD’s FY 2023 FMRs
and VLILs do not account for the change
in Census county-equivalent areas in
Connecticut from the eight historical
counties to the States’s nine planning
regions.
HUD’s unit of analysis for designating
metropolitan DDAs consists of ZCTAs,
whose Small Area FMRs are compared
to metropolitan VLILs. For purposes of
computing VLILs in metropolitan areas,
HUD considers entire MSAs in cases
where these were not broken up into
HMFAs; and HMFAs within the MSAs
that were broken up for such purposes.
HUD used the 2010 ZCTA boundaries to
designate the 2024 SDDAs in order to
remain consistent with the FY 2023
Small Area FMRs. To allocate 2020
Census population to the 2010 ZCTA
boundaries, HUD first translated the
2020 decennial Census population into
2010 census tract boundaries using the
Census Bureau’s 2010 to 2020 block
relationship file and aggregating to 2010
census tracts. The tract populations
were then allocated to ZCTAs using the
proportion of each tract’s 2010
population within each ZCTA, using the
Census Bureau’s 2010 ZCTA to 2010
Census Tract Relationship File.
Hereafter in this notice, the unit of
analysis for designating metropolitan
DDAs will be called the ZCTA, and the
unit of analysis for nonmetropolitan
DDAs will be the nonmetropolitan
county or county equivalent area. The
procedure used in making the DDA
designations follows:
1. Calculate FMR-to-Income Ratios.
For each metropolitan ZCTA and each
nonmetropolitan county, HUD
calculated a ratio of housing costs to
income. HUD used a modified FY 2023
two-bedroom Small Area FMR for
ZCTAs, a modified FY 2023 twobedroom FMR for non-metropolitan
counties, and the FY 2023 four-person
VLIL for this calculation.
The modified FY 2023 two-bedroom
Small Area FMRs for ZCTAs differ from
the FY 2023 Small Area FMRs in four
ways. First, HUD did not limit the Small
Area FMR to 150 percent of its
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metropolitan area FMR. Second, HUD
did not limit annual decreases in Small
Area FMRs to ten percent, which was
first applied in the FY 2018 FMR
calculations. Third, HUD adjusted the
Small Area FMRs in New York City
using the New York City Housing and
Vacancy Survey, which is conducted by
the U.S. Census Bureau, to adjust for the
effect of local rent control and
stabilization regulations. No other
jurisdictions have provided HUD with
data that could be used to adjust Small
Area FMRs for rent control or
stabilization regulations.4 Finally, the
Small Area FMRs are not limited to the
State non-metropolitan minimum FMR.
The FY 2023 two-bedroom FMR for
non-metropolitan counties was
modified only by removing the State
non-metropolitan minimum FMR.
The numerator of the ratio,
representing the development cost of
housing, was the area’s FY 2023 FMR,
or Small Area FMR in metropolitan
areas. In general, the FMR is based on
the 40th-percentile gross rent paid by
recent movers to live in a two-bedroom
rental unit.
The denominator of the ratio,
representing the maximum income of
eligible tenants, was the monthly LIHTC
income-based rent limit, which was
calculated as 1⁄12 of 30 percent of 120
percent of the area’s 4-person VLIL
(where the VLIL was rounded to the
nearest $50).
2. Sort Areas by Ratio and Exclude
Unsuitable Areas. The ratios of the
FMR, or Small Area FMR, to the LIHTC
income-based rent limit were arrayed in
descending order, separately, for ZCTAs
and for nonmetropolitan counties.
ZCTAs with populations less than 100
were excluded in order to avoid
designating areas unsuitable for
residential development, such as ZCTAs
containing airports.
3. Select Areas with Highest Ratios
and Exclude QCTs. The DDAs are those
areas with the highest ratios that
cumulatively comprise 20 percent of the
2020 population of all metropolitan
areas and all nonmetropolitan areas. For
purposes of applying this population
cap, HUD excluded the population in
areas designated as 2024 QCTs. Thus, an
area can be designated as a QCT or
DDA, but not both.
B. Application of Population Caps to
DDA Determinations
In identifying DDAs, HUD applied
caps, or limitations, as noted above. The
4 HUD encourages other jurisdictions with rent
control laws that affect rents paid by recent movers
into existing units to contact HUD about what data
might be provided or collected to adjust Small Area
FMRs in those jurisdictions.
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65191
cumulative population of metropolitan
DDAs cannot exceed 20 percent of the
cumulative population of all
metropolitan areas, and the cumulative
population of nonmetropolitan DDAs
cannot exceed 20 percent of the
cumulative population of all
nonmetropolitan areas.
In applying these caps, HUD
established procedures to deal with how
to treat small overruns of the caps. The
remainder of this section explains those
procedures. In general, HUD stops
selecting areas when it is impossible to
choose another area without exceeding
the applicable cap. The only exceptions
to this policy are when the next eligible
excluded area contains either a large
absolute population or a large
percentage of the total population, or
the next excluded area’s ranking ratio,
as described above, was identical (to
four decimal places) to the last area
selected, and its inclusion resulted in
only a minor overrun of the cap. Thus,
for both the designated metropolitan
and nonmetropolitan DDAs, there may
be minimal overruns of the cap. HUD
believes the designation of additional
areas in the above examples of minimal
overruns is consistent with the intent of
the IRC. As long as the apparent excess
is small due to measurement errors,
some latitude is justifiable, because it is
impossible to determine whether the 20
percent cap has been exceeded. Despite
the care and effort involved in a
Decennial Census, the Census Bureau
and all users of the data recognize that
the population counts for a given area
and for the entire country are not
precise. Therefore, the extent of the
measurement error is unknown. There
can be errors in both the numerator and
denominator of the ratio of populations
used in applying a 20 percent cap. In
circumstances where a strict application
of a 20 percent cap results in an
anomalous situation, recognition of the
unavoidable imprecision in the census
data justifies accepting small variances
above the 20 percent limit.
B. Qualified Census Tracts
In developing the list of QCTs, HUD
used 2020 Census 100-percent count
data on total population, total
households, and population in
households; the median household
income and poverty rate as estimated in
the 2015–2019, 2016–2020 and 2017–
2021 ACS tabulations; 5 the FY 2023
5 The 2015–2019 ACS data were released using
2010 census tract boundaries, while the 2016–2020
and 2017–2021 ACS data use 2020 census tract
boundaries. To reconcile these datasets, HUD used
population-weighted averages of the median
household income and poverty rate estimates from
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Very Low-Income Limits (VLILs)
computed at the HMFA level to
determine tract eligibility; and the MSA
definitions published in OMB Bulletin
No. 18–04 on September 14, 2018, for
determining how many eligible tracts
can be designated under the statutory 20
percent population cap.
HUD uses the HMFA-level AMGIs to
determine QCT eligibility because the
statute, specifically IRC section
42(d)(5)(B)(iv)(II), refers to the same
section of the IRC that defines income
for purposes of tenant eligibility and
unit maximum rent, specifically IRC
section 42(g)(4). By rule, the IRS sets
these income limits according to HUD’s
VLILs, which, starting in FY 2006 and
thereafter, are established at the HMFA
level. HUD uses the entire MSA to
determine how many eligible tracts can
be designated under the 20 percent
population cap as required by the
statute (IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(ii)(III)),
which states that MSAs should be
treated as singular areas.
HUD determined the QCTs as follows:
1. Calculate 60 percent AMGI. To be
eligible to be designated a QCT, a
census tract must have 50 percent of its
households with incomes below 60
percent of AMGI or have a poverty rate
of 25 percent or more. Due to potential
statistical anomalies in the ACS 5-year
estimates, one of these conditions must
be met in at least 2 of the 3 ACS 5-year
tabulations for a tract to be considered
eligible for QCT designation. HUD
calculates 60 percent of AMGI by
multiplying by a factor of 1.2 the HMFA
or nonmetropolitan county FY 2023
VLIL adjusted for inflation to match the
ACS estimates, which are adjusted to
the value of the dollar in the last year
of the 5-year group.
2. Determine Whether Census Tracts
Have Less than 50 percent of
Households Below 60 percent AMGI. For
each census tract, whether or not 50
percent of households have incomes
below the 60 percent income standard
(income criterion) was determined by:
(a) calculating the average household
size of the census tract, (b) adjusting the
income standard to match the average
household size, and (c) comparing the
average-household-size-adjusted income
standard to the median household
income for the tract reported in each of
the three years of ACS tabulations
(2015–2019, 2016–2020 and 2017–
the 2015–2019 ACS wherever a 2020 census tract
intersected multiple 2010 census tracts. HUD did
not consider these derived ACS estimates to be
statistically reliable if any of the 2010 census tracts
comprising more than 10 percent of the population
of the 2020 census tract failed to meet the reliability
standard (i.e., had a margin of error greater than half
of the estimate for the estimate in question).
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2021). HUD did not consider estimates
of median household income to be
statistically reliable unless the margin of
error was less than half of the estimate
(or a Margin of Error Ratio, MoER, of 50
percent or less). If at least two of the
three estimates were not statistically
reliable by this measure, HUD
determined the tract to be ineligible
under the income criterion due to lack
of consistently reliable median income
statistics across the three ACS
tabulations. Since 50 percent of
households in a tract have incomes
above and below the tract median
household income, if the tract median
household income is less than the
average-household-size-adjusted income
standard for the tract, then more than 50
percent of households have incomes
below the standard.
3. Estimate Poverty Rate. For each
census tract, HUD determined the
poverty rate in each of the three releases
of ACS tabulations (2015–2019, 2016–
2020 and 2017–2021) by dividing the
population with incomes below the
poverty line by the population for
whom poverty status has been
determined. As with the evaluation of
tracts under the income criterion, HUD
applies a data quality standard for
evaluating ACS poverty rate data in
designating the 2024 QCTs. HUD did
not consider estimates of the poverty
rate to be statistically reliable unless
both the population for whom poverty
status has been determined and the
number of persons below poverty had
MoERs of less than 50 percent of the
respective estimates. If at least two of
the three poverty rate estimates were not
statistically reliable, HUD determined
the tract to be ineligible under the
poverty rate criterion due to lack of
reliable poverty statistics across the ACS
tabulations.
4. Designate QCTs Where 20 percent
or Less of Population Resides in Eligible
Census Tracts. QCTs are those census
tracts in which 50 percent or more of
the households meet the income
criterion in at least two of the three
years evaluated, or 25 percent or more
of the population is in poverty in at
least two of the three years evaluated,
such that the population of all census
tracts that satisfy either one or both of
these criteria does not exceed 20 percent
of the total population of the respective
area.
5. Designate QCTs Where More than
20 percent of Population Resides in
Eligible Census Tracts. In areas where
more than 20 percent of the population
resides in eligible census tracts, census
tracts are designated as QCTs in
accordance with the following
procedure:
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a. The statistically reliable income
and poverty criteria are each averaged
over the three ACS tabulations (2015–
2019, 2016–2020 and 2017–2021).
Statistically reliable values that did not
exceed the income and poverty rate
thresholds were included in the average.
b. Eligible tracts are placed in one of
two groups based on the averaged
values of the income and poverty
criteria. The first group includes tracts
that satisfy both the income and poverty
criteria for QCTs for at least two of the
three evaluation years; a different pair of
years may be used to meet each
criterion. The second group includes
tracts that satisfy either the income
criterion in at least two of the three
years, or the poverty criterion in at least
two of three years, but not both. A tract
must qualify by at least one of the
criteria in at least two of the three
evaluation years to be eligible.
c. HUD ranked tracts in the first group
from highest to lowest by the average of
the ratios of the tract averagehousehold-size-adjusted income limit to
the median household income. Then,
HUD ranked tracts in the first group
from highest to lowest by the average of
the poverty rates. HUD averaged the two
ranks to yield a combined rank. HUD
then sorted the tracts on the combined
rank, with the census tract with the
highest combined rank being placed at
the top of the sorted list. In the event of
a tie, HUD ranked more populous tracts
above less populous ones.
d. HUD ranked tracts in the second
group from highest to lowest by the
average of the ratios of the tract averagehousehold-size-adjusted income limit to
the median household income. Then,
HUD ranked tracts in the second group
from highest to lowest by the average of
the poverty rates. HUD then averaged
the two ranks to yield a combined rank.
HUD then sorted the tracts on the
combined rank, with the census tract
with the highest combined rank being
placed at the top of the sorted list. In the
event of a tie, HUD ranked more
populous tracts above less populous
ones.
e. HUD stacked the ranked first group
on top of the ranked second group to
yield a single, concatenated, ranked list
of eligible census tracts.
f. Working down the single,
concatenated, ranked list of eligible
tracts, HUD identified census tracts as
designated until the designation of an
additional tract would cause the 20
percent limit to be exceeded. If HUD
does not designate a census tract
because doing so would raise the
percentage above 20 percent, HUD then
considers subsequent eligible census
tracts to determine whether one or more
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eligible census tract(s) with smaller
population(s) could be designated
without exceeding the 20 percent limit.
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C. Exceptions to OMB Definitions of
MSAs and Other Geographic Matters
As stated in OMB Bulletin 18–04,
defining metropolitan areas:
‘‘OMB establishes and maintains the
delineations of Metropolitan Statistical
Areas, . . . solely for statistical
purposes. . . . OMB does not take into
account or attempt to anticipate any
non-statistical uses that may be made of
the delineations[.] In cases where . . .
an agency elects to use the Metropolitan
. . . Area definitions in nonstatistical
programs, it is the sponsoring agency’s
responsibility to ensure that the
delineations are appropriate for such
use. An agency using the statistical
delineations in a nonstatistical program
may modify the delineations, but only
for the purposes of that program. In
such cases, any modifications should be
clearly identified as deviations from the
OMB statistical area delineations in
order to avoid confusion.’’
Following OMB guidance, HUD’s
estimation procedure for the FMRs and
income limits incorporates the
September 2018 OMB definitions of
metropolitan Core-Based Statistical
Areas (CBSAs) based on the CBSA
standards, but makes adjustments to the
definitions, in order to separate subparts
of these areas in cases where counties
were added to an existing or newly
defined metropolitan area. In CBSAs
where HUD establishes subareas, it is
HUD’s view that the geographic extent
of the housing markets is not the same
as the geographic extent of the CBSAs.
In the New England States
(Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and
Vermont), HUD defines HMFAs
according to county subdivisions or
minor civil divisions (MCDs), rather
than county or county-equivalent
boundaries. However, since no part of
an HMFA is outside an OMB-defined,
county-based MSA, all New England
nonmetropolitan counties are kept
intact for purposes of designating
Nonmetropolitan DDAs.
VII. Future Designations
HUD designates DDAs annually as
updated HUD income limit and FMR
data are made public. HUD designates
QCTs annually as new income and
poverty rate data are released.
A. Effective Date
The 2024 lists of QCTs and DDAs are
effective:
(1) for allocations of credit after
December 31, 2023; or
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(2) for purposes of IRC section
42(h)(4), if the bonds are issued and the
building is placed in service after
December 31, 2023.
If an area is not on a subsequent list
of QCTs or DDAs, the 2024 lists are
effective for the area if:
(1) the allocation of credit to an
applicant is made no later than the end
of the 730-day period after the applicant
submits a complete application to the
LIHTC-allocating agency, and the
submission is made before the effective
date of the subsequent lists; or
(2) for purposes of IRC section
42(h)(4), if:
(a) the bonds are issued or the
building is placed in service no later
than the end of the 730-day period after
the applicant submits a complete
application to the bond-issuing agency,
and
(b) the submission is made before the
effective date of the subsequent lists,
provided that both the issuance of the
bonds and the placement in service of
the building occur after the application
is submitted.
An application is deemed to be
submitted on the date it is filed if the
application is determined to be
complete by the credit-allocating or
bond-issuing agency. A ‘‘complete
application’’ means that no more than
de minimis clarification of the
application is required for the agency to
make a decision about the allocation of
tax credits or issuance of bonds
requested in the application.
In the case of a ‘‘multiphase project,’’
the DDA or QCT status of the site of the
project that applies for all phases of the
project is that which applied when the
project received its first allocation of
LIHTC. For purposes of IRC section
42(h)(4), the DDA or QCT status of the
site of the project that applies for all
phases of the project is that which
applied when the first of the following
occurred: (a) the building(s) in the first
phase was (were) placed in service, or
(b) the bonds were issued.
For purposes of this notice, a
‘‘multiphase project’’ is defined as a set
of buildings to be constructed or
rehabilitated under the rules of the
LIHTC and meeting the following
criteria:
(1) the multiphase composition of the
project (i.e., total number of buildings
and phases in the project, with a
description of how many buildings are
to be built in each phase and when each
phase is to be completed, and any other
information required by the agency) is
made known by the applicant in the
first application of credit for any
building in the project, and that the
applicant identifies the buildings in the
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65193
project for which credit is (or will be)
sought;
(2) the aggregate amount of LIHTC
applied for on behalf of, or that would
eventually be allocated to, the buildings
on the site exceeds the one-year
limitation on credits per applicant, as
defined in the QAP of the LIHTCallocating agency, or the annual percapita credit authority of the LIHTC
allocating agency, and is the reason the
applicant must request multiple
allocations over 2 or more years; and
(3) all applications for LIHTC for
buildings on the site are made in
immediately consecutive years.
Members of the public are hereby
reminded that the Secretary of Housing
and Urban Development, or the
Secretary’s designee, has legal authority
to designate DDAs and QCTs, by
publishing lists of geographic entities as
defined by, in the case of DDAs, the
Census Bureau, the several States and
the governments of the insular areas of
the United States and, in the case of
QCTs, by the Census Bureau; and to
establish the effective dates of such lists.
The Secretary of the Treasury, through
the IRS thereof, has sole legal authority
to interpret, and to determine and
enforce compliance with the IRC and
associated regulations, including
Federal Register notices published by
HUD for purposes of designating DDAs
and QCTs. Representations made by any
other entity as to the content of HUD
notices designating DDAs and QCTs that
do not precisely match the language
published by HUD should not be relied
upon by taxpayers in determining what
actions are necessary to comply with
HUD notices.
B. Interpretive Examples of Effective
Date
For the convenience of readers of this
notice, interpretive examples are
provided below to illustrate the
consequences of the effective date in
areas that gain or lose QCT or DDA
status. The examples covering DDAs are
equally applicable to QCT designations.
(Case A) Project A is located in a 2024
DDA that is NOT a designated DDA in
2025 or 2026. A complete application
for tax credits for Project A is filed with
the allocating agency on November 15,
2024. Credits are allocated to Project A
on October 30, 2026. Project A is
eligible for the increase in basis
accorded a project in a 2024 DDA
because the application was filed
BEFORE January 1, 2025 (the assumed
effective date for the 2025 DDA lists),
and because tax credits were allocated
no later than the end of the 730-day
period after the filing of the complete
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application for an allocation of tax
credits.
(Case B) Project B is located in a 2024
DDA that is NOT a designated DDA in
2025 or 2026. A complete application
for tax credits for Project B is filed with
the allocating agency on December 1,
2024. Credits are allocated to Project B
on March 30, 2027. Project B is NOT
eligible for the increase in basis
accorded a project in a 2024 DDA
because, although the application for an
allocation of tax credits was filed
BEFORE January 1, 2025 (the assumed
effective date of the 2025 DDA lists), the
tax credits were allocated later than the
end of the 730-day period after the filing
of the complete application.
(Case C) Project C is located in a 2024
DDA that was not a DDA in 2023.
Project C was placed in service on
November 15, 2023. A complete
application for tax-exempt bond
financing for Project C is filed with the
bond-issuing agency on January 15,
2024. The tax-exempt bonds that will
support the permanent financing of
Project C are issued on September 30,
2024. Project C is NOT eligible for the
increase in basis otherwise accorded a
project in a 2024 DDA, because the
project was placed in service BEFORE
January 1, 2024.
(Case D) Project D is located in an area
that is a DDA in 2024 but is NOT a DDA
in 2025 or 2026. A complete application
for tax-exempt bond financing for
Project D is filed with the bond-issuing
agency on October 30, 2024. Tax-exempt
bonds are issued for Project D on April
30, 2026, but Project D is not placed in
service until January 30, 2027. Project D
is eligible for the increase in basis
available to projects located in 2024
DDAs because: (1) one of the two events
necessary for triggering the effective
date for buildings described in section
42(h)(4)(B) of the IRC (the two events
being tax-exempt bonds issued and
buildings placed in service) took place
on April 30, 2026, within the 730-day
period after a complete application for
tax-exempt bond financing was filed, (2)
the application was filed during a time
when the location of Project D was in a
DDA, and (3) both the issuance of the
tax-exempt bonds and placement in
service of Project D occurred after the
application was submitted.
(Case E) Project E is a multiphase
project located in a 2024 DDA that is
NOT a designated DDA or QCT in 2025.
The first phase of Project E received an
allocation of credits in 2024, pursuant to
an application filed March 15, 2024,
which describes the multiphase
composition of the project. An
application for tax credits for the second
phase of Project E is filed with the
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allocating agency by the same entity on
March 15, 2025. The second phase of
Project E is located on a contiguous site.
Credits are allocated to the second
phase of Project E on October 30, 2025.
The aggregate amount of credits
allocated to the two phases of Project E
exceeds the amount of credits that may
be allocated to an applicant in one year
under the allocating agency’s QAP and
is the reason that applications were
made in multiple phases. The second
phase of Project E is, therefore, eligible
for the increase in basis accorded a
project in a 2024 DDA, because it meets
all of the conditions to be a part of a
multiphase project.
(Case F) Project F is a multiphase
project located in a 2024 DDA that is
NOT a designated DDA in 2025 or 2026.
The first phase of Project F received an
allocation of credits in 2024, pursuant to
an application filed March 15, 2024,
which does not describe the multiphase
composition of the project. An
application for tax credits for the second
phase of Project F is filed with the
allocating agency by the same entity on
March 15, 2026. Credits are allocated to
the second phase of Project F on
October 30, 2026. The aggregate amount
of credits allocated to the two phases of
Project F exceeds the amount of credits
that may be allocated to an applicant in
one year under the allocating agency’s
QAP. The second phase of Project F is,
therefore, NOT eligible for the increase
in basis accorded a project in a 2024
DDA, since it does not meet all of the
conditions for a multiphase project, as
defined in this notice. The original
application for credits for the first phase
did not describe the multiphase
composition of the project. Also, the
application for credits for the second
phase of Project F was not made in the
year immediately following the first
phase application year.
(Case G) Project G is located in an area
that is NOT a DDA in 2024 or 2026, but
is in a DDA in 2025. A complete
application for tax-exempt bond
financing for Project G is filed with the
bond-issuing agency on October 30,
2024. Project G is placed in service on
November 15, 2025 and the bonds are
issued on February 20, 2026. Property G
is eligible for the increase in basis
available to projects located in 2025
DDAs because one of the two necessary
actions (the two events being taxexempt bonds issued and buildings
placed in service) occur when the
property is in a DDA and both events
occur after January 1, 2025, the assumed
effective date of the 2025 DDAs.
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VIII. Findings and Certifications
A. Environmental Impact
This notice involves the statutorily
required establishment of fiscal
requirements or procedures that are
related to rate and cost determinations
and do not constitute a development
decision affecting the physical
condition of specific project areas or
building sites. Accordingly, under 24
CFR 50.19(c)(6) of HUD’s regulations,
this notice is categorically excluded
from environmental review under the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321, et seq.).
B. Federalism Impact
Executive Order 13132 (entitled
‘‘Federalism’’) prohibits an agency from
publishing any policy document that
has federalism implications if the
document either imposes substantial
direct compliance costs on State and
local governments and is not required
by statute, or the document preempts
State law, unless the agency meets the
consultation and funding requirements
of section 6 of the executive order. This
notice merely designates DDAs and
QCTs as required under IRC section 42,
as amended, for the use by political
subdivisions of the States in allocating
the LIHTC. This notice also details the
technical methods used in making such
designations. As a result, this notice is
not subject to review under the order.
Solomon J. Greene,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Policy Development and Research.
[FR Doc. 2023–20478 Filed 9–20–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
COMMISSION
[Investigation Nos. 701–TA–685 and 731–
TA–1599–1606 (Final)]
Tin Mill Products From Canada, China,
Germany, Netherlands, South Korea,
Taiwan, Turkey, and the United
Kingdom; Revised Schedule for the
Subject Investigations
United States International
Trade Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
DATES:
September 12, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Caitlyn Hendricks (202–205–2058),
Office of Investigations, U.S.
International Trade Commission, 500 E
Street SW, Washington, DC 20436.
Hearing-impaired persons can obtain
information on this matter by contacting
the Commission’s TDD terminal on 202–
E:\FR\FM\21SEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 182 (Thursday, September 21, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 65188-65194]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-20478]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-6427-N-01]
Statutorily Mandated Designation of Difficult Development Areas
and Qualified Census Tracts for 2024
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and
Research, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document designates ``Difficult Development Areas''
(DDAs) and ``Qualified Census Tracts'' (QCTs) for purposes of the Low-
Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) under Internal Revenue Code (IRC)
section 42. The United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) makes new DDA and QCT designations annually.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions on how areas are
designated and on geographic definitions, contact Michael K. Hollar,
Senior Economist, Public Finance and Regulatory Analysis Division,
Office of Policy Development and Research, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW, Room 8216, Washington, DC
20410-6000; telephone number 202-402-5878, or send an email to
[email protected]. For specific legal questions pertaining to
section 42, Office of the Associate Chief Counsel, Passthroughs and
Special Industries, Internal Revenue Service, 1111 Constitution Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20224; telephone number 202-317-4137. For questions
about the ``HUBZone'' program, contact Lori Gillen, Director, HUBZone
Program, Office of Government Contracting and Business Development,
U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 Third Street SW, Suite 8800,
Washington, DC 20416; telephone number 202-386-7382, or send an email
to [email protected]. (These are not toll-free
[[Page 65189]]
telephone numbers). Additional copies of this notice are available
through HUD User at, toll-free, 800-245-2691 for a small fee to cover
duplication and mailing costs. HUD welcomes and is prepared to receive
calls from individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, as well as
individuals with speech or communication disabilities. To learn more
about how to make an accessible telephone call, please visit https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
Copies Available Electronically: This notice and additional
information about DDAs and QCTs, including the lists of DDAs and QCTs,
are available electronically on the internet at https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/qct.html.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. This Notice
Under IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(iii)(I), for purposes of the LIHTC,
the Secretary of HUD must designate DDAs, which are areas with high
construction, land, and utility costs relative to area median gross
income (AMGI). This notice designates DDAs for each of the 50 States,
the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. HUD makes the
designations of DDAs in this notice based on modified Fiscal Year (FY)
2023 Small Area Fair Market Rents (Small Area FMRs, SAFMRs), FY 2023
nonmetropolitan county FMRs, FY 2023 income limits, and 2020 Census
population counts, as explained below.
Similarly, under IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(ii)(I), the Secretary of
HUD must designate QCTs, which are areas where either 50 percent or
more of the households have an income less than 60 percent of the AMGI
or have a poverty rate of at least 25 percent. This notice designates
QCTs based on new income and poverty data released in the American
Community Survey (ACS). Specifically, HUD relies on the most recent
three sets of ACS data to ensure that anomalous estimates, due to
sampling, do not affect the QCT status of tracts.
II. Data Used To Designate DDAs
HUD uses data from the 2020 Census on total population of
metropolitan areas, metropolitan ZIP Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs),\1\
and nonmetropolitan areas in the designation of DDAs. The Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) published updated metropolitan areas in OMB
Bulletin No. 18-04 on September 14, 2018.2 3 FY 2023 FMRs
and FY 2023 income limits HUD uses to designate DDAs are based on these
metropolitan statistical area (MSA) definitions, with modifications to
account for substantial differences in rental housing markets (and, in
some cases, median family income levels) within MSAs. HUD calculates
Small Area FMRs for the ZCTAs, or portions of ZCTAs within the
metropolitan areas defined by OMB Bulletin No. 18-04.
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\1\ The 2024 SDDAs follow the 2010 ZCTA boundaries in order to
remain consistent with the FY2023 FMRs. The method HUD used to
allocate population counts from the 2020 Census to these ZCTAs is
described below.
\2\ Available at: www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Bulletin-18-04.pdf.
\3\ The OMB metropolitan area definitions released on March 6,
2020 (OMB Bulletin No. 20-01) will be used for the first time in the
calculations of income limits in FY 2024 and thus used for QCT and
DDA designations for the first time in the 2025 designations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Data HUD Uses To Designate QCTs
HUD uses data from the 2020 Census on total population of census
tracts, metropolitan areas, and the nonmetropolitan parts of States in
the designation of QCTs. The FY 2023 income limits HUD uses to
designate QCTs are based on these MSA definitions with modifications to
account for substantial differences in rental housing markets (and in
some cases median family income levels) within MSAs. In this QCT
designation, HUD uses the OMB metropolitan area definitions published
in OMB Bulletin No. 18-04, without modification for purposes of
evaluating how many census tracts can be designated under the
population cap but uses the HUD-modified definitions and their
associated area median family incomes for determining QCT eligibility.
Because the 2020 Decennial Census did not include questions on
respondent household income, HUD uses ACS data to designate QCTs. The
ACS tabulates data collected over 5 years to provide estimates of
socioeconomic variables for small areas containing fewer than 65,000
persons, such as census tracts. Due to sample-related anomalies in
estimates from year to year, HUD utilizes three sets of ACS tabulations
to ensure that anomalous estimates do not affect QCT status.
IV. Background
The U.S. Department of the Treasury (Treasury) and the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) are authorized to interpret and enforce the
provisions of IRC section 42. In order to assist in understanding HUD's
mandated designation of DDAs and QCTs for use in administering IRC
section 42, a summary of the section is provided below. The following
summary does not purport to bind Treasury or the IRS in any way, nor
does it purport to bind HUD, since HUD has authority to interpret or
administer the IRC only in instances where it receives explicit
statutory delegation.
V. Summary of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit
A. Determining Eligibility
The LIHTC is a tax incentive intended to increase the availability
of low-income rental housing. IRC section 42 provides an income tax
credit to certain owners of newly constructed or substantially
rehabilitated low-income rental housing projects. The dollar amount of
the LIHTC available for allocation by each State (credit ceiling) is
limited by population. Section 42 allows each State a credit ceiling
based on a statutory formula indicated at IRC section 42(h)(3). States
may carry forward unallocated credits derived from the credit ceiling
for one year; however, to the extent such unallocated credits are not
used by then, the credits go into a national pool to be allocated to
qualified States as additional credit. State and local housing agencies
allocate the State's credit ceiling among low-income housing buildings
whose owners have applied for the credit. Besides IRC section 42
credits derived from the credit ceiling, States may also provide IRC
section 42 credits to owners of buildings based on the percentage of
certain building costs financed by tax-exempt bond proceeds. Credits
provided based on the use of tax-exempt bond proceeds do not reduce the
credits available from the credit ceiling. See IRC section 42(h)(4).
The credits allocated to a building are based on the cost of units
placed in service as low-income units under particular minimum
occupancy and maximum rent criteria. Prior to the enactment of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (the 2018 Act), under IRC section
42(g), a building was required to meet one of two tests to be eligible
for the LIHTC; either: (1) 20 percent of the units must be rent-
restricted and occupied by tenants with incomes no higher than 50
percent of AMGI, or (2) 40 percent of the units must be rent-restricted
and occupied by tenants with incomes no higher than 60 percent of AMGI.
A unit is ``rent-restricted'' if the gross rent, including an allowance
for tenant-paid utilities, does not exceed 30 percent of the imputed
income limitation (i.e., 50 percent or 60 percent of AMGI) applicable
to that unit. The rent and occupancy thresholds
[[Page 65190]]
remain in effect for at least 15 years, and building owners are
required to enter into agreements to maintain the low-income character
of the building for at least an additional 15 years.
The 2018 Act added a third test, the average income test. See IRC
section 42(g)(1), as amended by Public Law 115-141, Division T, section
103(a)(1) (March 23, 2018). A building meets the minimum requirements
of the average income test if 40 percent or more (25 percent or more in
the case of a project located in a high-cost housing area as described
in IRC section 142(d)(6)) of the residential units in such project are
both rent-restricted and occupied by individuals whose income does not
exceed the imputed income limitation designated by the taxpayer with
respect to the respective unit. The taxpayer designates the imputed
income limitation for each unit. The designated imputed income
limitation of any unit is determined in 10-percentage-point increments,
and may be designated as 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, or 80 percent of AMGI.
The average of the imputed income limitations designated must not
exceed 60 percent of AMGI. See IRC section 42(g)(1)(C).
B. Calculating the LIHTC
The LIHTC reduces income tax liability dollar-for-dollar. It is
taken annually for a term of 10 years and is intended to yield a
present value of either: (1) 70 percent of the ``qualified basis'' for
new construction or substantial rehabilitation expenditures that are
not federally subsidized (as defined in IRC section 42(i)(2)), or (2)
30 percent of the qualified basis for the cost of acquiring certain
existing buildings or projects that are federally subsidized. The tax
credit rates are determined monthly under procedures specified in IRC
section 42 and cannot be less than 9 percent for new buildings that are
not federally subsidized, and cannot be less than 4 percent for
buildings that are federally subsidized. Individuals can use the
credits up to a deduction equivalent of $25,000 (the actual maximum
amount of credit that an individual can claim depends on the
individual's marginal tax rate). For buildings placed in service after
December 31, 2007, individuals can use the credits against the
alternative minimum tax. Corporations, other than S or personal service
corporations, can use the credits against ordinary income tax, and, for
buildings placed in service after December 31, 2007, against the
alternative minimum tax. These corporations also can deduct losses from
the project.
The qualified basis represents the product of the building's
``applicable fraction'' and its ``eligible basis.'' The applicable
fraction is based on the number of low-income units in the building as
a percentage of the total number of units, or based on the floor space
of low-income units as a percentage of the total floor space of
residential units in the building. The eligible basis is the adjusted
basis attributable to acquisition, rehabilitation, or new construction
costs (depending on the type of LIHTC involved). These costs include
amounts chargeable to a capital account that are incurred prior to the
end of the first taxable year in which the qualified low-income
building is placed in service or, at the election of the taxpayer, the
end of the succeeding taxable year. In the case of buildings located in
designated DDAs or designated QCTs, or for credits awarded from the
State's per capita allocation, to buildings designated by the State
agency, eligible basis may be increased up to 130 percent from what it
would otherwise be. This means that the available credits also may be
increased by up to 30 percent. For example, if a 70 percent credit is
available, it effectively could be increased to as much as 91 percent
(70 percent x 130 percent).
C. Defining Difficult Development Areas (DDAs) and Qualified Census
Tracts (QCTs)
As stated above, IRC section 42 defines a DDA as an area designated
by the Secretary of HUD that has high construction, land, and utility
costs relative to the AMGI. All designated DDAs in metropolitan areas
(taken together) may not contain more than 20 percent of the aggregate
population of all metropolitan areas, and all designated areas not in
metropolitan areas may not contain more than 20 percent of the
aggregate population of all nonmetropolitan areas. See IRC section
42(d)(5)(B)(iii).
Similarly, IRC section 42 defines a QCT as an area designated by
the Secretary of HUD where, for the most recent year for which census
data are available on household income in such tract, either 50 percent
or more of the households in the tract have an income which is less
than 60 percent of the AMGI or the tract's poverty rate is at least 25
percent. All designated QCTs in a single metropolitan area or
nonmetropolitan area (taken together) may not contain more than 20
percent of the population of that metropolitan or nonmetropolitan area.
Thus, unlike the restriction on DDA designations, QCTs are restricted
by the total population of each individual area as opposed to the
aggregate population across all metropolitan areas and nonmetropolitan
areas. See IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(ii).
IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(v) allows States to award an increase in
basis up to 30 percent to buildings located outside of federally
designated DDAs and QCTs if the increase is necessary to make the
building financially feasible. This State discretion applies only to
buildings allocated credits under the State housing credit ceiling and
is not permitted for buildings receiving credits in connection with
tax-exempt bonds. Rules for such designations shall be set forth in the
LIHTC-allocating agencies' qualified allocation plans (QAPs). See IRC
section 42(m).
VI. Explanation of HUD Designation Method
A. 2024 Difficult Development Areas
In developing the 2024 list of DDAs, as required by IRC section
42(d)(5)(B)(iii), HUD compared housing costs with incomes. HUD used
2020 Census population for ZCTAs, and nonmetropolitan areas, and the
MSA definitions, as published in OMB Bulletin 18-04 on September 14,
2018, with modifications, as described below. In keeping with past
practice of basing the coming year's DDA designations on data from the
preceding year, the basis for these comparisons is the FY 2023 HUD
income limits for very low-income households (very low-income limits,
or VLILs), which are based on 50 percent of AMGI, and modified FMRs
based on the FY 2023 FMRs used for the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV)
program. For metropolitan DDAs, HUD used Small Area FMRs based on three
annual releases of ACS data, to compensate for statistical anomalies
which affect estimates for some ZCTAs. For non-metropolitan DDAs, HUD
used the FY 2023 FMRs published on September 1, 2022 and effective on
October 1, 2022 (87 FR 53761), as updated by the March 20, 2023
publication effective April 19, 2023 (88 FR 16647).
In formulating the FY 2023 FMRs and VLILs, HUD modified the current
OMB definitions of MSAs to account for differences in rents among areas
within each current MSA that were in different FMR areas under
definitions used in prior years. HUD formed these ``HUD Metro FMR
Areas'' (HMFAs) in cases where one or more of the parts of newly
defined MSAs were previously in separate FMR areas. All counties added
to metropolitan areas are treated as HMFAs with rents and incomes based
on their own county data, where available. HUD no longer requires
[[Page 65191]]
recent-mover rents to differ by five percent or more in order to form a
new HMFA. All HMFAs are contained entirely within MSAs. All
nonmetropolitan counties are outside of MSAs and are not broken up by
HUD for purposes of setting FMRs and VLILs. (Complete details on HUD's
process for determining FY 2023 FMR areas and FMRs are available at
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/fmr.html#2023. Complete details
on HUD's process for determining FY 2023 income limits are available at
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/il.html#2023). HUD's FY 2023
FMRs and VLILs do not account for the change in Census county-
equivalent areas in Connecticut from the eight historical counties to
the States's nine planning regions.
HUD's unit of analysis for designating metropolitan DDAs consists
of ZCTAs, whose Small Area FMRs are compared to metropolitan VLILs. For
purposes of computing VLILs in metropolitan areas, HUD considers entire
MSAs in cases where these were not broken up into HMFAs; and HMFAs
within the MSAs that were broken up for such purposes. HUD used the
2010 ZCTA boundaries to designate the 2024 SDDAs in order to remain
consistent with the FY 2023 Small Area FMRs. To allocate 2020 Census
population to the 2010 ZCTA boundaries, HUD first translated the 2020
decennial Census population into 2010 census tract boundaries using the
Census Bureau's 2010 to 2020 block relationship file and aggregating to
2010 census tracts. The tract populations were then allocated to ZCTAs
using the proportion of each tract's 2010 population within each ZCTA,
using the Census Bureau's 2010 ZCTA to 2010 Census Tract Relationship
File.
Hereafter in this notice, the unit of analysis for designating
metropolitan DDAs will be called the ZCTA, and the unit of analysis for
nonmetropolitan DDAs will be the nonmetropolitan county or county
equivalent area. The procedure used in making the DDA designations
follows:
1. Calculate FMR-to-Income Ratios. For each metropolitan ZCTA and
each nonmetropolitan county, HUD calculated a ratio of housing costs to
income. HUD used a modified FY 2023 two-bedroom Small Area FMR for
ZCTAs, a modified FY 2023 two-bedroom FMR for non-metropolitan
counties, and the FY 2023 four-person VLIL for this calculation.
The modified FY 2023 two-bedroom Small Area FMRs for ZCTAs differ
from the FY 2023 Small Area FMRs in four ways. First, HUD did not limit
the Small Area FMR to 150 percent of its metropolitan area FMR. Second,
HUD did not limit annual decreases in Small Area FMRs to ten percent,
which was first applied in the FY 2018 FMR calculations. Third, HUD
adjusted the Small Area FMRs in New York City using the New York City
Housing and Vacancy Survey, which is conducted by the U.S. Census
Bureau, to adjust for the effect of local rent control and
stabilization regulations. No other jurisdictions have provided HUD
with data that could be used to adjust Small Area FMRs for rent control
or stabilization regulations.\4\ Finally, the Small Area FMRs are not
limited to the State non-metropolitan minimum FMR.
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\4\ HUD encourages other jurisdictions with rent control laws
that affect rents paid by recent movers into existing units to
contact HUD about what data might be provided or collected to adjust
Small Area FMRs in those jurisdictions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FY 2023 two-bedroom FMR for non-metropolitan counties was
modified only by removing the State non-metropolitan minimum FMR.
The numerator of the ratio, representing the development cost of
housing, was the area's FY 2023 FMR, or Small Area FMR in metropolitan
areas. In general, the FMR is based on the 40th-percentile gross rent
paid by recent movers to live in a two-bedroom rental unit.
The denominator of the ratio, representing the maximum income of
eligible tenants, was the monthly LIHTC income-based rent limit, which
was calculated as \1/12\ of 30 percent of 120 percent of the area's 4-
person VLIL (where the VLIL was rounded to the nearest $50).
2. Sort Areas by Ratio and Exclude Unsuitable Areas. The ratios of
the FMR, or Small Area FMR, to the LIHTC income-based rent limit were
arrayed in descending order, separately, for ZCTAs and for
nonmetropolitan counties. ZCTAs with populations less than 100 were
excluded in order to avoid designating areas unsuitable for residential
development, such as ZCTAs containing airports.
3. Select Areas with Highest Ratios and Exclude QCTs. The DDAs are
those areas with the highest ratios that cumulatively comprise 20
percent of the 2020 population of all metropolitan areas and all
nonmetropolitan areas. For purposes of applying this population cap,
HUD excluded the population in areas designated as 2024 QCTs. Thus, an
area can be designated as a QCT or DDA, but not both.
B. Application of Population Caps to DDA Determinations
In identifying DDAs, HUD applied caps, or limitations, as noted
above. The cumulative population of metropolitan DDAs cannot exceed 20
percent of the cumulative population of all metropolitan areas, and the
cumulative population of nonmetropolitan DDAs cannot exceed 20 percent
of the cumulative population of all nonmetropolitan areas.
In applying these caps, HUD established procedures to deal with how
to treat small overruns of the caps. The remainder of this section
explains those procedures. In general, HUD stops selecting areas when
it is impossible to choose another area without exceeding the
applicable cap. The only exceptions to this policy are when the next
eligible excluded area contains either a large absolute population or a
large percentage of the total population, or the next excluded area's
ranking ratio, as described above, was identical (to four decimal
places) to the last area selected, and its inclusion resulted in only a
minor overrun of the cap. Thus, for both the designated metropolitan
and nonmetropolitan DDAs, there may be minimal overruns of the cap. HUD
believes the designation of additional areas in the above examples of
minimal overruns is consistent with the intent of the IRC. As long as
the apparent excess is small due to measurement errors, some latitude
is justifiable, because it is impossible to determine whether the 20
percent cap has been exceeded. Despite the care and effort involved in
a Decennial Census, the Census Bureau and all users of the data
recognize that the population counts for a given area and for the
entire country are not precise. Therefore, the extent of the
measurement error is unknown. There can be errors in both the numerator
and denominator of the ratio of populations used in applying a 20
percent cap. In circumstances where a strict application of a 20
percent cap results in an anomalous situation, recognition of the
unavoidable imprecision in the census data justifies accepting small
variances above the 20 percent limit.
B. Qualified Census Tracts
In developing the list of QCTs, HUD used 2020 Census 100-percent
count data on total population, total households, and population in
households; the median household income and poverty rate as estimated
in the 2015-2019, 2016-2020 and 2017-2021 ACS tabulations; \5\ the FY
2023
[[Page 65192]]
Very Low-Income Limits (VLILs) computed at the HMFA level to determine
tract eligibility; and the MSA definitions published in OMB Bulletin
No. 18-04 on September 14, 2018, for determining how many eligible
tracts can be designated under the statutory 20 percent population cap.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The 2015-2019 ACS data were released using 2010 census tract
boundaries, while the 2016-2020 and 2017-2021 ACS data use 2020
census tract boundaries. To reconcile these datasets, HUD used
population-weighted averages of the median household income and
poverty rate estimates from the 2015-2019 ACS wherever a 2020 census
tract intersected multiple 2010 census tracts. HUD did not consider
these derived ACS estimates to be statistically reliable if any of
the 2010 census tracts comprising more than 10 percent of the
population of the 2020 census tract failed to meet the reliability
standard (i.e., had a margin of error greater than half of the
estimate for the estimate in question).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
HUD uses the HMFA-level AMGIs to determine QCT eligibility because
the statute, specifically IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(iv)(II), refers to
the same section of the IRC that defines income for purposes of tenant
eligibility and unit maximum rent, specifically IRC section 42(g)(4).
By rule, the IRS sets these income limits according to HUD's VLILs,
which, starting in FY 2006 and thereafter, are established at the HMFA
level. HUD uses the entire MSA to determine how many eligible tracts
can be designated under the 20 percent population cap as required by
the statute (IRC section 42(d)(5)(B)(ii)(III)), which states that MSAs
should be treated as singular areas.
HUD determined the QCTs as follows:
1. Calculate 60 percent AMGI. To be eligible to be designated a
QCT, a census tract must have 50 percent of its households with incomes
below 60 percent of AMGI or have a poverty rate of 25 percent or more.
Due to potential statistical anomalies in the ACS 5-year estimates, one
of these conditions must be met in at least 2 of the 3 ACS 5-year
tabulations for a tract to be considered eligible for QCT designation.
HUD calculates 60 percent of AMGI by multiplying by a factor of 1.2 the
HMFA or nonmetropolitan county FY 2023 VLIL adjusted for inflation to
match the ACS estimates, which are adjusted to the value of the dollar
in the last year of the 5-year group.
2. Determine Whether Census Tracts Have Less than 50 percent of
Households Below 60 percent AMGI. For each census tract, whether or not
50 percent of households have incomes below the 60 percent income
standard (income criterion) was determined by: (a) calculating the
average household size of the census tract, (b) adjusting the income
standard to match the average household size, and (c) comparing the
average-household-size-adjusted income standard to the median household
income for the tract reported in each of the three years of ACS
tabulations (2015-2019, 2016-2020 and 2017-2021). HUD did not consider
estimates of median household income to be statistically reliable
unless the margin of error was less than half of the estimate (or a
Margin of Error Ratio, MoER, of 50 percent or less). If at least two of
the three estimates were not statistically reliable by this measure,
HUD determined the tract to be ineligible under the income criterion
due to lack of consistently reliable median income statistics across
the three ACS tabulations. Since 50 percent of households in a tract
have incomes above and below the tract median household income, if the
tract median household income is less than the average-household-size-
adjusted income standard for the tract, then more than 50 percent of
households have incomes below the standard.
3. Estimate Poverty Rate. For each census tract, HUD determined the
poverty rate in each of the three releases of ACS tabulations (2015-
2019, 2016-2020 and 2017-2021) by dividing the population with incomes
below the poverty line by the population for whom poverty status has
been determined. As with the evaluation of tracts under the income
criterion, HUD applies a data quality standard for evaluating ACS
poverty rate data in designating the 2024 QCTs. HUD did not consider
estimates of the poverty rate to be statistically reliable unless both
the population for whom poverty status has been determined and the
number of persons below poverty had MoERs of less than 50 percent of
the respective estimates. If at least two of the three poverty rate
estimates were not statistically reliable, HUD determined the tract to
be ineligible under the poverty rate criterion due to lack of reliable
poverty statistics across the ACS tabulations.
4. Designate QCTs Where 20 percent or Less of Population Resides in
Eligible Census Tracts. QCTs are those census tracts in which 50
percent or more of the households meet the income criterion in at least
two of the three years evaluated, or 25 percent or more of the
population is in poverty in at least two of the three years evaluated,
such that the population of all census tracts that satisfy either one
or both of these criteria does not exceed 20 percent of the total
population of the respective area.
5. Designate QCTs Where More than 20 percent of Population Resides
in Eligible Census Tracts. In areas where more than 20 percent of the
population resides in eligible census tracts, census tracts are
designated as QCTs in accordance with the following procedure:
a. The statistically reliable income and poverty criteria are each
averaged over the three ACS tabulations (2015-2019, 2016-2020 and 2017-
2021). Statistically reliable values that did not exceed the income and
poverty rate thresholds were included in the average.
b. Eligible tracts are placed in one of two groups based on the
averaged values of the income and poverty criteria. The first group
includes tracts that satisfy both the income and poverty criteria for
QCTs for at least two of the three evaluation years; a different pair
of years may be used to meet each criterion. The second group includes
tracts that satisfy either the income criterion in at least two of the
three years, or the poverty criterion in at least two of three years,
but not both. A tract must qualify by at least one of the criteria in
at least two of the three evaluation years to be eligible.
c. HUD ranked tracts in the first group from highest to lowest by
the average of the ratios of the tract average-household-size-adjusted
income limit to the median household income. Then, HUD ranked tracts in
the first group from highest to lowest by the average of the poverty
rates. HUD averaged the two ranks to yield a combined rank. HUD then
sorted the tracts on the combined rank, with the census tract with the
highest combined rank being placed at the top of the sorted list. In
the event of a tie, HUD ranked more populous tracts above less populous
ones.
d. HUD ranked tracts in the second group from highest to lowest by
the average of the ratios of the tract average-household-size-adjusted
income limit to the median household income. Then, HUD ranked tracts in
the second group from highest to lowest by the average of the poverty
rates. HUD then averaged the two ranks to yield a combined rank. HUD
then sorted the tracts on the combined rank, with the census tract with
the highest combined rank being placed at the top of the sorted list.
In the event of a tie, HUD ranked more populous tracts above less
populous ones.
e. HUD stacked the ranked first group on top of the ranked second
group to yield a single, concatenated, ranked list of eligible census
tracts.
f. Working down the single, concatenated, ranked list of eligible
tracts, HUD identified census tracts as designated until the
designation of an additional tract would cause the 20 percent limit to
be exceeded. If HUD does not designate a census tract because doing so
would raise the percentage above 20 percent, HUD then considers
subsequent eligible census tracts to determine whether one or more
[[Page 65193]]
eligible census tract(s) with smaller population(s) could be designated
without exceeding the 20 percent limit.
C. Exceptions to OMB Definitions of MSAs and Other Geographic Matters
As stated in OMB Bulletin 18-04, defining metropolitan areas:
``OMB establishes and maintains the delineations of Metropolitan
Statistical Areas, . . . solely for statistical purposes. . . . OMB
does not take into account or attempt to anticipate any non-statistical
uses that may be made of the delineations[.] In cases where . . . an
agency elects to use the Metropolitan . . . Area definitions in
nonstatistical programs, it is the sponsoring agency's responsibility
to ensure that the delineations are appropriate for such use. An agency
using the statistical delineations in a nonstatistical program may
modify the delineations, but only for the purposes of that program. In
such cases, any modifications should be clearly identified as
deviations from the OMB statistical area delineations in order to avoid
confusion.''
Following OMB guidance, HUD's estimation procedure for the FMRs and
income limits incorporates the September 2018 OMB definitions of
metropolitan Core-Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) based on the CBSA
standards, but makes adjustments to the definitions, in order to
separate subparts of these areas in cases where counties were added to
an existing or newly defined metropolitan area. In CBSAs where HUD
establishes subareas, it is HUD's view that the geographic extent of
the housing markets is not the same as the geographic extent of the
CBSAs.
In the New England States (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont), HUD defines HMFAs according to
county subdivisions or minor civil divisions (MCDs), rather than county
or county-equivalent boundaries. However, since no part of an HMFA is
outside an OMB-defined, county-based MSA, all New England
nonmetropolitan counties are kept intact for purposes of designating
Nonmetropolitan DDAs.
VII. Future Designations
HUD designates DDAs annually as updated HUD income limit and FMR
data are made public. HUD designates QCTs annually as new income and
poverty rate data are released.
A. Effective Date
The 2024 lists of QCTs and DDAs are effective:
(1) for allocations of credit after December 31, 2023; or
(2) for purposes of IRC section 42(h)(4), if the bonds are issued
and the building is placed in service after December 31, 2023.
If an area is not on a subsequent list of QCTs or DDAs, the 2024
lists are effective for the area if:
(1) the allocation of credit to an applicant is made no later than
the end of the 730-day period after the applicant submits a complete
application to the LIHTC-allocating agency, and the submission is made
before the effective date of the subsequent lists; or
(2) for purposes of IRC section 42(h)(4), if:
(a) the bonds are issued or the building is placed in service no
later than the end of the 730-day period after the applicant submits a
complete application to the bond-issuing agency, and
(b) the submission is made before the effective date of the
subsequent lists, provided that both the issuance of the bonds and the
placement in service of the building occur after the application is
submitted.
An application is deemed to be submitted on the date it is filed if
the application is determined to be complete by the credit-allocating
or bond-issuing agency. A ``complete application'' means that no more
than de minimis clarification of the application is required for the
agency to make a decision about the allocation of tax credits or
issuance of bonds requested in the application.
In the case of a ``multiphase project,'' the DDA or QCT status of
the site of the project that applies for all phases of the project is
that which applied when the project received its first allocation of
LIHTC. For purposes of IRC section 42(h)(4), the DDA or QCT status of
the site of the project that applies for all phases of the project is
that which applied when the first of the following occurred: (a) the
building(s) in the first phase was (were) placed in service, or (b) the
bonds were issued.
For purposes of this notice, a ``multiphase project'' is defined as
a set of buildings to be constructed or rehabilitated under the rules
of the LIHTC and meeting the following criteria:
(1) the multiphase composition of the project (i.e., total number
of buildings and phases in the project, with a description of how many
buildings are to be built in each phase and when each phase is to be
completed, and any other information required by the agency) is made
known by the applicant in the first application of credit for any
building in the project, and that the applicant identifies the
buildings in the project for which credit is (or will be) sought;
(2) the aggregate amount of LIHTC applied for on behalf of, or that
would eventually be allocated to, the buildings on the site exceeds the
one-year limitation on credits per applicant, as defined in the QAP of
the LIHTC-allocating agency, or the annual per-capita credit authority
of the LIHTC allocating agency, and is the reason the applicant must
request multiple allocations over 2 or more years; and
(3) all applications for LIHTC for buildings on the site are made
in immediately consecutive years.
Members of the public are hereby reminded that the Secretary of
Housing and Urban Development, or the Secretary's designee, has legal
authority to designate DDAs and QCTs, by publishing lists of geographic
entities as defined by, in the case of DDAs, the Census Bureau, the
several States and the governments of the insular areas of the United
States and, in the case of QCTs, by the Census Bureau; and to establish
the effective dates of such lists. The Secretary of the Treasury,
through the IRS thereof, has sole legal authority to interpret, and to
determine and enforce compliance with the IRC and associated
regulations, including Federal Register notices published by HUD for
purposes of designating DDAs and QCTs. Representations made by any
other entity as to the content of HUD notices designating DDAs and QCTs
that do not precisely match the language published by HUD should not be
relied upon by taxpayers in determining what actions are necessary to
comply with HUD notices.
B. Interpretive Examples of Effective Date
For the convenience of readers of this notice, interpretive
examples are provided below to illustrate the consequences of the
effective date in areas that gain or lose QCT or DDA status. The
examples covering DDAs are equally applicable to QCT designations.
(Case A) Project A is located in a 2024 DDA that is NOT a
designated DDA in 2025 or 2026. A complete application for tax credits
for Project A is filed with the allocating agency on November 15, 2024.
Credits are allocated to Project A on October 30, 2026. Project A is
eligible for the increase in basis accorded a project in a 2024 DDA
because the application was filed BEFORE January 1, 2025 (the assumed
effective date for the 2025 DDA lists), and because tax credits were
allocated no later than the end of the 730-day period after the filing
of the complete
[[Page 65194]]
application for an allocation of tax credits.
(Case B) Project B is located in a 2024 DDA that is NOT a
designated DDA in 2025 or 2026. A complete application for tax credits
for Project B is filed with the allocating agency on December 1, 2024.
Credits are allocated to Project B on March 30, 2027. Project B is NOT
eligible for the increase in basis accorded a project in a 2024 DDA
because, although the application for an allocation of tax credits was
filed BEFORE January 1, 2025 (the assumed effective date of the 2025
DDA lists), the tax credits were allocated later than the end of the
730-day period after the filing of the complete application.
(Case C) Project C is located in a 2024 DDA that was not a DDA in
2023. Project C was placed in service on November 15, 2023. A complete
application for tax-exempt bond financing for Project C is filed with
the bond-issuing agency on January 15, 2024. The tax-exempt bonds that
will support the permanent financing of Project C are issued on
September 30, 2024. Project C is NOT eligible for the increase in basis
otherwise accorded a project in a 2024 DDA, because the project was
placed in service BEFORE January 1, 2024.
(Case D) Project D is located in an area that is a DDA in 2024 but
is NOT a DDA in 2025 or 2026. A complete application for tax-exempt
bond financing for Project D is filed with the bond-issuing agency on
October 30, 2024. Tax-exempt bonds are issued for Project D on April
30, 2026, but Project D is not placed in service until January 30,
2027. Project D is eligible for the increase in basis available to
projects located in 2024 DDAs because: (1) one of the two events
necessary for triggering the effective date for buildings described in
section 42(h)(4)(B) of the IRC (the two events being tax-exempt bonds
issued and buildings placed in service) took place on April 30, 2026,
within the 730-day period after a complete application for tax-exempt
bond financing was filed, (2) the application was filed during a time
when the location of Project D was in a DDA, and (3) both the issuance
of the tax-exempt bonds and placement in service of Project D occurred
after the application was submitted.
(Case E) Project E is a multiphase project located in a 2024 DDA
that is NOT a designated DDA or QCT in 2025. The first phase of Project
E received an allocation of credits in 2024, pursuant to an application
filed March 15, 2024, which describes the multiphase composition of the
project. An application for tax credits for the second phase of Project
E is filed with the allocating agency by the same entity on March 15,
2025. The second phase of Project E is located on a contiguous site.
Credits are allocated to the second phase of Project E on October 30,
2025. The aggregate amount of credits allocated to the two phases of
Project E exceeds the amount of credits that may be allocated to an
applicant in one year under the allocating agency's QAP and is the
reason that applications were made in multiple phases. The second phase
of Project E is, therefore, eligible for the increase in basis accorded
a project in a 2024 DDA, because it meets all of the conditions to be a
part of a multiphase project.
(Case F) Project F is a multiphase project located in a 2024 DDA
that is NOT a designated DDA in 2025 or 2026. The first phase of
Project F received an allocation of credits in 2024, pursuant to an
application filed March 15, 2024, which does not describe the
multiphase composition of the project. An application for tax credits
for the second phase of Project F is filed with the allocating agency
by the same entity on March 15, 2026. Credits are allocated to the
second phase of Project F on October 30, 2026. The aggregate amount of
credits allocated to the two phases of Project F exceeds the amount of
credits that may be allocated to an applicant in one year under the
allocating agency's QAP. The second phase of Project F is, therefore,
NOT eligible for the increase in basis accorded a project in a 2024
DDA, since it does not meet all of the conditions for a multiphase
project, as defined in this notice. The original application for
credits for the first phase did not describe the multiphase composition
of the project. Also, the application for credits for the second phase
of Project F was not made in the year immediately following the first
phase application year.
(Case G) Project G is located in an area that is NOT a DDA in 2024
or 2026, but is in a DDA in 2025. A complete application for tax-exempt
bond financing for Project G is filed with the bond-issuing agency on
October 30, 2024. Project G is placed in service on November 15, 2025
and the bonds are issued on February 20, 2026. Property G is eligible
for the increase in basis available to projects located in 2025 DDAs
because one of the two necessary actions (the two events being tax-
exempt bonds issued and buildings placed in service) occur when the
property is in a DDA and both events occur after January 1, 2025, the
assumed effective date of the 2025 DDAs.
VIII. Findings and Certifications
A. Environmental Impact
This notice involves the statutorily required establishment of
fiscal requirements or procedures that are related to rate and cost
determinations and do not constitute a development decision affecting
the physical condition of specific project areas or building sites.
Accordingly, under 24 CFR 50.19(c)(6) of HUD's regulations, this notice
is categorically excluded from environmental review under the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321, et seq.).
B. Federalism Impact
Executive Order 13132 (entitled ``Federalism'') prohibits an agency
from publishing any policy document that has federalism implications if
the document either imposes substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments and is not required by statute, or the
document preempts State law, unless the agency meets the consultation
and funding requirements of section 6 of the executive order. This
notice merely designates DDAs and QCTs as required under IRC section
42, as amended, for the use by political subdivisions of the States in
allocating the LIHTC. This notice also details the technical methods
used in making such designations. As a result, this notice is not
subject to review under the order.
Solomon J. Greene,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and
Research.
[FR Doc. 2023-20478 Filed 9-20-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P