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Housing California California Tax Credit Update

Housing California California Tax Credit Update. William J. Pavão, Executive Director California Tax Credit Allocation Committee . First Round 2011 Update. 9% a pplications received: 103 (126 in 2010) Likely awards: 54 (37 in first round 2010) 4%+State applications: 13 (2 in 2010)

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Housing California California Tax Credit Update

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  1. Housing CaliforniaCalifornia Tax Credit Update

    William J. Pavão, Executive Director California Tax Credit Allocation Committee
  2. First Round 2011 Update 9% applications received: 103 (126 in 2010) Likely awards: 54 (37 in first round 2010) 4%+State applications: 13 (2 in 2010) Likely awards: 9 (8 in three 2010 rounds)
  3. 9% Requests vs. (Likely Awards) Nonprofit: 27 apps. (3) Rural: 21 apps. (12) At-risk: 4 apps. (2) Special Needs/SRO: 7 apps. (2)
  4. Geographic – Not Including Set-aside Cascades San Francisco: 3 apps. (1) Central Coast: 9 apps. (2) Capital Northern: 7 apps. (3) South/West Bay: 4 apps. (2) Orange County: 8 apps. (3)
  5. Geographic – Not Including Set-aside Cascades Inland Empire: 9 apps. (3) San Diego: 8 apps. (4) North/East Bay: 5 apps. (3) Central Valley: 9 apps. (5) Los Angeles: 20 apps. (10)
  6. Tiebreaker Ranges: Primarily Self Scores Nonprofit: 110.155 – 89.395% Rural: 60.016 – 50.048% At-risk: 51.928 – 46.620% Special Needs/SRO: 98.796 – 89.435%
  7. Tiebreaker Ranges: Primarily Self Scores and Reaching Down San Francisco: 82.531% Central Coast: 78.857 – 64.504% Capital Northern: 73.919 – 66.038% South/West Bay: 78.860 – 78.466% Orange County: 73.163 – 24.00%
  8. Tiebreaker Ranges: Primarily Self Scores and Reaching Down Inland Empire: 76.827 – 73.716% San Diego: 85.889 – 77.062% North/East Bay: 83.490 – 78.889% Central Valley: 89.204 – 65.019% Los Angeles: 83.266 – 63.512%
  9. State Credits $105 million available for 9% applicants in 2011 Approximately $19 million likely to be awarded to 9% applicants Second round likely to leave surplus for 4%-plus-State credit applicants
  10. Cost Reasonableness Initiating review for possible changes in 2012 In 2010, seven of 75 projects exceeded $480K/unit Three projects exceeded $500K/unit One exceeded $611K/unit
  11. Cost Per Unit Trends – 2005-2010
  12. Preliminary First Round 2011 Data
  13. 2011 Applications Four large family projects with high per unit costs Palo Alto project: $598K/unit Two Santa Monica projects: $592K and $595K/unit Culver City project: $642K/unit
  14. Current Regulations “Development and operational costs shall be reasonable and within limits established by the Committee, and may be adjusted by the Committee, at any time prior to issuance of the tax forms.” (Section 10327(a)) Committee has system of basis limits and adjustments Regulations limit developer fee and contractor overhead and profit
  15. Regulations cont. Currently no expressed limit on total costs Scoring on cost efficiency (Section 10325(c)(1)(A)) typically superseded by leveraged public funds What should TCAC’s role be?
  16. Starting Process Defining the problem: Outliers, or more? Working with other State housing partners May procure analytical help with cost components and trends May propose regulation changes for 2012
  17. Operating Expense Minimums Current TCAC practice in underwriting Establish averages from existing 3,000 property portfolio Sort by housing type, region, and elevator presence Use average as underwriting minimum
  18. 2010 Operating Cost Data Five years’ worth of data used each year Most recent year’s reports added; oldest dropped off Extreme increases in costs, especially for senior-only projects 25+% year-over-year increases in some cases
  19. 2011 Cost Data cont. Senior costs now very close to large family costs TCAC using 2010 tables for this year Will publish new data-based table for information toward 2012 rounds Seeking explanations and input
  20. Geographic Apportionments TCAC’s current regulation apportionments put in place in 2003 New census and other data available Periodic updating in order Memorandum forthcoming
  21. Apportionments cont. Memo will show results using prior method Memo will describe factors and method TCAC will propose one decimal-point display Will seek stakeholder input and consideration of other factors
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