81_FR_11146 81 FR 11104 - Utility Allowances Submetering

81 FR 11104 - Utility Allowances Submetering

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 42 (March 3, 2016)

Page Range11104-11110
FR Document2016-04606

This document contains final and temporary regulations that amend the utility allowance regulations concerning the low-income housing credit. The final regulations clarify the circumstances in which utility costs paid by a tenant based on actual consumption in a submetered rent-restricted unit are treated as paid by the tenant directly to the utility company. The temporary regulations extend the principles of these submetering rules to situations in which a building owner sells to tenants energy that is produced from a renewable source and that is not delivered by a local utility company. The final and temporary regulations affect owners of low-income housing projects that claim the credit, the tenants in those low-income housing projects, and State and local housing credit agencies. The text of these temporary regulations also serves as the text of the proposed regulations (REG- 123867-14) set forth in the notice of proposed rulemaking on this subject in the Proposed Rules section of this issue of the Federal Register.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 42 (Thursday, March 3, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 42 (Thursday, March 3, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 11104-11110]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-04606]



[[Page 11104]]

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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Internal Revenue Service

26 CFR Part 1

[TD 9755]
RIN 1545-BI91


Utility Allowances Submetering

AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.

ACTION: Final and temporary regulations.

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SUMMARY: This document contains final and temporary regulations that 
amend the utility allowance regulations concerning the low-income 
housing credit. The final regulations clarify the circumstances in 
which utility costs paid by a tenant based on actual consumption in a 
submetered rent-restricted unit are treated as paid by the tenant 
directly to the utility company. The temporary regulations extend the 
principles of these submetering rules to situations in which a building 
owner sells to tenants energy that is produced from a renewable source 
and that is not delivered by a local utility company. The final and 
temporary regulations affect owners of low-income housing projects that 
claim the credit, the tenants in those low-income housing projects, and 
State and local housing credit agencies. The text of these temporary 
regulations also serves as the text of the proposed regulations (REG-
123867-14) set forth in the notice of proposed rulemaking on this 
subject in the Proposed Rules section of this issue of the Federal 
Register.

DATES: 
    Effective Date: These regulations are effective on March 3, 2016.
    Applicability Date: For dates of applicability, see Sec. Sec.  
1.42-12(a)(5) and 1.42-10T(f)-(g).

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James Rider (202) 317-4137 (not a 
toll-free number).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Background

    This document contains amendments to Sec.  1.42-10 of the Income 
Tax Regulations (26 CFR part 1), which concerns the applicable utility 
allowance relating to the low-income housing credit under section 42 of 
the Internal Revenue Code. On May 5, 2009, the Treasury Department and 
the IRS released Notice 2009-44 (2009-21 IRB 1037) (see Sec.  
601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b)) to provide guidance on how the utility allowance 
regulations apply to buildings with a submetering system. On August 7, 
2012, the Treasury Department and the IRS published in the Federal 
Register a notice of proposed rulemaking under section 42(g)(2)(B)(ii) 
(77 FR 46987) (the 2012 proposed regulations) to provide that utility 
costs paid by a tenant based on actual consumption in a submetered 
rent-restricted unit are treated as paid by the tenant directly to the 
utility company and thus do not count against the maximum rent that the 
building owner can charge. The 2012 proposed regulations generally 
incorporated the guidance in Notice 2009-44. The Treasury Department 
and the IRS received written and electronic comments responding to the 
2012 proposed regulations. No requests for a public hearing were made 
and no public hearing was held.
    After consideration of all the comments, the final regulations 
adopt the 2012 proposed regulations as amended by this Treasury 
decision, and the temporary regulations extend those rules to the 
provision of energy that the building owner acquires directly from 
renewable sources and then provides to low-income tenants. The text of 
the temporary regulations also serves as the text of the proposed 
regulations (REG-123867-14) for purposes of the notice of proposed 
rulemaking on this subject in the Proposed Rules section in this issue 
of the Federal Register.

Summary of Comments and Explanation of Provisions

Comments Specifically Relating to Submetering

    Commenters generally stated that the 2012 proposed regulations 
provided for accurate utility allowance determinations, which would 
promote energy efficiency and help maintain the financial stability of 
housing credit properties.
1. Actual-Consumption Submetering Arrangements and Ratio Utility 
Billing Systems
    The 2012 proposed regulations defined an actual-consumption 
submetering arrangement for utility allowance purposes as not including 
a ratio utility billing system (RUBS). RUBS uses a formula that 
allocates a property's utility bill among its units based on the units' 
relative floor space, number of occupants, or some other quantitative 
measure, but not actual consumption by the tenant(s) in the unit. A 
commenter expressed concern that the inability to use RUBS for utility 
allowance purposes could be interpreted to prohibit the use of RUBS for 
any low-income housing credit project. This concern is unwarranted. 
Although the 2012 proposed regulations precluded an arrangement such as 
RUBS from qualifying as an actual consumption submetering arrangement, 
they did not prohibit the use of RUBS for low-income housing credit 
projects. However, any amount paid by a tenant for utilities using RUBS 
must be included in gross rent. Accordingly, the final regulations 
follow the approach in the 2012 proposed regulations and continue to 
define an actual-consumption submetering arrangement as not including 
RUBS.
2. Administrative Costs of Submetering
    The 2012 proposed regulations provided that, if the owner charges a 
unit's tenants an administrative fee for the owner's actual monthly 
costs of administering an actual-consumption submetering arrangement, 
then the fee is not considered gross rent for purposes of section 
42(g)(2) so long as the aggregate monthly fee or fees for all of the 
unit's utilities under one or more actual-consumption submetering 
arrangements does not exceed the lesser of (A) five dollars per month; 
or (B) the owner's actual monthly costs paid or incurred for 
administering the arrangement. One commenter recommended that the final 
regulations simply require owners to include in gross rent any amounts 
that exceed five dollars and not require the owner to determine actual 
monthly cost. According to the commenter, requiring the building owner 
to determine actual cost is overly burdensome and would lead to 
technical noncompliance as a result of nominal amounts. Two commenters 
requested that the final regulations also permit building owners to 
charge tenants an administrative fee in accordance with State law as 
currently permitted in Notice 2009-44. According to these commenters, 
this rule is regionally tuned and therefore allows building owners to 
recoup the full cost of submetering in a fair manner. The commenters 
suggested that by not allowing building owners to recover State-
approved charges for electricity, the 2012 proposed regulations would 
create a disincentive for developers to invest in high performance, 
sustainable low income housing or build additional housing units.
    In response to these comments, the final regulations do not include 
a requirement to determine actual monthly cost, and they generally 
permit owners to charge tenants an administrative fee in accordance 
with a State or local law that specifically prescribes a dollar amount 
for the

[[Page 11105]]

administrative fee. The final regulations authorize the Treasury 
Department and the IRS, by publication in the Internal Revenue Bulletin 
(IRB) (see Sec.  601.601(d)(2)(ii)), both to provide for administrative 
fees in excess of five dollars per month even in the absence a State or 
local law doing so and to put an upper bound on administrative fees 
even if State or local law allows higher fees.
    Thus, if a building owner or its agent charges a unit's tenants a 
fee for administering an actual-consumption submetering arrangement, 
then gross rent includes any amount by which the aggregate amount of 
monthly fees for all of the unit's utilities under one or more actual-
consumption submetering arrangements exceeds the greater of--(i) five 
dollars per month; (ii) an amount (if any) designated by publication in 
the IRB; or (iii) the lesser of a dollar amount (if any) specifically 
prescribed under a State or local law or a maximum amount (if any) 
designated by publication in the IRB.
3. Energy Acquired Directly From a Renewable Source
    During consideration of the comments on the 2012 proposed 
regulations, the Treasury Department and the IRS realized that the 
proposed definition of an actual-consumption submetering arrangement 
assumed that the building owner was purchasing the utility in question 
from a local utility company. For example, proposed Sec.  1.42-
10(e)(1)(iv) referred to ``the utility company rate incurred by the 
building owner for the particular utility.'' This assumption appeared 
to preclude applying submetering principles to electricity generated 
from renewable sources by the building owner or by some other person 
from whom the building owner purchases it directly.
    The legislative purposes of the low-income housing credit, however, 
are fully consistent with applying submetering principles to energy 
that is acquired without the intervention of a local utility company. 
Accordingly, this Treasury decision contains temporary regulations that 
apply those principles to energy that the building owner provides to 
tenants after having acquired it directly from renewable sources. 
Qualification for this submetering treatment, however, depends on the 
charges to the tenants for this energy being comparable to local 
utility rates. To the extent that tenants consume this energy, charges 
by the building owner must not exceed the rates that the local utility 
company would have charged the tenants if they had instead acquired the 
energy from that company. Information about how to provide comments on 
the substance of the temporary regulations is in the notice of proposed 
rulemaking on this subject (REG-123867-14), which is in the Proposed 
Rules section in this issue of the Federal Register.

Comments Relating to Utility Allowances Generally

    In addition to comments responding to the 2012 proposed 
regulations, the Treasury Department and the IRS received comments 
relating to the utility allowance regulations that existed prior to 
these final regulations. The final regulations incorporate certain 
changes suggested in those comments, as described in this preamble.
1. Role of Agencies Regarding the Utility Allowance Methods
    Section 1.42-10(b) provides the rules for determining the 
applicable utility allowance based upon whether (1) the building 
receives rental assistance from the Rural Housing Service (RHS) (``RHS-
assisted building''), (2) the building has any tenant that receives RHS 
rental assistance payments (``RHS tenant assistance''), (3) the rents 
and utility allowances of the building are reviewed by the Department 
of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) (``HUD-regulated building''), or 
(4) the building is not described in (1), (2), or (3) (``other 
buildings'').
    For an RHS-assisted building and a building with RHS tenant 
assistance, the applicable utility allowance is the applicable RHS 
utility allowance. For a HUD-regulated building, the applicable utility 
allowance is the applicable HUD utility allowance. In other buildings, 
for all rent-restricted units occupied by tenants receiving HUD tenant 
assistance, the applicable utility allowance is the applicable Public 
Housing Authority (PHA) utility allowance established for the Section 8 
Existing Housing Program. For all other tenants in rent-restricted 
units in other buildings, the applicable utility allowance is the 
applicable PHA utility allowance, a local utility company estimate, an 
estimate from the State or local housing credit agency (Agency) that 
has jurisdiction over the building, the HUD Utility Schedule Model, or 
an energy consumption model. See Sec.  1.42-10(b)(4)(ii) to determine 
which utility allowance applies.
    Prior to these final regulations, the existing regulations provided 
that, under the energy consumption model, utility consumption estimates 
must be calculated by ``either a properly licensed engineer or a 
qualified professional approved by the Agency that has jurisdiction 
over the building.'' The 2012 proposed regulations requested comments 
on whether approval by the agency with jurisdiction over the building 
should be required by the regulations for both properly licensed 
engineers and other qualified professionals or only for qualified 
professionals that are not properly licensed engineers.
    One commenter suggested that the Agency's approval should be 
required for determinations by both properly licensed engineers and 
other qualified professionals, because the Agency should have the 
ability to approve or deny a utility allowance method unless the 
building is a RHS property or a HUD-regulated building. Other 
commenters suggested that Agency approval should be required only for 
professionals who are not properly licensed engineers. According to 
these commenters, the intent and benefit of a project sponsor using a 
licensed engineering professional is not only to receive the benefit of 
the third-party professional's expertise but also to simplify 
evaluation of the third-party by the Agency. One commenter suggested 
that when reviewing consumption model estimates, an Agency should need 
to check for only the seal of an engineer, because State certification 
of the engineer already imposes standards for expertise, performance, 
and conduct and exposes the certified individual and firm, if any, to 
possible sanctions through the professional certification and oversight 
process.
    In response to these comments, the final regulations provide that 
Agency approval is required only for qualified professionals that are 
not properly licensed engineers. However, the final regulations also 
clarify that an Agency continues to have the option to review, and take 
appropriate action regarding, utility estimates based on the energy 
consumption model or the other optional methods.
    One commenter suggested that the final regulations should clarify 
that an Agency has the ability to approve or deny any owner's utility 
allowance, unless the building is an RHS property or a HUD-regulated 
building. By contrast, another commenter expressed concern that the 
existing regulations give an Agency too much discretion to approve or 
disapprove any of the methods of calculating utility allowances. In 
particular, the commenter suggested that the final regulations require 
an Agency to accept utility estimates based on an energy consumption 
model whenever the estimate is calculated by a properly licensed 
engineer.

[[Page 11106]]

    The final regulations do not adopt this latter suggestion. The 
existing regulations appropriately allow an Agency to approve or 
disapprove a method or to require certain information before permitting 
use of the method. Additionally, an Agency should have the ability to 
review the energy consumption model even when the model is used by a 
properly licensed engineer, who is not subject to Agency approval. 
Therefore, the final regulations specifically authorize an Agency to 
approve or disapprove use of the energy consumption model or require 
information about the model before permitting its use, regardless of 
the type of professional who calculates the utility estimates.
2. Use of Consumption Data for the Energy Consumption Model
    Under the existing regulations prior to these final regulations, 
use of the energy consumption model was limited to the building's 
consumption data for the twelve-month period ending no earlier than 60 
days prior to the beginning of the 90-day period under Sec.  1.42-
10(c)(1). One commenter was concerned about the perceptions that may 
arise if engineering models yield allowances that are out of line with 
past consumption. The commenter requested additional guidance on the 
development of acceptable assumptions for use in engineering models to 
avoid this problem.
    Another commenter stated that it is unclear whether the required 
building consumption data refers to the calculated consumptions derived 
from an energy consumption model or a separate set of consumption data 
such as historical tenant utility billing information. According to the 
commenter, several Agencies that regulate the acceptable utility 
allowance methodologies either have had an unclear understanding of 
what additional information, if any, is required for an engineering 
analysis under the energy consumption model or have taken the position 
that actual historical tenant utility bills for the most recent 12-
month period are necessary to process an energy consumption model 
utility allowance submittal.
    The commenter also asserted that historical utility data may be 
inaccessible and, even if the data were accessible, collection of the 
data imposes an additional paperwork burden on property owners. The 
commenter further contended that historical utility billing data does 
not take into account energy-efficient behavior and does not promote 
energy conservation. According to the commenter, most utility providers 
do not maintain utility information beyond the most recent 12-month 
period. As year-to-year variations occur, the most recent 12 months may 
not be a representative set of consumption data to provide an ongoing 
utility allowance. The commenter suggested amending the energy 
consumption model to allow an engineering approach that analyzes 
specific factors including, but not limited to, unit size, building 
orientation, design and materials, mechanical systems, appliances, and 
characteristics of the building location.
    For the reasons stated by the commenters, the final regulations 
remove the provision requiring that an energy consumption model use the 
building's consumption data for a particular twelve-month period. 
Instead, the final regulations revise the specific factors used in 
determining estimates under the energy consumption model to include 
available historical data.
3. Areas With No Public Housing Authorities
    The existing regulations provide that, if the building is neither 
an RHS-assisted building nor a HUD-regulated building and no tenant in 
the building receives RHS tenant assistance, then the appropriate 
utility allowance for the units in the building is the applicable PHA 
utility allowance. One commenter requested clarification as to which 
method of calculating utility allowances applies if no PHA exists under 
these circumstances. Under the existing regulations, if a building 
owner obtains a local utility company estimate or uses one of the other 
options for determining the applicable utility allowance, then the 
selected option replaces the applicable PHA allowance as the 
appropriate utility allowance. The regulations do not include an option 
for using the allowance of a neighboring PHA.
    Allowing the use of a neighboring PHA's utility allowance might not 
be appropriate because climate and utility consumption can be 
dissimilar from one PHA jurisdiction to a neighboring jurisdiction. 
Comments are requested on how the rules might best address situations 
in which no PHA exists. Comments should be submitted in the manner 
described in the notice of proposed rulemaking on submetering (REG-
123867-14), which is in the Proposed Rules section in this issue of the 
Federal Register.
4. Changes in Public Housing Authority Utility Allowances
    One commenter requested that a building owner be required to check 
for a change in a PHA utility allowance only annually. The existing 
regulations provide that, if the applicable utility allowance for units 
changes, the building owner must use the new utility allowance to 
compute gross rents of the units due 90 days after the change (the 90-
day period). For example, if a tenant provides a local utility company 
estimate that shows a higher utility cost than the otherwise applicable 
PHA utility allowance, then the building owner must lower the rent. The 
lower rent must be in effect for rent due at the end of the 90-day 
period. The commenter stated that a building owner must continuously 
monitor for changes in the PHA utility allowance because a PHA is not 
required to update utility allowances on a regular, fixed schedule.
    The final regulations do not adopt this recommendation because it 
might result in tenants paying more than the gross rent amount under 
section 42(g)(2). If a PHA utility allowance were to change after the 
one-time date suggested by the commenter, then tenants would pay a 
higher rent until the next annual date to review the PHA utility 
allowance and the higher rent might exceed the gross-rent limit under 
section 42(g)(2). Compliance with the 90-day period does not require 
continuous monitoring. A building owner that checks the PHA utility 
allowance every 60 days would have at least 30 days in which to adjust 
rents.
5. HUD-Regulated Building
    Prior to these final regulations, the existing regulations defined 
a HUD-regulated building as one in which neither the building nor any 
tenant in the building receives RHS assistance and the rents and 
utility allowances of the building are reviewed by HUD on an annual 
basis. One commenter recommended amending this definition because HUD 
does not review the rents and utility allowances on an annual basis for 
all HUD programs. In response to this comment, the final regulations 
define a HUD-regulated building to mean one in which the rents and 
utility allowances of the building are regulated by HUD.
6. Disclosure to Tenants
    One commenter suggested that the final regulations address how 
utility estimates are to be made available to all tenants in the 
building. Because circumstances may vary and different reasonable 
options may exist, the final regulations do not adopt this suggestion.

Comments

    Information about how to provide comments is in the notice of 
proposed

[[Page 11107]]

rulemaking on this subject (REG-123867-14), which is in the Proposed 
Rules section in this issue of the Federal Register.

Table of Contents

    The final regulations update the table of contents to include all 
of the current provisions under section 42.

Effect on Other Documents

    Notice 2009-44 (2009-21 IRB 1037) is obsolete for taxable years 
beginning on or after March 3, 2016.

Statement of Availability of IRS Documents

    Notice 2009-44 is published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin and is 
available from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government 
Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting the IRS Web site 
at http://www.irs.gov.

Special Analyses

    Certain IRS regulations, including this one, are exempt from the 
requirements of Executive Order 12866, as supplemented and reaffirmed 
by Executive Order 13563. Therefore, a regulatory impact assessment is 
not required. It also has been determined that section 553(b) of the 
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does not apply to 
these regulations and, because the regulations do not impose a 
collection of information on small entities, the Regulatory Flexibility 
Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) does not apply. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of 
the Code, the notice of proposed rulemaking that preceded these final 
regulations was submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the 
Small Business Administration for comment on its impact on small 
business. No comments were received.

Drafting Information

    The principal author of these regulations is David Selig, Office of 
the Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs and Special Industries), IRS. 
However, other personnel from the Treasury Department and the IRS 
participated in their development.

List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1

    Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations

    Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is amended as follows:

PART 1--INCOME TAXES

0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 is amended by adding an 
entry in numerical order to read in part as follows:

    Authority:  26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *

    Section 1.42-10T also issued under 26 U.S.C. 42(n); * * *


0
Par. 2. Section 1.42-0 is amended by:
0
1. Revising the introductory text.
0
2. Revising the heading and adding entries for Sec.  1.42-1.
0
3. Adding entries for Sec.  1.42-1T.
0
4. Adding entries for Sec. Sec.  1.42-3 through 1.42-18.
    The additions and revisions read as follows:


Sec.  1.42-0  Table of contents.

    This section lists the paragraphs contained in Sec. Sec.  1.42-1 
through 1.42-18 and Sec.  1.42-1T.

Sec.  1.42-1 Limitation on low-income housing credit allowed with 
respect to qualified low-income buildings receiving housing credit 
allocations from a State or local housing credit agency.

    (a) through (g) [Reserved]
    (h) Filing of forms.
    (i) [Reserved]
    (j) Effective dates.

Sec.  1.42-1T Limitation on low-income housing credit allowed with 
respect to qualified low income buildings receiving housing credit 
allocations from a State or local housing credit agency (temporary).

    (a) In general.
    (1) Determination of amount of low-income housing credit.
    (2) Limitation on low-income housing credit allowed.
    (b) The State housing credit ceiling.
    (c) Apportionment of State housing credit ceiling among State 
and local housing credit agencies.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Primary apportionment.
    (3) States with 1 or more constitutional home rule cities.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Amount of apportionment to a constitutional home rule city.
    (iii) Effect of apportionment to constitutional home rule cities 
on apportionment to other housing credit agencies.
    (iv) Treatment of governmental authority within constitutional 
home rule city.
    (4) Apportionment to local housing credit agencies.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Change in apportionment during a calendar year.
    (iii) Exchanges of apportionments.
    (iv) Written records of apportionments.
    (5) Set-aside apportionments for projects involving a qualified 
nonprofit organization.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Projects involving a qualified nonprofit organization.
    (6) Expiration of unused apportionments.
    (d) Housing credit allocation made by State and local housing 
credit agencies.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Amount of a housing credit allocation.
    (3) Counting housing credit allocations against an agency's 
aggregate housing credit dollar amount.
    (4) Rules for when applications for housing credit allocations 
exceed an agency's aggregate housing credit dollar amount.
    (5) Reduced or additional housing credit allocations.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Examples.
    (6) No carryover of unused aggregate housing credit dollar 
amount.
    (7) Effect of housing credit allocations in excess of an 
agency's aggregate housing credit dollar amount.
    (8) Time and manner for making housing credit allocations.
    (i) Time.
    (ii) Manner.
    (iii) Certification.
    (iv) Fee.
    (v) No continuing agency responsibility.
    (e) Housing credit allocation taken into account by owner of a 
qualified low-income building.
    (1) Time and manner for taking housing credit allocation into 
account.
    (2) First-year convention limitation on housing credit 
allocation taken into account.
    (3) Use of excess housing credit allocation for increases in 
qualified basis.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Example.
    (4) Separate housing credit allocations for new buildings and 
increases in qualified basis.
    (5) Acquisition of building for which a prior housing credit 
allocation has been made.
    (6) Multiple housing credit allocations.
    (f) Exception to housing credit allocation requirement.
    (1) Tax-exempt bond financing.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Determining use of bond proceeds.
    (iii) Example.
    (g) Termination of authority to make housing credit allocation.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Carryover of unused 1989 apportionment.
    (3) Expiration of exception for tax-exempt bond financed 
projects.
    (h) [Reserved]
    (i) Transitional rules.
* * * * *
Sec.  1.42-3 Treatment of buildings financed with proceeds from a 
loan under an Affordable Housing Program established pursuant to 
section 721 of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and 
Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA).

    (a) Treatment under sections 42(i) and 42(b).
    (b) Effective date.

Sec.  1.42-4 Application of not-for-profit rules of section 183 to 
low-income housing credit activities.

    (a) Inapplicability to section 42.
    (b) Limitation.
    (c) Effective date.


[[Page 11108]]


Sec.  1.42-5 Monitoring compliance with low-income housing credit 
requirements.

    (a) Compliance monitoring requirement.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Requirements for a monitoring procedure.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Order and form.
    (iii) [Reserved]
    (b) Recordkeeping and record retention provisions.
    (1) Recordkeeping provision.
    (2) Record retention provision.
    (3) Inspection record retention provision.
    (c) Certification and review provisions.
    (1) Certification.
    (2) Review.
    (ii) [Reserved]
    (iii) [Reserved]
    (3) [Reserved]
    (4) Exception for certain buildings.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Agreement and review.
    (iii) Example.
    (5) Agency reports of compliance monitoring activities.
    (d) Inspection provision.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Inspection standard.
    (3) Exception from inspection provision.
    (4) Delegation.
    (e) Notification-of-noncompliance provisions.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Notice to owner.
    (3) Notice to Internal Revenue Service.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Agency retention of records.
    (4) Correction period.
    (f) Delegation of authority.
    (1) Agencies permitted to delegate compliance monitoring 
functions.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Limitations.
    (2) Agencies permitted to delegate compliance monitoring 
functions to another Agency.
    (g) Liability.
    (h) Effective/applicability dates.
    (1) In general.
    (2) [Reserved]

Sec.  1.42-6 Buildings qualifying for carryover allocations.

    (a) Carryover allocations.
    (1) In general.
    (2) 10 percent basis requirement.
    (i) Allocation made before July 1.
    (ii) Allocation made after June 30.
    (b) Carryover-allocation basis.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Limitations.
    (i) Taxpayer must have basis in land or depreciable property 
related to the project.
    (ii) High cost areas.
    (iii) Amounts not treated as paid or incurred.
    (iv) Fees.
    (3) Reasonably expected basis.
    (4) Examples.
    (c) Verification of basis by Agency.
    (1) Verification requirement.
    (2) Manner of verification.
    (3) Time of verification.
    (i) Allocations made before July 1.
    (ii) Allocations made after June 30.
    (d) Requirements for making carryover allocations.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Requirements for allocation.
    (3) Special rules for project-based allocations.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Requirement of section 42(h)(1)(F)(1)(III).
    (4) Recordkeeping requirements.
    (i) Taxpayer.
    (ii) Agency.
    (5) Separate procedure for election of appropriate percentage 
month.
    (e) Special rules.
    (1) Treatment of partnerships and other flow-through entities.
    (2) Transferees.

Sec.  1.42-7 Substantially bond-financed buildings. [Reserved]

Sec.  1.42-8 Election of appropriate percentage month.

    (a) Election under section 42(b)(2)(A)(ii)(I) to use the 
appropriate percentage for the month of a binding agreement.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Effect on state housing credit ceiling.
    (3) Time and manner of making election.
    (4) Multiple agreements.
    (i) Rescinded agreements.
    (ii) Increases in credit.
    (5) Amount allocated.
    (6) Procedures.
    (i) Taxpayer.
    (ii) Agency.
    (7) Examples.
    (b) Election under section 42(b)(2)(A)(ii)(II) to use the 
appropriate percentage for the month tax-exempt bonds are issued.
    (1) Time and manner of making election.
    (2) Bonds issued in more than one month.
    (3) Limitations on appropriate percentage.
    (4) Procedures.
    (i) Taxpayer.
    (ii) Agency.

Sec.  1.42-9 For use by the general public.

    (a) General rule.
    (b) Limitations.
    (c) Treatment of units not for use by the general public.

Sec.  1.42-10 Utility allowances.

    (a) Inclusion of utility allowances in gross rent.
    (b) Applicable utility allowances.
    (1) Buildings assisted by the Rural Housing Service.
    (2) Buildings with Rural Housing Service assisted tenants.
    (3) Buildings regulated by the Department of Housing and Urban 
Development.
    (4) Other buildings.
    (i) Tenants receiving HUD rental assistance.
    (ii) Other tenants.
    (A) General rule.
    (B) Utility company estimate.
    (C) Agency estimate.
    (D) HUD Utility Schedule Model.
    (E) Energy consumption model.
    (c) Changes in applicable utility allowance.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Annual review.
    (d) Record retention.
    (e) Actual consumption submetering arrangements.
    (1) Definition.
    (2) Administrative fees.

Sec.  1.42-11 Provision of services.

    (a) General rule.
    (b) Services that are optional.
    (1) General rule.
    (2) Continual or frequent services.
    (3) Required services.
    (i) General rule.
    (ii) Exceptions.
    (A) Supportive services.
    (B) Specific project exception.

Sec.  1.42-12 Effective dates and transitional rules.

    (a) Effective dates.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Community Renewal Tax Relief Act of 2000.
    (i) In general.
    (3) Electronic filing simplification changes.
    (4) Utility allowances.
    (5) Additional effective dates affecting utility allowances.
    (b) Prior periods.
    (c) Carryover allocations.

Sec.  1.42-13 Rules necessary and appropriate; housing credit 
agencies' correction of administrative errors and omissions.

    (a) Publication of guidance.
    (b) Correcting administrative errors and omissions.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Administrative errors and omissions described.
    (3) Procedures for correcting administrative errors or 
omissions.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Specific procedures.
    (iii) Secretary's prior approval required.
    (iv) Requesting the Secretary's approval.
    (v) Agreement to conditions.
    (vi) Secretary's automatic approval.
    (vii) How Agency corrects errors or omissions subject to 
automatic approval.
    (viii) Other approval procedures.
    (c) Examples.
    (d) Effective date.

Sec.  1.42-14 Allocation rules for post-2000 State housing credit 
ceiling amount.

    (a) State housing credit ceiling.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Cost-of-living adjustment.
    (i) General rule.
    (ii) Rounding.
    (b) The unused carryforward component.
    (c) The population component.
    (d) The returned credit component.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Limitations and special rules.
    (i) General limitations.
    (ii) Credit period limitation.
    (iii) Three-month rule for returned credit.
    (iv) Returns of credit.
    (A) Building not qualified within required time period.
    (B) Noncompliance with terms of the allocation.
    (C) Mutual consent.
    (D) Amount not necessary for financial feasibility.
    (3) Manner of returning credit.
    (i) Taxpayer notification.
    (ii) Internal Revenue Service notification.
    (e) The national pool component.

[[Page 11109]]

    (f) When the State housing credit ceiling is determined.
    (g) Stacking order.
    (h) Nonprofit set-aside.
    (1) Determination of set-aside.
    (2) Allocation rules.
    (i) National Pool.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Unused housing credit carryover.
    (3) Qualified State.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Exceptions.
    (A) De minimis amount.
    (B) Other circumstances.
    (iii) Time and manner for making request.
    (4) Formula for determining the National Pool.
    (j) Coordination between Agencies.
    (k) Example.
    (l) Effective dates.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Community Renewal Tax Relief Act of 2000 changes.

Sec.  1.42-15 Available unit rule.

    (a) Definitions.
    (b) General section 42(g)(2)(D)(i) rule.
    (c) Exception.
    (d) Effect of current resident moving within building.
    (e) Available unit rule applies separately to each building in a 
project.
    (f) Result of noncompliance with available unit rule.
    (g) Relationship to tax-exempt bond provisions.
    (h) Examples.
    (i) Effective date.

Sec.  1.42-16 Eligible basis reduced by federal grants.

    (a) In general.
    (b) Grants do not include certain rental assistance payments.
    (c) Qualifying rental assistance program.
    (d) Effective date.

Sec.  1.42-17 Qualified allocation plan.

    (a) Requirements.
    (1) In general [Reserved].
    (2) Selection criteria [Reserved].
    (3) Agency evaluation.
    (4) Timing of Agency evaluation.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Time limit for placed-in-service evaluation.
    (5) Special rule for final determinations and certifications.
    (6) Bond-financed projects.
    (b) Effective date.

Sec.  1.42-18 Qualified Contracts.

    (a) Extended low-income housing commitment.
    (1) In general.
    (i) Extended use period.
    (ii) Termination of extended use period.
    (iii) Other non-acceptance.
    (iv) Eviction, gross rent increase concerning existing low-
income tenants not permitted.
    (2) Exception.
    (b) Definitions.
    (c) Qualified contract purchase price formula.
    (1) In general.
    (i) Initial determination.
    (ii) Mandatory adjustment by the buyer and owner.
    (iii) Optional adjustment by the Agency and owner.
    (2) Low-income portion amount.
    (3) Outstanding indebtedness.
    (4) Adjusted investor equity.
    (i) Application of cost-of-living factor.
    (ii) Unadjusted investor equity.
    (iii) Qualified-contract cost-of-living adjustment.
    (iv) General rule.
    (v) Provision by the Commissioner of the qualified-contract 
cost-of-living adjustment.
    (vi) Methodology.
    (vii) Example.
    (5) Other capital contributions.
    (6) Cash distributions.
    (i) In general.
    (ii) Excess proceeds.
    (iii) Anti-abuse rule.
    (d) Administrative discretion and responsibilities of the 
Agency.
    (1) In general.
    (2) Actual offer.
    (3) Debarment of certain appraisers.
    (e) Effective/applicability date.


0
Par. 3. Section 1.42-0T is added to read as follows:


Sec.  1.42-0T  Table of contents.

    This section lists the paragraphs contained in Sec. Sec.  1.42-5T 
and 1.42-10T.

Sec.  1.42-5T Monitoring compliance with low-income housing credit 
requirements (temporary).

    (a)(1) through (a)(2)(ii) [Reserved]
    (iii) Effect of guidance published in the Internal Revenue 
Bulletin.
    (b) through (c)(2)(i) [Reserved]
    (3) Frequency and form of certification.
    (c)(4) through (g) [Reserved]
    (h) Effective/applicability dates.
    (1) [Reserved]
    (2) Effective/applicability dates of the REAC inspection 
protocol.

Sec.  1.42-10T Energy obtained directly from renewable sources 
(temporary).

    (a) through (e)(1)(i)(A) [Reserved]
    (B) Utility not purchased from or through a local utility 
company.
    (C) Renewable source.
    (2) [Reserved]
    (f) Date of applicability.
    (g) Expiration date.


0
Par. 4. Section 1.42-10 is amended by:
0
1. Adding a sentence after the first sentence of paragraph (a).
0
2. Revising paragraph (b)(3).
0
3. Revising the first sentence of paragraph (b)(4)(ii)(A).
0
4. Revising paragraph (b)(4)(ii)(E).
0
5. Adding paragraph (e).
    The additions and revisions read as follows:


Sec.  1.42-10  Utility allowances.

    (a) * * * For purposes of the preceding sentence, if the cost of a 
particular utility for a residential unit is paid pursuant to an 
actual-consumption submetering arrangement within the meaning of 
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, then that cost is treated as being 
paid directly by the tenant(s) and not by or through the owner of the 
building. * * *
    (b)* * *
    (3) Buildings regulated by the Department of Housing and Urban 
Development. If neither a building nor any tenant in the building 
receives RHS housing assistance, and the rents and utility allowances 
of the building are regulated by HUD (HUD-regulated buildings), the 
applicable utility allowance for all rent-restricted units in the 
building is the applicable HUD utility allowance.
    (4) * * *
    (ii) * * *
    (A) * * * If none of the rules of paragraphs (b)(1), (2), (3), and 
(4)(i) of this section apply to determine the appropriate utility 
allowance for a rent-restricted unit, then the appropriate utility 
allowance for the unit is the applicable PHA utility allowance. * * *
* * * * *
    (E) Energy consumption model. A building owner may calculate 
utility estimates using an energy and water and sewage consumption and 
analysis model (energy consumption model). The energy consumption model 
must, at a minimum, take into account specific factors including, but 
not limited to, unit size, building orientation, design and materials, 
mechanical systems, appliances, characteristics of the building 
location, and available historical data. The utility consumption 
estimates must be calculated by a properly licensed engineer or other 
qualified professional. The qualified professional and the building 
owner must not be related within the meaning of section 267(b) or 
707(b). If a qualified professional is not a properly licensed engineer 
and if the building owner wants to utilize that qualified professional 
to calculate utility consumption estimates, then the owner must obtain 
approval from the Agency that has jurisdiction over the building. 
Further, regardless of the type of qualified professional, the Agency 
may approve or disapprove of the energy consumption model or require 
information before permitting its use. In addition, utility rates used 
for the energy consumption model must be no older than the rates in 
place 60 days prior to the beginning of the 90-day period under 
paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
* * * * *
    (e) Actual-consumption submetering arrangements--(1) Definition. 
For purposes of this section, an actual-consumption submetering 
arrangement

[[Page 11110]]

for a utility in a residential unit possesses all of the following 
attributes:
    (i) The utility consumed in the unit is described in paragraph 
(e)(1)(i)(A) of this section or in Sec.  1.42-10T(e)(1)(i)(B);
    (A) The utility is purchased from or through a local utility 
company by the building owner (or its agent or other party acting on 
behalf of the building owner).
    (B) [Reserved]. For further guidance see Sec.  1.42-10T(e)(1)(i)(B) 
through (e)(1)(i)(C)(3).
    (ii) The tenants in the unit are billed for, and pay the building 
owner (or its agent or other party acting on behalf of the building 
owner) for, the unit's consumption of the utility;
    (iii) The billed amount reflects the unit's actual consumption of 
the utility. In the case of sewerage charges, however, if the unit's 
sewerage charges are combined on the bill with water charges and the 
sewerage charges are determined based on the actual water consumption 
of the unit, then the bill is treated as reflecting the actual sewerage 
consumption of the unit; and
    (iv) The rate at which the building owner bills for the utility 
satisfies the following requirements:
    (A) To the extent that the utility consumed is described in 
paragraph (e)(1)(i)(A) of this section, the utility rate charged to the 
tenants of the unit does not exceed the rate incurred by the building 
owner for that utility; and
    (B) To the extent that the utility consumed is described in Sec.  
1.42-10T(e)(1)(i)(B), the utility rate charged to the tenants of the 
unit does not exceed the rate described in Sec.  1.42-10T(e)(1)(iv)(B).
    (2) Administrative fees. If the owner charges a unit's tenants a 
fee for administering an actual-consumption submetering arrangement, 
the fee is not considered gross rent for purposes of section 42(g)(2). 
The preceding sentence, however, does not apply unless the fee is 
computed in the same manner for every unit receiving the same 
submetered utility service, nor does it apply to any amount by which 
the aggregate monthly fee or fees for all of the unit's utilities under 
one or more actual-consumption submetering arrangements exceed the 
greater of--
    (i) Five dollars per month;
    (ii) An amount (if any) designated by publication in the Internal 
Revenue Bulletin (see Sec.  601.601(d)(2)(ii) of this chapter); or
    (iii) The lesser of--
    (A) The dollar amount (if any) specifically prescribed under a 
State or local law; or
    (B) A maximum amount (if any) designated by publication in the 
Internal Revenue Bulletin (see Sec.  601.601(d)(2)(ii) of this 
chapter).

0
Par. 5. Section 1.42-10T is added to read as follows:


Sec.  1.42-10T  Energy obtained directly from renewable sources 
(temporary).

    (a) through (e)(1)(i)(A) [Reserved]. For further guidance see Sec.  
1.42-10(a) through (e)(1)(i)(A).
    (B) Utility not purchased from or through a local utility company. 
The utility is not described in Sec.  1.42-10(e)(1)(i)(A) and is 
produced from a renewable source (within the meaning of paragraph 
(e)(1)(i)(C) of this section).
    (C) Renewable source. For purposes of paragraph (e)(1)(i)(B) of 
this section, a utility is produced from a renewable source if--
    (1) It is energy that is produced from energy property described in 
section 48;
    (2) It is energy that is produced from property that is part of a 
facility described in section 45(d)(1) through (4), (6), (9), or (11); 
or
    (3) It is a utility that is described in guidance published for 
this purpose in the Internal Revenue Bulletin (see Sec.  
601.601(d)(2)(ii) of this chapter).
    (ii) through (iv)(A) [Reserved]. For further guidance see Sec.  
1.42-10(e)(1)(ii) through (e)(1)(iv)(A).
    (B) The rate described in this paragraph (e)(1)(iv)(B) is the rate 
at which the local utility company would have charged the tenants in 
the unit for the utility if that entity had provided it to them.
    (2) [Reserved]
    (f) Date of applicability. This section applies to a building 
owner's taxable years beginning on or after March 3, 2016. A building 
owner may apply the provisions of this section to the building owner's 
taxable years beginning before March 3, 2016.
    (g) Expiration date. The applicability of this section expires on 
March 1, 2019.

0
Par. 6. Section 1.42-12 is amended by adding paragraph (a)(5) to read 
as follows:


Sec.  1.42-12  Effective dates and transitional rules.

    (a) * * *
    (5) Additional effective dates affecting utility allowances. (i) 
The following provisions apply to a building owner's taxable years 
beginning on or after March 3, 2016--
    (A) The second sentence in Sec.  1.42-10(a);
    (B) Section 1.42-10(b)(3);
    (C) The first sentence in Sec.  1.42-10(b)(4)(ii)(A);
    (D) Section 1.42-10(b)(4)(ii)(E); and
    (E) Section 1.42-10(e).
    (ii) A building owner may apply these provisions to the building 
owner's taxable years beginning before March 3, 2016. Otherwise, the 
utility allowances provisions that apply to taxable years beginning 
before March 3, 2016 are contained in Sec.  1.42-10 (see 26 CFR part 1 
revised as of April 1, 2015).

John Dalrymple,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
    Approved: February 8, 2016.
Mark J. Mazur,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2016-04606 Filed 3-2-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4830-01-P



                                                11104              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 42 / Thursday, March 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY                              On August 7, 2012, the Treasury                       project. This concern is unwarranted.
                                                                                                        Department and the IRS published in                   Although the 2012 proposed regulations
                                                Internal Revenue Service                                the Federal Register a notice of                      precluded an arrangement such as
                                                                                                        proposed rulemaking under section                     RUBS from qualifying as an actual
                                                26 CFR Part 1                                           42(g)(2)(B)(ii) (77 FR 46987) (the 2012               consumption submetering arrangement,
                                                [TD 9755]                                               proposed regulations) to provide that                 they did not prohibit the use of RUBS
                                                                                                        utility costs paid by a tenant based on               for low-income housing credit projects.
                                                RIN 1545–BI91                                           actual consumption in a submetered                    However, any amount paid by a tenant
                                                                                                        rent-restricted unit are treated as paid              for utilities using RUBS must be
                                                Utility Allowances Submetering                          by the tenant directly to the utility                 included in gross rent. Accordingly, the
                                                AGENCY:  Internal Revenue Service (IRS),                company and thus do not count against                 final regulations follow the approach in
                                                Treasury.                                               the maximum rent that the building                    the 2012 proposed regulations and
                                                ACTION: Final and temporary                             owner can charge. The 2012 proposed                   continue to define an actual-
                                                regulations.                                            regulations generally incorporated the                consumption submetering arrangement
                                                                                                        guidance in Notice 2009–44. The                       as not including RUBS.
                                                SUMMARY:    This document contains final                Treasury Department and the IRS                       2. Administrative Costs of Submetering
                                                and temporary regulations that amend                    received written and electronic
                                                the utility allowance regulations                       comments responding to the 2012                          The 2012 proposed regulations
                                                concerning the low-income housing                       proposed regulations. No requests for a               provided that, if the owner charges a
                                                credit. The final regulations clarify the               public hearing were made and no public                unit’s tenants an administrative fee for
                                                circumstances in which utility costs                    hearing was held.                                     the owner’s actual monthly costs of
                                                paid by a tenant based on actual                          After consideration of all the                      administering an actual-consumption
                                                consumption in a submetered rent-                       comments, the final regulations adopt                 submetering arrangement, then the fee is
                                                restricted unit are treated as paid by the              the 2012 proposed regulations as                      not considered gross rent for purposes
                                                tenant directly to the utility company.                 amended by this Treasury decision, and                of section 42(g)(2) so long as the
                                                The temporary regulations extend the                    the temporary regulations extend those                aggregate monthly fee or fees for all of
                                                principles of these submetering rules to                rules to the provision of energy that the             the unit’s utilities under one or more
                                                situations in which a building owner                    building owner acquires directly from                 actual-consumption submetering
                                                sells to tenants energy that is produced                renewable sources and then provides to                arrangements does not exceed the lesser
                                                from a renewable source and that is not                 low-income tenants. The text of the                   of (A) five dollars per month; or (B) the
                                                delivered by a local utility company.                   temporary regulations also serves as the              owner’s actual monthly costs paid or
                                                The final and temporary regulations                     text of the proposed regulations (REG–                incurred for administering the
                                                                                                                                                              arrangement. One commenter
                                                affect owners of low-income housing                     123867–14) for purposes of the notice of
                                                                                                                                                              recommended that the final regulations
                                                projects that claim the credit, the                     proposed rulemaking on this subject in
                                                                                                                                                              simply require owners to include in
                                                tenants in those low-income housing                     the Proposed Rules section in this issue
                                                                                                                                                              gross rent any amounts that exceed five
                                                projects, and State and local housing                   of the Federal Register.
                                                                                                                                                              dollars and not require the owner to
                                                credit agencies. The text of these
                                                                                                        Summary of Comments and                               determine actual monthly cost.
                                                temporary regulations also serves as the
                                                                                                        Explanation of Provisions                             According to the commenter, requiring
                                                text of the proposed regulations (REG–
                                                                                                                                                              the building owner to determine actual
                                                123867–14) set forth in the notice of                   Comments Specifically Relating to
                                                                                                                                                              cost is overly burdensome and would
                                                proposed rulemaking on this subject in                  Submetering
                                                                                                                                                              lead to technical noncompliance as a
                                                the Proposed Rules section of this issue                   Commenters generally stated that the               result of nominal amounts. Two
                                                of the Federal Register.                                2012 proposed regulations provided for                commenters requested that the final
                                                DATES:                                                  accurate utility allowance                            regulations also permit building owners
                                                   Effective Date: These regulations are                determinations, which would promote                   to charge tenants an administrative fee
                                                effective on March 3, 2016.                             energy efficiency and help maintain the               in accordance with State law as
                                                   Applicability Date: For dates of                     financial stability of housing credit                 currently permitted in Notice 2009–44.
                                                applicability, see §§ 1.42–12(a)(5) and                 properties.                                           According to these commenters, this
                                                1.42–10T(f)–(g).                                                                                              rule is regionally tuned and therefore
                                                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                        1. Actual-Consumption Submetering
                                                                                                                                                              allows building owners to recoup the
                                                James Rider (202) 317–4137 (not a toll-                 Arrangements and Ratio Utility Billing
                                                                                                                                                              full cost of submetering in a fair
                                                free number).                                           Systems
                                                                                                                                                              manner. The commenters suggested that
                                                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                                 The 2012 proposed regulations                      by not allowing building owners to
                                                                                                        defined an actual-consumption                         recover State-approved charges for
                                                Background                                              submetering arrangement for utility                   electricity, the 2012 proposed
                                                   This document contains amendments                    allowance purposes as not including a                 regulations would create a disincentive
                                                to § 1.42–10 of the Income Tax                          ratio utility billing system (RUBS).                  for developers to invest in high
                                                Regulations (26 CFR part 1), which                      RUBS uses a formula that allocates a                  performance, sustainable low income
                                                concerns the applicable utility                         property’s utility bill among its units               housing or build additional housing
                                                allowance relating to the low-income                    based on the units’ relative floor space,             units.
                                                housing credit under section 42 of the                  number of occupants, or some other                       In response to these comments, the
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES




                                                Internal Revenue Code. On May 5, 2009,                  quantitative measure, but not actual                  final regulations do not include a
                                                the Treasury Department and the IRS                     consumption by the tenant(s) in the                   requirement to determine actual
                                                released Notice 2009–44 (2009–21 IRB                    unit. A commenter expressed concern                   monthly cost, and they generally permit
                                                1037) (see § 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b)) to                   that the inability to use RUBS for utility            owners to charge tenants an
                                                provide guidance on how the utility                     allowance purposes could be                           administrative fee in accordance with a
                                                allowance regulations apply to                          interpreted to prohibit the use of RUBS               State or local law that specifically
                                                buildings with a submetering system.                    for any low-income housing credit                     prescribes a dollar amount for the


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:47 Mar 02, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00006   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\03MRR1.SGM   03MRR1


                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 42 / Thursday, March 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                         11105

                                                administrative fee. The final regulations               that company. Information about how to                that has jurisdiction over the building.’’
                                                authorize the Treasury Department and                   provide comments on the substance of                  The 2012 proposed regulations
                                                the IRS, by publication in the Internal                 the temporary regulations is in the                   requested comments on whether
                                                Revenue Bulletin (IRB) (see                             notice of proposed rulemaking on this                 approval by the agency with jurisdiction
                                                § 601.601(d)(2)(ii)), both to provide for               subject (REG–123867–14), which is in                  over the building should be required by
                                                administrative fees in excess of five                   the Proposed Rules section in this issue              the regulations for both properly
                                                dollars per month even in the absence                   of the Federal Register.                              licensed engineers and other qualified
                                                a State or local law doing so and to put                                                                      professionals or only for qualified
                                                                                                        Comments Relating to Utility
                                                an upper bound on administrative fees                                                                         professionals that are not properly
                                                                                                        Allowances Generally
                                                even if State or local law allows higher                                                                      licensed engineers.
                                                fees.                                                      In addition to comments responding                    One commenter suggested that the
                                                   Thus, if a building owner or its agent               to the 2012 proposed regulations, the                 Agency’s approval should be required
                                                charges a unit’s tenants a fee for                      Treasury Department and the IRS                       for determinations by both properly
                                                administering an actual-consumption                     received comments relating to the utility             licensed engineers and other qualified
                                                submetering arrangement, then gross                     allowance regulations that existed prior              professionals, because the Agency
                                                rent includes any amount by which the                   to these final regulations. The final                 should have the ability to approve or
                                                aggregate amount of monthly fees for all                regulations incorporate certain changes               deny a utility allowance method unless
                                                of the unit’s utilities under one or more               suggested in those comments, as                       the building is a RHS property or a
                                                actual-consumption submetering                          described in this preamble.                           HUD-regulated building. Other
                                                arrangements exceeds the greater of—(i)                 1. Role of Agencies Regarding the Utility             commenters suggested that Agency
                                                five dollars per month; (ii) an amount (if              Allowance Methods                                     approval should be required only for
                                                any) designated by publication in the                                                                         professionals who are not properly
                                                IRB; or (iii) the lesser of a dollar amount                Section 1.42–10(b) provides the rules              licensed engineers. According to these
                                                (if any) specifically prescribed under a                for determining the applicable utility                commenters, the intent and benefit of a
                                                State or local law or a maximum amount                  allowance based upon whether (1) the                  project sponsor using a licensed
                                                (if any) designated by publication in the               building receives rental assistance from              engineering professional is not only to
                                                IRB.                                                    the Rural Housing Service (RHS) (‘‘RHS-               receive the benefit of the third-party
                                                                                                        assisted building’’), (2) the building has            professional’s expertise but also to
                                                3. Energy Acquired Directly From a                      any tenant that receives RHS rental                   simplify evaluation of the third-party by
                                                Renewable Source                                        assistance payments (‘‘RHS tenant                     the Agency. One commenter suggested
                                                   During consideration of the comments                 assistance’’), (3) the rents and utility              that when reviewing consumption
                                                on the 2012 proposed regulations, the                   allowances of the building are reviewed               model estimates, an Agency should
                                                Treasury Department and the IRS                         by the Department of Housing and                      need to check for only the seal of an
                                                realized that the proposed definition of                Urban Development (HUD) (‘‘HUD-                       engineer, because State certification of
                                                an actual-consumption submetering                       regulated building’’), or (4) the building            the engineer already imposes standards
                                                arrangement assumed that the building                   is not described in (1), (2), or (3) (‘‘other         for expertise, performance, and conduct
                                                owner was purchasing the utility in                     buildings’’).                                         and exposes the certified individual and
                                                question from a local utility company.                     For an RHS-assisted building and a                 firm, if any, to possible sanctions
                                                For example, proposed § 1.42–                           building with RHS tenant assistance, the              through the professional certification
                                                10(e)(1)(iv) referred to ‘‘the utility                  applicable utility allowance is the                   and oversight process.
                                                company rate incurred by the building                   applicable RHS utility allowance. For a                  In response to these comments, the
                                                owner for the particular utility.’’ This                HUD-regulated building, the applicable                final regulations provide that Agency
                                                assumption appeared to preclude                         utility allowance is the applicable HUD               approval is required only for qualified
                                                applying submetering principles to                      utility allowance. In other buildings, for            professionals that are not properly
                                                electricity generated from renewable                    all rent-restricted units occupied by                 licensed engineers. However, the final
                                                sources by the building owner or by                     tenants receiving HUD tenant                          regulations also clarify that an Agency
                                                some other person from whom the                         assistance, the applicable utility                    continues to have the option to review,
                                                building owner purchases it directly.                   allowance is the applicable Public                    and take appropriate action regarding,
                                                   The legislative purposes of the low-                 Housing Authority (PHA) utility                       utility estimates based on the energy
                                                income housing credit, however, are                     allowance established for the Section 8               consumption model or the other
                                                fully consistent with applying                          Existing Housing Program. For all other               optional methods.
                                                submetering principles to energy that is                tenants in rent-restricted units in other                One commenter suggested that the
                                                acquired without the intervention of a                  buildings, the applicable utility                     final regulations should clarify that an
                                                local utility company. Accordingly, this                allowance is the applicable PHA utility               Agency has the ability to approve or
                                                Treasury decision contains temporary                    allowance, a local utility company                    deny any owner’s utility allowance,
                                                regulations that apply those principles                 estimate, an estimate from the State or               unless the building is an RHS property
                                                to energy that the building owner                       local housing credit agency (Agency)                  or a HUD-regulated building. By
                                                provides to tenants after having                        that has jurisdiction over the building,              contrast, another commenter expressed
                                                acquired it directly from renewable                     the HUD Utility Schedule Model, or an                 concern that the existing regulations
                                                sources. Qualification for this                         energy consumption model. See § 1.42–                 give an Agency too much discretion to
                                                submetering treatment, however,                         10(b)(4)(ii) to determine which utility               approve or disapprove any of the
                                                depends on the charges to the tenants                   allowance applies.                                    methods of calculating utility
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                                                for this energy being comparable to local                  Prior to these final regulations, the              allowances. In particular, the
                                                utility rates. To the extent that tenants               existing regulations provided that,                   commenter suggested that the final
                                                consume this energy, charges by the                     under the energy consumption model,                   regulations require an Agency to accept
                                                building owner must not exceed the                      utility consumption estimates must be                 utility estimates based on an energy
                                                rates that the local utility company                    calculated by ‘‘either a properly                     consumption model whenever the
                                                would have charged the tenants if they                  licensed engineer or a qualified                      estimate is calculated by a properly
                                                had instead acquired the energy from                    professional approved by the Agency                   licensed engineer.


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                                                11106              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 42 / Thursday, March 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                   The final regulations do not adopt this              commenter, most utility providers do                  a change in a PHA utility allowance
                                                latter suggestion. The existing                         not maintain utility information beyond               only annually. The existing regulations
                                                regulations appropriately allow an                      the most recent 12-month period. As                   provide that, if the applicable utility
                                                Agency to approve or disapprove a                       year-to-year variations occur, the most               allowance for units changes, the
                                                method or to require certain information                recent 12 months may not be a                         building owner must use the new utility
                                                before permitting use of the method.                    representative set of consumption data                allowance to compute gross rents of the
                                                Additionally, an Agency should have                     to provide an ongoing utility allowance.              units due 90 days after the change (the
                                                the ability to review the energy                        The commenter suggested amending the                  90-day period). For example, if a tenant
                                                consumption model even when the                         energy consumption model to allow an                  provides a local utility company
                                                model is used by a properly licensed                    engineering approach that analyzes                    estimate that shows a higher utility cost
                                                engineer, who is not subject to Agency                  specific factors including, but not                   than the otherwise applicable PHA
                                                approval. Therefore, the final                          limited to, unit size, building                       utility allowance, then the building
                                                regulations specifically authorize an                   orientation, design and materials,                    owner must lower the rent. The lower
                                                Agency to approve or disapprove use of                  mechanical systems, appliances, and                   rent must be in effect for rent due at the
                                                the energy consumption model or                         characteristics of the building location.             end of the 90-day period. The
                                                require information about the model                       For the reasons stated by the                       commenter stated that a building owner
                                                before permitting its use, regardless of                commenters, the final regulations                     must continuously monitor for changes
                                                the type of professional who calculates                 remove the provision requiring that an                in the PHA utility allowance because a
                                                the utility estimates.                                  energy consumption model use the                      PHA is not required to update utility
                                                                                                        building’s consumption data for a                     allowances on a regular, fixed schedule.
                                                2. Use of Consumption Data for the                      particular twelve-month period. Instead,                 The final regulations do not adopt this
                                                Energy Consumption Model                                the final regulations revise the specific             recommendation because it might result
                                                   Under the existing regulations prior to              factors used in determining estimates                 in tenants paying more than the gross
                                                these final regulations, use of the energy              under the energy consumption model to                 rent amount under section 42(g)(2). If a
                                                consumption model was limited to the                    include available historical data.                    PHA utility allowance were to change
                                                building’s consumption data for the                                                                           after the one-time date suggested by the
                                                twelve-month period ending no earlier                   3. Areas With No Public Housing
                                                                                                        Authorities                                           commenter, then tenants would pay a
                                                than 60 days prior to the beginning of                                                                        higher rent until the next annual date to
                                                the 90-day period under § 1.42–10(c)(1).                   The existing regulations provide that,             review the PHA utility allowance and
                                                One commenter was concerned about                       if the building is neither an RHS-                    the higher rent might exceed the gross-
                                                the perceptions that may arise if                       assisted building nor a HUD-regulated                 rent limit under section 42(g)(2).
                                                engineering models yield allowances                     building and no tenant in the building                Compliance with the 90-day period does
                                                that are out of line with past                          receives RHS tenant assistance, then the              not require continuous monitoring. A
                                                consumption. The commenter requested                    appropriate utility allowance for the                 building owner that checks the PHA
                                                additional guidance on the development                  units in the building is the applicable               utility allowance every 60 days would
                                                of acceptable assumptions for use in                    PHA utility allowance. One commenter                  have at least 30 days in which to adjust
                                                engineering models to avoid this                        requested clarification as to which                   rents.
                                                problem.                                                method of calculating utility allowances
                                                   Another commenter stated that it is                  applies if no PHA exists under these                  5. HUD-Regulated Building
                                                unclear whether the required building                   circumstances. Under the existing                        Prior to these final regulations, the
                                                consumption data refers to the                          regulations, if a building owner obtains              existing regulations defined a HUD-
                                                calculated consumptions derived from                    a local utility company estimate or uses              regulated building as one in which
                                                an energy consumption model or a                        one of the other options for determining              neither the building nor any tenant in
                                                separate set of consumption data such                   the applicable utility allowance, then                the building receives RHS assistance
                                                as historical tenant utility billing                    the selected option replaces the                      and the rents and utility allowances of
                                                information. According to the                           applicable PHA allowance as the                       the building are reviewed by HUD on an
                                                commenter, several Agencies that                        appropriate utility allowance. The                    annual basis. One commenter
                                                regulate the acceptable utility allowance               regulations do not include an option for              recommended amending this definition
                                                methodologies either have had an                        using the allowance of a neighboring                  because HUD does not review the rents
                                                unclear understanding of what                           PHA.                                                  and utility allowances on an annual
                                                additional information, if any, is                         Allowing the use of a neighboring                  basis for all HUD programs. In response
                                                required for an engineering analysis                    PHA’s utility allowance might not be                  to this comment, the final regulations
                                                under the energy consumption model or                   appropriate because climate and utility               define a HUD-regulated building to
                                                have taken the position that actual                     consumption can be dissimilar from one                mean one in which the rents and utility
                                                historical tenant utility bills for the most            PHA jurisdiction to a neighboring                     allowances of the building are regulated
                                                recent 12-month period are necessary to                 jurisdiction. Comments are requested on               by HUD.
                                                process an energy consumption model                     how the rules might best address
                                                utility allowance submittal.                            situations in which no PHA exists.                    6. Disclosure to Tenants
                                                   The commenter also asserted that                     Comments should be submitted in the                      One commenter suggested that the
                                                historical utility data may be                          manner described in the notice of                     final regulations address how utility
                                                inaccessible and, even if the data were                 proposed rulemaking on submetering                    estimates are to be made available to all
                                                accessible, collection of the data                      (REG–123867–14), which is in the                      tenants in the building. Because
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                                                imposes an additional paperwork                         Proposed Rules section in this issue of               circumstances may vary and different
                                                burden on property owners. The                          the Federal Register.                                 reasonable options may exist, the final
                                                commenter further contended that                                                                              regulations do not adopt this suggestion.
                                                historical utility billing data does not                4. Changes in Public Housing Authority
                                                take into account energy-efficient                      Utility Allowances                                    Comments
                                                behavior and does not promote energy                       One commenter requested that a                       Information about how to provide
                                                conservation. According to the                          building owner be required to check for               comments is in the notice of proposed


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 42 / Thursday, March 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                             11107

                                                rulemaking on this subject (REG–                        PART 1—INCOME TAXES                                      (d) Housing credit allocation made by State
                                                123867–14), which is in the Proposed                                                                          and local housing credit agencies.
                                                Rules section in this issue of the Federal              ■ Paragraph 1. The authority citation                    (1) In general.
                                                                                                        for part 1 is amended by adding an entry                 (2) Amount of a housing credit allocation.
                                                Register.                                                                                                        (3) Counting housing credit allocations
                                                                                                        in numerical order to read in part as
                                                Table of Contents                                                                                             against an agency’s aggregate housing credit
                                                                                                        follows:                                              dollar amount.
                                                  The final regulations update the table                    Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *                      (4) Rules for when applications for housing
                                                of contents to include all of the current                 Section 1.42–10T also issued under 26               credit allocations exceed an agency’s
                                                                                                                                                              aggregate housing credit dollar amount.
                                                provisions under section 42.                            U.S.C. 42(n); * * *
                                                                                                                                                                 (5) Reduced or additional housing credit
                                                Effect on Other Documents                               ■ Par. 2. Section 1.42–0 is amended by:               allocations.
                                                                                                        ■ 1. Revising the introductory text.                     (i) In general.
                                                  Notice 2009–44 (2009–21 IRB 1037) is                  ■ 2. Revising the heading and adding                     (ii) Examples.
                                                obsolete for taxable years beginning on                 entries for § 1.42–1.                                    (6) No carryover of unused aggregate
                                                                                                        ■ 3. Adding entries for § 1.42–1T.                    housing credit dollar amount.
                                                or after March 3, 2016.
                                                                                                        ■ 4. Adding entries for §§ 1.42–3
                                                                                                                                                                 (7) Effect of housing credit allocations in
                                                Statement of Availability of IRS                                                                              excess of an agency’s aggregate housing
                                                                                                        through 1.42–18.                                      credit dollar amount.
                                                Documents                                                 The additions and revisions read as                    (8) Time and manner for making housing
                                                                                                        follows:                                              credit allocations.
                                                  Notice 2009–44 is published in the
                                                Internal Revenue Bulletin and is                                                                                 (i) Time.
                                                                                                        § 1.42–0    Table of contents.
                                                                                                                                                                 (ii) Manner.
                                                available from the Superintendent of                      This section lists the paragraphs                      (iii) Certification.
                                                Documents, U.S. Government Printing                     contained in §§ 1.42–1 through 1.42–18                   (iv) Fee.
                                                Office, Washington, DC 20402, or by                     and § 1.42–1T.                                           (v) No continuing agency responsibility.
                                                visiting the IRS Web site at http://                    § 1.42–1 Limitation on low-income housing                (e) Housing credit allocation taken into
                                                www.irs.gov.                                                  credit allowed with respect to qualified        account by owner of a qualified low-income
                                                                                                              low-income buildings receiving housing          building.
                                                Special Analyses                                                                                                 (1) Time and manner for taking housing
                                                                                                              credit allocations from a State or local
                                                                                                              housing credit agency.                          credit allocation into account.
                                                  Certain IRS regulations, including this                                                                        (2) First-year convention limitation on
                                                one, are exempt from the requirements                      (a) through (g) [Reserved]                         housing credit allocation taken into account.
                                                of Executive Order 12866, as                               (h) Filing of forms.                                  (3) Use of excess housing credit allocation
                                                supplemented and reaffirmed by                             (i) [Reserved]                                     for increases in qualified basis.
                                                                                                           (j) Effective dates.                                  (i) In general.
                                                Executive Order 13563. Therefore, a
                                                regulatory impact assessment is not                     § 1.42–1T Limitation on low-income                       (ii) Example.
                                                                                                              housing credit allowed with respect to             (4) Separate housing credit allocations for
                                                required. It also has been determined                         qualified low income buildings receiving        new buildings and increases in qualified
                                                that section 553(b) of the Administrative                     housing credit allocations from a State or      basis.
                                                Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does                       local housing credit agency (temporary).           (5) Acquisition of building for which a
                                                not apply to these regulations and,                        (a) In general.                                    prior housing credit allocation has been
                                                because the regulations do not impose a                    (1) Determination of amount of low-income          made.
                                                collection of information on small                      housing credit.                                          (6) Multiple housing credit allocations.
                                                entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act                   (2) Limitation on low-income housing                  (f) Exception to housing credit allocation
                                                (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) does not apply.                    credit allowed.                                       requirement.
                                                Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code,                   (b) The State housing credit ceiling.                 (1) Tax-exempt bond financing.
                                                the notice of proposed rulemaking that                     (c) Apportionment of State housing credit             (i) In general.
                                                                                                        ceiling among State and local housing credit             (ii) Determining use of bond proceeds.
                                                preceded these final regulations was
                                                                                                        agencies.                                                (iii) Example.
                                                submitted to the Chief Counsel for                         (1) In general.                                       (g) Termination of authority to make
                                                Advocacy of the Small Business                             (2) Primary apportionment.                         housing credit allocation.
                                                Administration for comment on its                          (3) States with 1 or more constitutional              (1) In general.
                                                impact on small business. No comments                   home rule cities.                                        (2) Carryover of unused 1989
                                                were received.                                             (i) In general.                                    apportionment.
                                                                                                           (ii) Amount of apportionment to a                     (3) Expiration of exception for tax-exempt
                                                Drafting Information                                    constitutional home rule city.                        bond financed projects.
                                                                                                           (iii) Effect of apportionment to                      (h) [Reserved]
                                                  The principal author of these                         constitutional home rule cities on                       (i) Transitional rules.
                                                regulations is David Selig, Office of the               apportionment to other housing credit                 *        *       *    *   *
                                                Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs                   agencies.                                             § 1.42–3 Treatment of buildings financed
                                                and Special Industries), IRS. However,                     (iv) Treatment of governmental authority                 with proceeds from a loan under an
                                                other personnel from the Treasury                       within constitutional home rule city.                       Affordable Housing Program established
                                                Department and the IRS participated in                     (4) Apportionment to local housing credit                pursuant to section 721 of the Financial
                                                their development.                                      agencies.                                                   Institutions Reform, Recovery, and
                                                                                                           (i) In general.                                          Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA).
                                                List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1                          (ii) Change in apportionment during a
                                                                                                        calendar year.                                           (a) Treatment under sections 42(i) and
                                                                                                                                                              42(b).
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                                                  Income taxes, Reporting and                              (iii) Exchanges of apportionments.
                                                                                                           (iv) Written records of apportionments.               (b) Effective date.
                                                recordkeeping requirements.
                                                                                                           (5) Set-aside apportionments for projects          § 1.42–4 Application of not-for-profit rules
                                                Adoption of Amendments to the                           involving a qualified nonprofit organization.               of section 183 to low-income housing
                                                Regulations                                                (i) In general.                                          credit activities.
                                                                                                           (ii) Projects involving a qualified nonprofit         (a) Inapplicability to section 42.
                                                  Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is                         organization.                                            (b) Limitation.
                                                amended as follows:                                        (6) Expiration of unused apportionments.              (c) Effective date.



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                                                11108              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 42 / Thursday, March 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                § 1.42–5 Monitoring compliance with low-                   (d) Requirements for making carryover                 (1) Definition.
                                                      income housing credit requirements.               allocations.                                             (2) Administrative fees.
                                                   (a) Compliance monitoring requirement.                  (1) In general.                                    § 1.42–11 Provision of services.
                                                   (1) In general.                                         (2) Requirements for allocation.
                                                                                                                                                                 (a) General rule.
                                                   (2) Requirements for a monitoring                       (3) Special rules for project-based
                                                                                                                                                                 (b) Services that are optional.
                                                procedure.                                              allocations.
                                                                                                                                                                 (1) General rule.
                                                   (i) In general.                                         (i) In general.
                                                                                                                                                                 (2) Continual or frequent services.
                                                   (ii) Order and form.                                    (ii) Requirement of section
                                                                                                                                                                 (3) Required services.
                                                   (iii) [Reserved]                                     42(h)(1)(F)(1)(III).
                                                                                                                                                                 (i) General rule.
                                                   (b) Recordkeeping and record retention                  (4) Recordkeeping requirements.
                                                                                                                                                                 (ii) Exceptions.
                                                                                                           (i) Taxpayer.
                                                provisions.                                                                                                      (A) Supportive services.
                                                                                                           (ii) Agency.
                                                   (1) Recordkeeping provision.                                                                                  (B) Specific project exception.
                                                                                                           (5) Separate procedure for election of
                                                   (2) Record retention provision.                                                                            § 1.42–12 Effective dates and transitional
                                                                                                        appropriate percentage month.
                                                   (3) Inspection record retention provision.                                                                       rules.
                                                                                                           (e) Special rules.
                                                   (c) Certification and review provisions.
                                                                                                           (1) Treatment of partnerships and other               (a) Effective dates.
                                                   (1) Certification.
                                                                                                        flow-through entities.                                   (1) In general.
                                                   (2) Review.
                                                                                                           (2) Transferees.                                      (2) Community Renewal Tax Relief Act of
                                                   (ii) [Reserved]
                                                                                                        § 1.42–7 Substantially bond-financed                  2000.
                                                   (iii) [Reserved]
                                                                                                              buildings. [Reserved]                              (i) In general.
                                                   (3) [Reserved]
                                                                                                        § 1.42–8 Election of appropriate percentage              (3) Electronic filing simplification changes.
                                                   (4) Exception for certain buildings.
                                                                                                              month.                                             (4) Utility allowances.
                                                   (i) In general.
                                                                                                                                                                 (5) Additional effective dates affecting
                                                   (ii) Agreement and review.                              (a) Election under section 42(b)(2)(A)(ii)(I)
                                                                                                                                                              utility allowances.
                                                   (iii) Example.                                       to use the appropriate percentage for the
                                                                                                                                                                 (b) Prior periods.
                                                   (5) Agency reports of compliance                     month of a binding agreement.
                                                                                                                                                                 (c) Carryover allocations.
                                                monitoring activities.                                     (1) In general.
                                                   (d) Inspection provision.                               (2) Effect on state housing credit ceiling.        § 1.42–13 Rules necessary and appropriate;
                                                   (1) In general.                                         (3) Time and manner of making election.                  housing credit agencies’ correction of
                                                   (2) Inspection standard.                                (4) Multiple agreements.                                 administrative errors and omissions.
                                                   (3) Exception from inspection provision.                (i) Rescinded agreements.                             (a) Publication of guidance.
                                                   (4) Delegation.                                         (ii) Increases in credit.                             (b) Correcting administrative errors and
                                                   (e) Notification-of-noncompliance                       (5) Amount allocated.                              omissions.
                                                provisions.                                                (6) Procedures.                                       (1) In general.
                                                   (1) In general.                                         (i) Taxpayer.                                         (2) Administrative errors and omissions
                                                   (2) Notice to owner.                                    (ii) Agency.                                       described.
                                                   (3) Notice to Internal Revenue Service.                 (7) Examples.                                         (3) Procedures for correcting administrative
                                                   (i) In general.                                         (b) Election under section 42(b)(2)(A)(ii)(II)     errors or omissions.
                                                   (ii) Agency retention of records.                    to use the appropriate percentage for the                (i) In general.
                                                   (4) Correction period.                               month tax-exempt bonds are issued.                       (ii) Specific procedures.
                                                   (f) Delegation of authority.                            (1) Time and manner of making election.               (iii) Secretary’s prior approval required.
                                                   (1) Agencies permitted to delegate                      (2) Bonds issued in more than one month.              (iv) Requesting the Secretary’s approval.
                                                compliance monitoring functions.                           (3) Limitations on appropriate percentage.            (v) Agreement to conditions.
                                                   (i) In general.                                         (4) Procedures.                                       (vi) Secretary’s automatic approval.
                                                   (ii) Limitations.                                       (i) Taxpayer.                                         (vii) How Agency corrects errors or
                                                   (2) Agencies permitted to delegate                      (ii) Agency.                                       omissions subject to automatic approval.
                                                compliance monitoring functions to another              § 1.42–9 For use by the general public.                  (viii) Other approval procedures.
                                                Agency.                                                    (a) General rule.                                     (c) Examples.
                                                   (g) Liability.                                          (b) Limitations.                                      (d) Effective date.
                                                   (h) Effective/applicability dates.                      (c) Treatment of units not for use by the          § 1.42–14 Allocation rules for post-2000
                                                   (1) In general.                                      general public.                                             State housing credit ceiling amount.
                                                   (2) [Reserved]                                       § 1.42–10 Utility allowances.                            (a) State housing credit ceiling.
                                                § 1.42–6 Buildings qualifying for carryover                (a) Inclusion of utility allowances in gross          (1) In general.
                                                      allocations.                                      rent.                                                    (2) Cost-of-living adjustment.
                                                   (a) Carryover allocations.                              (b) Applicable utility allowances.                    (i) General rule.
                                                   (1) In general.                                         (1) Buildings assisted by the Rural Housing           (ii) Rounding.
                                                   (2) 10 percent basis requirement.                    Service.                                                 (b) The unused carryforward component.
                                                   (i) Allocation made before July 1.                      (2) Buildings with Rural Housing Service              (c) The population component.
                                                   (ii) Allocation made after June 30.                  assisted tenants.                                        (d) The returned credit component.
                                                   (b) Carryover-allocation basis.                         (3) Buildings regulated by the Department             (1) In general.
                                                   (1) In general.                                      of Housing and Urban Development.                        (2) Limitations and special rules.
                                                   (2) Limitations.                                        (4) Other buildings.                                  (i) General limitations.
                                                   (i) Taxpayer must have basis in land or                 (i) Tenants receiving HUD rental                      (ii) Credit period limitation.
                                                depreciable property related to the project.            assistance.                                              (iii) Three-month rule for returned credit.
                                                   (ii) High cost areas.                                   (ii) Other tenants.                                   (iv) Returns of credit.
                                                   (iii) Amounts not treated as paid or                    (A) General rule.                                     (A) Building not qualified within required
                                                incurred.                                                  (B) Utility company estimate.                      time period.
                                                   (iv) Fees.                                              (C) Agency estimate.                                  (B) Noncompliance with terms of the
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                                                   (3) Reasonably expected basis.                          (D) HUD Utility Schedule Model.                    allocation.
                                                   (4) Examples.                                           (E) Energy consumption model.                         (C) Mutual consent.
                                                   (c) Verification of basis by Agency.                    (c) Changes in applicable utility allowance.          (D) Amount not necessary for financial
                                                   (1) Verification requirement.                           (1) In general.                                    feasibility.
                                                   (2) Manner of verification.                             (2) Annual review.                                    (3) Manner of returning credit.
                                                   (3) Time of verification.                               (d) Record retention.                                 (i) Taxpayer notification.
                                                   (i) Allocations made before July 1.                     (e) Actual consumption submetering                    (ii) Internal Revenue Service notification.
                                                   (ii) Allocations made after June 30.                 arrangements.                                            (e) The national pool component.



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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 42 / Thursday, March 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          11109

                                                   (f) When the State housing credit ceiling is           (iii) Optional adjustment by the Agency             section, then that cost is treated as being
                                                determined.                                             and owner.                                            paid directly by the tenant(s) and not by
                                                   (g) Stacking order.                                    (2) Low-income portion amount.                      or through the owner of the building.
                                                   (h) Nonprofit set-aside.                               (3) Outstanding indebtedness.
                                                   (1) Determination of set-aside.
                                                                                                                                                              * * *
                                                                                                          (4) Adjusted investor equity.
                                                   (2) Allocation rules.                                  (i) Application of cost-of-living factor.
                                                                                                                                                                 (b)* * *
                                                   (i) National Pool.                                     (ii) Unadjusted investor equity.                       (3) Buildings regulated by the
                                                   (1) In general.                                        (iii) Qualified-contract cost-of-living             Department of Housing and Urban
                                                   (2) Unused housing credit carryover.                 adjustment.                                           Development. If neither a building nor
                                                   (3) Qualified State.                                   (iv) General rule.                                  any tenant in the building receives RHS
                                                   (i) In general.                                        (v) Provision by the Commissioner of the            housing assistance, and the rents and
                                                   (ii) Exceptions.                                     qualified-contract cost-of-living adjustment.         utility allowances of the building are
                                                   (A) De minimis amount.                                 (vi) Methodology.
                                                   (B) Other circumstances.
                                                                                                                                                              regulated by HUD (HUD-regulated
                                                                                                          (vii) Example.                                      buildings), the applicable utility
                                                   (iii) Time and manner for making request.              (5) Other capital contributions.
                                                   (4) Formula for determining the National               (6) Cash distributions.
                                                                                                                                                              allowance for all rent-restricted units in
                                                Pool.                                                     (i) In general.                                     the building is the applicable HUD
                                                   (j) Coordination between Agencies.                     (ii) Excess proceeds.                               utility allowance.
                                                   (k) Example.                                           (iii) Anti-abuse rule.                                 (4) * * *
                                                   (l) Effective dates.                                   (d) Administrative discretion and                      (ii) * * *
                                                   (1) In general.                                      responsibilities of the Agency.                          (A) * * * If none of the rules of
                                                   (2) Community Renewal Tax Relief Act of                (1) In general.                                     paragraphs (b)(1), (2), (3), and (4)(i) of
                                                2000 changes.                                             (2) Actual offer.                                   this section apply to determine the
                                                § 1.42–15 Available unit rule.                            (3) Debarment of certain appraisers.                appropriate utility allowance for a rent-
                                                   (a) Definitions.                                       (e) Effective/applicability date.                   restricted unit, then the appropriate
                                                   (b) General section 42(g)(2)(D)(i) rule.
                                                   (c) Exception.
                                                                                                        ■ Par. 3. Section 1.42–0T is added to                 utility allowance for the unit is the
                                                   (d) Effect of current resident moving within         read as follows:                                      applicable PHA utility allowance. * * *
                                                building.                                               § 1.42–0T    Table of contents.
                                                                                                                                                              *       *   *     *     *
                                                   (e) Available unit rule applies separately to                                                                 (E) Energy consumption model. A
                                                each building in a project.                               This section lists the paragraphs                   building owner may calculate utility
                                                   (f) Result of noncompliance with available           contained in §§ 1.42–5T and 1.42–10T.                 estimates using an energy and water and
                                                unit rule.                                              § 1.42–5T Monitoring compliance with low-             sewage consumption and analysis
                                                   (g) Relationship to tax-exempt bond                        income housing credit requirements
                                                provisions.                                                                                                   model (energy consumption model).
                                                                                                              (temporary).                                    The energy consumption model must, at
                                                   (h) Examples.
                                                   (i) Effective date.                                     (a)(1) through (a)(2)(ii) [Reserved]               a minimum, take into account specific
                                                                                                           (iii) Effect of guidance published in the          factors including, but not limited to,
                                                § 1.42–16 Eligible basis reduced by federal             Internal Revenue Bulletin.
                                                      grants.                                                                                                 unit size, building orientation, design
                                                                                                           (b) through (c)(2)(i) [Reserved]
                                                   (a) In general.                                         (3) Frequency and form of certification.           and materials, mechanical systems,
                                                   (b) Grants do not include certain rental                (c)(4) through (g) [Reserved]                      appliances, characteristics of the
                                                assistance payments.                                       (h) Effective/applicability dates.                 building location, and available
                                                   (c) Qualifying rental assistance program.               (1) [Reserved]                                     historical data. The utility consumption
                                                   (d) Effective date.                                     (2) Effective/applicability dates of the           estimates must be calculated by a
                                                § 1.42–17 Qualified allocation plan.                    REAC inspection protocol.                             properly licensed engineer or other
                                                   (a) Requirements.                                    § 1.42–10T Energy obtained directly from              qualified professional. The qualified
                                                   (1) In general [Reserved].                                 renewable sources (temporary).                  professional and the building owner
                                                   (2) Selection criteria [Reserved].                      (a) through (e)(1)(i)(A) [Reserved]                must not be related within the meaning
                                                   (3) Agency evaluation.                                  (B) Utility not purchased from or through          of section 267(b) or 707(b). If a qualified
                                                   (4) Timing of Agency evaluation.                     a local utility company.
                                                   (i) In general.
                                                                                                                                                              professional is not a properly licensed
                                                                                                           (C) Renewable source.                              engineer and if the building owner
                                                   (ii) Time limit for placed-in-service                   (2) [Reserved]
                                                evaluation.                                                                                                   wants to utilize that qualified
                                                                                                           (f) Date of applicability.
                                                   (5) Special rule for final determinations               (g) Expiration date.                               professional to calculate utility
                                                and certifications.                                                                                           consumption estimates, then the owner
                                                   (6) Bond-financed projects.                          ■ Par. 4. Section 1.42–10 is amended                  must obtain approval from the Agency
                                                   (b) Effective date.                                  by:                                                   that has jurisdiction over the building.
                                                § 1.42–18 Qualified Contracts.                          ■ 1. Adding a sentence after the first                Further, regardless of the type of
                                                   (a) Extended low-income housing                      sentence of paragraph (a).                            qualified professional, the Agency may
                                                commitment.                                             ■ 2. Revising paragraph (b)(3).
                                                                                                                                                              approve or disapprove of the energy
                                                   (1) In general.                                      ■ 3. Revising the first sentence of
                                                                                                                                                              consumption model or require
                                                   (i) Extended use period.                             paragraph (b)(4)(ii)(A).                              information before permitting its use. In
                                                   (ii) Termination of extended use period.             ■ 4. Revising paragraph (b)(4)(ii)(E).
                                                   (iii) Other non-acceptance.                                                                                addition, utility rates used for the
                                                                                                        ■ 5. Adding paragraph (e).
                                                   (iv) Eviction, gross rent increase                     The additions and revisions read as                 energy consumption model must be no
                                                concerning existing low-income tenants not              follows:                                              older than the rates in place 60 days
                                                permitted.                                                                                                    prior to the beginning of the 90-day
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                                                   (2) Exception.                                       § 1.42–10    Utility allowances.                      period under paragraph (c)(1) of this
                                                   (b) Definitions.                                       (a) * * * For purposes of the                       section.
                                                   (c) Qualified contract purchase price
                                                formula.
                                                                                                        preceding sentence, if the cost of a                  *       *   *     *     *
                                                   (1) In general.                                      particular utility for a residential unit is             (e) Actual-consumption submetering
                                                   (i) Initial determination.                           paid pursuant to an actual-consumption                arrangements—(1) Definition. For
                                                   (ii) Mandatory adjustment by the buyer and           submetering arrangement within the                    purposes of this section, an actual-
                                                owner.                                                  meaning of paragraph (e)(1) of this                   consumption submetering arrangement


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                                                11110              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 42 / Thursday, March 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                                for a utility in a residential unit                     Internal Revenue Bulletin (see                        taxable years beginning before March 3,
                                                possesses all of the following attributes:              § 601.601(d)(2)(ii) of this chapter).                 2016. Otherwise, the utility allowances
                                                   (i) The utility consumed in the unit is              ■ Par. 5. Section 1.42–10T is added to                provisions that apply to taxable years
                                                described in paragraph (e)(1)(i)(A) of                  read as follows:                                      beginning before March 3, 2016 are
                                                this section or in § 1.42–10T(e)(1)(i)(B);                                                                    contained in § 1.42–10 (see 26 CFR part
                                                   (A) The utility is purchased from or                 § 1.42–10T Energy obtained directly from              1 revised as of April 1, 2015).
                                                through a local utility company by the                  renewable sources (temporary).
                                                building owner (or its agent or other                     (a) through (e)(1)(i)(A) [Reserved]. For            John Dalrymple,
                                                party acting on behalf of the building                  further guidance see § 1.42–10(a)                     Deputy Commissioner for Services and
                                                owner).                                                 through (e)(1)(i)(A).                                 Enforcement.
                                                   (B) [Reserved]. For further guidance                   (B) Utility not purchased from or                     Approved: February 8, 2016.
                                                see § 1.42–10T(e)(1)(i)(B) through                      through a local utility company. The                  Mark J. Mazur,
                                                (e)(1)(i)(C)(3).                                        utility is not described in § 1.42–                   Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax
                                                   (ii) The tenants in the unit are billed              10(e)(1)(i)(A) and is produced from a                 Policy).
                                                for, and pay the building owner (or its                 renewable source (within the meaning                  [FR Doc. 2016–04606 Filed 3–2–16; 8:45 am]
                                                agent or other party acting on behalf of                of paragraph (e)(1)(i)(C) of this section).           BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
                                                the building owner) for, the unit’s                       (C) Renewable source. For purposes of
                                                consumption of the utility;                             paragraph (e)(1)(i)(B) of this section, a
                                                   (iii) The billed amount reflects the                 utility is produced from a renewable                  DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
                                                unit’s actual consumption of the utility.               source if—
                                                In the case of sewerage charges,                          (1) It is energy that is produced from              Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade
                                                however, if the unit’s sewerage charges                 energy property described in section 48;              Bureau
                                                are combined on the bill with water                       (2) It is energy that is produced from
                                                charges and the sewerage charges are                    property that is part of a facility                   27 CFR Part 9
                                                determined based on the actual water                    described in section 45(d)(1) through
                                                                                                                                                              [Docket No. TTB–2015–0008; T.D. TTB–134;
                                                consumption of the unit, then the bill is               (4), (6), (9), or (11); or
                                                                                                                                                              Ref: Notice No. 152]
                                                treated as reflecting the actual sewerage                 (3) It is a utility that is described in
                                                consumption of the unit; and                            guidance published for this purpose in                RIN 1513–AC21
                                                   (iv) The rate at which the building                  the Internal Revenue Bulletin (see
                                                                                                        § 601.601(d)(2)(ii) of this chapter).                 Expansion of the Willamette Valley
                                                owner bills for the utility satisfies the
                                                                                                          (ii) through (iv)(A) [Reserved]. For                Viticultural Area
                                                following requirements:
                                                   (A) To the extent that the utility                   further guidance see § 1.42–10(e)(1)(ii)              AGENCY:  Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and
                                                consumed is described in paragraph                      through (e)(1)(iv)(A).                                Trade Bureau, Treasury.
                                                (e)(1)(i)(A) of this section, the utility rate            (B) The rate described in this
                                                                                                                                                              ACTION: Final rule; Treasury decision.
                                                charged to the tenants of the unit does                 paragraph (e)(1)(iv)(B) is the rate at
                                                not exceed the rate incurred by the                     which the local utility company would                 SUMMARY:   The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax
                                                building owner for that utility; and                    have charged the tenants in the unit for              and Trade Bureau (TTB) is expanding
                                                   (B) To the extent that the utility                   the utility if that entity had provided it            the approximately 5,360-square mile
                                                consumed is described in § 1.42–                        to them.                                              ‘‘Willamette Valley’’ viticultural area in
                                                10T(e)(1)(i)(B), the utility rate charged to              (2) [Reserved]                                      northwestern Oregon, by approximately
                                                                                                          (f) Date of applicability. This section             29 square miles. Neither the established
                                                the tenants of the unit does not exceed
                                                                                                        applies to a building owner’s taxable                 viticultural area nor the expansion area
                                                the rate described in § 1.42–
                                                                                                        years beginning on or after March 3,                  is located within any other established
                                                10T(e)(1)(iv)(B).
                                                   (2) Administrative fees. If the owner                2016. A building owner may apply the                  viticultural area. TTB designates
                                                charges a unit’s tenants a fee for                      provisions of this section to the building            viticultural areas to allow vintners to
                                                administering an actual-consumption                     owner’s taxable years beginning before                better describe the origin of their wines
                                                submetering arrangement, the fee is not                 March 3, 2016.                                        and to allow consumers to better
                                                                                                          (g) Expiration date. The applicability
                                                considered gross rent for purposes of                                                                         identify wines they may purchase.
                                                                                                        of this section expires on March 1, 2019.
                                                section 42(g)(2). The preceding                                                                               DATES: This final rule is effective April
                                                                                                        ■ Par. 6. Section 1.42–12 is amended by
                                                sentence, however, does not apply                                                                             4, 2016.
                                                unless the fee is computed in the same                  adding paragraph (a)(5) to read as
                                                                                                        follows:                                              FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                manner for every unit receiving the                                                                           Karen A. Thornton, Regulations and
                                                same submetered utility service, nor                    § 1.42–12    Effective dates and transitional         Rulings Division, Alcohol and Tobacco
                                                does it apply to any amount by which                    rules.                                                Tax and Trade Bureau, 1310 G Street
                                                the aggregate monthly fee or fees for all                 (a) * * *                                           NW., Box 12, Washington, DC 20005;
                                                of the unit’s utilities under one or more                 (5) Additional effective dates affecting            phone 202–453–1039, ext. 175.
                                                actual-consumption submetering                          utility allowances. (i) The following                 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                arrangements exceed the greater of—                     provisions apply to a building owner’s
                                                   (i) Five dollars per month;                          taxable years beginning on or after                   Background on Viticultural Areas
                                                   (ii) An amount (if any) designated by                March 3, 2016—                                        TTB Authority
                                                publication in the Internal Revenue                       (A) The second sentence in § 1.42–
                                                Bulletin (see § 601.601(d)(2)(ii) of this               10(a);                                                  Section 105(e) of the Federal Alcohol
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                                                chapter); or                                              (B) Section 1.42–10(b)(3);                          Administration Act (FAA Act), 27
                                                   (iii) The lesser of—                                   (C) The first sentence in § 1.42–                   U.S.C. 205(e), authorizes the Secretary
                                                   (A) The dollar amount (if any)                       10(b)(4)(ii)(A);                                      of the Treasury to prescribe regulations
                                                specifically prescribed under a State or                  (D) Section 1.42–10(b)(4)(ii)(E); and               for the labeling of wine, distilled spirits,
                                                local law; or                                             (E) Section 1.42–10(e).                             and malt beverages. The FAA Act
                                                   (B) A maximum amount (if any)                          (ii) A building owner may apply these               provides that these regulations should,
                                                designated by publication in the                        provisions to the building owner’s                    among other things, prohibit consumer


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Document Created: 2016-03-03 03:51:19
Document Modified: 2016-03-03 03:51:19
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal and temporary regulations.
ContactJames Rider (202) 317-4137 (not a toll-free number).
FR Citation81 FR 11104 
RIN Number1545-BI91
CFR AssociatedIncome Taxes and Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements

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