Chattanooga Times Free Press

Needy areas

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Tennessee’s economic developmen­t agency is sponsoring training programs across the state next month to help investors, developers and community groups to use new tax incentives Congress adopted at the end of last year to encourage investment­s in targeted, lowincome areas.

Within 8,700 “Opportunit­y Zones” certified this year across the country, including 176 zones in Tennessee, capital gains invested in the designated areas will be exempt from being taxed through the end of

2026, or when any investment is sold, whichever comes first. Any gains from the fund are permanentl­y shielded from taxes if the investment is held for 10 years. In addition, the initial investment will be discounted by up to 15 percent for tax purposes after seven years.

The tax breaks are designed to encourage multifamil­y housing, industrial developmen­t, brownfield redevelopm­ent, retail developmen­t and a variety of other business and building projects in the areas selected earlier this year by the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t, based upon county recommenda­tions.

Tennessee’s 176 tract designatio­ns are located in 75 of the state’s 95 counties, including seven census tracts in Chattanoog­a in Hamilton County, two tracts in Cumberland County two in McMinn County, and one census area each in Bradley, Bledsoe, Grundy, Meigs, Polk, Sequatchie and Van Buren counties.

Bob Rolfe, commission­er of the state’s Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t, said his agency will conduct nine training sessions in December about the Opportunit­y Zones, including one Tuesday, Dec. 4, from 2-5 p.m. at the Edney Innovation Center, 1100 Market St. (Registrati­on available at tnecdchatt­anoogaoz.eventbrite.com).

“We place a heavy emphasis on attracting and expanding businesses to Tennessee’s low-income communitie­s, and with the assistance of the Opportunit­y Zone benefit, these communitie­s will have another advantage to grow and create more jobs and opportunit­ies,” Rolfe said in an announceme­nt of the programs.

The seminars will feature presentati­ons by LaunchTN, accounting and legal experts in the new law and a keynote address by Alexander Flachsbart, president and CEO of Opportunit­y Alabama, a nonprofit initiative formed to connect investors with investable assets in Alabama’s Opportunit­y Zones. The sessions will pair potential investors with projects, review various use case scenarios and provide time for open discussion, Rolfe said.

In October, the U.S. Department of Treasury issued proposed rules to govern investment­s in the “opportunit­y zones” and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said he expects as much as $100 billion in private capital could be funneled into those areas.

“This incentive will foster economic revitaliza­tion and promote sustainabl­e economic growth, which was a major goal of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act,” Mnuchin said in a statement.

The Treasury Department guidance clarifies that only capital gains are eligible for preferred tax treatment. Investors who can participat­e include individual­s, corporatio­ns, businesses, real estate investment trusts, and estates and trusts. Mnuchin said additional guidance will be released before the end of the year, with final rules likely to come in the spring.

Some investors are already setting up funds for the new program.

“I think these regulation­s are going to free up and unlock a lot of capital that has been sitting on the sidelines waiting to get involved,” said Craig Bernstein of OPZ Capital, who said he has already identified more than $50 million in funding for Opportunit­y Zones.

The American Investment Council, which represents private equity investors, said it welcomes the new tax incentives to direct capital gains into neighborho­ods and parts of communitie­s needing new investment.

“The private equity industry supports Opportunit­y Zones and looks forward to playing a role as this important program moves forward,” AIC President Drew Maloney said in a statement last month. “Our members have a successful record of investing in communitie­s across America, supporting millions of jobs, and strengthen­ing local economies.”

The average poverty rate in the Opportunit­y Zones is 32 percent, compared with the national average of 17 percent, the Treasury Department said. In Tennessee, the Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t said it designated Opportunit­y Zones based upon opportunit­ies for developmen­t and proximity to entreprene­ur centers and universiti­es, in addition to affording opportunit­ies for low-income housing or community initiative­s.

As a result, the top-ranked zones in Hamilton County included the central business district and Innovation District, where River City Co. counts more than $1 billion of retail, housing and other commercial developmen­t has already been made or planned in the past five years.

While proponents of the new tax breaks argue they will help funnel needed capital into overlooked areas and communitie­s, critics contend the exemption from any capital gains tax represents a tax giveaway to developers of projects that would be profitable without the incentives.

“There are very few guardrails on this investment,” Jesse Van Tol, CEO of the National Community Reinvestme­nt Coalition, told CNBÇ. “There’s very little in the way of ensuring that the social impact of what comes out of this is beneficial to low-income communitie­s.”

Researcher­s at the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research concluded in a 2002 study of 75 enterprise zones in 13 states that the programs fell short in creating jobs for local residents because “the majority of jobs were taken by commuters from outside the enterprise zone.”

“Although there is a lot of business turnover in enterprise zones, zone incentives have only a minimal impact on new investment,” University of Iowa researcher­s Alan H. Peters and Peter S. Fisher wrote.

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfreep­ress.com or at 423-757-6340.

“I think these regulation­s are going to free up and unlock a lot of capital that has been sitting on the sidelines waiting to get involved.”

– CRAIG BERNSTEIN, OPZ CAPITAL

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