The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lawmakers target ‘abusive’ tax shelters popular in Ga.

Key U.S. senators seek crackdown on controvers­ial credits.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

There are no traffic lights or high schools in Clay County, a sparsely populated region about 50 miles west of Albany that’s one of the state’s poorest.

There aren’t any hospitals either. The county’s only doctor sends sick patients more than an hour away, across the Alabama line, to visit the emergency room.

All of that wasn’t enough to stop real estate developers from marketing Clay County, population 3,000, as an investment opportunit­y in 2013 for a 227-acre, 800-unit senior living facility.

But such a facility was never seriously considered, according to a bipartisan congressio­nal investigat­ion alleging the land deal was instead a smoke

Fort Gaines is county seat of Clay County, one of Georgia’s poorest, but developers marketed the area in 2013 as an investment opportunit­y for a 227-acre, 800-unit senior living facility.

screen for wealthy investors hunting for massive tax deductions.

The transactio­n, flagged in last week’s U.S. Senate Finance Committee report, is an example of syndicated conservati­on easements that the panel said “appear to be highly abusive tax shelters.” Syndicated easements have become increasing­ly popular over the last decade in Georgia, where a cottage industry of promoters has emerged in Rome and metro Atlanta.

The IRS estimates that between 2010 and 2017, such deals generated nearly $27 billion in tax benefits for investors, including thousands of doctors, business owners, athletes and celebritie­s. Most of those investors, the Senate report notes, “appear to reside or work in the southeaste­rn United States.”

Defenders say reports of abuse are overblown and that easements have conserved tens of millions of acres of land in the four decades since the law was created.

Key senators, meanwhile, are calling for legislatio­n to curb syndicated transactio­ns, as well as aggressive enforcemen­t from federal agencies, which have cracked down over the last four years. Easements more broadly have come under scrutiny after several golf course owners, including President Donald Trump, took deductions.

Georgia a hot spot

Conservati­on easements are tax deductions given to landowners who agree to permanentl­y ban developmen­t on their environmen­tally sensitive land. For example, if a property is valued at $5 million fully developed and $1 million undevelope­d, investors could claim a $4 million charitable tax deduction.

In syndicated easements, like the one in Clay County, promoters sell interests in tracts of land to investors, who together decide whether to develop or conserve the land.

What’s become increasing­ly common, according to the Finance Committee, are crooked appraisals that inflate land valuations, jacking up the deductions investors receive for agreeing to conserve it.

Finance Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and his Democratic counterpar­t Ron Wyden of Oregon have expressed concern that syndicated transactio­ns are allowing wealthy investors to game the tax code, costing the federal government billions in lost tax revenue. The report estimates such investors typically reap two dollars in tax savings for every dollar invested with land promoters, who themselves pocket millions in fees.

Syndicated transactio­ns have exploded in popularity in recent years, increasing by 44% between 2015 and 2017, according to IRS data.

More than one-third of all deductions for conservati­on easements were claimed by Georgians between 2010 and 2012, according to a 2017 Brookings Institutio­n report.

A onetime state-level tax credit helped incentiviz­e such deals, while some point to the Southeast’s relatively large amount of undevelope­d land outside of rapidly growing cities.

Other observers credit the emergence of groups and individual promoters in Georgia — a half dozen of whom were subpoenaed for documents by the Finance Committee last year, including former state Sen. Eugene “Chip” Pearson — who made syndicated transactio­ns a key part of their business strategy.

Robert Ramsay, the former head of the Georgia Conservanc­y, has been the most vocal defender of syndicated easement transactio­ns. He now leads the nonprofit Partnershi­p for Conservati­on.

Ramsay said the staff of the Senate Finance Committee had a “predetermi­ned narrative” about syndicated transactio­ns when they launched their investigat­ion. “What I saw were examples of what some have said they don’t like. I didn’t see any instances where it was clear to me to anybody had broken any laws,” he said in an interview.

Ramsay warned that curtailing syndicated transactio­ns would have a chilling effect on an important conservati­on method.

In the final days of Obama administra­tion, the IRS began requiring taxpayers to flag large transactio­ns in their returns, increasing the potential for audits. The IRS has also litigated easement cases, winning a string of them in Tax Court in recent months, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Clay County deal

The Senate report detailed the sales pitches of several Georgia-based promoters, including EcoVest Capital, an Atlanta-based real estate developer under federal investigat­ion. EcoVest has denied any wrongdoing.

It also highlighte­d several case studies, including the Clay County land deal that netted investors $12 million in charitable deductions and about $4.8 million in tax savings.

The property’s promoter, Rome, Georgia-based Webb Creek Management Group, told investors in 2013 that a large parcel of undevelope­d land along Eufaula Highway might be developed into a senior living facility. More than 50 investors paid more than $11,000 an acre after an appraiser estimated the property would be worth nearly $55,000 an acre if it were developed into a senior facility. The appraisal also determined that with a conservati­on easement, it would be worth only $1,300 an acre.

Within two days of the partnershi­p’s close date on Dec. 26, 2013, 96% of investors voted to grant a conservati­on easement instead of developing the land. While investors split millions in tax benefits, Webb Creek pocketed $200,000 in fees, according to the Finance Committee.

“It seems unlikely that those investors had the time to make an informed decision on the property’s developmen­t prospects within the three days after Christmas 2013, given the scale of the purported 800-unit senior living facilities,” the report argues.

In a lengthy statement posted on its website, Webb Creek disagreed with the committee’s assessment. It said the land was seriously vetted for a senior living facility, initially called “The Villages at the Lake.”

“Contrary to the (committee’s) self-serving conclusion, at the time the developmen­t was originally contemplat­ed in 2006, the lack of comparable property developmen­t in Clay County was a significan­t factor in the residentia­l appraiser’s conclusion that ‘The Villages on the Lake’ had good developmen­t potential,” Webb Creek stated.

The Finance Committee said courts and the IRS have “long held” that investors are “obligated to demonstrat­e that such alternativ­e use is reasonably probable, not simply within the realm of possibilit­y” to claim an easement.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM 2017 ??
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM 2017
 ?? BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM 2017 ?? There are no hospitals in Clay County. Its only doctor, in Fort Gaines, sends sick patients more than an hour away, into Alabama, to visit the ER. But developers touted the area for a big senior living facility.
BOB ANDRES / BANDRES@AJC.COM 2017 There are no hospitals in Clay County. Its only doctor, in Fort Gaines, sends sick patients more than an hour away, into Alabama, to visit the ER. But developers touted the area for a big senior living facility.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States