CC: PA:LPD:PR (Reg-128841-07)
Room 5203
Internal Revenue Service
PO Box 7604
Ben Franklin Station
Washington, DC 20044
December 3, 2008
Re: Comments on Proposed Changes to Public Approval Guidance for Tax Exempt
bonds under Section 147(f) of the Internal Revenue Code
To Whom It May Concern:
We write on behalf of Good Jobs New York, Good Jobs First, and the Fiscal Policy
Institute.
Our missions include promoting accountability to taxpayers in the use of
economic development subsidies. As such, we are very concerned that the Internal
Revenue Service’s proposed changes to public approval requirements for
tax-exempt private activity bonds will substantially weaken opportunities for
U.S. taxpayers to understand or comment upon proposed projects in their communities.
For 10 years Good Jobs New York, a joint project of Good Jobs First in
Washington, DC and the Fiscal Policy Institute in New York, has used the public
hearing process to monitor and scrutinize how tax-exempt bonds for economic
development are allocated in New York City. Based upon this experience, we urge
the Internal Revenue Service not to approve the proposed regulations and instead
push for stronger public hearing opportunities to strengthen core principles of
civil society: transparency, accountability and democracy.
The current public notice and hearing requirements under the Tax Equity and
Fiscal Responsibility Act (TEFRA) of 1982, and subsequently the Tax Reform Act
of 1986, provide interested parties the opportunity to testify before state and
local government agencies on proposed public financing for a host of different
projects including affordable housing, industrial facilities, nonprofit
organizations, sports facilities and, in New York, even financial sector firms.
For example, without TEFRA, New Yorkers would not have had the opportunity to
participate in hearings for $8 billion in tax-exempt private activity Liberty
Bonds allocated to New York for commercial and residential projects in the wake
of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
New York City residents have an enhanced ability for public participation due to
the New York State legislature and the local New York City Industrial
Development Agency, which have substantially improved upon TEFRA regulations. We
urge the IRS to consider such policies to improve and expand—not curtail and
reduce—public participation.
We highlight three of the pending proposed IRS regulations we believe are
grossly corrosive of the public hearing process and instead offer improved,
alternative proposals.
1. Notification Process.
Proposed: The proposed regulations would reduce the time a proposed project is
made public by giving taxpayers half the time they now have to gather
information on projects and prepare comments. In our experience, given the
complexity of many projects, the current 14-day notice period is far too short,
so the proposed 7-day notice would almost completely preclude meaningful public
participation.
Higher Standard/Alternative: The New York City Industrial Development Agency, in
a 2006 Omnibus Resolution, requires that a notice must be published 30 days
prior to the public hearing. The Resolution also requires the New York City IDA
to post this notice on its website. This regularity provides us and diverse
members of the public the opportunity to study proposed projects and to prepare
testimony.
Unfortunately, projects administered by our state economic development agency
(Urban Development Corporation d/b/a Empire State Development Corporation) or by
state or municipal housing authorities are not subject to the 30 day public
approval process. Because of this limited time, existing TEFRA requirements
provided New Yorkers limited opportunity to gather information and prepare
testimony on projects such as the $1.65 billion in tax-exempt Liberty Bonds for
Goldman Sachs, and some of the $1.6 billion dollars in Liberty Bonds approved by
the state Housing Financing Agency for luxury housing in Manhattan after 9/11.
2. Cancelling Hearings
Proposed: The proposed regulations would allow the governmental issuer to cancel
public hearings on qualified bonds if it does not receive “timely requests” to
participate in the hearing. Current regulations have no such option of no public
hearing at all. Paired with the brevity of the proposed notice period, this rule
seems intended to minimize the likelihood that taxpayers would be able to comment.
Higher Standard/Alternative: Under no circumstances should a hearing be
cancelled. Our experience with the New York City Industrial Development Agency
has shown that the current process is not cumbersome. Moreover, should an agency
develop a reputation for cancelling hearings, taxpayers may become
disenfranchised and a self-fulfilling norm would set in, wherein agencies could
come to expect that they will not need to hold hearings because they don’t think
people will attend, and people would not seek to attend hearings because they
come to believe that the agency doesn’t hold hearings or will cancel them at the
last minute.
In New York City, community members have testified on projects without providing
advance notice to the government entity issuing the bonds and even without
formal testimony. Considering that these hearings are sometimes the only chance
for members of the public to comment on projects, there should be no option of
cancelling them altogether.
3. Fewer Project Details
Proposed: The proposed regulations would only require public notices to list
general descriptions of the types of facilities to be financed and a general
description of its location, though this “must be reasonably designed to inform
readers of the location.” In addition, the proposed regulations leave open which
party can be listed in the notice, saying it could be “the name of the legal
owner or principal user of the facility or, alternatively, the name of the true
beneficial party…”
These details matter greatly. If a project is not fully described, it is
impossible for taxpayers to present relevant and educated testimony on the
proposed project. Existing businesses may not understand that a competing
business is slated to benefit. Neighbors may not understand that a project may
increase traffic or create parking problems. Particularly in urban and suburban
areas where several businesses could be at one location, this proposed
regulation could render a public notice useless. There is no surer way to
disenfranchise a community than to provide incomplete information about an
economic development project.
Higher Standard/Alternative: Maintain existing requirements regarding facility
types and locations. Require that the names of legal owners AND expected
principal users of facilities be included in public notices. Members of the
public often have concerns about specific companies that rent space in new
developments. If these companies will be the principal user a facility, the
public has the right to know.
There are other measures governmental agencies can take to ensure that members
of the public are well informed of project details, and have the opportunity to
comment on them, prior to a hearing. The New York City Industrial Development
Agency, for example, makes the full project applications and cost/benefit
analyses for each project available to the public five days prior to a hearing.
Other Transparency Suggestions
In addition to the above mentioned proposals for improving transparency,
regulations should require that:
• State and local authorities use technology to further advance the public
hearing process - The proposed regulations allow governmental units to post
public hearing notices on their websites as long as they offer a reasonable
method for otherwise obtaining the information. Instead, new regulations should
require that, in addition to current methods for public postings, any issuer
with a functional website must post public hearing notices on such website. The
New York City Industrial Development Agency already does this. In addition,
agencies required to adhere to TEFRA should offer taxpayers the option of
signing up for a list to receive hearing notices electronically. These notices
should be sent out the same day a public hearing notice is legally required. For
example, Good Jobs New York maintains a list of over 300 people to whom we email
a monthly “subsidy alert” of public hearing notices for proposed subsidized
projects. Agencies should also create processes where they can directly notify
interested parties.
• More information on approved projects be listed on agency websites - For
example, the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation (the LMDC was created to
allocate special Community Development Block Grants after the September 11, 2001
attacks on the World Trade Center) has copies of final reports to the US
Department of Housing and Urban Development on its website and copies of board
minutes. And thanks to an executive order by former Governor Eliot Spitzer, the
LMDC webcasts its board meetings. This could be expanded to include public
hearings, which would make hearings and meetings more accessible to rural
communities and people with disabilities.
Summary
The IRS’ proposed changes to TEFRA would make an important function of
government substantially less transparent and accountable. Current TEFRA public
hearing rules, which impose minimal standards that we believe should be
enhanced, do not impose an undue burden on government agencies. If the proposed
changes are approved, they will grossly impair and diminish public input,
excluding meaningful participation and fueling public cynicism about government.
We urge the IRS to vacate these proposals and instead start anew by embracing
our suggestions for higher public hearing standards that enable an informed and
transparent economic development process.
Sincerely,
Bettina Damiani
Project Director
Good Jobs New York
11 Park Place, #701
NY, NY 10007
212-721-7996
Greg LeRoy
Executive Director
Good Jobs First
1616 P St., Suite 210
Washington, DC 20036
202-232-1616
James Parrott
Deputy Director
Fiscal Policy Institute
11 Park Place, #701
NY, NY 10007
212-721-5624
Comment on FR Doc # E8-20771
This is comment on Proposed Rule
Public Approval Guidance for Tax-Exempt Bonds
View Comment
Attachments:
Comment on FR Doc # E8-20771
Title:
Comment on FR Doc # E8-20771
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