This could be good news for entrepreneurs looking to get a foothold in some of Downtown Greensboro's historic buildings.
Here's what the National Trust says the bill would do:
- Reduce the requirement that lowers tax benefits dollar-for-dollar according to the amount of credit taken when using the historic rehab credit.
- Deepen the historic rehab credit in the most difficult to develop and disinvested areas.
- Make the ten percent portion of the credit available for housing and changing the definition of "older building" from "built before 1936" to any property "fifty years old or older."
- Enrich the historic rehab credit from 20 to 40 percent in projects that are $2 million or less to target those "main street" type developments in which rehab credit costs are currently too prohibitive.
- Ease the rules governing non-profit deals so that more community-oriented projects move forward.
Read the National Trust's article.
Hat tip to Mike Cowhig for the info.
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