100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2017 and 2018
HB3360

 

Introduced , by Rep. Elgie R. Sims, Jr.

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act
35 ILCS 5/216
35 ILCS 25/25
35 ILCS 25/30

    Creates the Community Renewal and Revitalization Act. Provides for the qualifications for and designation of Health, Opportunity, Prosperity, and Empowerment (HOPE) Zones. Provides for a HOPE Zone tax credit and other credits and benefits going to businesses operating in HOPE Zones. Provides for the powers and duties of the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity under the Act. Provides for State incentives regarding public services and physical infrastructure. Provides for State regulatory exemptions in HOPE Zones. Provides for State and local regulatory alternatives under the Act. Amends the Illinois Income Tax Act to allow for a specified tax credit for wages paid to qualified ex-offenders in HOPE Zones. Modifies the term "qualified ex-offender" to include a person hired by a taxpayer 5 years (currently, 3 years) after being released from an Illinois adult correctional center. Amends the Small Business Job Creation Tax Credit Act to allow a specified tax credit for businesses operating in HOPE Zones. Provides that the Department shall limit the monetary amount of credits awarded under the Act to no more than $100,000,000 (currently, $50,000,000).


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A BILL FOR

 

HB3360LRB100 11034 RJF 21273 b

1    AN ACT concerning government.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Community Renewal and Revitalization Act.
 
6    Section 5. Intent. The intent of this Act is to spur
7investment in areas of high unemployment and high crime through
8various economic development tools intended to incentivize
9businesses to relocate, expand, and develop within those
10communities. It is the hope and belief of the General Assembly
11that through the creation of Health, Opportunity, Prosperity,
12and Empowerment (HOPE) Zones, economic growth and vitality can
13foster in impoverished communities of this State.
 
14    Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
15    "Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic
16Opportunity.
17    "Director" means the Director of the Department of Commerce
18and Economic Opportunity.
19    "HOPE Zone" or "Zone" means a Health, Opportunity,
20Prosperity, and Empowerment Zone established under this Act.
 
21    Section 15. Qualifications for HOPE Zones.

 

 

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1    (a) An area is qualified to become a HOPE Zone if:
2        (1) it is a contiguous area, provided that a zone area
3    may exclude wholly surrounded territory within its
4    boundaries;
5        (2) it is comprised of a minimum of one-half square
6    mile and not more than 15 square miles, in total area,
7    exclusive of lakes and waterways;
8        (3) it is entirely within a municipality or entirely
9    within the unincorporated areas of a county, except where
10    reasonable need is established for such zone to cover
11    portions of more than one municipality or county;
12        (4) all or part of the area to be designated as a HOPE
13    Zone has had an annual average unemployment rate of at
14    least 120% of the State's annual average unemployment rate
15    for the most recent calendar year or the most recent fiscal
16    year as reported by the Department of Employment Security;
17    and
18        (5) all or part of the area to be designated as a HOPE
19    Zone has a poverty rate of at least 20% according to the
20    latest federal decennial census, and a census tract crime
21    rate higher than the State average.
22    (b) Any criteria established by the Department or by law
23which utilize the rate of unemployment for a particular area
24shall provide that all persons who are not presently employed
25and have exhausted all unemployment benefits shall be
26considered unemployed, whether or not such persons are actively

 

 

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1seeking employment.
 
2    Section 20. Designation of HOPE Zones.
3    (a) Any area determined by the Director of the Department
4of Commerce and Economic Opportunity as meeting the
5qualifications established under Section 10 shall be
6designated a HOPE Zone, and be eligible for benefits under this
7Act.
8    (b) Upon designation of a HOPE Zone, the Director shall
9provide:
10        (1) a precise description of the area comprising the
11    Zone, either in the form of a legal description or by
12    reference to roadways, lakes and waterways, and township
13    and county boundaries;
14        (2) a finding that the Zone area meets the
15    qualifications established under Section 10;
16        (3) provisions for any tax incentives or reimbursement
17    for taxes, which under State and federal law apply to
18    businesses within the designated Zone;
19        (4) the duration or term of the HOPE Zone, which shall
20    be no less than 10 years in duration; and
21        (5) any other information the Director deems necessary
22    to the establishment of HOPE Zones under this Act.
23    (c) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a municipality
24or county from extending additional tax incentives or
25reimbursement for businesses in HOPE Zones or throughout their

 

 

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1territory by separate ordinance. Nothing in this Section shall
2prohibit a municipality or county from applying to be an
3Enterprise Zone under the Illinois Enterprise Zone Act.
 
4    Section 25. HOPE Zone tax credit.
5    (a) The HOPE Zone tax credit is hereby created to be
6granted to businesses relocating to, expanding within,
7developing within, or existing within areas designated as HOPE
8Zones under this Act.
9    (b) Businesses maintaining operations within a HOPE Zone
10shall be eligible to receive a 50% tax credit on its annual
11corporate income tax, and a tax credit to all fees and
12franchise taxes paid to the Secretary of State for organizing
13and maintaining any business organization within the Zone.
14    (c) Individuals living within a HOPE Zone shall also be
15eligible to receive a 50% tax credit to their annual individual
16income tax.
17    (d) Any business designated as a "High Impact Business"
18under Section 5.5 of the Illinois Enterprise Zone Act that
19intends to invest in a HOPE Zone, in a manner specified in
20subparagraphs (A) through (F) of that Section, shall be
21eligible for the credits and benefits provided in that Section.
22All provisions and procedures in Section 5.5 of the Illinois
23Enterprise Zone Act with respect to the application and
24designation of High Impact Businesses shall apply.
 

 

 

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1    Section 30. Powers and duties of the Department.
2    (a) General powers. The Department shall administer this
3Act and shall have the following powers and duties:
4        (1) To monitor the implementation of this Act and
5    submit reports evaluating the effectiveness of the program
6    and any suggestions for legislation to the Governor and
7    General Assembly by October 1 of every year preceding a
8    regular Session of the General Assembly and to annually
9    report to the General Assembly initial and current
10    population, employment, per capita income, number of
11    business establishments, dollar value of new construction
12    and improvements, and the aggregate value of each tax
13    incentive, based on information provided by the Department
14    of Revenue, for each HOPE Zone.
15        (2) To adopt all necessary rules and regulations to
16    carry out the purposes of this Act in accordance with The
17    Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
18        (3) To assist municipalities and counties in obtaining
19    federal status as an Enterprise Zone.
20    (b) Specific duties:
21        (1) The Department shall provide information and
22    appropriate assistance to persons desiring to locate and
23    engage in business in a HOPE Zone, to persons engaged in
24    business in a HOPE Zone, and to designated Zone
25    organizations operating there.
26        (2) The Department shall, in cooperation with

 

 

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1    appropriate units of local government and State agencies,
2    coordinate and streamline existing State business
3    assistance programs and permit and license application
4    procedures for HOPE Zone businesses.
5        (3) The Department shall publicize existing tax
6    incentives and economic development programs within the
7    Zone and upon request, offer technical assistance in
8    abatement and alternative revenue source development to
9    local units of government which have HOPE Zones within
10    their jurisdiction.
11        (4) The Department shall work together with the
12    responsible State and federal agencies to promote the
13    coordination of other relevant programs, including, but
14    not limited to, housing, community and economic
15    development, small business, banking, financial
16    assistance, and employment training programs which are
17    carried on in a HOPE Zone.
18        (5) In order to stimulate employment opportunities for
19    Zone residents, the Department, in cooperation with the
20    Department of Human Services and the Department of
21    Employment Security, is to initiate a test of the following
22    2 programs within the 12 month period following designation
23    and approval by the Department of the first HOPE zones: (i)
24    the use of aid to families with dependent children benefits
25    payable under Article IV of the Illinois Public Aid Code,
26    General Assistance benefits payable under Article VI of the

 

 

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1    Illinois Public Aid Code, the unemployment insurance
2    benefits payable under the Unemployment Insurance Act as
3    training or employment subsidies leading to unsubsidized
4    employment; and (ii) a program for voucher reimbursement of
5    the cost of training Zone residents eligible under the
6    Targeted Jobs Tax Credit provisions of the Internal Revenue
7    Code for employment in private industry. These programs
8    shall not be designed to subsidize businesses, but are
9    intended to open up job and training opportunities not
10    otherwise available. Nothing in this paragraph (5) shall be
11    deemed to require Zone businesses to utilize these
12    programs. These programs should be designed (i) for those
13    individuals whose opportunities for job-finding are
14    minimal without program participation; (ii) to minimize
15    the period of benefit collection by such individuals; and
16    (iii) to accelerate the transition of those individuals to
17    unsubsidized employment. The Department is to seek
18    agreement with business, organized labor and the
19    appropriate State Department, and agencies on the design,
20    operation, and evaluation of the test programs.
21    A report with recommendations including representative
22comments of these groups shall be submitted by the Department
23to the Governor and General Assembly not later than 12 months
24after such test programs have commenced, or not later than 3
25months following the termination of such test programs,
26whichever first occurs.
 

 

 

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1    Section 35. State incentives regarding public services and
2physical infrastructure.
3    (a) Industrial development bonds. Priority in the use of
4industrial development bonds issued by the Illinois Finance
5Authority shall be given to businesses located in HOPE Zones.
6    (b) Deposit of State funds by the State Treasurer. The
7State Treasurer is authorized and encouraged to place deposits
8of State funds with financial institutions doing business in
9HOPE Zones.
 
10    Section 40. State regulatory exemptions in HOPE Zones.
11    (a) The Department shall conduct an ongoing review of such
12agency rules and regulations that may be identified by the
13Department as businesses and preliminarily appearing to the
14Department to:
15        (i) affect the conduct of business, industry, and
16    commerce;
17        (ii) impose excessive costs on either the creation or
18    conduct of such businesses; and
19        (iii) inhibit the development and expansions of
20    businesses within HOPE Zones.
21    The Department shall conduct hearings, pursuant to public
22notice, to solicit public comment on such identified rules and
23regulations as part of this review process.
24    (b) No later than August 1 of each calendar year, the

 

 

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1Department shall publish in the Illinois Register a list of
2such rules and regulations identified under subsection (a). The
3Department shall transmit a copy of the list to each agency
4which has adopted rules or regulations on the list.
5    (c) Within 90 days of the publication of the list by the
6Department, each agency which adopted rules or regulations
7identified therein shall file a written report with the
8Department detailing for each identified rule or regulation:
9        (i) the need or justification;
10        (ii) whether the rule or regulation is mandated by
11    State or federal law, or is discretionary, and to what
12    extent;
13        (iii) a synopsis of the history of the rule, including
14    any internal agency review after its original adoption; and
15        (iv) any appropriate explanation of its relationship
16    to other regulatory requirements.
17    The adopting agency shall also include any available data,
18analysis, and studies concerning the economic impact of the
19identified rules and regulations. The agency responses shall be
20public records.
21    (d) No later than January 1 of the following calendar year,
22the Department shall file proposed rules exempting businesses
23within HOPE Zones from those agency rules and regulations
24contained in the published list, for which the Department finds
25that the job creation or business development incentives for
26HOPE Zone development engendered by the exemption outweigh the

 

 

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1need and justification for the rule or regulation. In making
2its findings, the Department shall consider all information,
3data, and opinions submitted to it by the public, as well as by
4adopting agencies, as well as information otherwise available
5to it.
6    (e) The proposed rules and regulations adopted by the
7Department shall be in the form of amendments to the existing
8rules and regulations to be affected, and shall be subject to
9the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
10    (f) Upon its effective date, any exempting rule or
11regulation of the Department shall supersede the exempted
12agency rule or regulation in accordance with the terms of the
13exemption. Such exemptions may apply only to businesses within
14HOPE Zones during the effective term of the respective Zones.
15Agencies may not adopt emergency rules to circumvent an
16exemption effected by a Department exemption rule; any such
17emergency rules shall not be effective within HOPE Zones to the
18extent inconsistent with the terms of such an exemption.
 
19    Section 45. State and local regulatory alternatives.
20    (a) Agencies may provide in their rules and regulations for
21(i) the exemption of businesses within HOPE Zones; or (ii)
22modifications or alternatives specifically applicable to
23businesses within HOPE Zones, which impose less stringent
24standards or alternative standards for compliance, including
25performance-based standards as a substitute for specific

 

 

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1mandates of methods, procedures, or equipment.
2    Such exemptions, modifications, or alternatives shall be
3effected by rule or regulation adopted in accordance with the
4Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The agency adopting
5exemptions, modifications, or alternatives shall file with its
6proposed rule or regulation its findings that the proposed rule
7or regulation provides economic incentives within HOPE Zones
8which promote the purposes of this Act, and which, to the
9extent they include any exemptions or reductions in regulatory
10standards or requirements, outweigh the need or justification
11for the existing rule or regulation.
12    (b) If any agency adopts a rule or regulation under
13subsection (a) of this Section affecting a rule or regulation
14contained on the list published by the Department under Section
1535 of this Act, prior to the completion of the rule making
16process for the Department's rules under that Section, the
17agency shall immediately transmit a copy of its proposed rule
18or regulation to the Department, together with a statement of
19reasons as to why the Department should defer to the agency's
20proposed rule or regulation. Agency rules adopted under
21subsection (a) of this Section shall, however, be subject to
22the exemption rules and regulations of the Department adopted
23under Section 35 of this Act.
24    (c) The county or municipality containing a HOPE Zone may
25modify all local ordinances and regulations regarding (1)
26zoning; (2) licensing; (3) building codes, excluding however,

 

 

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1any regulations treating building defects; and (4) rent control
2and price controls; except for the minimum wage.
3Notwithstanding any shorter statute of limitation to the
4contrary, actions against any contractor or architect who
5designs, constructs, or rehabilitates a building or structure
6in a HOPE Zone in accordance with local standards specifically
7applicable within Zones which have been relaxed may be
8commenced within 10 years from the time of beneficial occupancy
9of the building or use of the structure.
 
10    Section 100. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by
11changing Section 216 as follows:
 
12    (35 ILCS 5/216)
13    Sec. 216. Credit for wages paid to ex-felons.
14    (a) For each taxable year beginning on or after January 1,
152007, each taxpayer is entitled to a credit against the tax
16imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act
17in an amount equal to 5% of qualified wages paid by the
18taxpayer during the taxable year to one or more Illinois
19residents who are qualified ex-offenders. The total credit
20allowed to a taxpayer with respect to each qualified
21ex-offender may not exceed $1,500 for all taxable years, except
22that a taxpayer operating a business in a HOPE Zone under the
23Community Renewal and Revitalization Act shall be allowed a
24total credit up to $3,000 with respect to each qualified

 

 

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1ex-offender for all taxable years. For partners, shareholders
2of Subchapter S corporations, and owners of limited liability
3companies, if the liability company is treated as a partnership
4for purposes of federal and State income taxation, there shall
5be allowed a credit under this Section to be determined in
6accordance with the determination of income and distributive
7share of income under Sections 702 and 704 and Subchapter S of
8the Internal Revenue Code.
9    (b) For purposes of this Section, "qualified wages":
10        (1) includes only wages that are subject to federal
11    unemployment tax under Section 3306 of the Internal Revenue
12    Code, without regard to any dollar limitation contained in
13    that Section;
14        (2) does not include any amounts paid or incurred by an
15    employer for any period to any qualified ex-offender for
16    whom the employer receives federally funded payments for
17    on-the-job training of that qualified ex-offender for that
18    period; and
19        (3) includes only wages attributable to service
20    rendered during the one-year period beginning with the day
21    the qualified ex-offender begins work for the employer.
22    If the taxpayer has received any payment from a program
23established under Section 482(e)(1) of the federal Social
24Security Act with respect to a qualified ex-offender, then, for
25purposes of calculating the credit under this Section, the
26amount of the qualified wages paid to that qualified

 

 

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1ex-offender must be reduced by the amount of the payment.
2    (c) For purposes of this Section, "qualified ex-offender"
3means any person who:
4        (1) has been convicted of a crime in this State or of
5    an offense in any other jurisdiction, not including any
6    offense or attempted offense that would subject a person to
7    registration under the Sex Offender Registration Act;
8        (2) was sentenced to a period of incarceration in an
9    Illinois adult correctional center; and
10        (3) was hired by the taxpayer within 5 3 years after
11    being released from an Illinois adult correctional center.
12    (d) In no event shall a credit under this Section reduce
13the taxpayer's liability to less than zero. If the amount of
14the credit exceeds the tax liability for the year, the excess
15may be carried forward and applied to the tax liability of the
165 taxable years following the excess credit year. The tax
17credit shall be applied to the earliest year for which there is
18a tax liability. If there are credits for more than one year
19that are available to offset a liability, the earlier credit
20shall be applied first.
21    (e) This Section is exempt from the provisions of Section
22250.
23(Source: P.A. 98-165, eff. 8-5-13.)
 
24    Section 105. The Small Business Job Creation Tax Credit Act
25is amended by changing Sections 25 and 30 as follows:
 

 

 

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1    (35 ILCS 25/25)
2    Sec. 25. Tax credit.
3    (a) Subject to the conditions set forth in this Act, an
4applicant is entitled to a credit against payment of taxes
5withheld under Section 704A of the Illinois Income Tax Act:
6        (1) for new employees who participated as
7    worker-trainees in the Put Illinois to Work Program during
8    2010:
9            (A) in the first calendar year ending on or after
10        the date that is 6 months after December 31, 2010, or
11        the date of hire, whichever is later. Under this
12        subparagraph, the applicant is entitled to one-half of
13        the credit allowable for each new employee who is
14        employed for at least 6 months after the date of hire;
15        and
16            (B) in the first calendar year ending on or after
17        the date that is 12 months after December 31, 2010, or
18        the date of hire, whichever is later. Under this
19        subparagraph, the applicant is entitled to one-half of
20        the credit allowable for each new employee who is
21        employed for at least 12 months after the date of hire;
22         (2) for all other new employees, in the first calendar
23    year ending on or after the date that is 12 months after
24    the date of hire of a new employee. The credit shall be
25    allowed as a credit to an applicant for each full-time

 

 

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1    employee hired during the incentive period that results in
2    a net increase in full-time Illinois employees, where the
3    net increase in the employer's full-time Illinois
4    employees is maintained for at least 12 months.
5    (b) The Department shall make credit awards under this Act
6to further job creation.
7    (c) The credit shall be claimed for the first calendar year
8ending on or after the date on which the certificate is issued
9by the Department.
10    (d) The credit shall not exceed $2,500 per new employee
11hired; however, businesses operating within HOPE Zones under
12the Community Renewal and Revitalization Act shall be allowed a
13credit up to $5,000 per new employee hired.
14    (e) The net increase in full-time Illinois employees,
15measured on an annual full-time equivalent basis, shall be the
16total number of full-time Illinois employees of the applicant
17on the final day of the incentive period, minus the number of
18full-time Illinois employees employed by the employer on the
19first day of that same incentive period. For purposes of the
20calculation, an employer that begins doing business in this
21State during the incentive period, as determined by the
22Director, shall be treated as having zero Illinois employees on
23the first day of the incentive period.
24    (f) The net increase in the number of full-time Illinois
25employees of the applicant under subsection (e) must be
26sustained continuously for at least 12 months, starting with

 

 

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1the date of hire of a new employee during the incentive period.
2Eligibility for the credit does not depend on the continuous
3employment of any particular individual. For purposes of this
4subsection (f), if a new employee ceases to be employed before
5the completion of the 12-month period for any reason, the net
6increase in the number of full-time Illinois employees shall be
7treated as continuous if a different new employee is hired as a
8replacement within a reasonable time for the same position.
9    (g) The Department shall promulgate rules to enable an
10applicant for which a PEO has been contracted to issue W-2s and
11make payment of taxes withheld under Section 704A of the
12Illinois Income Tax Act for new employees to retain the benefit
13of tax credits to which the applicant is otherwise entitled
14under this Act.
15(Source: P.A. 96-888, eff. 4-13-10; 96-1498, eff. 1-18-11;
1697-636, eff. 6-1-12; 97-1052, eff. 8-23-12.)
 
17    (35 ILCS 25/30)
18    Sec. 30. Maximum amount of credits allowed. The Department
19shall limit the monetary amount of credits awarded under this
20Act to no more than $100,000,000 $50,000,000. If applications
21for a greater amount are received, credits shall be allowed on
22a first-come-first-served basis, based on the date on which
23each properly completed application for a certificate of
24eligibility is received by the Department. If more than one
25certificate of eligibility is received on the same day, the

 

 

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1credits will be awarded based on the time of submission for
2that particular day.
3(Source: P.A. 96-888, eff. 4-13-10.)