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1 (October 17, 2006)

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                                                                   Order  Code  RS21599
                                                              Updated  October  17, 2006



 CRS Report for Congress

               Received through the CRS Web



        Brownfields Tax Incentive Extension

                                Mark  Reisch
                      Analyst  in Environmental  Policy
                Resources,   Science,  and  Industry Division

Summary


     The brownfields tax incentive expired on December 31, 2005. Enacted in 1997,
 the provision allowed a taxpayer to fully deduct the costs of environmental cleanup in
 the year the costs were incurred (called expensing), rather than spreading the costs
 over a period of years (capitalizing). The provision was adopted to stimulate the
 cleanup and development of less seriously contaminated sites by providing a benefit to
 taxpaying developers of brownfield properties. Two bills that received congressional
 attention contained extensions of the provision; in one case (H.R. 4297, P.L. 109-222),
 the bill was dropped in conference, and in the other (H.R. 5970), the bill passed the
 House but failed in the Senate. Nevertheless, in each of its budget proposals since
 FY2003,  the administration has suggested that Congress make the tax incentive
 permanent.

     Information on the extent of use of the brownfields tax incentive cannot be
 determined from federal income tax returns. However, to take advantage of the tax
 break, a developer had to obtain a certification from the state environmental agency that
 the site qualified as a brownfield. CRS surveyed the agencies of all states in 2003 to ask
 how many applications they had received and approved. Twenty-seven states reported
 that they had received brownfield tax incentive applications, for a total of 161
 applications, of which 147 were approved. The other 23 states reported that they
 received no requests for certification.


    The brownfields' tax incentive expired on December 31, 2005. First enacted as part
of the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 (P.L. 105-34), the incentive allowed a taxpayer to
fully deduct the costs of environmental cleanups in the year the costs were incurred
(called expensing), rather than spreading the costs over  a period of  years
(capitalizing). Its purpose was to encourage developers to rehabilitate sites where
environmental contamination stands in the way of bringing unproductive properties back


1 For purposes of the tax incentive, a brownfield site (qualified contaminated site) is a property
held for use in a trade or business, for the production of income, or as inventory where there has
been a release, or threat of release, or disposal of a hazardous substance. Sites on the Superfund
National Priorities List are excluded (26 U.S.C. 198(c)).

       Congressional   Research   Service 4- The Library  of Congress

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