Developers working to clean-up and redevelop brownfields could soon lose a major federal aid – unless advocates work together to save it.
Originally signed into law in 1997 and extended through December 31, 2011, Section 198’s Brownfields Tax Incentive is a tax deduction intended to encourage the cleanup and revitalization of brownfield properties. Under the incentive environmental cleanup costs are fully deductible in the year incurred, rather than capitalized and spread over time. Improvements in 2006 expanded the Incentive to include petroleum cleanup.
The incentive is scheduled to expire at the end of the year, but there’s a chance to save it. The National Brownfields Coalition is asking Congress to extend the Incentive as part of the Family and Business Tax Cut Certainty Act of 2012, more commonly known as the “tax extenders” bill.
Join the call to make brownfields cleanup easier: send a letter to your members of Congress today.
The Incentive is already helping towns put contaminated land back in to productive reuse. In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for example, the Incentive helped make possible the redevelopment of a former industrial site in the city’s historic Martin Luther King Drive Business Improvement District. The site is now home to new commercial and residential space, and has greatly added momentum to efforts within the Business Improvement District.
Congress is due to vote on the tax extenders bill before the end of the year. Now is the time to voice your support for this crucial federal program.
Tell Congress you support brownfield redevelopment: click here to send a letter today.
Coalition allies including NAIOP, the Commercial Real Estate Development Association, the International Council of Shopping Centers, the National Brownfields Association Michigan Chapter, and the Wisconsin Brownfields Study Group have all joined the National Brownfield Coalition’s call for renewal of the program.