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House of Representatives > House Research > Property Taxes > Tax Increment Financing
Hazardous substances subdistricts are a TIF financing mechanism that allows use of the original tax capacity in a TIF district to pay for the cost of clean-up of pollution and contamination. Subdistricts also allow extension of a TIF district’s duration to permit recovery of pollution clean-up costs for the subdistrict area.
Hazardous substance subdistricts are unique entities under the TIF law. Three factors distinguish them:
Increments from a hazardous substance subdistrict may be collected for the lesser of
This period begins to run after the subdistrict is certified and begins to generate increments higher than in the year of certification of the subdistrict. Unlike the other TIF duration limits, the first year of increment does count. Thus, the maximum limit is 25 years of increment (not 26 years, as is the case with housing and redevelopment districts).
A subdistrict must be created in another, regular TIF district. The duration limit for the subdistrict operates independently of the duration limit for the overlying or host district. The duration limit of the subdistrict only limits the ability to collect increments that result from the “write-down” of original tax capacity. Creation of a subdistrict may extend the duration for parcels of the host district in subdistrict. Minn. Stat. § 469.176, subd. 1e.
A hazardous substance subdistrict must be located in a TIF district. A subdistrict may not be created as a stand-alone district. Minn. Stat. § 469.175, subd. 7(a). The subdistrict is limited to parcels that:
An area must meet three basic requirements to qualify as a hazardous substance site.
These increments may be used only for four purposes relative to properties in the subdistrict:
Parcels in a hazardous substance subdistrict can generate two types of increments:
The distinction between these types of increments can be confusing. The calculations for an example parcel illustrate the distinctions between the two types of increments. Assume that a parcel has a tax capacity of $100,000 and clean-up costs of $5,000,000. The parcel pays $125,000 in annual taxes (i.e., the local tax rate is 125%). The parcel is certified as part of a redevelopment district and hazardous substance subdistrict. The parcel is cleaned up and a new building is built and the total tax capacity of the parcel increases to $400,000. The total taxes paid after the development are $500,000. The table summarizes the division between the two types of increment. Row #5 is the redevelopment district increment and row #6 is the subdistrict increment. This increment would, in all cases, be subject to the spending restrictions. After the end of the legal duration limit of the redevelopment district, the amount displayed in row #7 (total increment for the parcel) would be subject to the subdistrict spending rules as increment during the period of the extended subdistrict.
| Hazardous Substance Subdistrict Example Calculation | |
| 1. Original tax capacity of redevelopment district | $100,000 |
| 2. Cost of removal and remedial actions | $5,000,000 |
| 3. Original tax capacity of subdistrict (= 1 – 2 but not < 0) | 0 |
| 4. Current tax capacity of parcel | $400,000 |
| 5. Captured tax capacity of redevelopment district (= 4 – 1) | $300,000 |
| 6. Captured tax capacity of subdistrict (= 1 – 3) | $100,000 |
| 7. Local tax rate | 125% |
| 8. Redevelopment district increments (= 5 * 7) | $375,000 |
| 9. Hazardous substance subdistrict increments (= 6 * 7) | $125,000 |
| 10. Total increment (= 5 + 6) | $400,000 |
The subdistrict law has been used infrequently. The law does not require reporting on the creation of hazardous substance subdistricts, since they are not a separate type of district. As a result, the State Auditor does not have data on the number of subdistricts created. From the Department of Revenue’s TIF Supplement, 26 subdistricts were identified for taxes payable in 2008.
November 2009