Pursuant to Arkansas Laws Act 855 of 2019, the Division of Arkansas Heritage through its Arkansas Historic Preservation Program hereby establishes these rules governing the four part application process for which the Owner of a historic Arkansas property may apply for an income tax credit under The Arkansas Major Historic Rehabilitation Income Tax Credit Act.
Arkansas Code Annotated $ 19-5-1150 (Act 855 of 2019) created on the books of the Treasurer of State, the Auditor of State, and the Chief Fiscal Officer of the State, a trust fund known as the "Arkansas Major Historic Rehabilitation Trust Fund".
Arkansas Code Annotated $ 26-51-2601et seq. (Act 855 of 2019), the "Arkansas Major Historic Rehabilitation Income Tax Credit Act", allows a credit against the Arkansas Income Tax Act of 1929, Ark. Code Ann. $$ 26-51-101 - 26-51-2510 and the Insurance Premium Tax levied under $$ 26-57-603 - 26-57-605;
"Act" means Ark. Acts, No. 855 as codified at Arkansas Code Annotated $ 19-5-1150 and at $ 26-51-2601et seq., as such may be amended from time to time.
"AHPP" means the Arkansas Historic Preservation Program, an agency of the Division of Arkansas Heritage ("DAH") under the Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage & Tourism.
"Application" means the Arkansas Major Historic Rehabilitation Tax Credit Application that constitutes a written plan for development and operation of a Rehabilitation project. Applications are submitted in four parts:
"Arkansas Major Historic Rehabilitation Income Tax Credit" means the income tax credit allowed under this subchapter against the income tax imposed by this chapter and the Premium Tax levied under $$ 26-57-601 - 26-57-605;
"Certification of Completion" means a certificate issued by the Division of Arkansas Heritage certifying that a project is a Certified Rehabilitation of an Eligible Property that qualifies for the Arkansas Major Historic Rehabilitation Income Tax Credit;
"Certified Rehabilitation" means the total of appropriate and approved Rehabilitation work on an Eligible Property that results in a substantial rehabilitation of an Eligible Property that has been issued an eligibility certificate.
"Eligible Property" means property that is located in the state that:
"Federal Rehabilitation Tax Credit" means the federal tax credit provided under 26 U.S.C. $ 47, as it existed on January 1, 2009;
"Historic District" means a geographically definable area, urban or rural, that possesses a significant concentration, linkage or continuity of sites, buildings, structures or objects united historically or aesthetically by plan or physical development. A district may also comprise individual elements separated geographically during the period of significance but linked by association or function.
"Holder" means the holder of a Certification of Completion that is:
"Income Tax Credits" means the authorized amount that may be applied against Arkansas income tax or Premium Tax, whether earned by an individual, partnership, limited liability company, S Corporation or Corporation.
"National Register" or "National Register of Historic Places" means the National Register of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects significant in American history, architecture, archeology, engineering, and culture pursuant to section 101(a)(1) of the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as amended. (The procedures of the National Register appear in 36 CFR part 60 et seq.)
"Owner" means a person or an entity that owns Eligible Property and is the initial recipient of the Certification of Completion from the Division of Arkansas Heritage;
"Premium Tax" means a tax levied under Ark. Code Ann. $$ 26-57-603 - 26-57-615;
"Qualified Rehabilitation Expenses" means costs and expenses incurred to complete a Certified Rehabilitation that are Qualified Rehabilitation Expenses under the Federal Rehabilitation Tax Credit or under the Arkansas Major Historic Rehabilitation Income Tax Credit.
"Rehabilitation" means the process of returning a building or buildings to a state of utility, through repair or alteration, which makes possible an efficient use while preserving those portions and features of the building and its site and environment which are significant to its historic, architectural, and cultural values.
Funding Reservation Award: Where funds within the Arkansas Major Historic Rehabilitation Trust Fund are obligated to a specific rehabilitation project which continues to meet progression requirements. Funding awards may not exceed $12 million dollars.
"State Historic Preservation Officer" (SHPO) means the Director of the Division of Arkansas Heritage, or other official designated by the Governor or statute to act as liaison for purposes of administering historic preservation programs within Arkansas.
"Tourism Attraction" means cultural or historical site, recreational or entertainment facility, area of natural phenomenon or scenic beauty, theme park, amusement or entertainment park, indoor or outdoor play or music show, botanical gardens, or cultural or educational centers.
Owners should understand that intent to nominate to the National Register, or amend an existing National Register listing, does not constitute listing in the National Register, nor does it constitute a certification of eligibility as required by law for tax incentives. Owners should further understand that they are proceeding at their own risk. If the property or district is not listed in the National Register for procedural, substantive or other reasons; if the district documentation is not formally amended; or if the historic significance of the property has been lost as a result of alterations or damage, these preliminary determinations of significance will not become final. The State Historic Preservation Officer must nominate the property or the district before the preliminary certification of eligibility can become final.
For buildings individually listed in the National Register, the procedures contained in the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations at 36 CFR part 60 must be followed prior to the move, or the building will be removed from the National Register, will not be considered an Eligible Property, and will have to be renominated to the National Register. The Owner may submit a Part 1 Application in order to receive a preliminary determination from the AHPP of whether a move will cause the property to be removed from the National Register. However, preliminary approval of such a Part 1 application does not satisfy the requirements for property eligibility. The applicant must follow the remaining National Register procedures to ensure that the moved building will remain listed in the National Register and retain its status as an Eligible Property.
If an Owner moves (or proposes to move) a building into a National Register Historic District or moves (or proposes to move) a building elsewhere within a Historic District, a Part 1 Application containing the required information must be submitted. The building to be moved will be evaluated to determine if it contributes to the historic significance of the district both before and after the move.
Upon the approval of Part 2 of the application, a rehabilitation project shall become eligible to apply for the Funding Reservation Award within the Arkansas Major Historic Rehabilitation Trust Fund within the Allocation of Funding Enrollment Period. Funding must be allocated to a project via Part 3 before it may submit Part 4 of its application.
Allocation Priority Score Application will contain the following categories that applicants may request for certification and cumulative scoring;
Primary Prioritization Category (Select up to three to apply for)
Secondary Prioritization Category (Select all applicable)
Applications for the Funding Reservation Award shall be reviewed and Allocation Priority Score Applications scored by the State Historic Preservation Officer in consultation with the Director of the Department of Heritage and the Federal Programs and Tax Credit Manager within the Department of Heritage.
The AHPP shall first have an open reservation application period from 03/01/2024 to 03/31/2024. In this period, major historic rehabilitation projects which have completed Part 1 and Part 2 applications may apply for the allocation of funds. At the conclusion of the application period, the projects shall be scored. No project with a score of less than 100 shall be given a funding allocation. When funding all allocation applications with a score of 100 or greater would cause allocated funds to exceed the amount certified available, the projects shall be ranked, and the highest score shall be given the highest priority. Projects which would cause the allocation of funds to exceed the current certification shall be rolled over to the next open reservation application period for rescoring. No project shall be awarded more that $12 million dollars in funding.
Beginning in Fiscal Year 2025, the Department of Heritage shall have biannual open application periods each July l-31st and January l-31st. In this period, major historic rehabilitation projects which have completed Part 1 and Part 2 applications may apply for Part 3 allocation of funding . At the conclusion of the application period, the Allocation Priority Score Applications shall be scored. No project with a score of less than 100 shall be given funding allocation. When allocating funding for all allocation applications with a score of 100 or greater would, as measured by AHPP, cause the amount of total allocated funds to exceed the amount certified available, the projects shall be ranked, and the highest score shall be given the highest priority. Projects which would cause the total amount of funds allocated via the Part 3 process to exceed the current funding certification shall be rolled over to next open reservation application period for rescoring. No project shall be awarded more than $12 million dollars in funding.
Only projects with a Funding Reservation Award shall be deemed to have completed Part 3 of the application.
Amendments may alter the applicant, scope of the project, cost, timeline for completion, financing, rehabilitation activities, or end use. No amendment may be accepted which materially negates the original primary or secondary prioritization categories of the restoration project. Amendments to the Part 3 Application total rehabilitation cost reservation are acceptable to the extent additional funding is available. The acceptance of any amendment resides in the sole discretion of the AHPP.
Upon receiving a Funding Reservation Award for a specific project, the AHPP shall give the project a date by which the Part 4 application must be submitted to retain the reservation of funds. This date shall consider the scope and difficulty of the project attempted, while encouraging timeliness. If the Part 4 application is not submitted by the required date, the rehabilitation project must reapply for funding allocation.
The AHPP may request evidence of the progression of a specific project at their discretion, but no more often than every 60 days. Acceptable evidence may include permits, drawings, active permit applications, new financial documents, purchase orders, site photographs, or other industry standard evidence of progression. If no material evidence is provided to the AHPP within 90 days of a request, the reservation shall be forfeited.
Forfeited reservation awards will be made available to other applicants to the extent possible. DFA will be notified of any forfeiture of reservation awards for the revocation of the fund obligation.
Fee Size of Rehabilitation
$400 review fee for $1,500,000 or more
Except as otherwise provided herein, an Owner may appeal any decision or action of the State Historic Preservation Officer.
233.04.23 Ark. Code R. 001