Connecticut 2022 2022 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB05505 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/26/2022

                     
Researcher: RP 	Page 1 	4/26/22 
 
 
 
OLR Bill Analysis 
HB 5505 
Emergency Certification  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING CERTAIN AEROSPACE MANUFACTURING 
PROJECTS.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill authorizes the Department of Economic and Community 
Development (DECD) commissioner to enter into an assistance 
agreement with an eligible aerospace company that intends to take on a 
qualifying helicopter production project in Connecticut. The agreement 
may provide the company with up to $50 million or $75 million in total 
tax benefits over its term, depending on whether it enters into federal 
contracts for one or two helicopter programs, respectively. These tax 
benefits may allow the company to first offset its sales and use tax 
liability and, if applicable, claim a corporation business tax credit, up to 
specified limits, for each year from FYs 23 to 32 (referred to as 
“compliance years” in the bill). 
Among other things, the eligible company must (1) have a wholly 
owned subsidiary with its headquarters and production facilities in 
Connecticut, (2) operate its primary helicopter production facility for its 
current U.S. government helicopter programs here, and (3) employ at 
least 7,000 people in the state. The qualifying project (i.e., “aerospace 
manufacturing project”) must, among other things, require the 
company to undertake and maintain primary production of helicopters 
in Connecticut under one or more future federal contracts. 
Under the bill, the commissioner must first certify that the company’s 
aerospace manufacturing project meets specified criteria, including 
agreeing to minimum requirements for total employment, average 
employee wages, supplier spend, and capital expenditures, that 
continue through at least June 30, 2042. Once certified, the commissioner 
may enter into an assistance agreement with the company that has a  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 2 	4/26/22 
 
minimum 20-year term.  
Under the bill, if the DECD commissioner determines that the 
company fails to meet any of the minimum requirements during FYs 23-
32, the company must repay the tax benefit that it used for that year and 
any penalty established under the assistance agreement. The bill also 
establishes a framework for recapturing these tax benefits from FYs 33-
42 if the company does not meet the specified thresholds. 
Lastly, the bill authorizes the DECD commissioner to revise the 
assistance agreement’s terms to address delays preventing the company 
from entering into these production contracts by June 30, 2024. This may 
include changing the agreement’s timing, minimum requirements, and 
recapture period. 
EFFECTIVE DATE: Upon passage 
ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA 
Eligible Taxpayers 
Under the bill, a taxpayer qualifies for the bill’s tax benefits if it is an 
aerospace company with a place of business or wholly owned 
subsidiary headquartered in Connecticut, including any subsidiaries 
and affiliates it or its wholly owned subsidiary owns. The company 
must also meet the following requirements when it applies to DECD for 
certification: 
1. employ at least 7,000 people in Connecticut; 
2. operate its primary helicopter production facility for its current 
federal programs here; 
3. plan to bid on a helicopter production contract or contracts under 
one or more federal programs; and 
4. have a wholly owned subsidiary with headquarters and 
production facilities in Connecticut before the bill’s passage. 
Eligible Aerospace Manufacturing Project 
An “eligible aerospace manufacturing project” is one involving  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 3 	4/26/22 
 
helicopter production in Connecticut that, if certified by the DECD 
commissioner, will require the following: 
1. primary helicopter production to be performed in Connecticut 
for current federal programs specified in the assistance 
agreement, as of the date specified in the agreement; 
2. during the assistance agreement’s term, undertaking and 
maintaining primary helicopter production in Connecticut for 
one or more of the future federal programs specified in the 
agreement under production contracts the eligible taxpayer 
enters into after the bill’s passage; and 
3. minimum employment, wage, supplier spend, and capital 
expenditure requirements by the eligible taxpayer through at 
least June 30, 2042. 
Under the bill “production” means the various operations related to 
completing a helicopter, including procurement, engineering, 
manufacturing, assembly, integration, and testing. 
Certifying Project Eligibility 
DECD must certify that the aerospace manufacturing project meets 
the bill’s criteria before it may enter into an assistance agreement with 
the company. Any company seeking certification must apply to the 
commissioner in a form acceptable to him and include information he 
prescribes, including a detailed plan outlining the project, its term, and 
estimated expenditures. The commissioner may also require the 
company to provide any additional information he needs to certify the 
company’s eligibility.  
Under the bill, only the DECD commissioner may decide if a project 
meets the bill’s eligibility criteria. His authority to do so is neither a 
waiver of the state’s sovereign immunity nor an authorization for a 
company to sue the state if he denies its application. 
ASSISTANCE AGREEMENT 
Once the DECD commissioner certifies the company’s aerospace  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 4 	4/26/22 
 
manufacturing project, the bill authorizes him to enter into an assistance 
agreement with a term of at least 20 years. Under this agreement 
(including any amendments or extensions made to it), the commissioner 
may agree to provide the company tax benefits for meeting minimum 
annual requirements and to further induce the company to enter into an 
aerospace manufacturing project. These benefits may allow the 
company to first offset its sales and use tax liability for the 
corresponding compliance year and, if applicable, claim a corporation 
business tax credit, as described below. Under the bill, a “compliance 
year” covers the same period as a state fiscal year (i.e., July 1 to June 30), 
from FY 23 to FY 32. 
The bill prohibits the commissioner from entering into any assistance 
agreement under the bill after January 31, 2023. 
Agreement’s Required Content 
The agreement must specify the conditions the company must meet 
to receive the benefits. These include requiring the company to commit 
to (1) maintaining its wholly owned subsidiary’s headquarters (or its 
successor’s) in Connecticut, (2) operating its primary helicopter 
production facility for current federal government programs here, and 
(3) undertaking and maintaining its primary helicopter production for 
any future federal government programs here.  
The agreement must also: 
1. describe the project and indicate how long it will take the 
company to complete it; 
2. establish the minimum requirements the company must meet in 
each compliance year, as described below; 
3. identify the amount of sales and use tax offsets and corporation 
business tax credits for which the company is eligible for each 
compliance year if it meets these minimum requirements; 
4. establish the terms and conditions for repaying the tax offsets and 
paying any penalties for failing to comply with the agreement;  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 5 	4/26/22 
 
5. specify how the company must notify the commissioner of any 
disputes under the agreement; and 
6. include any other terms and conditions the commissioner 
requires. 
Benefit Period 
The agreement must require the company to earn and use the tax 
benefits during the first eight years of any federal helicopter production 
contract, but no later than the “benefit period.” Under the bill, the 
benefit period runs from the bill’s effective date to June 30, 2032. 
Dispute Resolution 
 The bill allows the company to sue the state in Hartford Superior 
Court if it disputes a claim under the assistance agreement. The 
company must (1) first notify the DECD commissioner as the agreement 
requires and (2) bring the action within two years after providing this 
notice. The bill reserves all legal defenses to the state except sovereign 
immunity. 
Conflicts With Other Statutes 
The bill specifies that the agreement’s provisions supersede any 
conflicting laws (1) limiting the amount of assistance the commissioner 
may award under the Manufacturing Assistance Act (MAA), (2) 
requiring businesses to provide security for any MAA financing they 
receive, and (3) requiring legislative approval for economic 
development assistance exceeding specified thresholds. 
Allocation Notice 
Under the bill, after the DECD commissioner and company execute 
the assistance agreement, the commissioner must issue an allocation 
notice indicating the (1) maximum amount of sales and use tax offset 
and refundable tax credit available to the company for the benefit period 
and (2) requirements the company must meet to qualify for them. The 
notice must certify to the company that it may claim the offsets and 
credits if it meets the specified requirements.  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 6 	4/26/22 
 
Revisions to the Agreement 
The bill allows the commissioner to revise the assistance agreement’s 
terms to address a delay, not caused by the company, that prevents it 
from entering into one or more production contracts by June 30, 2024. 
The revisions may include changes to the timing of the (1) benefit 
period, (2) compliance years, (3) contract years (i.e., years following the 
benefit period where the company must continue to meet certain 
requirements to avoid benefit recapture), (4) minimum requirements 
(see below), and (5) recapture period. They may also include other 
conforming changes, so long as the project tax benefit must be earned 
and used during the production contract’s first eight years. 
The bill also authorizes the commissioner to periodically amend, 
supplement, or modify the agreement’s terms as long as the changes are 
consistent with the bill’s provisions. 
MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS 
The bill establishes the minimum conditions the company must meet 
during each compliance year to qualify for the incentives for each of 
these years (i.e., “minimum requirements”). These include the 
following: 
1. maintaining its wholly owned subsidiary’s headquarters in 
Connecticut; 
2. maintaining and operating the company’s primary helicopter 
production facility for its current federal government programs 
here;  
3. undertaking and maintaining in Connecticut its primary 
production for helicopters that will be produced (a) during the 
assistance agreement’s term under one or more of the future 
federal government programs specified in the agreement and (b) 
under production contracts entered into after the bill’s passage; 
4. maintaining diversity and workforce training programs 
according to the agreement’s terms; and  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 7 	4/26/22 
 
5. achieving the employee, average wage, supplier spend, and 
capital expenditure requirements for compliance years 23-32, as 
described below. 
Employee Requirement 
Under the bill, the employee requirement the company must achieve 
depends on whether it enters into one or two of the federal helicopter 
production contracts specified in the assistance agreement. If it enters 
into a contract for one federal program, it must have at least 7,375 full-
time employees in Connecticut on average for each compliance year 
(i.e., employees working at least 35 hours per week, excluding 
temporary or seasonal workers or anyone who does not receive a federal 
W-2 form from the company). If it enters into contracts for two federal 
programs, it must have at least 7,500 full-time employees for each year, 
on average. 
The average number of full-time employees for each compliance year 
is calculated by adding the number of these employees at the end of each 
quarter and dividing the total by four. 
Average Wage Requirement 
Under the bill, the company’s average annual wage for full-time 
employees in Connecticut must be no less than the amounts specified in 
the assistance agreement.  
Supplier Spend Requirement 
The bill requires the wholly owned subsidiary, or the company on the 
subsidiary’s behalf, to annually spend at least the following amounts 
with supply companies in Connecticut (i.e., total annual spend): 
1. $300 million for compliance years 23 and 24, 
2. $410 million for compliance years 25-29, and 
3. $470 million for compliance years 29-32. 
Purchases count toward the total annual spend if the supply 
company is a commercial business with a “regular place of business” in  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 8 	4/26/22 
 
Connecticut and supplies goods and services needed to support the 
company’s operations or product manufacturing. Supply companies do 
not include local, state, or federal revenue collection or taxing entities.  
Under the bill, the supply company has a regular place of business in 
Connecticut if it operates a bona fide office, factory, warehouse, or other 
space in the state at which it regularly and systematically does business 
in its own name through its employees (1) in regular attendance there 
and (2) carrying on its business in its own name. Regular places of 
business do not include (1) the location of a supply company’s statutory 
agent for service of process; (2) temporary offices used only for the 
duration of the contract; and (3) offices maintained, occupied, or used 
by a supplier’s affiliate. 
If an expenditure qualifies for both the supplier spend and capital 
expenditures requirement described below, the company may choose to 
count the expenditure toward either of the categories, but not both. 
Capital Expenditure Requirement 
The bill requires that the wholly owned subsidiary achieve annual 
capital expenditures in Connecticut that meet the minimum amounts 
shown in Table 1. 
Table 1: Capital Expenditures Requirement for Compliance Years 23-32 
Compliance Year Minimum 
Amount (millions) 
23 $70.2 
24 71.1 
25 72.9 
26 73.8 
27 75.6 
28 77.4 
29 78.3 
30 80.1 
31 81.9 
32 83.7 
 
“Capital expenditures” are the bona fide costs to the company’s 
wholly owned subsidiary and its subsidiaries for the following:  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 9 	4/26/22 
 
1. acquiring land, buildings, machinery, equipment, or any 
combination thereof; 
2. making site and infrastructure improvements; 
3. planning; 
4. spending on eligible research and development (R&D), including 
developing new products and markets (i.e., spending eligible for 
the state’s R&D tax credit); and 
5. developing diversification strategies, including preparing plans 
for regional diversification strategies and hiring consultants 
needed to complete these plans and strategies. 
TAX BENEFITS 
The bill authorizes two forms of tax benefits under the assistance 
agreement: a sales and use tax offset and refundable corporation 
business tax credit, as described below. Generally, the sales and use tax 
offsets must be claimed first; the company may claim a corporation 
business tax credit only if it is unable to use all of its allotted offsets. 
The bill caps the total benefit that may accrue to the company in the 
form of these incentives (i.e., project tax benefit) over the assistance 
agreement’s term at (1) $6.25 million for each compliance year ($50 
million total) or (2) $9.375 million for each compliance year ($75 million 
total), depending on whether the company enters into federal contracts 
for one or two helicopter programs, respectively. 
Sales and Use Tax Offset 
Certification. The bill requires that the assistance agreement 
authorize a sales and use tax offset for the company. After the federal 
helicopter production contract takes effect, the company must annually 
certify its actual employment, wages, supplier spend, and capital 
expenditure amounts to the DECD commissioner under the assistance 
agreement’s requirements and subject to a third-party audit performed 
according to DECD’s audit guide. The company must do so within 60 
days after each compliance year ends or by an extended date, if  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 10 	4/26/22 
 
requested by the company and approved by the commissioner.  
Calculating and Claiming the Offset. The bill requires the DECD 
commissioner, in consultation with the Department of Revenue Services 
(DRS) commissioner, to determine the form, timing, and manner of 
providing the offset. The company must calculate the offset amounts 
after deducting any sales and use tax exemptions applicable to its 
purchase. This offset does not limit the company’s ability to claim the 
sales and use tax exemptions for which it otherwise qualifies under 
existing law (e.g., existing exemptions for aerospace companies, see 
BACKGROUND). 
If the audit (see above) shows that the company claimed an offset that 
exceeds the allowable amount, the company must repay the offset as 
specified in the assistance agreement. After the DECD commissioner 
receives the company’s certification at the end of each compliance year, 
it must tell the DRS commissioner whether the company (1) has met all 
of the minimum requirements necessary to qualify for the offset or (2) 
must repay the offset amount in accordance with the assistance 
agreement’s terms. 
Refundable Tax Credit 
Under the bill, if the audit shows that the company is unable to use 
all of the offset for a compliance year, then the agreement must 
authorize the company to claim the excess amount as a refundable 
corporation business tax credit. The credit may be for up to $5 million 
for each compliance year and $45 million total over the agreement’s 
term. 
The company must claim the refundable credit on its corporate tax 
return for the income year that ends during the compliance year. The 
bill exempts the credit from statutes that (1) limit the total amount of tax 
credits a corporation may use to reduce its corporation business tax 
liability and (2) specify the order in which corporations must claim their 
eligible credits. 
Carry Forwards. Under the bill, if the excess amount is greater than  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 11 	4/26/22 
 
$5 million for any year, the company may carry forward the excess to 
future compliance years until it is fully used, but no later than June 30, 
2032.  
The company may first use the carried forward amount to offset its 
sales and use tax liability and then as refundable corporation business 
tax credits of up to $5 million for each compliance year. The company 
must use the carry forward amount before applying any sales and use 
tax offset it earns in any future compliance year. 
Credit Voucher. The bill requires DECD to issue the company a 
credit voucher that establishes the refundable credit amount allowed 
and income year for which it may be claimed. It must do so within 30 
days after receiving the audit described above, or as provided in the 
assistance agreement, during each year of the benefit period. The 
commissioner must annually provide the DRS commissioner with a 
report detailing these credit vouchers. 
REPAYMENT AND RECAPTURE 
Repayment During Compliance Years 
Under the bill, if the DECD commissioner determines that the 
company failed to meet any of the minimum requirements for a 
compliance year, the company must repay any project tax benefit that it 
used for that year and pay any penalty established under the assistance 
agreement. 
Recapture During Contract Years 
The bill subjects the sales and use tax offset and refundable tax credit 
to potential recapture for 10 years, from FYs 33 to 42. Specifically, the 
recapture applies during each 12-month period from July 1, 2032, 
through June 30, 2042 (i.e., contract years), if the company fails to meet 
the following requirements as detailed in the assistance agreement: 
1. meeting the annual threshold for employee head count, average 
wages, supplier spend, and capital expenditures detailed in the 
assistance agreement; 
2. maintaining its wholly owned subsidiary’s headquarters in  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 12 	4/26/22 
 
Connecticut, as described in the assistance agreement; 
3. maintaining and operating the company’s primary helicopter 
production facility for its current federal government programs 
here;  
4. undertaking and maintaining in Connecticut its primary 
helicopter production that will be produced during the assistance 
agreement’s term under one or more of the future federal 
government programs specified in the agreement and entered 
into after the bill’s passage; and 
5. maintaining diversity and workforce training programs 
according to the agreement’s terms. 
For each of these contract years, the bill establishes a targeted and 
minimum job requirement that depends on whether the company enters 
into one or two of the federal helicopter production contracts specified 
in the assistance agreement. Table 2 shows these requirements.  
Table 2: Annual Job Requirements from FY 33-42 
Job Requirement One Program Two Programs 
Minimum Number 6,000 7,000 
Targeted Number 7,250 7,750 
 
For any year in which the number of actual jobs is less than the 
minimum number required, the bill requires the company to repay 10% 
of the aggregate project tax benefits it used (i.e., the “annual recapture 
amount”). This annual recapture amount is prorated at 90% (i.e., 9% of 
the aggregate project tax benefits it used) if the number of actual jobs 
equals or exceeds the minimum but is less than the targeted amount. 
The bill authorizes the DECD commissioner to establish other 
requirements (e.g., wage requirements) that apply to the recapture of 
the remaining 10% of the annual recapture amount. However, the total 
amount of the recapture may not exceed the annual recapture amount. 
  2022HB-05505-R00-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: RP 	Page 13 	4/26/22 
 
BACKGROUND 
Connecticut Strategic Defense Investment Act 
Enacted in 2016 (PA 16-1, Sept. Special Session), this law authorizes a 
similar framework for providing financial incentives to an eligible 
aerospace company engaging in a qualifying helicopter manufacturing 
project in Connecticut. Specifically, the law authorizes DECD to enter 
into an assistance agreement to provide an eligible company with up to 
$140 million in bond-funded grants and $80 million in sales and use tax 
offsets for the manufacturing project over a 14-year term (i.e., July 1, 
2018, to June 30, 2032). In exchange, the company must, among other 
things, maintain minimum levels of employment, payroll, supplier 
spend, and capital expenditures and keep its primary production 
facility and subsidiary’s headquarters in Connecticut. The annual 
amount of incentives the company receives depends on the extent to 
which it meets or exceeds the specified performance requirements (CGS 
§§ 32-4n & -4o).