District Of Columbia 2023-2024 Regular Session

District Of Columbia Council Bill PR25-1083 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 11/25/2024

                            MURIEL BOWSER 
MAYOR 
November 25, 2024 
The Honorable Phil Mendelson 
Chairman 
Council of the District of Columbia 
John A. Wilson Building 
1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Suite 504 
Washington, DC 20004 
Dear Chairman Mendelson: 
Enclosed for consideration and adoption by the Council of the District of Columbia is a proposed 
resolution entitled “Supermarket Tax Incentive Expansion Approval Resolution of 2024”. 
The resolution will expand the geographic areas in which supermarkets may receive tax 
incentives under the Supermarket Tax Incentive Program (“Program”), established by D.C. 
Official Code § 47-3801. The expansion areas include downtown and the Northeast DC 
neighborhoods of Woodridge, North Michigan Park, Lamond Riggs, Queen’s Chapel, and Fort 
Totten. 
Through the Program, the District provides exemptions from certain taxes and fees to grocery 
stores that locate in specific neighborhoods. The exemptions encourage development and 
investment in areas lacking access to groceries and fresh food.  
I have determined that the Program should be expanded to include downtown because the 
Program’s tax and fee exemptions will support the District’s efforts to add 15,000 residents 
downtown by 2028. For more residents to live downtown, we will need more grocery options. 
However, grocery openings traditionally lag behind housing development—creating a food 
access gap and a disincentive for residents to locate downtown. In addition to our other planning 
efforts, the Program’s tax incentives will combat that lag and make it more attractive for grocers 
to begin investing in downtown. 
Additionally, I have determined that the Program should be expanded to include the Northeast 
neighborhoods of Woodridge, North Michigan Park, Lamond Riggs, Queen’s Chapel, and Fort 
Totten. These neighborhoods have a total population of over 23,000 residents, but only are home 
to a Walmart Supercenter and a Yes! Organic supermarket. Across the District/Maryland border, 
there are a number of national retailers, specialty markets, and local/regional markets that offer a 
variety of grocery options. The expansion of the eligibility area of the Program to includes these 
Northeast neighborhoods will increase the likelihood that these types of food retailers will locate 
in the District, offering our residents an opportunity to more easily access affordable food 
options within their neighborhoods and providing the opportunity to recapture District dollars  which are being spent on groceries outside the District. 
I urge the Council to take prompt and favorable action on the enclosed resolution. 
Sincerely, 
Muriel Bowser 
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at the request of the Mayor 
A PROPOSED RESOLUTION 
IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 
To approve an expansion 
of the eligible area of the supermarket tax incentives provided 	by 
Chapter 38 of Title 4 7 of the District of Columbia Official Code to include census tracts 
47.02, 58.01, 58.02, 59, 94, 95.03, 95.04, 95.05, 95.07, 95.08, 95.09, 101, and 107. 
RESOLVED, 
BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this 
resolution may be cited as the "Supermarket Tax Incentive Expansion Approval Resolution 
of 
2024". 
Sec. 
2. Pursuant to section 47-3801.01 	of the District of Columbia Official Code, the 
Council approves the plan submitted by the Mayor to the Council to expand the eligible area 
of 
the supermarket tax incentives authorized 	by Chapter 38 of Title 47 of the District of Columbia 
Official Code to include census tracts 47.02, 58.01, 58.02, 59, 94, 95.03, 95.04, 95.05, 95.07, 
95.08, 95.09, 95.04, 95.03, 94, 
101, and 107. 
Sec. 
3. Fiscal impact statement. 
The Council adopts the fiscal impact statement 
of the Chief Financial Officer as the fiscal 
impact statement required by section 4a 
of the General Legislative Procedures Act 	of 1975, 
approved October 16, 2006 (120 Stat. 2038; D.C. Official 
Code§ 1-301.47a). 
Sec. 
4. Effective date. 
This resolution shall take effect immediately.  GOVERNMENT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 
Executive Office of the Mayor 
Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development 
Nina Albert 
Deputy Mayor 
John A. Wilson Building | 1350 Pennsylvania Ave, NW, Suite 317 | Washington, DC 20004 
Supermarket Tax Incentive Boundary Expansion Plan 
Pursuant to D.C. Official Code § 47-3801.01, the Mayor has determined that additional areas (the 
“expansion areas”) warrant investment pursuant to Chapter 38 of Title 47 of the D.C. Code (the 
“Supermarket Tax Incentives Program”). 
This plan describes the expansion areas, geographically and otherwise, and provides a detailed 
rationale for extending the tax incentives provided for by the Supermarket Tax Incentives Program 
and an explication of the benefits to be derived for the expansion 	areas and the District as a whole. 
1.  Expansion Areas 
The chart below describes the expansion areas: 
Census Tract Ward 	Location 	Population 
47.02 6 	Downtown 	3,934 
58.01 2 	Downtown 	1,672 
58.02 2 	Downtown 	2,145 
59 6 	Downtown 	2,617 
101 2 	Downtown 	2,699 
107 2 	Downtown 	2,296 
94 5 Woodridge (Northeast) 4,424 
95.03 5 Michigan Park (Northeast) 3,106 
95.04 5 North Michigan Park (Northeast) 3,208 
95.05 4 Lamond Riggs (Northeast) 3,796 
95.07 4 Queen’s Chapel (Northeast) 1,525 
95.08 5 Queen’s Chapel/Fort Totten (Northeast) 4,243 
95.09 5 North Michigan Park (Northeast) 3,194 
2. Downtown Expansion Area 
The area for expansion of eligibility in the downtown area (the “Downtown Expansion Area”) 
is bounded generally by New Hampshire Avenue, NW, to the west, Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, 
to the south, Louisiana Avenue, NW, and North Capitol Street to the east, and Massachusetts 
Avenue, NW , and K Street, NW, to the north. Encompassed in this area are the Downton East, 
Chinatown, Penn Quarter, and 	Golden Triangle neighborhoods and the area traditionally 
known as downtown.  The current population of the Downtown Expansion Area is estimated to be 15,363 residents. These neighborhoods and the traditional downtown area are the focus 
of the District’s Downtown Action Plan, which includes over $400,000,000 in investments, 
including residential, public realm, retail, and economic evolution. 	The goal under the 
Downtown Action Plan is to add 15,000 residents within the expansion area.  The population of the Downtown Expansion A	rea is expected to double over the next 5 years 
as some of the current office buildings convert into residential buildings. Retail and grocery 
openings traditionally lag behind housing development creating a food access gap. To address 
this concern in the development of new housing in downtown, 	there has been a focus on 
incentivizing mixed-use development, which combines housing and retail options, and which 
has been successful in other areas of the District and in other jurisdictions nationwide. By 
making the Supermarket Tax Incentive benefit available in the Downtown Expansion A rea, the 
District will add another tool to incentivize supermarket development and help build a 	robust 
downtown for living, work, and play. 
3. Northeast Expansion Area 
The area for expansion of eligibility in the Northeast area (the “Northeast Expansion Area”) 	is 
bounded generally by North Capitol Street, Blair Road, and Kansas Avenue to the west, Rhode 
Island Avenue, NE, to the south, and Eastern Avenue, NE, 	to the east and the north. 
Encompassed in this area is a total population of 23,496 residents, but only two grocery 
options. Just across the District/Maryland border, however, 	there are a number of national 
retailers, specialty markets, and local/regional markets that offer a wide variety of grocery 
options. This concentration of grocers on major routes into/out of the District 	on the Maryland 
side have become the primary grocers for District residents in this area of Northeast DC.  
The expansion of the Supermarket Tax Incentives Program to the Northeast Expansion Area 
will provide an opportunity to create access to food options directly within these 
neighborhoods. Additionally, expansion of the program, and the creation of additional food 
options, provides the opportunity to recapture District dollars which are being spent on 
groceries outside the District. In addition, by incentivizing grocery store development within 
the Northeast Expansion Area, the District can capitalize on the co-location of grocers with 
major public transportation amenities, including the Fort Totten and Brookland Metrorail 
stations, potentially driving more commuter dollars to be spent within the District. 
4. Benefits to the District 
The proposed expansion of the Supermarket Tax Incentives Program to the Northeast and 	Downtown Expansion Areas will create targeted incentives to attract new grocery stores to the 
downtown and Northeast areas which will benefit both current and future District residents and 	businesses and foster further economic development. The expansion will also 	allow the District 
to capitalize on existing demand for groceries by capturing market share from neighboring 
jurisdictions. As an added benefit, with the strategic location of grocery stores in the two 	expansion areas, the District will be able to attract new spend from the commuter population 	who work and shop downtown, and those who drive through the Northeast corridor on Riggs 
Road, New Hampshire Avenue, and Rhode Island Avenue. This expansion will support the 
District’s commitments to increase food access and affordability, create new jobs within the 
food economy, support economic mobility and growth, and recapture District dollars being 
spent externally.
  Supermarket Tax Incentives Plan Expansion Map 
with District Grocery Stores  2 
 
 
GOVERNMENT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL 
 
 
 
 
 
 
BRIAN L. SCHWALB 
ATTORNEY GENERAL 
 
Legal Counsel Division 
    
 
MEMORANDUM 
 TO:              Tomás Talamante 
 Director 
          Office of Policy and Legislative Affairs 
         FROM:        Megan D. Browder 
                       Deputy Attorney General 
                       Legal Counsel Division DATE: October 18, 2024
 
  
SUBJECT:  Legal Sufficiency Review of the “Supermarket Tax Incentive Expansion Approval Resolution of 2024” 
 AE-24-515
 
_____________________________________________________________________________________ 
This is to Certify that the Office of the Attorney General has reviewed the 
“Supermarket Tax Incentive Expansion Approval Resolution of 2024” and determined that it is 
legally sufficient. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to call me at (202) 724-5524. 
   	_________________________________ 	Megan D. Browder 
                                         Government of the District of Columbia 
Office of the Chief Financial Officer 
 
Glen Lee 
Chief Financial Officer 
 
 
 
 
 
1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Suite 203, Washington, DC 20004 (202)727-2476 
www.cfo.dc.gov 
MEMORANDUM 
 
TO:  The Honorable Phil Mendelson 
 Chairman, Council of the District of Columbia 
 
FROM:   Glen Lee 
 Chief Financial Officer 
 
DATE:   October 17, 2024 
 
SUBJECT:  Fiscal Impact Statement – Supermarket Tax Incentive Expansion 
Approval Resolution of 2024  
 
REFERENCE:  Draft Resolution as provided to the Office of Revenue Analysis on 
September 25, 2024 
 
 
Conclusion 
 
Funds are sufficient in the fiscal year 2025 through fiscal year 2028 budget and financial plan to 
implement the bill.  
 
Background 
 
The Supermarket Tax Incentive (“Incentive”) is an exemption of certain property and sales and use 
taxes for ten years for new retail supermarkets that locate in specified areas. Established in 2000, the 
incentive was initially limited to one of six census tracts or in a Historically Underutilized Business 
Zone (“HUBZone”), which is defined by the United States Small Business Administration (SBA) and 
updated periodically. Legislation enacted in 2021
1 changed the definition of eligible area to include 
neighborhoods with over 20 percent participation in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program 
(SNAP) or other public assistance programs, as well as properties in low-income census tracts where 
residents are more than a half-mile from the nearest supermarket.  
 
To qualify for the Incentive, at least 50 percent of the store’s selling area must be dedicated to at least 
six of these seven categories of food: meats, poultry and seafood, dairy, canned food, frozen food, dry 
goods, and non-alcoholic beverages. The stores must also accept SNAP and the Special Supplemental 
Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) as payment. 
 
1
 Supermarket Tax Incentives Amendment Act of 2021, effective November 13, 2021 (D.C. Law 24-45; 68 DCR 
12567).   The Honorable Phil Mendelson 
FIS: “Supermarket Tax Incentive Expansion Approval Resolution of 2024”, Draft resolution as provided to the 
Office of Revenue Analysis on September 25, 2024 
Page 2 of 2 
 
Eligible stores qualify for 10 years of exemption from real property taxes, the food merchant license 
fee, personal property taxes, and sales and use taxes on the purchase of all building materials used in 
constructing the store.  
 
The 2021 legislation also granted the Mayor the authority to propose new areas to be included in the 
Incentive and established a passive approval process for the Council. This approval resolution from 
the Mayor proposes to expand the Incentive to include certain census tracts in areas of Downtown 
and Northeast DC. The census tracts in the Downtown area include the neighborhoods of Downtown 
East, Chinatown, Penn Quarter, and Golden Triangle. The census tracts in the Northeast DC area 
include the neighborhoods of Woodridge, Michigan Park, North Michigan Park, Lamond Riggs, 
Queen’s Chapel, and Fort Totten.  
 
Financial Plan Impact  
 
Funds are sufficient in the fiscal year 2025 through fiscal year 2028 budget and financial plan to 
implement the bill. No planned supermarkets are under construction in the newly eligible areas. 
Because of the lead time required to plan and open a supermarket, the expansion of the eligible areas 
to additional neighborhoods in Downtown and Northeast DC is not likely to significantly change the 
number of supermarkets taking advantage of the credit during the financial plan period.