Massachusetts 2023-2024 Regular Session

Massachusetts Senate Bill S2406 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 06/15/2023

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SENATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 2406
Senate, June 15, 2023 -- Text of the Senate amendment to the House Bill to improve the 
Commonwealth’s competitiveness, affordability, and equity (House, No. 3770) (being the text of 
Senate, No. 2397, printed as amended)
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_______________
In the One Hundred and Ninety-Third General Court
(2023-2024)
_______________
1 SECTION 1. Section 5K of chapter 59 of the General Laws, as appearing in the 2020 
2Official Edition, is hereby amended by striking out, in lines 14 and 39, the figure “$1,500” and 
3inserting in place thereof, in each instance, the following figure:- $2,000.
4 SECTION 2. Said chapter 59 is hereby further amended by inserting after section 5N the 
5following section:-
6 Section 5O. (a) In any city or town that accepts this section, the board of selectmen of the 
7town, the town council of a municipality having a town council form of government or the 
8mayor of a city, with the approval of the city council, may establish a property tax exemption for 
9real property classified as Class One, residential in the city or town. To qualify for the 
10exemption, the property shall be: (i) rented at an affordable housing rate, as determined by the 
11city or town and in accordance with the United States Department of Housing and Urban 
12Development guidance and regulations; (ii) rented on a yearly basis; and (iii) occupied year-
13round by a person or persons whose household income does not exceed an amount to be set by 
14the city or town; provided, however, that said income shall not be more than 200 per cent of the 
15area median income. The property tax exemption shall be for an amount determined by the city  2 of 14
16or town; provided, however, that the amount shall not be more than the tax otherwise due on the 
17parcel based on the full and fair assessed value multiplied by the square footage of the housing 
18units rented and occupied by a person or persons whose household income is not more than the 
19income limit set pursuant to clause (iii), divided by the total square footage of a structure located 
20on the parcel. Assessment of property seeking an exemption under this section, if by an income 
21approach to value, shall assume fair market rent for all units. The property owner seeking the 
22exemption shall submit to the city or town any documentation the city or town deems necessary, 
23including, but not limited to, a signed lease and proof of the occupying person or persons’ 
24household income, to confirm the eligibility of the property for the exemption under this section.
25 (b) A municipality may adopt ordinances or by-laws to implement this section.
26 SECTION 3. Section 3 of chapter 62 of the General Laws is hereby amended by striking 
27out, in line 109, as appearing in the 2020 Official Edition, the figure “$3,000” and inserting in 
28place thereof the following figure:- $4,000.
29 SECTION 4. Said section 3 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking out, 
30in lines 158 and 159, as so appearing, the words “weekly or monthly transit commuter passes” 
31and inserting in place thereof the following words:- fares.
32 SECTION 5. Said section 3 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by inserting 
33after the word “boat”, in line 160, as so appearing, the following words:- , or for regional transit 
34authority fares, or for bikeshare memberships, or for bicycles, including electric bikes, or for 
35bicycle improvements, repair and storage, or for any fare for a commuter boat owned, operated 
36or contracted by a municipality, public or quasi-public entity, agency or authority. 3 of 14
37 SECTION 6. Paragraph (a) of part B of said section 3 of said chapter 62, as amended by 
38section 24 of chapter 24 of the acts of 2021, is hereby further amended by adding the following 
39subparagraph:- 
40 (20) An amount equal to the amount of student loan payment assistance received by an 
41individual from their employer during the taxable year not already excluded under section 127 of 
42the Code. For the purposes of this subparagraph, “student loan payment assistance” shall mean 
43the payment of principal or interest on a qualified education loan, as defined in section 221 of the 
44Code.
45 SECTION 7. Section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby amended by striking out, in line 75, 
46as appearing in the 2020 Official Edition, the words “one thousand five hundred dollars” and 
47inserting in place thereof the following figure:- $3,000.
48 SECTION 8. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking out, 
49in line 86, as so appearing, the words “five hundred dollars” and inserting in place thereof the 
50following figure:- $1,000. 
51 SECTION 9. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking out, 
52in lines 245 and 250, as so appearing, the figure “30” and inserting in place thereof, in each 
53instance, the following figure:- 40.
54 SECTION 10. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking 
55out, in line 269, as so appearing, the figure “40” and inserting in place thereof the following 
56figure:- 60. 4 of 14
57 SECTION 11. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking 
58out, in lines 271 and 272, as so appearing, the words “as promulgated by the department of 
59environmental protection in 1995” and inserting in place thereof the following words:- of the 
60State Environmental Code.
61 SECTION 12. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking 
62out, in line 273, as so appearing, the figure “$15,000” and inserting in place thereof the following 
63figure:- $30,000. 
64 SECTION 13. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking 
65out, in line 277, as so appearing, the figure “$1,500” and inserting in place thereof the following 
66figure:- $4,000. 
67 SECTION 14. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking 
68out, in line 279, as so appearing, the figure “$6,000” and inserting in place thereof the following 
69figure:- $18,000.
70 SECTION 15. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking 
71out, in line 290, as so appearing, the figure “2023” and inserting in place thereof the following 
72figure:- 2028.
73 SECTION 16. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking 
74out, in line 296, as so appearing, the figure “2024” and inserting in place thereof the following 
75figure:- 2029.
76 SECTION 17. Paragraph (4) of subsection (j) of said section 6 of said chapter 62, as so 
77appearing, is hereby amended by adding the following sentence:- For the purposes of the  5 of 14
78Brownfields Redevelopment Fund, “state financial assistance” shall mean the amount of any 
79grant or principal amount of any loan, but shall not include any loan principal repaid as of the 
80date the credit application is filed with the commissioner. Net response and removal costs shall 
81not include any reimbursement that is received, or will be received, by the applicant, or any 
82amounts paid on behalf of the applicant from any source for these costs.
83 SECTION 18. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking 
84out, in line 447, as so appearing, the figure “$750” and inserting in place thereof the following 
85figure:- $1,500.
86 SECTION 19. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking 
87out, in line 732, as so appearing, the figure “$6,000,000” and inserting in place thereof the 
88following figure:- $8,000,000.
89 SECTION 20. Subsection (q) of said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby amended by 
90striking out paragraph (5), as so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following 
91paragraph:- 
92 (5) EOHLC may authorize not more than $30,000,000 in credits annually under this 
93subsection and section 38BB of chapter 63. EOHLC may authorize annually any credits under 
94this subsection or said section 38BB of said chapter 63 returned to EOHLC by a certified 
95housing development project. The total amount of credits authorized during a year shall include: 
96(1) credits granted during the year pursuant to this subsection or said section 38BB of said 
97chapter 63; and (2) carry forwards of credits from prior years pursuant to this subsection or said 
98section 38BB of said chapter 63, to the extent that such credit carry forwards are estimated by the 
99commissioner to offset tax liabilities during the year. Any portion of the $30,000,000 annual cap  6 of 14
100not awarded by EOHLC in a calendar year shall not be applied to awards in a subsequent year. 
101EOHLC shall provide the commissioner of revenue with any documentation that the 
102commissioner deems necessary to confirm compliance with the annual cap and the commissioner 
103shall provide a report confirming compliance with the annual cap to the secretary of 
104administration and finance and the secretary of housing and economic development.
105 SECTION 21. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by inserting 
106after the figure “31-33”, in line 1158, as so appearing, the following words:- and other expansion 
107industries the secretary of labor and workforce development identifies as critical to a regional 
108labor market economy.
109 SECTION 22. Said section 6 of said chapter 62 is hereby further amended by striking out 
110subsections (x) and (y), as most recently amended by 	sections 30 to 33, inclusive, of chapter 102 
111of the acts of 2021, and inserting in place thereof the following subsection:- 
112 (x) For the purposes of this subsection, “maintains a household” shall have the same 
113meaning as in section 21 of the Code. With respect to a taxpayer who is a non-resident for part of 
114the taxable year, the credit shall be further limited to the amount of allowable credit multiplied 
115by a fraction, the numerator of which shall be the number of days in the taxable year the person 
116resided in the commonwealth and the denominator of which shall be the number of days in the 
117taxable year. A taxpayer who maintains a household that includes as a member at least 1 
118individual: (i) under the age of 13 who qualifies for exemption as a dependent under section 151 
119of the Code; (ii) who is a qualifying individual as defined in said section 21 of the Code; or (iii) 
120at least 1 individual: (A) who is not less than 65 years of age or who is disabled; and (B) who 
121qualifies as a dependent under section 152 of the Code, shall be allowed a credit in an amount  7 of 14
122equal to $310 for each such dependent or qualifying individual with respect to the taxpayer; 
123provided, however, that if the taxpayer is married at the close of the taxable year, the credit 
124provided in this subsection shall be allowed if: (a) the taxpayer and the taxpayer’s spouse file a 
125joint return for the taxable year; or (b) the taxpayer qualifies as a head of household under 
126section 2(b) of the Code. A person who is a non-resident for the entire taxable year shall not 
127qualify for the credit. If the amount of the credit allowed under this subsection exceeds the 
128taxpayer’s tax liability, the commissioner shall treat the excess as an overpayment and shall pay 
129the taxpayer the entire amount of the excess without interest.
130 SECTION 23. Section 6I of said chapter 62 is hereby amended by striking out, in line70, 
131as so appearing, the figure “$40,000,000” and inserting in place thereof the following figure:- 
132$60,000,000.
133 SECTION 24. Section 6 of chapter 62C of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 
134amended by striking subsection (a) and inserting in place thereof the following subsection:-
135 (a)(1) Every individual inhabitant of the commonwealth who receives or accrues during 
136the taxable year Massachusetts gross income, as defined in section 2 of chapter 62, in excess of 
137$8,000 shall make a return 	of such income.
138 Every nonresident whose Massachusetts gross income, determined in accordance with 
139section 5A of chapter 62, exceeds $8,000 or the personal exemption to which such nonresident 
140may be entitled under section 3 of said chapter 62, whichever is the lesser, and every partnership, 
141association or trust whose federal gross income, as defined in section 1 of said chapter 62, 
142exceeds one $100, shall make a return of such income. 8 of 14
143 Every individual, not otherwise required to file a return under this subsection, who is a 
144resident for a portion of a 12-month period beginning on the first day of a taxable year and a 
145nonresident for a portion of the same 12-month period and whose Massachusetts gross income, 
146as defined in section 2 of chapter 62, exceeds $8,000 shall make separate returns as a resident 
147and a nonresident of his income subject to taxation under said chapter 62.
148 (2) A married couple shall file a joint return for any year in which they file a joint federal 
149income tax return. In cases where 1 spouse or both spouses are non-residents of the 
150commonwealth and have items of income, exemptions or deductions unrelated to their 
151Massachusetts income, the department shall provide by regulation for appropriate adjustments or 
152for exemption from the requirement to file a joint return.
153 SECTION 25. Section 5 of chapter 62F of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 
154amended by adding the following subsection:-
155 (e) Monthly, the department of revenue shall submit a report to the clerks of the senate 
156and the house of representatives, the joint committee on revenue and the senate and house 
157committees on ways and means on net state tax revenue for the current fiscal year, projections 
158for net state tax revenue for the remainder of said fiscal year and an estimate of if, and when, net 
159state tax revenue may exceed allowable state tax revenue for said fiscal year.  
160 SECTION 26. Section 38Q of chapter 63 of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 
161amended by striking out, in line 3, the figure “2023” and inserting in place thereof the following 
162figure:- 2028. 9 of 14
163 SECTION 27. Said section 38Q of said chapter 63, as so appearing, is hereby further 
164amended by striking out, in line 9, the figure “2024” and inserting in place thereof the following 
165figure:- 2029.
166 SECTION 28. Subsection (d) of said section 38Q of said chapter 63, as so appearing, is 
167hereby amended by adding the following sentence:- For the purpose of the Brownfields 
168Redevelopment Fund, “state financial assistance” shall mean the amount of any grant or 
169principal amount of any loan, but shall not include any loan principal repaid as of the date the 
170credit application is filed with the commissioner. Net response and removal costs shall not 
171include any reimbursement that is received, or will be received, by the applicant, or any amounts 
172paid on behalf of the applicant from any source for these costs.
173 SECTION 29. Section 38Z of said chapter 63, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 
174striking out, in line 28, the figure “$6,000,000” and inserting in place thereof the following 
175figure:- $8,000,000.
176 SECTION 30. Section 38BB of said chapter 63 is hereby amended by striking out 
177subdivision (5), as so appearing, and inserting in place thereof the following subdivision:- 
178 (5) EOHLC may authorize up to $30,000,000 in credits annually under this section and 
179subsection (q) of section 6 of chapter 62. EOHLC may authorize annually any credits under this 
180section or said subsection (q) of said section 6 of said chapter 62 returned to EOHLC by a 
181certified housing development project. The total amount of credits authorized during a year shall 
182include: (1) credits granted during the year under this section or said subsection (q) of section 6 
183of chapter 62; and (2) carry forwards of credits from prior years under this section or said 
184subsection (q) of section 6 of chapter 62, to the extent that such credit carry forwards are  10 of 14
185estimated by the commissioner of revenue to offset tax liabilities during the year. Any portion of 
186the $30,000,000 annual cap not awarded by EOHLC in a calendar year shall not be applied to 
187awards in a subsequent year. EOHLC shall provide the commissioner of revenue with any 
188documentation that the commissioner deems necessary to confirm compliance with the annual 
189cap and the commissioner shall provide a report confirming compliance with the annual cap to 
190the secretary of administration and finance and the secretary of housing and economic 
191development.
192 SECTION 31. Section 38HH of said chapter 63, as so appearing, is hereby amended by 
193inserting after the figure “31-33”, in line 18, the following words:- or other expansion industries 
194the secretary of labor and workforce development identifies as critical to a regional labor market 
195economy.
196 SECTION 32. Section 2A of chapter 65C of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 
197amended by striking out subsection (a) and inserting in place the following subsection:- 
198 (a) A tax is hereby imposed upon the transfer of the estate of each person dying on or 
199after January 1, 1997 who, at the time of death, was a resident of the commonwealth. The 
200amount of the tax shall be equal to the credit for state death taxes that would have been allowable 
201to a decedent’s estate as computed under section 2011 of the Code, as in effect on December 31, 
2022000, hereinafter referred to as the “credit”. If the federal gross estate of a person includes real or 
203tangible personal property 	located outside of the commonwealth at the time of death, the tax 
204shall be reduced by an amount equal to the proportion of such allowable credit as the value of 
205such real or tangible personal property located outside of the commonwealth bears to the value  11 of 14
206of the entire federal gross estate wherever situated, as determined under section 2011 of the 
207Code, as in effect on December 31, 2000. 
208 SECTION 33. Said section 2A of said chapter 65C, as so appearing, is hereby further 
209amended by adding the following 2 subsections:- 
210 (f) For the estates of decedents dying on or after January 1, 2023, a credit shall be 
211allowed against the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) equal to the amount of such tax; 
212provided, however, that the credit shall not exceed $99,600. 
213 (g) The estates of decedents dying on or after January 1, 2023 shall not be required to pay 
214any tax under subsections (a) and (b) if the value of the federal taxable estate is not more than 
215$2,000,000.
216 SECTION 34. Section 21 of chapter 138 of the General Laws, as so appearing, is hereby 
217amended by striking out, in lines 20 and 21, the words “six per cent of alcohol by weight” and 
218inserting in place thereof the following words:- 8½ per cent of alcohol by volume.
219 SECTION 35. Said section 21 of said chapter 138, as so appearing, is hereby further 
220amended by striking out, in line 25, the word “six” and inserting in place thereof the following 
221figure:- 8 ½.
222 SECTION 36. Sections 46, 48, 61, 63 and 124A of chapter 287 of the acts of 2014 are 
223hereby repealed.
224 SECTION 37. Chapter 358 of the acts of 2020 is hereby amended by striking out section 
22559. 12 of 14
226 SECTION 38. Section 112 of said chapter 358 is hereby amended by striking the words 
227“Sections 59 and” and inserting in place thereof the following word:- Section.
228 SECTION 39. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, in calendar 
229year 2023, the executive office of housing and livable communities may authorize not more than 
230$57,000,000 in credits under subsection (q) of section 6 of chapter 62 of the General Laws and 
231section 38BB of chapter 63 of the General Laws. Any portion of this amount that is not 
232authorized in calendar year 2023 shall be added to the amount the executive office of housing 
233and livable communities may authorize in subsequent years under said subsection (q) of said 
234section (6) of said chapter 62 and said section 38BB of said chapter 63.
235 SECTION 40. The 	executive office for administration and finance shall conduct a study 
236on the feasibility of creating a program of advance quarterly payments to taxpayers for credits 
237that the department of revenue estimates would be treated as allowed for a taxpayer under 
238subsection (x) of section 6 of chapter 62 of the General Laws for a taxable year. The study shall 
239include, but not be limited to: (i) an operational plan for how the department of revenue could 
240establish and maintain such a program; (ii) a description of the processes by which the 
241department could collect information from taxpayers and from other agencies to maximize the 
242accuracy of the department’s estimate of the amount that would be treated as allowed for a 
243taxpayer under said subsection (x) of said section 6 of said chapter 62 for a taxable year; (iii) a 
244description of the options for maximizing participation in such a program by taxpayers who are 
245eligible for credits under said subsection (x) of said section 6 of said chapter 62; (iv) an analysis 
246of any other credits against tax included in said section 6 of said chapter 62 that the department 
247could include in an advance quarterly payment program; (v) potential challenges to the 
248establishment of such a program and strategies by which the department could address those  13 of 14
249challenges; (vi) any legislative recommendations to support the establishment of such a program, 
250if applicable; and (vii) an estimate of the funds that would be necessary for the department to 
251establish and maintain such a program, if applicable.
252 The executive office shall submit a report of its findings to the house and senate 
253committees on ways and means not later than January 1, 2024.
254 SECTION 41. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, the department 
255of revenue shall analyze the potential impact of implementing an additional, elective entity-level 
256tax of up to 4 per cent on a portion of qualified taxable income in the commonwealth of eligible 
257pass-through entities defined in section 1 of chapter 63D of the General Laws, coupled with a 
258refundable tax credit. The analysis shall consider: (i) the impacts on the commonwealth’s 
259taxpayers and tax revenue; (ii) the feasibility of administering the additional elective tax; (iii) the 
260feasibility of determining the portion of qualified income taxable in the commonwealth pursuant 
261to this section based on: (A) an annual threshold tied to the threshold under Article XLIV of the 
262Amendments of the Constitution; or (B) the consent of each qualified member to have a portion 
263of the member’s share of qualified income taxable in 	the commonwealth subject to the additional 
264tax; (iv) passthrough entity tax regimes in other states; and (v) the impact of any tax on qualified 
265members with taxable income below the annual threshold under said Article XLIV.
266 The department of revenue shall submit a report of its findings to the clerks of the senate 
267and house of representatives, the joint committee on revenue and the senate and house 
268committees on ways and means not later than October 1, 2023.
269 SECTION 42. The department of revenue, in consultation with the executive office of 
270housing and livable communities, shall conduct a study on establishing a closing costs assistance  14 of 14
271program to be operated in tandem with a first-time homebuying savings program for income-
272eligible first-time homebuyers. The study shall include, but not be limited to: (i) an analysis of 
273the impact that such a program would have for first-time homebuyers; (ii) an analysis of the 
274funding necessary to make such a program effective; (iii) recommendations on any income 
275restriction for recipients of grants awarded from such a program that would make the program 
276most impactful; (iv) an assessment of best practices for partnering with financial institutions to 
277implement first-time homebuyer savings accounts; (v) any anticipated cost or revenue impact to 
278the commonwealth associated with such an assistance and savings program; and (vi) the 
279feasibility of and a detailed plan to implement such programs. The department of revenue shall 
280submit its findings and recommendations to the clerks of the senate and house of representatives, 
281the senate and house committees on ways and means and the joint committee on housing not 
282later than January 1, 2024.
283 SECTION 43. Sections 3, 9 and 18 shall apply to tax years beginning on or after January 
2841, 2023.
285 SECTION 44. Sections 20 and 30 shall take effect as of January 1, 2024.
286 SECTION 45. Section 24 shall apply to tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2023.
287 SECTION 46. Sections 32 and 33 shall take effect for the estates of decedents dying on 
288or after January 1, 2023. 
289 SECTION 47. Except as otherwise specified, this act shall take effect for taxable years 
290beginning on or after January 1, 2023.