Texas 2019 86th Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB1115 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/26/2019

                    86R12736 JAM-D
 By: Lucio S.B. No. 1115


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the authority of a county to adopt a land bank program.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subtitle B, Title 12, Local Government Code, is
 amended by adding Chapter 388 to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 388. LAND BANK PROGRAM
 Sec. 388.001.  DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:
 (1)  "Affordable" means that the monthly mortgage
 payment or contract rent does not exceed 30 percent of the
 applicable median family income for that unit size, in accordance
 with the income and rent limit rules adopted by the Texas Department
 of Housing and Community Affairs.
 (2)  "Community housing development organization" or
 "organization" means an organization that:
 (A)  meets the definition of a community housing
 development organization in 24 C.F.R. Section 92.2; and
 (B)  is certified by the county as a community
 housing development organization.
 (3)  "Land bank" means an entity established or
 approved by the governing body of a county to exercise the powers of
 acquiring, holding, developing, and transferring real property
 under this chapter.
 (4)  "Land bank plan" or "plan" means a plan adopted by
 the governing body of a county as provided by Section 388.004.
 (5)  "Land bank program" or "program" means a program
 adopted under Section 388.002.
 (6)  "Low income household" means a household with an
 income of not greater than 80 percent of the area median family
 income, based on gross household income, adjusted for household
 size, for the county, as determined annually by the United States
 Department of Housing and Urban Development.
 (7)  "Moderate income household" means a household
 that:
 (A)  requires assistance in securing sanitary,
 decent, and safe housing, considering:
 (i)  the amount of the total income
 available for housing needs of the individuals or families who are
 members of the household;
 (ii)  the size of the household;
 (iii)  the cost and condition of available
 housing facilities;
 (iv)  the ability of the individuals or
 families who are members of the household to compete successfully
 in the private housing market and to pay the amounts required by
 that market for sanitary, decent, and safe housing; and
 (v)  standards that are established for the
 purpose of federal programs and that use income to determine
 eligibility for the programs; and
 (B)  does not qualify as a low income household.
 (8)  "Qualified participating developer" means a
 developer who meets the requirements of Section 388.003 and
 includes a qualified organization under Section 388.009.
 Sec. 388.002.  LAND BANK PROGRAM. (a) The governing body of
 a county may adopt a land bank program in which the officer charged
 with selling real property ordered sold pursuant to foreclosure of
 a tax lien may sell certain eligible real property by private sale
 for purposes of affordable housing development as provided by this
 chapter.
 (b)  The governing body of a county that adopts a land bank
 program shall establish or approve a land bank to exercise the
 powers of acquiring, holding, developing, and transferring real
 property under this chapter.
 Sec. 388.003.  QUALIFIED PARTICIPATING DEVELOPER.  To
 qualify to participate in a land bank program, a developer other
 than the land bank must:
 (1)  have developed three or more housing units within
 the three-year period preceding the submission of a proposal to the
 land bank seeking to acquire real property from the land bank;
 (2)  have a development plan approved for the land bank
 property by the land bank or the county; and
 (3)  meet any other requirements adopted by the county
 in the land bank plan.
 Sec. 388.004.   LAND BANK PLAN. (a) A county that adopts a
 land bank program shall operate the program in conformance with a
 land bank plan.
 (b)  The governing body of a county that adopts a land bank
 program shall adopt a plan annually. The plan may be amended from
 time to time.
 (c)  In developing the plan, the county shall consider any
 other housing plans adopted by the county, including any fair
 housing plans and policies adopted or agreed to by the county.
 (d)  The plan must include the following:
 (1)  a list of community housing development
 organizations eligible to participate in the right of first refusal
 provided by Section 388.009;
 (2)  a list of the parcels of real property that may
 become eligible for sale to the land bank during the next year;
 (3)  the county's plan for affordable housing
 development on those parcels of real property; and
 (4)  the sources and amounts of money anticipated to be
 available from the county for subsidies for development of
 affordable housing in the county, including any money specifically
 available for housing developed under the program, as approved by
 the governing body of the county at the time the plan is adopted.
 Sec. 388.005.  PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED PLAN. (a) Before
 adopting a plan, a county shall hold a public hearing on the
 proposed plan.
 (b)  The county clerk or the county clerk's designee shall
 provide notice of the hearing to all community housing development
 organizations and to neighborhood associations identified by the
 county as serving the neighborhoods in which properties anticipated
 to be available for sale to the land bank under this chapter are
 located.
 (c)  The county clerk or the county clerk's designee shall
 make copies of the proposed plan available to the public not later
 than the 60th day before the date of the public hearing.
 Sec. 388.006.  PRIVATE SALE TO LAND BANK. (a)
 Notwithstanding any other law and except as provided by Subsection
 (f), property that is ordered sold pursuant to foreclosure of a tax
 lien may be sold in a private sale to a land bank by the officer
 charged with the sale of the property without first offering the
 property for sale as otherwise provided by Section 34.01, Tax Code,
 if:
 (1)  the market value of the property as specified in
 the judgment of foreclosure is less than the total amount due under
 the judgment, including all taxes, penalties, and interest, plus
 the value of nontax liens held by a taxing unit and awarded by the
 judgment, court costs, and the cost of the sale;
 (2)  there are delinquent taxes on the property for a
 total of at least five years; and
 (3)  the county has executed with the other taxing
 units that are parties to the tax suit an interlocal agreement that
 enables those units to agree to participate in the program while
 retaining the right to withhold consent to the sale of specific
 properties to the land bank.
 (b)  A sale of property for use in connection with the
 program is a sale for a public purpose.
 (c)  If the person being sued in a suit for foreclosure of a
 tax lien does not contest the market value of the property in the
 suit, the person waives the right to challenge the amount of the
 market value determined by the court for purposes of the sale of the
 property under Section 33.50, Tax Code.
 (d)  For any sale of property under this chapter, each person
 who was a defendant to the judgment, or that person's attorney,
 shall be given, not later than the 90th day before the date of sale,
 written notice of the proposed method of sale of the property by the
 officer charged with the sale of the property. Notice shall be
 given in the manner prescribed by Rule 21a, Texas Rules of Civil
 Procedure.
 (e)  After receipt of the notice required by Subsection (d)
 and before the date of the proposed sale, the owner of the property
 subject to sale may file with the officer charged with the sale a
 written request that the property not be sold in the manner provided
 by this chapter.
 (f)  If the officer charged with the sale receives a written
 request as provided by Subsection (e), the officer shall sell the
 property as otherwise provided in Section 34.01, Tax Code.
 (g)  The owner of the property subject to sale may not
 receive any proceeds of a sale under this chapter. However, the
 owner does not have any personal liability for a deficiency of the
 judgment as a result of a sale under this chapter.
 (h)  Notwithstanding any other law, if consent is given by
 the taxing units that are a party to the judgment, property may be
 sold to the land bank for less than the market value of the property
 as specified in the judgment or less than the total of all taxes,
 penalties, and interest, plus the value of nontax liens held by a
 taxing unit and awarded by the judgment, court costs, and the cost
 of the sale.
 (i)  The deed of conveyance of the property sold to a land
 bank under this section conveys to the land bank the right, title,
 and interest acquired or held by each taxing unit that was a party
 to the judgment, subject to the right of redemption.
 Sec. 388.007.  SUBSEQUENT RESALE OR DEVELOPMENT BY LAND
 BANK.  (a)  Within the five-year period following the date of
 acquisition of a property by a land bank, the land bank must:
 (1)  sell the property to a qualified participating
 developer for the purpose of construction or rehabilitation of
 affordable housing for sale or rent to low or moderate income
 households; or
 (2)  develop the property for the purposes described by
 Subdivision (1).
 (b)  If after five years a qualified participating developer
 has not purchased the property or the land bank has not developed
 the property, the property shall be transferred from the land bank
 to the taxing units who were parties to the judgment for disposition
 as otherwise allowed under the law.
 (c)  Unless the county increases the amount in its plan, the
 number of properties acquired by a qualified participating
 developer under this section on which development has not been
 completed may not at any given time exceed three times the annual
 average residential production completed by the qualified
 participating developer during the preceding three-year period as
 determined by the county.
 (d)  The deed conveying a property sold by the land bank must
 include a right of reverter so that if the qualified participating
 developer does not apply for a construction permit and close on any
 construction financing within the three-year period following the
 date of the conveyance of the property from the land bank to the
 qualified participating developer, the property will revert to the
 land bank for development by the land bank, subsequent resale to
 another qualifying participating developer, or conveyance to the
 taxing units who were parties to the judgment for disposition as
 otherwise allowed under the law.
 (e)  Each subsequent resale that a land bank makes to a
 qualified participating developer with respect to a property
 acquired by the land bank under this chapter must comply with the
 conditions of this section.
 Sec. 388.008.  RESTRICTIONS ON OCCUPANCY AND USE OF
 PROPERTY. (a) The land bank shall impose deed restrictions on
 property developed by the land bank or sold to qualified
 participating developers requiring the development and subsequent
 sale or rental of the property to low or moderate income households.
 (b)  For land bank properties developed by the land bank for
 sale, and for land bank properties sold to a qualifying
 participating developer for development for sale, the deed
 restrictions must require that, in any given fiscal year:
 (1)  at least 50 percent of the units must be sold to
 families with a household income of not more than 80 percent of the
 area median family income, based on gross household income and
 adjusted for household size, for the county in which the units are
 located; and
 (2)  the remaining units must be sold to families with a
 household income of not more than 120 percent of the area median
 family income, based on gross household income and adjusted for
 household size, for the county in which the units are located.
 (c)  If property is developed and used for rental housing,
 the deed restrictions must be for a period of not less than 20 years
 and must require that at least 80 percent of the units are occupied
 by and affordable to households with incomes not greater than 80
 percent of area median family income, based on gross household
 income, adjusted for household size, for the county, as determined
 annually by the United States Department of Housing and Urban
 Development, and must also require that:
 (1)  at least 40 percent of the rental units are
 occupied by and affordable to households with incomes not greater
 than 60 percent of area median family income, based on gross
 household income, adjusted for household size, for the county, as
 determined annually by the United States Department of Housing and
 Urban Development; or
 (2)  at least 20 percent of the units are occupied by
 and affordable to households with incomes not greater than 50
 percent of area median family income, based on gross household
 income, adjusted for household size, for the county, as determined
 annually by the United States Department of Housing and Urban
 Development.
 (d)  The deed restrictions under Subsection (c) must require
 the owner to file an annual occupancy report with the county on a
 reporting form provided by or acceptable to the county. The deed
 restrictions must also prohibit any exclusion of an individual or
 family from admission to the development based solely on the
 participation of the individual or family in the housing choice
 voucher program under Section 8, United States Housing Act of 1937
 (42 U.S.C. Section 1437f), as amended.
 (e)  Except as otherwise provided by this section, if the
 deed restrictions imposed under this section are for a term of
 years, the deed restrictions shall renew automatically.
 (f)  The land bank or the governing body of the county may
 modify or add to the deed restrictions imposed under this section.
 Any modifications or additions made by the governing body of the
 county must be adopted by the county as part of its plan and must
 comply with the restrictions set forth in Subsections (b), (c), and
 (d).
 Sec. 388.009.  RIGHT OF FIRST REFUSAL. (a) In this section,
 "qualified organization" means a community housing development
 organization that:
 (1)  contains within its designated geographical
 boundaries of operation, as set forth in its application for
 certification filed with and approved by the county, a portion of
 the property that the land bank is offering for sale;
 (2)  has built at least three single-family homes or
 duplexes or one multifamily residential dwelling of four or more
 units in compliance with all applicable building codes within the
 preceding two-year period and within the organization's designated
 geographical boundaries of operation; and
 (3)  within the preceding three-year period has
 developed or rehabilitated housing units within a two-mile radius
 of the property that the land bank is offering for sale.
 (b)  The land bank shall first offer a property for sale to
 qualified organizations.
 (c)  Notice must be provided to the qualified organizations
 by certified mail, return receipt requested, not later than the
 60th day before the beginning of the period in which a right of
 first refusal may be exercised.
 (d)  The county shall specify in its plan the period during
 which the right of first refusal provided by this section may be
 exercised by a qualified organization.  That period must be at
 least nine months but not more than 26 months from the date of the
 deed of conveyance of the property to the land bank.
 (e)  If the land bank conveys the property to a qualified
 organization before the expiration of the period specified by the
 county under Subsection (d), the interlocal agreement executed
 under Section 388.006(a)(3) must provide tax abatement for the
 property until the expiration of that period.
 (f)  During the specified period, the land bank may not sell
 the property to a qualified participating developer other than a
 qualified organization.  If all qualified organizations notify the
 land bank that they are declining to exercise their right of first
 refusal during the specified period, or if an offer to purchase the
 property is not received from a qualified organization during that
 period, the land bank may sell the property to any other qualified
 participating developer at the same price that the land bank
 offered the property to the qualified organizations.
 (g)  In its plan, the county shall establish the amount of
 additional time, if any, that a property may be held in the land
 bank once an offer has been received and accepted from a qualified
 organization or other qualified participating developer.
 (h)  If more than one qualified organization expresses an
 interest in exercising its right of first refusal, the organization
 that has designated the most geographically compact area
 encompassing a portion of the property shall be given priority.
 (i)  In its plan, the county may provide for other rights of
 first refusal for any other nonprofit corporation exempted from
 federal income tax under Section 501(c)(3), Internal Revenue Code
 of 1986, as amended, provided that the preeminent right of first
 refusal is provided to qualified organizations as provided by this
 section.
 (j)  The land bank is not required to provide a right of first
 refusal to qualified organizations under this section if the land
 bank is selling property that reverted to the land bank under
 Section 388.007(d).
 Sec. 388.010.  OPEN RECORDS AND MEETINGS. The land bank
 shall comply with the requirements of Chapters 551 and 552,
 Government Code.
 Sec. 388.011.  RECORDS; AUDIT; REPORT. (a) The land bank
 shall keep accurate minutes of its meetings and shall keep accurate
 records and books of account that conform with generally accepted
 principles of accounting and that clearly reflect the income and
 expenses of the land bank and all transactions in relation to its
 property.
 (b)  The land bank shall file with the county not later than
 the 90th day after the close of the fiscal year annual audited
 financial statements prepared by a certified public accountant.
 The financial transactions of the land bank are subject to audit by
 the county.
 (c)  For purposes of evaluating the effectiveness of the
 program, the land bank shall submit an annual performance report to
 the county not later than November 1 of each year in which the land
 bank acquires, develops, or sells property under this chapter.  The
 performance report must include:
 (1)  a complete and detailed written accounting of all
 money and properties received and disbursed by the land bank during
 the preceding fiscal year;
 (2)  for each property acquired by the land bank during
 the preceding fiscal year:
 (A)  the street address of the property;
 (B)  the legal description of the property;
 (C)  the date the land bank took title to the
 property;
 (D)  the name and mailing address of the property
 owner of record at the time of the foreclosure;
 (E)  the amount of taxes and other costs owed at
 the time of the foreclosure; and
 (F)  the assessed value of the property on the tax
 roll at the time of the foreclosure;
 (3)  for each property sold by the land bank during the
 preceding fiscal year to a qualified participating developer:
 (A)  the street address of the property;
 (B)  the legal description of the property;
 (C)  the name and mailing address of the
 purchaser;
 (D)  the price paid by the purchaser;
 (E)  the maximum incomes allowed for the
 households by the terms of the sale; and
 (F)  the source and amount of any public subsidy
 provided by the county to facilitate the sale or rental of the
 property to a household within the targeted income levels;
 (4)  for each property sold by the land bank or a
 qualified participating developer during the preceding fiscal
 year, the buyer's household income and a description of all use and
 sale restrictions; and
 (5)  for each property developed for rental housing
 with an active deed restriction, a copy of the most recent annual
 report for the property.
 (d)  The land bank shall maintain in its records for
 inspection a copy of the sale settlement statement for each
 property sold by the land bank or a qualified participating
 developer and a copy of the first page of the mortgage note with the
 interest rate and indicating the volume and page number of the
 instrument as filed with the county clerk.
 (e)  The land bank shall provide copies of the performance
 report to the taxing units who were parties to the judgment of
 foreclosure and shall provide notice of the availability of the
 performance report for review to the organizations and neighborhood
 associations identified by the county as serving the neighborhoods
 in which properties sold to the land bank under this chapter are
 located.
 (f)  The land bank and the county shall maintain copies of
 the performance report available for public review.
 SECTION 2.  Sections 11.18(d) and (o), Tax Code, are amended
 to read as follows:
 (d)  A charitable organization must be organized exclusively
 to perform religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or
 educational purposes and, except as permitted by Subsections (h)
 and (l), engage exclusively in performing one or more of the
 following charitable functions:
 (1)  providing medical care without regard to the
 beneficiaries' ability to pay, which in the case of a nonprofit
 hospital or hospital system means providing charity care and
 community benefits in accordance with Section 11.1801;
 (2)  providing support or relief to orphans,
 delinquent, dependent, or handicapped children in need of
 residential care, abused or battered spouses or children in need of
 temporary shelter, the impoverished, or victims of natural disaster
 without regard to the beneficiaries' ability to pay;
 (3)  providing support without regard to the
 beneficiaries' ability to pay to:
 (A)  elderly persons, including the provision of:
 (i)  recreational or social activities; and
 (ii)  facilities designed to address the
 special needs of elderly persons; or
 (B)  the handicapped, including training and
 employment:
 (i)  in the production of commodities; or
 (ii)  in the provision of services under 41
 U.S.C. Sections 8501-8506;
 (4)  preserving a historical landmark or site;
 (5)  promoting or operating a museum, zoo, library,
 theater of the dramatic or performing arts, or symphony orchestra
 or choir;
 (6)  promoting or providing humane treatment of
 animals;
 (7)  acquiring, storing, transporting, selling, or
 distributing water for public use;
 (8)  answering fire alarms and extinguishing fires with
 no compensation or only nominal compensation to the members of the
 organization;
 (9)  promoting the athletic development of boys or
 girls under the age of 18 years;
 (10)  preserving or conserving wildlife;
 (11)  promoting educational development through loans
 or scholarships to students;
 (12)  providing halfway house services pursuant to a
 certification as a halfway house by the parole division of the Texas
 Department of Criminal Justice;
 (13)  providing permanent housing and related social,
 health care, and educational facilities for persons who are 62
 years of age or older without regard to the residents' ability to
 pay;
 (14)  promoting or operating an art gallery, museum, or
 collection, in a permanent location or on tour, that is open to the
 public;
 (15)  providing for the organized solicitation and
 collection for distributions through gifts, grants, and agreements
 to nonprofit charitable, education, religious, and youth
 organizations that provide direct human, health, and welfare
 services;
 (16)  performing biomedical or scientific research or
 biomedical or scientific education for the benefit of the public;
 (17)  operating a television station that produces or
 broadcasts educational, cultural, or other public interest
 programming and that receives grants from the Corporation for
 Public Broadcasting under 47 U.S.C. Section 396, as amended;
 (18)  providing housing for low-income and
 moderate-income families, for unmarried individuals 62 years of age
 or older, for handicapped individuals, and for families displaced
 by urban renewal, through the use of trust assets that are
 irrevocably and, pursuant to a contract entered into before
 December 31, 1972, contractually dedicated on the sale or
 disposition of the housing to a charitable organization that
 performs charitable functions described by Subdivision (9);
 (19)  providing housing and related services to persons
 who are 62 years of age or older in a retirement community, if the
 retirement community provides independent living services,
 assisted living services, and nursing services to its residents on
 a single campus:
 (A)  without regard to the residents' ability to
 pay; or
 (B)  in which at least four percent of the
 retirement community's combined net resident revenue is provided in
 charitable care to its residents;
 (20)  providing housing on a cooperative basis to
 students of an institution of higher education if:
 (A)  the organization is exempt from federal
 income taxation under Section 501(a), Internal Revenue Code of
 1986, as amended, by being listed as an exempt entity under Section
 501(c)(3) of that code;
 (B)  membership in the organization is open to all
 students enrolled in the institution and is not limited to those
 chosen by current members of the organization;
 (C)  the organization is governed by its members;
 and
 (D)  the members of the organization share the
 responsibility for managing the housing;
 (21)  acquiring, holding, and transferring unimproved
 real property under an urban land bank demonstration program
 established under Chapter 379C, Local Government Code, as or on
 behalf of a land bank;
 (22)  acquiring, holding, and transferring unimproved
 real property under an urban land bank program established under
 Chapter 379E, Local Government Code, as or on behalf of a land bank;
 (22-a)  acquiring, holding, developing, and
 transferring real property under a land bank program established
 under Chapter 388, Local Government Code, as or on behalf of a land
 bank;
 (23)  providing housing and related services to
 individuals who:
 (A)  are unaccompanied and homeless and have a
 disabling condition; and
 (B)  have been continuously homeless for a year or
 more or have had at least four episodes of homelessness in the
 preceding three years;
 (24)  operating a radio station that broadcasts
 educational, cultural, or other public interest programming,
 including classical music, and that in the preceding five years has
 received or been selected to receive one or more grants from the
 Corporation for Public Broadcasting under 47 U.S.C. Section 396, as
 amended; or
 (25)  providing, without regard to the beneficiaries'
 ability to pay, tax return preparation services and assistance with
 other financial matters.
 (o)  For purposes of Subsection (a)(2), real property
 acquired, held, and transferred by an organization that performs
 the function described by Subsection (d)(21), [or] (22), or (22-a)
 is considered to be used exclusively by the qualified charitable
 organization to perform that function.
 SECTION 3.  Section 11.18, Tax Code, as amended by this Act,
 applies only to an ad valorem tax year that begins on or after the
 effective date of this Act.
 SECTION 4.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2019.