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1 bill on this topic
“Taxpayers should be able to delay capital gains tax when they reinvest those gains within 180 days into qualified funds for brownfield or Superfund sites, with the benefit limited to the amount invested and to sales through December 31, 2033.”
1 bill on this topic
“Investors who delay capital gains tax through polluted-site funds should have to pay the delayed tax when they sell the fund investment, or by December 31, 2033, whichever comes first.”
1 bill on this topic
“Investors who keep money in qualified polluted-site funds should receive larger tax breaks over time, including avoiding tax on part of the original delayed gain after 5 or 7 years and potentially avoiding tax on later growth after 10 years.”
1 bill on this topic
“Investors should be able to defer eligible capital gains through 2033 by using Opportunity Zone funds, exclude 10 percent of deferred gain after holding new investments for five years, and defer up to $10,000 of ordinary income through a separate capped option.”
1 bill on this topic
“Investors in covered Opportunity Zone rental projects should get larger tax basis increases, with some increases available only when at least half of occupied units are rented to tenants at or below area median income.”
1 bill on this topic
“A residential rental project should have to meet the normal Opportunity Zone business property test before receiving special Opportunity Zone rental project tax treatment.”
1 bill on this topic
“Investors should have to use qualified corporations or partnerships set up for eligible distressed-site property, and those funds should keep at least 90 percent of their assets in qualifying property instead of mainly investing elsewhere or through other funds.”
1 bill on this topic
“Investors should have until December 31, 2036, to delay taxes on eligible capital gains by putting those gains into Qualified Opportunity Funds, while older deferred gains would still become taxable by December 31, 2026.”
1 bill on this topic
“Polluted-site fund tax benefits should apply only to eligible new stock, partnership interests, property, and businesses tied to qualifying sites, with mixed investments split between tax-favored and taxable money, a 20 percent related-party cutoff for self-dealing, and up to 5 years for some property that stops qualifying to keep counting.”
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