Orange County NC Website
19Yl <br />counties. Granting counties the authority to implement these revenue options would lessen the <br />reliance on property tax and give counties more flexibility in designing a revenue system that <br />reflects their community's preferences and is best suited for their tax base. <br />TF -4: Protect county revenues in tax reform consideration. <br />Support legislation that recognizes the importance of county revenues and secures existing <br />county resources as the state considers tax reform strategies. The General Assembly will be <br />considering comprehensive tax reform this legislative session. Specifics of these changes to tax <br />statutes are uncertain and likely to be fluid throughout the session. County revenues should be <br />protected in any final outcome. <br />TF -S: Repeal moratorium on contingency fee audits. <br />Seek legislation to repeal the moratorium on contingency fee tax audits beginning July 1, 2013. <br />Allow counties the flexibility to contract for tax audit services by fee -based or contingency - <br />based arrangements. If a repeal of the moratorium is unviable, work with the state Department of <br />Revenue on alternative solutions. <br />TF -6: Improve and maintain incentive programs, workforce development and job creation <br />programs, NC's tax credit programs, and increase access to tax credit financing for smaller <br />economic development projects. <br />Support legislation to defend and maintain the state's tax credit programs to help stimulate <br />economic development activity in rural and economically distressed counties. In an era of fiscal <br />constraint and economic challenges, North Carolina's legislators may be tempted to terminate the <br />state's tax credit programs in an effort to increase tax revenues. However, these programs — <br />including Historic Preservation Tax Credits, the Renewable Energy Tax Credits, and the Article <br />3J Tax Credits — stimulate investment and business growth that otherwise might not take place in <br />our state. These tools are particularly important to stimulating economic development in rural <br />and Tier One counties. <br />Support legislation to improve access to tax credit financing for smaller economic development <br />projects. In order to finance commercial projects, businesses frequently benefit from being able <br />to attract investors who can utilize the tax credits generated by the project to offset their own tax <br />liabilities. However, it is difficult for small business owners to identify investors who may be <br />interested in their tax credits, and it is often prohibitively complicated and costly to broker tax <br />credit finance deals. Furthermore, tax credit investors are typically only interested in multi- <br />million dollar projects — a threshold that excludes many potentially eligible economic <br />development projects, especially in small rural counties. As a result, many tax credit - eligible <br />projects do not move forward because they are not able to access the potential equity generated <br />by their tax credits. The Legislature could help make this process less complicated and more <br />accessible to small businesses by: 1) enabling the "bundling" of multiple smaller projects into <br />projects that are large enough to attract investors; 2) establishing a central tax credit "exchange" <br />that brings tax credit - eligible projects together with potential investors; and 3) supporting <br />increased technical assistance and training in the utilization of tax credits. <br />TF -7: Explore and authorize use of alternate, sustainable revenue options and funding sources <br />for beach, inlet and waterway maintenance. <br />