(2)
Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following
definitions apply:
(a) "Acquisition" means
that an existing home for the aging (or home) currently in operation is
acquired by a nonprofit organization and the ownership of the facility will
change as a result of a purchase, gift, foreclosure, or other method.
(b)"Assistance with activities of daily
living" means the home provides, brokers, or contracts for the provision of
auxiliary services to residents, such as meal and housekeeping service,
transportation, ambulatory service, and attendant care including, but not
limited to, bathing and other acts related to personal hygiene, dressing,
shopping, food preparation, monitoring of medication, and laundry
services.
(c)"Combined disposable
income" means the disposable income of the person submitting the income
verification form, plus the disposable income of the person's spouse or
domestic partner, and the disposable income of each cotenant occupying the
dwelling unit for the preceding calendar year, less amounts paid by the person
submitting the income verification form or the person's spouse, domestic
partner or cotenant during the previous year for the treatment or care of
either person received in the dwelling unit or in a nursing home.
(i) If the person submitting the income
verification form was retired for two months or more of the preceding calendar
year, the combined disposable income of the person will be calculated by
multiplying the average monthly combined disposable income of the person during
the months the person was retired by twelve.
(ii) If the income of the person submitting
the income verification form is reduced for two or more months of the preceding
calendar year because of the death of the person's spouse or domestic partner,
the combined disposable income of the person will be calculated by multiplying
the average monthly combined disposable income of the person after the death of
the spouse or domestic partner by twelve.
(d)"Complete and separate dwelling units"
means that the individual units of a home contain complete facilities for
living, sleeping, cooking, and sanitation.
(e) "Construction" means the actual
construction or building of all or a portion of a home that did not exist prior
to the construction.
(f)"Continuing
care retirement community" or "CCRC" means an entity that provides shelter and
services under continuing care contracts with its residents or includes a
health care facility or health service.
(g)"Continuing care contract" means a
contract to provide a person, for the duration of that person's life or for a
term in excess of one year, shelter along with nursing, medical, health-related
or personal care services, that is conditioned upon the transfer of property,
the payment of an entrance fee to the provider of the services, and/or the
payment of periodic charges in consideration for the care and services
provided. A continuing care contract is not excluded from this definition
because the contract is mutually terminable or because shelter and services are
not provided at the same location.
(h) "Cotenant" means a person who resides
with an eligible resident and who shares personal financial resources with the
eligible resident.
(i) "Disposable
income" means adjusted gross income as defined in the federal Internal Revenue
Code, as amended prior to January 1, 1994, plus all of the following items to
the extent they are not included in or have been deducted from adjusted gross
income:
(i) Capital gains, other than gain
excluded from income under section 121 of the federal Internal Revenue Code to
the extent it is reinvested in a new principal residence;
(ii) Amounts deducted for loss;
(iii) Amounts deducted for
depreciation;
(iv) Pension and
annuity receipts;
(v) Military pay
and benefits other than attendant-care and medical-aid payments;
(vi) Veterans benefits other than
attendant-care and medical-aid payments;
(vii) Federal Social Security Act and
railroad retirement benefits;
(viii) Dividend receipts; and
(ix) Interest received on state and municipal
bonds.
(j) "Domestic
partner" means a partner registered under
chapter
26.60 RCW or a partner in
a legal union of two persons of the same sex, other than a marriage, that was
validly formed in another jurisdiction, and that is substantially equivalent to
a domestic partnership under
chapter
26.60 RCW.
(k) "Domestic partnership" means a
partnership registered under
chapter
26.60 RCW or a legal union
of two persons of the same sex, other than a marriage, that was validly formed
in another jurisdiction, and that is substantially equivalent to a domestic
partnership under
chapter
26.60 RCW.
(l) "Eligible resident" means a person who:
(i) Occupied the dwelling unit as their
principal place of residence as of December 31st of the assessment year the
home first became operational or in each subsequent year, occupied the dwelling
unit as their principal place of residence as of January 1st of the assessment
year. If an eligible resident is confined to a hospital or nursing home and the
dwelling unit is temporarily unoccupied or occupied by a spouse or domestic
partner, a person financially dependent on the claimant for support, or both,
the dwelling will still be considered occupied by the eligible
resident;
(ii) Is sixty-one years
of age or older on December 31st of the year in which the claim for exemption
is filed, or is, at the time of filing, retired from regular gainful employment
by reason of disability. A surviving spouse or domestic partner of a person who
was receiving an exemption at the time of the person's death will qualify for
this exemption if the surviving spouse or domestic partner is fifty-seven years
of age or older and otherwise meets the requirements of this subsection;
and
(iii) Has a combined disposable
income that is no more than the greater of twenty-two thousand dollars or
eighty percent of the median income adjusted for family size as determined by
the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for the county in
which the person resides and in effect as of January 1 of the year the
application for exemption is submitted.
(m) "First assessment year the home becomes
operational" or "the assessment year the home first became operational" means
the first year the home becomes occupied by and provides services to eligible
residents. Depending upon the facts, this year will be the year during which
construction of the home is completed or the year during which a nonprofit
organization purchases or acquires an existing home and begins to operate it as
a nonprofit home for the aging.
(n)
"Home for the aging" or "home" means a residential housing facility that:
(i) Provides a housing arrangement chosen
voluntarily by the resident, the resident's guardian or conservator, or another
responsible person;
(ii) Has only
residents who are at least sixty-one years of age or who have needs for care
generally compatible with persons who are at least sixty-one years of age;
and
(iii) Provides varying levels
of care and supervision, as agreed to at the time of admission or as determined
necessary at subsequent times of reappraisal.
(o) "HUD" means the federal Department of
Housing and Urban Development.
(p)
"Local median income" means the median income adjusted for family size as most
recently determined by HUD for the county in which the home is located and in
effect on January 1st of the year the application for exemption is
submitted.
(q) "Low income" means
that the combined disposable income of a resident is eighty percent or less of
the median income adjusted for family size as most recently determined by HUD
for the county in which the home is located and in effect as of January 1st of
the year the application for exemption is submitted.
(r) "Occupied dwelling unit" means a living
unit that is occupied either on January 1st of the year for which the
application for exemption is made or on December 31st of the assessment year
the home first becomes operational and for which application for exemption is
made.
(s) "Property that is
reasonably necessary" means all property that is:
(i) Operated and used by a home;
and
(ii) The use of which is
restricted to residents, guests, or employees of a home.
(t) "Refinancing" means the discharge of an
existing debt with funds obtained through the creation of new debt. For
purposes of this section, even if the application for tax exempt bond financing
to refinance existing debt is treated by the financing agent as something other
than refinancing, an application for a property tax exemption because of
refinancing by tax exempt bonds will be treated as refinancing and the
set-asides specific to refinancing will be applied. "Refinancing" shall include
tax exempt bond financing in excess of the amount of existing debt that is
obtained to modify, improve, restore, extend, or enlarge a facility currently
being operated as a home.
(u)
"Rehabilitation" means that an existing building or structure, not currently
used as a home, will be modified, improved, restored, extended, or enlarged so
that it can be used as a home for elderly and disabled individuals. A project
will be considered a rehabilitation if the costs of rehabilitation exceed five
thousand dollars. If a home has acquired tax exempt bond financing and does not
meet the definition of "rehabilitation" contained in this subsection, the home
may be eligible for a total exemption under the "refinancing" definition and if
it meets the "refinancing" set-aside requirements. If such a home is not
eligible for a total exemption, the department will determine the home's
eligibility for a partial exemption in accordance with the pertinent parts of
RCW
84.36.041 and this section.
(v) "Set-aside(s)" means the percentage of
dwelling units reserved for low-income residents when the construction,
rehabilitation, acquisition, or refinancing of a home is financed under a
financing program using tax exempt bonds.
(w) "Shared dwelling units" or "shared units"
means individual dwelling units of a home that do not contain complete
facilities for living, eating, cooking, and sanitation.
(x) "Taxable value" means the value of the
home upon which the tax rate is applied in order to determine the amount of
property taxes due.
(y) "Total
amount financed" means the total amount of financing required by the home to
fund construction, acquisition, rehabilitation, or refinancing. Seventy-five
percent of this amount must be supplied by tax exempt bonds to receive the
total exemption from property tax available under the tax exempt bond financing
provision of
RCW
84.36.041.
(5)
Homes or CCRCs financed
by tax exempt bonds-Generally. All real and personal property used by a
nonprofit home or CCRC may be totally exempt from property tax if at least
seventy-five percent of the total amount financed for construction,
rehabilitation, acquisition, or refinancing uses tax exempt bonds and the
financing program requires the home or CCRC to reserve or set-aside a percent-
age of all dwelling units so financed for low-income residents.
(a)The percentage of set-aside units required
will vary depending on whether the home is a CCRC, the purpose for which the
tax exempt bond financing was obtained, the type of dwelling unit, and the
receipt of medicaid funds. The set-aside requirements for homes are set forth
in subsection (6) of this section and for CCRCs are set forth in subsection (7)
of this section.
(b)The exemption
will be granted in direct correlation to the total amount financed by tax
exempt bonds and the portion of the home or CCRC that is constructed, acquired,
rehabilitated, or refinanced by tax exempt bonds.
(c)If tax exempt bonds are used for
refinancing, the set-aside requirements set forth in subsections (6) and (7) of
this section will be applied to the actual area or portion of the home or CCRC
to which the bonds correspond.
(i) Example 1.
A CCRC (that accepts medicaid funds) is composed of a multistory building, six
duplexes, and two independent homes and the CCRC has secured tax exempt bonds
to satisfy an existing mortgage on the multistory building. Only the multistory
building will be considered eligible for a total exemption from property tax
because of tax exempt bond financing. To receive the exemption, at least twenty
percent of the dwelling units of the multistory building must be set-aside for
residents at or below fifty percent of the local median income or at least
forty percent of the dwelling units must be set-aside for residents at or below
sixty percent of the local median income.
(ii) Example 2. A home obtains tax exempt
bonds to refinance a portion of the home and to fund construction. The
department will separately consider the area of the home that corresponds to
the purpose for which the tax exempt bonds were obtained. The set-aside
requirements related to refinancing will be applied to the portion of the home
that corresponds to the mortgage being refinanced and the set-aside
requirements related to construction will be applied to the area of the home to
be newly constructed. The department will determine the eligibility for partial
exemption of the remainder of the home that is not being refinanced or
constructed.
(d)If a
total exemption is granted under the tax exempt bond financing provision, the
total exemption will remain in effect as long as:
(i) The home or CCRC remains in compliance
with the requirements under which it received the tax exempt bonds;
(ii) The tax exempt bonds are outstanding;
and
(iii) The set-aside
requirements are met.
(e) If a home or CCRC has obtained tax exempt
bond financing to modify, improve, restore, extend, or enlarge its existing
facility and the project does not meet the definition of rehabilitation
contained in subsection (2) of this section, the project will not be considered
a rehabilitation. In this situation, the set-aside requirements related to
refinancing or acquisition will be applied in determining eligibility for a
total exemption.
(f)When a home or
CCRC no longer meets the criteria for exemption under the tax exempt bond
financing portion of the statute, eligibility for exemption under
RCW
84.34.041 will be determined by the other
provisions of the statute. In other words, a home may receive a total or
partial exemption depending on the number of residents who are deemed to be
"eligible residents" or who require "assistance with activities of daily
living." For example, if a home that previously received a total exemption due
to the receipt of tax exempt bond financing has one hundred dwelling units and
sixty of those dwelling units are occupied by eligible residents, the home may
receive a total exemption.
(8)
Partial exemption. If a home
does not qualify for a total exemption from property tax, the home may receive
a partial exemption for its real property on a unit by unit basis and a total
exemption for its personal property.
(a) Real
property exemption. If the real property of a home is used in the following
ways, the portion of the real property so used will be exempt and the home may
receive a partial exemption for:
(i) Each
dwelling unit occupied by a resident requiring significant assistance with
activities of daily living;
(ii)
Each dwelling unit occupied by an eligible resident; and
(iii) Common or shared areas of the home that
are jointly used for two or more purposes that are exempt from property tax
under chapter 84.36
RCW.
(b) Assistance with
activities of daily living. A home may receive a partial exemption for each
dwelling unit that is occupied by a resident who requires significant
assistance with the activities of daily living and the home provides, brokers,
facilitates, or contracts for the provision of this assistance. A resident
requiring assistance with the activities of daily living must be a resident who
requires significant assistance with at least three of the nonexclusive list of
activities set forth below and who, unless the resident receives the
assistance, would be at risk of being placed in a nursing home. Activities of
daily living include, but are not limited to:
(i) Shopping;
(ii) Meal and/or food preparation;
(iii) Housekeeping;
(iv) Transportation;
(v) Dressing;
(vi) Bathing;
(vii) General personal hygiene;
(viii) Monitoring of medication;
(ix) Ambulatory services;
(x) Laundry services;
(xi) Incontinence management; and
(xii) Cuing for the cognitively
impaired.
(c)Examples of
assistance with the activities of daily living:
(i) If the resident of a home requires
assistance with daily dressing, bathing, and personal hygiene, weekly
housekeeping chores, and daily meal preparation, the person is a resident
requiring significant assistance with activities of daily living and the home
may receive a partial exemption for the dwelling unit in which the person
resides.
(ii) If the resident of a
CCRC only requires someone to clean the house weekly and to do the laundry
weekly, the resident does not require significant assistance with activities of
daily living and the CCRC may not receive a partial exemption for the dwelling
unit.
(d)Common or
shared areas. Areas of a home that are jointly used for two or more purposes
exempt from property tax under
chapter
84.36 RCW will be exempted
under
RCW
84.36.041.
(i) The joint use of the common or shared
areas must be reasonably necessary for the purposes of the nonprofit
organization, association, or corporation exempt from property tax under
chapter
84.36 RCW. A kitchen,
dining room, and laundry room are examples of the types of common or shared
areas for which a partial property tax exemption may be granted.
(ii) Example. A nonprofit organization uses
its facility as a home for the aging and a nursing home. The home and nursing
home jointly use the kitchen and dining room. The home may receive a property
tax exemption for the common or shared areas under
RCW
84.36.041. The eligibility of the other areas
of the facility will be determined by the appropriate statute. The home's
eligibility will be determined by
RCW
84.36.041 and the nursing home's eligibility
will be determined by
RCW
84.36.040.
(e) Amount of partial exemption. The amount
of partial exemption will be calculated by multiplying the assessed value of
the property reasonably necessary for the purposes of the home, minus/less the
assessed value of any common or shared areas, by a fraction. The numerator and
denominator of the fraction will vary depending on the first assessment year
the home became operational and occupied by eligible residents.
(i) Numerator. If the home becomes
operational after the January 1st assessment date, the numerator is the number
of dwelling units occupied by eligible residents and by residents requiring
assistance with activities of daily living on December 31st. The December 31st
date will be used only in the first year of operation. In any other assessment
year, the numerator is the number of the dwelling units occupied on January 1st
of the assessment year by eligible residents and by residents requiring
assistance with activities of daily living.
(ii) Denominator. If the home becomes
operational after the January 1st assessment date, the denominator is the
number of dwelling units occupied on December 31st. The December 31st date will
be used only in the first assessment year the home becomes operational. In any
other assessment year, the denominator is the total number of occupied dwelling
units as of January 1st of the assessment year.
(iii) Example:
Assessed value of home: |
$500,000 |
Less assessed value of common area: |
- 80,000 |
Total |
$420,000 |
Number of units occupied on 1/1 by eligible residents and
people requiring assistance with daily living activities |
= 6 |
Total of occupied units on 1/1 |
40 or .15 |
$420,000 x .15 = $63,000 Amount of partial exemption
$420,000 - $63,000 = $357,000 Taxable value of
home
(f)
Valuation of the home. The assessor will value a home that receives a partial
exemption by considering only the current use of the property during the period
in which the partial exemption is received and will not consider any potential
use of the property.