[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 11]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.1394-1]

[Page 801-807]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.1394-1  Enterprise zone facility bonds.

    (a) Scope. This section contains rules relating to tax-exempt bonds 
under section 1394 (enterprise zone facility bonds) to provide 
enterprise zone facilities in both empowerment zones and enterprise 
communities (zones). See sections 1394, 1397B, and 1397C for other rules 
and definitions.
    (b) Period of compliance--(1) In general. Except as provided in 
paragraphs (b)(2) and (c) of this section, the requirements under 
sections 1394 (a) and (b) applicable to enterprise zone facility bonds 
must be complied with throughout the greater of the following--
    (i) The remainder of the period during which the zone designation is 
in effect under section 1391 (zone designation period); and

[[Page 802]]

    (ii) The period that ends on the weighted average maturity date of 
the enterprise zone facility bonds.
    (2) Compliance after an issue is retired. Except as provided in 
paragraph (c)(3) of this section, the requirements applicable to 
enterprise zone facility bonds do not apply to an issue after the date 
on which no enterprise zone facility bonds of the issue are outstanding.
    (3) Deemed compliance--(i) General rule. An issue is deemed to 
comply with the requirements of sections 1394 (a) and (b) if--
    (A) The issuer and the principal user in good faith attempt to meet 
the requirements of sections 1394 (a) and (b) throughout the period of 
compliance required under this section; and
    (B) Any failure to meet these requirements is corrected within a 
one-year period after the failure is first discovered.
    (ii) Exception. The provisions of paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this 
section do not apply to the requirements of section 1397B(d)(5)(A) 
(relating to certain prohibited business activities).
    (iii) Good faith. In order to satisfy the good faith requirement of 
paragraph (b)(3)(i)(A) of this section, the principal user must at least 
annually demonstrate to the issuer the principal user's monitoring of 
compliance with the requirements of sections 1394 (a) and (b).
    (c) Special rules for requirements of sections 1397B and 1397C--(1) 
Start of compliance period. Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of 
this section, the requirements of sections 1397B (relating to 
qualification as an enterprise zone business) and 1397C (relating to 
satisfaction of the rules for qualified zone property) do not apply 
prior to the initial testing date (as defined in paragraph (c)(4) of 
this section) if--
    (i) The issuer and the principal user reasonably expect on the issue 
date of the enterprise zone facility bonds that those requirements will 
be met by the principal user on or before the initial testing date; and
    (ii) The issuer and the principal user exercise due diligence to 
meet those requirements prior to the initial testing date.
    (2) Compliance period for certain prohibited activities. The 
requirements of section 1397B(d)(5)(A) (relating to certain prohibited 
business activities) must be complied with throughout the term of the 
enterprise zone facility bonds.
    (3) Minimum compliance period. The requirements of sections 1397B 
(b) or (c) and 1397C must be satisfied for a continuous period of at 
least three years after the initial testing date, notwithstanding that--
    (i) The period of compliance required under paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section expires before the end of the three-year period; or
    (ii) The enterprise zone facility bonds are retired before the end 
of the three-year period.
    (4) Initial testing date--(i) In general. Except as otherwise 
provided in paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section, the initial testing 
date is the date that is 18 months after the later of the issue date of 
the enterprise zone facility bonds or the date on which the financed 
property is placed in service; provided, however, it is not later than--
    (A) Three years after the issue date; or
    (B) Five years after the issue date, if the issue finances a 
construction project for which both the issuer and a licensed architect 
or engineer certify on or before the issue date of the enterprise zone 
facility bonds that more than three years after the issue date is 
necessary to complete construction of the project.
    (ii) Alternative initial testing date. If the issuer identifies as 
the initial testing date a date after the issue date of the enterprise 
zone facility bonds and prior to the initial testing date that would 
have been determined under paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section, that 
earlier date is treated as the initial testing date.
    (d) Testing on an average basis. Compliance with each of the 
requirements of section 1397B (b) or (c) is tested each taxable year. 
Compliance with any of the requirements may be tested on an average 
basis, taking into account up to four immediately preceding taxable 
years plus the current taxable year. The earliest taxable year that may 
be taken into account for purposes of the preceding sentence is the 
taxable year that includes the initial testing date. A

[[Page 803]]

taxable year is disregarded if the part of the taxable year that falls 
in a required compliance period does not exceed 90 days.
    (e) Resident employee requirements--(1) Determination of employee 
status. For purposes of the requirement of section 1397B (b)(6) or 
(c)(5) that at least 35 percent of the employees are residents of the 
zone, the issuer and the principal user may rely on a certification, 
signed under penalties of perjury by the employee, provided--
    (i) The certification provides to the principal user the address of 
the employee's principal residence;
    (ii) The employee is required by the certification to notify the 
principal user of a change of the employee's principal residence; and
    (iii) Neither the issuer nor the principal user has actual knowledge 
that the principal residence set forth in the certification is not the 
employee's principal residence.
    (2) Employee treated as zone resident. If an issue fails to comply 
with the requirement of section 1397B (b)(6) or (c)(5) because an 
employee who initially resided in the zone moves out of the zone, that 
employee is treated as still residing in the zone if--
    (i) That employee was a bona fide resident of the zone at the time 
of the certification described in paragraph (e)(1) of this section;
    (ii) That employee continues to perform services for the principal 
user in an enterprise zone business and substantially all of those 
services are performed in the zone; and
    (iii) A resident of the zone meeting the requirements of section 
1397B (b)(5) or (c)(4) is hired by the principal user for the next 
available comparable (or lesser) position.
    (3) Resident employee percentage. For purposes of meeting the 
requirement of section 1397B (b)(6) or (c)(5) that at least 35 percent 
of the employees of an enterprise zone business are residents of a zone, 
paragraphs (e)(3) (i) and (ii) of this section apply.
    (i) The term employee includes a self-employed individual within the 
meaning of section 401(c)(1).
    (ii) The resident employee percentage is determined on any 
reasonable basis consistently applied throughout the period of 
compliance required under this section. The per-employee fraction (as 
defined in paragraph (e)(3)(ii)(A) of this section) or the employee 
actual work hour fraction (as defined in paragraph (e)(3)(ii)(B) of this 
section) are both reasonable methods.
    (A) The term per-employee fraction means the fraction, the numerator 
of which is, during the taxable year, the number of employees who work 
at least 15 hours a week for the principal user, who reside in the zone, 
and who are employed for at least 90 days, and the denominator of which 
is, during the same taxable year, the aggregate number of all employees 
who work at least 15 hours a week for the principal user and who are 
employed for at least 90 days.
    (B) The term employee actual work hour fraction means the fraction, 
the numerator of which is the aggregate total actual hours of work for 
the principal user of employees who reside in the zone during a taxable 
year, and the denominator of which is the aggregate total actual hours 
of work for the principal user of all employees during the same taxable 
year.
    (f) Application to pooled financing bond and loan recycling 
programs. In the case of a pooled financing bond program described in 
paragraph (g)(2) of this section or a loan recycling program described 
in paragraph (m)(2)(ii) of this section, the requirements of paragraphs 
(b) through (e) of this section apply on a loan-by-loan basis. See also 
paragraphs (g)(2) (relating to limitation on amount of bonds), (m)(2) 
(relating to maturity limitations), (m)(3) (relating to volume cap), and 
(m)(4) (relating to remedial actions) of this section.
    (g) Limitation on amount of bonds--(1) Determination of outstanding 
amount. Whether an issue satisfies the requirements of section 1394(c) 
(relating to the $3 million and $20 million aggregate limitations on the 
amount of outstanding enterprise zone facility bonds) is determined as 
of the issue date of that issue, based on the issue price of that issue 
and the adjusted issue price of outstanding enterprise zone facility 
bonds. Amounts of outstanding enterprise zone facility bonds allocable 
to any entity are determined under rules

[[Page 804]]

contained in section 144(a)(10)(C) and the underlying regulations. Thus, 
the definition of principal user for purposes of section 1394(c) is 
different from the definition of principal user for purposes of 
paragraph (j) of this section.
    (2) Pooled financing bond programs--(i) In general. The limitations 
of section 1394(c) for an issue for a pooled financing bond program are 
determined with regard to the amount of the actual loans to enterprise 
zone businesses rather than the amount lent to intermediary lenders as 
defined in paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of this section. This paragraph (g)(2) 
applies only to the extent the proceeds of those enterprise zone 
facility bonds are loaned to one or more enterprise zone businesses 
within 42 months of the issue date of the enterprise zone facility bonds 
or are used to redeem enterprise zone facility bonds of the issue within 
that 42-month period.
    (ii) Pooled financing bond program defined. For purposes of this 
section, a pooled financing bond program is a program in which the 
issuer of enterprise zone facility bonds, in order to provide loans to 
enterprise zone businesses, lends the proceeds of the enterprise zone 
facility bonds to a bank or similar intermediary (intermediary lender) 
which must then relend the proceeds to two or more enterprise zone 
businesses.
    (h) Original use requirement for purposes of qualified zone 
property. In general, for purposes of section 1397C(a)(1)(B), the term 
original use means the first use to which the property is put within the 
zone. For purposes of section 1394, if property is vacant for at least a 
one-year period including the date of zone designation, use prior to 
that period is disregarded for purposes of determining original use. For 
this purpose, de minimis incidental uses of property, such as renting 
the side of a building for a billboard, are disregarded.
    (i) Land. The determination of whether land is functionally related 
and subordinate to qualified zone property is made in a manner 
consistent with the rules for exempt facilities under section 142.
    (j) Principal user--(1) In general. Except as provided in paragraph 
(j)(2) of this section, the term principal user means the owner of 
financed property.
    (2) Rental of real property--(i) A lessee as the principal user. If 
an owner of real property financed with enterprise zone facility bonds 
is not an enterprise zone business within the meaning of section 1397B, 
but the rental of the property is a qualified business within the 
meaning of section 1397B(d)(2), the term principal user for purposes of 
sections 1394 (b) and (e) means the lessee or lessees.
    (ii) Allocation of enterprise zone facility bonds. If a lessee is 
the principal user of real property under paragraph (j)(2)(i) of this 
section, then proceeds of enterprise zone facility bonds may be 
allocated to expenditures for real property only to the extent of the 
property allocable to the lessee's leased space, including expenditures 
for common areas.
    (3) Pooled financing bond program. An intermediary lender in a 
pooled financing bond program described in paragraph (g)(2) of this 
section is not treated as the principal user.
    (k) Treatment as separately incorporated business. For purposes of 
section 1394(b)(3)(B), a trade or business may be treated as separately 
incorporated if allocations of income and activities attributable to the 
business conducted within the zone are made using a reasonable 
allocation method and if that trade or business has evidence of those 
allocations sufficient to establish compliance with the requirements of 
paragraphs (b) through (f) of this section. Whether an allocation method 
is reasonable will depend upon the facts and circumstances. An 
allocation method will not be considered to be reasonable unless the 
allocation method is applied consistently by the trade or business and 
is consistent with the purposes of section 1394.
    (l) Substantially all. For purposes of sections 1397B and 1397C(a), 
the term substantially all means 85 percent.
    (m) Application of sections 142 and 146 through 150--(1) In general. 
Except as provided in this paragraph (m), enterprise zone facility bonds 
are treated as exempt facility bonds that are described in section 
142(a), and all regulations generally applicable to exempt facility 
bonds apply to enterprise zone

[[Page 805]]

facility bonds. For this purpose, enterprise zone businesses are treated 
as meeting the public use requirement. Sections 147(c)(1)(A) (relating 
to limitations on financing the acquisition of land), 147(d) (relating 
to financing the acquisition of existing property), and 142(b)(2) 
(relating to limitations on financing office space) do not apply to 
enterprise zone facility bonds. See also paragraph (n)(4) of this 
section.
    (2) Maturity limitation--(i) Requirements. An issue of enterprise 
zone facility bonds, the proceeds of which are to be used as part of a 
loan recycling program, satisfies the requirements of section 147(b) 
if--
    (A) Each loan satisfies the requirements of section 147(b) 
(determined by treating each separate loan as a separate issue); and
    (B) The term of the issue does not exceed 30 years.
    (ii) Loan recycling program defined. A loan recycling program is a 
program in which--
    (A) The issuer reasonably expects as of the issue date of the 
enterprise zone facility bonds that loan repayments from principal users 
will be used to make additional loans during the zone designation 
period;
    (B) Repayments of principal on loans (including prepayments) 
received during the zone designation period are used within six months 
of the date of receipt either to make new loans to enterprise zone 
businesses or to redeem enterprise zone facility bonds that are part of 
the issue; and
    (C) Repayments of principal on loans (including prepayments) 
received after the zone designation period are used to redeem enterprise 
zone facility bonds that are part of the issue within six months of the 
date of receipt.
    (3) Volume cap. For purposes of applying section 146(f)(5)(A) 
(relating to elective carryforward of unused volume limitation), issuing 
enterprise zone facility bonds is a carryforward purpose.
    (4) Remedial actions. In the case of a pooled financing bond program 
described in paragraph (g)(2) of this section or a loan recycling 
program described in paragraph (m)(2)(ii) of this section, if a loan 
fails to meet the requirements of paragraphs (b) through (f) of this 
section, within six months of noncompliance (after taking into account 
the deemed compliance provisions of paragraph (b)(3) of this section, if 
applicable), an amount equal to the outstanding loan principal must be 
prepaid and the issuer must--
    (i) Reloan the amount of the prepayment; or
    (ii) Use the prepayment to redeem an amount of outstanding 
enterprise zone facility bonds equal to the outstanding principal amount 
of the loan that no longer meets those requirements.
    (n) Continuing compliance and change of use penalties--(1) In 
general. The penalty provisions of section 1394(e) apply throughout the 
period of compliance required under paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
    (2) Coordination with deemed compliance provisions. Section 
1394(e)(2) does not apply during any period during which the issue is 
deemed to comply with the requirements of section 1394 under the deemed 
compliance provisions of paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
    (3) Application to pooled financing bond and loan recycling 
programs. In the case of a pooled financing bond program described in 
paragraph (g)(2) of this section or a loan recycling program described 
in paragraph (m)(2)(ii) of this section, section 1394(e) applies on a 
loan-by-loan basis.
    (4) Section 150(b)(4) inapplicable. Section 150(b)(4) does not apply 
to enterprise zone facility bonds.
    (o) Refunding bonds--(1) In general. An issue of bonds issued after 
the zone designation period to refund enterprise zone facility bonds 
(other than in an advance refunding) are treated as enterprise zone 
facility bonds if the refunding issue and the prior issue, if treated as 
a single combined issue, would meet all of the requirements for 
enterprise zone facility bonds, except the requirements in section 
1394(c). For example, the compliance period described in paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section is calculated taking into account any extension 
of the weighted average maturity of the refunding issue compared to the 
remaining weighted average maturity of the prior issue. The proceeds of 
the refunding issue are allocated to the same expenditures and purpose 
investments as the prior issue.

[[Page 806]]

    (2) Maturity limitation. The maturity limitation of section 147(b) 
is applied to a refunding issue by taking into account the issuer's 
reasonable expectations about the economic life of the financed property 
as of the issue date of the prior issue and the actual weighted average 
maturity of the combined refunding issue and prior issue.
    (p) Examples. The following examples illustrate paragraphs (a) 
through (o) of this section:

    Example 1. Averaging of enterprise zone business requirements. City 
C issues enterprise zone facility bonds, the proceeds of which are 
loaned by C to Corporation B to finance the acquisition of equipment for 
its existing business located in a zone. On the issue date of the 
enterprise zone facility bonds, B meets all of the requirements of 
section 1397B(b), except that only 25% of B's employees reside in the 
zone. C and B reasonably expect on the issue date to meet all 
requirements of section 1397B(b) by the date that is 18 months after the 
equipment is placed in service (the initial testing date). In each of 
the first, second, and third taxable years after the initial testing 
date, 35%, 40% and 45%, respectively, of B's employees are zone 
residents. In the fourth year after the testing date, only 25% of B's 
employees are zone residents. B continues to meet the 35% resident 
employee requirement, because the average of zone resident employees for 
those four taxable years is approximately 36%. The percentage of zone 
residents employed by B before the initial testing date is not included 
in determining whether B continues to comply with the 35% resident 
employee requirement.
    Example 2. Measurement of resident employee percentage. Authority D 
issues enterprise zone facility bonds, the proceeds of which are loaned 
to Sole Proprietor F to establish an accounting business in a zone. In 
the first year after the initial testing date, the staff working for F 
includes F, who works 40 hours per week and does not live in the zone, 
one employee who resides in the zone and works 40 hours per week, one 
employee who does not reside in the zone and works 20 hours per week, 
and one employee who does not reside in the zone and works 10 hours per 
week. F meets the 35% resident employee test by calculating the 
percentage on the basis of employee actual work hours as described in 
paragraph (e)(3)(ii)(B) of this section. If F uses the per-employee 
basis as described in paragraph (e)(3)(ii)(A) of this section to 
determine if the resident employee test is met, the percentage of 
employees who are zone residents on a per-employee basis is only 33% 
because F must exclude from the numerator and the denominator the 
employee who works only 10 hours per week. If F calculates the resident 
employee test as a percentage of employee actual work hours as described 
in paragraph (e)(3)(ii)(B) of this section in the first year, F must 
calculate the resident employee test as a percentage of employee actual 
work hours each year.
    Example 3. Active conduct of business within the zone. State G 
issues enterprise zone facility bonds and loans the proceeds to 
Corporation H to finance the acquisition of equipment for H's mail order 
clothing business, which is located in a zone. H purchases the supplies 
for its clothing business from suppliers located both within and outside 
of the zone and expects that orders will be received both from customers 
who will reside or work within the zone and from others outside the 
zone. All orders are received and filled at, and are shipped from, H's 
clothing business located in the zone. H meets the requirement that at 
least 80% of its gross income is derived from the active conduct of 
business within the zone.
    Example 4. Enterprise zone business definition. City J issues 
enterprise zone facility bonds, the proceeds of which are loaned to 
Partnership K to finance the acquisition of equipment for its printing 
operation located in the zone. All orders are taken and completed, and 
all billing and accounting activities are performed, at the print shop 
located in the zone. K, on occasion, uses its equipment (including its 
trucks) and employees to deliver large print jobs to customers who 
reside outside of the zone. So long as K is able to establish that its 
trucks are used in the zone at least 85% of the time and its employees 
perform at least 85% of services for K in the zone, K meets the 
requirements of sections 1397B(b) (3) and (5).
    Example 5. Treatment as a separately incorporated business. The 
facts are the same as in Example 4 except that six years after the issue 
date of the enterprise zone facility bonds, K determines to expand its 
operations to a second location outside of the boundaries of the zone. 
Although the expansion would result in the failure of K to meet the 
tests of 1397B(b), K, using a reasonable allocation method, allocates 
income and activities to its operations within the zone and has evidence 
of these allocations sufficient to establish compliance with the 
requirements of paragraphs (b) through (f) of this section. The bonds 
will not fail to be enterprise zone facility bonds merely because of the 
expansion.
    Example 6. Treatment of pooled financing bond programs. Authority L 
issues bonds in the aggregate principal amount of $5,000,000 and loans 
the proceeds to Bank M pursuant to a loans-to-lenders program. M does 
not meet the definition of enterprise zone business contained in section 
1397B. Prior to the issue date of the bonds, L held a public hearing 
regarding issuance of the bonds for the loans-to-lenders program, 
describing the

[[Page 807]]

projects of identified borrowers to be financed initially with 
$4,000,000 of the proceeds of the bonds. The applicable elected 
representative of L approved issuance of the bonds subsequent to the 
public hearing. The loan agreement between L and M provides that the 
other proceeds of the bonds will be held by M and loaned to borrowers 
that qualify as enterprise zone businesses, following a public hearing 
and approval by the applicable elected representative of L of each loan 
by M to an enterprise zone business. None of the loans will be in 
principal amounts in excess of $3,000,000. The loans by M will otherwise 
meet the requirements of section 1394. The bonds will be enterprise zone 
facility bonds.
    Example 7. Original use requirement for purposes of qualified zone 
property. City N issues enterprise zone facility bonds, the proceeds of 
which are loaned to Corporation P to finance the acquisition of 
equipment. P uses the proceeds after the zone designation date to 
purchase used equipment located outside of the zone and places the 
equipment in service at its location in the zone. Substantially all of 
the use of the equipment is in the zone and is in the active conduct of 
a qualified business by P. The equipment is treated as qualified 
enterprise zone property under section 1397C because P makes the first 
use of the property within the zone after the zone designation date.
    Example 8. Principal user. State R issues enterprise zone facility 
bonds and loans the proceeds to Partnership S to finance the 
construction of a small shopping center to be located in a zone. S is in 
the business of commercial real estate. S is not an enterprise zone 
business, but has secured one anchor lessee, Corporation T, for the 
shopping center. T would qualify as an enterprise zone business. S will 
derive 60% of its gross rental income of the shopping center from T. S 
does not anticipate that the remaining rental income will come from 
enterprise zone businesses. T will occupy 60% of the total rentable 
space in the shopping center. S can use enterprise zone facility bond 
proceeds to finance the portion of the costs of the shopping center 
allocable to T (60%) because T is treated as the principal user of the 
enterprise zone facility bond proceeds.
    Example 9. Remedial actions. State W issues pooled financing 
enterprise zone facility bonds, the proceeds of which will be loaned to 
several enterprise zone businesses in the two enterprise communities and 
one empowerment zone in W. Proceeds of the pooled financing bonds are 
loaned to Corporation X, an enterprise zone business, for a term of 10 
years. Six years after the date of the loan, X expands its operations 
beyond the empowerment zone and is no longer able to meet the 
requirements of section 1394. X does not reasonably expect to be able to 
cure the noncompliance. The loan documents provide that X must prepay 
its loan in the event of noncompliance. W does not expect to be able to 
reloan the prepayment by X within six months of noncompliance. X's 
noncompliance will not affect the qualification of the pooled financing 
bonds as enterprise zone facility bonds if W uses the proceeds from the 
loan prepayment to redeem outstanding enterprise zone facility bonds 
within six months of noncompliance in an amount comparable to the 
outstanding amount of the loan immediately prior to prepayment. X will 
be denied an interest expense deduction for the interest accruing from 
the first day of the taxable year in which the noncompliance began.

    (q) Effective dates--(1) In general. Except as otherwise provided in 
this section, the provisions of this section apply to all issues issued 
after July 30, 1996, and subject to section 1394.
    (2) Elective retroactive application in whole. An issuer may apply 
the provisions of this section in whole, but not in part, to any issue 
that is outstanding on July 30, 1996, and is subject to section 1394.

[T.D. 8673, 61 FR 27259, May 31, 1996]

                   Empowerment Zone Employment Credit