[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 38 (Tuesday, February 26, 2019)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 6076-6080]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-03388]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Internal Revenue Service

26 CFR Part 1

[TD 9848]
RIN 1545-BL39


Amendments to the Low-Income Housing Credit Compliance-Monitoring 
Regulations

AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.

ACTION: Final regulations and removal of temporary regulations.

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SUMMARY: This document contains final regulations that amend the 
compliance monitoring regulations concerning the low-income housing 
credit under section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code (Code). These 
final regulations revise and clarify the requirement to conduct 
physical inspections and review low-income certifications and other 
documentation. The final regulations will affect owners of low-income 
housing projects that claim the credit, the tenants in those low-income 
housing projects, and the State and local housing credit agencies that 
administer the credit.

DATES:  Effective date: These regulations are effective on February 26, 
2019.
    Applicability Dates: For dates of applicability see Sec.  1.42-
5(h)(2).

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Barbara Campbell or YoungNa Lee, (202) 
317-4137 (not a toll-free number).

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Background

    This document amends 26 CFR part 1 to finalize rules relating to 
section 42 of the Code. On February 25, 2016, the Department of the 
Treasury (Treasury Department) and the IRS published temporary 
regulations (T.D. 9753) in the Federal Register (81 FR 9333), which 
amended Sec.  1.42-5 of the Income Tax Regulations.
    Section 42(m)(1) provides that the owners of an otherwise-
qualifying building are not entitled to the housing credit dollar 
amount that is allocated to the building unless, among other 
requirements, the allocation is pursuant to a qualified allocation plan 
(QAP). A QAP provides standards by which a State or local housing 
credit agency or its Authorized Delegate within the meaning of Sec.  
1.42-5(f)(1) (Agency) is to make these allocations. A QAP also provides 
a procedure that an Agency must follow in monitoring for compliance 
with the provisions of section 42. A plan fails to be a QAP unless, in 
addition to other requirements, it provides a procedure that the agency 
(or an agent or other private contractor of such agency) will follow in 
monitoring for noncompliance with the provisions of section 42 and in 
notifying the Internal Revenue Service of such noncompliance which such 
agency becomes aware of and in monitoring for noncompliance with 
habitability standards through regular site visits. (Section 
42(m)(1)(B)(iii)).
    Section 1.42-5 (the compliance-monitoring regulations) describes 
some of the provisions that must be part of any QAP. As part of its 
compliance-monitoring responsibilities, an Agency must perform physical 
inspections and low-income certification review.
    The compliance-monitoring regulations specifically provide that, 
for each low-income housing project, an Agency must conduct on-site 
inspections of all buildings within its jurisdiction by the end of the 
second calendar year following the year the last building in the 
project is placed in service (the all-buildings requirement). Prior to 
the issuance of the temporary regulations, the regulations also 
provided that, for at least 20 percent of the project's low-income 
units (the 20-percent rule), the Agency must both inspect the units and 
review the low-income certifications, the documentation supporting the 
certifications, and the rent records for the tenants in those same 
units (the same-units requirement).
    Under the temporary regulations, guidance published in the Internal 
Revenue Bulletin may provide exceptions from, or alternative means of 
satisfying, the inspection provisions of Sec.  1.42-5(d). Rev. Proc. 
2016-15 (2016-11 I.R.B. 435) was published concurrently with the 
temporary regulations and provides that the U.S. Housing and Urban 
Development (HUD) Real Estate Assessment Center Protocol (the REAC 
protocol) satisfies both Sec.  1.42-5(d) and the physical inspection 
requirements of Sec.  1.42-5T(c)(2)(ii) and (iii). The revenue 
procedure provides that, in a low-income housing project, the minimum 
number of low-income units that must undergo physical inspection is the 
lesser of 20 percent of the low-income units in the project, rounded up 
to the nearest whole number of units, or the number of low-income units 
set forth in the Low-Income Housing Credit Minimum Unit Sample Size 
Reference Chart in the revenue procedure (the REAC numbers). The 
revenue procedure also applies the same rule to determine the minimum 
number of units that must undergo low-income certification review.
    The temporary regulations also required that Agencies continue to 
comply with the all-buildings requirement unless guidance published in 
the Internal Revenue Bulletin pursuant to Sec.  1.42-5T(a)(iii) 
provides otherwise. Rev. Proc. 2016-15 provides for such an exception. 
Under Rev. Proc. 2016-15, the all-buildings requirement does not apply 
to an Agency that uses the REAC protocol to satisfy the physical 
inspection requirement, because the Treasury Department and the IRS 
have determined that the REAC protocol is an acceptable method for 
satisfying both Sec.  1.42-5(d) and the physical inspection requirement 
of Sec.  1.42-5T(c)(2)(ii) and (iii).
    Finally, the temporary regulations decoupled the physical 
inspection and low-income certification review and ended the same-units 
requirement. Accordingly, an Agency is no longer required to conduct a 
physical inspection and low-income certification review of the same 
unit. Because the units no longer needed to be the same, an Agency may 
choose a different number of units for physical inspection and for low-
income certification review provided the Agency chooses at least the 
minimum number of low-income units. Further, an Agency may choose to 
conduct a physical inspection and low-income certification review at 
different times.
    On the same day the temporary regulations were published, the 
Treasury Department and the IRS also published a notice of proposed 
rulemaking (REG-150349-12, 81 FR 9379) (the proposed regulations). The 
text of the proposed regulations incorporated by cross-reference the 
text of the temporary regulations. The Treasury Department and the IRS 
received written comments on the proposed regulations. No requests for 
a public hearing were made, and no public hearing was held.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS considered the written comments 
in light of the questions presented in the preamble of the temporary 
regulations. The Treasury Department and the IRS

[[Page 6077]]

resolved those comments and questions concerning the temporary 
regulations and the interim guidance as discussed in this preamble and 
incorporated in this Treasury Decision.

Summary of Comments and Explanation of Provisions

I. Whether the REAC Numbers Should Replace the 20-Percent Rule for 
Physical Inspection and Low-Income Certification Review

    Historically, the Treasury Department and the IRS have not required 
an Agency physically to inspect every low-income residential unit in a 
low-income project. Instead, if physical inspection of a representative 
random sample of units yielded satisfactory results, the Agency was 
permitted to infer that the uninspected units were similar. In such an 
exercise, a critical question is how large a sample is needed to 
support confidence in that inference. Decades ago, the Treasury 
Department and the IRS determined that a sample was adequate if it 
included at least 20 percent of a project's low-income units, 
regardless of the total number of low-income units in the project. 
(T.D. 8430, 57 FR 40121, September 2, 1992).
    The REAC protocol requires sample sizes that differ from those that 
the Treasury Department and the IRS had required. In developing that 
protocol, HUD sought to determine sample sizes that would yield equally 
reliable inferences regardless of the size of the number of residential 
units in a project. HUD's statistical analysis produced minimum sample 
sizes that are much lower than 20 percent of large projects' units but 
somewhat higher than 20 percent of total units for small projects. The 
implication of the HUD conclusions was that the tax regulations' 20 
percent requirement for low-income housing credit inspections may have 
been unnecessarily burdensome for large projects and may have failed 
adequately to assess habitability in smaller ones.
    In the temporary regulations the Treasury Department and the IRS 
responded to that implication with a two-step process--minimum sample 
size was reduced for large projects, and taxpayers were asked whether 
analogous statistical considerations should be applied to increase 
minimum sample sizes for small ones.
    First, under the temporary regulations, the 20-percent rule and the 
REAC numbers (if an Agency is using the REAC protocol) are used by an 
Agency for purposes of conducting physical inspections and the low-
income certification reviews. Rev. Proc. 2016-15 provides that an 
Agency must conduct on-site inspections and low-income certification 
review of the lesser of--
    (1) 20 percent of the low-income units in the low-income housing 
project, rounded up to the nearest whole number of units, or
    (2) The Minimum Unit Sample Size set forth in the Low-Income 
Housing Credit Minimum Unit Sample Size Reference Chart. (The numbers 
in the chart come from the REAC protocol.)
    Second, in the preamble to T.D. 9753, the Treasury Department and 
the IRS expressed concern about application of the 20-percent rule for 
projects with a relatively small number of low-income units. The 
concern is that, in smaller projects, physical inspections and the low-
income certification review of 20 percent of units (even a 
representative random sample) may not produce a sufficiently accurate 
estimate of the uninspected units' overall compliance with habitability 
and low-income requirements. The preamble further states that the 
Treasury Department and the IRS intend to consider replacing Rev. Proc. 
2016-15 with a requirement that does not permit use of the 20-percent 
rule for projects with a relatively small number of low-income units. 
Comments were requested.
    One commenter responded that it was not concerned about ending the 
20-percent rule for projects with a relatively small number of low-
income units, because it is among those Agencies whose State or local 
rules require them to inspect a minimum number of units that exceeds 
the minimum numbers in Rev. Proc. 2016-15.
    These final regulations remove the rule that allows minimum sample 
size to be the lesser of 20-percent of the total number of low-income 
units or the minimum unit sample size set forth in the Low-Income 
Housing Credit Minimum Unit Sample Size Reference Chart. Instead, under 
these final regulations, Agencies must inspect no fewer units than the 
number specified for projects of the relevant size as set forth in the 
Low-Income Housing Credit Minimum Unit Sample Size Reference Chart. The 
Treasury Department and the IRS have determined that the REAC numbers 
produce a statistically valid sampling of units, which establishes 
confidence in the compliance monitoring results for projects of varying 
size. The Treasury Department and the IRS have further determined that 
the REAC numbers reasonably balance burden on Agencies, tenants, and 
building owners with the need to adequately monitor habitability and 
compliance with the low-income housing credit income and gross-rent 
restrictions. Agencies, however, continue to have discretion to inspect 
and review more units as they see fit.

II. Whether the Final Regulations Should Retain the All-Buildings 
Requirement

    The temporary regulations (Sec.  1.42-5T(c)(2)(iii)(A)(1) and (2)) 
require that an Agency physically inspect all buildings in a low-income 
housing project by the end of the second calendar year following the 
year the last building in the low-income housing project is placed in 
service and at least once every 3 years thereafter. However, Rev. Proc. 
2016-15 excepts from this all-buildings requirement a project 
inspection conducted under the REAC protocol. The exception was 
specifically carved out based on confidence in, and deference to, an 
inspection done under HUD oversight.
    Two commenters recommended that the final regulations also dispense 
with the all-buildings requirement for Agencies not using the REAC 
protocol. The final regulations do not adopt this recommendation. The 
REAC protocol requires that inspectors be specially trained in its use. 
When an Agency is not using that protocol, it may choose inspectors of 
diverse expertise to conduct inspections. The quality of these 
inspections may vary across projects and jurisdictions.
    Under the all-buildings rule, if the randomly selected minimum 
number of low-income units to be inspected fails to include at least 
one unit in one or more buildings in a project, then an Agency may 
satisfy the requirement by inspecting some aspect of each omitted 
building. These aspects might include the building exterior, common 
area, HVAC system, etc. In the absence of HUD oversight, requiring that 
all-buildings be inspected serves as a quality control mechanism.

III. Whether the Final Regulations Should Shorten the Reasonable-Notice 
Time Frame

    The temporary regulations require an Agency to select low-income 
units to inspect and low-income certifications to review in a manner 
that will not give advance notice that a particular low-income unit (or 
low-income certifications for a particular low-income unit) will or 
will not be inspected (or reviewed) for a particular year. The 
temporary regulations allow an Agency to give an owner reasonable 
notice that an inspection of the building and low-income units or 
review of low-income certifications will occur, whether or not an 
Agency is selecting

[[Page 6078]]

the same units for inspection and for low-income certification review. 
The temporary regulations provide that reasonable notice is generally 
no more than 30 days, but they also provide a very limited extension 
for certain extraordinary circumstances beyond an Agency's control such 
as natural disasters and severe weather conditions.
    The Treasury Department and the IRS requested comments on whether 
the same maximum amount of notice is reasonable for physical 
inspections as for low-income certification review. Additionally, the 
Treasury Department and the IRS requested comments on whether, for 
physical inspections, the reasonable-notice time frame should be 
shortened. For example, under the REAC protocol, an inspector provides 
a 15-day notice of an upcoming HUD inspection of a project but same-day 
identification of the units to be inspected. No comments were received.
    These final regulations shorten the reasonable notice requirement 
to a 15-day notice that a project will experience an upcoming physical 
inspection or review of low-income certification. The Treasury 
Department and Internal Revenue Service believe that the 15-day notice 
period gives building owners reasonable notice that a review of low-
income certifications will occur and gives building owners and tenants 
reasonable notice that a project will be inspected and that low-income 
units will be inspected if they are in the random sample that will 
later be selected.
    The statistical validity of inspecting only a sample of the low-
income units in a project depends on the sample being random and 
representative. Thus, the validity would be destroyed if a project 
owner had an opportunity to selectively prepare the units in the sample 
for inspection. Consistent with preserving the validity of the 
inspection process, an Agency must select the low-income units to 
inspect in a manner that will not give advance notice that a particular 
low-income unit will or will not be inspected. Accordingly, the final 
regulations clarify that an Agency may notify the owner of the 
particular low-income units for inspection only on the day of 
inspection. The Treasury Department and IRS note that, under the REAC 
protocol, HUD or HUD-Certified REAC inspectors randomly select low-
income units for inspection on the day of inspection.

IV. Whether the Final Regulations Should Allow an Agency To Treat a 
Scattered Site or Multiple Buildings With a Common Owner and Plan of 
Financing as One Low-Income Housing Project Absent a Multiple-Building 
Election Under Section 42(g)(3)(D)

    Section 42(c)(2)(A) defines ``qualified low-income building'' as 
any building that is part of a qualified low-income housing project at 
all times throughout the compliance period. Section 42(g)(1) defines 
``qualified low-income housing project'' as any project for residential 
rental property if the project meets the requirements of section 
42(g)(1)(A), (B), or (C), whichever is elected by the taxpayer. Section 
42(g)(7) provides for a scattered site project. Under that provision, 
buildings that would (but for their lack of proximity) be treated as a 
project shall be so treated if all of the dwelling units in each of the 
buildings are rent-restricted residential rental units. Section 
42(g)(3)(D) provides that a project contains only one building unless, 
prior to the end of the first calendar year in the project period (as 
defined in section 42(h)(1)(F)(ii)), each building to comprise the 
project is identified in the form and the manner that the Secretary 
provides. Taxpayers make the multiple-building election on Form 8609 
and by attaching a statement identifying each of the buildings in a 
project subject to the election.
    Two commenters recommended that, for purposes of compliance 
monitoring (including determining how many units to inspect), the final 
regulations provide special treatment to a scattered site or multiple 
buildings with a common owner and plan of financing. The recommendation 
was that compliance monitoring be conducted as if the multiple 
buildings were part of a single project, even if the owner had not made 
a multiple-building election under section 42(g)(3)(D). If the low-
income units in all of the buildings were treated as potentially 
representative of each other (as would be the case if the buildings 
were part of a single project), the size of the sample to be inspected 
would be lower than the aggregate number of units to be inspected if 
the buildings are considered separately. Because of this separate 
treatment, according to these commenters, the process of inspecting a 
number of small, single-building projects (for example, single family, 
duplex, or triplex buildings) located throughout a relatively large 
(possibly rural) geographic area is unnecessarily burdensome. In 
particular, separate treatment requires at least one unit of each of 
the building to be inspected. The Treasury Department and the IRS note 
that the multiple-building election is a statutory requirement. Other 
than treating these buildings as if such an election had been made, 
commenters did not suggest criteria according to which units in 
buildings in different projects could be treated as statistically 
representative of each other. For that reason, the Treasury Department 
and the IRS are not adopting this recommendation in the final 
regulations.

V. Certification and Review Provisions Under Sec.  1.42-5(c)

    One commenter recommended that the regulations clarify that for 
properties consisting of two or more separate projects, monitoring 
Agencies may accept one certification form as long as it contains an 
attachment that identifies all of the projects for which the 
certification is being made. The Treasury Department and the IRS 
decline to adopt the comment, because it is beyond the scope of the 
proposed regulations.

Effect on Other Documents

    The temporary regulations authorize the IRS to provide in guidance 
published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin exceptions from, or 
alternative means of satisfying, the inspection provisions of Sec.  
1.42-5(d). Rev. Proc. 2016-15 was published concurrently with the 
temporary regulations and provides that the HUD REAC protocol satisfies 
both Sec.  1.42-5(d) and the physical inspection requirements of the 
temporary regulations. These final regulations contain the guidance 
that Agencies need and do not rely on the IRS to provide in the 
Internal Revenue Bulletin exceptions from, or alternative means of 
satisfying the inspection provisions of Sec.  1.42-5(d) or these final 
regulations. Accordingly, Rev. Proc. 2016-15 is obsolete with respect 
to an Agency as of the date on which the Agency's QAP is amended to 
reflect these final regulations. In all cases, however, Rev. Proc. 
2016-15 is obsolete after December 31, 2020.

Applicability Date

    The Department of Treasury and the IRS are aware that additional 
time may be needed for Agencies' QAPs to be amended. The final 
regulations allow Agencies a reasonable period of time to amend their 
QAPs, but QAPs must be amended no later than December 31, 2020.

Special Analyses

    This regulation is not subject to review under section 6(b) of 
Executive

[[Page 6079]]

Order 12866 pursuant to the Memorandum of Agreement (April 11, 2018) 
between the Department of the Treasury and the Office of Management and 
Budget regarding review of tax regulations. Therefore, a regulatory 
impact assessment is not required. Because these regulations do not 
impose a collection of information on small entities, the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) does not apply. Pursuant to 
section 7805(f) of the Code, the notice of proposed rulemaking 
preceding these regulations was submitted to the Chief Counsel for 
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comment on their 
impact on small businesses. No comments were received from the Small 
Business Administration.

Drafting Information

    The principal authors of these regulations are Barbara Campbell and 
YoungNa Lee, Office of the Associate Chief Counsel (Passthroughs and 
Special Industries). However, other personnel from the IRS and the 
Treasury Department participated in their development.

List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1

    Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

Adoption of Amendments to the Regulations

    Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is amended as follows:

PART 1--INCOME TAXES

0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 is amended by removing 
the entry for Sec.  1.42-5T to read in part as follows:

    Authority:  26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *


Sec.  1.42-0T   [Amended]

0
Par. 2. Section 1.42-0T is amended by removing the entry for Sec.  
1.42-5T.


0
Par. 3. Section 1.42-5 is amended by:
0
1. Removing paragraph (a)(2)(iii).
0
2. Revising paragraphs (c)(2)(ii) and (iii).
0
3. Revising paragraph (c)(3).
0
4. Revising paragraph (h)(2).
0
5. Removing paragraph (i).
    The revisions and additions read as follows:


Sec.  1.42-5  Monitoring compliance with low-income housing credit 
requirements.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *
    (2) * * *
    (ii) Require that, with respect to each low-income housing project, 
the Agency conduct on-site inspections and review low-income 
certifications (including in that term the documentation supporting the 
low-income certifications and the rent records for tenants).
    (iii) Require that the on-site inspections that the Agency must 
conduct satisfy both the requirements of Sec.  1.42-5(d) and the 
requirements in paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(A) through (D) of this section, 
and require that the low-income certification review that the Agency 
must perform satisfies the requirements in paragraphs (c)(2)(iii)(A) 
through (D) of this section. Paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(A) through (D) of 
this section provides rules determining how these on-site inspection 
requirements and how these low-income certification review requirements 
may be satisfied by an inspection or review, as the case may be, that 
includes only a sample of the low-income units.
    (A) Timing. The Agency must conduct on-site inspections of all 
buildings in the low-income housing project and must review low-income 
certifications of the low-income housing project--
    (1) By the end of the second calendar year following the year the 
last building in the low-income housing project is placed in service; 
and
    (2) At least once every 3 years thereafter.
    (B) Number of low-income units. The Agency must conduct on-site 
inspections and low-income certification review of not fewer than the 
minimum number of low-income units for the corresponding number of low-
income units in the low-income housing project set forth in the table 
to paragraph (c)(2)(iii).

                     Table to Paragraph (c)(2)(iii)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Number of low-income
                                                     units selected for
   Number of low-income units in the low-income    inspection or for low-
                 housing project                    income certification
                                                    review (minimum unit
                                                        sample size)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1................................................                     1
2................................................                     2
 3...............................................                     3
4................................................                     4
5-6..............................................                     5
7................................................                     6
8-9..............................................                     7
10-11............................................                     8
12-13............................................                     9
14-16............................................                    10
17-18............................................                    11
19-21............................................                    12
22-25............................................                    13
26-29............................................                    14
30-34............................................                    15
35-40............................................                    16
41-47............................................                    17
48-56............................................                    18
57-67............................................                    19
68-81............................................                    20
82-101...........................................                    21
102-130..........................................                    22
131-175..........................................                    23
176-257..........................................                    24
258-449..........................................                    25
450-1,461........................................                    26
1,462-9,999......................................                    27
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (C) Selection of low-income units for inspection and low-income 
certifications for review--(1) Random selection. The Agency must select 
in a random manner the low-income units to be inspected and the units 
whose low-income certifications are to be reviewed. Agencies generally 
may not select the same low-income units of a low-income housing 
project for on-site inspections and low-income certification review, 
because doing so would usually give prohibited advance notice. See 
paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(C)(2) of this section. An Agency may choose a 
different number of units for on-site inspections and for low-income 
certification review, provided the Agency chooses at least the minimum 
number of low-income units in each case. The Agency must select the 
units for inspections or low-income certification review separately and 
in a random manner.
    (2) Advance notification limited to reasonable notice. The Agency 
must select the low-income units to inspect and low-income 
certifications to review in a manner that does not give advance notice 
that a particular low-income unit (or low-income certifications for a 
particular low-income unit) will or will not be inspected (or reviewed) 
for a particular year. The Agency may notify the owner of the low-
income units for on-site inspection only on the day of inspection. 
However, the Agency may give an owner reasonable notice that an 
inspection of the project and of not-yet-identified low-income units or 
review of low-income certifications will occur. The notice serves to 
enable the owner to assemble needed documentation for low-income 
certifications for review and to notify tenants of the possibility of 
physical inspection of their units.
    (3) Meaning of reasonable notice. For purposes of paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii)(C)(2) of this section, reasonable notice is generally no 
more than 15 days. The notice period begins on the date the Agency 
informs the owner that an on-

[[Page 6080]]

site inspection of a project and low-income units or low-income 
certification review will occur. Notice of more than 15 days, however, 
may be reasonable in extraordinary circumstances that are beyond an 
Agency's control and that prevent an Agency from carrying out within 15 
days an on-site inspection or low-income certification review. 
Extraordinary circumstances include, but are not limited to, natural 
disasters and severe weather conditions. In the event of extraordinary 
circumstances that result in a reasonable-notice period longer than 15 
days, an Agency must select the relevant units and conduct the same-day 
on-site inspection or low-income certification review as soon as 
practicable.
    (4) Alternative means of conducting on-site inspections--Use of the 
REAC protocol. An Agency may satisfy the requirements of paragraphs 
(c)(2)(ii) and (iii) of this section if the inspection is performed 
under the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Real Estate 
Assessment Center (REAC) protocol and the inspection satisfies the 
following requirements:
    (i) Both vacant and occupied low-income units in a low-income 
housing project are included in the population of units from which 
units are selected for inspection;
    (ii) The inspection complies with the procedural and substantive 
requirements of the REAC protocol, including the requirements of the 
most recent REAC Uniform Physical Condition Standards (UPCS) inspection 
software, or software accepted by HUD;
    (iii) The inspection is performed by HUD or HUD-Certified REAC 
inspectors;
    (iv) The inspection results are sent to HUD, the results are 
reviewed and scored within HUD's secure system without any involvement 
of the inspector who conducted the inspection, and HUD makes its 
inspection report available.
    (5) HUD Inspections that comply with the requirements of the REAC 
Protocol. If, consistent with the requirements of paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii)(4) of this section, an Agency conducts on-site inspections 
under the REAC protocol, then--
    (i) Paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(A) of this section is applied as if it 
did not contain the word ``all'';
    (ii) The number of low-income units required to be inspected under 
the REAC protocol satisfies the requirements of paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section concerning the number of low-income 
units an Agency must inspect; and
    (iii) The manner in which the low-income units are selected for 
inspection under the REAC protocol satisfies the requirements of 
paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(C) of this section.
    (6) Income Certification Requirements for HUD Inspections that 
comply with the requirements of the REAC Protocol. An agency that 
conducts on-site inspections under the REAC protocol is not excused 
from reviewing low-income certifications in accordance with paragraphs 
(c)(2)(ii) and (iii) of this section.
    (7) Applicability of reasonable notice limitation when the same 
units are chosen for inspection and file review. If the Agency chooses 
to select the same units for on-site inspections and low-income 
certification review, the Agency must complete both the inspections and 
review before the end of the day on which the units are selected. See 
paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(C)(1) and (2) of this section.
    (D) Method of low-income certification review. The Agency may 
review the low-income certifications wherever the owner maintains or 
stores the records (either on-site or off-site).
    (3) Frequency and form of certification. A monitoring procedure 
must require that the certifications and reviews of Sec.  1.42-5(c)(1) 
and (c)(2)(i) be made at least annually covering each year of the 15-
year compliance period under section 42(i)(1). The certifications must 
be made under penalties of perjury. A monitoring procedure may require 
certifications and reviews more frequently than every 12 months, 
provided that all months within each 12-month period are subject to 
certification.
* * * * *
    (h) * * *
    (2) Applicability dates. The requirements in paragraphs (c)(2)(ii) 
and (iii) and (c)(3) of this section apply beginning on February 26, 
2019. A state housing credit agency is allowed a reasonable period of 
time to amend its qualified allocation plan, but must amend its 
qualified allocation plan no later than December 31, 2020.
* * * * *


Sec.  1.42-5T  [Removed]

0
Par. 4. Section 1.42-5T is removed.

Kirsten Wielobob,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and Enforcement.
    Approved: February 13, 2019.
David J. Kautter,
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax Policy).
[FR Doc. 2019-03388 Filed 2-22-19; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P