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IRS ruling: State grants for hurricane mitigation are tax-free TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Dec. 13, 2007 – Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink announced yesterday that grants awarded to homeowners through the My Safe Florida Home (MSFH) program are not taxable income and do not have to be reported when filling out federal income taxes. CFO Sink made the announcement after receiving a Letter Ruling from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) stating that MSFH grants will be excluded from “gross incomes for federal income tax purposes.” “Floridians taking personal responsibility to harden their homes and receive a grant from the My Safe Florida Home program shouldn’t be hit with an additional tax bill in January 2008,” says CFO Sink, who runs the Department of Financial Services and the MSFH program. “I commend the IRS for granting our request that mitigation grants should not be considered part of a homeowner’s income.” Following a June 2007 request from CFO Sink, the IRS issued a Letter Ruling in late November that all grants given through the MSFH program will not be considered income and will not be reported as income to the federal government. Without this recent ruling, matching grant recipients could have been facing a tax liability of $1,250 on a $5,000 MSFH grant, based on the IRS Flat Tax calculation rate of 25 percent. The ruling potentially saves approximately $2.15 million in additional federal income taxes. The MSFH program resumed offering wind inspections and expanded statewide in April 2007 after conducting a pilot program during the previous year. During the last 7 months, the MSFH program has performed approximately 114,000 free wind inspections, and a total of 127,816 inspections since the program began. Approximately 15,985 homeowners have been approved to receive matching grants and are working with the MSFH program to harden their homes. Statewide, the program has issued a grand total of more than 2,637 grants to homeowners for more than $8.6 million. Property insurance savings Many Florida homeowners who participate in the free inspection program also receive insurance premium discounts without making any improvements since the inspection form, once sent to their insurer, can show hurricane mitigation features that are already in place. Sink says that 95,807 (76 percent) of participating homeowners are eligible for an average discount of $210 on their wind insurance premiums, based on the current structure of the home during the free MSFH wind inspection. Over the last seven months, the program has alerted Floridians to a potential savings in windstorm insurance premiums totaling more than $20 million. Any Floridian who lives in a single-family, site-built home is eligible for a free wind inspection through the program. Floridians can apply on-line at www.MySafeFloridaHome.com or by calling the program toll-free at (866) 513-6734. Homeowners who receive free wind inspections through the MSFH program will get a detailed inspection report, complete with additional eligibility information on matching grants and estimated insurance premium discounts, if the homeowner is eligible. In order to be eligible for the program’s matching grant reimbursements of up to $5,000, the Legislature requires that homeowners meet the following requirements: have received a completed wind inspection after May 1, 2007; live in a single-family, site-built home built before March 1, 2002; have a valid homestead exemption; have an insured value of $300,000 or less; and be located in the wind-borne debris region. Additionally, while the free wind inspections will still cover seven potential wind-resistance improvements, matching grants may only be applied to opening protections, including windows, exterior doors and garage doors, as well as the bracing of gable ends. © 2007 FLORIDA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® Questions, comments or suggestions on this article? Have a news tip? Send a letter to the editor to: Newseditor@floridarealtors.org. |