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Bill

H 3149

Motor vehicle offenses decriminalized

2025-2026 Regular Session Introduced by Todd Rutherford

Establishes a 9-member commission to study LIHTC reforms in Massachusetts and issue recommendations within 12 months to boost transparency, efficiency, and long-term affordability.

Referred to Committee on Judiciary
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Bill Summary · H 3149

Summary: H.3149 — An Act establishing a commission to study reforms to the low-income housing tax credit program

Purpose and intent

  • Establishes a special commission to study and recommend reforms to the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) program in Massachusetts.
  • Goals include enhancing transparency, efficiency, and the impact of LIHTC on affordable housing statewide.

Key provisions and proposed reforms to study

The commission will investigate and document:
- (a) How LIHTC resources are administered and allocated at the state level.
- (b) Ways to streamline project requirements, reduce unnecessary costs, and incentivize long-term affordability.
- (c) Feasibility of implementing supplementary state-level tax credits, expedited permitting, and incentives for mixed-use and environmentally sustainable development.
- (d) Best practices to prioritize preservation of existing affordable housing and align resources with local housing needs.
- (e) Enhanced oversight mechanisms to ensure transparent and equitable allocation of credits.

Commission composition

The commission is designed to be multidisciplinary and include:
- Secretary of Housing and Livable Communities (or designee) – Chair
- 1 House member appointed by the Speaker of the House
- 1 Senate member appointed by the Senate President
- 1 House member appointed by the House Minority Leader
- 1 Senate member appointed by the Senate Minority Leader
- 2 Governor appointees: one with affordable housing development expertise, and one with tax policy expertise
- 1 representative of a nonprofit housing advocacy organization (appointed by the Governor)
- 1 representative of a regional planning agency (appointed by the Governor)

Total: 9 members

Public hearings and stakeholder input

  • The commission must hold at least 3 public hearings to gather input from stakeholders such as developers, housing advocates, municipal officials, and community members.

Reporting and timelines

  • The commission must file its report with findings and recommendations no later than 12 months after the act’s effective date.
  • The report will be submitted to the clerks of the House and Senate, the Joint Committee on Housing, and the Joint Committee on Revenue.

Procedural status and timeline

  • Introduced: February 27, 2025
  • Legislative actions include: referral to the Committee on Revenue; Senate concurrence noted
  • Hearing: Scheduled for September 15, 2025, from 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM in hearing room A-2
  • Related bill: HD 3372 (House Docket No. 3372) is noted as replacing this measure

Potential impact

  • No immediate changes to LIHTC policy are enacted by this bill itself; rather, it creates a formal process to study reforms.
  • Could lead to reforms that improve transparency, reduce costs, speed up development, and promote long-term affordability and sustainable, mixed-use projects if the commission’s recommendations are adopted.
  • Impacts could extend to developers, affordable housing providers, municipalities, and state agencies involved in tax policy and housing oversight.

Notes

  • The bill is framed as a study commission rather than direct policy enactment.
  • The act emphasizes transparency, efficiency, and alignment of LIHTC resources with local housing needs.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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