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Barbour Calls Special Session on Coast Housing

[verbatim statement] (JACKSON, Mississippi) * Governor Haley Barbour announced today he has called a Special Session of the Mississippi Legislature for Thursday to ask legislators to reduce the cost of construction of new homes on the Mississippi Gulf Coast.

The Governor said the Special Session will convene at noon on Thursday, October 5, 2006, and legislators will be asked to reduce the state’s tax on modular homes as a means of reducing the cost of new homes for Coast families by $4,000 to $6,000 per home. The measure is the same he sought in a special legislative session in August; it unanimously passed the Senate, but was killed in the House Ways and Means Committee, when it was never brought up for a vote.

“The number one priority and challenge in Mississippi caused by Katrina is housing,” Governor Barbour said. “We must act now to remove barriers to building housing on the Gulf Coast, and reducing the tax on modular homes is a necessary step toward that end.”

“Rebuilding our housing stock is a massive undertaking. To rebuild quickly and efficiently, we must be innovative and creative and not just rely on pre-Katrina housing solutions,” Governor Barbour said.

More than 240,000 units of housing were damaged by Katrina statewide, representing 23 percent of the state’s occupied housing units. Nearly 80,000 units of housing suffered major or severe damage, or were destroyed, approximately 53,000 of which were in the three coastal counties.

Governor Barbour said due to labor supply constraints, the State must encourage alternatives to conventional, site-built, “stick-built” homes. One such alternative is modular housing, which under Mississippi law is taxed at 7 percent while manufactured housing is taxed at 3 percent.

“Modular homes” are often confused with “manufactured housing” (also referred to as mobile homes) since they are both “manufactured” in a plant. However, there are substantial differences between the two. Mobile homes are built to the HUD code, which is a national code governing the manufactured housing industry. Modular housing is built to comply with local building codes governing conventional construction, e.g. the International Residential Code; therefore, the construction of modular housing is virtually the same as a conventionally built home and qualifies for conventional mortgage financing.

What are modular homes?

A modular home is built in modules or sections which are transported to the site. A builder will normally install the foundation and the modules will be lifted in place and fixed to the foundation. Once the modules are installed at the foundation, the builder will complete the completion of the utilities and other finishes.

Modular homes vary in size and price. There are multi-million dollar custom modular homes, and there are modular homes designed for more affordable housing.

How does the current Mississippi tax law treat modular homes?

According to the Mississippi Tax Commission (MTC), Section 27-65-17 levies a tax at the rate of 7% on the sale of tangible personal property. This Section also provides reduced rates of tax for certain items, including mobile homes which are tax at the reduced rate of 3%.

The MTC taxes modular home sales at the regular retail rate of 7% since the statutes do not provide a lower rate of tax.

If a homeowner used conventional site-built housing methods, a 7% tax would be paid on the materials, but no sales tax would be paid on the labor. However, under the current tax law for modular homes, a 7% tax is owed on materials and labor.

How should Mississippi tax modular homes?

Modular homes should be taxed at the same 3% tax rate that currently exists for manufactured housing. This would also more closely match the taxability of a conventional site-built home.


What is the revenue impact to the state?

Since there is very little modular housing currently in Mississippi, there will be a very minimal impact on state revenue. The Mississippi Tax Commission reports that the State collected $5.5 million from the sale of manufactured housing in FY 06, but it can not identify existing revenue figures for modular homes. No one estimates the state has ever collected as much as $1 million in a year in state sales taxes on modular homes.

However, by removing a financial barrier to modular housing and given the large unmet demand for housing, there is no doubt that more modular houses will be purchased and, therefore, more tax revenue will be generated than in any previous year.

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posted by ladd on 10/02/06 at 01:30 PM. [printer version]    Share |

COMMENTS

 

With the lack of housing down there, we should be doing EVERYTHING to encourage housing on the coast. This is a better solution than waiting for contractors, builders, raw materials, etc to find their way to the coast to support more construction of stick built homes.

IF this is held up in the House again, McCoy needs his azz kicked to a pulp. Harsh? Yeah but not as harsh as thousands of homeless families who need our help right now and get the back of a hand instead. 

posted by Kingfish on 10/02/06 at 04:18 PM

Does anyone know what the argument against this proposal is? Is the idea that it hurts general contracting and/or local jobs by subsidizing cheaper modular homes from outside the state? I’m honestly curious...I don’t understand what the rationale might have been for killing it the first time around.

posted by iTodd on 10/02/06 at 04:20 PM

well, I can think of the Miss. Manuf. Housing Assn opposes it probably. I don’t know for sure but I’ll be surprised if they don’t.

I wouldn’t be surprised if McCoy opposed it just on the fact that Barbour thought of it and he needs a way to make Barbour look bad. Cynical I know but politics does work that way sometimes. 

posted by Kingfish on 10/02/06 at 04:31 PM

… legislators will be asked to reduce the state’s tax on modular homes as a means of reducing the cost of new homes for Coast families by $4,000 to $6,000 per home. The measure unanimously passed the Senate, but was killed in the House Ways and Means Committee, when it was never brought up for a vote.

YAY for the Senate! BOOS AND HISSES for the House (other than the members who did favor it, of course)!!!!

Other points worth mentioning, though they are not the subject of the article?

*What about Business Taxes? True, the Gulf Coast Economic Zone will undoubtedly help. If we want a swift revival though, the State of Mississippi govt will have to do its part by reducing business taxes as well (maybe they did, but if so I haven’t heard about it. Someone tell me I’m wrong if I did miss something). After all, businesses and residents are what propagate each other. This is not only true for retail, but for high-value-added (and hence higher paying) jobs.

*Planning and Buliding Codes. Granted the first priority is to get the area back to the way it was, only better. Even so, what about the building codes along the coast? The Miami area has a real-world example to follow in that regard, so why not simply copy Miami-Dade’s building codes and apply them to the are south of I-10?  Putting buildings on well-built pylons would be great for heavier buildings too

*Idea VERY LARGE buildings
(a) keep what would be the first or second floors empty space (or at least used-but-low-priority space). The more valuable stuff can be on the third and fourth floors, with interior storm shudders. That way, the storm surge would damage only the “least valuable/most easily repaired” sections of the building. The storm shudder on the top floors can protect teh office from broken glass; which has a rather nasty habit of damaging other items in the room, totally aside from the winds howling through the room.

(b) (if at all possible) Design the buildings similar to that of a ship: something that is essentially heavier than water, yet able to float. Furthermore, redesign the frame so that it resembles a piston and piston-shaft. The piston-like feature connects to the building itself - the “shaft-frame” would be hollow and allow the “piston” to move up and down with the storm surge. That way, the building can float through the storm surge, although you’d have to have to invest enormous resources in reenforcing the base of the shaft in order to prevent the building from snapping the hollow pylon.

Well, this is my two cents for how to build a better Gulf Coast

posted by Philip on 10/02/06 at 07:20 PM

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