SEN.
TIM
SCOTT:
‘Opportunity
Can
Truly
Be
The
Difference
That
Changes
The
Course
Of
One’s
Life’
SEN.
TIM
SCOTT
(R-SC): “These
are
private
sector
dollars
coming
into
distressed
communities,
where
50
million
Americans
live,
that
will
provide
long-term
opportunities
to
transform
communities
and
the
people
who
live
in
there
everything
from
workforce
investment
to
better
education,
to
businesses
being
attracted
into
these
Opportunity
Zones.” (Fox
Business,
2/5/2018)
- SEN.
SCOTT
(R-SC):“Since
I
entered
Congress,
my
goal
was
simple:
create
opportunity
for
everyday
Americans
wherever
possible
It
is
a
passion
because
I
grew
up
in
a
single-parent
household,
surrounded
in
poverty,
with
very
little
expectation
that
I
would
find
my
way
to
success.
But
I
learned
that
opportunity
can
truly
be
the
difference
that
changes
the
course
of
one’s
life. I
know
that
when
the
[Investing
in
Opportunity
Act]
is
passed,
when
it
actually
reaches
the
people
it’s
intended
to
help,
the
results
will
be
truly
amazing
because
it
will
help
everyday
people
in
South
Carolina
and
beyond
build
their
way
to
a
brighter
future.” (Sen.
Scott,
Press
Release,
11/17/2017)
SEN.
MITCH
McCONNELL
(R-KY): “Of
the
new
jobs
that
were
created
from
2010
to
2016,
according
to
one
estimate,
three
quarters
went
to
major
metropolitan
areas.
Only
three
percent
of
those
new
jobs
went
to
rural
America.
Across
the
nation
--
including
my
home
state
of
Kentucky,
particularly
eastern
Kentucky
--
many
rural
areas,
small
cities,
and
suburbs
were
left
behind
by
the
Obama
economy.
It’s
time
to
change
that.
That’s
why
my
colleague,
the
junior
Senator
from
South
Carolina,
made
sure
that
tax
reform
included
a
provision
to
create
‘opportunity
zones’
across
the
United
States. My
Republican
colleagues
and
I
were
proud
to
support
this
policy.
It
allows
state
governors
to
designate
economically-distressed
areas
for
special
tax
incentives
that
will
make
them
more
attractive
places
to
invest
and
create
jobs.
It
will
empower
communities
that
have
been
passed
over
time
and
time
again
to,
in
effect,
put
up
big
neon
signs
that
say
‘We’re
open
for
business.’” (Sen.
McConnell,
Floor
Remarks,
2/6/2018)
PRESIDENT
DONALD
TRUMP: “I
want
to
thank
Senator
Tim
Scott
for
‘opportunity
zones.’
Our
tax
plan
encourages
this
investment.
Thank
you,
Tim.
We’re
investing
in
distressed
communities
to
create
more
jobs
for
those
who
have
too
often
been
left
behind. And
Tim
worked
hard
on
that.
We
want
every
American
to
know
the
dignity
of
work,
the
pride
of
a
paycheck,
and
the
satisfaction
of
a
job
really
well
done.” (President
Trump,
Remarks
At
The
2018
House
And
Senate
Republican
Member
Conference,
2/1/18)
‘A
Little-Noticed
Section’
In
The
Tax
Law
‘Is
A
Huge
Deal’
“A
little-noticed
section
in
the
$1.5
trillion
tax
cut
that
President
Trump
signed
into
law
late
last
month
is
drawing
attention
from
venture
capitalists,
state
government
officials
and
mayors
across
America.
The
provision,
on
Page
130
of
the
tax
overhaul, is
an
attempt
to
grapple
with
a
yawning
hole
in
the
recovery
from
the
Great
Recession:
the
fact
that,
in
huge
swaths
of
the
country,
the
economic
recovery
has
yet
to
arrive.
The
law creates
‘Opportunity
Zones,’ which
will
use
tax
incentives
to
draw
long-term
investment
to
parts
of
America
that
continue
to
struggle
with
high
poverty
and
sluggish
job
and
business
growth.
The
provision
is
the
first
new
substantial
federal
attempt
to
aid
those
communities
in
more
than
a
decade.” (“Tucked
Into
The
Tax
Bill,
A
Plan
To
Help
Distressed
America,” The
New
York
Times,
1/29/2018)
- “The
program
allows
taxpayers
to
defer
and
reduce
the
recognition
of
capital
gain
if
the
taxpayer
reinvests
all
or
a
portion
the
capital
gain
proceeds
in
a
‘Qualified
Opportunity
Fund.’
A
Qualified
Opportunity
Fund
must
invest
at
least
90%
of
its
assets
in
certain
qualifying
businesses
or
property
located
in
a
‘Qualified
Opportunity
Zone.’
The
governor
of
each
state
may
designate
up
to
25%
of
the
state’s
qualifying
low-income
census
tracts
as
Qualified
Opportunity
Zones.
this
new
program
will
provide
a
number
of
tax
benefits
to
investors
and
direct
much
needed
capital
to
low-income
communities.” (“Capital
Gain
Deferral
And
Reduction
-
Benefits
Of
Investing
In
Opportunity
Zones,” The
National
Law
Review,
2/6/2018)
“The
zones
were
included
in
the
tax
law
by
Senator
Tim
Scott,
a
South
Carolina
Republican
who
was
born
into
poverty
in
North
Charleston,
and
based
on
a
bill
he
co-sponsored
in
2017
with
several
Democrats. The
effort
to
create
the
zones
was
pushed
by
an
upstart
Washington
think
tank,
the
Economic
Innovation
Group
a
previous
iteration
of
an
opportunity
zone
bill
included
Senator
Cory
Booker,
Democrat
of
New
Jersey,
and
House
lawmakers
from
both
parties.” (“Tucked
Into
The
Tax
Bill,
A
Plan
To
Help
Distressed
America,” The
New
York
Times,
1/29/2018)
“Colorado’s
economic
development
office
is
scrambling
to
craft
a
list
of
areas
in
the
state
eligible for
new
federal
tax
breaks
with
the
potential
to
funnel
billions
of
dollars
into
struggling
areas.
‘It
was
buried
in
the
tax
bill,
but
it
is
a
huge
deal,’
said
Stephanie
Copeland,
director
of
the
Colorado
Office
of
Economic
Development.” (“Colorado
Eyes
Creating
Opportunity
Zones
Under
New
Tax
Law
To
Spur
Investment
In
Distressed
Areas,” The Denver
Post,
1/18/2018)
“The
mayor
of
Hartford
[Connecticut]
is
urging
the
governor
to
nominate
wide
swaths
of
the
city
for
a
designation
created
in
the
GOP
federal
tax
legislation
that
would
reward
private
investment
in
low
income
neighborhoods.
‘the
bipartisan
Investing
in
Opportunity
Act,
could
provide
an
opportunity
to
spur
private
investment
in
long-disadvantaged
communities in
the
capital
city,’ Bronin,
a
Democrat,
wrote.” (“Hartford
Mayor
Luke
Bronin
Seeks
'Opportunity
Zone'
Designation
For
Neighborhoods,” Hartford
Courant,
1/9/2018)
‘One
In
Six
Americans
Lives
In
A
“Distressed
Community”’
“One
in
six
Americans
lives
in
what
the
Economic
Innovation
Group
calls
a
‘distressed
community,’
where
median
household
incomes
remain
far
below
the
national
level,
which
is
$59,000
a
year,
and
the
poverty
rate
is
well
above
the
national
average.
Those
communities
are
urban,
rural
and
suburban.
On
average,
the
communities
lost
6
percent
of
their
jobs
and
a
similar
share
of
their
business
establishments
from
2011
to
2015,
according
to
census
data.” (“Tucked
Into
The
Tax
Bill,
A
Plan
To
Help
Distressed
America,” The
New
York
Times,
1/29/2018)
- “The
national
economy
grew
and
added
jobs
during
that
period,
but
that
growth
was
disproportionately
in
large
cities. Metropolitan
areas
with
at
least
one
million
residents
provided
just
under
half
of
America’s
jobs
in
2010.
But from
2010
through
2016,
those
metropolitan
areas
accounted
for
nearly
three-quarters
of
the
country’s
net
job
creation, according
to
new
research
by
the
Metropolitan
Policy
Program
at
the
Brookings
Institution
in
Washington.” (“Tucked
Into
The
Tax
Bill,
A
Plan
To
Help
Distressed
America,” The
New
York
Times,
1/29/2018)
You
can
also
view
here.
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