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HR 6958 110th Congress House Taxation Alabama Books and print media Business expenses Business investment and capital Disaster relief and insurance Elementary and secondary education Employee benefits and pensions Florida Food assistance and relief Government information and archives Hazardous wastes and toxic substances Housing finance and home ownership Income tax credits Income tax deductions Income tax exclusion Louisiana Low- and moderate-income housing Mississippi Motor vehicles

Hurricane Ike Tax Relief Act of 2008

Introduced: September 18, 2008 See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 2 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Sep 18, 2008
Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.
Sep 18, 2008
Introduced in House
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Hurricane Ike Tax Relief Act of 2008 - Amends the Internal Revenue Code to provide tax benefits to individuals affected by Hurricane Ike.

Makes specified provisions of the Internal Revenue Code, which currently apply only to residents of the Gulf Opportunity Zone and the Hurricane Katrina disaster area, applicable to the Hurricane Ike recovery area, including: (1) tax-exempt bond financing, the low-income housing tax credit, accelerated depreciation and increased expensing of business assets, an increase in the rehabilitation tax credit, extended carryback of net operating losses, and investment in tax credit bonds; (2) expensing of environmental remediation costs and demolition and cleanup costs; (3) tax incentives for employer-provided housing; (4) tax-free withdrawals from retirement accounts and recontributions for home purchases; (5) employer tax credits for retention of employees; and (6) suspension of limitations on tax deductions for charitable contributions and personal casualty losses.

Extends through 2009 the additional tax exemption for housing displaced individuals in the Hurricane Ike recovery area.

Extends through 2009 the enhanced tax deduction for charitable contributions of food inventories and of book inventories to public schools.

Requires charitable organizations to provide the Secretary of the Treasury with specified information, on an annual basis, relating to their disaster relief activities.

Makes the standard mileage rate used to determine the tax deduction for the use of a passenger automobile for charitable purposes equal to the standard mileage rate used for the tax deduction for medical and moving expenses.

What's happening now September 18, 2008

Referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1