• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
The Habitat Group

The Habitat Group

|
Subscribe Log In
  • NY APARTMENT LAW
    • New York Apartment Law Insider
    • New York Landlord v. Tenant
    • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, 4th Edition
    • 2026 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
  • FAIR & AFFORDABLE HOUSING
    • Fair Housing Coach
    • Assisted Housing Management Insider
    • FAIR HOUSING BOOT CAMP Basic Training for New Hires
  • COMMERCIAL LEASE LAW
    • Commercial Lease Law Insider
    • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17th Edition
    • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant’s Edition
  • RESOURCES / GUIDEBOOKS

This is your free article for the month.

To view more articles, Log In or Subscribe.

Give New Employees Introductory Memo on Tax Credit Management

December 12, 2013
Download: Intro_to_TC_Management.pdf

It’s common to hire new employees who may have some experience in conventional site management, but no experience in tax credit site management. Because the tax credit program is complicated, you can’t expect these new employees to learn all the rules overnight. But until they get tax credit experience, they may pose a threat to the owner’s tax credits. That’s why it’s a good idea to give new employees a short, written summary of the tax credit program as early as you can.

To help you do so, we’ve prepared a Model Memo: Introduction to Tax Credit Management. It’s an overview of how tax credit management differs from conventional site management. If your employees read the overview before they begin training, they’ll have a clearer understanding of what lies ahead. Plus, as your employees become more familiar with the tax credit program, they can refer to this overview to see where a particular rule or concept fits into tax credit management in general.

How Overview Helps

Since many new employees may not have experience with tax credit sites, reading a summary of the tax credit program early on can help them understand what tax credit compliance will require of them. Our overview focuses on the ways that tax credit management differs from conventional site management. This can help employees recognize situations where they need to know tax credit rules and lower the chances that they’ll make errors that cost the owner its tax credits—and cost you the owner’s future business.

     Our overview can also be helpful to employees with tax credit management experience. As employees learn more of the complexities of the tax credit program, they may lose sight of how things fit in. By reading the overview at a later date, your experienced employees can see how what they’ve learned fits into the broad scheme of the program. If your employees know the rules, but don’t understand how they relate, they may be more inclined to make errors.

What Overview Covers

Our overview assumes new employees have experience only in conventional site management. Here’s what it covers:

Introduction. The overview opens by welcoming new employees to tax credit management. To encourage them, it points out how their experience in conventional site management will help them succeed in tax credit management.

The overview then lets employees know that they’ll get all additional training they need on the job, from seminars, and through books. It tells your new employees that reading it will allow them to start thinking about tax credit management before they begin any training. And once they get some training employees can refer to this overview to see how what they’ve learned relates to tax credit management overall.

How tax credit management is different. The overview goes on to list eight ways that tax credit management differs from conventional site management, starting with the idea that it must work toward maintaining compliance. Under each item there’s a short discussion that focuses on the duties that each difference creates for the tax credit manager.

The overview discusses only rules that are fundamental to the tax credit program. It’s best to leave specifics for later training sessions. This way, new employees won’t be overwhelmed with details at the start.

Feature Other Model Tools

Related Articles

  • Follow 5 Strategies to Maximize First-Year LIHTC Credits
  • How to Handle Unit Transfer Requests Without Triggering Noncompliance
  • HUD Further Delays Certain Provisions of HOME Final Rule, Including Tenant Protections

Email A Friend

https://www.thehabitatgroup.com/give-new-employees-introductory-memo-on-tax-credit-management/

Primary Sidebar

Popular Stories

  • February 2026 Coach’s Quiz
    Jan 20, 2026 | Heather Stone
    Fair Housing Coach
  • HUD Ends Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing Rule—Again
    Mar 5, 2025 | Eric Yoo
  • HUD Delays Implementation of the HOME Final Rule Until April
    Mar 5, 2025 | Eric Yoo
  • How to Count Income of Student Household Members Under New Rules
    Mar 5, 2025 | Eric Yoo
    Download: MODEL_STUDENT-FINANCIAL-AID-AFFIDAVIT_0325.pdf
  • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
    Feb 11, 2025
  • Sign Up for a FREE Issue ofAssisted Housing Management Insider
    Jan 4, 2025
    Assisted Housing Management Insider
  • Sign Up for a FREE Issue ofFair Housing Coach
    Jan 4, 2025
    Fair Housing Coach
  • Sign Up for a FREE Issue of New York Apartment Law Insider
    Jan 4, 2025
    New York Apartment Law Insider
  • Sign Up for a FREE Issue of Commercial Lease Law Insider
    Jan 4, 2025
    Commercial Lease Law Insider
  • Complete Annual Bedbug Reporting Requirement by Dec. 31
    Nov 22, 2024

Footer

Publications

Assisted Housing Management Insider
Commercial Lease Law Insider
Fair Housing Coach
New York Apartment Law Insider
New York Landlord v. Tenant

Additional Links

Contact Us
Advertise
Group Subscriptions
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use

Boards of Advisors

Assisted Housing Management Insider
Commercial Lease Law Insider
Fair Housing Coach
New York Apartment Law Insider

Copyright © 2026 · The Habitat Group / Plain Language Media · 1-888-729-2315 · customerservice@thehabitatgroup.com · Log in