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§ 11. Certified capital companies. (a) Definitions. For the purpose of  this section the following terms shall mean:    (1)  "Certification  date"  -  the  date  on which a certified capital  company is so designated by the  department  for  a  specific  certified  capital company program.    (2)  "Certified  capital"  -  an  investment  of  cash  by a certified  investor in a certified capital company which fully funds  the  purchase  price  of  either  or  both its equity interest in the certified capital  company or a qualified debt instrument issued by the  certified  capital  company.  Any  such  investment  shall  be  subject to the provisions of  article fourteen of the insurance law.    (3) "Certified capital company" - a partnership, corporation, trust or  limited liability company, organized  on  a  for-profit  basis  that  is  located, headquartered and licensed or registered to conduct business in  New  York,  that  has as its primary business activity the investment of  cash in qualified businesses and that is certified by the department  as  meeting the criteria set forth in subdivision (b) of this section.    (4)  "Certified  investor"  -  any  insurance company that contributes  certified capital.    (5) "Department" - the department of insurance.    (6) "Net profits on certified  investments"  -  the  amount  of  money  returned  to  the  certified capital company in repayment of or exchange  for the certified capital company's qualified investment or  investments  in  the  qualified  business  in  excess of the amount of such qualified  investment or investments.  Such  number  shall  aggregate  all  of  the  certified   capital  company's  qualified  investments  where  gains  on  qualified  investments  are   netted   against   losses   on   qualified  investments.    (7)  "Qualified  business"  -  an  independently  owned  and  operated  business that meets all of the following conditions as of  the  time  of  the first investment in the business:    (A)  It is headquartered in New York state, and its principal business  operations are located in New York state, and the  qualified  investment  it  receives  is  used  solely to support its business operations in the  state, except for advertising, promotions and sales purposes.  In  cases  where  the  qualified  investment  is  made  in  a start-up company such  capital must be used  solely  to  establish  and  support  its  business  operations  in  New  York  state, except for advertising, promotions and  sales purposes.    (B) It has either (i) no more than one  hundred  employees,  at  least  eighty  percent  of whom are employed in New York state or, (ii) no more  than two hundred employees, at least eighty percent of whom are employed  in this state, and during the  fiscal  year  immediately  preceding  the  qualified  investment  it  had,  together  with  its  affiliates,  gross  revenues of no more than five million dollars, on a  consolidated  basis  as   determined   in   accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles, except that,  with  respect  to  certified  capital  company  program  three  and certified capital company program four and certified  capital company program five, in the case of a  company  located  in  an  empire  zone  established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general  municipal law  such  gross  revenues  shall  not  exceed  eight  million  dollars.    (C)  It  is  involved  in  commerce  for the purpose of developing and  manufacturing products and systems, including but not  limited  to  high  technology  products  and  systems such as computers, computer software,  medical  equipment,  biotechnology,  telecommunications  equipment   and  products,  processing  or  assembling  all types of products, conducting  research and development on all types of products or providing services,but excluding  real  estate,  real  estate  development,  insurance  and  businesses  predominantly  engaged  in professional services provided by  accountants, lawyers or physicians.    (D)  The  business was not organized by a certified capital company or  an affiliate of a certified capital company, but  this  paragraph  shall  not  prohibit  a  certified  capital  company  from providing financial,  technical or similar advice to a business before making an investment in  such business.    (E) The business does not have a financial relationship,  such  as  an  ownership interest, investment interest, or compensation agreement, with  a  certified  capital  company  or  any affiliate of a certified capital  company before the date on which a certified capital company  makes  its  first  investment in the business, but this paragraph shall not prohibit  a certified capital  company  from  providing  financial,  technical  or  similar  advice  to  a  business  before  making  an  investment in such  business.    (F) For purposes of this paragraph, the term "independently owned  and  operated  business"  means  (i)  in the case of a corporation or limited  liability company, a corporation where no more than fifty percent of the  voting stock of the corporation or limited liability company is owned or  controlled, directly or indirectly, by a single  corporation,  a  single  partnership  or a single limited liability company, and (ii) in the case  of  a  partnership,  association,  or  other  entity,   a   partnership,  association  or  other  entity  where  no more than fifty percent of the  capital, profits or  other  beneficial  interest  in  such  partnership,  association  or  other  entity  is  owned  or  controlled,  directly  or  indirectly, by a single corporation, a single partnership  or  a  single  limited  liability  company;  provided,  however,  that  the  term shall  include, as a single "independently owned and operated business," parent  and subsidiary or affiliated corporations or limited liability companies  (i) that are engaged in an integrated  for-profit  business  enterprise,  and  (ii)  in  which  at  least  eighty  percent  of the voting stock or  membership interests of all of the  corporations  or  limited  liability  companies  is  owned  or controlled, directly or indirectly, by a common  group of shareholders or members, and no more than fifty percent of  the  voting  stock  or  membership  interests  of  all of the corporations or  limited  liability  companies  is  owned  or  controlled,  directly   or  indirectly,  by  a  single  corporation,  single  partnership, or single  limited liability company that is not  part  of  such  group  or  parent  company or affiliated corporations or limited liability companies.    (8)  "Qualified  debt  instrument"  -  a  debt  instrument issued by a  certified capital company, at par value or a premium, with  an  original  maturity  date of at least five years from date of issuance, a repayment  schedule which is not faster than a level  principal  amortization,  and  interest,  distribution or payment features which are not related to the  profitability of the certified capital company or the performance of the  certified capital company's investment portfolio.    (9) "Qualified distribution"  -  any  distribution  or  payment  by  a  certified capital company in connection with the following:    (A)  Reasonable  costs and expenses of such equity holders incurred by  such equity holders in connection with  forming,  syndicating,  managing  and  operating  the  certified  capital company, including (i) an annual  management fee in an amount  that  does  not  exceed  two  and  one-half  percent  of  the certified capital of the certified capital company with  respect to a particular certified  capital  company  program;  (ii)  the  reasonable  and  necessary  fees paid for professional services (such as  legal and accounting services) related to the operation of the certified  capital company; (iii) with respect to program four and  any  subsequentprogram,  all  payments by the certified capital company in satisfaction  of its indebtedness to its certified investors, provided  that  no  more  than  thirty-five  percent of such certified capital company's certified  capital  may  be  used  to  purchase  U.S.  treasury  securities,  other  investment-grade securities,  a  guaranty,  indemnity,  bond,  insurance  policy  or  other  payment  undertaking, or any combination thereof; and  provided further, that nothing in this provision shall be  construed  to  limit  a  certified capital company from expending non-certified capital  in satisfaction of such indebtedness; and (iv) with respect  to  program  four  and  any  subsequent program, the reasonable costs and expenses of  forming, syndicating,  or  organizing  the  certified  capital  company,  separate  from the costs of insuring or defeasing the obligations of the  certified capital  company,  provided,  however,  that  such  costs  and  expenses  shall  not  exceed  five  percent  of  the  certified  capital  company's certified capital; and    (B) Any increase or projected increase  in  federal  or  state  taxes,  including  penalties  and  interest  related to state and federal income  taxes, of the equity owners of a  certified  capital  company  resulting  from  the  earnings  or  other  tax  liability  of the certified capital  company to the extent that the increase is  related  to  the  ownership,  management or operation of a certified capital company.    (10)  "Qualified  investment"  - the investment of cash by a certified  capital company in a qualified business for the purchase  of  any  debt,  equity  or  hybrid  security,  of  any  nature and description whatever,  including a debt instrument or security which has the characteristics of  debt  but  which  provides  for  conversion  into   equity   or   equity  participation instruments such as options or warrants, provided however,  in the case of certified capital programs three, four and five, that any  such debt instrument have a maturity of at least twenty-four months from  the  date  such  debt is incurred; and further provided that a certified  capital company, after the investment and assuming full  conversion  and  exercise  of  any  equity  participation instruments, shall not own more  than fifty percent of the  voting  equity  of  the  qualified  business,  except  in the case of a follow-on investment where a specific exemption  is granted by the department under subparagraph (D) of paragraph one  of  subdivision  (c)  of  this section. Furthermore, except in the case of a  follow-on investment, if a certified  capital  company  owns  more  than  fifteen percent of the equity in a company or has a seat on the board of  directors  of  such  company,  then  a  certified capital company cannot  invest in such company unless the following conditions are met:  (i)  at  least  one  other  investor  who  is  not  an affiliate of the certified  capital company participates in the same round of investment on the same  terms and conditions as the certified  capital  company;  and  (ii)  the  certified  capital  company and its affiliates invest no more than fifty  percent of the total investment made in that round of investment.    (11) "Early stage business" - a qualified business which is  involved,  at  the  time of investment, in activities related to the development of  initial product or service offerings, such as prototype  development  or  establishment  of  initial production or service processes, or, which is  less than two years old and during the fiscal year immediately preceding  the qualified  investment  had,  together  with  its  affiliates,  gross  revenues of no more than two million dollars, on a consolidated basis as  determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.    (12) "Superintendent" - the superintendent of insurance.    (13)  "Certified  capital  company program" - a calendar year or years  for which taxpayers may be allocated and  allowed  credits  pursuant  to  this  section  and  subdivision (k) of section fifteen hundred eleven of  this chapter and delineated as a separate program by this section.(14) "Starting date" - the date on which a certified  capital  company  is  allocated certified capital for a specific certified capital company  program pursuant to subdivision (b) of this section.    (15) "Underserved area" - a county, including a county wholly within a  city, in which, as of January first, two thousand, less than twenty-five  percent  of  the qualified investments in qualified businesses were made  by certified capital companies under certified capital  company  program  one.  The  superintendent  shall prepare a list of such counties by July  first, two thousand.    (16) "Start-up business" - a qualified business which is involved,  at  the  time  of  investment,  in  activities related to the development of  initial product or service offerings, such as prototype  development  or  establishment  of  initial production or service processes, or, which is  less than two years old and during the fiscal year immediately preceding  the qualified  investment  had,  together  with  its  affiliates,  gross  revenues of no more than two million dollars, on a consolidated basis as  determined  in  accordance with generally accepted accounting principles  and has fewer than twenty employees at the time of the investment;  and,  in  addition,  which  has  emerged  within the year prior to the date of  investment or is emerging from, or  utilizes  a  technology  transferred  from,  a  university  or  college  research facility located in New York  state, a not-for-profit research facility located in New York state,  or  an  industrial  research facility located in New York state, or which is  conducting research in conjunction with or in the research facilities of  a university or college located in New York state, or which  is  located  in  or has emerged within the year prior to the date of investment or is  emerging from an incubator facility located in New York state.    (b) Certification. (1) The superintendent shall establish by  rule  or  regulation  the  procedures  for  making  an  application  to  become  a  certified capital company. The  applicant  shall  pay  a  non-refundable  application  fee  of  five  hundred  dollars  at  the time of filing the  application with the department.    (2) The superintendent may certify partnerships, corporations,  trusts  or  limited  liability companies, organized on a for profit basis, which  submit an application to be designated as a certified capital company if  such applicant is located, headquartered and licensed or  registered  to  conduct  business  in New York, has as its primary business activity the  investment of cash in qualified businesses and meets the other  criteria  set forth in this subdivision.    (3)  A certified capital company's initial capitalization, at the time  of seeking certification, must be five hundred thousand dollars or more.    (4) The superintendent shall review the  organizational  documents  of  each  applicant  for  certification  and  the  business  history  of the  applicant, determine that the applicant's  cash,  marketable  securities  and  other liquid assets are at least five hundred thousand dollars, and  determine  that  the  officers  and  the  board  of  directors,  general  partners,  trustees,  managers,  or  members  are  trustworthy  and  are  thoroughly acquainted with the requirements of this subdivision.    (5) The superintendent shall verify that at least  two  principals  of  the  certified  capital  company or any manager of the certified capital  company each have no less than five years of experience in  the  venture  capital or a venture capital-related industry.    (6)  Any  offering  material  involving  the sale of securities of the  certified capital company shall include the following statement:    "Authorizing the formation of a Certified  Capital  Company  does  not  constitute  the  endorsement  of  the state of New York as to either the  quality of management or the potential for earnings of such company  and  the state of New York is not liable for damages or losses to a CertifiedInvestor in the company. Use of the word 'certified' in an offering does  not  constitute a recommendation or endorsement of the investment by the  state of New York.    Investments  in  a  prospective Certified Capital Company prior to the  time such company is certified  with  respect  to  a  certified  capital  company  program  are not eligible for tax credits. In the event certain  statutory provisions (as specified in section 11 of  the  Tax  Law)  are  violated,  the  state  of  New York may require forfeiture of unused tax  credits and repayment of used tax credits."    (7) Within sixty days of application, the superintendent  shall  issue  the  certification  or shall refuse the certification and communicate in  detail  to  the  applicant  the  grounds  for  the  refusal,   including  suggestions for the removal of those grounds.    (8)  The  superintendent  may certify any previously certified capital  company which has remained in compliance with the requirements  of  this  section  upon  the  application  of  such  company  to  be  designated a  certified capital company for a certified capital  company  program  for  which  it  is  not  so  designated.  Such  new  certification  shall  be  considered a separate certification from any  other  such  certification  under  this  section  and  investments  in  and by such company shall be  considered separately for purposes of subdivisions (c) and (d)  of  this  section.    (9)  The superintendent shall start accepting applications to become a  certified capital company in certified capital company  program  two  by  November  first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine, and shall start accepting  applications to become a certified capital company in certified  capital  company  program  three  by  August first, two thousand, and shall begin  accepting  applications  to  become  a  certified  capital  company   in  certified capital company program four by the later of August first, two  thousand  four  or  not more than sixty days after the effective date of  section one of part D of chapter fifty-nine of the laws of two  thousand  four  and  shall  begin  accepting  applications  to  become a certified  capital company in certified capital company program five by  the  later  of  July  first, two thousand five or not more than sixty days after the  effective date of the chapter of the laws of  two  thousand  five  which  amended this paragraph.    (10)  A  certified  capital  company may obtain a guaranty, indemnity,  bond, insurance policy and/or other payment undertaking for the  benefit  of  its certified investors from any entity; provided, however, that, in  no case shall more than one certified investor of such certified capital  company or affiliates of such certified investor be entitled to  provide  such  guaranty,  indemnity,  bond, insurance policy and/or other payment  undertaking in favor of the certified investors of the certified capital  company and its affiliates in this state.    (c) Requirements for continuance of certification. (1) To continue  to  be  certified  with  respect  to  a particular certified capital company  program, a certified capital company  must  make  qualified  investments  according to the following schedule:    (A)  Within  two years after the starting date of a specific certified  capital company  program  of  a  certified  capital  company,  at  least  twenty-five percent of its certified capital allocable to such certified  capital company program must be placed in qualified investments.    (B) Within three years after the starting date of a specific certified  capital  company  program of a certified capital company, at least forty  percent of its certified capital allocable  to  such  certified  capital  company program must be placed in qualified investments.    (C)  Within four years after the starting date of a specific certified  capital company program of a certified capital company, at  least  fiftypercent  of  its  certified  capital allocable to such certified capital  company program must be placed in qualified investments, at least  fifty  percent of which must have been placed in early stage businesses, except  that  in  the  case of program four and any subsequent program, at least  twenty-five percent of which  must  have  been  placed  in  early  stage  businesses and an additional twenty-five percent of which must have been  placed  in start-up businesses, and except that in the case of qualified  investments  made  in  qualified  businesses  located  in  empire  zones  established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal law  under the provisions of certified capital company program three, program  four and  program  five  from  allocations  of  certified  capital  made  specifically   for   such   targeted  investments  in  such  zones,  the  requirement for  qualified  investments  in  early  stage  and  start-up  businesses shall not apply.    (D)  A  certified capital company, at least fifteen working days prior  to making a proposed investment in a specific business, shall certify in  writing to the superintendent that (i) the business in which it proposes  to invest meets the definition of a qualified business as set  forth  in  subdivision  (a)  of  this  section  or,  in  the  case  of  a follow-on  investment, that such business continues to meet  the  requirements  set  forth in subparagraphs (A) and (C) of paragraph seven of subdivision (a)  of this section and, in either case, an explanation of its determination  that  the  business  meets  such  requirements, and (ii) with respect to  certified capital company program three, program four and program  five,  whether  or  not  such business is located in an empire zone established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal  law  or  in  an  underserved  area  outside  an  empire  zone.  The  certification to the  superintendent shall include a sworn  statement  from  the  business  in  which  the certified capital company proposes to invest, which statement  shall  evidence  the  intention  of  the  business   to   maintain   its  headquarters  in New York and conduct its primary business operations in  the state of New York  after  its  receipt  of  the  investment  by  the  certified  capital  company.  If  the superintendent determines that the  business does not meet the definition of a qualified  business,  or,  in  the case of a follow-on investment, that such business does not meet the  requirements  set  forth in subparagraphs (A) and (C) of paragraph seven  of subdivision (a) of this section, then it shall,  within  the  fifteen  working  day  period  prior  to  the  making of the proposed investment,  notify the certified capital company of its determination and provide an  explanation thereof, provided, however, that the  department  may,  upon  written  request of a certified capital company and at the discretion of  the department, grant,  in  writing,  an  exemption  to  the  percentage  limitations of paragraph ten of subdivision (a) of this section.    (E)  All  certified capital not placed in qualified investments by the  certified capital company may be held or invested in such manner as  the  certified  capital  company,  in  its discretion, deems appropriate. The  proceeds of all  certified  capital  returned  to  a  certified  capital  company  after  being  originally placed in qualified investments may be  placed again  in  qualified  investments  and  shall  count  toward  any  requirement  in  this  subdivision  with  respect  to  placing certified  capital in qualified investments.    (F) If within ten years after the starting date of  certified  capital  company  program four or program five, and within twelve years after the  starting date of certified capital company programs one, two, and three,  one hundred percent of the certified capital allocable  to  a  certified  capital  company  participating  in  such program has not been placed in  qualified investments, the specific certified capital company  shall  no  longer  be  permitted  to  receive  management  fees; provided that suchrestriction shall not  apply  (i)  with  respect  to  certified  capital  company  programs  one, two, and three, to any certified capital company  that  has  not,  prior  to  October  thirty-first,  two  thousand  four,  received,  as  opposed  to  accrued,  any  management fees, or (ii) with  respect to any certified capital company program, to a certified capital  company in which at least fifty percent of the  voting  stock,  capital,  membership  interests,  or  other beneficial ownership interests, as the  case may be, are owned  by  an  entity  that  is  managed,  directly  or  indirectly, by a non-profit corporation.    (2)  Any  business  which is classified as a qualified business at the  time of the first investment in said business  by  a  certified  capital  company  shall remain classified as a qualified business and may receive  follow-on investments from  any  certified  capital  company,  and  such  follow-on  investments  shall  be qualified investments even though such  business may not meet the definition of a qualified business at the time  of such follow-on investments, provided,  however,  that  such  business  continues  to  meet  the requirements set forth in subparagraphs (A) and  (C) of paragraph seven of subdivision (a)  of  this  section,  and  such  business  reaffirms  its  intention  to maintain its headquarters in New  York and conduct its primary business operations in  the  state  of  New  York   as  required  in  subparagraph  (D)  of  paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision.    (3) No qualified investment may be made by a certified capital company  to the extent such investment would cause the company's total  qualified  investment  outstanding with respect to the qualified business receiving  such investment to exceed fifteen percent of the total certified capital  of the certified capital company at the time of such investment.    (4) Documents and  other  materials  submitted  by  certified  capital  companies   or   by  businesses  for  purposes  of  the  continuance  of  certification shall not be public records if such records are determined  by the superintendent to be trade  or  business  secrets  and  shall  be  maintained in a confidential manner by the superintendent.    (5)  The aggregate cumulative amount of all qualified investments made  by the certified capital company for a certified capital company program  from its starting date for  such  program  will  be  considered  in  the  calculation  of the percentage requirements under subparagraphs (A), (B)  and (C) of paragraph one of this subdivision,  provided,  however,  that  any  amounts  received  by  a certified capital company from a qualified  business as (i) commitment fees, closing fees,  or  other  similar  fees  (excluding reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses, including legal fees  and  accounting  fees) in excess of one percent of the certified capital  company's investment in the qualified business  or  (ii)  license  fees,  royalties,  or  similar  charges  shall  not be considered in any of the  percentage calculations under this section.    (6) Each certified capital company shall report the following  to  the  superintendent:    (A)  As  soon as practicable after the receipt of certified capital or  an irrevocable funding commitment subject only  to  the  receipt  of  an  allocation  pursuant to subdivision (h) of this section, (i) the name of  each certified investor from which the certified capital  was  received,  including such certified investor's insurance tax identification number;  (ii)  the  amount  of  each certified investor's investment of certified  capital; and (iii) the date on which the certified capital was received.  Provided, however, that requests for  allocation  of  tax  credits  with  respect  to  certified  capital company program two by certified capital  companies on behalf of their certified investors which are  received  by  the  superintendent  on  or  before  March  first, two thousand shall be  treated as having been received on March first,  two  thousand  for  taxcredits  to  be utilized in two thousand one, and if satisfactory, shall  be given equal priority for  allocation,  and  provided,  however,  that  requests for allocation of tax credits with respect to certified capital  company  program three by certified capital companies on behalf of their  certified investors which are  received  by  the  superintendent  on  or  before  December  first,  two  thousand  shall be treated as having been  received on December first, two thousand for tax credits to be  utilized  in  two thousand two, and if satisfactory, shall be given equal priority  for allocation, and provided, however, that requests for  allocation  of  tax  credits  with  respect to certified capital company program four by  certified capital companies on behalf of their certified investors which  are received by the superintendent on  or  before  December  first,  two  thousand  four  shall  be  treated  as  having been received on December  first, two thousand four for tax credits to be utilized in two  thousand  six,  and if satisfactory, shall be given equal priority for allocation,  and provided, however, that requests for allocation of tax credits  with  respect  to  certified capital company program five by certified capital  companies on behalf of their certified investors which are  received  by  the  superintendent  on  or  before the later of (i) November first, two  thousand five and (ii) the one hundred twentieth day after the  date  on  which  the superintendent began accepting applications for certification  in connection with certified capital company program  five  pursuant  to  paragraph  nine  of  subdivision (b) of this section shall be treated as  having been received on such later date for tax credits to  be  utilized  in  two  thousand  seven,  and  if  satisfactory,  shall  be given equal  priority for allocation.    (B) On an annual basis, on or  before  January  thirty-first  of  each  year,  (i)  the  amount  of  the  certified  capital company's certified  capital at the end of the immediately preceding year;  (ii)  whether  or  not the certified capital company has invested more than fifteen percent  of  its total certified capital in any one business; (iii) all qualified  investments that the certified capital company made during the  previous  calendar  year,  including  the  number  of  employees of each qualified  business in which it has made investments at the time of such investment  and as of December  first  of  the  preceding  calendar  year.  For  any  qualified  business where the certified capital company no longer has an  investment, the  certified  capital  company  shall  provide  employment  figures  for  such  company as of the last day before the investment was  terminated. Such report shall provide  a  separate  accounting  by  each  certified  capital  company  program; and (iv) all qualified investments  made in empire zones and underserved areas outside such empire zones  as  required  under  certified  capital  company  program  three,  certified  capital company program four and certified capital company program five.    (C) Each certified capital company shall provide to the superintendent  annual audited financial statements, which shall include the opinion  of  an  independent  certified  public accountant, within ninety days of the  close of its fiscal year. The audit  shall  address  whether  the  funds  received by the certified capital company have been invested as required  under   subparagraphs  (A),  (B)  and  (C)  of  paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision.  Upon  receiving  notification  and  documentation   by   a  certified  capital  company  that  it  has satisfied the requirements of  subparagraph (C) of paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision  that  it  has  invested  fifty  percent  of its certified capital, the department shall  have sixty days to notify such certified capital company that it has  or  has not met such requirement, with a reason for such determination if it  has not, in the judgment of the department, met such requirement. If the  department  does  not  provide  such notification within sixty days, thecertified capital  company  shall  then  be  deemed  to  have  met  such  requirement.    (D)  On  or  before  April  first of each year, each certified capital  company shall pay an annual, non-refundable certification  fee  of  five  hundred  dollars  to the superintendent; provided that no such fee shall  be required within six months of the initial  certification  date  of  a  certified capital company.    (E)(1)  Within  thirty  days  of  the  decision  on an application for  certification  pursuant  to  subdivision  (b)  of  this   section,   the  superintendent  shall  submit a copy of such application and the related  decision to the department of taxation and finance.  The  superintendent  shall  submit  a  copy  of  all  filings  of  certifications pursuant to  subparagraph  (D)  of  paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision   and   any  determination made thereon within fifteen days of such filing.    (2)  The  superintendent shall annually, by March first, submit to the  department of taxation and finance a list of persons who may  claim  the  tax  credit  for  the  previous  taxable  year and any other information  necessary to assist the department of taxation and finance to  determine  eligibility for such tax credit.    (d)  Distributions. (1) A certified capital company may make qualified  distributions at any time. In order for a certified capital  company  to  make a distribution other than a qualified distribution from a certified  capital company program, to its equity holders, either (A) the aggregate  cumulative  amount  of  all  qualified investments for such program must  equal or exceed one hundred percent of its certified  capital  allocable  to  such certified capital company program, or (B) it must have received  written authorization to make such distribution from the superintendent.  In no event, however, shall any such distribution to its equity holders,  other than a qualified distribution, be  made  by  a  certified  capital  company  from a certified capital company program unless an amount equal  cumulatively to at least ninety percent of its certified capital of such  program is invested in companies that conduct their  principal  business  operations in New York state.    (2)  In  the  event that a business in which a qualified investment is  made relocates its principal business operations to another state during  such investment, or within three months after the  termination  of  such  investment,  the  cumulative  amount  of  qualified  investment shall be  reduced by the amount of such qualified investment, for the purposes  of  this  subdivision only, unless (A) the certified capital company invests  an amount at least equal to the investment of certified capital  in  the  relocated  business  in  a  qualified business located in New York state  within  six  months  of  the  relocation  or  (B)  unless  the  business  demonstrates  that  it has returned its principal business operations to  New York state within three months of such relocation. A business  shall  be  deemed  to  have relocated its principal business operations outside  New York state if the primary workplace of more than  fifty  percent  of  the  employees of such business within the state is relocated to another  state.    (3) In the event that a business in which a  qualified  investment  is  made  under  certified  capital company program three, certified capital  company  program  four  or  certified  capital  company  program   five,  relocates  its  principal  business operation within the earlier of four  years after the date of such qualified investment or three months  after  the   termination  of  such  investment,  whereby  the  requirements  of  paragraph three of subdivision (h) of this  section  to  make  qualified  investments  in qualified businesses located in empire zones established  pursuant to article eighteen-B  of  the  general  municipal  law  or  in  underserved areas outside such empire zones no longer are satisfied, thecumulative amount of qualified investment shall be reduced by the amount  of such qualified investment, for the purposes of this subdivision only,  unless  (A)  the  certified  capital  company invests an amount at least  equal  to  the investment of certified capital in the relocated business  in a qualified business located in  either  an  empire  zone  or  in  an  underserved  area  outside  an  empire  zone so that the requirements of  paragraph three of subdivision (h) of this section are  again  satisfied  within  six  months  of  such  relocation,  unless the certified capital  company certifies to the superintendent that a  good  faith  effort  was  made to make additional qualifying investments under the requirements of  paragraph  three of subdivision (h) of this section, or (B) the business  demonstrates that it has returned its principal  business  operation  to  New  York  state  in  either  an  empire  zone or in an underserved area  outside an empire zone within three months of such  relocation,  or  (C)  the  business  demonstrates  that  it  had  a valid business purpose for  relocating its principal business operation. A business shall be  deemed  to have relocated its principal business operations outside of an empire  zone  or  an  underserved  area  outside  an  empire zone if the primary  workplace of more than fifty percent of the employees of  such  business  within  an  empire zone or an underserved area outside an empire zone is  relocated to an area outside the state or outside an empire zone  or  an  underserved area outside an empire zone.    (4)  Payments  to  debt  holders of a certified capital company may be  made without restriction with respect to  repayments  of  principal  and  interest  on  indebtedness  owed to them by a certified capital company,  including  indebtedness  of  the  certified  capital  company  on  which  certified  investors  earned  tax  credits. A debt holder that is also a  certified investor or equity holder of a certified capital  company  may  receive  payments  with  respect  to  such  debt without any restriction  whatsoever.    (5) A  certified  capital  company  that  receives  certified  capital  investments  under  program four and any subsequent program shall pay to  the department for deposit in the general fund an amount equal to thirty  percent of the net profits on qualified investments. A certified capital  company  shall  make  all  payments  required   under   this   paragraph  concurrently  with and pro rata to distributions of profits and gains to  its equity owners; however, nothing contained in this paragraph shall be  construed to affect qualified distributions.    (6) The amount of any payment required under paragraph  five  of  this  subdivision  shall  be reduced to fifteen percent of such net profits on  qualified investments if, at the time of such net profits  distribution,  such   certified  capital  company  irrevocably  commits  to  both:  (A)  re-invest the remaining fifteen percent of such net  profits  not  being  paid  to  the general fund under paragraph five of this subdivision into  qualified businesses, and (B) invest an additional amount  equal  to  at  least  fifteen  percent  of such net profits distribution into qualified  businesses which additional amount shall come from a  separate  pool  of  venture  capital that is controlled by the certified capital company but  that does not contain certified  capital.  In  making  investments  from  funds  established  under  this paragraph, the certified capital company  shall follow the requirements set forth in subparagraph (D) of paragraph  one of subdivision (c) of this section pertaining to obtaining  approval  of   the   investment   being  in  a  qualified  business,  except  that  requirements  pertaining  to  empire   zones   and   underserved   areas  requirements  shall  not  apply. Once qualified investments in qualified  businesses have been made pursuant to this  paragraph  equal  to  thirty  percent   of   the  net  profits  on  qualified  investments,  then  the  requirements under this subdivision shall have been  satisfied  and  theproceeds  from  such  qualified  businesses  may  be distributed without  restriction.    (e)  Decertification.  (1)  The superintendent shall conduct an annual  review of each certified capital company to determine if  the  certified  capital  company  is  abiding  by  the requirements of certification, to  advise the certified capital company as to the eligibility status of its  qualified investments, and to ensure that no investment has been made in  violation of this subdivision. The cost of the annual  review  shall  be  paid  by  each  certified  capital company according to a reasonable fee  schedule adopted by the superintendent.    (2) Any material violation of subdivision (c)  of  this  section  with  respect  to  a  particular  certified  capital  company program shall be  grounds for  decertification  of  the  certified  capital  company  with  respect  to  such  program.  If  the  superintendent  determines  that a  certified capital company is not in compliance with the requirements  of  subdivision  (c)  of this section with respect to a particular certified  capital company  program,  it  shall,  by  written  notice,  inform  the  officers  of  the  certified  capital company that the certified capital  company will be subject to decertification with respect to such  program  in  one  hundred  twenty  days  from  the date of mailing of the notice,  unless the deficiencies are corrected and the certified capital  company  is again in compliance with all requirements for certification.    (3)  At  the  end  of  the one hundred twenty day grace period, if the  certified capital company is still not in  compliance  with  subdivision  (c)  of  this  section  with  respect  to a particular certified capital  company  program,  the   superintendent   shall   send   a   notice   of  decertification  to  the  certified capital company with respect to such  program and to all other appropriate state agencies.    (4) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs two and three of this  subdivision, if a certified capital company in certified capital company  programs three, four and  five  fails  to  satisfy  the  requirement  in  subparagraph  (B)  of  paragraph  one of subdivision (c) of this section  because it has been unable to make  a  sufficient  amount  of  qualified  investments  in  qualified  businesses  located  either  in empire zones  established pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal  law  or  in  underserved  areas  outside  such  empire  zones, such certified  capital company shall not be subject to decertification  at  that  time.  However,  if  such  certified  capital  company  fails  to  satisfy  the  requirement in subparagraph (C) of paragraph one of subdivision  (c)  of  this  section  because it has been unable to make a sufficient amount of  qualified investments in qualified businesses  located  either  in  such  empire  zones  or  in  underserved  areas outside such empire zones, but  certifies to the superintendent that it had made a good faith effort  to  make  such  investments, such certified capital company shall be allowed  two additional years to satisfy the  requirement  in  such  subparagraph  (C).  If,  after  the  conclusion of such two year period, the certified  capital company still has not been able to satisfy  the  requirement  to  make  such  investments, and such certified capital company certifies to  the superintendent that it had made a good faith  effort  to  make  such  investments,  the  requirement  in  paragraphs  three,  four and five of  subdivision (h)  of  this  section  to  make  qualified  investments  in  qualified  businesses  located  in  empire zones or in underserved areas  shall be waived. Such certified capital company shall  then  be  allowed  one additional year to satisfy the requirement in such subparagraph (C),  and  if,  at  the  conclusion  of  that additional one year period, such  requirement is still not satisfied, such certified capital company shall  be subject to decertification and the provisions of paragraphs  two  and  three of this subdivision shall apply.(5)   Once   a  certified  capital  company  has  invested  an  amount  cumulatively equal to one hundred percent of its certified capital  with  respect  to  a particular certified capital company program in qualified  investments and has met all other requirements under  this  subdivision,  the  certified  capital company shall no longer be subject to regulation  by the superintendent and shall no longer be subject to the requirements  of subdivision (c) of this section with respect to  such  program.  Upon  receiving  documented  certification by a certified capital company that  it has invested an amount equal to one hundred percent of its  certified  capital,  the  department shall have sixty days to notify such certified  capital company that it has or has  not  met  such  requirement  with  a  reason  for  such  determination  if  it has not, in the judgment of the  department, met such requirement. If the  department  does  not  provide  such notification within sixty days, the certified capital company shall  then be deemed to have met such requirement.    (6)   The   superintendent   shall   send   written   notice  of  such  decertification to the address of  each  certified  investor  whose  tax  credit  has  been  subject to recapture or forfeiture, using the address  shown on the last filing submitted to the superintendent.    (f) Revocation of certification. The  superintendent  may  revoke  the  certification  of  a certified capital company, or, at the discretion of  the superintendent, the certification of  a  certified  capital  company  with  respect to a particular certified capital company program only, if  any material representation to the superintendent in connection with the  application  process  proves  to  have  been  falsely  made  or  if  the  application  materially  violates  any  requirement  established  by the  superintendent  pursuant  to  this   subdivision.   In   addition,   the  superintendent  may  revoke  the  certification  of  a certified capital  company  if  such  certified  capital  company  (i)  falsely  certified,  pursuant  to  paragraph  three of subdivision (d) of this section that a  good faith effort was made to  make  additional  qualifying  investments  under  the  requirements  of  paragraph three of subdivision (h) of this  section, or (ii)  falsely  certified,  pursuant  to  paragraph  four  of  subdivision (e) of this section, that it had made a good faith effort to  make  a  sufficient  amount  of  qualifying  investments  in  qualifying  businesses located in  empire  zones  established  pursuant  to  article  eighteen-B  of the general municipal law or in underserved areas outside  such empire zones.    (g) Registration requirements. All investments for which  tax  credits  are allowable under the provisions of subdivision (k) of section fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this  chapter shall satisfy the conditions of being  registered or specifically exempt from  registration  by  provisions  or  regulations  under  sections  three  hundred  fifty-nine-e through three  hundred fifty-nine-ff of the general business law.    (h) Maximum permitted credits. (1) Certified capital  company  program  one.  The  aggregate amount of certified capital for which taxpayers may  be allocated and allowed tax credits  pursuant  to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section fifteen hundred eleven of this chapter may  not exceed fifty million dollars  for  calendar  year  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in certified  capital  companies  beginning  in   calendar   year   nineteen   hundred  ninety-eight.  In  calendar year two thousand or thereafter, tax credits  may be allowed pursuant to this paragraph and such subdivision  (k)  for  an   additional  fifty  million  dollars  of  certified  capital,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in  certified  capital  companies  beginning   in  calendar  year  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine,  if  not  allocated to calendar year nineteen hundred ninety-eight  in  accordance  with  this  paragraph.  Therefore, the total amount of certified capitalfor which tax credits may be allowed pursuant to this paragraph and such  subdivision (k) shall be one hundred million dollars.    During  any  calendar  year  in which the limitation described in this  paragraph will limit the amount of certified capital, certified  capital  will  be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing of  information  described  in  subparagraph  (A)  of   paragraph   six   of  subdivision  (c)  of  this  section.  Certified  capital  limited in any  calendar year by the application of the  provisions  of  this  paragraph  shall  be  allowed  and allocated in the immediately succeeding calendar  year  in  order  of  priority  set  forth   in   this   paragraph.   The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified capital company in writing  within fifteen days after receiving such filing, whether the limitations  of this paragraph then in effect will be applicable with respect to  the  investments   and   credits   described   in   such   filing   with  the  superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect to certified capital company program one at any time  subsequent  to  its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and vested  in certified investors at the time of each such investment  as  provided  in  this  paragraph, although such credits shall not be first allowed or  incurred for state tax purposes,  until,  at  the  earliest,  tax  years  beginning  in  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine  with respect to the first  fifty million dollars of credits and tax years beginning in two thousand  with respect to the next such fifty million dollars of credits.    (2) Certified capital company program two.  The  aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this chapter may not exceed thirty million  dollars for calendar year two thousand one, which certified capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in calendar year  nineteen hundred ninety-nine.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  of  subdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect will be applicable with respect to the  investments  and  credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect  to certified capital company program two at any time subsequent  to its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and  vested  in  certified  investors at the time of each such investment as provided  in this paragraph, although such credits shall not be first  allowed  or  incurred  for  state  tax  purposes,  until,  at the earliest, tax years  beginning in two thousand one.    (3) Certified capital company program three. The aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred eleven of this chapter may not exceed one hundred fifty  million dollars for calendar year  two  thousand  two,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in  calendar year two thousand.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  ofsubdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect  will  be  applicable with respect to the investments and credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect  to  certified  capital  company  program  three  at  any   time  subsequent  to its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to  and vested in certified investors at the time of each such investment as  provided in this paragraph, although such credits  shall  not  be  first  allowed  or incurred for state tax purposes, until, at the earliest, tax  years beginning in two thousand two. One-third of the certified  capital  raised  by  each  certified  capital  company  with respect to certified  capital  company  program  three  shall  be  used  to   make   qualified  investments  in qualified businesses located in empire zones established  pursuant to  article  eighteen-B  of  the  general  municipal  law,  and  one-third  of  such  certified  capital  shall be used to make qualified  investments in qualified businesses located in underserved areas outside  such empire zones.    (4) Certified capital company program four. The  aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this  chapter may not exceed sixty million  dollars for calendar year two thousand six, which certified capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in calendar year  two thousand four.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  of  subdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect will be applicable with respect to the  investments  and  credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect to certified capital company program four at any time subsequent  to  its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and vested  in certified investors at the time of each such investment  as  provided  in  this  paragraph, although such credits shall not be first allowed or  incurred for state tax purposes,  until,  at  the  earliest,  tax  years  beginning in two thousand six. One-third of the certified capital raised  by  each  certified  capital  company  with respect to certified capital  company program four shall be used  to  make  qualified  investments  in  qualified  businesses  located  in  empire zones established pursuant to  article eighteen-B of the general municipal law, and one-third  of  such  certified  capital  shall  be  used  to  make  qualified  investments in  qualified businesses located in underserved areas  outside  such  empire  zones,  provided,  however,  that in the case of an investment made by a  certified capital company in an empire zone located  in  an  underserved  area, the certified capital company making such an investment may choose  to designate such investment as an investment in an underserved area but  not  as  an  investment in an empire zone for the purpose of meeting the  requirements of this paragraph. Fifty percent of  the  total  amount  of  capital  invested  by  a  certified  capital  company at the time of one  hundred percent investment of  funds  shall  be  invested  in  qualified  businesses  that  are  involved  in  commerce for the primary purpose of  developing  and  manufacturing  products  and  systems  covered  by  theactivities  set  forth  in  paragraph  (b) of subdivision one of section  thirty-one hundred two-e of the public authorities law and have a  ratio  of  research  and  development expenditures to net sales which equals or  exceeds  six  percent  during  the fiscal year immediately preceding the  qualified investment.    (5) Certified capital company program five. The  aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this  chapter may not exceed sixty million  dollars for calendar year two thousand seven,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in calendar  year two thousand five.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  of  subdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect will be applicable with respect to the  investments  and  credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect to certified capital company program five at any time subsequent  to  its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and vested  in certified investors at the time of each such investment  as  provided  in  this  paragraph, although such credits shall not be first allowed or  incurred for state tax purposes,  until,  at  the  earliest,  tax  years  beginning  in  two  thousand  seven.  One-third of the certified capital  raised by each certified  capital  company  with  respect  to  certified  capital company program five shall be used to make qualified investments  in  qualified businesses located in empire zones established pursuant to  article eighteen-B of the general municipal law, and one-third  of  such  certified  capital  shall  be  used  to  make  qualified  investments in  qualified businesses located in underserved areas  outside  such  empire  zones,  provided,  however,  that in the case of an investment made by a  certified capital company in an empire zone located  in  an  underserved  area,  the certified capital company making such an investment may chose  to designate such investment as an investment in an underserved area but  not as an investment in an empire zone for the purpose  of  meeting  the  requirements  of  this  paragraph.  Fifty percent of the total amount of  capital invested by a certified capital  company  at  the  time  of  one  hundred  percent  investment  of  funds  shall  be invested in qualified  businesses that are involved in commerce  for  the  primary  purpose  of  developing  and  manufacturing  products  and  systems  covered  by  the  activities set forth in paragraph (b)  of  subdivision  one  of  section  thirty-one  hundred two-e of the public authorities law and have a ratio  of research and development expenditures to net sales  which  equals  or  exceeds  six  percent  during  the fiscal year immediately preceding the  qualified investment.    (i) Maximum certified capital. The maximum amount of certified capital  per certified capital company program invested in one or more  certified  capital  companies allowed in any one year to any one certified investor  shall not exceed ten  million  dollars  for  certified  capital  company  programs  one and three, and eight million dollars for certified capital  company programs two, four and five for such  year,  provided,  however,  that  if the aggregate amount of certified capital for such year, as set  forth in subdivision (h) of this section, has  not  been  reached  sixty  days  prior  to  the  end  of  the  year  to which such aggregate amountapplies, the provisions of this subdivision shall cease to apply for the  remainder of such year. In addition, the aggregate amount of tax credits  allowed in any taxable year to any  affiliated  group  of  taxpayers  in  relation  to  certified  capital  may  not  exceed  such maximum amount,  whether or not  such  taxpayers  file  a  combined  return  pursuant  to  subdivision  (f) of section fifteen hundred fifteen of this chapter. For  purposes of the preceding sentence, the term  "affiliated  group"  shall  have  the  same  meaning  as  described  in section 1504 of the internal  revenue code, except that the references to "at least eighty percent" in  such section 1504 shall be read as "more than fifty percent".    (j) Reports. The superintendent shall  report  to  the  governor,  the  temporary  president  of the senate, and the speaker of the assembly, on  or before June first of each year beginning in the  year  two  thousand,  the number of certified capital companies holding certified capital; the  amount  of certified capital invested in each certified capital company;  the cumulative amount that each certified capital company  has  invested  as  of  January  first of the year two thousand and the cumulative total  each year thereafter; the cumulative amount that the investments of each  certified capital company have leveraged in terms of capital invested by  other sources of capital in qualified businesses at  the  same  time  or  subsequent  to  investments  made by a certified capital company in such  businesses; the total amount of tax credits granted under  this  section  each  year  that  credits  have  been  awarded  under  this  section and  subdivision (k) of section fifteen hundred eleven of this  chapter;  the  performance  of  each  certified  capital  company  with  regard  to the  requirements for recertification set forth in subdivision  (c)  of  this  section; the classification of companies in which each certified capital  company has invested according to industrial sector and size of company;  the  total  gross  number  of  jobs  created by investments made by each  certified capital company using certified capital and the number of jobs  retained; the location of companies  in  which  each  certified  capital  company  has  invested  in  a manner to indicate if the requirements for  qualified investments in qualified businesses located  in  empire  zones  established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal law  set forth for programs three, four and five  and  in  underserved  areas  outside  such empire zones have been met; the total gross number of jobs  created in empire zones established pursuant to  article  eighteen-B  of  the  general  municipal law and in underserved areas outside such empire  zones made by each certified capital company using certified capital  in  certified  capital  company  programs  three, four and five, reported by  geographic location of each empire zone and  underserved  area  and  the  number of jobs retained; and those certified capital companies that have  been  decertified,  or  have had their certifications revoked, including  the reasons for decertification or revocation.    (k) Rules and regulations. The superintendent,  in  consultation  with  the  department  of taxation and finance, shall prescribe such rules and  regulations as he or she shall deem necessary in order to implement  the  provisions  of  this  section  within  one  hundred  twenty  days of the  effective date of this section.    (l) For the purposes of this section, the  term  "empire  zone"  shall  also  include,  in  relation  to investments made by a certified capital  company in which at least fifty percent of the  voting  stock,  capital,  and  membership  interests,  as  the case may be, are owned by an entity  that is managed directly or indirectly, by a non-profit corporation, the  liberty zone as defined in section one  of  part  AA  of  chap	
	
	
	
	

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§ 11. Certified capital companies. (a) Definitions. For the purpose of  this section the following terms shall mean:    (1)  "Certification  date"  -  the  date  on which a certified capital  company is so designated by the  department  for  a  specific  certified  capital company program.    (2)  "Certified  capital"  -  an  investment  of  cash  by a certified  investor in a certified capital company which fully funds  the  purchase  price  of  either  or  both its equity interest in the certified capital  company or a qualified debt instrument issued by the  certified  capital  company.  Any  such  investment  shall  be  subject to the provisions of  article fourteen of the insurance law.    (3) "Certified capital company" - a partnership, corporation, trust or  limited liability company, organized  on  a  for-profit  basis  that  is  located, headquartered and licensed or registered to conduct business in  New  York,  that  has as its primary business activity the investment of  cash in qualified businesses and that is certified by the department  as  meeting the criteria set forth in subdivision (b) of this section.    (4)  "Certified  investor"  -  any  insurance company that contributes  certified capital.    (5) "Department" - the department of insurance.    (6) "Net profits on certified  investments"  -  the  amount  of  money  returned  to  the  certified capital company in repayment of or exchange  for the certified capital company's qualified investment or  investments  in  the  qualified  business  in  excess of the amount of such qualified  investment or investments.  Such  number  shall  aggregate  all  of  the  certified   capital  company's  qualified  investments  where  gains  on  qualified  investments  are   netted   against   losses   on   qualified  investments.    (7)  "Qualified  business"  -  an  independently  owned  and  operated  business that meets all of the following conditions as of  the  time  of  the first investment in the business:    (A)  It is headquartered in New York state, and its principal business  operations are located in New York state, and the  qualified  investment  it  receives  is  used  solely to support its business operations in the  state, except for advertising, promotions and sales purposes.  In  cases  where  the  qualified  investment  is  made  in  a start-up company such  capital must be used  solely  to  establish  and  support  its  business  operations  in  New  York  state, except for advertising, promotions and  sales purposes.    (B) It has either (i) no more than one  hundred  employees,  at  least  eighty  percent  of whom are employed in New York state or, (ii) no more  than two hundred employees, at least eighty percent of whom are employed  in this state, and during the  fiscal  year  immediately  preceding  the  qualified  investment  it  had,  together  with  its  affiliates,  gross  revenues of no more than five million dollars, on a  consolidated  basis  as   determined   in   accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles, except that,  with  respect  to  certified  capital  company  program  three  and certified capital company program four and certified  capital company program five, in the case of a  company  located  in  an  empire  zone  established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general  municipal law  such  gross  revenues  shall  not  exceed  eight  million  dollars.    (C)  It  is  involved  in  commerce  for the purpose of developing and  manufacturing products and systems, including but not  limited  to  high  technology  products  and  systems such as computers, computer software,  medical  equipment,  biotechnology,  telecommunications  equipment   and  products,  processing  or  assembling  all types of products, conducting  research and development on all types of products or providing services,but excluding  real  estate,  real  estate  development,  insurance  and  businesses  predominantly  engaged  in professional services provided by  accountants, lawyers or physicians.    (D)  The  business was not organized by a certified capital company or  an affiliate of a certified capital company, but  this  paragraph  shall  not  prohibit  a  certified  capital  company  from providing financial,  technical or similar advice to a business before making an investment in  such business.    (E) The business does not have a financial relationship,  such  as  an  ownership interest, investment interest, or compensation agreement, with  a  certified  capital  company  or  any affiliate of a certified capital  company before the date on which a certified capital company  makes  its  first  investment in the business, but this paragraph shall not prohibit  a certified capital  company  from  providing  financial,  technical  or  similar  advice  to  a  business  before  making  an  investment in such  business.    (F) For purposes of this paragraph, the term "independently owned  and  operated  business"  means  (i)  in the case of a corporation or limited  liability company, a corporation where no more than fifty percent of the  voting stock of the corporation or limited liability company is owned or  controlled, directly or indirectly, by a single  corporation,  a  single  partnership  or a single limited liability company, and (ii) in the case  of  a  partnership,  association,  or  other  entity,   a   partnership,  association  or  other  entity  where  no more than fifty percent of the  capital, profits or  other  beneficial  interest  in  such  partnership,  association  or  other  entity  is  owned  or  controlled,  directly  or  indirectly, by a single corporation, a single partnership  or  a  single  limited  liability  company;  provided,  however,  that  the  term shall  include, as a single "independently owned and operated business," parent  and subsidiary or affiliated corporations or limited liability companies  (i) that are engaged in an integrated  for-profit  business  enterprise,  and  (ii)  in  which  at  least  eighty  percent  of the voting stock or  membership interests of all of the  corporations  or  limited  liability  companies  is  owned  or controlled, directly or indirectly, by a common  group of shareholders or members, and no more than fifty percent of  the  voting  stock  or  membership  interests  of  all of the corporations or  limited  liability  companies  is  owned  or  controlled,  directly   or  indirectly,  by  a  single  corporation,  single  partnership, or single  limited liability company that is not  part  of  such  group  or  parent  company or affiliated corporations or limited liability companies.    (8)  "Qualified  debt  instrument"  -  a  debt  instrument issued by a  certified capital company, at par value or a premium, with  an  original  maturity  date of at least five years from date of issuance, a repayment  schedule which is not faster than a level  principal  amortization,  and  interest,  distribution or payment features which are not related to the  profitability of the certified capital company or the performance of the  certified capital company's investment portfolio.    (9) "Qualified distribution"  -  any  distribution  or  payment  by  a  certified capital company in connection with the following:    (A)  Reasonable  costs and expenses of such equity holders incurred by  such equity holders in connection with  forming,  syndicating,  managing  and  operating  the  certified  capital company, including (i) an annual  management fee in an amount  that  does  not  exceed  two  and  one-half  percent  of  the certified capital of the certified capital company with  respect to a particular certified  capital  company  program;  (ii)  the  reasonable  and  necessary  fees paid for professional services (such as  legal and accounting services) related to the operation of the certified  capital company; (iii) with respect to program four and  any  subsequentprogram,  all  payments by the certified capital company in satisfaction  of its indebtedness to its certified investors, provided  that  no  more  than  thirty-five  percent of such certified capital company's certified  capital  may  be  used  to  purchase  U.S.  treasury  securities,  other  investment-grade securities,  a  guaranty,  indemnity,  bond,  insurance  policy  or  other  payment  undertaking, or any combination thereof; and  provided further, that nothing in this provision shall be  construed  to  limit  a  certified capital company from expending non-certified capital  in satisfaction of such indebtedness; and (iv) with respect  to  program  four  and  any  subsequent program, the reasonable costs and expenses of  forming, syndicating,  or  organizing  the  certified  capital  company,  separate  from the costs of insuring or defeasing the obligations of the  certified capital  company,  provided,  however,  that  such  costs  and  expenses  shall  not  exceed  five  percent  of  the  certified  capital  company's certified capital; and    (B) Any increase or projected increase  in  federal  or  state  taxes,  including  penalties  and  interest  related to state and federal income  taxes, of the equity owners of a  certified  capital  company  resulting  from  the  earnings  or  other  tax  liability  of the certified capital  company to the extent that the increase is  related  to  the  ownership,  management or operation of a certified capital company.    (10)  "Qualified  investment"  - the investment of cash by a certified  capital company in a qualified business for the purchase  of  any  debt,  equity  or  hybrid  security,  of  any  nature and description whatever,  including a debt instrument or security which has the characteristics of  debt  but  which  provides  for  conversion  into   equity   or   equity  participation instruments such as options or warrants, provided however,  in the case of certified capital programs three, four and five, that any  such debt instrument have a maturity of at least twenty-four months from  the  date  such  debt is incurred; and further provided that a certified  capital company, after the investment and assuming full  conversion  and  exercise  of  any  equity  participation instruments, shall not own more  than fifty percent of the  voting  equity  of  the  qualified  business,  except  in the case of a follow-on investment where a specific exemption  is granted by the department under subparagraph (D) of paragraph one  of  subdivision  (c)  of  this section. Furthermore, except in the case of a  follow-on investment, if a certified  capital  company  owns  more  than  fifteen percent of the equity in a company or has a seat on the board of  directors  of  such  company,  then  a  certified capital company cannot  invest in such company unless the following conditions are met:  (i)  at  least  one  other  investor  who  is  not  an affiliate of the certified  capital company participates in the same round of investment on the same  terms and conditions as the certified  capital  company;  and  (ii)  the  certified  capital  company and its affiliates invest no more than fifty  percent of the total investment made in that round of investment.    (11) "Early stage business" - a qualified business which is  involved,  at  the  time of investment, in activities related to the development of  initial product or service offerings, such as prototype  development  or  establishment  of  initial production or service processes, or, which is  less than two years old and during the fiscal year immediately preceding  the qualified  investment  had,  together  with  its  affiliates,  gross  revenues of no more than two million dollars, on a consolidated basis as  determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.    (12) "Superintendent" - the superintendent of insurance.    (13)  "Certified  capital  company program" - a calendar year or years  for which taxpayers may be allocated and  allowed  credits  pursuant  to  this  section  and  subdivision (k) of section fifteen hundred eleven of  this chapter and delineated as a separate program by this section.(14) "Starting date" - the date on which a certified  capital  company  is  allocated certified capital for a specific certified capital company  program pursuant to subdivision (b) of this section.    (15) "Underserved area" - a county, including a county wholly within a  city, in which, as of January first, two thousand, less than twenty-five  percent  of  the qualified investments in qualified businesses were made  by certified capital companies under certified capital  company  program  one.  The  superintendent  shall prepare a list of such counties by July  first, two thousand.    (16) "Start-up business" - a qualified business which is involved,  at  the  time  of  investment,  in  activities related to the development of  initial product or service offerings, such as prototype  development  or  establishment  of  initial production or service processes, or, which is  less than two years old and during the fiscal year immediately preceding  the qualified  investment  had,  together  with  its  affiliates,  gross  revenues of no more than two million dollars, on a consolidated basis as  determined  in  accordance with generally accepted accounting principles  and has fewer than twenty employees at the time of the investment;  and,  in  addition,  which  has  emerged  within the year prior to the date of  investment or is emerging from, or  utilizes  a  technology  transferred  from,  a  university  or  college  research facility located in New York  state, a not-for-profit research facility located in New York state,  or  an  industrial  research facility located in New York state, or which is  conducting research in conjunction with or in the research facilities of  a university or college located in New York state, or which  is  located  in  or has emerged within the year prior to the date of investment or is  emerging from an incubator facility located in New York state.    (b) Certification. (1) The superintendent shall establish by  rule  or  regulation  the  procedures  for  making  an  application  to  become  a  certified capital company. The  applicant  shall  pay  a  non-refundable  application  fee  of  five  hundred  dollars  at  the time of filing the  application with the department.    (2) The superintendent may certify partnerships, corporations,  trusts  or  limited  liability companies, organized on a for profit basis, which  submit an application to be designated as a certified capital company if  such applicant is located, headquartered and licensed or  registered  to  conduct  business  in New York, has as its primary business activity the  investment of cash in qualified businesses and meets the other  criteria  set forth in this subdivision.    (3)  A certified capital company's initial capitalization, at the time  of seeking certification, must be five hundred thousand dollars or more.    (4) The superintendent shall review the  organizational  documents  of  each  applicant  for  certification  and  the  business  history  of the  applicant, determine that the applicant's  cash,  marketable  securities  and  other liquid assets are at least five hundred thousand dollars, and  determine  that  the  officers  and  the  board  of  directors,  general  partners,  trustees,  managers,  or  members  are  trustworthy  and  are  thoroughly acquainted with the requirements of this subdivision.    (5) The superintendent shall verify that at least  two  principals  of  the  certified  capital  company or any manager of the certified capital  company each have no less than five years of experience in  the  venture  capital or a venture capital-related industry.    (6)  Any  offering  material  involving  the sale of securities of the  certified capital company shall include the following statement:    "Authorizing the formation of a Certified  Capital  Company  does  not  constitute  the  endorsement  of  the state of New York as to either the  quality of management or the potential for earnings of such company  and  the state of New York is not liable for damages or losses to a CertifiedInvestor in the company. Use of the word 'certified' in an offering does  not  constitute a recommendation or endorsement of the investment by the  state of New York.    Investments  in  a  prospective Certified Capital Company prior to the  time such company is certified  with  respect  to  a  certified  capital  company  program  are not eligible for tax credits. In the event certain  statutory provisions (as specified in section 11 of  the  Tax  Law)  are  violated,  the  state  of  New York may require forfeiture of unused tax  credits and repayment of used tax credits."    (7) Within sixty days of application, the superintendent  shall  issue  the  certification  or shall refuse the certification and communicate in  detail  to  the  applicant  the  grounds  for  the  refusal,   including  suggestions for the removal of those grounds.    (8)  The  superintendent  may certify any previously certified capital  company which has remained in compliance with the requirements  of  this  section  upon  the  application  of  such  company  to  be  designated a  certified capital company for a certified capital  company  program  for  which  it  is  not  so  designated.  Such  new  certification  shall  be  considered a separate certification from any  other  such  certification  under  this  section  and  investments  in  and by such company shall be  considered separately for purposes of subdivisions (c) and (d)  of  this  section.    (9)  The superintendent shall start accepting applications to become a  certified capital company in certified capital company  program  two  by  November  first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine, and shall start accepting  applications to become a certified capital company in certified  capital  company  program  three  by  August first, two thousand, and shall begin  accepting  applications  to  become  a  certified  capital  company   in  certified capital company program four by the later of August first, two  thousand  four  or  not more than sixty days after the effective date of  section one of part D of chapter fifty-nine of the laws of two  thousand  four  and  shall  begin  accepting  applications  to  become a certified  capital company in certified capital company program five by  the  later  of  July  first, two thousand five or not more than sixty days after the  effective date of the chapter of the laws of  two  thousand  five  which  amended this paragraph.    (10)  A  certified  capital  company may obtain a guaranty, indemnity,  bond, insurance policy and/or other payment undertaking for the  benefit  of  its certified investors from any entity; provided, however, that, in  no case shall more than one certified investor of such certified capital  company or affiliates of such certified investor be entitled to  provide  such  guaranty,  indemnity,  bond, insurance policy and/or other payment  undertaking in favor of the certified investors of the certified capital  company and its affiliates in this state.    (c) Requirements for continuance of certification. (1) To continue  to  be  certified  with  respect  to  a particular certified capital company  program, a certified capital company  must  make  qualified  investments  according to the following schedule:    (A)  Within  two years after the starting date of a specific certified  capital company  program  of  a  certified  capital  company,  at  least  twenty-five percent of its certified capital allocable to such certified  capital company program must be placed in qualified investments.    (B) Within three years after the starting date of a specific certified  capital  company  program of a certified capital company, at least forty  percent of its certified capital allocable  to  such  certified  capital  company program must be placed in qualified investments.    (C)  Within four years after the starting date of a specific certified  capital company program of a certified capital company, at  least  fiftypercent  of  its  certified  capital allocable to such certified capital  company program must be placed in qualified investments, at least  fifty  percent of which must have been placed in early stage businesses, except  that  in  the  case of program four and any subsequent program, at least  twenty-five percent of which  must  have  been  placed  in  early  stage  businesses and an additional twenty-five percent of which must have been  placed  in start-up businesses, and except that in the case of qualified  investments  made  in  qualified  businesses  located  in  empire  zones  established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal law  under the provisions of certified capital company program three, program  four and  program  five  from  allocations  of  certified  capital  made  specifically   for   such   targeted  investments  in  such  zones,  the  requirement for  qualified  investments  in  early  stage  and  start-up  businesses shall not apply.    (D)  A  certified capital company, at least fifteen working days prior  to making a proposed investment in a specific business, shall certify in  writing to the superintendent that (i) the business in which it proposes  to invest meets the definition of a qualified business as set  forth  in  subdivision  (a)  of  this  section  or,  in  the  case  of  a follow-on  investment, that such business continues to meet  the  requirements  set  forth in subparagraphs (A) and (C) of paragraph seven of subdivision (a)  of this section and, in either case, an explanation of its determination  that  the  business  meets  such  requirements, and (ii) with respect to  certified capital company program three, program four and program  five,  whether  or  not  such business is located in an empire zone established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal  law  or  in  an  underserved  area  outside  an  empire  zone.  The  certification to the  superintendent shall include a sworn  statement  from  the  business  in  which  the certified capital company proposes to invest, which statement  shall  evidence  the  intention  of  the  business   to   maintain   its  headquarters  in New York and conduct its primary business operations in  the state of New York  after  its  receipt  of  the  investment  by  the  certified  capital  company.  If  the superintendent determines that the  business does not meet the definition of a qualified  business,  or,  in  the case of a follow-on investment, that such business does not meet the  requirements  set  forth in subparagraphs (A) and (C) of paragraph seven  of subdivision (a) of this section, then it shall,  within  the  fifteen  working  day  period  prior  to  the  making of the proposed investment,  notify the certified capital company of its determination and provide an  explanation thereof, provided, however, that the  department  may,  upon  written  request of a certified capital company and at the discretion of  the department, grant,  in  writing,  an  exemption  to  the  percentage  limitations of paragraph ten of subdivision (a) of this section.    (E)  All  certified capital not placed in qualified investments by the  certified capital company may be held or invested in such manner as  the  certified  capital  company,  in  its discretion, deems appropriate. The  proceeds of all  certified  capital  returned  to  a  certified  capital  company  after  being  originally placed in qualified investments may be  placed again  in  qualified  investments  and  shall  count  toward  any  requirement  in  this  subdivision  with  respect  to  placing certified  capital in qualified investments.    (F) If within ten years after the starting date of  certified  capital  company  program four or program five, and within twelve years after the  starting date of certified capital company programs one, two, and three,  one hundred percent of the certified capital allocable  to  a  certified  capital  company  participating  in  such program has not been placed in  qualified investments, the specific certified capital company  shall  no  longer  be  permitted  to  receive  management  fees; provided that suchrestriction shall not  apply  (i)  with  respect  to  certified  capital  company  programs  one, two, and three, to any certified capital company  that  has  not,  prior  to  October  thirty-first,  two  thousand  four,  received,  as  opposed  to  accrued,  any  management fees, or (ii) with  respect to any certified capital company program, to a certified capital  company in which at least fifty percent of the  voting  stock,  capital,  membership  interests,  or  other beneficial ownership interests, as the  case may be, are owned  by  an  entity  that  is  managed,  directly  or  indirectly, by a non-profit corporation.    (2)  Any  business  which is classified as a qualified business at the  time of the first investment in said business  by  a  certified  capital  company  shall remain classified as a qualified business and may receive  follow-on investments from  any  certified  capital  company,  and  such  follow-on  investments  shall  be qualified investments even though such  business may not meet the definition of a qualified business at the time  of such follow-on investments, provided,  however,  that  such  business  continues  to  meet  the requirements set forth in subparagraphs (A) and  (C) of paragraph seven of subdivision (a)  of  this  section,  and  such  business  reaffirms  its  intention  to maintain its headquarters in New  York and conduct its primary business operations in  the  state  of  New  York   as  required  in  subparagraph  (D)  of  paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision.    (3) No qualified investment may be made by a certified capital company  to the extent such investment would cause the company's total  qualified  investment  outstanding with respect to the qualified business receiving  such investment to exceed fifteen percent of the total certified capital  of the certified capital company at the time of such investment.    (4) Documents and  other  materials  submitted  by  certified  capital  companies   or   by  businesses  for  purposes  of  the  continuance  of  certification shall not be public records if such records are determined  by the superintendent to be trade  or  business  secrets  and  shall  be  maintained in a confidential manner by the superintendent.    (5)  The aggregate cumulative amount of all qualified investments made  by the certified capital company for a certified capital company program  from its starting date for  such  program  will  be  considered  in  the  calculation  of the percentage requirements under subparagraphs (A), (B)  and (C) of paragraph one of this subdivision,  provided,  however,  that  any  amounts  received  by  a certified capital company from a qualified  business as (i) commitment fees, closing fees,  or  other  similar  fees  (excluding reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses, including legal fees  and  accounting  fees) in excess of one percent of the certified capital  company's investment in the qualified business  or  (ii)  license  fees,  royalties,  or  similar  charges  shall  not be considered in any of the  percentage calculations under this section.    (6) Each certified capital company shall report the following  to  the  superintendent:    (A)  As  soon as practicable after the receipt of certified capital or  an irrevocable funding commitment subject only  to  the  receipt  of  an  allocation  pursuant to subdivision (h) of this section, (i) the name of  each certified investor from which the certified capital  was  received,  including such certified investor's insurance tax identification number;  (ii)  the  amount  of  each certified investor's investment of certified  capital; and (iii) the date on which the certified capital was received.  Provided, however, that requests for  allocation  of  tax  credits  with  respect  to  certified  capital company program two by certified capital  companies on behalf of their certified investors which are  received  by  the  superintendent  on  or  before  March  first, two thousand shall be  treated as having been received on March first,  two  thousand  for  taxcredits  to  be utilized in two thousand one, and if satisfactory, shall  be given equal priority for  allocation,  and  provided,  however,  that  requests for allocation of tax credits with respect to certified capital  company  program three by certified capital companies on behalf of their  certified investors which are  received  by  the  superintendent  on  or  before  December  first,  two  thousand  shall be treated as having been  received on December first, two thousand for tax credits to be  utilized  in  two thousand two, and if satisfactory, shall be given equal priority  for allocation, and provided, however, that requests for  allocation  of  tax  credits  with  respect to certified capital company program four by  certified capital companies on behalf of their certified investors which  are received by the superintendent on  or  before  December  first,  two  thousand  four  shall  be  treated  as  having been received on December  first, two thousand four for tax credits to be utilized in two  thousand  six,  and if satisfactory, shall be given equal priority for allocation,  and provided, however, that requests for allocation of tax credits  with  respect  to  certified capital company program five by certified capital  companies on behalf of their certified investors which are  received  by  the  superintendent  on  or  before the later of (i) November first, two  thousand five and (ii) the one hundred twentieth day after the  date  on  which  the superintendent began accepting applications for certification  in connection with certified capital company program  five  pursuant  to  paragraph  nine  of  subdivision (b) of this section shall be treated as  having been received on such later date for tax credits to  be  utilized  in  two  thousand  seven,  and  if  satisfactory,  shall  be given equal  priority for allocation.    (B) On an annual basis, on or  before  January  thirty-first  of  each  year,  (i)  the  amount  of  the  certified  capital company's certified  capital at the end of the immediately preceding year;  (ii)  whether  or  not the certified capital company has invested more than fifteen percent  of  its total certified capital in any one business; (iii) all qualified  investments that the certified capital company made during the  previous  calendar  year,  including  the  number  of  employees of each qualified  business in which it has made investments at the time of such investment  and as of December  first  of  the  preceding  calendar  year.  For  any  qualified  business where the certified capital company no longer has an  investment, the  certified  capital  company  shall  provide  employment  figures  for  such  company as of the last day before the investment was  terminated. Such report shall provide  a  separate  accounting  by  each  certified  capital  company  program; and (iv) all qualified investments  made in empire zones and underserved areas outside such empire zones  as  required  under  certified  capital  company  program  three,  certified  capital company program four and certified capital company program five.    (C) Each certified capital company shall provide to the superintendent  annual audited financial statements, which shall include the opinion  of  an  independent  certified  public accountant, within ninety days of the  close of its fiscal year. The audit  shall  address  whether  the  funds  received by the certified capital company have been invested as required  under   subparagraphs  (A),  (B)  and  (C)  of  paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision.  Upon  receiving  notification  and  documentation   by   a  certified  capital  company  that  it  has satisfied the requirements of  subparagraph (C) of paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision  that  it  has  invested  fifty  percent  of its certified capital, the department shall  have sixty days to notify such certified capital company that it has  or  has not met such requirement, with a reason for such determination if it  has not, in the judgment of the department, met such requirement. If the  department  does  not  provide  such notification within sixty days, thecertified capital  company  shall  then  be  deemed  to  have  met  such  requirement.    (D)  On  or  before  April  first of each year, each certified capital  company shall pay an annual, non-refundable certification  fee  of  five  hundred  dollars  to the superintendent; provided that no such fee shall  be required within six months of the initial  certification  date  of  a  certified capital company.    (E)(1)  Within  thirty  days  of  the  decision  on an application for  certification  pursuant  to  subdivision  (b)  of  this   section,   the  superintendent  shall  submit a copy of such application and the related  decision to the department of taxation and finance.  The  superintendent  shall  submit  a  copy  of  all  filings  of  certifications pursuant to  subparagraph  (D)  of  paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision   and   any  determination made thereon within fifteen days of such filing.    (2)  The  superintendent shall annually, by March first, submit to the  department of taxation and finance a list of persons who may  claim  the  tax  credit  for  the  previous  taxable  year and any other information  necessary to assist the department of taxation and finance to  determine  eligibility for such tax credit.    (d)  Distributions. (1) A certified capital company may make qualified  distributions at any time. In order for a certified capital  company  to  make a distribution other than a qualified distribution from a certified  capital company program, to its equity holders, either (A) the aggregate  cumulative  amount  of  all  qualified investments for such program must  equal or exceed one hundred percent of its certified  capital  allocable  to  such certified capital company program, or (B) it must have received  written authorization to make such distribution from the superintendent.  In no event, however, shall any such distribution to its equity holders,  other than a qualified distribution, be  made  by  a  certified  capital  company  from a certified capital company program unless an amount equal  cumulatively to at least ninety percent of its certified capital of such  program is invested in companies that conduct their  principal  business  operations in New York state.    (2)  In  the  event that a business in which a qualified investment is  made relocates its principal business operations to another state during  such investment, or within three months after the  termination  of  such  investment,  the  cumulative  amount  of  qualified  investment shall be  reduced by the amount of such qualified investment, for the purposes  of  this  subdivision only, unless (A) the certified capital company invests  an amount at least equal to the investment of certified capital  in  the  relocated  business  in  a  qualified business located in New York state  within  six  months  of  the  relocation  or  (B)  unless  the  business  demonstrates  that  it has returned its principal business operations to  New York state within three months of such relocation. A business  shall  be  deemed  to  have relocated its principal business operations outside  New York state if the primary workplace of more than  fifty  percent  of  the  employees of such business within the state is relocated to another  state.    (3) In the event that a business in which a  qualified  investment  is  made  under  certified  capital company program three, certified capital  company  program  four  or  certified  capital  company  program   five,  relocates  its  principal  business operation within the earlier of four  years after the date of such qualified investment or three months  after  the   termination  of  such  investment,  whereby  the  requirements  of  paragraph three of subdivision (h) of this  section  to  make  qualified  investments  in qualified businesses located in empire zones established  pursuant to article eighteen-B  of  the  general  municipal  law  or  in  underserved areas outside such empire zones no longer are satisfied, thecumulative amount of qualified investment shall be reduced by the amount  of such qualified investment, for the purposes of this subdivision only,  unless  (A)  the  certified  capital  company invests an amount at least  equal  to  the investment of certified capital in the relocated business  in a qualified business located in  either  an  empire  zone  or  in  an  underserved  area  outside  an  empire  zone so that the requirements of  paragraph three of subdivision (h) of this section are  again  satisfied  within  six  months  of  such  relocation,  unless the certified capital  company certifies to the superintendent that a  good  faith  effort  was  made to make additional qualifying investments under the requirements of  paragraph  three of subdivision (h) of this section, or (B) the business  demonstrates that it has returned its principal  business  operation  to  New  York  state  in  either  an  empire  zone or in an underserved area  outside an empire zone within three months of such  relocation,  or  (C)  the  business  demonstrates  that  it  had  a valid business purpose for  relocating its principal business operation. A business shall be  deemed  to have relocated its principal business operations outside of an empire  zone  or  an  underserved  area  outside  an  empire zone if the primary  workplace of more than fifty percent of the employees of  such  business  within  an  empire zone or an underserved area outside an empire zone is  relocated to an area outside the state or outside an empire zone  or  an  underserved area outside an empire zone.    (4)  Payments  to  debt  holders of a certified capital company may be  made without restriction with respect to  repayments  of  principal  and  interest  on  indebtedness  owed to them by a certified capital company,  including  indebtedness  of  the  certified  capital  company  on  which  certified  investors  earned  tax  credits. A debt holder that is also a  certified investor or equity holder of a certified capital  company  may  receive  payments  with  respect  to  such  debt without any restriction  whatsoever.    (5) A  certified  capital  company  that  receives  certified  capital  investments  under  program four and any subsequent program shall pay to  the department for deposit in the general fund an amount equal to thirty  percent of the net profits on qualified investments. A certified capital  company  shall  make  all  payments  required   under   this   paragraph  concurrently  with and pro rata to distributions of profits and gains to  its equity owners; however, nothing contained in this paragraph shall be  construed to affect qualified distributions.    (6) The amount of any payment required under paragraph  five  of  this  subdivision  shall  be reduced to fifteen percent of such net profits on  qualified investments if, at the time of such net profits  distribution,  such   certified  capital  company  irrevocably  commits  to  both:  (A)  re-invest the remaining fifteen percent of such net  profits  not  being  paid  to  the general fund under paragraph five of this subdivision into  qualified businesses, and (B) invest an additional amount  equal  to  at  least  fifteen  percent  of such net profits distribution into qualified  businesses which additional amount shall come from a  separate  pool  of  venture  capital that is controlled by the certified capital company but  that does not contain certified  capital.  In  making  investments  from  funds  established  under  this paragraph, the certified capital company  shall follow the requirements set forth in subparagraph (D) of paragraph  one of subdivision (c) of this section pertaining to obtaining  approval  of   the   investment   being  in  a  qualified  business,  except  that  requirements  pertaining  to  empire   zones   and   underserved   areas  requirements  shall  not  apply. Once qualified investments in qualified  businesses have been made pursuant to this  paragraph  equal  to  thirty  percent   of   the  net  profits  on  qualified  investments,  then  the  requirements under this subdivision shall have been  satisfied  and  theproceeds  from  such  qualified  businesses  may  be distributed without  restriction.    (e)  Decertification.  (1)  The superintendent shall conduct an annual  review of each certified capital company to determine if  the  certified  capital  company  is  abiding  by  the requirements of certification, to  advise the certified capital company as to the eligibility status of its  qualified investments, and to ensure that no investment has been made in  violation of this subdivision. The cost of the annual  review  shall  be  paid  by  each  certified  capital company according to a reasonable fee  schedule adopted by the superintendent.    (2) Any material violation of subdivision (c)  of  this  section  with  respect  to  a  particular  certified  capital  company program shall be  grounds for  decertification  of  the  certified  capital  company  with  respect  to  such  program.  If  the  superintendent  determines  that a  certified capital company is not in compliance with the requirements  of  subdivision  (c)  of this section with respect to a particular certified  capital company  program,  it  shall,  by  written  notice,  inform  the  officers  of  the  certified  capital company that the certified capital  company will be subject to decertification with respect to such  program  in  one  hundred  twenty  days  from  the date of mailing of the notice,  unless the deficiencies are corrected and the certified capital  company  is again in compliance with all requirements for certification.    (3)  At  the  end  of  the one hundred twenty day grace period, if the  certified capital company is still not in  compliance  with  subdivision  (c)  of  this  section  with  respect  to a particular certified capital  company  program,  the   superintendent   shall   send   a   notice   of  decertification  to  the  certified capital company with respect to such  program and to all other appropriate state agencies.    (4) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs two and three of this  subdivision, if a certified capital company in certified capital company  programs three, four and  five  fails  to  satisfy  the  requirement  in  subparagraph  (B)  of  paragraph  one of subdivision (c) of this section  because it has been unable to make  a  sufficient  amount  of  qualified  investments  in  qualified  businesses  located  either  in empire zones  established pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal  law  or  in  underserved  areas  outside  such  empire  zones, such certified  capital company shall not be subject to decertification  at  that  time.  However,  if  such  certified  capital  company  fails  to  satisfy  the  requirement in subparagraph (C) of paragraph one of subdivision  (c)  of  this  section  because it has been unable to make a sufficient amount of  qualified investments in qualified businesses  located  either  in  such  empire  zones  or  in  underserved  areas outside such empire zones, but  certifies to the superintendent that it had made a good faith effort  to  make  such  investments, such certified capital company shall be allowed  two additional years to satisfy the  requirement  in  such  subparagraph  (C).  If,  after  the  conclusion of such two year period, the certified  capital company still has not been able to satisfy  the  requirement  to  make  such  investments, and such certified capital company certifies to  the superintendent that it had made a good faith  effort  to  make  such  investments,  the  requirement  in  paragraphs  three,  four and five of  subdivision (h)  of  this  section  to  make  qualified  investments  in  qualified  businesses  located  in  empire zones or in underserved areas  shall be waived. Such certified capital company shall  then  be  allowed  one additional year to satisfy the requirement in such subparagraph (C),  and  if,  at  the  conclusion  of  that additional one year period, such  requirement is still not satisfied, such certified capital company shall  be subject to decertification and the provisions of paragraphs  two  and  three of this subdivision shall apply.(5)   Once   a  certified  capital  company  has  invested  an  amount  cumulatively equal to one hundred percent of its certified capital  with  respect  to  a particular certified capital company program in qualified  investments and has met all other requirements under  this  subdivision,  the  certified  capital company shall no longer be subject to regulation  by the superintendent and shall no longer be subject to the requirements  of subdivision (c) of this section with respect to  such  program.  Upon  receiving  documented  certification by a certified capital company that  it has invested an amount equal to one hundred percent of its  certified  capital,  the  department shall have sixty days to notify such certified  capital company that it has or has  not  met  such  requirement  with  a  reason  for  such  determination  if  it has not, in the judgment of the  department, met such requirement. If the  department  does  not  provide  such notification within sixty days, the certified capital company shall  then be deemed to have met such requirement.    (6)   The   superintendent   shall   send   written   notice  of  such  decertification to the address of  each  certified  investor  whose  tax  credit  has  been  subject to recapture or forfeiture, using the address  shown on the last filing submitted to the superintendent.    (f) Revocation of certification. The  superintendent  may  revoke  the  certification  of  a certified capital company, or, at the discretion of  the superintendent, the certification of  a  certified  capital  company  with  respect to a particular certified capital company program only, if  any material representation to the superintendent in connection with the  application  process  proves  to  have  been  falsely  made  or  if  the  application  materially  violates  any  requirement  established  by the  superintendent  pursuant  to  this   subdivision.   In   addition,   the  superintendent  may  revoke  the  certification  of  a certified capital  company  if  such  certified  capital  company  (i)  falsely  certified,  pursuant  to  paragraph  three of subdivision (d) of this section that a  good faith effort was made to  make  additional  qualifying  investments  under  the  requirements  of  paragraph three of subdivision (h) of this  section, or (ii)  falsely  certified,  pursuant  to  paragraph  four  of  subdivision (e) of this section, that it had made a good faith effort to  make  a  sufficient  amount  of  qualifying  investments  in  qualifying  businesses located in  empire  zones  established  pursuant  to  article  eighteen-B  of the general municipal law or in underserved areas outside  such empire zones.    (g) Registration requirements. All investments for which  tax  credits  are allowable under the provisions of subdivision (k) of section fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this  chapter shall satisfy the conditions of being  registered or specifically exempt from  registration  by  provisions  or  regulations  under  sections  three  hundred  fifty-nine-e through three  hundred fifty-nine-ff of the general business law.    (h) Maximum permitted credits. (1) Certified capital  company  program  one.  The  aggregate amount of certified capital for which taxpayers may  be allocated and allowed tax credits  pursuant  to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section fifteen hundred eleven of this chapter may  not exceed fifty million dollars  for  calendar  year  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in certified  capital  companies  beginning  in   calendar   year   nineteen   hundred  ninety-eight.  In  calendar year two thousand or thereafter, tax credits  may be allowed pursuant to this paragraph and such subdivision  (k)  for  an   additional  fifty  million  dollars  of  certified  capital,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in  certified  capital  companies  beginning   in  calendar  year  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine,  if  not  allocated to calendar year nineteen hundred ninety-eight  in  accordance  with  this  paragraph.  Therefore, the total amount of certified capitalfor which tax credits may be allowed pursuant to this paragraph and such  subdivision (k) shall be one hundred million dollars.    During  any  calendar  year  in which the limitation described in this  paragraph will limit the amount of certified capital, certified  capital  will  be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing of  information  described  in  subparagraph  (A)  of   paragraph   six   of  subdivision  (c)  of  this  section.  Certified  capital  limited in any  calendar year by the application of the  provisions  of  this  paragraph  shall  be  allowed  and allocated in the immediately succeeding calendar  year  in  order  of  priority  set  forth   in   this   paragraph.   The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified capital company in writing  within fifteen days after receiving such filing, whether the limitations  of this paragraph then in effect will be applicable with respect to  the  investments   and   credits   described   in   such   filing   with  the  superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect to certified capital company program one at any time  subsequent  to  its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and vested  in certified investors at the time of each such investment  as  provided  in  this  paragraph, although such credits shall not be first allowed or  incurred for state tax purposes,  until,  at  the  earliest,  tax  years  beginning  in  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine  with respect to the first  fifty million dollars of credits and tax years beginning in two thousand  with respect to the next such fifty million dollars of credits.    (2) Certified capital company program two.  The  aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this chapter may not exceed thirty million  dollars for calendar year two thousand one, which certified capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in calendar year  nineteen hundred ninety-nine.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  of  subdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect will be applicable with respect to the  investments  and  credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect  to certified capital company program two at any time subsequent  to its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and  vested  in  certified  investors at the time of each such investment as provided  in this paragraph, although such credits shall not be first  allowed  or  incurred  for  state  tax  purposes,  until,  at the earliest, tax years  beginning in two thousand one.    (3) Certified capital company program three. The aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred eleven of this chapter may not exceed one hundred fifty  million dollars for calendar year  two  thousand  two,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in  calendar year two thousand.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  ofsubdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect  will  be  applicable with respect to the investments and credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect  to  certified  capital  company  program  three  at  any   time  subsequent  to its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to  and vested in certified investors at the time of each such investment as  provided in this paragraph, although such credits  shall  not  be  first  allowed  or incurred for state tax purposes, until, at the earliest, tax  years beginning in two thousand two. One-third of the certified  capital  raised  by  each  certified  capital  company  with respect to certified  capital  company  program  three  shall  be  used  to   make   qualified  investments  in qualified businesses located in empire zones established  pursuant to  article  eighteen-B  of  the  general  municipal  law,  and  one-third  of  such  certified  capital  shall be used to make qualified  investments in qualified businesses located in underserved areas outside  such empire zones.    (4) Certified capital company program four. The  aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this  chapter may not exceed sixty million  dollars for calendar year two thousand six, which certified capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in calendar year  two thousand four.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  of  subdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect will be applicable with respect to the  investments  and  credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect to certified capital company program four at any time subsequent  to  its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and vested  in certified investors at the time of each such investment  as  provided  in  this  paragraph, although such credits shall not be first allowed or  incurred for state tax purposes,  until,  at  the  earliest,  tax  years  beginning in two thousand six. One-third of the certified capital raised  by  each  certified  capital  company  with respect to certified capital  company program four shall be used  to  make  qualified  investments  in  qualified  businesses  located  in  empire zones established pursuant to  article eighteen-B of the general municipal law, and one-third  of  such  certified  capital  shall  be  used  to  make  qualified  investments in  qualified businesses located in underserved areas  outside  such  empire  zones,  provided,  however,  that in the case of an investment made by a  certified capital company in an empire zone located  in  an  underserved  area, the certified capital company making such an investment may choose  to designate such investment as an investment in an underserved area but  not  as  an  investment in an empire zone for the purpose of meeting the  requirements of this paragraph. Fifty percent of  the  total  amount  of  capital  invested  by  a  certified  capital  company at the time of one  hundred percent investment of  funds  shall  be  invested  in  qualified  businesses  that  are  involved  in  commerce for the primary purpose of  developing  and  manufacturing  products  and  systems  covered  by  theactivities  set  forth  in  paragraph  (b) of subdivision one of section  thirty-one hundred two-e of the public authorities law and have a  ratio  of  research  and  development expenditures to net sales which equals or  exceeds  six  percent  during  the fiscal year immediately preceding the  qualified investment.    (5) Certified capital company program five. The  aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this  chapter may not exceed sixty million  dollars for calendar year two thousand seven,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in calendar  year two thousand five.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  of  subdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect will be applicable with respect to the  investments  and  credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect to certified capital company program five at any time subsequent  to  its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and vested  in certified investors at the time of each such investment  as  provided  in  this  paragraph, although such credits shall not be first allowed or  incurred for state tax purposes,  until,  at  the  earliest,  tax  years  beginning  in  two  thousand  seven.  One-third of the certified capital  raised by each certified  capital  company  with  respect  to  certified  capital company program five shall be used to make qualified investments  in  qualified businesses located in empire zones established pursuant to  article eighteen-B of the general municipal law, and one-third  of  such  certified  capital  shall  be  used  to  make  qualified  investments in  qualified businesses located in underserved areas  outside  such  empire  zones,  provided,  however,  that in the case of an investment made by a  certified capital company in an empire zone located  in  an  underserved  area,  the certified capital company making such an investment may chose  to designate such investment as an investment in an underserved area but  not as an investment in an empire zone for the purpose  of  meeting  the  requirements  of  this  paragraph.  Fifty percent of the total amount of  capital invested by a certified capital  company  at  the  time  of  one  hundred  percent  investment  of  funds  shall  be invested in qualified  businesses that are involved in commerce  for  the  primary  purpose  of  developing  and  manufacturing  products  and  systems  covered  by  the  activities set forth in paragraph (b)  of  subdivision  one  of  section  thirty-one  hundred two-e of the public authorities law and have a ratio  of research and development expenditures to net sales  which  equals  or  exceeds  six  percent  during  the fiscal year immediately preceding the  qualified investment.    (i) Maximum certified capital. The maximum amount of certified capital  per certified capital company program invested in one or more  certified  capital  companies allowed in any one year to any one certified investor  shall not exceed ten  million  dollars  for  certified  capital  company  programs  one and three, and eight million dollars for certified capital  company programs two, four and five for such  year,  provided,  however,  that  if the aggregate amount of certified capital for such year, as set  forth in subdivision (h) of this section, has  not  been  reached  sixty  days  prior  to  the  end  of  the  year  to which such aggregate amountapplies, the provisions of this subdivision shall cease to apply for the  remainder of such year. In addition, the aggregate amount of tax credits  allowed in any taxable year to any  affiliated  group  of  taxpayers  in  relation  to  certified  capital  may  not  exceed  such maximum amount,  whether or not  such  taxpayers  file  a  combined  return  pursuant  to  subdivision  (f) of section fifteen hundred fifteen of this chapter. For  purposes of the preceding sentence, the term  "affiliated  group"  shall  have  the  same  meaning  as  described  in section 1504 of the internal  revenue code, except that the references to "at least eighty percent" in  such section 1504 shall be read as "more than fifty percent".    (j) Reports. The superintendent shall  report  to  the  governor,  the  temporary  president  of the senate, and the speaker of the assembly, on  or before June first of each year beginning in the  year  two  thousand,  the number of certified capital companies holding certified capital; the  amount  of certified capital invested in each certified capital company;  the cumulative amount that each certified capital company  has  invested  as  of  January  first of the year two thousand and the cumulative total  each year thereafter; the cumulative amount that the investments of each  certified capital company have leveraged in terms of capital invested by  other sources of capital in qualified businesses at  the  same  time  or  subsequent  to  investments  made by a certified capital company in such  businesses; the total amount of tax credits granted under  this  section  each  year  that  credits  have  been  awarded  under  this  section and  subdivision (k) of section fifteen hundred eleven of this  chapter;  the  performance  of  each  certified  capital  company  with  regard  to the  requirements for recertification set forth in subdivision  (c)  of  this  section; the classification of companies in which each certified capital  company has invested according to industrial sector and size of company;  the  total  gross  number  of  jobs  created by investments made by each  certified capital company using certified capital and the number of jobs  retained; the location of companies  in  which  each  certified  capital  company  has  invested  in  a manner to indicate if the requirements for  qualified investments in qualified businesses located  in  empire  zones  established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal law  set forth for programs three, four and five  and  in  underserved  areas  outside  such empire zones have been met; the total gross number of jobs  created in empire zones established pursuant to  article  eighteen-B  of  the  general  municipal law and in underserved areas outside such empire  zones made by each certified capital company using certified capital  in  certified  capital  company  programs  three, four and five, reported by  geographic location of each empire zone and  underserved  area  and  the  number of jobs retained; and those certified capital companies that have  been  decertified,  or  have had their certifications revoked, including  the reasons for decertification or revocation.    (k) Rules and regulations. The superintendent,  in  consultation  with  the  department  of taxation and finance, shall prescribe such rules and  regulations as he or she shall deem necessary in order to implement  the  provisions  of  this  section  within  one  hundred  twenty  days of the  effective date of this section.    (l) For the purposes of this section, the  term  "empire  zone"  shall  also  include,  in  relation  to investments made by a certified capital  company in which at least fifty percent of the  voting  stock,  capital,  and  membership  interests,  as  the case may be, are owned by an entity  that is managed directly or indirectly, by a non-profit corporation, the  liberty zone as defined in section one  of  part  AA  of  chap	
	











































		
		
	

	
	
	

			

			
		

		

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Tax > Article-1 > 11

§ 11. Certified capital companies. (a) Definitions. For the purpose of  this section the following terms shall mean:    (1)  "Certification  date"  -  the  date  on which a certified capital  company is so designated by the  department  for  a  specific  certified  capital company program.    (2)  "Certified  capital"  -  an  investment  of  cash  by a certified  investor in a certified capital company which fully funds  the  purchase  price  of  either  or  both its equity interest in the certified capital  company or a qualified debt instrument issued by the  certified  capital  company.  Any  such  investment  shall  be  subject to the provisions of  article fourteen of the insurance law.    (3) "Certified capital company" - a partnership, corporation, trust or  limited liability company, organized  on  a  for-profit  basis  that  is  located, headquartered and licensed or registered to conduct business in  New  York,  that  has as its primary business activity the investment of  cash in qualified businesses and that is certified by the department  as  meeting the criteria set forth in subdivision (b) of this section.    (4)  "Certified  investor"  -  any  insurance company that contributes  certified capital.    (5) "Department" - the department of insurance.    (6) "Net profits on certified  investments"  -  the  amount  of  money  returned  to  the  certified capital company in repayment of or exchange  for the certified capital company's qualified investment or  investments  in  the  qualified  business  in  excess of the amount of such qualified  investment or investments.  Such  number  shall  aggregate  all  of  the  certified   capital  company's  qualified  investments  where  gains  on  qualified  investments  are   netted   against   losses   on   qualified  investments.    (7)  "Qualified  business"  -  an  independently  owned  and  operated  business that meets all of the following conditions as of  the  time  of  the first investment in the business:    (A)  It is headquartered in New York state, and its principal business  operations are located in New York state, and the  qualified  investment  it  receives  is  used  solely to support its business operations in the  state, except for advertising, promotions and sales purposes.  In  cases  where  the  qualified  investment  is  made  in  a start-up company such  capital must be used  solely  to  establish  and  support  its  business  operations  in  New  York  state, except for advertising, promotions and  sales purposes.    (B) It has either (i) no more than one  hundred  employees,  at  least  eighty  percent  of whom are employed in New York state or, (ii) no more  than two hundred employees, at least eighty percent of whom are employed  in this state, and during the  fiscal  year  immediately  preceding  the  qualified  investment  it  had,  together  with  its  affiliates,  gross  revenues of no more than five million dollars, on a  consolidated  basis  as   determined   in   accordance  with  generally  accepted  accounting  principles, except that,  with  respect  to  certified  capital  company  program  three  and certified capital company program four and certified  capital company program five, in the case of a  company  located  in  an  empire  zone  established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general  municipal law  such  gross  revenues  shall  not  exceed  eight  million  dollars.    (C)  It  is  involved  in  commerce  for the purpose of developing and  manufacturing products and systems, including but not  limited  to  high  technology  products  and  systems such as computers, computer software,  medical  equipment,  biotechnology,  telecommunications  equipment   and  products,  processing  or  assembling  all types of products, conducting  research and development on all types of products or providing services,but excluding  real  estate,  real  estate  development,  insurance  and  businesses  predominantly  engaged  in professional services provided by  accountants, lawyers or physicians.    (D)  The  business was not organized by a certified capital company or  an affiliate of a certified capital company, but  this  paragraph  shall  not  prohibit  a  certified  capital  company  from providing financial,  technical or similar advice to a business before making an investment in  such business.    (E) The business does not have a financial relationship,  such  as  an  ownership interest, investment interest, or compensation agreement, with  a  certified  capital  company  or  any affiliate of a certified capital  company before the date on which a certified capital company  makes  its  first  investment in the business, but this paragraph shall not prohibit  a certified capital  company  from  providing  financial,  technical  or  similar  advice  to  a  business  before  making  an  investment in such  business.    (F) For purposes of this paragraph, the term "independently owned  and  operated  business"  means  (i)  in the case of a corporation or limited  liability company, a corporation where no more than fifty percent of the  voting stock of the corporation or limited liability company is owned or  controlled, directly or indirectly, by a single  corporation,  a  single  partnership  or a single limited liability company, and (ii) in the case  of  a  partnership,  association,  or  other  entity,   a   partnership,  association  or  other  entity  where  no more than fifty percent of the  capital, profits or  other  beneficial  interest  in  such  partnership,  association  or  other  entity  is  owned  or  controlled,  directly  or  indirectly, by a single corporation, a single partnership  or  a  single  limited  liability  company;  provided,  however,  that  the  term shall  include, as a single "independently owned and operated business," parent  and subsidiary or affiliated corporations or limited liability companies  (i) that are engaged in an integrated  for-profit  business  enterprise,  and  (ii)  in  which  at  least  eighty  percent  of the voting stock or  membership interests of all of the  corporations  or  limited  liability  companies  is  owned  or controlled, directly or indirectly, by a common  group of shareholders or members, and no more than fifty percent of  the  voting  stock  or  membership  interests  of  all of the corporations or  limited  liability  companies  is  owned  or  controlled,  directly   or  indirectly,  by  a  single  corporation,  single  partnership, or single  limited liability company that is not  part  of  such  group  or  parent  company or affiliated corporations or limited liability companies.    (8)  "Qualified  debt  instrument"  -  a  debt  instrument issued by a  certified capital company, at par value or a premium, with  an  original  maturity  date of at least five years from date of issuance, a repayment  schedule which is not faster than a level  principal  amortization,  and  interest,  distribution or payment features which are not related to the  profitability of the certified capital company or the performance of the  certified capital company's investment portfolio.    (9) "Qualified distribution"  -  any  distribution  or  payment  by  a  certified capital company in connection with the following:    (A)  Reasonable  costs and expenses of such equity holders incurred by  such equity holders in connection with  forming,  syndicating,  managing  and  operating  the  certified  capital company, including (i) an annual  management fee in an amount  that  does  not  exceed  two  and  one-half  percent  of  the certified capital of the certified capital company with  respect to a particular certified  capital  company  program;  (ii)  the  reasonable  and  necessary  fees paid for professional services (such as  legal and accounting services) related to the operation of the certified  capital company; (iii) with respect to program four and  any  subsequentprogram,  all  payments by the certified capital company in satisfaction  of its indebtedness to its certified investors, provided  that  no  more  than  thirty-five  percent of such certified capital company's certified  capital  may  be  used  to  purchase  U.S.  treasury  securities,  other  investment-grade securities,  a  guaranty,  indemnity,  bond,  insurance  policy  or  other  payment  undertaking, or any combination thereof; and  provided further, that nothing in this provision shall be  construed  to  limit  a  certified capital company from expending non-certified capital  in satisfaction of such indebtedness; and (iv) with respect  to  program  four  and  any  subsequent program, the reasonable costs and expenses of  forming, syndicating,  or  organizing  the  certified  capital  company,  separate  from the costs of insuring or defeasing the obligations of the  certified capital  company,  provided,  however,  that  such  costs  and  expenses  shall  not  exceed  five  percent  of  the  certified  capital  company's certified capital; and    (B) Any increase or projected increase  in  federal  or  state  taxes,  including  penalties  and  interest  related to state and federal income  taxes, of the equity owners of a  certified  capital  company  resulting  from  the  earnings  or  other  tax  liability  of the certified capital  company to the extent that the increase is  related  to  the  ownership,  management or operation of a certified capital company.    (10)  "Qualified  investment"  - the investment of cash by a certified  capital company in a qualified business for the purchase  of  any  debt,  equity  or  hybrid  security,  of  any  nature and description whatever,  including a debt instrument or security which has the characteristics of  debt  but  which  provides  for  conversion  into   equity   or   equity  participation instruments such as options or warrants, provided however,  in the case of certified capital programs three, four and five, that any  such debt instrument have a maturity of at least twenty-four months from  the  date  such  debt is incurred; and further provided that a certified  capital company, after the investment and assuming full  conversion  and  exercise  of  any  equity  participation instruments, shall not own more  than fifty percent of the  voting  equity  of  the  qualified  business,  except  in the case of a follow-on investment where a specific exemption  is granted by the department under subparagraph (D) of paragraph one  of  subdivision  (c)  of  this section. Furthermore, except in the case of a  follow-on investment, if a certified  capital  company  owns  more  than  fifteen percent of the equity in a company or has a seat on the board of  directors  of  such  company,  then  a  certified capital company cannot  invest in such company unless the following conditions are met:  (i)  at  least  one  other  investor  who  is  not  an affiliate of the certified  capital company participates in the same round of investment on the same  terms and conditions as the certified  capital  company;  and  (ii)  the  certified  capital  company and its affiliates invest no more than fifty  percent of the total investment made in that round of investment.    (11) "Early stage business" - a qualified business which is  involved,  at  the  time of investment, in activities related to the development of  initial product or service offerings, such as prototype  development  or  establishment  of  initial production or service processes, or, which is  less than two years old and during the fiscal year immediately preceding  the qualified  investment  had,  together  with  its  affiliates,  gross  revenues of no more than two million dollars, on a consolidated basis as  determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles.    (12) "Superintendent" - the superintendent of insurance.    (13)  "Certified  capital  company program" - a calendar year or years  for which taxpayers may be allocated and  allowed  credits  pursuant  to  this  section  and  subdivision (k) of section fifteen hundred eleven of  this chapter and delineated as a separate program by this section.(14) "Starting date" - the date on which a certified  capital  company  is  allocated certified capital for a specific certified capital company  program pursuant to subdivision (b) of this section.    (15) "Underserved area" - a county, including a county wholly within a  city, in which, as of January first, two thousand, less than twenty-five  percent  of  the qualified investments in qualified businesses were made  by certified capital companies under certified capital  company  program  one.  The  superintendent  shall prepare a list of such counties by July  first, two thousand.    (16) "Start-up business" - a qualified business which is involved,  at  the  time  of  investment,  in  activities related to the development of  initial product or service offerings, such as prototype  development  or  establishment  of  initial production or service processes, or, which is  less than two years old and during the fiscal year immediately preceding  the qualified  investment  had,  together  with  its  affiliates,  gross  revenues of no more than two million dollars, on a consolidated basis as  determined  in  accordance with generally accepted accounting principles  and has fewer than twenty employees at the time of the investment;  and,  in  addition,  which  has  emerged  within the year prior to the date of  investment or is emerging from, or  utilizes  a  technology  transferred  from,  a  university  or  college  research facility located in New York  state, a not-for-profit research facility located in New York state,  or  an  industrial  research facility located in New York state, or which is  conducting research in conjunction with or in the research facilities of  a university or college located in New York state, or which  is  located  in  or has emerged within the year prior to the date of investment or is  emerging from an incubator facility located in New York state.    (b) Certification. (1) The superintendent shall establish by  rule  or  regulation  the  procedures  for  making  an  application  to  become  a  certified capital company. The  applicant  shall  pay  a  non-refundable  application  fee  of  five  hundred  dollars  at  the time of filing the  application with the department.    (2) The superintendent may certify partnerships, corporations,  trusts  or  limited  liability companies, organized on a for profit basis, which  submit an application to be designated as a certified capital company if  such applicant is located, headquartered and licensed or  registered  to  conduct  business  in New York, has as its primary business activity the  investment of cash in qualified businesses and meets the other  criteria  set forth in this subdivision.    (3)  A certified capital company's initial capitalization, at the time  of seeking certification, must be five hundred thousand dollars or more.    (4) The superintendent shall review the  organizational  documents  of  each  applicant  for  certification  and  the  business  history  of the  applicant, determine that the applicant's  cash,  marketable  securities  and  other liquid assets are at least five hundred thousand dollars, and  determine  that  the  officers  and  the  board  of  directors,  general  partners,  trustees,  managers,  or  members  are  trustworthy  and  are  thoroughly acquainted with the requirements of this subdivision.    (5) The superintendent shall verify that at least  two  principals  of  the  certified  capital  company or any manager of the certified capital  company each have no less than five years of experience in  the  venture  capital or a venture capital-related industry.    (6)  Any  offering  material  involving  the sale of securities of the  certified capital company shall include the following statement:    "Authorizing the formation of a Certified  Capital  Company  does  not  constitute  the  endorsement  of  the state of New York as to either the  quality of management or the potential for earnings of such company  and  the state of New York is not liable for damages or losses to a CertifiedInvestor in the company. Use of the word 'certified' in an offering does  not  constitute a recommendation or endorsement of the investment by the  state of New York.    Investments  in  a  prospective Certified Capital Company prior to the  time such company is certified  with  respect  to  a  certified  capital  company  program  are not eligible for tax credits. In the event certain  statutory provisions (as specified in section 11 of  the  Tax  Law)  are  violated,  the  state  of  New York may require forfeiture of unused tax  credits and repayment of used tax credits."    (7) Within sixty days of application, the superintendent  shall  issue  the  certification  or shall refuse the certification and communicate in  detail  to  the  applicant  the  grounds  for  the  refusal,   including  suggestions for the removal of those grounds.    (8)  The  superintendent  may certify any previously certified capital  company which has remained in compliance with the requirements  of  this  section  upon  the  application  of  such  company  to  be  designated a  certified capital company for a certified capital  company  program  for  which  it  is  not  so  designated.  Such  new  certification  shall  be  considered a separate certification from any  other  such  certification  under  this  section  and  investments  in  and by such company shall be  considered separately for purposes of subdivisions (c) and (d)  of  this  section.    (9)  The superintendent shall start accepting applications to become a  certified capital company in certified capital company  program  two  by  November  first, nineteen hundred ninety-nine, and shall start accepting  applications to become a certified capital company in certified  capital  company  program  three  by  August first, two thousand, and shall begin  accepting  applications  to  become  a  certified  capital  company   in  certified capital company program four by the later of August first, two  thousand  four  or  not more than sixty days after the effective date of  section one of part D of chapter fifty-nine of the laws of two  thousand  four  and  shall  begin  accepting  applications  to  become a certified  capital company in certified capital company program five by  the  later  of  July  first, two thousand five or not more than sixty days after the  effective date of the chapter of the laws of  two  thousand  five  which  amended this paragraph.    (10)  A  certified  capital  company may obtain a guaranty, indemnity,  bond, insurance policy and/or other payment undertaking for the  benefit  of  its certified investors from any entity; provided, however, that, in  no case shall more than one certified investor of such certified capital  company or affiliates of such certified investor be entitled to  provide  such  guaranty,  indemnity,  bond, insurance policy and/or other payment  undertaking in favor of the certified investors of the certified capital  company and its affiliates in this state.    (c) Requirements for continuance of certification. (1) To continue  to  be  certified  with  respect  to  a particular certified capital company  program, a certified capital company  must  make  qualified  investments  according to the following schedule:    (A)  Within  two years after the starting date of a specific certified  capital company  program  of  a  certified  capital  company,  at  least  twenty-five percent of its certified capital allocable to such certified  capital company program must be placed in qualified investments.    (B) Within three years after the starting date of a specific certified  capital  company  program of a certified capital company, at least forty  percent of its certified capital allocable  to  such  certified  capital  company program must be placed in qualified investments.    (C)  Within four years after the starting date of a specific certified  capital company program of a certified capital company, at  least  fiftypercent  of  its  certified  capital allocable to such certified capital  company program must be placed in qualified investments, at least  fifty  percent of which must have been placed in early stage businesses, except  that  in  the  case of program four and any subsequent program, at least  twenty-five percent of which  must  have  been  placed  in  early  stage  businesses and an additional twenty-five percent of which must have been  placed  in start-up businesses, and except that in the case of qualified  investments  made  in  qualified  businesses  located  in  empire  zones  established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal law  under the provisions of certified capital company program three, program  four and  program  five  from  allocations  of  certified  capital  made  specifically   for   such   targeted  investments  in  such  zones,  the  requirement for  qualified  investments  in  early  stage  and  start-up  businesses shall not apply.    (D)  A  certified capital company, at least fifteen working days prior  to making a proposed investment in a specific business, shall certify in  writing to the superintendent that (i) the business in which it proposes  to invest meets the definition of a qualified business as set  forth  in  subdivision  (a)  of  this  section  or,  in  the  case  of  a follow-on  investment, that such business continues to meet  the  requirements  set  forth in subparagraphs (A) and (C) of paragraph seven of subdivision (a)  of this section and, in either case, an explanation of its determination  that  the  business  meets  such  requirements, and (ii) with respect to  certified capital company program three, program four and program  five,  whether  or  not  such business is located in an empire zone established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal  law  or  in  an  underserved  area  outside  an  empire  zone.  The  certification to the  superintendent shall include a sworn  statement  from  the  business  in  which  the certified capital company proposes to invest, which statement  shall  evidence  the  intention  of  the  business   to   maintain   its  headquarters  in New York and conduct its primary business operations in  the state of New York  after  its  receipt  of  the  investment  by  the  certified  capital  company.  If  the superintendent determines that the  business does not meet the definition of a qualified  business,  or,  in  the case of a follow-on investment, that such business does not meet the  requirements  set  forth in subparagraphs (A) and (C) of paragraph seven  of subdivision (a) of this section, then it shall,  within  the  fifteen  working  day  period  prior  to  the  making of the proposed investment,  notify the certified capital company of its determination and provide an  explanation thereof, provided, however, that the  department  may,  upon  written  request of a certified capital company and at the discretion of  the department, grant,  in  writing,  an  exemption  to  the  percentage  limitations of paragraph ten of subdivision (a) of this section.    (E)  All  certified capital not placed in qualified investments by the  certified capital company may be held or invested in such manner as  the  certified  capital  company,  in  its discretion, deems appropriate. The  proceeds of all  certified  capital  returned  to  a  certified  capital  company  after  being  originally placed in qualified investments may be  placed again  in  qualified  investments  and  shall  count  toward  any  requirement  in  this  subdivision  with  respect  to  placing certified  capital in qualified investments.    (F) If within ten years after the starting date of  certified  capital  company  program four or program five, and within twelve years after the  starting date of certified capital company programs one, two, and three,  one hundred percent of the certified capital allocable  to  a  certified  capital  company  participating  in  such program has not been placed in  qualified investments, the specific certified capital company  shall  no  longer  be  permitted  to  receive  management  fees; provided that suchrestriction shall not  apply  (i)  with  respect  to  certified  capital  company  programs  one, two, and three, to any certified capital company  that  has  not,  prior  to  October  thirty-first,  two  thousand  four,  received,  as  opposed  to  accrued,  any  management fees, or (ii) with  respect to any certified capital company program, to a certified capital  company in which at least fifty percent of the  voting  stock,  capital,  membership  interests,  or  other beneficial ownership interests, as the  case may be, are owned  by  an  entity  that  is  managed,  directly  or  indirectly, by a non-profit corporation.    (2)  Any  business  which is classified as a qualified business at the  time of the first investment in said business  by  a  certified  capital  company  shall remain classified as a qualified business and may receive  follow-on investments from  any  certified  capital  company,  and  such  follow-on  investments  shall  be qualified investments even though such  business may not meet the definition of a qualified business at the time  of such follow-on investments, provided,  however,  that  such  business  continues  to  meet  the requirements set forth in subparagraphs (A) and  (C) of paragraph seven of subdivision (a)  of  this  section,  and  such  business  reaffirms  its  intention  to maintain its headquarters in New  York and conduct its primary business operations in  the  state  of  New  York   as  required  in  subparagraph  (D)  of  paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision.    (3) No qualified investment may be made by a certified capital company  to the extent such investment would cause the company's total  qualified  investment  outstanding with respect to the qualified business receiving  such investment to exceed fifteen percent of the total certified capital  of the certified capital company at the time of such investment.    (4) Documents and  other  materials  submitted  by  certified  capital  companies   or   by  businesses  for  purposes  of  the  continuance  of  certification shall not be public records if such records are determined  by the superintendent to be trade  or  business  secrets  and  shall  be  maintained in a confidential manner by the superintendent.    (5)  The aggregate cumulative amount of all qualified investments made  by the certified capital company for a certified capital company program  from its starting date for  such  program  will  be  considered  in  the  calculation  of the percentage requirements under subparagraphs (A), (B)  and (C) of paragraph one of this subdivision,  provided,  however,  that  any  amounts  received  by  a certified capital company from a qualified  business as (i) commitment fees, closing fees,  or  other  similar  fees  (excluding reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses, including legal fees  and  accounting  fees) in excess of one percent of the certified capital  company's investment in the qualified business  or  (ii)  license  fees,  royalties,  or  similar  charges  shall  not be considered in any of the  percentage calculations under this section.    (6) Each certified capital company shall report the following  to  the  superintendent:    (A)  As  soon as practicable after the receipt of certified capital or  an irrevocable funding commitment subject only  to  the  receipt  of  an  allocation  pursuant to subdivision (h) of this section, (i) the name of  each certified investor from which the certified capital  was  received,  including such certified investor's insurance tax identification number;  (ii)  the  amount  of  each certified investor's investment of certified  capital; and (iii) the date on which the certified capital was received.  Provided, however, that requests for  allocation  of  tax  credits  with  respect  to  certified  capital company program two by certified capital  companies on behalf of their certified investors which are  received  by  the  superintendent  on  or  before  March  first, two thousand shall be  treated as having been received on March first,  two  thousand  for  taxcredits  to  be utilized in two thousand one, and if satisfactory, shall  be given equal priority for  allocation,  and  provided,  however,  that  requests for allocation of tax credits with respect to certified capital  company  program three by certified capital companies on behalf of their  certified investors which are  received  by  the  superintendent  on  or  before  December  first,  two  thousand  shall be treated as having been  received on December first, two thousand for tax credits to be  utilized  in  two thousand two, and if satisfactory, shall be given equal priority  for allocation, and provided, however, that requests for  allocation  of  tax  credits  with  respect to certified capital company program four by  certified capital companies on behalf of their certified investors which  are received by the superintendent on  or  before  December  first,  two  thousand  four  shall  be  treated  as  having been received on December  first, two thousand four for tax credits to be utilized in two  thousand  six,  and if satisfactory, shall be given equal priority for allocation,  and provided, however, that requests for allocation of tax credits  with  respect  to  certified capital company program five by certified capital  companies on behalf of their certified investors which are  received  by  the  superintendent  on  or  before the later of (i) November first, two  thousand five and (ii) the one hundred twentieth day after the  date  on  which  the superintendent began accepting applications for certification  in connection with certified capital company program  five  pursuant  to  paragraph  nine  of  subdivision (b) of this section shall be treated as  having been received on such later date for tax credits to  be  utilized  in  two  thousand  seven,  and  if  satisfactory,  shall  be given equal  priority for allocation.    (B) On an annual basis, on or  before  January  thirty-first  of  each  year,  (i)  the  amount  of  the  certified  capital company's certified  capital at the end of the immediately preceding year;  (ii)  whether  or  not the certified capital company has invested more than fifteen percent  of  its total certified capital in any one business; (iii) all qualified  investments that the certified capital company made during the  previous  calendar  year,  including  the  number  of  employees of each qualified  business in which it has made investments at the time of such investment  and as of December  first  of  the  preceding  calendar  year.  For  any  qualified  business where the certified capital company no longer has an  investment, the  certified  capital  company  shall  provide  employment  figures  for  such  company as of the last day before the investment was  terminated. Such report shall provide  a  separate  accounting  by  each  certified  capital  company  program; and (iv) all qualified investments  made in empire zones and underserved areas outside such empire zones  as  required  under  certified  capital  company  program  three,  certified  capital company program four and certified capital company program five.    (C) Each certified capital company shall provide to the superintendent  annual audited financial statements, which shall include the opinion  of  an  independent  certified  public accountant, within ninety days of the  close of its fiscal year. The audit  shall  address  whether  the  funds  received by the certified capital company have been invested as required  under   subparagraphs  (A),  (B)  and  (C)  of  paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision.  Upon  receiving  notification  and  documentation   by   a  certified  capital  company  that  it  has satisfied the requirements of  subparagraph (C) of paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision  that  it  has  invested  fifty  percent  of its certified capital, the department shall  have sixty days to notify such certified capital company that it has  or  has not met such requirement, with a reason for such determination if it  has not, in the judgment of the department, met such requirement. If the  department  does  not  provide  such notification within sixty days, thecertified capital  company  shall  then  be  deemed  to  have  met  such  requirement.    (D)  On  or  before  April  first of each year, each certified capital  company shall pay an annual, non-refundable certification  fee  of  five  hundred  dollars  to the superintendent; provided that no such fee shall  be required within six months of the initial  certification  date  of  a  certified capital company.    (E)(1)  Within  thirty  days  of  the  decision  on an application for  certification  pursuant  to  subdivision  (b)  of  this   section,   the  superintendent  shall  submit a copy of such application and the related  decision to the department of taxation and finance.  The  superintendent  shall  submit  a  copy  of  all  filings  of  certifications pursuant to  subparagraph  (D)  of  paragraph  one  of  this  subdivision   and   any  determination made thereon within fifteen days of such filing.    (2)  The  superintendent shall annually, by March first, submit to the  department of taxation and finance a list of persons who may  claim  the  tax  credit  for  the  previous  taxable  year and any other information  necessary to assist the department of taxation and finance to  determine  eligibility for such tax credit.    (d)  Distributions. (1) A certified capital company may make qualified  distributions at any time. In order for a certified capital  company  to  make a distribution other than a qualified distribution from a certified  capital company program, to its equity holders, either (A) the aggregate  cumulative  amount  of  all  qualified investments for such program must  equal or exceed one hundred percent of its certified  capital  allocable  to  such certified capital company program, or (B) it must have received  written authorization to make such distribution from the superintendent.  In no event, however, shall any such distribution to its equity holders,  other than a qualified distribution, be  made  by  a  certified  capital  company  from a certified capital company program unless an amount equal  cumulatively to at least ninety percent of its certified capital of such  program is invested in companies that conduct their  principal  business  operations in New York state.    (2)  In  the  event that a business in which a qualified investment is  made relocates its principal business operations to another state during  such investment, or within three months after the  termination  of  such  investment,  the  cumulative  amount  of  qualified  investment shall be  reduced by the amount of such qualified investment, for the purposes  of  this  subdivision only, unless (A) the certified capital company invests  an amount at least equal to the investment of certified capital  in  the  relocated  business  in  a  qualified business located in New York state  within  six  months  of  the  relocation  or  (B)  unless  the  business  demonstrates  that  it has returned its principal business operations to  New York state within three months of such relocation. A business  shall  be  deemed  to  have relocated its principal business operations outside  New York state if the primary workplace of more than  fifty  percent  of  the  employees of such business within the state is relocated to another  state.    (3) In the event that a business in which a  qualified  investment  is  made  under  certified  capital company program three, certified capital  company  program  four  or  certified  capital  company  program   five,  relocates  its  principal  business operation within the earlier of four  years after the date of such qualified investment or three months  after  the   termination  of  such  investment,  whereby  the  requirements  of  paragraph three of subdivision (h) of this  section  to  make  qualified  investments  in qualified businesses located in empire zones established  pursuant to article eighteen-B  of  the  general  municipal  law  or  in  underserved areas outside such empire zones no longer are satisfied, thecumulative amount of qualified investment shall be reduced by the amount  of such qualified investment, for the purposes of this subdivision only,  unless  (A)  the  certified  capital  company invests an amount at least  equal  to  the investment of certified capital in the relocated business  in a qualified business located in  either  an  empire  zone  or  in  an  underserved  area  outside  an  empire  zone so that the requirements of  paragraph three of subdivision (h) of this section are  again  satisfied  within  six  months  of  such  relocation,  unless the certified capital  company certifies to the superintendent that a  good  faith  effort  was  made to make additional qualifying investments under the requirements of  paragraph  three of subdivision (h) of this section, or (B) the business  demonstrates that it has returned its principal  business  operation  to  New  York  state  in  either  an  empire  zone or in an underserved area  outside an empire zone within three months of such  relocation,  or  (C)  the  business  demonstrates  that  it  had  a valid business purpose for  relocating its principal business operation. A business shall be  deemed  to have relocated its principal business operations outside of an empire  zone  or  an  underserved  area  outside  an  empire zone if the primary  workplace of more than fifty percent of the employees of  such  business  within  an  empire zone or an underserved area outside an empire zone is  relocated to an area outside the state or outside an empire zone  or  an  underserved area outside an empire zone.    (4)  Payments  to  debt  holders of a certified capital company may be  made without restriction with respect to  repayments  of  principal  and  interest  on  indebtedness  owed to them by a certified capital company,  including  indebtedness  of  the  certified  capital  company  on  which  certified  investors  earned  tax  credits. A debt holder that is also a  certified investor or equity holder of a certified capital  company  may  receive  payments  with  respect  to  such  debt without any restriction  whatsoever.    (5) A  certified  capital  company  that  receives  certified  capital  investments  under  program four and any subsequent program shall pay to  the department for deposit in the general fund an amount equal to thirty  percent of the net profits on qualified investments. A certified capital  company  shall  make  all  payments  required   under   this   paragraph  concurrently  with and pro rata to distributions of profits and gains to  its equity owners; however, nothing contained in this paragraph shall be  construed to affect qualified distributions.    (6) The amount of any payment required under paragraph  five  of  this  subdivision  shall  be reduced to fifteen percent of such net profits on  qualified investments if, at the time of such net profits  distribution,  such   certified  capital  company  irrevocably  commits  to  both:  (A)  re-invest the remaining fifteen percent of such net  profits  not  being  paid  to  the general fund under paragraph five of this subdivision into  qualified businesses, and (B) invest an additional amount  equal  to  at  least  fifteen  percent  of such net profits distribution into qualified  businesses which additional amount shall come from a  separate  pool  of  venture  capital that is controlled by the certified capital company but  that does not contain certified  capital.  In  making  investments  from  funds  established  under  this paragraph, the certified capital company  shall follow the requirements set forth in subparagraph (D) of paragraph  one of subdivision (c) of this section pertaining to obtaining  approval  of   the   investment   being  in  a  qualified  business,  except  that  requirements  pertaining  to  empire   zones   and   underserved   areas  requirements  shall  not  apply. Once qualified investments in qualified  businesses have been made pursuant to this  paragraph  equal  to  thirty  percent   of   the  net  profits  on  qualified  investments,  then  the  requirements under this subdivision shall have been  satisfied  and  theproceeds  from  such  qualified  businesses  may  be distributed without  restriction.    (e)  Decertification.  (1)  The superintendent shall conduct an annual  review of each certified capital company to determine if  the  certified  capital  company  is  abiding  by  the requirements of certification, to  advise the certified capital company as to the eligibility status of its  qualified investments, and to ensure that no investment has been made in  violation of this subdivision. The cost of the annual  review  shall  be  paid  by  each  certified  capital company according to a reasonable fee  schedule adopted by the superintendent.    (2) Any material violation of subdivision (c)  of  this  section  with  respect  to  a  particular  certified  capital  company program shall be  grounds for  decertification  of  the  certified  capital  company  with  respect  to  such  program.  If  the  superintendent  determines  that a  certified capital company is not in compliance with the requirements  of  subdivision  (c)  of this section with respect to a particular certified  capital company  program,  it  shall,  by  written  notice,  inform  the  officers  of  the  certified  capital company that the certified capital  company will be subject to decertification with respect to such  program  in  one  hundred  twenty  days  from  the date of mailing of the notice,  unless the deficiencies are corrected and the certified capital  company  is again in compliance with all requirements for certification.    (3)  At  the  end  of  the one hundred twenty day grace period, if the  certified capital company is still not in  compliance  with  subdivision  (c)  of  this  section  with  respect  to a particular certified capital  company  program,  the   superintendent   shall   send   a   notice   of  decertification  to  the  certified capital company with respect to such  program and to all other appropriate state agencies.    (4) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs two and three of this  subdivision, if a certified capital company in certified capital company  programs three, four and  five  fails  to  satisfy  the  requirement  in  subparagraph  (B)  of  paragraph  one of subdivision (c) of this section  because it has been unable to make  a  sufficient  amount  of  qualified  investments  in  qualified  businesses  located  either  in empire zones  established pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal  law  or  in  underserved  areas  outside  such  empire  zones, such certified  capital company shall not be subject to decertification  at  that  time.  However,  if  such  certified  capital  company  fails  to  satisfy  the  requirement in subparagraph (C) of paragraph one of subdivision  (c)  of  this  section  because it has been unable to make a sufficient amount of  qualified investments in qualified businesses  located  either  in  such  empire  zones  or  in  underserved  areas outside such empire zones, but  certifies to the superintendent that it had made a good faith effort  to  make  such  investments, such certified capital company shall be allowed  two additional years to satisfy the  requirement  in  such  subparagraph  (C).  If,  after  the  conclusion of such two year period, the certified  capital company still has not been able to satisfy  the  requirement  to  make  such  investments, and such certified capital company certifies to  the superintendent that it had made a good faith  effort  to  make  such  investments,  the  requirement  in  paragraphs  three,  four and five of  subdivision (h)  of  this  section  to  make  qualified  investments  in  qualified  businesses  located  in  empire zones or in underserved areas  shall be waived. Such certified capital company shall  then  be  allowed  one additional year to satisfy the requirement in such subparagraph (C),  and  if,  at  the  conclusion  of  that additional one year period, such  requirement is still not satisfied, such certified capital company shall  be subject to decertification and the provisions of paragraphs  two  and  three of this subdivision shall apply.(5)   Once   a  certified  capital  company  has  invested  an  amount  cumulatively equal to one hundred percent of its certified capital  with  respect  to  a particular certified capital company program in qualified  investments and has met all other requirements under  this  subdivision,  the  certified  capital company shall no longer be subject to regulation  by the superintendent and shall no longer be subject to the requirements  of subdivision (c) of this section with respect to  such  program.  Upon  receiving  documented  certification by a certified capital company that  it has invested an amount equal to one hundred percent of its  certified  capital,  the  department shall have sixty days to notify such certified  capital company that it has or has  not  met  such  requirement  with  a  reason  for  such  determination  if  it has not, in the judgment of the  department, met such requirement. If the  department  does  not  provide  such notification within sixty days, the certified capital company shall  then be deemed to have met such requirement.    (6)   The   superintendent   shall   send   written   notice  of  such  decertification to the address of  each  certified  investor  whose  tax  credit  has  been  subject to recapture or forfeiture, using the address  shown on the last filing submitted to the superintendent.    (f) Revocation of certification. The  superintendent  may  revoke  the  certification  of  a certified capital company, or, at the discretion of  the superintendent, the certification of  a  certified  capital  company  with  respect to a particular certified capital company program only, if  any material representation to the superintendent in connection with the  application  process  proves  to  have  been  falsely  made  or  if  the  application  materially  violates  any  requirement  established  by the  superintendent  pursuant  to  this   subdivision.   In   addition,   the  superintendent  may  revoke  the  certification  of  a certified capital  company  if  such  certified  capital  company  (i)  falsely  certified,  pursuant  to  paragraph  three of subdivision (d) of this section that a  good faith effort was made to  make  additional  qualifying  investments  under  the  requirements  of  paragraph three of subdivision (h) of this  section, or (ii)  falsely  certified,  pursuant  to  paragraph  four  of  subdivision (e) of this section, that it had made a good faith effort to  make  a  sufficient  amount  of  qualifying  investments  in  qualifying  businesses located in  empire  zones  established  pursuant  to  article  eighteen-B  of the general municipal law or in underserved areas outside  such empire zones.    (g) Registration requirements. All investments for which  tax  credits  are allowable under the provisions of subdivision (k) of section fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this  chapter shall satisfy the conditions of being  registered or specifically exempt from  registration  by  provisions  or  regulations  under  sections  three  hundred  fifty-nine-e through three  hundred fifty-nine-ff of the general business law.    (h) Maximum permitted credits. (1) Certified capital  company  program  one.  The  aggregate amount of certified capital for which taxpayers may  be allocated and allowed tax credits  pursuant  to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section fifteen hundred eleven of this chapter may  not exceed fifty million dollars  for  calendar  year  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in certified  capital  companies  beginning  in   calendar   year   nineteen   hundred  ninety-eight.  In  calendar year two thousand or thereafter, tax credits  may be allowed pursuant to this paragraph and such subdivision  (k)  for  an   additional  fifty  million  dollars  of  certified  capital,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in  certified  capital  companies  beginning   in  calendar  year  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine,  if  not  allocated to calendar year nineteen hundred ninety-eight  in  accordance  with  this  paragraph.  Therefore, the total amount of certified capitalfor which tax credits may be allowed pursuant to this paragraph and such  subdivision (k) shall be one hundred million dollars.    During  any  calendar  year  in which the limitation described in this  paragraph will limit the amount of certified capital, certified  capital  will  be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing of  information  described  in  subparagraph  (A)  of   paragraph   six   of  subdivision  (c)  of  this  section.  Certified  capital  limited in any  calendar year by the application of the  provisions  of  this  paragraph  shall  be  allowed  and allocated in the immediately succeeding calendar  year  in  order  of  priority  set  forth   in   this   paragraph.   The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified capital company in writing  within fifteen days after receiving such filing, whether the limitations  of this paragraph then in effect will be applicable with respect to  the  investments   and   credits   described   in   such   filing   with  the  superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect to certified capital company program one at any time  subsequent  to  its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and vested  in certified investors at the time of each such investment  as  provided  in  this  paragraph, although such credits shall not be first allowed or  incurred for state tax purposes,  until,  at  the  earliest,  tax  years  beginning  in  nineteen  hundred  ninety-nine  with respect to the first  fifty million dollars of credits and tax years beginning in two thousand  with respect to the next such fifty million dollars of credits.    (2) Certified capital company program two.  The  aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this chapter may not exceed thirty million  dollars for calendar year two thousand one, which certified capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in calendar year  nineteen hundred ninety-nine.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  of  subdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect will be applicable with respect to the  investments  and  credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect  to certified capital company program two at any time subsequent  to its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and  vested  in  certified  investors at the time of each such investment as provided  in this paragraph, although such credits shall not be first  allowed  or  incurred  for  state  tax  purposes,  until,  at the earliest, tax years  beginning in two thousand one.    (3) Certified capital company program three. The aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred eleven of this chapter may not exceed one hundred fifty  million dollars for calendar year  two  thousand  two,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in  calendar year two thousand.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  ofsubdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect  will  be  applicable with respect to the investments and credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect  to  certified  capital  company  program  three  at  any   time  subsequent  to its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to  and vested in certified investors at the time of each such investment as  provided in this paragraph, although such credits  shall  not  be  first  allowed  or incurred for state tax purposes, until, at the earliest, tax  years beginning in two thousand two. One-third of the certified  capital  raised  by  each  certified  capital  company  with respect to certified  capital  company  program  three  shall  be  used  to   make   qualified  investments  in qualified businesses located in empire zones established  pursuant to  article  eighteen-B  of  the  general  municipal  law,  and  one-third  of  such  certified  capital  shall be used to make qualified  investments in qualified businesses located in underserved areas outside  such empire zones.    (4) Certified capital company program four. The  aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this  chapter may not exceed sixty million  dollars for calendar year two thousand six, which certified capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in calendar year  two thousand four.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  of  subdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect will be applicable with respect to the  investments  and  credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect to certified capital company program four at any time subsequent  to  its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and vested  in certified investors at the time of each such investment  as  provided  in  this  paragraph, although such credits shall not be first allowed or  incurred for state tax purposes,  until,  at  the  earliest,  tax  years  beginning in two thousand six. One-third of the certified capital raised  by  each  certified  capital  company  with respect to certified capital  company program four shall be used  to  make  qualified  investments  in  qualified  businesses  located  in  empire zones established pursuant to  article eighteen-B of the general municipal law, and one-third  of  such  certified  capital  shall  be  used  to  make  qualified  investments in  qualified businesses located in underserved areas  outside  such  empire  zones,  provided,  however,  that in the case of an investment made by a  certified capital company in an empire zone located  in  an  underserved  area, the certified capital company making such an investment may choose  to designate such investment as an investment in an underserved area but  not  as  an  investment in an empire zone for the purpose of meeting the  requirements of this paragraph. Fifty percent of  the  total  amount  of  capital  invested  by  a  certified  capital  company at the time of one  hundred percent investment of  funds  shall  be  invested  in  qualified  businesses  that  are  involved  in  commerce for the primary purpose of  developing  and  manufacturing  products  and  systems  covered  by  theactivities  set  forth  in  paragraph  (b) of subdivision one of section  thirty-one hundred two-e of the public authorities law and have a  ratio  of  research  and  development expenditures to net sales which equals or  exceeds  six  percent  during  the fiscal year immediately preceding the  qualified investment.    (5) Certified capital company program five. The  aggregate  amount  of  certified  capital  for which taxpayers may be allocated and allowed tax  credits pursuant to  this  paragraph  and  subdivision  (k)  of  section  fifteen  hundred  eleven  of  this  chapter may not exceed sixty million  dollars for calendar year two thousand seven,  which  certified  capital  may  be  invested  in  certified capital companies beginning in calendar  year two thousand five.    During any calendar year in which the  limitation  described  in  this  paragraph  will limit the amount of certified capital, certified capital  will be allocated in order of priority based upon the date of filing  of  information   described   in   subparagraph  (A)  of  paragraph  six  of  subdivision (c) of this section. The  superintendent  shall  advise  any  certified   capital  company  in  writing,  within  fifteen  days  after  receiving such filing, whether the limitations of this paragraph then in  effect will be applicable with respect to the  investments  and  credits  described in such filing with the superintendent.    Certified capital may be raised by each certified capital company with  respect to certified capital company program five at any time subsequent  to  its certification date, and credits shall be allocated to and vested  in certified investors at the time of each such investment  as  provided  in  this  paragraph, although such credits shall not be first allowed or  incurred for state tax purposes,  until,  at  the  earliest,  tax  years  beginning  in  two  thousand  seven.  One-third of the certified capital  raised by each certified  capital  company  with  respect  to  certified  capital company program five shall be used to make qualified investments  in  qualified businesses located in empire zones established pursuant to  article eighteen-B of the general municipal law, and one-third  of  such  certified  capital  shall  be  used  to  make  qualified  investments in  qualified businesses located in underserved areas  outside  such  empire  zones,  provided,  however,  that in the case of an investment made by a  certified capital company in an empire zone located  in  an  underserved  area,  the certified capital company making such an investment may chose  to designate such investment as an investment in an underserved area but  not as an investment in an empire zone for the purpose  of  meeting  the  requirements  of  this  paragraph.  Fifty percent of the total amount of  capital invested by a certified capital  company  at  the  time  of  one  hundred  percent  investment  of  funds  shall  be invested in qualified  businesses that are involved in commerce  for  the  primary  purpose  of  developing  and  manufacturing  products  and  systems  covered  by  the  activities set forth in paragraph (b)  of  subdivision  one  of  section  thirty-one  hundred two-e of the public authorities law and have a ratio  of research and development expenditures to net sales  which  equals  or  exceeds  six  percent  during  the fiscal year immediately preceding the  qualified investment.    (i) Maximum certified capital. The maximum amount of certified capital  per certified capital company program invested in one or more  certified  capital  companies allowed in any one year to any one certified investor  shall not exceed ten  million  dollars  for  certified  capital  company  programs  one and three, and eight million dollars for certified capital  company programs two, four and five for such  year,  provided,  however,  that  if the aggregate amount of certified capital for such year, as set  forth in subdivision (h) of this section, has  not  been  reached  sixty  days  prior  to  the  end  of  the  year  to which such aggregate amountapplies, the provisions of this subdivision shall cease to apply for the  remainder of such year. In addition, the aggregate amount of tax credits  allowed in any taxable year to any  affiliated  group  of  taxpayers  in  relation  to  certified  capital  may  not  exceed  such maximum amount,  whether or not  such  taxpayers  file  a  combined  return  pursuant  to  subdivision  (f) of section fifteen hundred fifteen of this chapter. For  purposes of the preceding sentence, the term  "affiliated  group"  shall  have  the  same  meaning  as  described  in section 1504 of the internal  revenue code, except that the references to "at least eighty percent" in  such section 1504 shall be read as "more than fifty percent".    (j) Reports. The superintendent shall  report  to  the  governor,  the  temporary  president  of the senate, and the speaker of the assembly, on  or before June first of each year beginning in the  year  two  thousand,  the number of certified capital companies holding certified capital; the  amount  of certified capital invested in each certified capital company;  the cumulative amount that each certified capital company  has  invested  as  of  January  first of the year two thousand and the cumulative total  each year thereafter; the cumulative amount that the investments of each  certified capital company have leveraged in terms of capital invested by  other sources of capital in qualified businesses at  the  same  time  or  subsequent  to  investments  made by a certified capital company in such  businesses; the total amount of tax credits granted under  this  section  each  year  that  credits  have  been  awarded  under  this  section and  subdivision (k) of section fifteen hundred eleven of this  chapter;  the  performance  of  each  certified  capital  company  with  regard  to the  requirements for recertification set forth in subdivision  (c)  of  this  section; the classification of companies in which each certified capital  company has invested according to industrial sector and size of company;  the  total  gross  number  of  jobs  created by investments made by each  certified capital company using certified capital and the number of jobs  retained; the location of companies  in  which  each  certified  capital  company  has  invested  in  a manner to indicate if the requirements for  qualified investments in qualified businesses located  in  empire  zones  established  pursuant to article eighteen-B of the general municipal law  set forth for programs three, four and five  and  in  underserved  areas  outside  such empire zones have been met; the total gross number of jobs  created in empire zones established pursuant to  article  eighteen-B  of  the  general  municipal law and in underserved areas outside such empire  zones made by each certified capital company using certified capital  in  certified  capital  company  programs  three, four and five, reported by  geographic location of each empire zone and  underserved  area  and  the  number of jobs retained; and those certified capital companies that have  been  decertified,  or  have had their certifications revoked, including  the reasons for decertification or revocation.    (k) Rules and regulations. The superintendent,  in  consultation  with  the  department  of taxation and finance, shall prescribe such rules and  regulations as he or she shall deem necessary in order to implement  the  provisions  of  this  section  within  one  hundred  twenty  days of the  effective date of this section.    (l) For the purposes of this section, the  term  "empire  zone"  shall  also  include,  in  relation  to investments made by a certified capital  company in which at least fifty percent of the  voting  stock,  capital,  and  membership  interests,  as  the case may be, are owned by an entity  that is managed directly or indirectly, by a non-profit corporation, the  liberty zone as defined in section one  of  part  AA  of  chap