What to know about bathhouses in Minnesota



The Minneapolis City Council is considering ordinances that would allow bathhouses back in the city after a nearly 40-year ban.

What are bathhouses?

Adult bathhouses community space historically frequented by gay men where people could also engage in sexual activity or relax after the bars.

They were also a cheap place to spend the night, as they were open for 24 hours. For some, they would go bathhouses to escape unsafe situations at home.

In 1988 Minneapolis passed an ordinance to ban bathhouses. There were three bathhouses that existed: Hennepin Baths, Locker Room Baths and Big Daddy’s Bath House. All closed prior to the ban. Locker Room Baths was known as the 315 Health Club at the time of closure.

Why were they banned?

After the first positive HIV test in Minneapolis in 1982, concern grew about the spread of the virus. While the ordinance and others put blame on bathhouses for contributing to the spread of HIV, some health experts at the time said closing the venues did more harm than good.

A community health department study by Hennepin County done at the request of the council showed that adult bathhouses and LGBTQ+ bars were providing patrons with sexual health education like condoms and HIV tests. In the current day, many adult bathhouses in other cities have kept this at the forefront of their business model.

The study reads: “Closing one facility type or another is unlikely to drastically affect transmissibility of the AIDS virus — since the behavior will continue while the person changes location. The key is behavior change, which public policy needs to be addressing — for the use of both heterosexuals as well as homosexuals."

In 1979, three years before the first positive HIV test in Minneapolis, police regularly raided bathhouses. At the time, the city also had laws against “sodomy,” which advocates say were used to arrest patrons.

In November of that year, police ticketed more than 100 men, including arresting nine for the then felony of sodomy. Advocates say it is the single largest gay bathhouse raid in U.S. history.

Local LGBTQ+ historians say the 1979 raid — combined with ones that followed, city redevelopment, gentrification, homophobia and the rise of the AIDS epidemic — contributed to the closures and, later, the ordinance.

Brian Coyle: Influence and legacy

At the time, Brian Coyle, the first out gay city council member, was in favor of bathhouses. That slowly changed as historians say he found himself in the middle at a time when there wasn’t a lot known about HIV and AIDS.

Communities were scared and this fear contributed to public opposition to bathhouses. Coyle died of AIDS in 1991.

Noah Barth, a queer public historian and exhibit developer, went through Coyle’s papers at the Minnesota Historical Society.

“You see all this feedback that he's getting from community members, people who are calling in, and his secretary is leaving notes about, ‘So and so called, they're in favor of the bathhouse ban,’ ‘So and so called, they're not in favor,’” he said. “It's very easy to see how his head and heart were split on this topic.”

There have been attempts in the past to have the 1988 ordinance updated, and in 2023, the Safer Sex Spaces Coalition was successful in removing what they called harmful language from the ordinance. While bathhouses are still banned in the city, the coalition members believe they are close to getting this changed.

Why is the council considering reopening bathhouses?

In March the council members signaled they were open to considering changes to the current ordinance.

Advocates like Claire Kingstad and Ben Carrier, the creators of the Safer Sex Spaces Coalition, support the council’s consideration of the proposed changes. They say the world is different now and the current ordinance needs to be revisited.

“We don’t necessarily look back at the codes that we’ve adopted and revisit them and be like is this still what we need. I think this is something we don’t need if it doesn’t match our current public health landscape,” Carrier said. “They’re places where people can explore different sexual experiences, know themselves better and meet people.”

While places like New York and San Francisco are considered LGBTQ+ capitals of the nation, historians say there was a rich and expanding industry for places like adult bathhouses in the Twin Cities and until the 1979 raid, they went largely unmonitored by police departments.

Compared to other major cities, Minneapolis is an outlier by not having bathhouses. Numerous cities across the nation including Chicago; Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Cleveland, Ohio; Berkeley, Calif.; Dallas, Texas, and more have them. And a bit to the north, Duluth also has one.

The council is expected to forward a series of directives to city staff on Thursday that would decriminalize and legalize adult bathhouses and sex venues and introduce zoning and health ordinances. A final vote is expected in June after a public hearing.





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Architects and engineers who design energy-efficient government buildings can qualify for a Section 179D tax deduction. Technically, it is the building owner who qualifies, but since the government is the owner of the building and does not pay tax, our tax law allows the allocation of the deduction to the designer. This allocation provides an incentive for designers to take on government building projects.

This allocation raises some interesting questions, such as what year the allocated deduction is available. Designers often work on multiple buildings for the same client or project, and the work typically spans several years. So can the designer simply claim the tax deduction on their current year return–perhaps in the year that the final building for the project is completed? The court in Cannon Corp. v. Commissioner, No. 23-XXX (2d Cir. Feb. 18, 2025), recently answered this question.

Facts & Procedural History

The taxpayer in this case designed energy-efficient buildings for government clients between 2006 and 2011. As the designer, was allocated the Section 179D tax deductions that would normally go to the government building owners. After successfully claiming these deductions on an amended return for 2006, the taxpayer failed to claim approximately $3.9 million in Section 179D deductions for buildings placed in service from 2007 through 2010 on its originally-filed income tax returns.

Instead of filing separate amended tax returns for each year, the taxpayer reported all of the deductions at once on its 2011 tax return. It did this by reporting the deduction as an accounting method change on a Form 3115. The IRS audited the tax return and issued a notice of deficiency denying the Section 179D deductions. The taxpayer challenged this determination in tax court, but the court granted summary judgment for the IRS. This appeal was from the tax court case.

About the Section 179D Deduction

Section 179D allows owners of commercial buildings to deduct the cost of energy efficient commercial building property. This is for property placed in service during the tax year. The amount of the tax deduction is calculated based on a formula that considers the building’s square footage and energy cost reductions.

Specifically, the deduction amount starts at $0.50 per square foot and can increase up to $1.00 per square foot based on the building’s energy efficiency. The rate increases by $0.02 for each percentage point by which the building’s total annual energy and power costs are certified to be reduced by more than 25 percent. For certain qualifying properties, these base amounts can be increased to $2.50 per square foot (up to $5.00 per square foot) if prevailing wage and apprenticeship requirements are met.

The energy efficient improvements must be to one or more of three specific building systems:

  • Interior lighting systems
  • Heating, cooling, ventilation, and hot water systems
  • Building envelope

These improvements must be certified as part of a plan designed to reduce the building’s total annual energy and power costs by 25% or more compared to a reference building that meets minimum efficiency standards. The certification must be performed by qualified individuals using approved software.

As noted above, there is an allocation rule that can apply to government-owned buildings. Since government entities cannot use tax deductions, they can allocate the deduction to the person primarily responsible for designing the property. This allocation makes the designer “the taxpayer” for purposes of claiming the Section 179D deduction. Eligible government entities include federal, state, and local governments, their agencies and instrumentalities, Indian tribal governments, and other tax-exempt organizations.

One challenge presented by this Section 179D allocation is determining who qualifies as the “designer” of the energy-efficient commercial building property. Only the designer is eligible to claim the deduction when the property is owned by a government entity. The courts addressed this in United States v. Oehler, 9 F.3d 1538 (2d Cir. 1993), for a designer who installed and identified additional fixtures for replacement, but did not create the technical specifications for the lighting systems. The architects and engineers retained provided the designs, and the taxpayer’s role was limited to implementation. Because the taxpayer merely installed the systems rather than designing them, the court held that it was not entitled to the deduction as they were not the designer for purposes of this tax deduction.

When to Report Section 179D Deductions?

Another aspect of this allocation that is challenging is that the designers do not control when the property is placed in service–the government entity does. While designers may complete their work well before the building systems are operational, IRS Notice 2008-40 states that designers may only claim the deduction in the tax year that the government places the property in service.

This timing rule creates practical challenges. Designers may not know exactly when the government places the property in service. Even when they do know the placed-in-service date, they might not learn about their ability to claim the Section 179D deduction until after they have filed their tax return for that year. This raises the question of how to claim the deduction for prior tax years.

One approach taxpayers have tried is to treat missed Section 179D deductions as an accounting method change. A change in accounting method typically involves changing when an item of income or deduction is reported – essentially shifting the timing between tax years. Under Section 481 of the tax code and its regulations, a material item qualifies for accounting method change treatment only if it involves the proper time for including an item in income or claiming a deduction.

Section 179D Deduction for a Prior Year a Method Change?

One might think that taking a Section 179D deduction for a prior year is an accounting method change. An accounting method change typically involves changing when an item of income or deduction is reported–essentially shifting the timing between tax years. Under Section 481 of the tax code and its regulations, a material item qualifies for accounting method change treatment only if it involves the proper time for including an item in income or claiming a deduction.

However, the regulations clarify that an accounting method change cannot permanently alter a taxpayer’s lifetime income. Instead, it must merely affect the timing of when income or deductions are reported. For example, changing from the cash to accrual method shifts when income and expenses are recognized but does not permanently change the total amount reported over time.

This brings us to the court case. The Second Circuit agreed with the tax court that Section 179D deductions do not qualify as an accounting method change. The court noted that these deductions permanently reduced the taxpayer’s taxable income rather than merely shifting the timing of deductions between years. This is due to the Section 179D deduction. Unlike building owners who might accelerate depreciation deductions, designers receive a one-time allocated deduction that permanently reduces their tax liability.

The Second Circuit also found that Revenue Procedure 2011-14, which the taxpayer cited, did not authorize designers to use the accounting method change procedures. While this guidance included some filing instructions for designers, it never explicitly permitted them to report prior year Section 179D deductions as accounting method changes.

The Role of Amended Returns and Statutes of Limitations

The designers do have a few ways to deal with this situation. As noted in this case, the proper procedure for claiming missed Section 179D deductions is to file amended returns for the specific tax years when the buildings were placed in service. The time for filing an amended return is limited by the general three-year statute of limitations for filing amended returns under Section 6511.

It was this timing limitation that prevented the taxpayer in this case from filing an amended return for 2007. The statute of limitations had expired. However, the taxpayer did file “protective” amended returns for the 2008-2010 tax years that were filed within the limitations period. While the court did not directly address these amended returns, they likely preserved the taxpayer’s ability to claim deductions for these years. This is the way that designers can proactively report these deductions when they are not certain as to whether they will be allocated the tax deductions and in what year the property will be placed in service.

The Takeaway

This case shows that Section 179D tax deductions allocated to designers must be claimed in the tax year when the energy-efficient property is placed in service. These deductions cannot be claimed in later years through accounting method changes because they permanently affect taxable income rather than merely shifting the timing of deductions between years. Designers who may qualify for this deduction should consider filing protective claims with the IRS in the years that the properties could have been placed in service. This can help preserve the deductions if the property is placed in service in one year, but the allocation is not made until a later year.

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