Final Fair Market Rents for the Housing Choice Voucher Program and Moderate Rehabilitation Single Room Occupancy Program for Fiscal Year 2007, 56744-56804 [06-8273]
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than the HUD USER information line
and TTY numbers, telephone numbers
are not toll-free.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–5068–N–02]
Final Fair Market Rents for the Housing
Choice Voucher Program and
Moderate Rehabilitation Single Room
Occupancy Program for Fiscal Year
2007
Office of the Secretary, HUD.
Notice of Final Fair Market
Rents (FMRs) for Fiscal Year (FY) 2007.
AGENCY:
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ACTION:
SUMMARY: Section 8(c)(1) of the United
States Housing Act of 1937 (USHA)
requires the Secretary to publish FMRs
periodically, but not less than annually,
adjusted to be effective on October 1 of
each year. The primary uses of FMRs are
to determine payment standard amounts
for the Housing Choice Voucher
program, to determine initial renewal
rents for some expiring project-based
Section 8 contracts, to determine initial
rents for housing assistance payment
(HAP) contracts in the Moderate
Rehabilitation Single Room Occupancy
program (Mod Rehab), and to serve as a
rent ceiling in the HOME rental
assistance program. Today’s notice
provides final FY2007 FMRs for all
areas that reflect the estimated 40th and
50th percentile rent levels trended to
April 1, 2007.
DATES: Effective Date: The FMRs
published in this notice are effective on
October 1, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
technical information on the
methodology used to develop FMRs or
a listing of all FMRs, please call the
HUD USER information line at (800)
245–2691 or access the information on
the HUD Web site at https://
www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr.html.
FMRs are listed at the 40th or 50th
percentile in Schedule B. An asterisk
before the FMR area name identifies a
50th percentile area. Any questions
related to use of FMRs or voucher
payment standards should be directed
to the respective local HUD program
staff. Questions on how to conduct FMR
surveys or further requests for
methodological explanations may be
addressed to Marie L. Lihn or Lynn A.
Rodgers, Economic and Market Analysis
Division, Office of Economic Affairs,
Office of Policy Development and
Research, telephone (202) 708–0590.
Questions about disaster-related FMR
exceptions should be referred to the
respective local HUD office. Persons
with hearing or speech impairments
may access this number through TTY by
calling the toll-free Federal Information
Relay Service at (800) 877–8339. (Other
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I. Background
Section 8 of the U.S. Housing Act of
1937 (USHA) (42 U.S.C. 1437f)
authorizes housing assistance to aid
lower-income families in renting safe
and decent housing. Housing assistance
payments are limited by FMRs
established by HUD for different areas.
In the Housing Choice Voucher
program, the FMR is the basis for
determining the ‘‘payment standard
amount’’ used to calculate the
maximum monthly subsidy for an
assisted family (see 24 CFR 982.503). In
general, the FMR for an area is the
amount that would be needed to pay the
gross rent (shelter rent plus utilities) of
privately owned, decent, and safe rental
housing of a modest (non-luxury) nature
with suitable amenities. In addition, all
rents subsidized under the Housing
Choice Voucher program must meet
reasonable rent standards.
Electronic Data Availability: This
Federal Register notice is available
electronically from the HUD news page
at https://www.hudclips.org. Federal
Register notices also are available
electronically from the U.S. Government
Printing Office Web site at
https://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/
index.html. Information on how FMRs
are determined, including detailed
calculations, is available at
https://www.huduser.org/fmr/fmr.html.
II. Procedures for the Development of
FMRs
Section 8(c) of the USHA requires the
Secretary of HUD to publish FMRs
periodically, but not less frequently
than annually. Section 8(c) states in part
as follows:
Proposed fair market rentals for an area
shall be published in the Federal Register
with reasonable time for public comment and
shall become effective upon the date of
publication in final form in the Federal
Register. Each fair market rental in effect
under this subsection shall be adjusted to be
effective on October 1 of each year to reflect
changes, based on the most recent available
data trended so the rentals will be current for
the year to which they apply, of rents for
existing or newly constructed rental dwelling
units, as the case may be, of various sizes and
types in this section.
The Department’s regulations at 24
CFR part 888 provide that HUD will
develop proposed FMRs, publish them
for public comment, provide a public
comment period of at least 30 days,
analyze the comments, and publish final
FMRs. (See 24 CFR 888.115.) Final
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FY2007 FMRs are published on or
before October 1, 2006, as required by
section 8(c)(1) of the USHA.
III. Proposed FY2007 FMRs
On June 15, 2006 (71 FR 34726), HUD
published proposed FY2007 FMRs. As
noted in the preamble to the proposed
FMRs, the FMRs for FY2007 reflect
minor changes that allow further
modifications of the core-based
statistical areas (CBSA), as defined by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB), based on median family income
differences between the CBSA and the
CBSA components defined by FY2005
FMRs. All proposed metropolitan FMR
areas consist of areas within new OMB
metropolitan areas. In general, any parts
of old metropolitan areas, or formerly
nonmetropolitan counties, that would
have more than a 5 percent increase or
decrease in their FMRs or median
family incomes as a result of
implementing the new OMB
metropolitan definitions are defined as
separate FMR and income limit areas
(provided that there are enough recent
mover renter household observations in
the 2000 Census data).
During the comment period, which
ended August 1, 2006, HUD received 25
public comments on the proposed
FY2007 FMRs. Most of the public
comments received lacked the data
needed to support FMR changes. The
comments received are discussed in
more detail later in this notice.
IV. FMR Methodology
The FY2007 FMRs are based on
current OMB metropolitan area
definitions that were first used in the
FY2006 FMRs. These definitions have
the advantages that they are based on
more current (2000 Census) data, use a
more relevant commuting interchange
standard, and generally provide a better
measure of current housing market
relationships. HUD had three objectives
in defining FMR areas for FY2006: (1)
To incorporate new OMB metropolitan
area definitions so the FMR estimation
system can employ new data collected
using those definitions; (2) to better
reflect current housing markets; and (3)
to minimize the number of large
changes in FMRs due to use of the new
OMB definitions. These objectives
continue to apply to the proposed
FY2007 FMRs, and area definitions
were developed to achieve these
objectives as follows:
• FMRs were calculated for each of
the new OMB metropolitan areas using
2000 Census data.
• Subparts of any of the new areas
that had separate FMRs under the old
OMB definitions, and that had a
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sufficiently large 2000 Census count of
recent mover renter households in
standard quality units, were identified,
and 2000 Census Base Rents for these
subparts were calculated. Only the
subparts within the new OMB
metropolitan area were included in this
calculation (e.g., counties that had been
excluded from the new OMB
metropolitan area were not included).
• Metropolitan subparts of new areas
that had previously had separate FMRs
were assigned their own FMRs if their
2000 Census Base Rents differed by
more than 5 percent from the new OMB
area 2000 Census Base Rent.
• Formerly metropolitan counties
removed from metropolitan areas get
their own FMRs.
• For FY2007 FMRs, an additional
comparison was made to determine if
new sub-areas should be created.
Metropolitan subparts of new areas that
had previously had separate FMRs were
assigned their own FMRs if their 2000
Census Median Family Income differed
by more than 5 percent from the new
OMB area 2000 Census Median Family
Income.
C size cities and nonmetropolitan areas
without local CPI update factors.
A. Data Sources
FY2007 FMRs are based on 2000
Census data updated with more current
survey data. At HUD’s request, the
Census Bureau prepared a special
publicly releasable Census file that
permits almost exact replication of
HUD’s 2000 Base Rent calculations,
except for areas with few rental units.
This data set is located on HUD’s
HUDUSER Web site at https://
www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr/
CensusRentData/. The area-specific data
and computations used to calculate final
FY2007 FMRs and FMR area definitions
can be found at https://
www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr/fmrs/.
C. Additional Rent Surveys and Other
Data
B. FMR Updates From 2006 to 2007
Local Consumer Price Index (CPI)
data is used to move rents from the end
of 2004 to the end of 2005 for Class A
cities covered by local CPI data. Census
region CPI data is used for Class B and
The Department regularly obtains
additional rent survey data to update
the 2000 Census rent data in selected
areas. Random Digit Dialing (RDD)
telephone rent surveys meeting the
Department’s statistical criteria for
updating FMRs covering 11 additional
areas were conducted by HUD in the
June-July 2006 period and completed in
time for use in this publication. In
addition, one public housing authority
(PHA) survey was submitted. Table 1
identifies the areas surveyed and
changes in the final FMR, if any, based
on survey results. The first column of
Table 1 identifies the RDD survey area.
The second column shows the proposed
FY2007 FMR as published on June 15,
2006. The third column shows the final
FY2007 FMR. The fourth column
summarizes the impact of the RDDs.
TABLE 1.—RESULTS OF RECENT RDD RENT SURVEYS
Proposed
FY2007 FMR
Area surveyed
Final
FY2007 FMR
RDD result
998
593
798
549
768
665
638
614
715
1551
586
617
941
593
798
549
768
823
638
614
715
1551
586
687
Decrease.
No Change.
No Change.
No Change 1
No Change.
Increase.
No Change.
No Change.
No Change.
No Change.
No Change.
Increase.
Baltimore-Towson, MD MSA .........................................................................................................
Beaumont-Port Arthur, TX .............................................................................................................
Dallas, TX ......................................................................................................................................
Hattiesburg, MS .............................................................................................................................
Houston, TX ..................................................................................................................................
Island County, WA ........................................................................................................................
Jackson, MS ..................................................................................................................................
Little Rock, AR ..............................................................................................................................
San Antonio, TX ............................................................................................................................
San Francisco, CA ........................................................................................................................
Shreveport, LA ..............................................................................................................................
Clallam County, WA ......................................................................................................................
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1 An RDD survey performed in Hattiesburg, MS, indicated that the two-bedroom FMR should be reduced to $513. Even though the RDD survey was modified to cover only movers since Hurricane Katrina in 2005, HUD has determined not to use the results, given the continuing uncertainty about the state of Gulf Coast housing markets as the pressures on the rental housing stock increase with the acceleration of rebuilding activity in Mississippi.
HUD is directed by statute to use the
most recent data available in its FMR
publications. These RDD survey results
are being implemented in this final
notice FY2007 FMR publication
consistent with that requirement.
The RDD surveys conducted in the
Gulf of Mexico areas (Beaumont-Port
Arthur, Dallas, Hattiesburg, Houston,
Jackson, Little Rock, San Antonio, and
Shreveport) used 6 months as the recent
mover time period, instead of the
normal 15 months. This shorter time
period was used to determine with
greater accuracy how the evacuees from
the Katrina and Rita hurricanes
impacted rental-housing markets in
these areas. Because most of these areas
had relatively soft rental markets before
the hurricanes, the additional renters
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were absorbed without significant rental
housing cost increases.
HUD also used the shorter time period
definition of recent mover for the Island
County, WA survey in an attempt to
measure the impact of the September
2005 addition of a naval air squadron on
the local rental housing market. Again,
a 6-month recent mover definition was
used. This area received an increase in
its FMR for FY2007.
D. FMRs by Bedroom Size
FMR estimates are calculated for twobedroom units. This is the most
common type of rental unit and,
therefore, the easiest to accurately
survey and analyze. After each
Decennial Census, rent ratios between
two-bedroom units and other unit sizes
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are calculated. These ratios are then
used to calculate FMRs in future years.
This is done because obtaining accurate
two-bedroom estimates and then using
pre-established cost relationships with
other bedroom sizes to update those rent
estimates is much easier than
developing independent FMR estimates
for each bedroom size. A publicly
releasable version of the data file that
permits derivations of rent ratios from
the 2000 Census, as well as
demonstrations of how the data are
used, are available at https://
www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr/
CensusRentData/.
The rents for three-bedroom and
larger units continue to reflect HUD’s
policy to set higher rents for these units
than would result from using normal
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market rents. This adjustment is
intended to increase the likelihood that
the largest families, who have the most
difficulty in leasing units, will be
successful in finding eligible program
units. The adjustment adds bonuses of
8.7 percent to the unadjusted threebedroom FMR estimates and adds 7.7
percent to the unadjusted four-bedroom
FMR estimates. The FMRs for unit sizes
larger than four bedrooms are calculated
by adding 15 percent to the fourbedroom FMR for each extra bedroom.
For example, the FMR for a fivebedroom unit is 1.15 times the fourbedroom FMR, and the FMR for a sixbedroom unit is 1.30 times the fourbedroom FMR. FMRs for single-room
occupancy units are 0.75 times the zerobedroom (efficiency) FMR.
A further adjustment is made for areas
with local bedroom-size intervals above
or below what are considered to be
reasonable ranges or where sample sizes
are inadequate to accurately measure
bedroom rent differentials. Experience
has shown that highly unusual bedroom
ratios typically reflect inadequate
sample sizes or peculiar local
circumstances that HUD would not
want to utilize in setting FMRs (e.g.,
luxury efficiency apartments that rent
for more than typical one-bedroom
units). Bedroom interval ranges were
established based on an analysis of the
range of such intervals for all areas with
large enough samples to permit accurate
bedroom ratio determinations. The final
ranges used were: efficiency units are
constrained to fall between 0.65 and
0.83 of the two-bedroom FMR, onebedroom units must be between 0.76
and 0.90 of the two-bedroom unit, threebedroom units must be between 1.10
and 1.34 of the two-bedroom unit, and
four-bedroom units must be between
1.14 and 1.63 of the two-bedroom unit.
Bedroom rents for a given FMR area
were then adjusted if the differentials
between bedroom-size FMRs were
inconsistent with normally observed
patterns (e.g., efficiency rents were not
allowed to be higher than one-bedroom
rents and three-bedroom rents were not
allowed to be higher than four-bedroom
rents.) 2
For nonmetropolitan counties with
few rental units and small Census
recent-mover rent samples, Censusdefined county group data were used in
determining rents for each bedroom
2 The preamble for the final FY2006 FMRs, the
revised final FY2005 FMRs, and the final FY2005
FMRs erroneously stated that a 3 percent
differential between three-bedroom FMRs and fourbedroom FMRs was maintained. A 3 percent
minimum differential has never been included in
the estimated three-bedroom and four-bedroom
FMRs.
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size. This adjustment was made to
protect against unrealistically high or
low FMRs due to insufficient sample
sizes. The areas covered by this new
estimation method had less than 200
two-bedroom Census-tabulated
observations.
E. State Minimums
In response to comments received on
the FY2005 and the proposed FY2006
FMRs, a state minimum policy similar
to that used prior to FY2005 has been
implemented. The rationale for having a
state minimum FMR is that some lowincome, low-rent nonmetropolitan
counties have Census-based FMR
estimates that appear to be below longterm operating costs for standard quality
rental units and raise concerns about
housing quality. Housing quality
problems are limited in most parts of
the country and have little impact on
FMR estimates. The exception to this
generality within the continental United
States occurs in some nonmetropolitan
areas with unusually low rents. State
minimum FMRs have been set at the
respective state-wide median
nonmetropolitan rent level, but are not
allowed to exceed the U.S. median
nonmetropolitan rent level. This change
primarily affects small nonmetropolitan
counties in the South with low rents.
V. Public Comments
A total of 25 public comments were
received on the proposed FY2007 FMRs.
Two comments, those from the National
Association of Home Builders (NAHB)
and the National Association of Housing
and Redevelopment Officials (NAHRO),
were broad in scope, addressing various
aspects of the proposed methodology for
establishing the FY2007 FMRs. The
remainder of the comments addressed
the FMR levels proposed in specific
FMR areas as being either too low or too
high, or urged that specific FMR area
definitions be modified.
NAHB disagreed with the proposed
requirement that an area must have a
large enough sample of 2000 Census
rents on which to base FMRs in order
for the area to be treated as a sub-area
within a CBSA. The proposed notice for
the FY2007 FMRs created separate FMR
areas for any parts of old metropolitan
areas, or formerly nonmetropolitan
counties that would have more than a 5
percent increase or decrease in their
2000 Census base 40th percentile twobedroom rent, or more than a 5 percent
increase or decrease in their 2000
Census base area median family income
as a result of implementing the new
OMB CBSA definitions, and have at
least 200 recent mover cases in the 2000
Census rent data. NAHB urged the
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Department to drop the 200 recent
mover threshold in the 2000 Census
data if the other criteria would qualify
the area as a separate area. Since HUD’s
median family income and income limit
estimates are defined for the same
geographic areas as FMRs, the NAHB
noted that the 200 recent mover
criterion resulted in income limit
decreases for some areas because they
did not qualify to be treated as subareas.
In response to this comment, the
Department notes that FMRs are used in
the estimation process for income
limits; thus, the areas upon which both
estimates are made must (except when
required by statute) remain the same.
Furthermore, HUD cannot determine
FMRs without sufficient data, so these
small areas must be incorporated into
the larger metropolitan areas. The
Department believes that the 200 recent
mover threshold is reasonable and
consistent with HUD’s Final
Information Quality Guidelines (67 FR
69642), and no change is being made to
define additional FMR areas that fail to
meet this criterion.
NAHRO commented on several
aspects of the proposed FY2007 FMRs.
First, NAHRO recommended that the
Department return to using the OMB
metropolitan area definitions based on
the 1990 Census data ‘‘ definitions that
formed the basis for establishing FMR
areas from FY1993 through FY2005.
NAHRO states that the proposed CBSAbased areas cause ‘‘dilution’’ of
metropolitan FMRs by including former
nonmetropolitan counties in the new
metropolitan area definitions, resulting
in decreased rental assistance payments
for in-place voucher-assisted
households. The Department finds it
inappropriate to continue to use such
old data (from the 1990 Census) for
housing market determinations. To
more accurately define today’s housing
markets, the final FY2007 FMRs follow
the CBSA metropolitan area definitions,
with modifications as appropriate, in
light of these definitions being based on
2000 Census data as analyzed by OMB.
NAHRO also disagreed with the
proposed rule on including rental data
from formerly nonmetropolitan counties
established as separate FMR sub-areas
when calculating the FMRs for the
remainder of the CBSA, again arguing
that this causes dilution of the FMR in
the affected CBSA areas. The
Department believes that inclusion of
rental data from the entire CBSA, even
when some formerly nonmetropolitan
counties have been established as subareas due to greater than 5 percent
changes in 2000 Census based FMR or
median family incomes, is appropriate
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to smooth the transition for future FMR
determinations that will cover the entire
CBSA area. HUD intends to analyze
CBSAs and sub-areas on an ongoing
basis, and, as these rents converge, to
reduce the number of sub-areas.3 The
final FY2007 FMR does not change this
calculation methodology.
NAHRO also objected to the proposed
policy to modify the CBSA definitions
by establishing sub-areas based on
changes in 2000 Census base median
family incomes of more than 5 percent.
In some cases, the result of applying the
median family income test has been for
some CBSA sub-areas to receive lower
FMRs than in the absence of the policy.
The Department listed the areas so
affected in a table in Section F of the
proposed FY2007 FMR notice. NAHRO
suggests that this outcome is
inconsistent with the Department’s
primary area hold-harmless policy for
income limits. In response to this
comment, the Department reiterates that
FMRs are used in the estimation process
for income limits; thus, the area
definition of both estimates must
(except when required by statute)
remain the same. Furthermore, HUD has
a hold-harmless policy for income limits
because without such a policy, program
rent revenues in subsidized rental
projects with rents statutorily tied to
income limits may fall, leading to the
possibility of project default or
departure from the program. HUD does
not have a similar hold-harmless policy
for FMRs because voucher program
rules are designed to mitigate the effects
of decreases in FMRs on individual
tenants. In cases where FMRs decline
and the PHAs reduce payment
standards accordingly, voucher rents for
existing tenants remaining in their units
may be maintained in accordance with
the previous higher payment standard
until the second annual recertification
of the tenants’ income and rent subsidy
after the payment standard declines.
Thus, for existing voucher tenants who
do not move, the rent level supported by
their voucher will not decrease until up
3 Previously, for the area definitions used through
FY2005, there was little opportunity to change the
FMR data once the initial FMR areas were
determined. In the future, there will be more
opportunity to revise the FMR area definitions
based on American Community Survey (ACS) data,
and HUD expects to see the number of sub-areas
reduced over time. The Department expects to use
CBSA rents as the basis for FMRs whenever
possible, because the strong relationships among
counties in CBSAs suggests that in the long run
CBSAs will generally be the best definition of rental
housing markets. In the New England states, it will
take longer for ACS data to become available
because the areas that have to be evaluated are
generally smaller, and no reduction in the number
of sub-areas will occur without data.
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to 2 years after the payment standard
decrease goes into effect.
NAHRO disagreed with HUD’s use of
regional CPI data to update rents for
Class B and C cities rather than using
local CPI update factors. Until ACS data
become available for this purpose, an
available alternative to the use of
regional CPI factors is to use regional
RDDs. However, regional RDD update
factors, instituted to improve rent
estimations and requiring tremendous
fiscal resources to produce, did not
consistently provide better estimations
than using regional CPI data. Regional
RDD results showed that some areas
were being overestimated and some
underestimated. Therefore, the FY2007
FMRs for Class B and C cities continue
to use the regional CPI update factors.
NAHRO recommended that HUD
consider additional analysis of the
utility component of the gross rents
comprising the FMR estimates, further
suggesting that HUD consider
publishing utility components of FMRs
separately. The Department appreciates
these recommendations, but notes that
utilities are included in the FY2007
FMR estimates as required by statute,
and that PHAs set utility allowances
based on their utility schedules and the
individual circumstances of each lease.
In addition, HUD is conducting research
to produce a utility schedule model for
PHAs to use to improve the accuracy of
their utility schedule estimates.
NAHRO suggested that HUD exempt
communities that have dealt with the
impact of Hurricane Katrina and Rita
evacuees from losing their 50th
percentile status. Baton Rouge and
Dallas lost their 50th percentile status in
a notice dated February 14, 2006, but
Dallas regained it for the FY2007 FMRs,
and Baton Rouge received market
adjusted 40th-percentile FMRs effective
March 6, 2006, that were higher than its
former 50th percentile FMRs. The
Department notes that the 50th
percentile FMR policy is not the correct
mechanism to address the cost of
disasters. HUD has a policy of allowing
federal disaster areas to apply for
regulatory suspension waivers and
allowing payment standards to be set at
up to 120 percent of the FMR.4
Furthermore, under section
982.503(c)(3), payment standards may
even exceed 120 percent of the FMR,
based on a request by a PHA to the
Assistant Secretary for Public and
Indian Housing. So far, this
administrative flexibility has allowed
the Housing Choice Voucher program to
continue operating effectively in these
areas. HUD has also recently surveyed
many FMR areas where the Gulf Coast
hurricane evacuees were placed. No
area had an increase in the FMR based
on HUD’s survey results.
Additional comments from NAHRO
seem based on incorrect interpretations
of the methodology for estimating the
FY2007 FMR. For example, one
criterion to determine if any parts of old
metropolitan areas or formerly
nonmetropolitan counties qualify as a
sub-area under the new CBSA
definitions is that the 2000 Census base
40th percentile, two-bedroom rent for
the area is found to be more than 5
percent different than the comparable
rent for the entire CBSA area. NAHRO
erroneously suggests the 5 percent test
is based on a comparison of the
proposed FY2007 FMR with the final
FY2006 FMR. Similarly, adjustments to
the FMR areas based on median family
income differentials are also based on
2000 Census data, not FY2006 data. The
Department reminds all interested
parties that a detailed description of the
FY2007 FMR methodology is available
to the public at https://www.huduser.org/
datasets/fmr/fmrs/
index.asp?data=fmr07.
One comment requested higher FMRs
for manufactured home space rentals in
Sonoma County, California. The
comment included data obtained from a
survey conducted by the Sonoma
County Housing Authority in support of
an exception rent. The survey results
provide Sonoma County with an
exception rent for manufactured homes
of $603, as listed in Schedule D.
The Housing Authority for the City of
Lafayette, Indiana, noted that the FMRs
for its area are too high given its low
funding levels and that the Department
must press for greater funding for the
voucher program. The Elkhart Housing
Authority stated that the proposed
increase in the FMRs would reduce the
number of homes they could serve since
the level of funding has been reduced.
HUD has no evidence of a need to
reduce the FMRs in these areas;
however, housing authorities have the
flexibility to set payment standards
below 100 percent of the FMR 5 and the
obligation to use rent reasonableness in
determining rents paid to owners
accepting vouchers. PHAs that are
concerned about costs in their voucher
programs can set payment standards at
90 percent of the FMR, without any
HUD approval. Moreover, PHAs may
request HUD approval to set payment
4 See the October 3, 2005, Hurricane Katrina
Notice (70 FR 57716) and the November 1, 2005,
Hurricane Rita Notice (70 FR 66222).
5 By statute, PHAs have the discretion to set their
payment standards at any level within the interval
of 90 percent to 110 percent of the FMR.
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standards below 90 percent of the FMR.
Voucher program funding and funding
formula allocations are outside the
scope of this notice.
The Housing Authority of Island
County, Washington, noted that its FMR
should be much higher than what is
proposed for FY2007 and provided a
report on ‘‘asking rents’’ in support of
its comments. The report indicated that
Island County rents were closer to
Seattle rents than shown in the FY2007
proposed FMRs. In September 2005, the
Department of Defense (DOD) moved a
naval air squadron to Island County.
HUD believed that the additional DOD
personnel substantially changed the
rental market on Island County from its
FMR basis, the 2000 decennial Census,
so a survey was conducted to determine
the appropriate FMR level.
Several comments were filed
concerning the drop in the fourbedroom FMR for the New York City
metropolitan area. It was noted that this
decrease in the FMR would mostly
affect the immigrant community. The
New York City FMR area became a subarea in FY2007, without Monmouth and
Ocean counties in New Jersey, because
its median income was well below the
median income of the CBSA, see:
https://www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr/
fmrs/index.asp?data=fmr07. In FY2006,
New York City used the two-bedroom
FMR and the bedroom ratios of the
CBSA instead of its sub-area amount
because the 2000 sub-area FMR was
within 5 percent of the CBSA 2000
FMR. Now that it has been established
as a sub-area, New York City must use
the sub-area rents to determine the 2000
two-bedroom FMR and bedroom
intervals. The ratio between the twobedroom FMR and the four-bedroom
FMR is less for the sub-area than for the
CBSA. According to the comments, this
decrease due to a change in the area
definition creates an undue hardship for
larger family tenants in this area. While
no data was filed with the comments,
the 2005 New York City Vacancy
Survey, conducted annually by the
Bureau of the Census, was reviewed to
determine if an adjustment could be
made to the four-bedroom FMR.
Analysis of the data revealed a fourbedroom recent mover, standard quality,
40th percentile rent greater than HUD’s
published FY2005 four-bedroom FMR.
HUD then trended this value forward
from 2005 to 2007 using HUD’s FY2006
and FY2007 update factors, and the
result has been incorporated in these
final FY2007 FMRs.
A law firm, representing the plaintiff
in a discrimination settlement in Dallas,
requested reinstatement of the FY2005
FMRs, and charged that all reductions
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since that time to the Dallas FMRs were
discriminatory. The FMR decrease,
since FY2005, is the result of an RDD
survey conducted in early 2005. As
discussed earlier, another survey
conducted this summer confirmed the
results of the 2005 survey, resulting in
no change in the FMR. Dallas regains its
50th percentile FMR in FY2007,
effective October 1, 2006, which it lost
effective March 1, 2006. Because the
FY2007 FMR for Dallas represents the
best data that are available, reverting to
the FY2005 FMR is not appropriate.
Two areas that specifically requested
changes in their FMR areas are Santa
Barbara County, California, and
Dartmouth Town, Massachusetts. Santa
Barbara would like to be split into North
and South County housing markets with
rents determined by apartment data.
These data are not statistically valid and
cannot be used to establish FMRs. The
difference in the Santa Barbara County
rents can be met by applying exception
payment standards in the high-rent
jurisdictions. Dartmouth is and has
always been part of the New Bedford
metropolitan area. The similarity in
rents between Dartmouth and
Providence is not justification for
including it in the Providence
metropolitan area. Again, exception
payment standards can be requested to
help Section 8 voucher holders find
units in this area.
Several PHAs noted that their FMRs
were too low. The Housing Authority of
Lake Charles, Louisiana, stated that it is
struggling to provide decent, safe,
sanitary, and affordable housing under
its Section 8 program. Landlords are
facing increased repair and insurance
costs as a result of the damage inflicted
by Hurricane Rita. Lake Charles, like
other areas designated as federal
disaster areas, may apply for regulatory
suspension waivers and set its payment
standards at 120 percent of the FMR.
The San Francisco Housing Authority
stated that its rental market is tightening
and was hopeful that the HUD survey
would verify this result. The survey did
not find higher rents; however, HUD
will continue to follow this volatile
rental market. The City of Casper,
Wyoming, said it was conducting its
own survey, but did not submit the
results in time for this final notice. The
Michigan State Housing Development
Authority noted that the change in the
geographic area definitions for Lenawee
and Muskegon counties in Michigan has
significantly reduced their FMRs and
that these reductions have significantly
affected the ability of tenants to use
their vouchers. The PHA intends to
conduct surveys of these areas, but the
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results will not be completed in time for
this publication.
Mora Housing Management, Inc.,
requested that the revisions made to
FY2006 FMRs in Puerto Rico, effective
June 2, 2006, be made retroactive to
provide relief for Mod Rehab properties
constrained by the lower FMRs in
metropolitan areas that were in place
from October 1, 2005, to June 1, 2006,
since the lowest rent must be used in all
cases. HUD cannot make the Puerto Rico
FMR revisions retroactive in this notice.
Any procedural changes that can be
made for the affected Puerto Rico Mod
Rehab units are outside the scope of this
notice.
VI. Manufactured Home Space Surveys
In general, the FMR used to establish
payment standard amounts for the
rental of manufactured home spaces in
the Housing Choice Voucher program is
40 percent of the FMR for a twobedroom unit. HUD modified
manufactured home space FMRs for
Santa Rosa-Petaluma, California
(Sonoma County) based on survey data
showing the 40th percentile
manufactured home space rent
(including the cost of utilities) for the
entire FMR area. The new manufactured
home space exception FMR is shown in
Schedule D.
All approved exceptions to these rents
that were in effect in FY2006 were
updated to the midpoint of FY2007
using the same data used to estimate the
Housing Choice Voucher program
FMRs. If the result of this computation
was higher than 40 percent of the
rebenchmarked two-bedroom rent, the
exception remains and is listed in
Schedule D. The FMR area definitions
used for the rental of manufactured
home spaces are the same as the area
definitions used for the other FMRs.
VII. HUD Rental Housing Survey
Guides
HUD recommends the use of
professionally conducted RDD
telephone surveys to test the accuracy of
FMRs for areas where there is a
sufficient number of Section 8 units to
justify the survey cost of $40,000 to
$50,000. Areas with 1,000 or more
program units usually meet this
criterion, and areas with fewer units
may meet it if local rents are thought to
be significantly different than the FMRs
proposed by HUD. In addition, HUD has
developed a simplified version of the
RDD survey methodology for smaller,
nonmetropolitan PHAs. This
methodology is designed to be simple
enough to be done by the PHA itself,
rather than by professional survey
organizations.
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PHAs in nonmetropolitan areas may,
in certain circumstances, conduct
surveys of groups of counties; all
county-group surveys have to be
approved in advance by HUD. PHAs are
cautioned that the resulting FMRs will
not be identical for the counties
surveyed; each individual FMR area
will have a separate FMR based on its
relationship to the combined rent of the
group of FMR areas. In these cases, HUD
recommends following the Census
county-group definitions as described in
the 2000 Census Base Rent section of
the FY2007 Documentation System,
which can be found at https://
www.huduser.org/fmr/fmrs/.
PHAs that plan to use the RDD survey
technique may obtain a copy of the
appropriate survey guide by calling
HUD USER at (800) 245–2691. Larger
PHAs should request ‘‘Random Digit
Dialing Surveys; A Guide to Assist
Larger Housing Agencies in Preparing
Fair Market Rent Comments.’’ Smaller
PHAs should obtain ‘‘Rental Housing
Surveys; A Guide to Assist Smaller
Housing Agencies in Preparing Fair
Market Rent Comments.’’ These guides
are also available at https://
www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr.html.
HUD prefers, but does not mandate,
the use of RDD telephone surveys, or the
more traditional method described in
the small PHA survey guide. Other
survey methodologies are acceptable if
they provide statistically reliable,
unbiased estimates of the 40th
percentile gross rent. Survey samples
should preferably be randomly drawn
from a complete list of rental units for
the FMR area. If this is not feasible, the
selected sample must be drawn to be
statistically representative of the entire
rental housing stock of the FMR area. In
particular, surveys must include units of
all rent levels and be representative by
structure type (including single-family,
duplex, and other small rental
properties), age of housing unit, and
geographic location. The decennial
Census should be used as a starting
point and means of verification used for
determining whether the sample is
representative of the FMR area’s rental
housing stock. All survey results must
be fully documented.
A PHA or contractor that cannot
obtain the recommended number of
sample responses after reasonable
efforts should consult with HUD before
abandoning its survey; in such
situations, HUD may find it appropriate
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to relax normal sample size
requirements.
Accordingly, the FMR Schedules,
which will not be codified in 24 CFR
part 888, are amended as follows:
Dated: September 21, 2006.
Darlene F. Williams,
Assistant Secretary for Policy Development
and Research.
Fair Market Rents for the Housing
Choice Voucher Program
Schedules B and D—General
Explanatory Notes
1. Geographic Coverage
a. Metropolitan Areas—FMRs are
market-wide rent estimates that are
intended to provide housing
opportunities throughout the geographic
area in which rental-housing units are
in direct competition. The FY2007
FMRs reflect a change in metropolitan
area definition where HUD is using
CBSAs which are made up of one or
more counties, as defined by OMB, with
some modifications. HUD is generally
assigning separate FMRs to the
component counties of CBSA
micropolitan areas.
b. Modifications to OMB Definitions—
Following OMB guidance, the
estimation procedure for the FY2007
FMRs incorporates the 2003 OMB
definitions of metropolitan areas based
on the new CBSA standards, as
implemented with 2000 Census data,
but makes adjustments to the definitions
to separate subparts of these areas where
FMRs or median family incomes would
otherwise change significantly if the
new area definitions were used without
modification. In CBSAs where sub-areas
are established, it is HUD’s view that the
geographic extent of the housing
markets are not yet the same as the
geographic extent of the CBSAs, but
may become so as the social and
economic integration of the CBSA
component areas increases.
Modifications to metropolitan CBSA
definitions are made according to a
formula as described below:
Metropolitan area CBSAs (referred to
as metropolitan statistical areas or
MSAs) may be modified to allow for
sub-area FMRs within MSAs based on
the boundaries of old FMR areas (OFAs)
within the boundaries of new MSAs.
(OFAs are the FMR areas defined for the
FY2005 FMRs. Collectively, they
include old-definition MSAs/PMSAs,
metropolitan counties deleted from old-
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definition MSAs/PMSAs by HUD for
FMR purposes, and counties and county
parts outside of old-definition MSAs/
PMSAs referred to as nonmetropolitan
counties.) Sub-areas of MSAs are
assigned their own FMRs when the subarea 2000 Census Base Rent differs by at
least 5 percent from (i.e., is at most 95
percent or at least 105 percent of) the
MSA 2000 Census Base Rent.
Additionally, sub-areas of MSAs are
assigned their own FMR when the subarea 2000 median family income differs
by at least 5 percent. MSA sub-areas,
and the remaining portions of MSAs
after sub-areas have been determined,
are referred to as HUD metro FMR areas
(HMFAs), to distinguish these areas
from OMB’s official definition of MSAs.
The specific counties and New
England towns and cities within each
state in MSAs and HMFAs are listed in
the FMR tables.
2. Bedroom Size Adjustments
Schedule B shows the FMRs for zerobedroom through four-bedroom units.
The FMRs for unit sizes larger than four
bedrooms are calculated by adding 15
percent to the four-bedroom FMR for
each extra bedroom. For example, the
FMR for a five-bedroom unit is 1.15
times the four-bedroom FMR, and the
FMR for a six-bedroom unit is 1.30
times the four-bedroom FMR. FMRs for
single-room-occupancy (SRO) units are
0.75 times the zero-bedroom FMR.
3. Arrangement of FMR Areas and
Identification of Constituent Parts
a. The FMR areas in Schedule B are
listed alphabetically, first by
metropolitan FMR area, then by
nonmetropolitan county for each state.
The exception FMRs for manufactured
home spaces are listed alphabetically by
state in Schedule D.
b. The constituent counties (and New
England towns and cities) included in
each metropolitan FMR area are listed
immediately following the listings of the
FMR dollar amounts. A metropolitan
FMR area that includes counties and
towns from more than one state is listed
under each applicable state.
c. Two nonmetropolitan counties are
listed alphabetically on each line of the
nonmetropolitan county listings.
d. The New England towns and cities
included in a nonmetropolitan part of a
county are listed immediately following
the county name.
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
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BILLING CODE 4210–67–C
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 187 (Wednesday, September 27, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 56744-56804]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-8273]
[[Page 56743]]
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Part V
Department of Housing and Urban Development
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Final Fair Market Rents for the Housing Choice Voucher Program and
Moderate Rehabilitation Single Room Occupancy Program for Fiscal Year
2007; Notice
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 187 / Wednesday, September 27, 2006 /
Notices
[[Page 56744]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-5068-N-02]
Final Fair Market Rents for the Housing Choice Voucher Program
and Moderate Rehabilitation Single Room Occupancy Program for Fiscal
Year 2007
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of Final Fair Market Rents (FMRs) for Fiscal Year (FY)
2007.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Section 8(c)(1) of the United States Housing Act of 1937
(USHA) requires the Secretary to publish FMRs periodically, but not
less than annually, adjusted to be effective on October 1 of each year.
The primary uses of FMRs are to determine payment standard amounts for
the Housing Choice Voucher program, to determine initial renewal rents
for some expiring project-based Section 8 contracts, to determine
initial rents for housing assistance payment (HAP) contracts in the
Moderate Rehabilitation Single Room Occupancy program (Mod Rehab), and
to serve as a rent ceiling in the HOME rental assistance program.
Today's notice provides final FY2007 FMRs for all areas that reflect
the estimated 40th and 50th percentile rent levels trended to April 1,
2007.
DATES: Effective Date: The FMRs published in this notice are effective
on October 1, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical information on the
methodology used to develop FMRs or a listing of all FMRs, please call
the HUD USER information line at (800) 245-2691 or access the
information on the HUD Web site at https://www.huduser.org/datasets/
fmr.html. FMRs are listed at the 40th or 50th percentile in Schedule B.
An asterisk before the FMR area name identifies a 50th percentile area.
Any questions related to use of FMRs or voucher payment standards
should be directed to the respective local HUD program staff. Questions
on how to conduct FMR surveys or further requests for methodological
explanations may be addressed to Marie L. Lihn or Lynn A. Rodgers,
Economic and Market Analysis Division, Office of Economic Affairs,
Office of Policy Development and Research, telephone (202) 708-0590.
Questions about disaster-related FMR exceptions should be referred to
the respective local HUD office. Persons with hearing or speech
impairments may access this number through TTY by calling the toll-free
Federal Information Relay Service at (800) 877-8339. (Other than the
HUD USER information line and TTY numbers, telephone numbers are not
toll-free.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 8 of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 (USHA) (42 U.S.C. 1437f)
authorizes housing assistance to aid lower-income families in renting
safe and decent housing. Housing assistance payments are limited by
FMRs established by HUD for different areas. In the Housing Choice
Voucher program, the FMR is the basis for determining the ``payment
standard amount'' used to calculate the maximum monthly subsidy for an
assisted family (see 24 CFR 982.503). In general, the FMR for an area
is the amount that would be needed to pay the gross rent (shelter rent
plus utilities) of privately owned, decent, and safe rental housing of
a modest (non-luxury) nature with suitable amenities. In addition, all
rents subsidized under the Housing Choice Voucher program must meet
reasonable rent standards.
Electronic Data Availability: This Federal Register notice is
available electronically from the HUD news page at https://
www.hudclips.org. Federal Register notices also are available
electronically from the U.S. Government Printing Office Web site at
https://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/. Information on how FMRs are
determined, including detailed calculations, is available at https://
www.huduser.org/fmr/fmr.html.
II. Procedures for the Development of FMRs
Section 8(c) of the USHA requires the Secretary of HUD to publish
FMRs periodically, but not less frequently than annually. Section 8(c)
states in part as follows:
Proposed fair market rentals for an area shall be published in
the Federal Register with reasonable time for public comment and
shall become effective upon the date of publication in final form in
the Federal Register. Each fair market rental in effect under this
subsection shall be adjusted to be effective on October 1 of each
year to reflect changes, based on the most recent available data
trended so the rentals will be current for the year to which they
apply, of rents for existing or newly constructed rental dwelling
units, as the case may be, of various sizes and types in this
section.
The Department's regulations at 24 CFR part 888 provide that HUD
will develop proposed FMRs, publish them for public comment, provide a
public comment period of at least 30 days, analyze the comments, and
publish final FMRs. (See 24 CFR 888.115.) Final FY2007 FMRs are
published on or before October 1, 2006, as required by section 8(c)(1)
of the USHA.
III. Proposed FY2007 FMRs
On June 15, 2006 (71 FR 34726), HUD published proposed FY2007 FMRs.
As noted in the preamble to the proposed FMRs, the FMRs for FY2007
reflect minor changes that allow further modifications of the core-
based statistical areas (CBSA), as defined by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB), based on median family income differences between the
CBSA and the CBSA components defined by FY2005 FMRs. All proposed
metropolitan FMR areas consist of areas within new OMB metropolitan
areas. In general, any parts of old metropolitan areas, or formerly
nonmetropolitan counties, that would have more than a 5 percent
increase or decrease in their FMRs or median family incomes as a result
of implementing the new OMB metropolitan definitions are defined as
separate FMR and income limit areas (provided that there are enough
recent mover renter household observations in the 2000 Census data).
During the comment period, which ended August 1, 2006, HUD received
25 public comments on the proposed FY2007 FMRs. Most of the public
comments received lacked the data needed to support FMR changes. The
comments received are discussed in more detail later in this notice.
IV. FMR Methodology
The FY2007 FMRs are based on current OMB metropolitan area
definitions that were first used in the FY2006 FMRs. These definitions
have the advantages that they are based on more current (2000 Census)
data, use a more relevant commuting interchange standard, and generally
provide a better measure of current housing market relationships. HUD
had three objectives in defining FMR areas for FY2006: (1) To
incorporate new OMB metropolitan area definitions so the FMR estimation
system can employ new data collected using those definitions; (2) to
better reflect current housing markets; and (3) to minimize the number
of large changes in FMRs due to use of the new OMB definitions. These
objectives continue to apply to the proposed FY2007 FMRs, and area
definitions were developed to achieve these objectives as follows:
FMRs were calculated for each of the new OMB metropolitan
areas using 2000 Census data.
Subparts of any of the new areas that had separate FMRs
under the old OMB definitions, and that had a
[[Page 56745]]
sufficiently large 2000 Census count of recent mover renter households
in standard quality units, were identified, and 2000 Census Base Rents
for these subparts were calculated. Only the subparts within the new
OMB metropolitan area were included in this calculation (e.g., counties
that had been excluded from the new OMB metropolitan area were not
included).
Metropolitan subparts of new areas that had previously had
separate FMRs were assigned their own FMRs if their 2000 Census Base
Rents differed by more than 5 percent from the new OMB area 2000 Census
Base Rent.
Formerly metropolitan counties removed from metropolitan
areas get their own FMRs.
For FY2007 FMRs, an additional comparison was made to
determine if new sub-areas should be created. Metropolitan subparts of
new areas that had previously had separate FMRs were assigned their own
FMRs if their 2000 Census Median Family Income differed by more than 5
percent from the new OMB area 2000 Census Median Family Income.
A. Data Sources
FY2007 FMRs are based on 2000 Census data updated with more current
survey data. At HUD's request, the Census Bureau prepared a special
publicly releasable Census file that permits almost exact replication
of HUD's 2000 Base Rent calculations, except for areas with few rental
units. This data set is located on HUD's HUDUSER Web site at https://
www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr/CensusRentData/. The area-specific data
and computations used to calculate final FY2007 FMRs and FMR area
definitions can be found at https://www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr/fmrs/.
B. FMR Updates From 2006 to 2007
Local Consumer Price Index (CPI) data is used to move rents from
the end of 2004 to the end of 2005 for Class A cities covered by local
CPI data. Census region CPI data is used for Class B and C size cities
and nonmetropolitan areas without local CPI update factors.
C. Additional Rent Surveys and Other Data
The Department regularly obtains additional rent survey data to
update the 2000 Census rent data in selected areas. Random Digit
Dialing (RDD) telephone rent surveys meeting the Department's
statistical criteria for updating FMRs covering 11 additional areas
were conducted by HUD in the June-July 2006 period and completed in
time for use in this publication. In addition, one public housing
authority (PHA) survey was submitted. Table 1 identifies the areas
surveyed and changes in the final FMR, if any, based on survey results.
The first column of Table 1 identifies the RDD survey area. The second
column shows the proposed FY2007 FMR as published on June 15, 2006. The
third column shows the final FY2007 FMR. The fourth column summarizes
the impact of the RDDs.
Table 1.--Results of Recent RDD Rent Surveys
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed Final FY2007
Area surveyed FY2007 FMR FMR RDD result
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Baltimore-Towson, MD MSA..................... 998 941 Decrease.
Beaumont-Port Arthur, TX..................... 593 593 No Change.
Dallas, TX................................... 798 798 No Change.
Hattiesburg, MS.............................. 549 549 No Change 1
Houston, TX.................................. 768 768 No Change.
Island County, WA............................ 665 823 Increase.
Jackson, MS.................................. 638 638 No Change.
Little Rock, AR.............................. 614 614 No Change.
San Antonio, TX.............................. 715 715 No Change.
San Francisco, CA............................ 1551 1551 No Change.
Shreveport, LA............................... 586 586 No Change.
Clallam County, WA........................... 617 687 Increase.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ An RDD survey performed in Hattiesburg, MS, indicated that the two-bedroom FMR should be reduced to $513.
Even though the RDD survey was modified to cover only movers since Hurricane Katrina in 2005, HUD has
determined not to use the results, given the continuing uncertainty about the state of Gulf Coast housing
markets as the pressures on the rental housing stock increase with the acceleration of rebuilding activity in
Mississippi.
HUD is directed by statute to use the most recent data available in
its FMR publications. These RDD survey results are being implemented in
this final notice FY2007 FMR publication consistent with that
requirement.
The RDD surveys conducted in the Gulf of Mexico areas (Beaumont-
Port Arthur, Dallas, Hattiesburg, Houston, Jackson, Little Rock, San
Antonio, and Shreveport) used 6 months as the recent mover time period,
instead of the normal 15 months. This shorter time period was used to
determine with greater accuracy how the evacuees from the Katrina and
Rita hurricanes impacted rental-housing markets in these areas. Because
most of these areas had relatively soft rental markets before the
hurricanes, the additional renters were absorbed without significant
rental housing cost increases.
HUD also used the shorter time period definition of recent mover
for the Island County, WA survey in an attempt to measure the impact of
the September 2005 addition of a naval air squadron on the local rental
housing market. Again, a 6-month recent mover definition was used. This
area received an increase in its FMR for FY2007.
D. FMRs by Bedroom Size
FMR estimates are calculated for two-bedroom units. This is the
most common type of rental unit and, therefore, the easiest to
accurately survey and analyze. After each Decennial Census, rent ratios
between two-bedroom units and other unit sizes are calculated. These
ratios are then used to calculate FMRs in future years. This is done
because obtaining accurate two-bedroom estimates and then using pre-
established cost relationships with other bedroom sizes to update those
rent estimates is much easier than developing independent FMR estimates
for each bedroom size. A publicly releasable version of the data file
that permits derivations of rent ratios from the 2000 Census, as well
as demonstrations of how the data are used, are available at https://
www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr/CensusRentData/.
The rents for three-bedroom and larger units continue to reflect
HUD's policy to set higher rents for these units than would result from
using normal
[[Page 56746]]
market rents. This adjustment is intended to increase the likelihood
that the largest families, who have the most difficulty in leasing
units, will be successful in finding eligible program units. The
adjustment adds bonuses of 8.7 percent to the unadjusted three-bedroom
FMR estimates and adds 7.7 percent to the unadjusted four-bedroom FMR
estimates. The FMRs for unit sizes larger than four bedrooms are
calculated by adding 15 percent to the four-bedroom FMR for each extra
bedroom. For example, the FMR for a five-bedroom unit is 1.15 times the
four-bedroom FMR, and the FMR for a six-bedroom unit is 1.30 times the
four-bedroom FMR. FMRs for single-room occupancy units are 0.75 times
the zero-bedroom (efficiency) FMR.
A further adjustment is made for areas with local bedroom-size
intervals above or below what are considered to be reasonable ranges or
where sample sizes are inadequate to accurately measure bedroom rent
differentials. Experience has shown that highly unusual bedroom ratios
typically reflect inadequate sample sizes or peculiar local
circumstances that HUD would not want to utilize in setting FMRs (e.g.,
luxury efficiency apartments that rent for more than typical one-
bedroom units). Bedroom interval ranges were established based on an
analysis of the range of such intervals for all areas with large enough
samples to permit accurate bedroom ratio determinations. The final
ranges used were: efficiency units are constrained to fall between 0.65
and 0.83 of the two-bedroom FMR, one-bedroom units must be between 0.76
and 0.90 of the two-bedroom unit, three-bedroom units must be between
1.10 and 1.34 of the two-bedroom unit, and four-bedroom units must be
between 1.14 and 1.63 of the two-bedroom unit. Bedroom rents for a
given FMR area were then adjusted if the differentials between bedroom-
size FMRs were inconsistent with normally observed patterns (e.g.,
efficiency rents were not allowed to be higher than one-bedroom rents
and three-bedroom rents were not allowed to be higher than four-bedroom
rents.) \2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The preamble for the final FY2006 FMRs, the revised final
FY2005 FMRs, and the final FY2005 FMRs erroneously stated that a 3
percent differential between three-bedroom FMRs and four-bedroom
FMRs was maintained. A 3 percent minimum differential has never been
included in the estimated three-bedroom and four-bedroom FMRs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For nonmetropolitan counties with few rental units and small Census
recent-mover rent samples, Census-defined county group data were used
in determining rents for each bedroom size. This adjustment was made to
protect against unrealistically high or low FMRs due to insufficient
sample sizes. The areas covered by this new estimation method had less
than 200 two-bedroom Census-tabulated observations.
E. State Minimums
In response to comments received on the FY2005 and the proposed
FY2006 FMRs, a state minimum policy similar to that used prior to
FY2005 has been implemented. The rationale for having a state minimum
FMR is that some low-income, low-rent nonmetropolitan counties have
Census-based FMR estimates that appear to be below long-term operating
costs for standard quality rental units and raise concerns about
housing quality. Housing quality problems are limited in most parts of
the country and have little impact on FMR estimates. The exception to
this generality within the continental United States occurs in some
nonmetropolitan areas with unusually low rents. State minimum FMRs have
been set at the respective state-wide median nonmetropolitan rent
level, but are not allowed to exceed the U.S. median nonmetropolitan
rent level. This change primarily affects small nonmetropolitan
counties in the South with low rents.
V. Public Comments
A total of 25 public comments were received on the proposed FY2007
FMRs. Two comments, those from the National Association of Home
Builders (NAHB) and the National Association of Housing and
Redevelopment Officials (NAHRO), were broad in scope, addressing
various aspects of the proposed methodology for establishing the FY2007
FMRs. The remainder of the comments addressed the FMR levels proposed
in specific FMR areas as being either too low or too high, or urged
that specific FMR area definitions be modified.
NAHB disagreed with the proposed requirement that an area must have
a large enough sample of 2000 Census rents on which to base FMRs in
order for the area to be treated as a sub-area within a CBSA. The
proposed notice for the FY2007 FMRs created separate FMR areas for any
parts of old metropolitan areas, or formerly nonmetropolitan counties
that would have more than a 5 percent increase or decrease in their
2000 Census base 40th percentile two-bedroom rent, or more than a 5
percent increase or decrease in their 2000 Census base area median
family income as a result of implementing the new OMB CBSA definitions,
and have at least 200 recent mover cases in the 2000 Census rent data.
NAHB urged the Department to drop the 200 recent mover threshold in the
2000 Census data if the other criteria would qualify the area as a
separate area. Since HUD's median family income and income limit
estimates are defined for the same geographic areas as FMRs, the NAHB
noted that the 200 recent mover criterion resulted in income limit
decreases for some areas because they did not qualify to be treated as
sub-areas.
In response to this comment, the Department notes that FMRs are
used in the estimation process for income limits; thus, the areas upon
which both estimates are made must (except when required by statute)
remain the same. Furthermore, HUD cannot determine FMRs without
sufficient data, so these small areas must be incorporated into the
larger metropolitan areas. The Department believes that the 200 recent
mover threshold is reasonable and consistent with HUD's Final
Information Quality Guidelines (67 FR 69642), and no change is being
made to define additional FMR areas that fail to meet this criterion.
NAHRO commented on several aspects of the proposed FY2007 FMRs.
First, NAHRO recommended that the Department return to using the OMB
metropolitan area definitions based on the 1990 Census data ``
definitions that formed the basis for establishing FMR areas from
FY1993 through FY2005. NAHRO states that the proposed CBSA-based areas
cause ``dilution'' of metropolitan FMRs by including former
nonmetropolitan counties in the new metropolitan area definitions,
resulting in decreased rental assistance payments for in-place voucher-
assisted households. The Department finds it inappropriate to continue
to use such old data (from the 1990 Census) for housing market
determinations. To more accurately define today's housing markets, the
final FY2007 FMRs follow the CBSA metropolitan area definitions, with
modifications as appropriate, in light of these definitions being based
on 2000 Census data as analyzed by OMB.
NAHRO also disagreed with the proposed rule on including rental
data from formerly nonmetropolitan counties established as separate FMR
sub-areas when calculating the FMRs for the remainder of the CBSA,
again arguing that this causes dilution of the FMR in the affected CBSA
areas. The Department believes that inclusion of rental data from the
entire CBSA, even when some formerly nonmetropolitan counties have been
established as sub-areas due to greater than 5 percent changes in 2000
Census based FMR or median family incomes, is appropriate
[[Page 56747]]
to smooth the transition for future FMR determinations that will cover
the entire CBSA area. HUD intends to analyze CBSAs and sub-areas on an
ongoing basis, and, as these rents converge, to reduce the number of
sub-areas.\3\ The final FY2007 FMR does not change this calculation
methodology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Previously, for the area definitions used through FY2005,
there was little opportunity to change the FMR data once the initial
FMR areas were determined. In the future, there will be more
opportunity to revise the FMR area definitions based on American
Community Survey (ACS) data, and HUD expects to see the number of
sub-areas reduced over time. The Department expects to use CBSA
rents as the basis for FMRs whenever possible, because the strong
relationships among counties in CBSAs suggests that in the long run
CBSAs will generally be the best definition of rental housing
markets. In the New England states, it will take longer for ACS data
to become available because the areas that have to be evaluated are
generally smaller, and no reduction in the number of sub-areas will
occur without data.
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NAHRO also objected to the proposed policy to modify the CBSA
definitions by establishing sub-areas based on changes in 2000 Census
base median family incomes of more than 5 percent. In some cases, the
result of applying the median family income test has been for some CBSA
sub-areas to receive lower FMRs than in the absence of the policy. The
Department listed the areas so affected in a table in Section F of the
proposed FY2007 FMR notice. NAHRO suggests that this outcome is
inconsistent with the Department's primary area hold-harmless policy
for income limits. In response to this comment, the Department
reiterates that FMRs are used in the estimation process for income
limits; thus, the area definition of both estimates must (except when
required by statute) remain the same. Furthermore, HUD has a hold-
harmless policy for income limits because without such a policy,
program rent revenues in subsidized rental projects with rents
statutorily tied to income limits may fall, leading to the possibility
of project default or departure from the program. HUD does not have a
similar hold-harmless policy for FMRs because voucher program rules are
designed to mitigate the effects of decreases in FMRs on individual
tenants. In cases where FMRs decline and the PHAs reduce payment
standards accordingly, voucher rents for existing tenants remaining in
their units may be maintained in accordance with the previous higher
payment standard until the second annual recertification of the
tenants' income and rent subsidy after the payment standard declines.
Thus, for existing voucher tenants who do not move, the rent level
supported by their voucher will not decrease until up to 2 years after
the payment standard decrease goes into effect.
NAHRO disagreed with HUD's use of regional CPI data to update rents
for Class B and C cities rather than using local CPI update factors.
Until ACS data become available for this purpose, an available
alternative to the use of regional CPI factors is to use regional RDDs.
However, regional RDD update factors, instituted to improve rent
estimations and requiring tremendous fiscal resources to produce, did
not consistently provide better estimations than using regional CPI
data. Regional RDD results showed that some areas were being
overestimated and some underestimated. Therefore, the FY2007 FMRs for
Class B and C cities continue to use the regional CPI update factors.
NAHRO recommended that HUD consider additional analysis of the
utility component of the gross rents comprising the FMR estimates,
further suggesting that HUD consider publishing utility components of
FMRs separately. The Department appreciates these recommendations, but
notes that utilities are included in the FY2007 FMR estimates as
required by statute, and that PHAs set utility allowances based on
their utility schedules and the individual circumstances of each lease.
In addition, HUD is conducting research to produce a utility schedule
model for PHAs to use to improve the accuracy of their utility schedule
estimates.
NAHRO suggested that HUD exempt communities that have dealt with
the impact of Hurricane Katrina and Rita evacuees from losing their
50th percentile status. Baton Rouge and Dallas lost their 50th
percentile status in a notice dated February 14, 2006, but Dallas
regained it for the FY2007 FMRs, and Baton Rouge received market
adjusted 40th-percentile FMRs effective March 6, 2006, that were higher
than its former 50th percentile FMRs. The Department notes that the
50th percentile FMR policy is not the correct mechanism to address the
cost of disasters. HUD has a policy of allowing federal disaster areas
to apply for regulatory suspension waivers and allowing payment
standards to be set at up to 120 percent of the FMR.\4\ Furthermore,
under section 982.503(c)(3), payment standards may even exceed 120
percent of the FMR, based on a request by a PHA to the Assistant
Secretary for Public and Indian Housing. So far, this administrative
flexibility has allowed the Housing Choice Voucher program to continue
operating effectively in these areas. HUD has also recently surveyed
many FMR areas where the Gulf Coast hurricane evacuees were placed. No
area had an increase in the FMR based on HUD's survey results.
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\4\ See the October 3, 2005, Hurricane Katrina Notice (70 FR
57716) and the November 1, 2005, Hurricane Rita Notice (70 FR
66222).
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Additional comments from NAHRO seem based on incorrect
interpretations of the methodology for estimating the FY2007 FMR. For
example, one criterion to determine if any parts of old metropolitan
areas or formerly nonmetropolitan counties qualify as a sub-area under
the new CBSA definitions is that the 2000 Census base 40th percentile,
two-bedroom rent for the area is found to be more than 5 percent
different than the comparable rent for the entire CBSA area. NAHRO
erroneously suggests the 5 percent test is based on a comparison of the
proposed FY2007 FMR with the final FY2006 FMR. Similarly, adjustments
to the FMR areas based on median family income differentials are also
based on 2000 Census data, not FY2006 data. The Department reminds all
interested parties that a detailed description of the FY2007 FMR
methodology is available to the public at https://www.huduser.org/
datasets/fmr/fmrs/index.asp?data=fmr07.
One comment requested higher FMRs for manufactured home space
rentals in Sonoma County, California. The comment included data
obtained from a survey conducted by the Sonoma County Housing Authority
in support of an exception rent. The survey results provide Sonoma
County with an exception rent for manufactured homes of $603, as listed
in Schedule D.
The Housing Authority for the City of Lafayette, Indiana, noted
that the FMRs for its area are too high given its low funding levels
and that the Department must press for greater funding for the voucher
program. The Elkhart Housing Authority stated that the proposed
increase in the FMRs would reduce the number of homes they could serve
since the level of funding has been reduced. HUD has no evidence of a
need to reduce the FMRs in these areas; however, housing authorities
have the flexibility to set payment standards below 100 percent of the
FMR \5\ and the obligation to use rent reasonableness in determining
rents paid to owners accepting vouchers. PHAs that are concerned about
costs in their voucher programs can set payment standards at 90 percent
of the FMR, without any HUD approval. Moreover, PHAs may request HUD
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standards below 90 percent of the FMR. Voucher program funding and
funding formula allocations are outside the scope of this notice.
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\5\ By statute, PHAs have the discretion to set their payment
standards at any level within the interval of 90 percent to 110
percent of the FMR.
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The Housing Authority of Island County, Washington, noted that its
FMR should be much higher than what is proposed for FY2007 and provided
a report on ``asking rents'' in support of its comments. The report
indicated that Island County rents were closer to Seattle rents than
shown in the FY2007 proposed FMRs. In September 2005, the Department of
Defense (DOD) moved a naval air squadron to Island County. HUD believed
that the additional DOD personnel substantially changed the rental
market on Island County from its FMR basis, the 2000 decennial Census,
so a survey was conducted to determine the appropriate FMR level.
Several comments were filed concerning the drop in the four-bedroom
FMR for the New York City metropolitan area. It was noted that this
decrease in the FMR would mostly affect the immigrant community. The
New York City FMR area became a sub-area in FY2007, without Monmouth
and Ocean counties in New Jersey, because its median income was well
below the median income of the CBSA, see: https://www.huduser.org/
datasets/fmr/fmrs/index.asp?data=fmr07. In FY2006, New York City used
the two-bedroom FMR and the bedroom ratios of the CBSA instead of its
sub-area amount because the 2000 sub-area FMR was within 5 percent of
the CBSA 2000 FMR. Now that it has been established as a sub-area, New
York City must use the sub-area rents to determine the 2000 two-bedroom
FMR and bedroom intervals. The ratio between the two-bedroom FMR and
the four-bedroom FMR is less for the sub-area than for the CBSA.
According to the comments, this decrease due to a change in the area
definition creates an undue hardship for larger family tenants in this
area. While no data was filed with the comments, the 2005 New York City
Vacancy Survey, conducted annually by the Bureau of the Census, was
reviewed to determine if an adjustment could be made to the four-
bedroom FMR. Analysis of the data revealed a four-bedroom recent mover,
standard quality, 40th percentile rent greater than HUD's published
FY2005 four-bedroom FMR. HUD then trended this value forward from 2005
to 2007 using HUD's FY2006 and FY2007 update factors, and the result
has been incorporated in these final FY2007 FMRs.
A law firm, representing the plaintiff in a discrimination
settlement in Dallas, requested reinstatement of the FY2005 FMRs, and
charged that all reductions since that time to the Dallas FMRs were
discriminatory. The FMR decrease, since FY2005, is the result of an RDD
survey conducted in early 2005. As discussed earlier, another survey
conducted this summer confirmed the results of the 2005 survey,
resulting in no change in the FMR. Dallas regains its 50th percentile
FMR in FY2007, effective October 1, 2006, which it lost effective March
1, 2006. Because the FY2007 FMR for Dallas represents the best data
that are available, reverting to the FY2005 FMR is not appropriate.
Two areas that specifically requested changes in their FMR areas
are Santa Barbara County, California, and Dartmouth Town,
Massachusetts. Santa Barbara would like to be split into North and
South County housing markets with rents determined by apartment data.
These data are not statistically valid and cannot be used to establish
FMRs. The difference in the Santa Barbara County rents can be met by
applying exception payment standards in the high-rent jurisdictions.
Dartmouth is and has always been part of the New Bedford metropolitan
area. The similarity in rents between Dartmouth and Providence is not
justification for including it in the Providence metropolitan area.
Again, exception payment standards can be requested to help Section 8
voucher holders find units in this area.
Several PHAs noted that their FMRs were too low. The Housing
Authority of Lake Charles, Louisiana, stated that it is struggling to
provide decent, safe, sanitary, and affordable housing under its
Section 8 program. Landlords are facing increased repair and insurance
costs as a result of the damage inflicted by Hurricane Rita. Lake
Charles, like other areas designated as federal disaster areas, may
apply for regulatory suspension waivers and set its payment standards
at 120 percent of the FMR. The San Francisco Housing Authority stated
that its rental market is tightening and was hopeful that the HUD
survey would verify this result. The survey did not find higher rents;
however, HUD will continue to follow this volatile rental market. The
City of Casper, Wyoming, said it was conducting its own survey, but did
not submit the results in time for this final notice. The Michigan
State Housing Development Authority noted that the change in the
geographic area definitions for Lenawee and Muskegon counties in
Michigan has significantly reduced their FMRs and that these reductions
have significantly affected the ability of tenants to use their
vouchers. The PHA intends to conduct surveys of these areas, but the
results will not be completed in time for this publication.
Mora Housing Management, Inc., requested that the revisions made to
FY2006 FMRs in Puerto Rico, effective June 2, 2006, be made retroactive
to provide relief for Mod Rehab properties constrained by the lower
FMRs in metropolitan areas that were in place from October 1, 2005, to
June 1, 2006, since the lowest rent must be used in all cases. HUD
cannot make the Puerto Rico FMR revisions retroactive in this notice.
Any procedural changes that can be made for the affected Puerto Rico
Mod Rehab units are outside the scope of this notice.
VI. Manufactured Home Space Surveys
In general, the FMR used to establish payment standard amounts for
the rental of manufactured home spaces in the Housing Choice Voucher
program is 40 percent of the FMR for a two-bedroom unit. HUD modified
manufactured home space FMRs for Santa Rosa-Petaluma, California
(Sonoma County) based on survey data showing the 40th percentile
manufactured home space rent (including the cost of utilities) for the
entire FMR area. The new manufactured home space exception FMR is shown
in Schedule D.
All approved exceptions to these rents that were in effect in
FY2006 were updated to the midpoint of FY2007 using the same data used
to estimate the Housing Choice Voucher program FMRs. If the result of
this computation was higher than 40 percent of the rebenchmarked two-
bedroom rent, the exception remains and is listed in Schedule D. The
FMR area definitions used for the rental of manufactured home spaces
are the same as the area definitions used for the other FMRs.
VII. HUD Rental Housing Survey Guides
HUD recommends the use of professionally conducted RDD telephone
surveys to test the accuracy of FMRs for areas where there is a
sufficient number of Section 8 units to justify the survey cost of
$40,000 to $50,000. Areas with 1,000 or more program units usually meet
this criterion, and areas with fewer units may meet it if local rents
are thought to be significantly different than the FMRs proposed by
HUD. In addition, HUD has developed a simplified version of the RDD
survey methodology for smaller, nonmetropolitan PHAs. This methodology
is designed to be simple enough to be done by the PHA itself, rather
than by professional survey organizations.
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PHAs in nonmetropolitan areas may, in certain circumstances,
conduct surveys of groups of counties; all county-group surveys have to
be approved in advance by HUD. PHAs are cautioned that the resulting
FMRs will not be identical for the counties surveyed; each individual
FMR area will have a separate FMR based on its relationship to the
combined rent of the group of FMR areas. In these cases, HUD recommends
following the Census county-group definitions as described in the 2000
Census Base Rent section of the FY2007 Documentation System, which can
be found at https://www.huduser.org/fmr/fmrs/.
PHAs that plan to use the RDD survey technique may obtain a copy of
the appropriate survey guide by calling HUD USER at (800) 245-2691.
Larger PHAs should request ``Random Digit Dialing Surveys; A Guide to
Assist Larger Housing Agencies in Preparing Fair Market Rent
Comments.'' Smaller PHAs should obtain ``Rental Housing Surveys; A
Guide to Assist Smaller Housing Agencies in Preparing Fair Market Rent
Comments.'' These guides are also available at https://www.huduser.org/
datasets/fmr.html.
HUD prefers, but does not mandate, the use of RDD telephone
surveys, or the more traditional method described in the small PHA
survey guide. Other survey methodologies are acceptable if they provide
statistically reliable, unbiased estimates of the 40th percentile gross
rent. Survey samples should preferably be randomly drawn from a
complete list of rental units for the FMR area. If this is not
feasible, the selected sample must be drawn to be statistically
representative of the entire rental housing stock of the FMR area. In
particular, surveys must include units of all rent levels and be
representative by structure type (including single-family, duplex, and
other small rental properties), age of housing unit, and geographic
location. The decennial Census should be used as a starting point and
means of verification used for determining whether the sample is
representative of the FMR area's rental housing stock. All survey
results must be fully documented.
A PHA or contractor that cannot obtain the recommended number of
sample responses after reasonable efforts should consult with HUD
before abandoning its survey; in such situations, HUD may find it
appropriate to relax normal sample size requirements.
Accordingly, the FMR Schedules, which will not be codified in 24
CFR part 888, are amended as follows:
Dated: September 21, 2006.
Darlene F. Williams,
Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research.
Fair Market Rents for the Housing Choice Voucher Program
Schedules B and D--General Explanatory Notes
1. Geographic Coverage
a. Metropolitan Areas--FMRs are market-wide rent estimates that are
intended to provide housing opportunities throughout the geographic
area in which rental-housing units are in direct competition. The
FY2007 FMRs reflect a change in metropolitan area definition where HUD
is using CBSAs which are made up of one or more counties, as defined by
OMB, with some modifications. HUD is generally assigning separate FMRs
to the component counties of CBSA micropolitan areas.
b. Modifications to OMB Definitions--Following OMB guidance, the
estimation procedure for the FY2007 FMRs incorporates the 2003 OMB
definitions of metropolitan areas based on the new CBSA standards, as
implemented with 2000 Census data, but makes adjustments to the
definitions to separate subparts of these areas where FMRs or median
family incomes would otherwise change significantly if the new area
definitions were used without modification. In CBSAs where sub-areas
are established, it is HUD's view that the geographic extent of the
housing markets are not yet the same as the geographic extent of the
CBSAs, but may become so as the social and economic integration of the
CBSA component areas increases. Modifications to metropolitan CBSA
definitions are made according to a formula as described below:
Metropolitan area CBSAs (referred to as metropolitan statistical
areas or MSAs) may be modified to allow for sub-area FMRs within MSAs
based on the boundaries of old FMR areas (OFAs) within the boundaries
of new MSAs. (OFAs are the FMR areas defined for the FY2005 FMRs.
Collectively, they include old-definition MSAs/PMSAs, metropolitan
counties deleted from old-definition MSAs/PMSAs by HUD for FMR
purposes, and counties and county parts outside of old-definition MSAs/
PMSAs referred to as nonmetropolitan counties.) Sub-areas of MSAs are
assigned their own FMRs when the sub-area 2000 Census Base Rent differs
by at least 5 percent from (i.e., is at most 95 percent or at least 105
percent of) the MSA 2000 Census Base Rent. Additionally, sub-areas of
MSAs are assigned their own FMR when the sub-area 2000 median family
income differs by at least 5 percent. MSA sub-areas, and the remaining
portions of MSAs after sub-areas have been determined, are referred to
as HUD metro FMR areas (HMFAs), to distinguish these areas from OMB's
official definition of MSAs.
The specific counties and New England towns and cities within each
state in MSAs and HMFAs are listed in the FMR tables.
2. Bedroom Size Adjustments
Schedule B shows the FMRs for zero-bedroom through four-bedroom
units. The FMRs for unit sizes larger than four bedrooms are calculated
by adding 15 percent to the four-bedroom FMR for each extra bedroom.
For example, the FMR for a five-bedroom unit is 1.15 times the four-
bedroom FMR, and the FMR for a six-bedroom unit is 1.30 times the four-
bedroom FMR. FMRs for single-room-occupancy (SRO) units are 0.75 times
the zero-bedroom FMR.
3. Arrangement of FMR Areas and Identification of Constituent Parts
a. The FMR areas in Schedule B are listed alphabetically, first by
metropolitan FMR area, then by nonmetropolitan county for each state.
The exception FMRs for manufactured home spaces are listed
alphabetically by state in Schedule D.
b. The constituent counties (and New England towns and cities)
included in each metropolitan FMR area are listed immediately following
the listings of the FMR dollar amounts. A metropolitan FMR area that
includes counties and towns from more than one state is listed under
each applicable state.
c. Two nonmetropolitan counties are listed alphabetically on each
line of the nonmetropolitan county listings.
d. The New England towns and cities included in a nonmetropolitan
part of a county are listed immediately following the county name.
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[FR Doc. 06-8273 Filed 9-26-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-C