Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program-Demonstration Project of Small Area Fair Market Rents in Certain Metropolitan Areas for Fiscal Year 2011, 27808-27812 [2010-11731]
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27808
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 18, 2010 / Notices
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Authority: Section 3507 of the Paperwork
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amended.
Dated: May 10, 2010.
Leroy McKinney, Jr.,
Departmental Reports Management Officer,
Office of the Chief Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 2010–11737 Filed 5–17–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–5374–N–11]
Buy American Exceptions Under the
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009
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AGENCY: Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: In accordance with the
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009 (Pub. L. 111–05, approved
February 17, 2009) (Recovery Act), and
implementing guidance of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), this
notice advises that certain exceptions to
the Buy American requirement of the
Recovery Act have been determined
applicable for work using Capital Fund
Recovery Formula and Competition
(CFRFC) grant funds. Specifically, an
exception was granted to the Housing
Authority of Owensboro for the
purchase and installation of tank-less
water heaters at Adams Village.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dominique G. Blom, Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Public Housing
Investments, Office of Public Housing
Investments, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 7th Street,
SW., Room 4130, Washington, DC,
20410–4000, telephone number 202–
402–8500 (this is not a toll-free
number). Persons with hearing- or
speech-impairments may access this
number through TTY by calling the tollfree Federal Information Relay Service
at 800–877–8339.
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Section
1605(a) of the Recovery Act provides
that none of the funds appropriated or
made available by the Recovery Act may
be used for a project for the
construction, alteration, maintenance, or
repair of a public building or public
work unless all of the iron, steel, and
manufactured goods used in the project
are produced in the United States.
Section 1605(b) provides that the Buy
American requirement shall not apply
in any case or category in which the
head of a Federal department or agency
finds that: (1) Applying the Buy
American requirement would be
inconsistent with the public interest; (2)
iron, steel, and the relevant
manufactured goods are not produced in
the U.S. in sufficient and reasonably
available quantities or of satisfactory
quality, or (3) inclusion of iron, steel,
and manufactured goods will increase
the cost of the overall project by more
than 25 percent. Section 1605(c)
provides that if the head of a Federal
department or agency makes a
determination pursuant to section
1605(b), the head of the department or
agency shall publish a detailed written
justification in the Federal Register.
In accordance with section 1605(c) of
the Recovery Act and OMB’s
implementing guidance published on
April 23, 2009 (74 FR 18449), this notice
advises the public that, on April 23,
2010, upon request of the Housing
Authority of Owensboro, HUD granted
an exception to the applicability of the
Buy American requirements with
respect to work, using CFRFC grant
funds, based on the fact that the relevant
manufactured goods (tank-less water
heaters) are not produced in the U.S. in
sufficient and reasonably available
quantities or of satisfactory quality.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Dated: May 10, 2010.
Deborah Hernandez,
General Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public
and Indian Housing.
[FR Doc. 2010–11732 Filed 5–17–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–5413–N–01]
Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher
Program—Demonstration Project of
Small Area Fair Market Rents in
Certain Metropolitan Areas for Fiscal
Year 2011
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Policy Development and
Research, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of Demonstration Project
of Small Area Fair Market Rents (FMRs)
in Selected Metropolitan Areas for
Fiscal Year (FY) 2011.
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 (HCV)
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
announces a demonstration project that
will set small area FMRs for the HCV
program within certain metropolitan
areas, and requests comments on several
topics related to small area FMRs,
including how these small areas should
be defined. Small area FMRs calculated
for the Demonstration projects will be
used only in the Section 8 HCV program
and will not affect rents in any other
HUD or other federal program. HUD
expects that small area FMRs will
provide Section 8 tenants with greater
ability to move into opportunity areas
where jobs, transportation, and
educational opportunities exist, and
prevent undue subsidy in lower-rent
areas.
DATES: Comments Due Date: July 19,
2010.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
HUD’s small area FMR demonstration,
as announced in this notice, to the
Office of General Counsel, Rules Docket
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 18, 2010 / Notices
Clerk, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street,
SW., Room 10276, Washington, DC
20410–0001. Communications should
refer to the above docket number and
title and should contain the information
specified in the ‘‘Request for Comments’’
of this notice.
Submission of Hard Copy Comments.
To ensure that the information is fully
considered by all of the reviewers, each
commenter submitting hard copy
comments, by mail or hand delivery,
should submit comments or requests to
the address above, addressed to the
attention of the Rules Docket Clerk. Due
to security measures at all Federal
agencies, submission of comments or
requests by mail often result in delayed
delivery. To ensure timely receipt of
comments, HUD recommends that any
comments submitted by mail be
submitted at least 2 weeks in advance of
the public comment deadline.
Electronic Submission of Comments.
Interested persons may submit
comments electronically through the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly
encourages commenters to submit
comments electronically. Electronic
submission of comments allows the
commenter maximum time to prepare
and submit a comment, ensures timely
receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to
make them immediately available to the
public. Comments submitted
electronically through the https://
www.regulations.gov Web site can be
viewed by interested members of the
public. Commenters should follow
instructions provided on that site to
submit comments electronically.
No Facsimile Comments. Facsimile
(FAX) comments are not acceptable.
Public Inspection of Comments. All
comments submitted to HUD regarding
this notice will be available, without
charge, for public inspection and
copying between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
weekdays at the above address. Due to
security measures at the HUD
Headquarters building, an advance
appointment to review the documents
must be scheduled by calling the
Regulations Division at 202–708–3055
(this is not a toll-free number). Copies
of all documents submitted are available
for inspection and downloading at
https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
technical information on the
methodology used to develop small area
FMRs, please contact Peter B. Kahn or
Marie L. Lihn, Economic and Market
Analysis Division, Office of Economic
Affairs, Office of Policy Development
and Research, telephone number 202–
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708–0590 (this is not a toll-free
number). Persons with hearing or
speech impairments may access this
number through TTY by calling the tollfree 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 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 HCV 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 (nonluxury) nature
with suitable amenities. In addition, all
rents subsidized under the HCV
program must meet reasonable rent
standards.
Currently FMRs are calculated for all
nonmetropolitan counties and
metropolitan areas. The same FMR is
available throughout a nonmetropolitan
county or a metropolitan area, which is
generally comprised of several
metropolitan counties. FMRs in a
metropolitan area represent the 40thpercentile (or in special circumstances
the 50th-percentile) gross rent of the
entire HUD-defined metropolitan area.
Public housing agencies (PHAs) may set
a payment standard within 90 percent to
110 percent of the FMR. PHAs may
determine that payment standards that
are higher than 110 percent, or lower
than 90 percent, are needed to make the
voucher program work in subareas of
their market; in this instance, a PHA
would request HUD approval for
payment standards below 90 percent or
exception payment standards above 110
percent. These requests cannot
represent more than 50 percent of the
population of the area (see 24 CFR
982.503).
In the past, HUD has not had the
means to maintain and update a small
area FMR system. In late 2010, the
Census Bureau will make publicly
available the data it collected over the
first 5 years of the American
Community Survey (ACS) in 5-year
aggregations for the areas with
population of less than 20,000. With
these data, HUD will be able to update
FMR estimates in smaller geographic
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areas than is currently possible using
ACS data at one-year or 3-year
aggregations. HUD intends to use this
data to establish a program of smaller
area FMRs for metropolitan areas. To
determine how best to implement a
comprehensive small area FMR
program, HUD will operate small area
FMR demonstration projects for the
HCV program using 2000 Census data to
determine FMRs for smaller areas. HUD
expects that small area FMRs will
provide Section 8 tenants with greater
ability to move into opportunity areas,
where jobs, transportation and
educational opportunities exist, and
prevent undue subsidy in lower-rent
areas. Small area FMRs will alter some
administrative responsibilities of PHAs
that administer housing voucher
programs, but it is unclear what the net
effect will be. For example, small area
FMRs are likely to reduce the time
needed to determine whether rents are
reasonable. (Rent reasonableness tests
reflect the conditions and characteristics
of units relative to others in the area, as
well as market rents in the immediate
area of the units). While the requirement
to determine rent reasonableness based
on the condition and characteristics of
individual units will remain, less
comparative data may be needed, since
local area baseline rents will largely be
embedded in the small area FMR. Small
area FMRs will also increase the number
of payment standards used in a
metropolitan area. The small area FMR
demonstration projects will provide
HUD with insight into the
administration of small area FMRs
before implementing such a program
nationwide.
The first demonstration projects will
begin October 1, 2010 (the beginning of
FY2011), with others being added prior
to the beginning of Calendar Year 2011.
Small area FMRs would be rolled out to
all metropolitan areas at a later date,
provided that the small area FMR
demonstration project shows that
voucher program operation using small
area FMRs is feasible.
For illustrative purposes, the
following Web site provides
hypothetical Small Area FMRs that are
based on the current FY2010 FMRs:
https://www.huduser.org/portal/
datasets/fmr.html. Comments may be
provided on these FMRs.
Electronic Data Availability: This
Federal Register notice is available
electronically from the HUD Web site at
https://www.hudclips.org. Federal
Register notices also are available
electronically from the U.S. Government
Printing Office Web site, https://www.
gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
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II. Methodology for Small Area FMRs
Currently, FMRs are determined
based on Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) Core Based Statistical
Areas (CBSAs), with some modifications
based on pre-FY2006 FMR area
definitions for metropolitan areas. For
nonmetropolitan areas, the basic unit of
geography is at the county level.1 The
standards for definition of CBSAs are
based on a review of journey-to-work
data, or commuting patterns, as the
basis for grouping counties together to
form CBSAs.2
Use of metropolitan area-wide FMRs
allows HUD’s Section 8 Voucher tenants
access to different parts of a
metropolitan area; however, because
FMRs generally are set at the 40th
percentile of the metropolitan rent
distribution, certain neighborhoods may
not have many units available in the
FMR range. That is why HUD has an
exception payment standard policy that
allows payments standards to be set
much higher than the FMR, but the
policy is dependent on a showing of
program need in terms of whether or not
suitable housing is available. To make a
broader range of neighborhoods
accessible to its clients, HUD is
researching ways to set FMRs at a more
localized level. Currently, HUD is
focusing on a methodology that would
use small areas, defined by U.S. Postal
Service ZIP codes, as the basis for FMRs
in metropolitan areas. For
nonmetropolitan areas, counties would
continue to be used as the basis for
FMRs.
The most recent data regarding rents,
incomes, and other socio-economic
information collected by the U.S.
Census Bureau comes from the ACS. At
this time, only 1-year and 3-year ACS
tables are available. ACS 5-year data are
expected to have sufficient data at the
small area level available to permit the
calculation of statistically reliable FMRs
for many ZIP codes in metropolitan
areas. However, the first publication of
5-year ACS data does not begin until
after October 1, 2010, so for the FY2011
small area FMR demonstration projects,
HUD will have to use a different data
source; HUD will use data from the 2000
Decennial Census to estimate the rent
relationship (rental rate ratio) between
the OMB-defined CBSA and each ZIP
1 In
some sparsely populated counties where
statistically reliable information was not available
from the 2000 Decennial Census, county groups are
used instead.
2 OMB published a Federal Register notice (65 FR
82228), available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/
omb/fedreg/metroareas122700.pdf, that outlined its
decisions for how to create CBSAs and responses
to public comments concerning the formation of
CBSAs.
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code within the given metropolitan
area.3 The individual ZIP code-level 2bedroom FMR for each part of the FMR
area is the product of the rental rate
ratio and the 2-bedroom FMR for that
area’s CBSA as calculated using
methods employed for past
metropolitan area FMR estimates.
Before a rent relationship can be
determined, HUD first eliminates any
records where there were no units with
occupants paying cash rent. HUD then
aggregates these rental distribution data
for each CBSA and calculates a median
(50th-percentile) gross rent across all
bedroom sizes. These CBSA median
gross rents serve as the denominator in
the rent relationship calculation. HUD
then aggregates the rental distributions
for each ZIP code within a given CBSA
(ZIP codes can cross county boundaries;
therefore, there may be multiple records
for each ZIP code within a single CBSA,
and HUD aggregates these multiple
records). A median gross rent is
calculated for each ZIP code (or ZIP
code part for ZIP codes spanning CBSA
boundaries). HUD restricts the use of
ZIP code level median gross rents to
those areas that have at least 1,000 cash
rental unit observations. HUD
anticipates that the set of ZIP codes with
at least 1,000 cash renter-occupied units
in the 2000 Decennial Census will be
representative of the set of ZIP codes
with statistically valid 5-year ACS data
that can be used to set small area FMRs.
The rent relationship is calculated in
the following manner for those ZIP
codes within the metropolitan area that
have 1,000 or more cash rental units:
Rental Rate Ratio = Median Gross Rent
for ZIP Code Area/Median Gross
Rent for CBSA
The rent relationship is capped at 150
percent for areas that would otherwise
be greater. If the ZIP code within the
CBSA does not have 1,000 cash rental
units, then the rent relationship is
calculated as:
Rental Rate Ratio = Median Gross Rent
STCO/Median Gross Rent of the
CBSA
where STCO is the county within the state
containing the ZIP code.4 For metropolitan
3 Note that some ZIP codes span metropolitan
area boundaries so that a ZIP code may contain
parts of a metropolitan area and one (or more)
nonmetropolitan county (counties), or part of
another metropolitan CBSA. As in current FMR
policy, nonmetropolitan counties would not be
broken along ZIP code or any other lines under the
small area FMR policy. ZIP codes that span more
than one metropolitan CBSA would have different
FMRs in each CBSA as they do under current
metropolitan FMR policy.
4 For ZIP codes with fewer than 1000 cash rental
units that cross county boundaries, the median
gross rent in the numerator is calculated as the
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areas, FMRs will be calculated and published
for each small area. ZIP codes were chosen
because they localize rental rates and a unit’s
ZIP code is easily identified both by PHAs
and by tenants.
As previously stated, the individual
ZIP code level 2-bedroom FMR for each
part of the FMR area is the product of
the rental rate ratio and the 2-bedroom
FMR for that area’s CBSA, as calculated
using methods employed for past
metropolitan area FMR estimates. To set
the floor for small area FMRs in a
metropolitan area, this product is then
compared to the state nonmetropolitan
minimum 2-bedroom rent for the state
the area is located in and, if the ZIP
code rent determined using the rental
rate ratio is less than the minimum, the
ZIP code rent is set at the
nonmetropolitan minimum for that
state. The relationship between 2bedroom units and other bedroom sizes
has been estimated from Decennial
Census data and then held constant
until superseded by more recent data.
Small area FMRs for other bedroom
sizes will be calculated based on the
bedroom-size relationships estimated
for the large area of geography. HUD
anticipates updating the bedroom rental
rate ratios with the release of 5-year
ACS data (covering 2005 though 2009),
and then once every 5 years when the
5-year ACS sample is completely
replaced.5 The final calculated rents are
then rounded to the nearest $25.
Small area FMRs for all metropolitan
areas are available for viewing and
download on the Internet at https://www.
huduser.org/portal/datasets/fmr.html.
These will be updated using FY2011
FMRs and posted on the Web site when
the proposed FY2011 FMR notice is
published. Small area FMRs calculated
for the demonstration projects will be
used only in the Section 8 HCV program
and will not affect rents in any other
HUD or other federal program. PHAs in
small area FMR demonstration sites will
be empowered to renew pre-existing
HAP contracts based on payment
standards outside the new basic range
(90 to 110 percent of the small area
FMR) for tenants who wish to remain in
their existing units and whose existing
payment standards would otherwise fall
outside the new basic range due to the
rental unit weighted average of the median gross
rents for each county containing the ZIP code.
5 The current decennial data is not robust enough
to lead HUD to believe that updating bedroom ratios
on a more frequent basis would provide many
changes. The current bedroom ratios are
constrained by ranges that reflect the average
relationship of a given bedroom size to the 2bedroom rent, and, for the 3-bedroom and 4bedroom rents, bonuses have been added to assist
with the operation of the Section 8 program.
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implementation of the small area FMR
demonstration project.
III. Requirements for Participation in
the Small Area FMR Demonstration
Project
The small area FMR demonstration
project is intended to cover a limited set
of FMR areas so that HUD can provide
adequate technical assistance to the
participating PHAs and monitor the
effects and effectiveness of the policy.
At the same time, HUD seeks to have all
PHAs in small area FMR demonstration
project areas firmly committed to
implementing the program to achieve its
stated goals. HUD will apply three
principles for selecting participating
FMR areas if participation needs to be
limited because too many areas
volunteer: (1) The participant area is
large enough that small area FMRs will
result in substantial variation in rents,
(2) the greatest possible proportion of
voucher tenants are served by PHAs that
are willing participants in the
demonstration, and (3) the PHAs in the
area have demonstrated previous
commitment, within the flexibilities
available in the voucher program, to set
voucher payment standards at varying
and appropriate levels.
Larger FMR areas provide the greatest
potential benefit from the small area
FMR proposal in that they are likelier to
have a wider array of market rents that
can be captured by the proposed
methodology. HUD may therefore limit
participation in the small area FMR
demonstration project to FMR areas
meeting the size (100 or more census
tracts) and affordable housing
concentration (in less than 70 percent of
their census tracts containing 10 or
more rental units, at least 30 percent of
rental units rent for the 40th-percentile
two-bedroom FMR or less) criteria for
eligibility for the 50th-percentile FMR at
24 CFR 888.113.
The small area FMR demonstration
project will not be effective unless the
PHAs that operate voucher programs
covering the vast majority of voucher
tenants in a metropolitan area agree to
participate and abide by the small area
rents. Therefore, HUD is requiring that
PHAs requesting participation in the
small area FMR demonstration project
must account for at least 80 percent of
the voucher tenants in that metropolitan
area. If the PHAs represent a smaller
percentage of the voucher tenant
population, they will not be able to
participate. HUD will consider as
evidence a joint letter requesting
participation in the small area FMR
demonstration project, signed by the
Executive Director and/or Board Chair
of each PHA in the metropolitan area
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jointly making the request. HUD will
verify, using data for Calendar Year
2009, that the signatories represent at
least 80 percent of the voucher tenants
residing in each nominated
metropolitan area. HUD will notify the
PHAs if they are found to represent
fewer than 80 percent of voucher
tenants in the metropolitan area, so that
they may enlist participation by
additional PHAs in the metropolitan
area.
Applicants who provide evidence that
they are using multiple payment
standards or that use exception payment
standards may be given priority for
participating in the demonstration
project. Through their current operating
procedures, these applicants are already
showing the ability and willingness to
administer the project using multiple
rent structures and are likely able to
provide HUD with valuable feedback on
the small area FMRs HUD calculates
and provides.
IV. Request for Public Comment on
Small Area FMRs and Demonstration
Eligibility Criteria
Before HUD institutes the small area
FMR demonstration project, HUD would
like to solicit comments on the
implementation of small area FMRs.
The following is a list of issues that
maybe addressed in comments:
• Should HUD institute caps and
floors on small area FMRs? As
proposed, the current cap is 150 percent
of the metropolitan FMR, and the
current floor is the state
nonmetropolitan minimum FMR. Are
these appropriate, or should they be
changed or eliminated? What is an
appropriate amount or percentage for
caps and floors?
• The use of small area FMRs in
metropolitan areas will result in no
areas being big enough to qualify for
50th-percentile FMRs. (The goal of the
50th-percentile FMR policy should be
more efficiently addressed through the
use of small area FMRs.) Should HUD
revise the 50th-percentile FMR policy or
eliminate it, and why?
• The exception payment standard
policy, which is based on a relationship
like that used to set the small area
FMRs, will generally be redundant and
could therefore be eliminated if the
small area FMR policy is adopted. Are
there any instances where an exception
payment standard policy might still be
useful? Such instances could include,
for example, areas where rents have
changed so rapidly due to extraordinary
circumstances (such as natural disasters,
or rapid economic change) that existing
statistical methods cannot determine
accurate rents, but PHAs can show that
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27811
their voucher program operations have
been impacted. If the exception
payment standard policy remains in
effect, should the exceptions be
continued for nonmetropolitan counties
only, or for larger areas within a
metropolitan area?
• Do small area FMRs increase the
administrative burden of PHAs, and if
so, how can this be reduced?
• Is the proposed rounding protocol
of $25 appropriate, or should small area
FMRs be rounded to a larger or smaller
amount?
• Should state minimums be rounded
both up and down? Should they be
rounded before comparison with a ZIP
code rent?
In addition, comments may discuss
the proposed HUD methodology for the
small area FMRs that would be used for
the demonstration project, including the
use of 2000 Census data for the
demonstration projects and the
anomalies created by that data; using 5year ACS data and implementing small
area FMRs in metropolitan areas only;
addressing the need, if it exists, for
small area FMRs in nonmetropolitan
counties; and addressing the general
need for and implementation of a small
area FMR demonstration project.
HUD also seeks comments on the
eligibility criteria for the small area
FMR demonstration project. Should the
demonstration be open to smaller
metropolitan areas than those meeting
the size criterion for 50th-percentile
FMR eligibility? Should, or should not,
the affordable housing concentration
criterion be a consideration in selecting
participating areas? Is the 80 percent-ofvoucher-tenants standard appropriate?
Is there a better way for PHAs to
demonstrate commitment to the
demonstration project than a joint letter
to HUD? Is demonstrated past use of
multiple payment standards an
appropriate criterion for participation?
V. Implementation of the Small Area
FMR Demonstration Program
The first small area FMR
demonstration projects for the HCV
program are expected to be put in place
on October 1, 2010, after a review of all
comments, when FY2011 FMRs become
effective. Other demonstration areas
may be added between this date and the
beginning of Calendar Year 2011. For
illustrative purposes, hypothetical small
area FMRs that are based on the current
FY2010 FMRs are available for review
on the HUD USER Web site at https://
www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/fmr.
html. The Federal Register notice on
proposed FY2011 FMRs will include an
update of these potential small area
FMRs and the selection criteria for areas
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 95 / Tuesday, May 18, 2010 / Notices
interested in being a part of the
demonstration project. The
demonstration project will operate for
approximately one year before a
complete national implementation of
small area FMRs will be proposed. The
timing of full implementation will be
determined based on the outcomes of
the demonstrations.
Dated: May 12, 2010.
Raphael W. Bostic,
Assistant Secretary for Policy Development
and Research.
[FR Doc. 2010–11731 Filed 5–17–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
Final Environmental Impact Statement
for the General Management Plan;
Monocacy National Battlefield
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY: National Park Service,
Department of the Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Availability of the
Final Environmental Impact Statement
for the General Management Plan for
Monocacy National Battlefield.
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42
U.S.C. 4332(2)(C), the National Park
Service (NPS) announces the
availability of a Final Environmental
Impact Statement for the General
Management Plan for Monocacy
National Battlefield. The plan will
provide guidance to park management
for administration, development, and
interpretation of park resources over the
next 20 years. Impact topics addressed
were cultural resources (cultural
landscapes and historic structures);
visitor use and interpretation,
socioeconomic environment;
transportation, access and circulation;
and national battlefield operations.
The document describes a No Action
Alternative (continuation of existing
management) and three Action
Alternatives, one of which was
identified as the selected alternative.
Alternative 2 would move the
administrative and maintenance staff
into local leased space. An alternative
transportation system would be
implemented. New trails would be
constructed to outlying features of the
battlefield. Safety improvements would
be implemented at the New Jersey
Monument and a commemorative area
developed at the Pennsylvania and
Vermont Memorials. A deck crossing
Interstate 270 (I–270) would be
constructed.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:22 May 17, 2010
Jkt 220001
Alternative 3 would move NPS
administration facilities into the
Thomas House and expand the existing
maintenance facility. There would be no
alternative transportation system for
visitors. New trails would be
constructed to outlying features of the
battlefield and safety improvements
would be implemented at the New
Jersey Monument. A commemorative
area would be developed at the
Pennsylvania and Vermont Memorials
but no new monuments would be
allowed.
Alternative 4, the selected preferred
alternative, would move NPS
administrative facilities into the Thomas
House and an expanded maintenance
facility would be developed at the
existing site. Visitors would transit the
battlefield in their automobiles. All
historic structures would be preserved
with exhibits in the Worthington House
and Thomas outbuilding. New trails
would be constructed to outlying
features of the battlefield and
commemorative memorial locations
would be upgraded. A pedestrian-only
deck would be constructed over I–270
between the Worthington Farm and
Thomas Farm.
The Draft Environmental Impact
Statement for the General Management
Plan was made available for public
review from September 2008 to July 1,
2009. The official review period
following the Federal Register Notice of
Availability was from May 2 to July 1,
2009. Approximately 350 copies of the
plan were mailed to agencies,
organizations, and the national
battlefield mailing list. In addition, the
availability of the document and
information about public meetings were
announced in the local newspaper.
Following initial distribution of the
draft plan, three public meetings were
held in 2009—June 9 during the review
period, and two on September 24. The
NPS received 34 comments during the
review period. Because comments
received did not meet the criteria for
‘‘substantive comment,’’ a request was
granted by the Department of the
Interior Office of Environmental Policy
and Compliance to undertake this
abbreviated format Final Environmental
Impact Statement for the General
Management Plan.
DATES: The NPS will execute a Record
of Decision (ROD) no sooner than 30
days following publication by the
Environmental Protection Agency of the
Notice of Availability of the Final
Environmental Impact Statement for the
General Management Plan.
ADDRESSES: Information will be
available for public review online at
PO 00000
Frm 00112
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
https://parkplanning.nps.gov, or
available on C–D. Hard copies may be
obtained by contacting Superintendent
Susan Trail, Monocacy National
Battlefield, 4801 Urbana Pike, Frederick,
Maryland, or by telephone at (301) 694–
3147.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David Hayes, Regional Planner and
Transportation Liaison, National Capital
Region, National Park Service, 1100
Ohio Drive, SW., Washington, DC
20242, by telephone at (202) 619–7277,
or by e-mail at David_Hayes@nps.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The NPS
evaluated a No Action Alternative and
three Action Alternatives for
management, development, and
interpretation in the Final
Environmental Impact Statement for the
General Management Plan. All Action
Alternatives provide for the
preservation of all park cultural and
natural resources. However, the selected
preferred alternative (Alternative 4)
provides the best variety of visitor
experiences, the widest access to all
areas of Monocacy National Battlefield,
and the most appropriate use of historic
resources for interpretive and other park
operational purposes. Overall, it best
meets NPS purposes and goals for
Monocacy National Battlefield while
meeting National Environmental Policy
Act goals. The selected preferred
alternative will not result in the
impairment of park resources and will
allow the NPS to conserve park
resources while providing for their
enjoyment by visitors.
Dated: April 28, 2010.
Margaret O’Dell,
Regional Director, National Capital Region.
[FR Doc. 2010–11819 Filed 5–17–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–57–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
Final Environmental Impact Statement
for the General Management Plan;
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park
AGENCY: National Park Service,
Department of the Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability of the
Final Environmental Impact Statement
for the General Management Plan for
Harpers Ferry National Historical Park.
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42
U.S.C. 4332 (2)(C), the National Park
Service (NPS) announces the
availability of a Final Environmental
Impact Statement for the General
Management Plan for Harpers Ferry
E:\FR\FM\18MYN1.SGM
18MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 95 (Tuesday, May 18, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 27808-27812]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-11731]
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-5413-N-01]
Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program--Demonstration Project
of Small Area Fair Market Rents in Certain Metropolitan Areas for
Fiscal Year 2011
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and
Research, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of Demonstration Project of Small Area Fair Market Rents
(FMRs) in Selected Metropolitan Areas for Fiscal Year (FY) 2011.
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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 (HCV) 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 announces a demonstration project that will set small
area FMRs for the HCV program within certain metropolitan areas, and
requests comments on several topics related to small area FMRs,
including how these small areas should be defined. Small area FMRs
calculated for the Demonstration projects will be used only in the
Section 8 HCV program and will not affect rents in any other HUD or
other federal program. HUD expects that small area FMRs will provide
Section 8 tenants with greater ability to move into opportunity areas
where jobs, transportation, and educational opportunities exist, and
prevent undue subsidy in lower-rent areas.
DATES: Comments Due Date: July 19, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit comments regarding
HUD's small area FMR demonstration, as announced in this notice, to the
Office of General Counsel, Rules Docket
[[Page 27809]]
Clerk, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street,
SW., Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410-0001. Communications should refer
to the above docket number and title and should contain the information
specified in the ``Request for Comments'' of this notice.
Submission of Hard Copy Comments. To ensure that the information is
fully considered by all of the reviewers, each commenter submitting
hard copy comments, by mail or hand delivery, should submit comments or
requests to the address above, addressed to the attention of the Rules
Docket Clerk. Due to security measures at all Federal agencies,
submission of comments or requests by mail often result in delayed
delivery. To ensure timely receipt of comments, HUD recommends that any
comments submitted by mail be submitted at least 2 weeks in advance of
the public comment deadline.
Electronic Submission of Comments. Interested persons may submit
comments electronically through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
https://www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly encourages commenters to
submit comments electronically. Electronic submission of comments
allows the commenter maximum time to prepare and submit a comment,
ensures timely receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to make them immediately
available to the public. Comments submitted electronically through the
https://www.regulations.gov Web site can be viewed by interested members
of the public. Commenters should follow instructions provided on that
site to submit comments electronically.
No Facsimile Comments. Facsimile (FAX) comments are not acceptable.
Public Inspection of Comments. All comments submitted to HUD
regarding this notice will be available, without charge, for public
inspection and copying between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays at the above
address. Due to security measures at the HUD Headquarters building, an
advance appointment to review the documents must be scheduled by
calling the Regulations Division at 202-708-3055 (this is not a toll-
free number). Copies of all documents submitted are available for
inspection and downloading at https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical information on the
methodology used to develop small area FMRs, please contact Peter B.
Kahn or Marie L. Lihn, Economic and Market Analysis Division, Office of
Economic Affairs, Office of Policy Development and Research, telephone
number 202-708-0590 (this is not a toll-free number). 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 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 HCV 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 (nonluxury) nature with
suitable amenities. In addition, all rents subsidized under the HCV
program must meet reasonable rent standards.
Currently FMRs are calculated for all nonmetropolitan counties and
metropolitan areas. The same FMR is available throughout a
nonmetropolitan county or a metropolitan area, which is generally
comprised of several metropolitan counties. FMRs in a metropolitan area
represent the 40th-percentile (or in special circumstances the 50th-
percentile) gross rent of the entire HUD-defined metropolitan area.
Public housing agencies (PHAs) may set a payment standard within 90
percent to 110 percent of the FMR. PHAs may determine that payment
standards that are higher than 110 percent, or lower than 90 percent,
are needed to make the voucher program work in subareas of their
market; in this instance, a PHA would request HUD approval for payment
standards below 90 percent or exception payment standards above 110
percent. These requests cannot represent more than 50 percent of the
population of the area (see 24 CFR 982.503).
In the past, HUD has not had the means to maintain and update a
small area FMR system. In late 2010, the Census Bureau will make
publicly available the data it collected over the first 5 years of the
American Community Survey (ACS) in 5-year aggregations for the areas
with population of less than 20,000. With these data, HUD will be able
to update FMR estimates in smaller geographic areas than is currently
possible using ACS data at one-year or 3-year aggregations. HUD intends
to use this data to establish a program of smaller area FMRs for
metropolitan areas. To determine how best to implement a comprehensive
small area FMR program, HUD will operate small area FMR demonstration
projects for the HCV program using 2000 Census data to determine FMRs
for smaller areas. HUD expects that small area FMRs will provide
Section 8 tenants with greater ability to move into opportunity areas,
where jobs, transportation and educational opportunities exist, and
prevent undue subsidy in lower-rent areas. Small area FMRs will alter
some administrative responsibilities of PHAs that administer housing
voucher programs, but it is unclear what the net effect will be. For
example, small area FMRs are likely to reduce the time needed to
determine whether rents are reasonable. (Rent reasonableness tests
reflect the conditions and characteristics of units relative to others
in the area, as well as market rents in the immediate area of the
units). While the requirement to determine rent reasonableness based on
the condition and characteristics of individual units will remain, less
comparative data may be needed, since local area baseline rents will
largely be embedded in the small area FMR. Small area FMRs will also
increase the number of payment standards used in a metropolitan area.
The small area FMR demonstration projects will provide HUD with insight
into the administration of small area FMRs before implementing such a
program nationwide.
The first demonstration projects will begin October 1, 2010 (the
beginning of FY2011), with others being added prior to the beginning of
Calendar Year 2011. Small area FMRs would be rolled out to all
metropolitan areas at a later date, provided that the small area FMR
demonstration project shows that voucher program operation using small
area FMRs is feasible.
For illustrative purposes, the following Web site provides
hypothetical Small Area FMRs that are based on the current FY2010 FMRs:
https://www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/fmr.html. Comments may be
provided on these FMRs.
Electronic Data Availability: This Federal Register notice is
available electronically from the HUD Web site at https://www.hudclips.org. Federal Register notices also are available
electronically from the U.S. Government Printing Office Web site,
https://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
[[Page 27810]]
II. Methodology for Small Area FMRs
Currently, FMRs are determined based on Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs), with some
modifications based on pre-FY2006 FMR area definitions for metropolitan
areas. For nonmetropolitan areas, the basic unit of geography is at the
county level.\1\ The standards for definition of CBSAs are based on a
review of journey-to-work data, or commuting patterns, as the basis for
grouping counties together to form CBSAs.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In some sparsely populated counties where statistically
reliable information was not available from the 2000 Decennial
Census, county groups are used instead.
\2\ OMB published a Federal Register notice (65 FR 82228),
available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/fedreg/metroareas122700.pdf, that outlined its decisions for how to create
CBSAs and responses to public comments concerning the formation of
CBSAs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Use of metropolitan area-wide FMRs allows HUD's Section 8 Voucher
tenants access to different parts of a metropolitan area; however,
because FMRs generally are set at the 40th percentile of the
metropolitan rent distribution, certain neighborhoods may not have many
units available in the FMR range. That is why HUD has an exception
payment standard policy that allows payments standards to be set much
higher than the FMR, but the policy is dependent on a showing of
program need in terms of whether or not suitable housing is available.
To make a broader range of neighborhoods accessible to its clients, HUD
is researching ways to set FMRs at a more localized level. Currently,
HUD is focusing on a methodology that would use small areas, defined by
U.S. Postal Service ZIP codes, as the basis for FMRs in metropolitan
areas. For nonmetropolitan areas, counties would continue to be used as
the basis for FMRs.
The most recent data regarding rents, incomes, and other socio-
economic information collected by the U.S. Census Bureau comes from the
ACS. At this time, only 1-year and 3-year ACS tables are available. ACS
5-year data are expected to have sufficient data at the small area
level available to permit the calculation of statistically reliable
FMRs for many ZIP codes in metropolitan areas. However, the first
publication of 5-year ACS data does not begin until after October 1,
2010, so for the FY2011 small area FMR demonstration projects, HUD will
have to use a different data source; HUD will use data from the 2000
Decennial Census to estimate the rent relationship (rental rate ratio)
between the OMB-defined CBSA and each ZIP code within the given
metropolitan area.\3\ The individual ZIP code-level 2-bedroom FMR for
each part of the FMR area is the product of the rental rate ratio and
the 2-bedroom FMR for that area's CBSA as calculated using methods
employed for past metropolitan area FMR estimates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Note that some ZIP codes span metropolitan area boundaries
so that a ZIP code may contain parts of a metropolitan area and one
(or more) nonmetropolitan county (counties), or part of another
metropolitan CBSA. As in current FMR policy, nonmetropolitan
counties would not be broken along ZIP code or any other lines under
the small area FMR policy. ZIP codes that span more than one
metropolitan CBSA would have different FMRs in each CBSA as they do
under current metropolitan FMR policy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before a rent relationship can be determined, HUD first eliminates
any records where there were no units with occupants paying cash rent.
HUD then aggregates these rental distribution data for each CBSA and
calculates a median (50th-percentile) gross rent across all bedroom
sizes. These CBSA median gross rents serve as the denominator in the
rent relationship calculation. HUD then aggregates the rental
distributions for each ZIP code within a given CBSA (ZIP codes can
cross county boundaries; therefore, there may be multiple records for
each ZIP code within a single CBSA, and HUD aggregates these multiple
records). A median gross rent is calculated for each ZIP code (or ZIP
code part for ZIP codes spanning CBSA boundaries). HUD restricts the
use of ZIP code level median gross rents to those areas that have at
least 1,000 cash rental unit observations. HUD anticipates that the set
of ZIP codes with at least 1,000 cash renter-occupied units in the 2000
Decennial Census will be representative of the set of ZIP codes with
statistically valid 5-year ACS data that can be used to set small area
FMRs.
The rent relationship is calculated in the following manner for
those ZIP codes within the metropolitan area that have 1,000 or more
cash rental units:
Rental Rate Ratio = Median Gross Rent for ZIP Code Area/Median Gross
Rent for CBSA
The rent relationship is capped at 150 percent for areas that would
otherwise be greater. If the ZIP code within the CBSA does not have
1,000 cash rental units, then the rent relationship is calculated as:
Rental Rate Ratio = Median Gross Rent STCO/Median Gross Rent of the
CBSA
where STCO is the county within the state containing the ZIP
code.\4\ For metropolitan areas, FMRs will be calculated and
published for each small area. ZIP codes were chosen because they
localize rental rates and a unit's ZIP code is easily identified
both by PHAs and by tenants.
\4\ For ZIP codes with fewer than 1000 cash rental units that
cross county boundaries, the median gross rent in the numerator is
calculated as the rental unit weighted average of the median gross
rents for each county containing the ZIP code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As previously stated, the individual ZIP code level 2-bedroom FMR
for each part of the FMR area is the product of the rental rate ratio
and the 2-bedroom FMR for that area's CBSA, as calculated using methods
employed for past metropolitan area FMR estimates. To set the floor for
small area FMRs in a metropolitan area, this product is then compared
to the state nonmetropolitan minimum 2-bedroom rent for the state the
area is located in and, if the ZIP code rent determined using the
rental rate ratio is less than the minimum, the ZIP code rent is set at
the nonmetropolitan minimum for that state. The relationship between 2-
bedroom units and other bedroom sizes has been estimated from Decennial
Census data and then held constant until superseded by more recent
data. Small area FMRs for other bedroom sizes will be calculated based
on the bedroom-size relationships estimated for the large area of
geography. HUD anticipates updating the bedroom rental rate ratios with
the release of 5-year ACS data (covering 2005 though 2009), and then
once every 5 years when the 5-year ACS sample is completely
replaced.\5\ The final calculated rents are then rounded to the nearest
$25.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The current decennial data is not robust enough to lead HUD
to believe that updating bedroom ratios on a more frequent basis
would provide many changes. The current bedroom ratios are
constrained by ranges that reflect the average relationship of a
given bedroom size to the 2-bedroom rent, and, for the 3-bedroom and
4-bedroom rents, bonuses have been added to assist with the
operation of the Section 8 program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Small area FMRs for all metropolitan areas are available for
viewing and download on the Internet at https://www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/fmr.html. These will be updated using FY2011 FMRs and posted
on the Web site when the proposed FY2011 FMR notice is published. Small
area FMRs calculated for the demonstration projects will be used only
in the Section 8 HCV program and will not affect rents in any other HUD
or other federal program. PHAs in small area FMR demonstration sites
will be empowered to renew pre-existing HAP contracts based on payment
standards outside the new basic range (90 to 110 percent of the small
area FMR) for tenants who wish to remain in their existing units and
whose existing payment standards would otherwise fall outside the new
basic range due to the
[[Page 27811]]
implementation of the small area FMR demonstration project.
III. Requirements for Participation in the Small Area FMR Demonstration
Project
The small area FMR demonstration project is intended to cover a
limited set of FMR areas so that HUD can provide adequate technical
assistance to the participating PHAs and monitor the effects and
effectiveness of the policy. At the same time, HUD seeks to have all
PHAs in small area FMR demonstration project areas firmly committed to
implementing the program to achieve its stated goals. HUD will apply
three principles for selecting participating FMR areas if participation
needs to be limited because too many areas volunteer: (1) The
participant area is large enough that small area FMRs will result in
substantial variation in rents, (2) the greatest possible proportion of
voucher tenants are served by PHAs that are willing participants in the
demonstration, and (3) the PHAs in the area have demonstrated previous
commitment, within the flexibilities available in the voucher program,
to set voucher payment standards at varying and appropriate levels.
Larger FMR areas provide the greatest potential benefit from the
small area FMR proposal in that they are likelier to have a wider array
of market rents that can be captured by the proposed methodology. HUD
may therefore limit participation in the small area FMR demonstration
project to FMR areas meeting the size (100 or more census tracts) and
affordable housing concentration (in less than 70 percent of their
census tracts containing 10 or more rental units, at least 30 percent
of rental units rent for the 40th-percentile two-bedroom FMR or less)
criteria for eligibility for the 50th-percentile FMR at 24 CFR 888.113.
The small area FMR demonstration project will not be effective
unless the PHAs that operate voucher programs covering the vast
majority of voucher tenants in a metropolitan area agree to participate
and abide by the small area rents. Therefore, HUD is requiring that
PHAs requesting participation in the small area FMR demonstration
project must account for at least 80 percent of the voucher tenants in
that metropolitan area. If the PHAs represent a smaller percentage of
the voucher tenant population, they will not be able to participate.
HUD will consider as evidence a joint letter requesting participation
in the small area FMR demonstration project, signed by the Executive
Director and/or Board Chair of each PHA in the metropolitan area
jointly making the request. HUD will verify, using data for Calendar
Year 2009, that the signatories represent at least 80 percent of the
voucher tenants residing in each nominated metropolitan area. HUD will
notify the PHAs if they are found to represent fewer than 80 percent of
voucher tenants in the metropolitan area, so that they may enlist
participation by additional PHAs in the metropolitan area.
Applicants who provide evidence that they are using multiple
payment standards or that use exception payment standards may be given
priority for participating in the demonstration project. Through their
current operating procedures, these applicants are already showing the
ability and willingness to administer the project using multiple rent
structures and are likely able to provide HUD with valuable feedback on
the small area FMRs HUD calculates and provides.
IV. Request for Public Comment on Small Area FMRs and Demonstration
Eligibility Criteria
Before HUD institutes the small area FMR demonstration project, HUD
would like to solicit comments on the implementation of small area
FMRs. The following is a list of issues that maybe addressed in
comments:
Should HUD institute caps and floors on small area FMRs?
As proposed, the current cap is 150 percent of the metropolitan FMR,
and the current floor is the state nonmetropolitan minimum FMR. Are
these appropriate, or should they be changed or eliminated? What is an
appropriate amount or percentage for caps and floors?
The use of small area FMRs in metropolitan areas will
result in no areas being big enough to qualify for 50th-percentile
FMRs. (The goal of the 50th-percentile FMR policy should be more
efficiently addressed through the use of small area FMRs.) Should HUD
revise the 50th-percentile FMR policy or eliminate it, and why?
The exception payment standard policy, which is based on a
relationship like that used to set the small area FMRs, will generally
be redundant and could therefore be eliminated if the small area FMR
policy is adopted. Are there any instances where an exception payment
standard policy might still be useful? Such instances could include,
for example, areas where rents have changed so rapidly due to
extraordinary circumstances (such as natural disasters, or rapid
economic change) that existing statistical methods cannot determine
accurate rents, but PHAs can show that their voucher program operations
have been impacted. If the exception payment standard policy remains in
effect, should the exceptions be continued for nonmetropolitan counties
only, or for larger areas within a metropolitan area?
Do small area FMRs increase the administrative burden of
PHAs, and if so, how can this be reduced?
Is the proposed rounding protocol of $25 appropriate, or
should small area FMRs be rounded to a larger or smaller amount?
Should state minimums be rounded both up and down? Should
they be rounded before comparison with a ZIP code rent?
In addition, comments may discuss the proposed HUD methodology for
the small area FMRs that would be used for the demonstration project,
including the use of 2000 Census data for the demonstration projects
and the anomalies created by that data; using 5-year ACS data and
implementing small area FMRs in metropolitan areas only; addressing the
need, if it exists, for small area FMRs in nonmetropolitan counties;
and addressing the general need for and implementation of a small area
FMR demonstration project.
HUD also seeks comments on the eligibility criteria for the small
area FMR demonstration project. Should the demonstration be open to
smaller metropolitan areas than those meeting the size criterion for
50th-percentile FMR eligibility? Should, or should not, the affordable
housing concentration criterion be a consideration in selecting
participating areas? Is the 80 percent-of-voucher-tenants standard
appropriate? Is there a better way for PHAs to demonstrate commitment
to the demonstration project than a joint letter to HUD? Is
demonstrated past use of multiple payment standards an appropriate
criterion for participation?
V. Implementation of the Small Area FMR Demonstration Program
The first small area FMR demonstration projects for the HCV program
are expected to be put in place on October 1, 2010, after a review of
all comments, when FY2011 FMRs become effective. Other demonstration
areas may be added between this date and the beginning of Calendar Year
2011. For illustrative purposes, hypothetical small area FMRs that are
based on the current FY2010 FMRs are available for review on the HUD
USER Web site at https://www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/fmr.html. The
Federal Register notice on proposed FY2011 FMRs will include an update
of these potential small area FMRs and the selection criteria for areas
[[Page 27812]]
interested in being a part of the demonstration project. The
demonstration project will operate for approximately one year before a
complete national implementation of small area FMRs will be proposed.
The timing of full implementation will be determined based on the
outcomes of the demonstrations.
Dated: May 12, 2010.
Raphael W. Bostic,
Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research.
[FR Doc. 2010-11731 Filed 5-17-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P