Notice of Regulatory Waiver Requests Granted for the Fourth Quarter of Calendar Year 2014, 17062-17072 [2015-07183]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 61 / Tuesday, March 31, 2015 / Notices
Dated: March 18, 2015.
Laura Dawkins,
Chief, Regulatory Coordination Division,
Office of Policy and Strategy, U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services, Department of
Homeland Security.
[FR Doc. 2015–06732 Filed 3–30–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–97–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–5789–N–04]
Notice of Regulatory Waiver Requests
Granted for the Fourth Quarter of
Calendar Year 2014
AGENCY:
Office of the General Counsel,
HUD.
ACTION:
Notice.
Section 106 of the Department
of Housing and Urban Development
Reform Act of 1989 (the HUD Reform
Act) requires HUD to publish quarterly
Federal Register notices of all
regulatory waivers that HUD has
approved. Each notice covers the
quarterly period since the previous
Federal Register notice. The purpose of
this notice is to comply with the
requirements of section 106 of the HUD
Reform Act. This notice contains a list
of regulatory waivers granted by HUD
during the period beginning on October
1, 2014, and ending on December 31,
2014.
SUMMARY:
For
general information about this notice,
contact Camille E. Acevedo, Associate
General Counsel for Legislation and
Regulations, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street,
SW., Room 10282, Washington, DC
20410–0500, telephone 202–708–1793
(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 Relay
Service at 800–877–8339.
For information concerning a
particular waiver that was granted and
for which public notice is provided in
this document, contact the person
whose name and address follow the
description of the waiver granted in the
accompanying list of waivers that have
been granted in the fourth quarter of
calendar year 2014.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section
106 of the HUD Reform Act added a
new section 7(q) to the Department of
Housing and Urban Development Act
(42 U.S.C. 3535(q)), which provides
that:
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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1. Any waiver of a regulation must be
in writing and must specify the grounds
for approving the waiver;
2. Authority to approve a waiver of a
regulation may be delegated by the
Secretary only to an individual of
Assistant Secretary or equivalent rank,
and the person to whom authority to
waive is delegated must also have
authority to issue the particular
regulation to be waived;
3. Not less than quarterly, the
Secretary must notify the public of all
waivers of regulations that HUD has
approved, by publishing a notice in the
Federal Register. These notices (each
covering the period since the most
recent previous notification) shall:
a. Identify the project, activity, or
undertaking involved;
b. Describe the nature of the provision
waived and the designation of the
provision;
c. Indicate the name and title of the
person who granted the waiver request;
d. Describe briefly the grounds for
approval of the request; and
e. State how additional information
about a particular waiver may be
obtained.
Section 106 of the HUD Reform Act
also contains requirements applicable to
waivers of HUD handbook provisions
that are not relevant to the purpose of
this notice.
This notice follows procedures
provided in HUD’s Statement of Policy
on Waiver of Regulations and Directives
issued on April 22, 1991 (56 FR 16337).
In accordance with those procedures
and with the requirements of section
106 of the HUD Reform Act, waivers of
regulations are granted by the Assistant
Secretary with jurisdiction over the
regulations for which a waiver was
requested. In those cases in which a
General Deputy Assistant Secretary
granted the waiver, the General Deputy
Assistant Secretary was serving in the
absence of the Assistant Secretary in
accordance with the office’s Order of
Succession.
This notice covers waivers of
regulations granted by HUD from
October 1, 2014 through December 31,
2014. For ease of reference, the waivers
granted by HUD are listed by HUD
program office (for example, the Office
of Community Planning and
Development, the Office of Fair Housing
and Equal Opportunity, the Office of
Housing, and the Office of Public and
Indian Housing, etc.). Within each
program office grouping, the waivers are
listed sequentially by the regulatory
section of title 24 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) that is being waived.
For example, a waiver of a provision in
24 CFR part 58 would be listed before
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a waiver of a provision in 24 CFR part
570.
Where more than one regulatory
provision is involved in the grant of a
particular waiver request, the action is
listed under the section number of the
first regulatory requirement that appears
in 24 CFR and that is being waived. For
example, a waiver of both § 58.73 and
§ 58.74 would appear sequentially in the
listing under § 58.73.
Waiver of regulations that involve the
same initial regulatory citation are in
time sequence beginning with the
earliest-dated regulatory waiver.
Should HUD receive additional
information about waivers granted
during the period covered by this report
(the fourth quarter of calendar year
2014) before the next report is published
(the first quarter of calendar year 2015),
HUD will include any additional
waivers granted for the fourth quarter in
the next report.
Accordingly, information about
approved waiver requests pertaining to
HUD regulations is provided in the
Appendix that follows this notice.
Dated: March 24, 2015.
Tonya T. Robinson,
Principal Deputy General Counsel.
APPENDIX
Listing of Waivers of Regulatory
Requirements Granted by Offices of the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development October 1, 2014 through
December 31, 2014
Note to Reader: More information about
the granting of these waivers, including a
copy of the waiver request and approval, may
be obtained by contacting the person whose
name is listed as the contact person directly
after each set of regulatory waivers granted.
The regulatory waivers granted appear in
the following order:
I. Regulatory waivers granted by the Office
of Community Planning and Development.
II. Regulatory waivers granted by the Office
of Housing.
III. Regulatory waivers granted by the
Office of Public and Indian Housing.
I. Regulatory Waivers Granted by the Office
of Community Planning and Development
For further information about the following
regulatory waivers, please see the name of
the contact person that immediately follows
the description of the waiver granted.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 58.22(a).
Project/Activity: The Spokane Tribe of
Indians requested a waiver of 24 CFR
58.22(a) for the demolition and new
construction of the West End Community
Center serving the Spokane Tribe in
Wellpinit, WA. The waiver requested
clearance for the demolition of the old
community center prior to the Request for
Release of Funds (RROF).
Nature of Requirement: The regulation at
24 CFR 58.22(a) provides that no entity may
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commit HUD assistance under a program
listed in § 58.1(b) on any activity or project
until HUD or the state has approved the
recipient’s RROF. In addition, until the RROF
has been approved, no entity may commit
non-HUD funds on an activity listed in
§ 58.1(b) if the activity would have an
adverse environmental impact. Since the
commitment of non-HUD funds violates only
the regulation and not the statute, HUD may,
if there is good cause, grant a waiver of the
affected regulation. A waiver is required
because the Spokane Tribe committed nonHUD funds to demolish the old West End
Community Center facility prior to receiving
an approved RROF.
Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Community Planning
and Development.
Date Granted: December 10, 2014.
Reason Waived: It was determined that the
project would further the HUD mission and
advance HUD program goals to develop
viable, quality communities. It was further
determined that the Spokane Tribe of Indians
did not knowingly violate the regulation, no
HUD funds were committed, and based on
the environmental assessment and field
inspection, granting the waiver will not
result in any unmitigated, adverse
environmental impact.
Contact: Lauren Hayes, Office of
Environment and Energy, Office of
Community Planning and Development,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room
7248, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202)
402–4270.
• Regulations: 24 CFR 92.251(c) and 24
CFR 92.504(d).
Project/Activity: HUD, along with the U.S.
Department of Agriculture and the U.S.
Department of Treasury, developed the
Physical Inspection Alignment Pilot Program
to align physical inspection criteria and
reduce the number of inspections for each
property to no more than one visit per year
while meeting the requirements of each
federal funding source with a vested
financial interest in the property. The waiver
permitted pilot grantees to use the Uniform
Physical Condition Standards as the
minimum inspection standard for HOMEassisted rental property rather than Housing
Quality Standards as currently required by 24
CFR 92.251(c) and allows for more frequent
inspections than are required for inspection
frequency under 24 CFR 92.504(d). The
following participating jurisdictions were
granted a limited waiver of HOME property
standards for participating in HUD’s Physical
Inspections Alignment Pilot Program: the
State of Kentucky, the State of Louisiana, the
State of Minnesota, the State of Missouri, the
State of New Mexico, the State of Texas, the
State of Wisconsin and the State of Vermont.
Nature of Requirements: The regulation at
24 CFR 92.251(c) identifies the property
standards for property acquired with HOME
assistance. The regulation at 24 CFR
92.504(d) requires the participating
jurisdiction to inspect each project at project
completion and during the period of
affordability to determine that the project
meets the property standards of 24 CFR
92.251.
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Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Community Planning
and Development.
Date Granted: November 5, 2014.
Reasons Waived: The waiver was granted
to reduce duplicative inspection for grantees
participating in the Physical Inspection
Alignment Pilot Program. HUD estimates that
one periodically-scheduled physical
inspection may result in 20,000 fewer
property inspections per year by federal
agencies, which will reduce the cost of
program oversight and create efficiencies for
the government, property owners, and for
residents of affordable housing whose
apartments are subject to inspection. The
waiver was effective until December 31, 2014
and limited to Combined Funding Properties
included in the 2014 Physical Inspection
Alignment Pilot Program.
Contact: Virginia Sardone, Director, Office
of Affordable Housing Programs, Office of
Community Planning and Development,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room
7164, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202)
708–2684.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 570.200(h).
Project/Activity: On October 21, 2014,
HUD issued a CPD Notice implementing
procedures to govern the submission and
review of consolidated plans and action
plans for FY 2015 funding prior to the
enactment of a FY 2015 HUD appropriation
bill. These procedures apply to any
Entitlement, Insular or Hawaii
nonentitlement grantee with a program year
start date prior to, or up to 60 days after,
HUD’s announcement of the FY 2015 formula
program funding allocations for CDBG, ESG,
HOME and HOPWA formula funding. Any
grantee with an FY 2015 program year start
date during the period starting October 1,
2014, and ending August 16, 2015 or 60 days
after HUD announcement of FY 2015
allocation amounts (whichever comes first),
is advised not to submit its consolidated
plan/action plan until the FY 2015 formula
allocations have been announced.
Nature of Requirement: The Entitlement
CDBG program regulations provide for
situations in which a grantee may incur costs
against its CDBG grant prior to the award of
its grant from HUD. Under the regulations,
the effective date of a grantee’s grant
agreement is either the grantee’s program
year start date or the date that the grantee’s
annual action plan is received by HUD,
whichever is later. This waiver allowed
grantees to treat the effective date of the FY
2015 program year as the grantee’s program
year start date or date or the date that the
grantee’s annual action plan is received by
HUD, whichever is earlier.
Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Community Planning
and Development.
Date Granted: September 25, 2014, for
effect on October 21, 2014.
Reason Waived: Under the provisions of
the CPD Notice, a grantee’s action plan may
not be submitted to (and thus received by)
HUD until several months after the grantee’s
program year start date. Lengthy delays in the
receipt of annual appropriations by HUD,
and implementation of the policy to delay
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submission of FY 2015 Action Plans, may
have negative consequences for CDBG
grantees that intend to incur eligible costs
prior to the award of FY 2015 funding. Some
activities might otherwise be interrupted
while implementing these revised
procedures. In addition, grantees might not
otherwise be able to use CDBG funds for
planning and administrative costs of
administering their programs. In order to
address communities’ needs and to ensure
that programs can continue without
disturbance, this waiver allowed grantees to
incur pre-award costs on a timetable
comparable to that under which grantees
have operated in past years. HUD advised
grantees that this waiver is available for use
by any applicable CDBG grantee whose
action plan submission is delayed past the
normal submission date because of delayed
enactment of FY 2015 appropriations for the
Department. This waiver authority is only in
effect until August 16, 2015.
Contact: Steve Johnson, Director,
Entitlement Communities Division, Office of
Block Grant Assistance, Office of Community
and Planning Development, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th
Street SW., Room 7282, Washington, DC
20410, telephone (202) 708–1577.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 570.208(a)(l)(vi).
Project/Activity: Spokane County, WA
requested a waiver of 24 CFR 570.208(a)(l)(vi)
to allow the use of prior Low and Moderate
Income Summary Data (LMISD) for an
infrastructure activity in the town of Fairfield
in order to demonstrate compliance with the
low- and moderate-income benefit national
objective requirements.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 570.208(a)(l)(vi) requires that the
most recently available decennial census
information must be used to the fullest extent
feasible, together with the section 8 income
limits that would have applied at the time
the income information was collected by the
Census Bureau, to determine whether there is
a sufficiently large percentage of low- and
moderate-income persons residing in the area
served by a CDBG funded activity. The HUDproduced Low and Moderate Income
Summary Data provide this data to grantees.
On June 10, 2014, HUD issued new Low and
Moderate Income Summary Data, with an
effective date of July 1, 2014 for use by
grantees.
Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Community Planning
and Development.
Date Granted: November 4, 2014.
Reason Waived: The Fairfield water line
infrastructure activity had been in the
planning stage for many months, and was
included in the county’s FY 2014 Annual
Action Plan. However, funds were not
obligated by the county to the activity prior
to July 1, 2014 and July 1 was the county’s
program year start date. The service area for
this activity no longer qualified under the
new LMISD. However, the county explained
that the town of Fairfield’s demographic
characteristics, with a population of 665,
almost remained the same since the previous
LMISD was issued, and that the American
Community Survey (ACS) sampling
methodology resulted in this change, not a
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decrease in the number of low- and
moderate-income persons. The urgency of
repairing the water lines made it difficult to
complete a special survey in time. The
county estimated that it would cost close to
$20,000 to conduct a survey to demonstrate
that the service area of the activity meets the
low- and moderate-income area benefit
national objective criteria. The waiver
allowed the county to continue to use the
prior Low and Moderate Income Summary
Data to demonstrate compliance with the
low- and moderate-income benefit national
objective requirements.
Contact: Steve Johnson, Director,
Entitlement Communities Division, Office of
Block Grant Assistance, Office of Community
and Planning Development, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 7282, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–1577.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 570.208(a)(l)(vi).
Project/Activity: King County, WA
requested a waiver of 24 CFR 570.208(a)(l)(vi)
to allow the use of prior Low and Moderate
Income Summary Data (LMISD) for two
infrastructure activities in order to
demonstrate compliance with the low- and
moderate-income benefit national objective
requirements.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 570.208(a)(l)(vi) requires that the
most recently available decennial census
information must be used to the fullest extent
feasible, together with the section 8 income
limits that would have applied at the time
the income information was collected by the
Census Bureau, to determine whether there is
a sufficiently large percentage of low- and
moderate-income persons residing in the area
served by a CDBG funded activity. The HUDproduced Low and Moderate Income
Summary Data provide this data to grantees.
On June 10, 2014, HUD issued new Low and
Moderate Income Summary Data, with an
effective date of July 1, 2014 for use by
grantees.
Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Community Planning
and Development.
Date Granted: November 18, 2014.
Reason Waived: The request pertained to
two infrastructure activities, which had been
in the planning stage for many months, and
were included in the county’s FY 2014
Annual Action Plan. However, funds were
not obligated by the county to these activities
prior to July 1, 2014. The county documented
that the available Low and Moderate Income
Summary Data covered an area larger than
the actual service areas for the two activities,
and was not representative of the income
characteristics of the activity service area
residents. It was determined that unless the
waiver was granted to the county, these
activities that directly benefit the health and
safety of residents would not be implemented
due to the lack of expertise and funds needed
to conduct special surveys to qualify the
service areas. The waiver allowed the county
to continue to use the prior Low and
Moderate Income Summary Data to
demonstrate compliance with the low- and
moderate-income benefit national objective
requirements.
Contact: Steve Johnson, Director,
Entitlement Communities Division, Office of
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Block Grant Assistance, Office of Community
and Planning Development, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 7282, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–1577.
• Regulation: 24 CFR part 576.403(c).
Project/Activity: Louisville-Jefferson
County, KY Metro Government requested a
waiver of § 576.403(c) to allow the Legal Aid
Society to provide legal services under the
homelessness prevention component to
program participants who want to stay in
their units, even if the units do not meet the
habitability standards. The waiver would
allow those program participants receiving
the legal services to receive the case
management required at § 576.401(d) and (e)
even if their units do not meet the
habitability standards. The waiver was
contingent upon the commitment of the
recipient, its subrecipient, Legal Aid Society,
and the subrecipient(s) providing the
required case management to work with the
property owners to bring the units into
compliance with the habitability standards or
assist the program participants to move if the
units are unsafe.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation at
§ 576.403(c) states that the recipient or
subrecipient cannot use ESG funds to help a
program participant remain in or move into
housing that does not meet the ESG
minimum habitability standards for
permanent housing.
Granted By: Cliff Taffet, General Deputy
Assistant Secretary for Community Planning
and Development.
Date Granted: December 10, 2014.
Reason Waived: HUD recognized that in
certain instances, the best way to help
program participants avoid homelessness is
to keep them in their housing until better
housing can be located, or their existing
housing can be brought up to code. Legal
services provide an important resource for
persons who are at risk of homelessness, who
need immediate assistance to help them
avoid moving to the streets or emergency
shelters. In some instances, it is not feasible
to inspect a unit to ensure that it meets the
habitability standards prior to the provision
of the legal services assistance necessary to
prevent homelessness for the individual or
family. Also in some cases, the habitability
requirement actually prohibits eligible
program participants from receiving the legal
services that could assist them to make the
unit habitable and stabilize them in their
housing.
Contact: Norm Suchar, Director, Office of
Special Needs Assistance Programs, Office of
Community Planning and Development,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room
7262, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202)
708–4300.
II. Regulatory Waivers Granted by the Office
of Housing—Federal Housing
Administration (FHA)
For further information about the following
regulatory waivers, please see the name of
the contact person that immediately follows
the description of the waiver granted.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 219.220(b).
Project/Activity: St. James A.M.E Tower
Apartments, FHA Project Number 031–
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018NISUP, Newark, NJ. The Owners have
requested deferral of repayment of the
Flexible Subsidy Operating Assistance Loan
on this project due to their inability to repay
the loan in full upon prepayment of the 236
Loan.
Nature of Requirement: Section
219.220(b)(1995) governs the repayment of
operating assistance provided under the
Flexible Subsidy Program for Troubled
Projects states ‘‘Assistance that has been paid
to a project owner under this subpart must
be repaid at the earlier of expiration of the
term of the mortgage, termination of mortgage
insurance, prepayment of the mortgage, or a
sale of the project (Transfer of Physical
Assets (TPA)) if the Secretary so requires at
the time of approval of the TPA.’’ Either of
these actions would typically terminate FHA
involvement with the property, and the
Flexible Subsidy Loan would be repaid, in
whole, at that time.
Granted by: Biniam T. Gebre, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Housing-Federal
Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: December 30, 2014.
Reason Waived: The owner requested and
was granted waiver of the requirement to
defer repayment of the Flexible Subsidy
Operating Assistance Loan to allow the much
needed preservation and moderate
rehabilitation of the project. The project will
be preserved as an affordable housing
resource of Newark, NJ.
Contact: John Ardovini, Restructuring
Analyst, Office of Affordable Housing
Preservation, Office of Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20410,
telephone (202) 402–2636.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 219.220(b).
Project/Activity: CWA Apartments II FHA
Number TN43L000016 is a project based
Section 8 Loan Management Set-Aside
(LMSA) contract encumbering a76-units for
low- income families located in Nashville,
Tennessee. The project consists of 76 twobedroom units. The contract expires on
August 31, 2017. On September 1, 1994, a
Flexible Subsidy Loan was awarded in the
amount of $1,659,585 at one percent per
annum.
Nature of Requirement: Section 219.220(b)
governs the repayment of operating
assistance provided under the Flexible
Subsidy Program for Troubled Projects prior
to May 1, 1996 states: ‘‘Assistance that has
been paid to a project owner under this
subpart must be repaid at the earlier of the
expiration of the term of the mortgage,
termination of mortgage insurance,
prepayment of the mortgage, or a sale of the
project. . .’’ Either of these actions would
typically terminate FHA involvement with
the property, and the Flexible Subsidy Loan
would be repaid, in whole, at that time.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant
Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 7, 2014.
Reason Waived: The owner requested and
was granted waiver because good cause was
shown that it is in the public’s best interest
to grant this waiver. The owner executed and
recorded a Rental Use Agreement that
extended the affordability of the property for
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20 years and amended the Residual Receipts
Note to reflect the monthly payments. These
documents were simultaneously assumed by
the purchaser.
Contact: Marilynne Hutchins, Office of
Asset Management and Portfolio Oversight
(OAMPO), Office of Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 6174, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 402–4323.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 219.220(b).
Project/Activity: CWA Apartments I
Contract number TN43–L000–015 apartments
CWA Apartments I is a 176-unit multifamily
project which consists of 20 two-bedroom
units and 156 three-bedroom units. The
property was financed with a mortgage
insured pursuant to Section 221(d)(3) of the
National Housing Act, which has now
matured and is paid in full. The Loan
Management Set-Aside (LMSA) Housing
Assistance Payments (HAP) contract covers
all 176 units. The HAP contact expires on
August 31, 2017. In 1995, the project was
awarded a Flexible Subsidy Loan in the
amount of $3,508,629 with one percent
interest rate. As of September 29, 2014, the
Flexible Subsidy Loan’s unpaid balance is
$4,141,194, including accrued interest.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation at
24 CFR 219.220(b)(1995), which governs the
repayment of operating assistance provided
under the Flexible Subsidy Program for
Troubled Projects states, ‘‘Assistance that has
been paid to a project Owner under this
subpart must be repaid at the earlier of
expiration of the term of the mortgage,
termination of mortgage insurance,
prepayment of the mortgage, or a sale of the
project.’’
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant
Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 7, 2014.
Reason Waived: The owner requested and
was granted waiver because good cause was
shown that it is in the public’s best interest
to grant this waiver. The owner executed and
recorded a Rental Use Agreement that
extended the affordability of the property for
20 years and amended the Residual Receipts
Note to reflect the monthly payments. These
documents were simultaneously assumed by
the purchaser.
Contact: Marilynne Hutchins, Office of
Asset Management and Portfolio Oversight
(OAMPO), Office of Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 6174, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 402–4323.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 219.220(b).
Project/Activity: Cathedral Terrace
Apartments FHA number 063–44007 is a
240-unit high-rise project for low- income
and very low-income tenants. The mortgage
was insured pursuant to Section 236(j)(1) of
the National Housing Act and received its
final endorsement on November 22, 1974, in
the amount of $4,919,500. A Section 8 Loan
Management Set-Aside (LMSA) contract
subsidizes 224 units and expires on June 30,
2034. The mortgage matured on November 1,
2014, which triggered the repayment of the
Flexible Subsidy Loans
Nature of Requirement: The regulation at
24 CFR 219.220(b) (1995), which governs the
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repayment of operating assistance provided
under the Flexible Subsidy Program for
Troubled Properties, states ‘‘Assistance that
has been paid to a project Owner under this
subpart must be repaid at the earlier of the
expiration of the term of the mortgage,
termination of mortgage insurance,
prepayment of the mortgage, or a sale of the
project.’’
Granted by: Biniam Gebre, Acting Assistant
Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: December 30, 2014.
Reason Waived: The owner requested and
was granted waiver to permit the deferment
of repayment of the Flexible Subsidy Loans,
plus accrued interest for a period of one year.
The requested waiver was for the subject
property only. The owner executed and
recorded a Rental Use Agreement that would
be superior to all liens. The Rental Use
Agreement extended the project affordability
20 years from the date of the original
mortgage maturity.
Contact: Judith Bryant, Office of Asset
Management and Portfolio Oversight
(OAMPO), Office of Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 6174, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 402–4891.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 232.7.
Project/Activity: Maple Ride of Plover
Memory care is a 20 bed memory care
facility. The facility does not meet the FHA
‘‘Bathroom ‘‘requirements at 24 CFR 232.7.
The project is located in Plover, WI.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation
mandates in a board and care home or
assisted living facility that not less than one
full bathroom must be provided for every
four residents. Also, the bathroom cannot be
accessed from a public corridor or area.
Granted By: Carol J. Galante, Assistant
Secretary for Housing–Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 7, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is for memory
care, all rooms have half-bathrooms and the
resident to full bathroom ratio is 5:1.
Contact: Vance T. Morris, Special
Assistant, Office of Healthcare Programs,
Office of Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street
SW., Room 2337, Washington, DC 20401,
telephone (202) 402–2419.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 232.7.
Project/Activity: Senior Suites of
Urbandale is an assisted living and memory
care facility. The facility does not meet the
FHA ‘‘Bathroom ‘‘requirements at 24 CFR
232.7. The project is located in Urbandale,
IA.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation
mandates that in a board and care home or
assisted living facility that the not less than
one full bathroom must be provided for every
four residents. Also, the bathroom cannot be
accessed from a public corridor or area.
Granted By: Biniam Gebre, Acting,
Assistant Secretary for Housing-Federal
Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: November 24, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is currently
FHA insured and presents no additional
financial risks to HUD.
Contact: Vance T. Morris, Special
Assistant, Office of Healthcare Programs,
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Office of Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street
SW., Room 2337, Washington, DC 20401,
telephone (202) 402–2419.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 232.505(a), 232.520,
232.540(b), 232.605 and 232.620.
Project/Activity: Supplemental Loans to
Finance Purchase and Installation of Fire
Safety Equipment.
Nature of Requirement: Waiver of
provisions 232.505(a), 232.520, 232.540(b),
232.605 and 232.620 that do not reflect
current processing requirements, as these
regulatory procedures and protocols were
established in 1974.
Granted By: Carol J. Galante, Assistant
Secretary for Housing–Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 21, 2014.
Reason Waived: There is an urgent need to
install automatic fire sprinkler systems in
nursing homes due to a new federal mandate.
Contact: Vance T. Morris, Special
Assistant, Office of Healthcare Programs,
Office of Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street
SW., Room 2337, Washington, DC 20401,
telephone (202) 402–2419.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 891.100(d).
Project/Activity: Teaneck Senior Housing,
Teaneck, NJ, Project Number: 031–EE077/
NJ39–S091–004.
Nature of Requirement: Section 891.100(d)
prohibits amendment of the amount of the
approved capital advance funds prior to
closing.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant
Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 3, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is
economically designed and comparable in
cost to similar projects in the area, and the
sponsor/owner exhausted all efforts to obtain
additional funding from other sources.
Contact: Catherine M. Brennan, Director,
Office of Housing Assistance and Grant
Administration, Office of Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room
6180, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202)
708–3000.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 891.100(d).
Project/Activity: Allen House, Millstone,
NJ, Project Number: 031–EE083/NJ39–S101–
006.
Nature of Requirement: Section 891.100(d)
prohibits amendment of the amount of the
approved capital advance funds prior to
closing.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant
Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 3, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is
economically designed and comparable in
cost to similar projects in the area, and the
sponsor/owner exhausted all efforts to obtain
additional funding from other sources.
Contact: Catherine M. Brennan, Director,
Office of Housing Assistance and Grant
Administration, Office of Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room
6180, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202)
708–3000.
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• Regulation: 24 CFR 891.100(d).
Project/Activity: Our Lady of Assumption
Apts., Abbeville, LA, Project Number: 064–
EE243/LA48–S091–012.
Nature of Requirement: Section 891.100(d)
prohibits amendment of the amount of the
approved capital advance funds prior to
closing.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant
Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 3, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is
economically designed and comparable in
cost to similar projects in the area, and the
sponsor/owner exhausted all efforts to obtain
additional funding from other sources.
Contact: Catherine M. Brennan, Director,
Office of Housing Assistance and Grant
Administration, Office of Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room
6180, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202)
708–3000.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 891.165.
Project/Activity: Bill Sorro Community,
San Francisco, CA, Project Number: 121–
HD097/CA39–Q101–003.
Nature of Requirement: Section 891.165
provides that the duration of the fund
reservation of the capital advance is 18
months from the date of issuance with
limited exceptions up to 36 months, as
approved by HUD on a case-by-case basis.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant
Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: Additional time was
needed in order to meet the construction
lender’s loan requirement for this capital
advance upon completion mixed-finance
project.
Contact: Catherine M. Brennan, Director,
Office of Housing Assistance and Grant
Administration, Office of Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room
6180, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202)
708–3000.
• Regulation: Requirements of Mortgagee
Letter 2011–22, Condominium Project
Approval and Processing Guide, Insurance
Requirements.
Project/Activity: Extension of initial waiver
issued November 27, 2013, providing an
exemption to the insurance requirements
defined in Mortgagee Letter 2011–22,
Condominium Project Approval and
Processing Guide.
Nature of Requirement: Section 2.1.9 of the
Condominium Project Approval and
Processing Guide, Insurance Requirements,
defines the condominium project insurance
requirements that must be met for issuance
of FHA condominium project approval. The
extension of the initial waiver allows for
acceptance of individual insurance policies
issued to the unit owners for Manufactured
Housing, Detached and Common Interest
Condominium Projects unable to satisfy the
insurance requirements.
Granted by: Biniam Gebre, Acting Assistant
Secretary for Housing-Federal Housing
Commissioner.
Date Granted: November 27, 2014.
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Reason Waived: The extension of the
waiver previously issued that allows unit
owners to obtain and maintain their own
insurance coverage is required to ensure the
continued availability of a condominium unit
as an affordable housing option. Issuance of
the extension is consistent with the
Department’s objectives to expand the
availability of FHA mortgage insurance,
while providing appropriate safeguards.
Contact: Joanne B. Kuczma, Housing
Program Officer, Office of Single Family
Program Development, Office of Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 402–
2137.
III. Regulatory Waivers Granted by the
Office of Public and Indian Housing
For further information about the following
regulatory waivers, please see the name of
the contact person that immediately follows
the description of the waiver granted.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: Olean Housing Authority
(NY093), Olean NY.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation
establishes certain reporting compliance
dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate
Assessment Center (REAC) no later than nine
months after the housing authority’s (HA)
fiscal year end (FYE), in accordance with the
Single Audit Act and OMB Circular A–133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 1, 2014.
Reason Waived: The final approval of the
annual audit was postponed due to three
weather related cancellations of meetings of
the Board of Commissioners. The audit was
completed in December 2013, but was
inadvertently not submitted. Due to the
Departments’ delayed response and the fact
that the audited financials have been
submitted and approved, the housing
authority was granted a one-time waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program
Manager, NASS, Real Estate Assessment
Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 475–
7907.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: The Municipality of
Fajardo (RQ036) Fajardo, PR
Nature of Requirement: The regulation
establishes certain reporting compliance
dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate
Assessment Center (REAC) no later than nine
months after the housing authority’s (HA)
fiscal year end (FYE), in accordance with the
Single Audit Act and OMB Circular A–133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 13, 2014.
Reason Waived: The audited reporting
requirements were delayed due to the
unforeseen death of your predecessor
auditor. The additional time was needed to
enable the successor auditor to review and
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process for final approval. Due to the
Departments’ delayed response and the fact
that the audited financial report was
approved on August 28, 2014, the housing
authority was granted this one-time waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program
Manager, NASS, Real Estate Assessment
Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 475–
7907.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: City of Mesa Housing
Authority (AZ005) Mesa AZ.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation
establishes certain reporting compliance
dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate
Assessment Center (REAC) no later than nine
months after the housing authority’s (HA)
fiscal year end (FYE), in accordance with the
Single Audit Act and OMB Circular A–133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 14, 2014.
Reason Waived: The delayed submission
was a result of the process to implement a
new ERP Integrated Information System
during 2013. The agency is component unit
and must wait until the city-wide audit was
complete before processing the audited
financial data. The agency incurred a
turnover in staff prior to closing your 2013
books and that additional time was needed
for IPA review and final submission. Due to
the Department’s delayed response and the
fact that your audited financial report was
approved on July 22, 2014, the housing
authority was granted this one-time waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program
Manager, NASS, Real Estate Assessment
Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 475–
7907.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: South Tucson Housing
Authority (AZ025) South Tucson, AZ
Nature of Requirement: The regulation
establishes certain reporting compliance
dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate
Assessment Center (REAC) no later than nine
months after the housing authority’s (HA)
fiscal year end (FYE), in accordance with the
Single Audit Act and OMB Circular A–133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: November 19, 2014.
Reason Waived: The delayed submission
was a result of the City of South Tucson’s
inability to obtain an extension from OMB to
complete its Single Audit requirement. The
agency was a component unit and waited
until the city-wide audit was completed
before processing the audited financial data
for submission. Due to the Department’s
delayed response and the fact that the
audited financial report was approved on
August 27, 2014, the housing authority was
granted a one-time waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program
Manager, NASS, Real Estate Assessment
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Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 475–
7907.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: Mercedes Housing
Authority (TX029) Mercedes, TX
Nature of Requirement: The regulation
establishes certain reporting compliance
dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate
Assessment Center (REAC) no later than nine
months after the housing authority’s (HA)
fiscal year end (FYE), in accordance with the
Single Audit Act and OMB Circular A–133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: November 26, 2014.
Reason Waived: The delayed submission
was due to issues between the independent
auditor and the Texas State Board. The State
Board required the agency to seek a second
review from another independent auditor.
However, due to human resource issues and
scheduled vacation, the advising auditor
could not complete the audit in time to
submit your audited financial data by the due
date. The agency’s audited financial data was
approved on September 4, 2014, therefore,
the housing authority was granted a one-time
waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program
Manager, NASS, Real Estate Assessment
Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 475–
7907.
• Regulation: Notices PIH 2013–3 and PIH
20013–26: Public Housing and Housing
Choice Voucher Programs—Temporary
Compliance Assistance.
Project/Activity: PIH Notice 2013–3 was
issued to establish temporary guidelines for
public housing agencies (PHAs) in fulfilling
certain public housing and housing choice
voucher requirements during the current and
upcoming fiscal year to alleviate some of the
burden on already stressed PHA resources.
The reduction of burden provided in this
notice involved offering PHAs the option to
comply with certain alternative requirements
to existing regulations, and if they opted to
do so the existing regulation would be
waived. Issuance of this notice was reported
in HUD’s Quarterly Regulatory Waiver report
published in the Federal Register on
September 13, 2013, at 78 FR 56912, at
56916. On November 5, 2013, PIH extended
the availability of the alternative
requirements to existing regulations through
March 31, 2015. The following housing
authorities obtained regulatory waivers under
these notices: Housing Authority of the
Birmingham District, AL; Housing Authority
of the City of Huntsville, AL; Enterprise
Housing Authority, AL; Albertville Housing
Authority, AL; Gordo Housing Authority, AL;
Searcy Housing Authority, AR; Lonoke
County Housing Authority, AR; Jonesboro
Urban Renewal Housing Authority, AR; City
of Phoenix Housing Department, AZ;
Housing and Community Development
Tucson, AZ; Housing Authority of Maricopa
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County, AZ; Yuma County Housing
Department, AZ; Chandler Housing &
Redevelopment Division, AZ; Tempe
Housing Authority, AZ; Pima County
Housing Authority, AZ; Housing Authority of
the City & County of San Francisco, CA;
Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles,
CA; City of Sacramento Housing Authority,
CA; Housing Authority City of Fresno, CA;
Housing Authority of Fresno County, CA;
County of Sacramento Housing Authority,
CA; Housing Authority of the County of
Kern, CA; Tulare County Housing Authority,
CA; Housing Authority of the City of San
Buenaventura, CA; Regional Housing
Authority of Sutter & Nevada Co, CA.;
Housing Authority of County of Marin, CA;
Housing Authority of the City of Vallejo, CA;
City of Pittsburg Housing Authority, CA;
Housing Authority of the City of San Luis
Obispo, CA; Alameda County Housing
Authority, CA; Santa Cruz County Housing
Authority, CA; Housing Authority of the City
of Pasadena, CA; Mendocino County Housing
Authority, CA; County of Sonoma Housing
Authority, CA; Yuba County Housing
Authority, CA; Housing Authority of the
County of San Diego, CA; Housing Authority
of the City of Norwalk, CA; City of Hollister
Housing Authority, CA; City of Vacaville
Housing Authority, CA; City of Roseville
Housing Authority, CA; County of Solano
Housing Authority, CA; City of Oceanside
Community Development Commission, CA;
Housing Authority of the City and County of
Denver, CO; Wellington Housing Authority,
CO; Housing Authority of the City of Greeley,
CO; Littleton Housing Authority, CO; Fort
Collins Housing Authority, CO; Englewood
Housing Authority, CO; Lakewood Housing
Authority, CO; Arvada Housing Authority,
CO; Aurora Housing Authority, CO; Housing
Authority of Weld County, CO; Larimer
County Housing Authority, CO; Colorado
Division of Housing, CO; Housing Authority
of the City of Bridgeport, CT; Housing
Authority of the City of Stamford, CT;
Housing Authority of the City of Danbury,
CT; West Haven Housing Authority, CT;
Tampa Housing Authority, FL; Sarasota
Housing Authority, FL; Housing Authority of
Pompano Beach, FL; Housing Authority of
the City of Fort Myers, FL; Milton Housing
Authority, FL; Pinellas County Housing
Authority, FL; Gainesville Housing
Authority, FL; City of Pensacola Housing
Office, FL; Housing Authority of Boca Raton,
FL; Housing Authority of Lee County, FL;
Housing Authority of the City of Athens, GA;
Housing Authority of the City of Macon, GA;
Housing Authority of the City of LaGrange,
GA; Housing Authority of the City of
Conyers, GA; Housing Authority of Fulton
County, GA; Hawaii Public Housing
Authority, HI; Kauai County Housing
Agency, HI; City of Sioux City Housing
Authority, IA; Des Moines Municipal
Housing Agency, IA; City of Iowa City
Housing Authority, IA; Boise City Housing
Authority, ID; Southwestern Idaho
Cooperative Housing Authority, ID; Idaho
Housing and Finance Association, ID; Ada
County Housing Authority, ID; Decatur
Housing Authority, IL; Rockford Housing
Authority, IL; Housing Authority Cook
County, IL; Pike County Housing Authority,
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17067
IL; Aurora Housing Authority of the City of
Aurora, IL; Housing Authority of the Village
of Oak Park, IL; Housing Authority of the
City of New Albany, IN; Housing Authority
of the City of Evansville, IN; Housing
Authority of the City of Michigan City, IN;
Housing Authority of the City of Terre Haute,
IN; Brazil Housing Authority, IN; Cannelton
Housing Authority, IN; Housing Authority of
the City of Lafayette, IN; Housing Authority
of the City of Peru, IN; Indiana Housing and
Community Development Authority, IN;
Wichita Housing Authority, KS; Holton
Housing Authority, KS; Atchison Housing
Authority, KS; Great Bend Housing
Authority, KS; Wamego Housing Authority,
KS; Housing Authority of Paducah, KY;
Housing Authority of Somerset, KY; Housing
Authority of Owensboro, KY; Housing
Authority of Newport, KY; Housing
Authority of Cynthiana, KY; Housing
Authority of Glasgow, KY; Housing Authority
of Owenton, KY; Bowling Green CDA, KY;
Kentucky Housing Corporation-State Agency,
KY; Ouachita Parish Police Jury, LA; Boston
Housing Authority, MA; Taunton Housing
Authority, MA; Lynn Housing Authority,
MA; Newton Housing Authority, MA;
Braintree Housing Authority, MA; Salem
Housing Authority, MA; Holden Housing
Authority, MA; Leominster Housing
Authority, MA; Franklin County Regional
Housing Authority, MA; Department of
Housing & Community Development. MA;
Hagerstown Housing Authority, MD;
Rockville Housing Enterprises, MD; Elkton
Housing Authority, MD; Portland Housing
Authority, ME; Brunswick Housing
Authority, ME; Auburn Housing Authority,
ME; Housing Authority City of Bangor, ME;
Biddeford Housing Authority, ME; Saco
Housing Authority, ME; Maine State Housing
Authority, ME; Detroit Housing Commission,
MI; Inkster Housing Commission, MI;
Eastpointe Housing Commission, MI;
Cadillac Housing Commission, MI; Ann
Arbor Housing Commission, MI; Traverse
City Housing Commission, MI; Lapeer
Housing Commission, MI; Wyoming Housing
Commission, MI; Saranac Housing
Commission, MI; Potterville Housing
Commission, MI; Ingham County Housing
Commission, MI; Michigan State Housing
Development Authority, MI; Public Housing
Agency of the City of St Paul, MN; Housing
Authority of Virginia, MN; Housing and
Redevelopment Authority of the City of St.
Paul, MN; Housing and Redevelopment
Authority of St. Cloud, MN; Itasca County
Housing Redevelopment Authority, MN;
Northwest MN Multi-County Housing
Redevelopment Authority, MN; Metropolitan
Council of MN; Clay County Housing
Redevelopment Authority, MN; Plymouth
Housing & Redevelopment Authority, MN;
Stearns County Housing Redevelopment
Authority, MN: Washington County Housing
Redevelopment Authority: Ripley County
Public Housing Agency, MO; ESCSWA dba
Jasper Cty Public Housing Agency, MO;
Mississippi Regional Housing Authority No.
VII, MS; Mississippi Regional Housing
Authority No. VI, MS; Housing Authority of
Billings, MT; Whitefish Housing Authority,
MT; Missoula Housing Authority, MT;
Housing Authority of the City of Asheville,
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NC; Housing Authority of the City of
Greensboro, NC; Housing Authority of the
City of Winston-Salem, NC; Housing
Authority of the City of Durham, NC;
Housing Authority of the City of Salisbury,
NC; Mooresville Housing Authority, NC; City
of Hickory Public Housing Authority, NC;
New Edenton Housing Authority, NC;
Asheboro Housing Authority, NC; RoanokeChowan Regional Housing Authority, NC;
Western Carolina Community Action, Inc.,
NC; Northwestern Regional Housing
Authority, NC; Omaha Housing Authority,
NE; Hall County Housing Authority, NE;
Kearney Housing Authority, NE; Henderson
Housing Authority, NE; Minden Housing
Authority, NE; Shelton Housing Authority,
NE; Tilden Housing Authority, NE; Blair
Housing Authority, NE; Gibbon Housing
Authority, NE; Alliance Housing Authority,
NE; Douglas County Housing Authority, NE;
Norfolk Housing Agency, NE; Concord
Housing Authority, NH; Laconia Housing &
Redevelopment Authority, NH; Housing
Authority of the Town of Salem, NH; New
Hampshire Housing Finance Agency, NH;
Housing Authority City of Jersey City, NJ;
Burlington County Housing Authority, NJ;
Mesilla Valley Public Housing Authority,
NM; Housing Authority of the City of Truth
or Consequences, NM; City of Reno Housing
Authority, NV; Southern Nevada Regional
Housing Authority, NV; Nevada Rural
Housing Authority, NV; Syracuse Housing
Authority, NY; Municipal Housing Authority
City Yonkers, NY; Gloversville Housing
Authority, NY; Ithaca Housing Authority,
NY; Town of Amherst, NY; NYC Department
of Housing Preservation and Development,
NY; Village of Highland Falls, NY; Town of
Southampton; Village of Elmira Heights, NY;
City of North Tonawand, NY; Town of
Colonie, NY; City of Buffalo, NY; Town of
Clifton Park, NY; Town of Hadley, NY; Town
of Guilderland, NY; Town of Bethlehem, NY;
Town of Duanesburg, NY; Town of
Niskayuna, NY; Town of Schodack, NY;
Town of Horseheads, NY; City of Johnstown,
NY; Town of Knox, NY; Town of Waterford,
NY; Village of Scotia’ Town of Glenville, NY;
Town of Rotterdam, NY; Town of Corinth,
NY; Fort Plain Housing Agency, NY; Village
of Green Island, NY; Village of Corinth, NY;
Town of Coeymans, NY; Town of Stillwater,
NY; Village of Ballston Spa, NY; Town of
Nassau, NY; Village of Waterford, NY;
Youngstown Metropolitan Housing
Authority, OH; Cuyahoga Metropolitan
Housing Authority, OH; Lucas Metropolitan
Housing Authority, OH; Akron Metropolitan
Housing Authority, OH; Trumbull
Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH;
Jefferson Metropolitan Housing Authority,
OH; Mansfield Metropolitan Housing
Authority, OH; Springfield Metropolitan
Housing Authority, OH; Huron Metropolitan
Housing Authority, OH; Crawford
Metropolitan housing Authority, OH: Geauga
Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH; Warren
Metropolitan Housing Authority; Seneca
Metropolitan Housing Authority; Marion
Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH; City of
Marietta, OH; Brown Metropolitan Housing
Authority, OH; Hancock Housing Authority,
OH; Housing Authority of the City of
Stillwater, OK; Housing Authority of
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Clackamas County, OR; Housing Authority of
Lincoln County, OR; Housing Authority &
Community Services of Lane County, OR;
Housing Authority of the County of Umatilla’
Housing and Urban Renewal Agency of Polk
County, OR; North Bend Housing Authority,
OR; Housing Authority of Jackson County,
OR; Housing Authority of Yamhill County,
OR; Linn-Benton Housing Authority, OR;
Coos-Curry Housing Authority, OR; Housing
Authority of Washington County, OR;
Northwest Oregon Housing Authority, OR;
Josephine Housing Community Development
Council, OR; Central Oregon Regional
Housing Authority, OR; Housing Authority of
the City of Pittsburgh, PA; Allentown
Housing Authority, PA; Allegany Housing
Authority, PA: Chester Housing Authority.
PA: Housing Authority of the County Butler,
PA; Montgomery County Housing Authority,
PA; Housing Authority of the County of
Beaver, PA; Washington County Housing
Authority, PA: Housing Authority of the
County Delaware, PA; Housing Authority of
the County of Huntingdon, PA; Housing
Authority of the County of Franklin, PA;
Housing Authority of the City of Hazleton,
PA; Housing Authority of the County of
Chester, PA; Bradford City Housing
Authority, PA; Housing Authority of the
County of Berks, PA; Housing Authority of
the County of Cumberland, PA; Housing
Authority of the County of McKean, PA;
Lehigh County Housing Authority, PA;
Columbia County Housing Authority, PA;
Housing Authority of the County of Clarion,
PA; Adams County Housing Authority, PA;
Housing Authority Providence, RI; Housing
Authority of the City of Pawtucket, RI; East
Providence Housing Authority, RI; Greenville
Housing Authority, SC; Housing Authority of
Myrtle Beach, SC; Sioux Falls Housing and
Redevelopment Commission, SD; Aberdeen
Housing & Redevelopment Commission, SD;
Memphis Housing Authority, TN; Knoxville’s
Community Development Corp., TN;
Chattanooga Housing Authority, TN;
Metropolitan Development & Housing
Agency, TN; Kingsport Housing and
Redevelopment Authority, TN; Murfreesboro
Housing Authority, TN; Newport Housing
Authority, TN; Bristol Housing Authority,
TN; Elizabethton Housing and Development
Agency, TN; East Tennessee Human
Resource Agency, TN; Tennessee Housing
Development Agency, TN; Northern
Marianas Housing Corporation; Austin
Housing Authority, TX; Housing Authority of
the City of El Paso, TX; Housing Authority
of Fort Worth, TX; Houston Housing
Authority, TX; Housing Authority of the City
of Dallas, TX; San Benito Housing Authority,
TX; Housing Authority of Temple, TX; New
Boston Property Management, TX; Housing
Authority of the City of Munday, TX;
Housing Authority of the City of Knox City,
TX; Housing Authority of Belton, TX; Seguin
Housing Authority, TX; Denton Housing
Authority, TX; Arlington Housing Authority,
TX; Housing Authority of Marshall, TX; City
of Amarillo, TX; Housing Authority of the
City of Rosenberg, TX; McKinney Housing
Authority, TX; Housing Authority of Salt
Lake City, UT; Housing Authority of Utah
County, UT; Hopewell Redevelopment &
Housing Authority, VA; Richmond
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Redevelopment & Housing Authority, VA;
Roanoke Redevelopment & Housing
Authority, VA; Hampton Redevelopment &
Housing Authority, VA; Fairfax County
Redevelopment & Housing Authority, VA;
Lee County Redevelopment & Housing
Authority, VA; Accomack-Northampton
Regional Housing Authority, VA; Virgin
Islands Housing Authority; Brattleboro
Housing Authority, VT; Housing Authority of
the City of Bremerton, WA; Housing
Authority of the City of Everett, WA; Housing
Authority City of Longview, WA; Housing
Authority City of Bellingham, WA; Housing
Authority of Snohomish County, WA;
Housing Authority of Whatcom County, WA;
Housing Authority of the City of Yakima,
WA; Housing Authority of Thurston County,
WA; Housing Authority of City of Spokane,
WA; Housing Authority of the City of Walla
Walla, WA; Housing Authority of the City of
Milwaukee, WI; New London Housing
Authority, WI; River Falls Housing
Authority, WI; West Bend Housing
Authority, WI; Antigo Housing Authority,
WI; Waukesha Housing Authority, WI; Brown
County Housing Authority, WI; Janesville
Neighborhood Services, WI; Walworth
County Housing Authority, WI; Barron
County Housing Authority, WI; Richland
County Housing Authority, WI; New Berlin
Housing Authority, WI; Waukesha County
Housing Authority, WI; Wisconsin Housing &
Economic Development Authority, WI;
Fairmont/Morgantown Housing Authority,
WV; Housing Authority of the City of
Beckley, WV; and Housing Authority of
Raleigh County, WV.
Nature of Requirement: The alternative
requirements to regulatory requirements that
were offered under the original notice and
extended by the second notice were the
following: The notice allows PHAs to use
participants’ actual past income to verify
income, which would be a waiver of the
requirement to project expected income in 24
CFR 5.609(a)(2). The notice allows
households to self-certify as to having assets
of less than $5,000, which would be a waiver
of the requirement under 24 CFR 5.609(b)(3),
982.516(a)(2)(ii), and 960.259(c) for PHAs to
verify assets. The notice allows a streamlined
reexamination of income for elderly families
and disabled families on fixed incomes,
which would be a waiver of the requirement
in 24 CFR 982.516 and 960.257 for PHAs to
undertake the complete process for income
verification and rent determination for
families on fixed incomes. The notice allows
PHAs to establish a payment standard of not
more than 120 percent of the fair market rent
without HUD approval as a reasonable
accommodation, which would be a waiver of
24 CFR 982.503(c)(2)(B)(ii), which allows a
PHA to establish a payment standard for the
housing choice voucher program only but
within limits currently permitted but
designated for approval only by a HUD field
office.
Granted By: Sandra B. Henriquez, Assistant
Secretary for Public and Indian Housing.
Dates Granted: January 2013 through
March 2015.
Reason Waived: The waivers and
alternative requirements were granted
because they would help facilitate the ability
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of PHAs to continue, without interruption
and with minimal burden, the delivery of
rental assistance to eligible families in their
communities. Increased demand for housing
assistance without corresponding increased
resources strains the operations of PHAs and
jeopardizes their ability to assist families at
a time when families most need housing
assistance.
Contact: Todd Thomas, Senior Program
Specialist, Public Housing Management and
Occupancy Division, Office of Public and
Indian Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW.,
Room 4210, Washington, DC 20410,
telephone 202–402–5849.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 982.503(c),
982.503(c)(4)(ii) and 982.503(c)(5).
Project/Activity: Dunn County Housing
Authority (DCHA), McKenzie County
Housing Authority (MCHA), Bowman County
Housing Authority (BCHA), Adams County
Housing Authority (ACHA), Hettinger County
Housing Authority (HCHA), Billings County
Housing Authority (BCHA), Slope County
Housing Authority (SCHA), Golden Valley
County Housing Authority (GVCHA), Stark
County Housing Authority (SCHA), ND.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 982.503(c) establishes the
methodology for establishing exception
payment standards for an area. HUD’s
regulation at 24 CFR 503(c)(4)(ii) states that
HUD will only approve an exception
payment standard amount after six months
from the date of HUD approval of an
exception payment standard amount above
110 percent to 120 percent of the published
fair market rent (FMR). HUD’s regulation at
24 CFR 982.503(c)(5) states that the total
population of a HUD-approved exception
areas in an FMR area may not include more
than 50 percent of the population of the FMR
area.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: These waivers were
granted because of increased economic
activity due to natural resource exploration.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4216, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 982.503(c),
982.503(c)(4)(ii) and 982.503(c)(5).
Project/Activity: Burleigh County Housing
Authority (BCHA), Bismarck, ND.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 982.503(c) establishes the
methodology for establishing exception
payment standards for an area. HUD’s
regulation at 24 CFR 503(c)(4)(ii) states that
HUD will only approve an exception
payment standard amount after six months
from the date of HUD approval of an
exception payment standard amount above
110 percent to 120 percent of the published
fair market rent (FMR). HUD’s regulation at
24 CFR 982.503(c)(5) states that the total
population of a HUD-approved exception
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areas in an FMR area may not include more
than 50 percent of the population of the FMR
area.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: November 19, 2014.
Reason Waived: These waivers were
granted because of increased economic
activity due to natural resource exploration.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4216, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: Arvada Housing
Authority (AHA), Arvada, CO.
Nature of Requirement: 24 CFR 982.505(d)
states that a public housing agency may only
approve a higher payment standard for a
family as a reasonable accommodation if the
higher payment standard is within the basic
range of 90 to 110 percent of the fair market
rent (FMR) for the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 1, 2014.
Reason Waived: The participant, who is a
person with disabilities, required an
exception payment standard to move to a
more accessible unit. To provide this
reasonable accommodation so the client
could move to a new unit and pay no more
than 40 percent of her adjusted income
toward the family share, the AHA was
allowed to approve an exception payment
standard that exceeded the basic range of 90
to 110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4216, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: West Valley Housing
Authority (WVHA), Dallas, OR.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 982.505(d) states that a public
housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable
accommodation if the higher payment
standard is within the basic range of 90 to
110 percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for
the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 23, 2014.
Reason Waived: The applicant, who is a
person with disabilities, required an
exception payment standard to remain in her
current unit that met her needs. To provide
this reasonable accommodation so that the
client could remain in her unit and pay no
more than 40 percent of her adjusted income
toward the family share, the WVHA was
allowed to approve an exception payment
standard that exceeded the basic range of 90
to 110 percent of the FMR.
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Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4216, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: Housing Authority of
Grays Harbor County (HAGHC), Aberdeen,
WA.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 982.505(d) states that a public
housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable
accommodation if the higher payment
standard is within the basic range of 90 to
110 percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for
the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: December 10, 2014.
Reason Waived: The applicant, who is a
person with disabilities, required an
exception payment standard to remain in her
current unit that met her needs. To provide
this reasonable accommodation so that the
client could remain in her unit and pay no
more than 40 percent of her adjusted income
toward the family share, the HAGHC was
allowed to approve an exception payment
standard that exceeded the basic range of 90
to 110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4216, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: Rhode Island Housing
(RHI), Providence, RI.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 982.505(d) states that a public
housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable
accommodation if the higher payment
standard is within the basic range of 90 to
110 percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for
the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: December 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: The participant, who is a
person with disabilities, required an
exception payment standard to move to a
unit that meets her needs. To provide this
reasonable accommodation so the family
could move to a new unit and pay no more
than 40 percent of its adjusted income
toward the family share, RHI was allowed to
approve an exception payment standard that
exceeded the basic range of 90 to 110 percent
of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4216, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
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• Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: San Francisco Housing
Authority (SFHA), San Francisco, CA.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 982.505(d) states that a public
housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable
accommodation if the higher payment
standard is within the basic range of 90 to
110 percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for
the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: December 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: The applicant was a
person with disabilities who required an
exception payment standard to move to a
unit that met his needs. To provide this
reasonable accommodation so that the client
could move to a new unit and pay no more
than 40 percent of his adjusted income
toward the family share, the SFHA was
allowed to approve an exception payment
standard that exceeded the basic range of 90
to 110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4216, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: Howard County Housing
(HCH), Columbia, MD.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 982.505(d) states that a public
housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable
accommodation if the higher payment
standard is within the basic range of 90 to
110 percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for
the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: December 29, 2014.
Reason Waived: The participant, who is a
person with disabilities, required an
exception payment standard to move to a
new unit. To provide this reasonable
accommodation so the family could move to
a new unit and pay no more than 40 percent
of its adjusted income toward the family
share, HCH was allowed to approve an
exception payment standard that exceeded
the basic range of 90 to 110 percent of the
FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4216, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: City of Roseville Housing
Authority (CRHA), Roseville, CA.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 982.505(d) states that a public
housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable
accommodation if the higher payment
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standard is within the basic range of 90 to
110 percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for
the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: December 29, 2014.
Reason Waived: The applicant, who is a
person with disabilities, required an
exception payment standard to move to a
new unit. To provide this reasonable
accommodation so the family could move to
a new unit and pay no more than 40 percent
of his adjusted income toward the family
share, the CRHA was allowed to approve an
exception payment standard that exceeded
the basic range of 90 to 110 percent of the
FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4216, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Hawaii Public Housing
Authority (HPHA), Honolulu, HI.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 985.101(a) states a PHA must
submit the HUD-required Section Eight
Management Assessment Program (SEMAP)
certification form within 60 calendar days
after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 20, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted
since HPHA had technical difficulties in
submitting its certification. HPHA was
permitted to submit its SEMAP certification
after the due date.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4210, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Fort Wayne Housing
Authority (FWHA), Fort Wayne, IN.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 985.101(a) states a PHA must
submit the HUD-required Section Eight
Management Assessment Program (SEMAP)
certification form within 60 calendar days
after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: November 7, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted
since the executive director had a death in
his family at the time the SEMAP
certification was due. FWHA was permitted
to submit its SEMAP certification after the
due date.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
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Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4210, Washington,
DC, 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Housing Authority of the
City of Meriden (HACM), Meriden, CT.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 985.101(a) states a PHA must
submit the HUD-required Section Eight
Management Assessment Program (SEMAP)
certification form within 60 calendar days
after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: December 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted
since the SEMAP certification had been
submitted timely, but incorrectly into
PICTEST. HACM was permitted to submit its
SEMAP certification after the due date.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4210, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Palm Beach County
Housing Authority (PBCHA), West Palm
Beach, FL.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 985.101(a) states a PHA must
submit the HUD-required Section Eight
Management Assessment Program (SEMAP)
certification form within 60 calendar days
after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: December 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted
since the SEMAP certification had been
submitted timely, but with an error message
that could not be validated. PBCHA was
permitted to submit its SEMAP certification
after the due date.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4210, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Mercer County Housing
Authority (MCHA), Aledo, IL.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 985.101(a) states a PHA must
submit the HUD-required Section Eight
Management Assessment Program (SEMAP)
certification form within 60 calendar days
after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: December 29, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted
since it the executive director was new and
notification emails regarding SEMAP
submission were sent to the wrong email
address. MCHA was permitted to submit its
SEMAP certification after the due date.
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Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director,
Housing Voucher Management and
Operations Division, Office of Public
Housing and Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Room 4210, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 708–0477.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.327(b).
Project/Activity: Asa’Carsarmiut Tribe of
Mountain Village, Alaska 99632–0249;
Stebbins Community Association of Stebbins,
Alaska 99671; Bering Straits Regional
Housing Authority of Nome, Alaska 99762;
Native Village of Kivalina of Kivalina, AK
99750.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 1000.327(b) requires Indian tribes
in Alaska not located on a reservation to
notify HUD in writing by September 15th
that they or their Tribally Designated
Housing Entity (TDHE) intends to submit an
Indian Housing Plan (IHP) for the following
fiscal year. If the tribe or their TDHE does not
notify HUD, or notifies HUD that they do not
intend to submit an IHP, HUD allocates the
tribe’s need formula data in the Indian
Housing Block Grant formula to the tribe’s
regional tribe or regional corporation. HUD is
required to allocate IHBG funds within 60
days of an appropriation, and prior
notification ensures that HUD can properly
allocate Alaska tribes’ need data and make
formula allocations in a timely manner.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: November 24, 2014.
Reason Waived: HUD granted the waiver
because the tribes and TDHE would have lost
out on critical Indian Housing Block Grant
funding for the year. The waiver would not
delay HUD’s process because the
Congressional appropriation for the
upcoming fiscal year had not yet occurred.
As such, the Department believed that there
was good cause to waive the notification
requirements of 24 CFR 1000.327(b).
Contact: Glenda N. Green, Director for the
Office of Grants Management, Office of
Native American Programs, Office of Public
and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street
SW., Suite 5156, Washington, DC 20410,
telephone (202) 402–6967.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Pueblo de Cochiti of
Cochiti Pueblo, NM 87072–0070.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 1000.224 that the Secretary may
waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in
whole or in part, for a period of not more
than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that
an Indian tribe has not complied with, or is
unable to comply with, those requirements
due to exigent circumstances beyond the
control of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 20, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested
because of the unexpected resignation of the
Executive Director based on health issues.
The waiver was provided for no more than
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90 days on the basis of exigent circumstances
beyond its control.
Contact: Cheryl Dixon, Grants Management
Specialist, Office of Grants Management,
Office of Native American Programs, Office
of Public and Indian Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 500 Gold
Avenue SW., Seventh FL, Suite 7301,
Albuquerque, NM 87103–0906, telephone
(505) 346–6924.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Hopi Tribal Housing
Authority of Polacca, AZ 86042.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 1000.224 that the Secretary may
waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in
whole or in part, for a period of not more
than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that
an Indian tribe has not complied with, or is
unable to comply with, those requirements
due to exigent circumstances beyond the
control of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested
because a new Executive Director was in the
process of being hired. The waiver was
provided for no more than 90 days on the
basis of exigent circumstances beyond its
control.
Contact: Cristal Quinn, Grants Management
Specialist, Office of Grants Management,
Office of Native American Programs,
Southwest Office of Native American
Programs, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and Urban
Development, One N. Central Ave., Phoenix,
AZ 85004, telephone (602) 379–7206.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Resighini Rancheria of
Klamath, CA 95548–0529.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 1000.224 that the Secretary may
waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in
whole or in part, for a period of not more
than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that
an Indian tribe has not complied with, or is
unable to comply with, those requirements
due to exigent circumstances beyond the
control of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested
because of new staff turnover, which resulted
in technological problems in completing the
IHP. The waiver was provided for no more
than 90 days on the basis of exigent
circumstances beyond its control.
Contact: Sarah Olson, Grants Management
Specialist, Office of Grants Management,
Office of Native American Programs,
Southwest Office of Native American
Programs, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and Urban
Development, One N. Central Ave., Phoenix,
AZ 85004, telephone (602) 379–7233.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Cahto Indians of the
Laytonville Rancheria, Laytonville, CA
95454–1239.
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Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 1000.224 that the Secretary may
waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in
whole or in part, for a period of not more
than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that
an Indian tribe has not complied with, or is
unable to comply with, those requirements
due to exigent circumstances beyond the
control of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested
because there were no housing funds
available to pay the housing staff salary prior
to completing the IHP. The Tribe needed
time to re-hire the staff person to complete
and submit the IHP. The waiver was
provided for no more than 90 days on the
basis of exigent circumstances beyond its
control.
Contact: Daniel Celaya, Grants
Management Specialist, Office of Grants
Management, Office of Native American
Programs, Southwest Office of Native
American Programs, Office of Public and
Indian, Housing Department of Housing and
Urban Development, One N. Central Ave.,
Phoenix, AZ 85004, telephone (602) 379–
7193.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Big Valley Tribe of Pomo
Indians, Lakeport, CA 95453.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 1000.224 that the Secretary may
waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in
whole or in part, for a period of not more
than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that
an Indian tribe has not complied with, or is
unable to comply with, those requirements
due to exigent circumstances beyond the
control of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested
because a new Executive Director was in the
process of being hired. The waiver was
provided for no more than 90 days on the
basis of exigent circumstances beyond its
control.
Contact: Sarah Olson, Grants Management
Specialist, Office of Grants Management,
Office of Native American Programs,
Southwest Office of Native American
Programs, Office of Public and Indian
Housing Department of Housing and Urban
Development, One N. Central Ave., Phoenix,
AZ 85004, telephone (602) 379–7233.
• Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Summit Lake Paiute
Tribe, Summit Lake, NV.
Nature of Requirement: HUD’s regulation
at 24 CFR 1000.224 that the Secretary may
waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in
whole or in part, for a period of not more
than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that
an Indian tribe has not complied with, or is
unable to comply with, those requirements
due to exigent circumstances beyond the
control of the Indian Tribe.
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 61 / Tuesday, March 31, 2015 / Notices
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting
Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing.
Date Granted: October 28, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested
because the Tribal Council went through an
internal reorganization; the person
responsible for preparing the IHP was no
longer associated with the Tribal Council.
The Tribal Council will assign another
council member to complete the IHP. The
waiver was provided for no more than 90
days on the basis of exigent circumstances
beyond its control.
Contact: Leticia Rodriguez, Grants
Management Specialist, Office of Grants
Management, Office of Native American
Programs, Southwest Office of Native
American Programs, Office of Public and
Indian Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 500 Gold Ave. SW.,
Seventh FL, Suite 7301, Albuquerque, NM
87103–0906, telephone (505) 346–6926.
[FR Doc. 2015–07183 Filed 3–30–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–5831–N–16]
30-Day Notice of Proposed Information
Collection: Application for Energy
Innovation Fund—Multifamily Pilot
Program
Office of the Chief Information
Officer, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
HUD has submitted the
proposed information collection
requirement described below to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review, in accordance with
the Paperwork Reduction Act. The
purpose of this notice is to allow for an
additional 30 days of public comment.
DATES: Comments Due Date: April 30,
2015.
SUMMARY:
Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this proposal. Comments should refer to
the proposal by name and/or OMB
Control Number and should be sent to:
HUD Desk Officer, Office of
Management and Budget, New
Executive Office Building, Washington,
DC 20503; fax: 202–395–5806. Email:
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Colette Pollard, Reports Management
Officer, QDAM, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street,
SW., Washington, DC 20410; email at
Colette Pollard@hud.gov or telephone
202–402–3400. Persons with hearing or
speech impairments may access this
number through TTY by calling the tollfree Federal Relay Service at (800) 877–
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
ADDRESSES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:32 Mar 30, 2015
Jkt 235001
8339. This is not a toll-free number.
Copies of available documents
submitted to OMB may be obtained
from Ms. Pollard.
Dated: March 25, 2015.
Colette Pollard,
Department Reports Management Officer,
Office of the Chief Information Officer.
This
notice informs the public that HUD has
submitted to OMB a request for
approval of the information collection
described in Section A.
The Federal Register notice that
solicited public comment on the
information collection for a period of 60
days was published on December 5,
2014 at 79 FR 72194.
[FR Doc. 2015–07323 Filed 3–30–15; 8:45 am]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Overview of Information Collection
Title of Information Collection:
Application for Energy Innovation
Fund—Multifamily Pilot Program.
OMB Approval Number: 2502–0599.
Type of Request: Extension of
currently approved collection.
Form Numbers: N/A.
Description of the need for the
information and proposed use:
Application information will be used to
evaluate, score and rank applications for
grant funds.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
12.
Estimated Number of Responses: 120.
Frequency of Response: 4.
Average Hours per Response: 25.
Total Estimated Burdens: 464.
Solicitation of Public Comment
This notice is soliciting comments
from members of the public and affected
parties concerning the collection of
information described in Section A on
the following:
(1) Whether the proposed collection
of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of
the agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) The accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of the burden of the proposed
collection of information;
(3) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and
(4) Ways to minimize the burden of
the collection of information on those
who are to respond; including through
the use of appropriate automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
HUD encourages interested parties to
submit comment in response to these
questions.
Authority: Section 3507 of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35.
PO 00000
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BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLNMP00000 L13110000.PP0000
15XL1109PF]
Notice of Cancellation of Public
Meeting, Pecos District Resource
Advisory Council Meeting, Lesser
Prairie-Chicken Habitat Preservation
Area of Critical Environmental Concern
(LPC ACEC) Livestock Grazing
Subcommittee New Mexico
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Cancellation of public meeting.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act and the Federal Advisory
Committee Act, the meeting of the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
Pecos District Resource Advisory
Council’s (RAC) Lesser Prairie-Chicken
(LPC) Habitat Preservation Area of
Critical Environmental Concerns
(ACEC) Livestock Grazing
Subcommittee originally scheduled for
the time a date listed below is cancelled.
DATES: The LPC ACEC Subcommittee
was originally scheduled to meet on
March 31, 2015, at 1 p.m. in the Roswell
Field Office, 2909 West Second Street,
Roswell, New Mexico 88201.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Adam Ortega, Roswell Field Office,
Bureau of Land Management, 2909 West
2nd Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201,
575–627–0204. Persons who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–800–877–8229
to contact the above individual during
normal business hours. The FIRS is
available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
to leave a message or question with the
above individual. You will receive a
reply during normal business hours.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The 10member Pecos District RAC elected to
create a subcommittee to advise the
Secretary of the Interior, through the
BLM Pecos District, about possible
livestock grazing within the LPC ACEC.
The Pecos District RAC met on March
10, 2015, and voted to pass on
Subcommittee’s management
recommendations for the LPC ACEC to
the BLM’s Pecos District, making the
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\31MRN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 61 (Tuesday, March 31, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17062-17072]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-07183]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-5789-N-04]
Notice of Regulatory Waiver Requests Granted for the Fourth
Quarter of Calendar Year 2014
AGENCY: Office of the General Counsel, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Section 106 of the Department of Housing and Urban Development
Reform Act of 1989 (the HUD Reform Act) requires HUD to publish
quarterly Federal Register notices of all regulatory waivers that HUD
has approved. Each notice covers the quarterly period since the
previous Federal Register notice. The purpose of this notice is to
comply with the requirements of section 106 of the HUD Reform Act. This
notice contains a list of regulatory waivers granted by HUD during the
period beginning on October 1, 2014, and ending on December 31, 2014.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general information about this
notice, contact Camille E. Acevedo, Associate General Counsel for
Legislation and Regulations, Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW., Room 10282, Washington, DC 20410-
0500, telephone 202-708-1793 (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 Relay Service at 800-877-8339.
For information concerning a particular waiver that was granted and
for which public notice is provided in this document, contact the
person whose name and address follow the description of the waiver
granted in the accompanying list of waivers that have been granted in
the fourth quarter of calendar year 2014.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 106 of the HUD Reform Act added a
new section 7(q) to the Department of Housing and Urban Development Act
(42 U.S.C. 3535(q)), which provides that:
1. Any waiver of a regulation must be in writing and must specify
the grounds for approving the waiver;
2. Authority to approve a waiver of a regulation may be delegated
by the Secretary only to an individual of Assistant Secretary or
equivalent rank, and the person to whom authority to waive is delegated
must also have authority to issue the particular regulation to be
waived;
3. Not less than quarterly, the Secretary must notify the public of
all waivers of regulations that HUD has approved, by publishing a
notice in the Federal Register. These notices (each covering the period
since the most recent previous notification) shall:
a. Identify the project, activity, or undertaking involved;
b. Describe the nature of the provision waived and the designation
of the provision;
c. Indicate the name and title of the person who granted the waiver
request;
d. Describe briefly the grounds for approval of the request; and
e. State how additional information about a particular waiver may
be obtained.
Section 106 of the HUD Reform Act also contains requirements
applicable to waivers of HUD handbook provisions that are not relevant
to the purpose of this notice.
This notice follows procedures provided in HUD's Statement of
Policy on Waiver of Regulations and Directives issued on April 22, 1991
(56 FR 16337). In accordance with those procedures and with the
requirements of section 106 of the HUD Reform Act, waivers of
regulations are granted by the Assistant Secretary with jurisdiction
over the regulations for which a waiver was requested. In those cases
in which a General Deputy Assistant Secretary granted the waiver, the
General Deputy Assistant Secretary was serving in the absence of the
Assistant Secretary in accordance with the office's Order of
Succession.
This notice covers waivers of regulations granted by HUD from
October 1, 2014 through December 31, 2014. For ease of reference, the
waivers granted by HUD are listed by HUD program office (for example,
the Office of Community Planning and Development, the Office of Fair
Housing and Equal Opportunity, the Office of Housing, and the Office of
Public and Indian Housing, etc.). Within each program office grouping,
the waivers are listed sequentially by the regulatory section of title
24 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) that is being waived. For
example, a waiver of a provision in 24 CFR part 58 would be listed
before a waiver of a provision in 24 CFR part 570.
Where more than one regulatory provision is involved in the grant
of a particular waiver request, the action is listed under the section
number of the first regulatory requirement that appears in 24 CFR and
that is being waived. For example, a waiver of both Sec. 58.73 and
Sec. 58.74 would appear sequentially in the listing under Sec. 58.73.
Waiver of regulations that involve the same initial regulatory
citation are in time sequence beginning with the earliest-dated
regulatory waiver.
Should HUD receive additional information about waivers granted
during the period covered by this report (the fourth quarter of
calendar year 2014) before the next report is published (the first
quarter of calendar year 2015), HUD will include any additional waivers
granted for the fourth quarter in the next report.
Accordingly, information about approved waiver requests pertaining
to HUD regulations is provided in the Appendix that follows this
notice.
Dated: March 24, 2015.
Tonya T. Robinson,
Principal Deputy General Counsel.
APPENDIX
Listing of Waivers of Regulatory Requirements Granted by Offices of the
Department of Housing and Urban Development October 1, 2014 through
December 31, 2014
Note to Reader: More information about the granting of these
waivers, including a copy of the waiver request and approval, may be
obtained by contacting the person whose name is listed as the
contact person directly after each set of regulatory waivers
granted.
The regulatory waivers granted appear in the following order:
I. Regulatory waivers granted by the Office of Community
Planning and Development.
II. Regulatory waivers granted by the Office of Housing.
III. Regulatory waivers granted by the Office of Public and
Indian Housing.
I. Regulatory Waivers Granted by the Office of Community Planning and
Development
For further information about the following regulatory waivers,
please see the name of the contact person that immediately follows
the description of the waiver granted.
Regulation: 24 CFR 58.22(a).
Project/Activity: The Spokane Tribe of Indians requested a
waiver of 24 CFR 58.22(a) for the demolition and new construction of
the West End Community Center serving the Spokane Tribe in
Wellpinit, WA. The waiver requested clearance for the demolition of
the old community center prior to the Request for Release of Funds
(RROF).
Nature of Requirement: The regulation at 24 CFR 58.22(a)
provides that no entity may
[[Page 17063]]
commit HUD assistance under a program listed in Sec. 58.1(b) on any
activity or project until HUD or the state has approved the
recipient's RROF. In addition, until the RROF has been approved, no
entity may commit non-HUD funds on an activity listed in Sec.
58.1(b) if the activity would have an adverse environmental impact.
Since the commitment of non-HUD funds violates only the regulation
and not the statute, HUD may, if there is good cause, grant a waiver
of the affected regulation. A waiver is required because the Spokane
Tribe committed non-HUD funds to demolish the old West End Community
Center facility prior to receiving an approved RROF.
Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Community Planning and Development.
Date Granted: December 10, 2014.
Reason Waived: It was determined that the project would further
the HUD mission and advance HUD program goals to develop viable,
quality communities. It was further determined that the Spokane
Tribe of Indians did not knowingly violate the regulation, no HUD
funds were committed, and based on the environmental assessment and
field inspection, granting the waiver will not result in any
unmitigated, adverse environmental impact.
Contact: Lauren Hayes, Office of Environment and Energy, Office
of Community Planning and Development, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 7248, Washington, DC
20410, telephone (202) 402-4270.
Regulations: 24 CFR 92.251(c) and 24 CFR 92.504(d).
Project/Activity: HUD, along with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture and the U.S. Department of Treasury, developed the
Physical Inspection Alignment Pilot Program to align physical
inspection criteria and reduce the number of inspections for each
property to no more than one visit per year while meeting the
requirements of each federal funding source with a vested financial
interest in the property. The waiver permitted pilot grantees to use
the Uniform Physical Condition Standards as the minimum inspection
standard for HOME-assisted rental property rather than Housing
Quality Standards as currently required by 24 CFR 92.251(c) and
allows for more frequent inspections than are required for
inspection frequency under 24 CFR 92.504(d). The following
participating jurisdictions were granted a limited waiver of HOME
property standards for participating in HUD's Physical Inspections
Alignment Pilot Program: the State of Kentucky, the State of
Louisiana, the State of Minnesota, the State of Missouri, the State
of New Mexico, the State of Texas, the State of Wisconsin and the
State of Vermont.
Nature of Requirements: The regulation at 24 CFR 92.251(c)
identifies the property standards for property acquired with HOME
assistance. The regulation at 24 CFR 92.504(d) requires the
participating jurisdiction to inspect each project at project
completion and during the period of affordability to determine that
the project meets the property standards of 24 CFR 92.251.
Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Community Planning and Development.
Date Granted: November 5, 2014.
Reasons Waived: The waiver was granted to reduce duplicative
inspection for grantees participating in the Physical Inspection
Alignment Pilot Program. HUD estimates that one periodically-
scheduled physical inspection may result in 20,000 fewer property
inspections per year by federal agencies, which will reduce the cost
of program oversight and create efficiencies for the government,
property owners, and for residents of affordable housing whose
apartments are subject to inspection. The waiver was effective until
December 31, 2014 and limited to Combined Funding Properties
included in the 2014 Physical Inspection Alignment Pilot Program.
Contact: Virginia Sardone, Director, Office of Affordable
Housing Programs, Office of Community Planning and Development,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Room 7164, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-2684.
Regulation: 24 CFR 570.200(h).
Project/Activity: On October 21, 2014, HUD issued a CPD Notice
implementing procedures to govern the submission and review of
consolidated plans and action plans for FY 2015 funding prior to the
enactment of a FY 2015 HUD appropriation bill. These procedures
apply to any Entitlement, Insular or Hawaii nonentitlement grantee
with a program year start date prior to, or up to 60 days after,
HUD's announcement of the FY 2015 formula program funding
allocations for CDBG, ESG, HOME and HOPWA formula funding. Any
grantee with an FY 2015 program year start date during the period
starting October 1, 2014, and ending August 16, 2015 or 60 days
after HUD announcement of FY 2015 allocation amounts (whichever
comes first), is advised not to submit its consolidated plan/action
plan until the FY 2015 formula allocations have been announced.
Nature of Requirement: The Entitlement CDBG program regulations
provide for situations in which a grantee may incur costs against
its CDBG grant prior to the award of its grant from HUD. Under the
regulations, the effective date of a grantee's grant agreement is
either the grantee's program year start date or the date that the
grantee's annual action plan is received by HUD, whichever is later.
This waiver allowed grantees to treat the effective date of the FY
2015 program year as the grantee's program year start date or date
or the date that the grantee's annual action plan is received by
HUD, whichever is earlier.
Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Community Planning and Development.
Date Granted: September 25, 2014, for effect on October 21,
2014.
Reason Waived: Under the provisions of the CPD Notice, a
grantee's action plan may not be submitted to (and thus received by)
HUD until several months after the grantee's program year start
date. Lengthy delays in the receipt of annual appropriations by HUD,
and implementation of the policy to delay submission of FY 2015
Action Plans, may have negative consequences for CDBG grantees that
intend to incur eligible costs prior to the award of FY 2015
funding. Some activities might otherwise be interrupted while
implementing these revised procedures. In addition, grantees might
not otherwise be able to use CDBG funds for planning and
administrative costs of administering their programs. In order to
address communities' needs and to ensure that programs can continue
without disturbance, this waiver allowed grantees to incur pre-award
costs on a timetable comparable to that under which grantees have
operated in past years. HUD advised grantees that this waiver is
available for use by any applicable CDBG grantee whose action plan
submission is delayed past the normal submission date because of
delayed enactment of FY 2015 appropriations for the Department. This
waiver authority is only in effect until August 16, 2015.
Contact: Steve Johnson, Director, Entitlement Communities
Division, Office of Block Grant Assistance, Office of Community and
Planning Development, Department of Housing and Urban Development,
451 7th Street SW., Room 7282, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202)
708-1577.
Regulation: 24 CFR 570.208(a)(l)(vi).
Project/Activity: Spokane County, WA requested a waiver of 24
CFR 570.208(a)(l)(vi) to allow the use of prior Low and Moderate
Income Summary Data (LMISD) for an infrastructure activity in the
town of Fairfield in order to demonstrate compliance with the low-
and moderate-income benefit national objective requirements.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR
570.208(a)(l)(vi) requires that the most recently available
decennial census information must be used to the fullest extent
feasible, together with the section 8 income limits that would have
applied at the time the income information was collected by the
Census Bureau, to determine whether there is a sufficiently large
percentage of low- and moderate-income persons residing in the area
served by a CDBG funded activity. The HUD-produced Low and Moderate
Income Summary Data provide this data to grantees. On June 10, 2014,
HUD issued new Low and Moderate Income Summary Data, with an
effective date of July 1, 2014 for use by grantees.
Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Community Planning and Development.
Date Granted: November 4, 2014.
Reason Waived: The Fairfield water line infrastructure activity
had been in the planning stage for many months, and was included in
the county's FY 2014 Annual Action Plan. However, funds were not
obligated by the county to the activity prior to July 1, 2014 and
July 1 was the county's program year start date. The service area
for this activity no longer qualified under the new LMISD. However,
the county explained that the town of Fairfield's demographic
characteristics, with a population of 665, almost remained the same
since the previous LMISD was issued, and that the American Community
Survey (ACS) sampling methodology resulted in this change, not a
[[Page 17064]]
decrease in the number of low- and moderate-income persons. The
urgency of repairing the water lines made it difficult to complete a
special survey in time. The county estimated that it would cost
close to $20,000 to conduct a survey to demonstrate that the service
area of the activity meets the low- and moderate-income area benefit
national objective criteria. The waiver allowed the county to
continue to use the prior Low and Moderate Income Summary Data to
demonstrate compliance with the low- and moderate-income benefit
national objective requirements.
Contact: Steve Johnson, Director, Entitlement Communities
Division, Office of Block Grant Assistance, Office of Community and
Planning Development, Department of Housing and Urban Development,
451 Seventh Street SW., Room 7282, Washington, DC 20410, telephone
(202) 708-1577.
Regulation: 24 CFR 570.208(a)(l)(vi).
Project/Activity: King County, WA requested a waiver of 24 CFR
570.208(a)(l)(vi) to allow the use of prior Low and Moderate Income
Summary Data (LMISD) for two infrastructure activities in order to
demonstrate compliance with the low- and moderate-income benefit
national objective requirements.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR
570.208(a)(l)(vi) requires that the most recently available
decennial census information must be used to the fullest extent
feasible, together with the section 8 income limits that would have
applied at the time the income information was collected by the
Census Bureau, to determine whether there is a sufficiently large
percentage of low- and moderate-income persons residing in the area
served by a CDBG funded activity. The HUD-produced Low and Moderate
Income Summary Data provide this data to grantees. On June 10, 2014,
HUD issued new Low and Moderate Income Summary Data, with an
effective date of July 1, 2014 for use by grantees.
Granted By: Clifford Taffet, General Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Community Planning and Development.
Date Granted: November 18, 2014.
Reason Waived: The request pertained to two infrastructure
activities, which had been in the planning stage for many months,
and were included in the county's FY 2014 Annual Action Plan.
However, funds were not obligated by the county to these activities
prior to July 1, 2014. The county documented that the available Low
and Moderate Income Summary Data covered an area larger than the
actual service areas for the two activities, and was not
representative of the income characteristics of the activity service
area residents. It was determined that unless the waiver was granted
to the county, these activities that directly benefit the health and
safety of residents would not be implemented due to the lack of
expertise and funds needed to conduct special surveys to qualify the
service areas. The waiver allowed the county to continue to use the
prior Low and Moderate Income Summary Data to demonstrate compliance
with the low- and moderate-income benefit national objective
requirements.
Contact: Steve Johnson, Director, Entitlement Communities
Division, Office of Block Grant Assistance, Office of Community and
Planning Development, Department of Housing and Urban Development,
451 Seventh Street SW., Room 7282, Washington, DC 20410, telephone
(202) 708-1577.
Regulation: 24 CFR part 576.403(c).
Project/Activity: Louisville-Jefferson County, KY Metro
Government requested a waiver of Sec. 576.403(c) to allow the Legal
Aid Society to provide legal services under the homelessness
prevention component to program participants who want to stay in
their units, even if the units do not meet the habitability
standards. The waiver would allow those program participants
receiving the legal services to receive the case management required
at Sec. 576.401(d) and (e) even if their units do not meet the
habitability standards. The waiver was contingent upon the
commitment of the recipient, its subrecipient, Legal Aid Society,
and the subrecipient(s) providing the required case management to
work with the property owners to bring the units into compliance
with the habitability standards or assist the program participants
to move if the units are unsafe.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation at Sec. 576.403(c) states
that the recipient or subrecipient cannot use ESG funds to help a
program participant remain in or move into housing that does not
meet the ESG minimum habitability standards for permanent housing.
Granted By: Cliff Taffet, General Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Community Planning and Development.
Date Granted: December 10, 2014.
Reason Waived: HUD recognized that in certain instances, the
best way to help program participants avoid homelessness is to keep
them in their housing until better housing can be located, or their
existing housing can be brought up to code. Legal services provide
an important resource for persons who are at risk of homelessness,
who need immediate assistance to help them avoid moving to the
streets or emergency shelters. In some instances, it is not feasible
to inspect a unit to ensure that it meets the habitability standards
prior to the provision of the legal services assistance necessary to
prevent homelessness for the individual or family. Also in some
cases, the habitability requirement actually prohibits eligible
program participants from receiving the legal services that could
assist them to make the unit habitable and stabilize them in their
housing.
Contact: Norm Suchar, Director, Office of Special Needs
Assistance Programs, Office of Community Planning and Development,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW.,
Room 7262, Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-4300.
II. Regulatory Waivers Granted by the Office of Housing--Federal
Housing Administration (FHA)
For further information about the following regulatory waivers,
please see the name of the contact person that immediately follows
the description of the waiver granted.
Regulation: 24 CFR 219.220(b).
Project/Activity: St. James A.M.E Tower Apartments, FHA Project
Number 031-018NISUP, Newark, NJ. The Owners have requested deferral
of repayment of the Flexible Subsidy Operating Assistance Loan on
this project due to their inability to repay the loan in full upon
prepayment of the 236 Loan.
Nature of Requirement: Section 219.220(b)(1995) governs the
repayment of operating assistance provided under the Flexible
Subsidy Program for Troubled Projects states ``Assistance that has
been paid to a project owner under this subpart must be repaid at
the earlier of expiration of the term of the mortgage, termination
of mortgage insurance, prepayment of the mortgage, or a sale of the
project (Transfer of Physical Assets (TPA)) if the Secretary so
requires at the time of approval of the TPA.'' Either of these
actions would typically terminate FHA involvement with the property,
and the Flexible Subsidy Loan would be repaid, in whole, at that
time.
Granted by: Biniam T. Gebre, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Housing-Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: December 30, 2014.
Reason Waived: The owner requested and was granted waiver of the
requirement to defer repayment of the Flexible Subsidy Operating
Assistance Loan to allow the much needed preservation and moderate
rehabilitation of the project. The project will be preserved as an
affordable housing resource of Newark, NJ.
Contact: John Ardovini, Restructuring Analyst, Office of
Affordable Housing Preservation, Office of Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 402-2636.
Regulation: 24 CFR 219.220(b).
Project/Activity: CWA Apartments II FHA Number TN43L000016 is a
project based Section 8 Loan Management Set-Aside (LMSA) contract
encumbering a76-units for low- income families located in Nashville,
Tennessee. The project consists of 76 two-bedroom units. The
contract expires on August 31, 2017. On September 1, 1994, a
Flexible Subsidy Loan was awarded in the amount of $1,659,585 at one
percent per annum.
Nature of Requirement: Section 219.220(b) governs the repayment
of operating assistance provided under the Flexible Subsidy Program
for Troubled Projects prior to May 1, 1996 states: ``Assistance that
has been paid to a project owner under this subpart must be repaid
at the earlier of the expiration of the term of the mortgage,
termination of mortgage insurance, prepayment of the mortgage, or a
sale of the project. . .'' Either of these actions would typically
terminate FHA involvement with the property, and the Flexible
Subsidy Loan would be repaid, in whole, at that time.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant Secretary for Housing-
Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 7, 2014.
Reason Waived: The owner requested and was granted waiver
because good cause was shown that it is in the public's best
interest to grant this waiver. The owner executed and recorded a
Rental Use Agreement that extended the affordability of the property
for
[[Page 17065]]
20 years and amended the Residual Receipts Note to reflect the
monthly payments. These documents were simultaneously assumed by the
purchaser.
Contact: Marilynne Hutchins, Office of Asset Management and
Portfolio Oversight (OAMPO), Office of Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 6174,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 402-4323.
Regulation: 24 CFR 219.220(b).
Project/Activity: CWA Apartments I Contract number TN43-L000-015
apartments CWA Apartments I is a 176-unit multifamily project which
consists of 20 two-bedroom units and 156 three-bedroom units. The
property was financed with a mortgage insured pursuant to Section
221(d)(3) of the National Housing Act, which has now matured and is
paid in full. The Loan Management Set-Aside (LMSA) Housing
Assistance Payments (HAP) contract covers all 176 units. The HAP
contact expires on August 31, 2017. In 1995, the project was awarded
a Flexible Subsidy Loan in the amount of $3,508,629 with one percent
interest rate. As of September 29, 2014, the Flexible Subsidy Loan's
unpaid balance is $4,141,194, including accrued interest.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation at 24 CFR
219.220(b)(1995), which governs the repayment of operating
assistance provided under the Flexible Subsidy Program for Troubled
Projects states, ``Assistance that has been paid to a project Owner
under this subpart must be repaid at the earlier of expiration of
the term of the mortgage, termination of mortgage insurance,
prepayment of the mortgage, or a sale of the project.''
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant Secretary for Housing-
Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 7, 2014.
Reason Waived: The owner requested and was granted waiver
because good cause was shown that it is in the public's best
interest to grant this waiver. The owner executed and recorded a
Rental Use Agreement that extended the affordability of the property
for 20 years and amended the Residual Receipts Note to reflect the
monthly payments. These documents were simultaneously assumed by the
purchaser.
Contact: Marilynne Hutchins, Office of Asset Management and
Portfolio Oversight (OAMPO), Office of Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 6174,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 402-4323.
Regulation: 24 CFR 219.220(b).
Project/Activity: Cathedral Terrace Apartments FHA number 063-
44007 is a 240-unit high-rise project for low- income and very low-
income tenants. The mortgage was insured pursuant to Section
236(j)(1) of the National Housing Act and received its final
endorsement on November 22, 1974, in the amount of $4,919,500. A
Section 8 Loan Management Set-Aside (LMSA) contract subsidizes 224
units and expires on June 30, 2034. The mortgage matured on November
1, 2014, which triggered the repayment of the Flexible Subsidy Loans
Nature of Requirement: The regulation at 24 CFR 219.220(b)
(1995), which governs the repayment of operating assistance provided
under the Flexible Subsidy Program for Troubled Properties, states
``Assistance that has been paid to a project Owner under this
subpart must be repaid at the earlier of the expiration of the term
of the mortgage, termination of mortgage insurance, prepayment of
the mortgage, or a sale of the project.''
Granted by: Biniam Gebre, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Housing-Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: December 30, 2014.
Reason Waived: The owner requested and was granted waiver to
permit the deferment of repayment of the Flexible Subsidy Loans,
plus accrued interest for a period of one year. The requested waiver
was for the subject property only. The owner executed and recorded a
Rental Use Agreement that would be superior to all liens. The Rental
Use Agreement extended the project affordability 20 years from the
date of the original mortgage maturity.
Contact: Judith Bryant, Office of Asset Management and Portfolio
Oversight (OAMPO), Office of Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 6174, Washington, DC
20410, telephone (202) 402-4891.
Regulation: 24 CFR 232.7.
Project/Activity: Maple Ride of Plover Memory care is a 20 bed
memory care facility. The facility does not meet the FHA ``Bathroom
``requirements at 24 CFR 232.7. The project is located in Plover,
WI.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation mandates in a board and
care home or assisted living facility that not less than one full
bathroom must be provided for every four residents. Also, the
bathroom cannot be accessed from a public corridor or area.
Granted By: Carol J. Galante, Assistant Secretary for Housing-
Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 7, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is for memory care, all rooms have
half-bathrooms and the resident to full bathroom ratio is 5:1.
Contact: Vance T. Morris, Special Assistant, Office of
Healthcare Programs, Office of Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 2337, Washington, DC
20401, telephone (202) 402-2419.
Regulation: 24 CFR 232.7.
Project/Activity: Senior Suites of Urbandale is an assisted
living and memory care facility. The facility does not meet the FHA
``Bathroom ``requirements at 24 CFR 232.7. The project is located in
Urbandale, IA.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation mandates that in a board
and care home or assisted living facility that the not less than one
full bathroom must be provided for every four residents. Also, the
bathroom cannot be accessed from a public corridor or area.
Granted By: Biniam Gebre, Acting, Assistant Secretary for
Housing-Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: November 24, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is currently FHA insured and presents
no additional financial risks to HUD.
Contact: Vance T. Morris, Special Assistant, Office of
Healthcare Programs, Office of Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 2337, Washington, DC
20401, telephone (202) 402-2419.
Regulation: 24 CFR 232.505(a), 232.520, 232.540(b),
232.605 and 232.620.
Project/Activity: Supplemental Loans to Finance Purchase and
Installation of Fire Safety Equipment.
Nature of Requirement: Waiver of provisions 232.505(a), 232.520,
232.540(b), 232.605 and 232.620 that do not reflect current
processing requirements, as these regulatory procedures and
protocols were established in 1974.
Granted By: Carol J. Galante, Assistant Secretary for Housing-
Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 21, 2014.
Reason Waived: There is an urgent need to install automatic fire
sprinkler systems in nursing homes due to a new federal mandate.
Contact: Vance T. Morris, Special Assistant, Office of
Healthcare Programs, Office of Housing, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 2337, Washington, DC
20401, telephone (202) 402-2419.
Regulation: 24 CFR 891.100(d).
Project/Activity: Teaneck Senior Housing, Teaneck, NJ, Project
Number: 031-EE077/NJ39-S091-004.
Nature of Requirement: Section 891.100(d) prohibits amendment of
the amount of the approved capital advance funds prior to closing.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant Secretary for Housing-
Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 3, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is economically designed and
comparable in cost to similar projects in the area, and the sponsor/
owner exhausted all efforts to obtain additional funding from other
sources.
Contact: Catherine M. Brennan, Director, Office of Housing
Assistance and Grant Administration, Office of Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 6180,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-3000.
Regulation: 24 CFR 891.100(d).
Project/Activity: Allen House, Millstone, NJ, Project Number:
031-EE083/NJ39-S101-006.
Nature of Requirement: Section 891.100(d) prohibits amendment of
the amount of the approved capital advance funds prior to closing.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant Secretary for Housing-
Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 3, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is economically designed and
comparable in cost to similar projects in the area, and the sponsor/
owner exhausted all efforts to obtain additional funding from other
sources.
Contact: Catherine M. Brennan, Director, Office of Housing
Assistance and Grant Administration, Office of Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 6180,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-3000.
[[Page 17066]]
Regulation: 24 CFR 891.100(d).
Project/Activity: Our Lady of Assumption Apts., Abbeville, LA,
Project Number: 064-EE243/LA48-S091-012.
Nature of Requirement: Section 891.100(d) prohibits amendment of
the amount of the approved capital advance funds prior to closing.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant Secretary for Housing-
Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 3, 2014.
Reason Waived: The project is economically designed and
comparable in cost to similar projects in the area, and the sponsor/
owner exhausted all efforts to obtain additional funding from other
sources.
Contact: Catherine M. Brennan, Director, Office of Housing
Assistance and Grant Administration, Office of Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 6180,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-3000.
Regulation: 24 CFR 891.165.
Project/Activity: Bill Sorro Community, San Francisco, CA,
Project Number: 121-HD097/CA39-Q101-003.
Nature of Requirement: Section 891.165 provides that the
duration of the fund reservation of the capital advance is 18 months
from the date of issuance with limited exceptions up to 36 months,
as approved by HUD on a case-by-case basis.
Granted by: Carol J. Galante, Assistant Secretary for Housing-
Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: Additional time was needed in order to meet the
construction lender's loan requirement for this capital advance upon
completion mixed-finance project.
Contact: Catherine M. Brennan, Director, Office of Housing
Assistance and Grant Administration, Office of Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 6180,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-3000.
Regulation: Requirements of Mortgagee Letter 2011-22,
Condominium Project Approval and Processing Guide, Insurance
Requirements.
Project/Activity: Extension of initial waiver issued November
27, 2013, providing an exemption to the insurance requirements
defined in Mortgagee Letter 2011-22, Condominium Project Approval
and Processing Guide.
Nature of Requirement: Section 2.1.9 of the Condominium Project
Approval and Processing Guide, Insurance Requirements, defines the
condominium project insurance requirements that must be met for
issuance of FHA condominium project approval. The extension of the
initial waiver allows for acceptance of individual insurance
policies issued to the unit owners for Manufactured Housing,
Detached and Common Interest Condominium Projects unable to satisfy
the insurance requirements.
Granted by: Biniam Gebre, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Housing-Federal Housing Commissioner.
Date Granted: November 27, 2014.
Reason Waived: The extension of the waiver previously issued
that allows unit owners to obtain and maintain their own insurance
coverage is required to ensure the continued availability of a
condominium unit as an affordable housing option. Issuance of the
extension is consistent with the Department's objectives to expand
the availability of FHA mortgage insurance, while providing
appropriate safeguards.
Contact: Joanne B. Kuczma, Housing Program Officer, Office of
Single Family Program Development, Office of Housing, Department of
Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 402-2137.
III. Regulatory Waivers Granted by the Office of Public and Indian
Housing
For further information about the following regulatory waivers,
please see the name of the contact person that immediately follows
the description of the waiver granted.
Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: Olean Housing Authority (NY093), Olean NY.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation establishes certain
reporting compliance dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate Assessment Center (REAC)
no later than nine months after the housing authority's (HA) fiscal
year end (FYE), in accordance with the Single Audit Act and OMB
Circular A-133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 1, 2014.
Reason Waived: The final approval of the annual audit was
postponed due to three weather related cancellations of meetings of
the Board of Commissioners. The audit was completed in December
2013, but was inadvertently not submitted. Due to the Departments'
delayed response and the fact that the audited financials have been
submitted and approved, the housing authority was granted a one-time
waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program Manager, NASS, Real Estate
Assessment Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 475-7907.
Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: The Municipality of Fajardo (RQ036) Fajardo,
PR
Nature of Requirement: The regulation establishes certain
reporting compliance dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate Assessment Center (REAC)
no later than nine months after the housing authority's (HA) fiscal
year end (FYE), in accordance with the Single Audit Act and OMB
Circular A-133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 13, 2014.
Reason Waived: The audited reporting requirements were delayed
due to the unforeseen death of your predecessor auditor. The
additional time was needed to enable the successor auditor to review
and process for final approval. Due to the Departments' delayed
response and the fact that the audited financial report was approved
on August 28, 2014, the housing authority was granted this one-time
waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program Manager, NASS, Real Estate
Assessment Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 475-7907.
Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: City of Mesa Housing Authority (AZ005) Mesa
AZ.
Nature of Requirement: The regulation establishes certain
reporting compliance dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate Assessment Center (REAC)
no later than nine months after the housing authority's (HA) fiscal
year end (FYE), in accordance with the Single Audit Act and OMB
Circular A-133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 14, 2014.
Reason Waived: The delayed submission was a result of the
process to implement a new ERP Integrated Information System during
2013. The agency is component unit and must wait until the city-wide
audit was complete before processing the audited financial data. The
agency incurred a turnover in staff prior to closing your 2013 books
and that additional time was needed for IPA review and final
submission. Due to the Department's delayed response and the fact
that your audited financial report was approved on July 22, 2014,
the housing authority was granted this one-time waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program Manager, NASS, Real Estate
Assessment Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 475-7907.
Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: South Tucson Housing Authority (AZ025) South
Tucson, AZ
Nature of Requirement: The regulation establishes certain
reporting compliance dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate Assessment Center (REAC)
no later than nine months after the housing authority's (HA) fiscal
year end (FYE), in accordance with the Single Audit Act and OMB
Circular A-133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: November 19, 2014.
Reason Waived: The delayed submission was a result of the City
of South Tucson's inability to obtain an extension from OMB to
complete its Single Audit requirement. The agency was a component
unit and waited until the city-wide audit was completed before
processing the audited financial data for submission. Due to the
Department's delayed response and the fact that the audited
financial report was approved on August 27, 2014, the housing
authority was granted a one-time waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program Manager, NASS, Real Estate
Assessment
[[Page 17067]]
Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100, Washington,
DC 20410, telephone (202) 475-7907.
Regulation: 24 CFR 5.801(d)(1).
Project/Activity: Mercedes Housing Authority (TX029) Mercedes,
TX
Nature of Requirement: The regulation establishes certain
reporting compliance dates. The audited financial statements are
required to be submitted to the Real Estate Assessment Center (REAC)
no later than nine months after the housing authority's (HA) fiscal
year end (FYE), in accordance with the Single Audit Act and OMB
Circular A-133.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: November 26, 2014.
Reason Waived: The delayed submission was due to issues between
the independent auditor and the Texas State Board. The State Board
required the agency to seek a second review from another independent
auditor. However, due to human resource issues and scheduled
vacation, the advising auditor could not complete the audit in time
to submit your audited financial data by the due date. The agency's
audited financial data was approved on September 4, 2014, therefore,
the housing authority was granted a one-time waiver.
Contact: Judy Wojciechowski, Program Manager, NASS, Real Estate
Assessment Center, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 550 12th Street SW., Suite 100,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 475-7907.
Regulation: Notices PIH 2013-3 and PIH 20013-26: Public
Housing and Housing Choice Voucher Programs--Temporary Compliance
Assistance.
Project/Activity: PIH Notice 2013-3 was issued to establish
temporary guidelines for public housing agencies (PHAs) in
fulfilling certain public housing and housing choice voucher
requirements during the current and upcoming fiscal year to
alleviate some of the burden on already stressed PHA resources. The
reduction of burden provided in this notice involved offering PHAs
the option to comply with certain alternative requirements to
existing regulations, and if they opted to do so the existing
regulation would be waived. Issuance of this notice was reported in
HUD's Quarterly Regulatory Waiver report published in the Federal
Register on September 13, 2013, at 78 FR 56912, at 56916. On
November 5, 2013, PIH extended the availability of the alternative
requirements to existing regulations through March 31, 2015. The
following housing authorities obtained regulatory waivers under
these notices: Housing Authority of the Birmingham District, AL;
Housing Authority of the City of Huntsville, AL; Enterprise Housing
Authority, AL; Albertville Housing Authority, AL; Gordo Housing
Authority, AL; Searcy Housing Authority, AR; Lonoke County Housing
Authority, AR; Jonesboro Urban Renewal Housing Authority, AR; City
of Phoenix Housing Department, AZ; Housing and Community Development
Tucson, AZ; Housing Authority of Maricopa County, AZ; Yuma County
Housing Department, AZ; Chandler Housing & Redevelopment Division,
AZ; Tempe Housing Authority, AZ; Pima County Housing Authority, AZ;
Housing Authority of the City & County of San Francisco, CA; Housing
Authority of the City of Los Angeles, CA; City of Sacramento Housing
Authority, CA; Housing Authority City of Fresno, CA; Housing
Authority of Fresno County, CA; County of Sacramento Housing
Authority, CA; Housing Authority of the County of Kern, CA; Tulare
County Housing Authority, CA; Housing Authority of the City of San
Buenaventura, CA; Regional Housing Authority of Sutter & Nevada Co,
CA.; Housing Authority of County of Marin, CA; Housing Authority of
the City of Vallejo, CA; City of Pittsburg Housing Authority, CA;
Housing Authority of the City of San Luis Obispo, CA; Alameda County
Housing Authority, CA; Santa Cruz County Housing Authority, CA;
Housing Authority of the City of Pasadena, CA; Mendocino County
Housing Authority, CA; County of Sonoma Housing Authority, CA; Yuba
County Housing Authority, CA; Housing Authority of the County of San
Diego, CA; Housing Authority of the City of Norwalk, CA; City of
Hollister Housing Authority, CA; City of Vacaville Housing
Authority, CA; City of Roseville Housing Authority, CA; County of
Solano Housing Authority, CA; City of Oceanside Community
Development Commission, CA; Housing Authority of the City and County
of Denver, CO; Wellington Housing Authority, CO; Housing Authority
of the City of Greeley, CO; Littleton Housing Authority, CO; Fort
Collins Housing Authority, CO; Englewood Housing Authority, CO;
Lakewood Housing Authority, CO; Arvada Housing Authority, CO; Aurora
Housing Authority, CO; Housing Authority of Weld County, CO; Larimer
County Housing Authority, CO; Colorado Division of Housing, CO;
Housing Authority of the City of Bridgeport, CT; Housing Authority
of the City of Stamford, CT; Housing Authority of the City of
Danbury, CT; West Haven Housing Authority, CT; Tampa Housing
Authority, FL; Sarasota Housing Authority, FL; Housing Authority of
Pompano Beach, FL; Housing Authority of the City of Fort Myers, FL;
Milton Housing Authority, FL; Pinellas County Housing Authority, FL;
Gainesville Housing Authority, FL; City of Pensacola Housing Office,
FL; Housing Authority of Boca Raton, FL; Housing Authority of Lee
County, FL; Housing Authority of the City of Athens, GA; Housing
Authority of the City of Macon, GA; Housing Authority of the City of
LaGrange, GA; Housing Authority of the City of Conyers, GA; Housing
Authority of Fulton County, GA; Hawaii Public Housing Authority, HI;
Kauai County Housing Agency, HI; City of Sioux City Housing
Authority, IA; Des Moines Municipal Housing Agency, IA; City of Iowa
City Housing Authority, IA; Boise City Housing Authority, ID;
Southwestern Idaho Cooperative Housing Authority, ID; Idaho Housing
and Finance Association, ID; Ada County Housing Authority, ID;
Decatur Housing Authority, IL; Rockford Housing Authority, IL;
Housing Authority Cook County, IL; Pike County Housing Authority,
IL; Aurora Housing Authority of the City of Aurora, IL; Housing
Authority of the Village of Oak Park, IL; Housing Authority of the
City of New Albany, IN; Housing Authority of the City of Evansville,
IN; Housing Authority of the City of Michigan City, IN; Housing
Authority of the City of Terre Haute, IN; Brazil Housing Authority,
IN; Cannelton Housing Authority, IN; Housing Authority of the City
of Lafayette, IN; Housing Authority of the City of Peru, IN; Indiana
Housing and Community Development Authority, IN; Wichita Housing
Authority, KS; Holton Housing Authority, KS; Atchison Housing
Authority, KS; Great Bend Housing Authority, KS; Wamego Housing
Authority, KS; Housing Authority of Paducah, KY; Housing Authority
of Somerset, KY; Housing Authority of Owensboro, KY; Housing
Authority of Newport, KY; Housing Authority of Cynthiana, KY;
Housing Authority of Glasgow, KY; Housing Authority of Owenton, KY;
Bowling Green CDA, KY; Kentucky Housing Corporation-State Agency,
KY; Ouachita Parish Police Jury, LA; Boston Housing Authority, MA;
Taunton Housing Authority, MA; Lynn Housing Authority, MA; Newton
Housing Authority, MA; Braintree Housing Authority, MA; Salem
Housing Authority, MA; Holden Housing Authority, MA; Leominster
Housing Authority, MA; Franklin County Regional Housing Authority,
MA; Department of Housing & Community Development. MA; Hagerstown
Housing Authority, MD; Rockville Housing Enterprises, MD; Elkton
Housing Authority, MD; Portland Housing Authority, ME; Brunswick
Housing Authority, ME; Auburn Housing Authority, ME; Housing
Authority City of Bangor, ME; Biddeford Housing Authority, ME; Saco
Housing Authority, ME; Maine State Housing Authority, ME; Detroit
Housing Commission, MI; Inkster Housing Commission, MI; Eastpointe
Housing Commission, MI; Cadillac Housing Commission, MI; Ann Arbor
Housing Commission, MI; Traverse City Housing Commission, MI; Lapeer
Housing Commission, MI; Wyoming Housing Commission, MI; Saranac
Housing Commission, MI; Potterville Housing Commission, MI; Ingham
County Housing Commission, MI; Michigan State Housing Development
Authority, MI; Public Housing Agency of the City of St Paul, MN;
Housing Authority of Virginia, MN; Housing and Redevelopment
Authority of the City of St. Paul, MN; Housing and Redevelopment
Authority of St. Cloud, MN; Itasca County Housing Redevelopment
Authority, MN; Northwest MN Multi-County Housing Redevelopment
Authority, MN; Metropolitan Council of MN; Clay County Housing
Redevelopment Authority, MN; Plymouth Housing & Redevelopment
Authority, MN; Stearns County Housing Redevelopment Authority, MN:
Washington County Housing Redevelopment Authority: Ripley County
Public Housing Agency, MO; ESCSWA dba Jasper Cty Public Housing
Agency, MO; Mississippi Regional Housing Authority No. VII, MS;
Mississippi Regional Housing Authority No. VI, MS; Housing Authority
of Billings, MT; Whitefish Housing Authority, MT; Missoula Housing
Authority, MT; Housing Authority of the City of Asheville,
[[Page 17068]]
NC; Housing Authority of the City of Greensboro, NC; Housing
Authority of the City of Winston-Salem, NC; Housing Authority of the
City of Durham, NC; Housing Authority of the City of Salisbury, NC;
Mooresville Housing Authority, NC; City of Hickory Public Housing
Authority, NC; New Edenton Housing Authority, NC; Asheboro Housing
Authority, NC; Roanoke-Chowan Regional Housing Authority, NC;
Western Carolina Community Action, Inc., NC; Northwestern Regional
Housing Authority, NC; Omaha Housing Authority, NE; Hall County
Housing Authority, NE; Kearney Housing Authority, NE; Henderson
Housing Authority, NE; Minden Housing Authority, NE; Shelton Housing
Authority, NE; Tilden Housing Authority, NE; Blair Housing
Authority, NE; Gibbon Housing Authority, NE; Alliance Housing
Authority, NE; Douglas County Housing Authority, NE; Norfolk Housing
Agency, NE; Concord Housing Authority, NH; Laconia Housing &
Redevelopment Authority, NH; Housing Authority of the Town of Salem,
NH; New Hampshire Housing Finance Agency, NH; Housing Authority City
of Jersey City, NJ; Burlington County Housing Authority, NJ; Mesilla
Valley Public Housing Authority, NM; Housing Authority of the City
of Truth or Consequences, NM; City of Reno Housing Authority, NV;
Southern Nevada Regional Housing Authority, NV; Nevada Rural Housing
Authority, NV; Syracuse Housing Authority, NY; Municipal Housing
Authority City Yonkers, NY; Gloversville Housing Authority, NY;
Ithaca Housing Authority, NY; Town of Amherst, NY; NYC Department of
Housing Preservation and Development, NY; Village of Highland Falls,
NY; Town of Southampton; Village of Elmira Heights, NY; City of
North Tonawand, NY; Town of Colonie, NY; City of Buffalo, NY; Town
of Clifton Park, NY; Town of Hadley, NY; Town of Guilderland, NY;
Town of Bethlehem, NY; Town of Duanesburg, NY; Town of Niskayuna,
NY; Town of Schodack, NY; Town of Horseheads, NY; City of Johnstown,
NY; Town of Knox, NY; Town of Waterford, NY; Village of Scotia' Town
of Glenville, NY; Town of Rotterdam, NY; Town of Corinth, NY; Fort
Plain Housing Agency, NY; Village of Green Island, NY; Village of
Corinth, NY; Town of Coeymans, NY; Town of Stillwater, NY; Village
of Ballston Spa, NY; Town of Nassau, NY; Village of Waterford, NY;
Youngstown Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH; Cuyahoga Metropolitan
Housing Authority, OH; Lucas Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH;
Akron Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH; Trumbull Metropolitan
Housing Authority, OH; Jefferson Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH;
Mansfield Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH; Springfield
Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH; Huron Metropolitan Housing
Authority, OH; Crawford Metropolitan housing Authority, OH: Geauga
Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH; Warren Metropolitan Housing
Authority; Seneca Metropolitan Housing Authority; Marion
Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH; City of Marietta, OH; Brown
Metropolitan Housing Authority, OH; Hancock Housing Authority, OH;
Housing Authority of the City of Stillwater, OK; Housing Authority
of Clackamas County, OR; Housing Authority of Lincoln County, OR;
Housing Authority & Community Services of Lane County, OR; Housing
Authority of the County of Umatilla' Housing and Urban Renewal
Agency of Polk County, OR; North Bend Housing Authority, OR; Housing
Authority of Jackson County, OR; Housing Authority of Yamhill
County, OR; Linn-Benton Housing Authority, OR; Coos-Curry Housing
Authority, OR; Housing Authority of Washington County, OR; Northwest
Oregon Housing Authority, OR; Josephine Housing Community
Development Council, OR; Central Oregon Regional Housing Authority,
OR; Housing Authority of the City of Pittsburgh, PA; Allentown
Housing Authority, PA; Allegany Housing Authority, PA: Chester
Housing Authority. PA: Housing Authority of the County Butler, PA;
Montgomery County Housing Authority, PA; Housing Authority of the
County of Beaver, PA; Washington County Housing Authority, PA:
Housing Authority of the County Delaware, PA; Housing Authority of
the County of Huntingdon, PA; Housing Authority of the County of
Franklin, PA; Housing Authority of the City of Hazleton, PA; Housing
Authority of the County of Chester, PA; Bradford City Housing
Authority, PA; Housing Authority of the County of Berks, PA; Housing
Authority of the County of Cumberland, PA; Housing Authority of the
County of McKean, PA; Lehigh County Housing Authority, PA; Columbia
County Housing Authority, PA; Housing Authority of the County of
Clarion, PA; Adams County Housing Authority, PA; Housing Authority
Providence, RI; Housing Authority of the City of Pawtucket, RI; East
Providence Housing Authority, RI; Greenville Housing Authority, SC;
Housing Authority of Myrtle Beach, SC; Sioux Falls Housing and
Redevelopment Commission, SD; Aberdeen Housing & Redevelopment
Commission, SD; Memphis Housing Authority, TN; Knoxville's Community
Development Corp., TN; Chattanooga Housing Authority, TN;
Metropolitan Development & Housing Agency, TN; Kingsport Housing and
Redevelopment Authority, TN; Murfreesboro Housing Authority, TN;
Newport Housing Authority, TN; Bristol Housing Authority, TN;
Elizabethton Housing and Development Agency, TN; East Tennessee
Human Resource Agency, TN; Tennessee Housing Development Agency, TN;
Northern Marianas Housing Corporation; Austin Housing Authority, TX;
Housing Authority of the City of El Paso, TX; Housing Authority of
Fort Worth, TX; Houston Housing Authority, TX; Housing Authority of
the City of Dallas, TX; San Benito Housing Authority, TX; Housing
Authority of Temple, TX; New Boston Property Management, TX; Housing
Authority of the City of Munday, TX; Housing Authority of the City
of Knox City, TX; Housing Authority of Belton, TX; Seguin Housing
Authority, TX; Denton Housing Authority, TX; Arlington Housing
Authority, TX; Housing Authority of Marshall, TX; City of Amarillo,
TX; Housing Authority of the City of Rosenberg, TX; McKinney Housing
Authority, TX; Housing Authority of Salt Lake City, UT; Housing
Authority of Utah County, UT; Hopewell Redevelopment & Housing
Authority, VA; Richmond Redevelopment & Housing Authority, VA;
Roanoke Redevelopment & Housing Authority, VA; Hampton Redevelopment
& Housing Authority, VA; Fairfax County Redevelopment & Housing
Authority, VA; Lee County Redevelopment & Housing Authority, VA;
Accomack-Northampton Regional Housing Authority, VA; Virgin Islands
Housing Authority; Brattleboro Housing Authority, VT; Housing
Authority of the City of Bremerton, WA; Housing Authority of the
City of Everett, WA; Housing Authority City of Longview, WA; Housing
Authority City of Bellingham, WA; Housing Authority of Snohomish
County, WA; Housing Authority of Whatcom County, WA; Housing
Authority of the City of Yakima, WA; Housing Authority of Thurston
County, WA; Housing Authority of City of Spokane, WA; Housing
Authority of the City of Walla Walla, WA; Housing Authority of the
City of Milwaukee, WI; New London Housing Authority, WI; River Falls
Housing Authority, WI; West Bend Housing Authority, WI; Antigo
Housing Authority, WI; Waukesha Housing Authority, WI; Brown County
Housing Authority, WI; Janesville Neighborhood Services, WI;
Walworth County Housing Authority, WI; Barron County Housing
Authority, WI; Richland County Housing Authority, WI; New Berlin
Housing Authority, WI; Waukesha County Housing Authority, WI;
Wisconsin Housing & Economic Development Authority, WI; Fairmont/
Morgantown Housing Authority, WV; Housing Authority of the City of
Beckley, WV; and Housing Authority of Raleigh County, WV.
Nature of Requirement: The alternative requirements to
regulatory requirements that were offered under the original notice
and extended by the second notice were the following: The notice
allows PHAs to use participants' actual past income to verify
income, which would be a waiver of the requirement to project
expected income in 24 CFR 5.609(a)(2). The notice allows households
to self-certify as to having assets of less than $5,000, which would
be a waiver of the requirement under 24 CFR 5.609(b)(3),
982.516(a)(2)(ii), and 960.259(c) for PHAs to verify assets. The
notice allows a streamlined reexamination of income for elderly
families and disabled families on fixed incomes, which would be a
waiver of the requirement in 24 CFR 982.516 and 960.257 for PHAs to
undertake the complete process for income verification and rent
determination for families on fixed incomes. The notice allows PHAs
to establish a payment standard of not more than 120 percent of the
fair market rent without HUD approval as a reasonable accommodation,
which would be a waiver of 24 CFR 982.503(c)(2)(B)(ii), which allows
a PHA to establish a payment standard for the housing choice voucher
program only but within limits currently permitted but designated
for approval only by a HUD field office.
Granted By: Sandra B. Henriquez, Assistant Secretary for Public
and Indian Housing.
Dates Granted: January 2013 through March 2015.
Reason Waived: The waivers and alternative requirements were
granted because they would help facilitate the ability
[[Page 17069]]
of PHAs to continue, without interruption and with minimal burden,
the delivery of rental assistance to eligible families in their
communities. Increased demand for housing assistance without
corresponding increased resources strains the operations of PHAs and
jeopardizes their ability to assist families at a time when families
most need housing assistance.
Contact: Todd Thomas, Senior Program Specialist, Public Housing
Management and Occupancy Division, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW., Room 4210, Washington, DC 20410, telephone 202-402-5849.
Regulation: 24 CFR 982.503(c), 982.503(c)(4)(ii) and
982.503(c)(5).
Project/Activity: Dunn County Housing Authority (DCHA), McKenzie
County Housing Authority (MCHA), Bowman County Housing Authority
(BCHA), Adams County Housing Authority (ACHA), Hettinger County
Housing Authority (HCHA), Billings County Housing Authority (BCHA),
Slope County Housing Authority (SCHA), Golden Valley County Housing
Authority (GVCHA), Stark County Housing Authority (SCHA), ND.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 982.503(c)
establishes the methodology for establishing exception payment
standards for an area. HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 503(c)(4)(ii)
states that HUD will only approve an exception payment standard
amount after six months from the date of HUD approval of an
exception payment standard amount above 110 percent to 120 percent
of the published fair market rent (FMR). HUD's regulation at 24 CFR
982.503(c)(5) states that the total population of a HUD-approved
exception areas in an FMR area may not include more than 50 percent
of the population of the FMR area.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: These waivers were granted because of increased
economic activity due to natural resource exploration.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4216,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 982.503(c), 982.503(c)(4)(ii) and
982.503(c)(5).
Project/Activity: Burleigh County Housing Authority (BCHA),
Bismarck, ND.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 982.503(c)
establishes the methodology for establishing exception payment
standards for an area. HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 503(c)(4)(ii)
states that HUD will only approve an exception payment standard
amount after six months from the date of HUD approval of an
exception payment standard amount above 110 percent to 120 percent
of the published fair market rent (FMR). HUD's regulation at 24 CFR
982.503(c)(5) states that the total population of a HUD-approved
exception areas in an FMR area may not include more than 50 percent
of the population of the FMR area.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: November 19, 2014.
Reason Waived: These waivers were granted because of increased
economic activity due to natural resource exploration.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4216,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: Arvada Housing Authority (AHA), Arvada, CO.
Nature of Requirement: 24 CFR 982.505(d) states that a public
housing agency may only approve a higher payment standard for a
family as a reasonable accommodation if the higher payment standard
is within the basic range of 90 to 110 percent of the fair market
rent (FMR) for the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 1, 2014.
Reason Waived: The participant, who is a person with
disabilities, required an exception payment standard to move to a
more accessible unit. To provide this reasonable accommodation so
the client could move to a new unit and pay no more than 40 percent
of her adjusted income toward the family share, the AHA was allowed
to approve an exception payment standard that exceeded the basic
range of 90 to 110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4216,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: West Valley Housing Authority (WVHA), Dallas,
OR.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 982.505(d)
states that a public housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable accommodation if the
higher payment standard is within the basic range of 90 to 110
percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 23, 2014.
Reason Waived: The applicant, who is a person with disabilities,
required an exception payment standard to remain in her current unit
that met her needs. To provide this reasonable accommodation so that
the client could remain in her unit and pay no more than 40 percent
of her adjusted income toward the family share, the WVHA was allowed
to approve an exception payment standard that exceeded the basic
range of 90 to 110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4216,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: Housing Authority of Grays Harbor County
(HAGHC), Aberdeen, WA.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 982.505(d)
states that a public housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable accommodation if the
higher payment standard is within the basic range of 90 to 110
percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: December 10, 2014.
Reason Waived: The applicant, who is a person with disabilities,
required an exception payment standard to remain in her current unit
that met her needs. To provide this reasonable accommodation so that
the client could remain in her unit and pay no more than 40 percent
of her adjusted income toward the family share, the HAGHC was
allowed to approve an exception payment standard that exceeded the
basic range of 90 to 110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4216,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: Rhode Island Housing (RHI), Providence, RI.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 982.505(d)
states that a public housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable accommodation if the
higher payment standard is within the basic range of 90 to 110
percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: December 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: The participant, who is a person with
disabilities, required an exception payment standard to move to a
unit that meets her needs. To provide this reasonable accommodation
so the family could move to a new unit and pay no more than 40
percent of its adjusted income toward the family share, RHI was
allowed to approve an exception payment standard that exceeded the
basic range of 90 to 110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4216,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
[[Page 17070]]
Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: San Francisco Housing Authority (SFHA), San
Francisco, CA.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 982.505(d)
states that a public housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable accommodation if the
higher payment standard is within the basic range of 90 to 110
percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: December 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: The applicant was a person with disabilities who
required an exception payment standard to move to a unit that met
his needs. To provide this reasonable accommodation so that the
client could move to a new unit and pay no more than 40 percent of
his adjusted income toward the family share, the SFHA was allowed to
approve an exception payment standard that exceeded the basic range
of 90 to 110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4216,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: Howard County Housing (HCH), Columbia, MD.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 982.505(d)
states that a public housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable accommodation if the
higher payment standard is within the basic range of 90 to 110
percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: December 29, 2014.
Reason Waived: The participant, who is a person with
disabilities, required an exception payment standard to move to a
new unit. To provide this reasonable accommodation so the family
could move to a new unit and pay no more than 40 percent of its
adjusted income toward the family share, HCH was allowed to approve
an exception payment standard that exceeded the basic range of 90 to
110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4216,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 982.505(d).
Project/Activity: City of Roseville Housing Authority (CRHA),
Roseville, CA.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 982.505(d)
states that a public housing agency may only approve a higher
payment standard for a family as a reasonable accommodation if the
higher payment standard is within the basic range of 90 to 110
percent of the fair market rent (FMR) for the unit size.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: December 29, 2014.
Reason Waived: The applicant, who is a person with disabilities,
required an exception payment standard to move to a new unit. To
provide this reasonable accommodation so the family could move to a
new unit and pay no more than 40 percent of his adjusted income
toward the family share, the CRHA was allowed to approve an
exception payment standard that exceeded the basic range of 90 to
110 percent of the FMR.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4216,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Hawaii Public Housing Authority (HPHA),
Honolulu, HI.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 985.101(a)
states a PHA must submit the HUD-required Section Eight Management
Assessment Program (SEMAP) certification form within 60 calendar
days after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 20, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted since HPHA had technical
difficulties in submitting its certification. HPHA was permitted to
submit its SEMAP certification after the due date.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4210,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Fort Wayne Housing Authority (FWHA), Fort
Wayne, IN.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 985.101(a)
states a PHA must submit the HUD-required Section Eight Management
Assessment Program (SEMAP) certification form within 60 calendar
days after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: November 7, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted since the executive
director had a death in his family at the time the SEMAP
certification was due. FWHA was permitted to submit its SEMAP
certification after the due date.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4210,
Washington, DC, 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Housing Authority of the City of Meriden
(HACM), Meriden, CT.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 985.101(a)
states a PHA must submit the HUD-required Section Eight Management
Assessment Program (SEMAP) certification form within 60 calendar
days after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: December 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted since the SEMAP
certification had been submitted timely, but incorrectly into
PICTEST. HACM was permitted to submit its SEMAP certification after
the due date.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4210,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Palm Beach County Housing Authority (PBCHA),
West Palm Beach, FL.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 985.101(a)
states a PHA must submit the HUD-required Section Eight Management
Assessment Program (SEMAP) certification form within 60 calendar
days after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: December 17, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted since the SEMAP
certification had been submitted timely, but with an error message
that could not be validated. PBCHA was permitted to submit its SEMAP
certification after the due date.
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4210,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 985.101(a).
Project/Activity: Mercer County Housing Authority (MCHA), Aledo,
IL.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 985.101(a)
states a PHA must submit the HUD-required Section Eight Management
Assessment Program (SEMAP) certification form within 60 calendar
days after the end of its fiscal year.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: December 29, 2014.
Reason Waived: This waiver was granted since it the executive
director was new and notification emails regarding SEMAP submission
were sent to the wrong email address. MCHA was permitted to submit
its SEMAP certification after the due date.
[[Page 17071]]
Contact: Becky Primeaux, Director, Housing Voucher Management
and Operations Division, Office of Public Housing and Voucher
Programs, Office of Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Room 4210,
Washington, DC 20410, telephone (202) 708-0477.
Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.327(b).
Project/Activity: Asa'Carsarmiut Tribe of Mountain Village,
Alaska 99632-0249; Stebbins Community Association of Stebbins,
Alaska 99671; Bering Straits Regional Housing Authority of Nome,
Alaska 99762; Native Village of Kivalina of Kivalina, AK 99750.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 1000.327(b)
requires Indian tribes in Alaska not located on a reservation to
notify HUD in writing by September 15th that they or their Tribally
Designated Housing Entity (TDHE) intends to submit an Indian Housing
Plan (IHP) for the following fiscal year. If the tribe or their TDHE
does not notify HUD, or notifies HUD that they do not intend to
submit an IHP, HUD allocates the tribe's need formula data in the
Indian Housing Block Grant formula to the tribe's regional tribe or
regional corporation. HUD is required to allocate IHBG funds within
60 days of an appropriation, and prior notification ensures that HUD
can properly allocate Alaska tribes' need data and make formula
allocations in a timely manner.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: November 24, 2014.
Reason Waived: HUD granted the waiver because the tribes and
TDHE would have lost out on critical Indian Housing Block Grant
funding for the year. The waiver would not delay HUD's process
because the Congressional appropriation for the upcoming fiscal year
had not yet occurred. As such, the Department believed that there
was good cause to waive the notification requirements of 24 CFR
1000.327(b).
Contact: Glenda N. Green, Director for the Office of Grants
Management, Office of Native American Programs, Office of Public and
Indian Housing, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451
Seventh Street SW., Suite 5156, Washington, DC 20410, telephone
(202) 402-6967.
Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Pueblo de Cochiti of Cochiti Pueblo, NM 87072-
0070.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 1000.224 that
the Secretary may waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in whole or in part, for a
period of not more than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that an
Indian tribe has not complied with, or is unable to comply with,
those requirements due to exigent circumstances beyond the control
of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 20, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested because of the unexpected
resignation of the Executive Director based on health issues. The
waiver was provided for no more than 90 days on the basis of exigent
circumstances beyond its control.
Contact: Cheryl Dixon, Grants Management Specialist, Office of
Grants Management, Office of Native American Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 500 Gold Avenue SW., Seventh FL, Suite 7301,
Albuquerque, NM 87103-0906, telephone (505) 346-6924.
Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Hopi Tribal Housing Authority of Polacca, AZ
86042.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 1000.224 that
the Secretary may waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in whole or in part, for a
period of not more than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that an
Indian tribe has not complied with, or is unable to comply with,
those requirements due to exigent circumstances beyond the control
of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested because a new Executive
Director was in the process of being hired. The waiver was provided
for no more than 90 days on the basis of exigent circumstances
beyond its control.
Contact: Cristal Quinn, Grants Management Specialist, Office of
Grants Management, Office of Native American Programs, Southwest
Office of Native American Programs, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and Urban Development, One N. Central
Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85004, telephone (602) 379-7206.
Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Resighini Rancheria of Klamath, CA 95548-0529.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 1000.224 that
the Secretary may waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in whole or in part, for a
period of not more than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that an
Indian tribe has not complied with, or is unable to comply with,
those requirements due to exigent circumstances beyond the control
of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested because of new staff
turnover, which resulted in technological problems in completing the
IHP. The waiver was provided for no more than 90 days on the basis
of exigent circumstances beyond its control.
Contact: Sarah Olson, Grants Management Specialist, Office of
Grants Management, Office of Native American Programs, Southwest
Office of Native American Programs, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and Urban Development, One N. Central
Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85004, telephone (602) 379-7233.
Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Cahto Indians of the Laytonville Rancheria,
Laytonville, CA 95454-1239.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 1000.224 that
the Secretary may waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in whole or in part, for a
period of not more than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that an
Indian tribe has not complied with, or is unable to comply with,
those requirements due to exigent circumstances beyond the control
of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested because there were no
housing funds available to pay the housing staff salary prior to
completing the IHP. The Tribe needed time to re-hire the staff
person to complete and submit the IHP. The waiver was provided for
no more than 90 days on the basis of exigent circumstances beyond
its control.
Contact: Daniel Celaya, Grants Management Specialist, Office of
Grants Management, Office of Native American Programs, Southwest
Office of Native American Programs, Office of Public and Indian,
Housing Department of Housing and Urban Development, One N. Central
Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85004, telephone (602) 379-7193.
Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Big Valley Tribe of Pomo Indians, Lakeport, CA
95453.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 1000.224 that
the Secretary may waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in whole or in part, for a
period of not more than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that an
Indian tribe has not complied with, or is unable to comply with,
those requirements due to exigent circumstances beyond the control
of the Indian Tribe.
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 22, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested because a new Executive
Director was in the process of being hired. The waiver was provided
for no more than 90 days on the basis of exigent circumstances
beyond its control.
Contact: Sarah Olson, Grants Management Specialist, Office of
Grants Management, Office of Native American Programs, Southwest
Office of Native American Programs, Office of Public and Indian
Housing Department of Housing and Urban Development, One N. Central
Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85004, telephone (602) 379-7233.
Regulation: 24 CFR 1000.224.
Project/Activity: Summit Lake Paiute Tribe, Summit Lake, NV.
Nature of Requirement: HUD's regulation at 24 CFR 1000.224 that
the Secretary may waive the applicability of the requirement to
submit an Indian Housing Plan (IHP), in whole or in part, for a
period of not more than 90 days, if the Secretary determines that an
Indian tribe has not complied with, or is unable to comply with,
those requirements due to exigent circumstances beyond the control
of the Indian Tribe.
[[Page 17072]]
Granted By: Jemine A. Bryon, Acting Assistant Secretary for
Public and Indian Housing.
Date Granted: October 28, 2014.
Reason Waived: A waiver was requested because the Tribal Council
went through an internal reorganization; the person responsible for
preparing the IHP was no longer associated with the Tribal Council.
The Tribal Council will assign another council member to complete
the IHP. The waiver was provided for no more than 90 days on the
basis of exigent circumstances beyond its control.
Contact: Leticia Rodriguez, Grants Management Specialist, Office
of Grants Management, Office of Native American Programs, Southwest
Office of Native American Programs, Office of Public and Indian
Housing, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 500 Gold Ave.
SW., Seventh FL, Suite 7301, Albuquerque, NM 87103-0906, telephone
(505) 346-6926.
[FR Doc. 2015-07183 Filed 3-30-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P