Section 8 Housing Assistance Payments Program-Annual Adjustment Factors, Fiscal Year 2024, 22436-22438 [2024-06798]
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22436
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 63 / Monday, April 1, 2024 / Notices
Community
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of
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of
of
of
Community map repository address
Cecil ..........................................................................................
Eland ........................................................................................
Gresham ...................................................................................
Mattoon .....................................................................................
Tigerton ....................................................................................
Wittenberg ................................................................................
[FR Doc. 2024–06783 Filed 3–29–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–12–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–6443–N–01]
Section 8 Housing Assistance
Payments Program—Annual
Adjustment Factors, Fiscal Year 2024
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Policy Development and
Research, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of fiscal year (FY) 2024
Annual Adjustment Factors (AAFs).
AGENCY:
The United States Housing
Act of 1937 requires that certain
assistance contracts signed by owners
participating in the Department’s
Section 8 housing assistance payment
programs provide annual adjustments to
monthly rentals for units covered by the
contracts. For owners subject to a
Reserve for Replacement deposit
requirement, HUD also requires that the
amount of the required deposit be
adjusted each year by the AAF. This
notice announces FY 2024 AAFs for
adjustment of contract rents on the
anniversary of those assistance
contracts. The factors are based on a
formula using residential rent and
utility cost changes from the most recent
annual Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
Consumer Price Index (CPI) survey and
market rents from a total of six possible
private sector rent data sources. AAFs
were historically based on the shelter
and gross rent inflation factors used in
HUD’s Fair Market Rent (FMR)
calculation, and this notice maintains
that practice by updating the AAF
methodology in line with the FMR
methodology changes that HUD adopted
for FY 2024.
DATES: The FY 2024 AAFs are effective
April 1, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ryan Jones, Director, Management and
Operations Division, Office of Housing
Voucher Programs, Office of Public and
Indian Housing, 202–708–1380, for
questions relating to the Moderate
Rehabilitation programs (not the Single
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
SUMMARY:
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20:13 Mar 29, 2024
Jkt 262001
Village
Village
Village
Village
Village
Village
Hall,
Hall,
Hall,
Hall,
Hall,
Hall,
111 East Hofman Street, Cecil, WI 54111.
W19141 Maple Street, Eland, WI 54427.
1126 Main Street, Gresham, WI 54128.
310 Slate Avenue, Mattoon, WI 54450.
221 Birch Street, Tigerton, WI 54486.
208 West Vinal Street, Wittenberg, WI 54499.
Room Occupancy program); Norman A.
Suchar, Director, Office of Special
Needs Assistance Programs, Office of
Community Planning and Development,
202–402–5015, for questions regarding
the Single Room Occupancy (SRO)
Moderate Rehabilitation program;
Katherine Nzive, Director, OAMPO
Program Administration Office, Office
of Multifamily Housing, 202–402–3440,
for questions relating to all other
Section 8 programs; and Adam Bibler,
Director, Program Parameters and
Research Division, Office of Policy
Development and Research, 202–402–
6057, for technical information
regarding the development of the
schedules for specific areas or the
methods used for calculating the AAFs.
The mailing address for these
individuals is: Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Washington, DC 20410. HUD
welcomes and is prepared to receive
calls from individuals who are deaf or
hard of hearing, as well as individuals
with speech or communication
disabilities. To learn more about how to
make an accessible telephone call,
please visit https://www.fcc.gov/
consumers/guides/telecommunicationsrelay-service-trs.
The AAFs
are applied at the anniversary of
Housing Assistance Payment (HAP)
contracts for which rents are to be
adjusted using the AAF for those
calendar months commencing after the
AAF effective date listed in this notice.
The amount that an owner is required
to deposit to the Reserve for
Replacement account is also adjusted
annually by the most recently published
AAF, at the HAP contract anniversary.
AAFs are distinct from, and do not
apply to the same properties as,
Operating Cost Adjustment Factors
(OCAFs). OCAFs are annual factors used
to adjust rents for project-based rental
assistance contracts issued under
Section 8 of the United States Housing
Act of 1937 and renewed under section
515 or section 524 of the Multifamily
Assisted Housing Reform and
Affordability Act of 1997 (MAHRA).
HUD has published OCAFs for 2024 in
the Federal Register at 87 FR 68513.
The AAFs are also distinct from
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Renewal Funding Inflation Factors
which help determine renewal funding
for public housing agencies operating
the Housing Choice Voucher program. A
separate Federal Register notice, to be
published following the passage of FY
2024 HUD appropriations, will contain
the 2024 Renewal Funding Inflation
Factors.
Tables showing AAFs will be
available electronically from the HUD
data information page at https://
www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/
aaf.html.
I. Applying AAFs to Various Section 8
Programs
AAFs established by this notice are
used to adjust contract rents for units
assisted in certain Section 8 housing
assistance payment programs during the
initial (i.e., pre-renewal) term of the
HAP contract. There are two categories
of Section 8 programs that use the
AAFs:
Category 1: The Section 8 New
Construction, Substantial
Rehabilitation, and Moderate
Rehabilitation programs; and
Category 2: The Section 8 Loan
Management Set-Aside (LMSA) and
Property Disposition (PD) programs.
Each Section 8 program category uses
the AAFs differently. The specific
application of the AAFs is determined
by the law, the HAP contract, and
appropriate program regulations or
requirements.
AAFs are not used in the following
cases:
Renewal Rents. AAFs are not used to
determine renewal rents after expiration
of the original Section 8 HAP contract
(either for projects where the Section 8
HAP contract is renewed under a
restructuring plan adopted under 24
CFR part 401; or renewed without
restructuring under 24 CFR part 402). In
general, renewal rents are established in
accordance with the statutory provision
in MAHRA, as amended, under which
the HAP is renewed. After renewal,
annual rent adjustments will be
provided in accordance with MAHRA.
Budget-based Rents. AAFs are not
used for budget-based rent adjustments.
For projects receiving Section 8
subsidies under the LMSA program (24
CFR part 886, subpart A) and for
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01APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 63 / Monday, April 1, 2024 / Notices
projects receiving Section 8 subsidies
under the PD program (24 CFR part 886,
subpart C), contract rents are adjusted,
at HUD’s option, either by applying the
AAFs or by budget-based adjustments in
accordance with 24 CFR 886.112(b) and
24 CFR 886.312(b). Budget-based
adjustments are used for most Section 8/
202 projects.
Housing Choice Voucher Program.
AAFs are not used to adjust rents in the
Tenant-Based or the Project-Based
Voucher programs.
Reserve for Replacement. The amount
that an owner is required to deposit to
the Reserve for Replacement account is
adjusted annually by the AAF at the
HAP contract anniversary.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
II. Adjustment Procedures
This section of the notice provides a
broad description of procedures for
adjusting the contract rent. Technical
details and requirements are described
in HUD notices H 2002–10 (Section 8
New Construction and Substantial
Rehabilitation, Loan Management, and
Property Disposition) and PIH 97–57
(Moderate Rehabilitation). HUD
publishes two separate AAF Tables,
Table 1 and Table 2. The difference
between Table 1 and Table 2 is that each
AAF in Table 2 is 0.01 less than the
corresponding AAF in Table 1. Where
an AAF in Table 1 would otherwise be
less than 1.0, it is set at 1.0, as required
by statute; the corresponding AAF in
Table 2 will also be set at 1.0, as
required by statute. Because of statutory
and structural distinctions among the
various Section 8 programs, there are
separate rent adjustment procedures for
the three program categories:
Category 1: Section 8 New Construction,
Substantial Rehabilitation, and
Moderate Rehabilitation Programs
In the Section 8 New Construction
and Substantial Rehabilitation
programs, the published AAF factor is
applied to the pre-adjustment contract
rent. In the Section 8 Moderate
Rehabilitation program (both the regular
program and the single room occupancy
program), the published AAF is applied
to the pre-adjustment base rent.
For Category 1 programs, the Table 1
AAF factor is applied before
determining comparability (rent
reasonableness). Comparability applies
if the pre-adjustment gross rent (preadjustment contract rent plus any
allowance for tenant-paid utilities) is
above the published Fair Market Rent
(FMR).
If the comparable rent level (plus any
initial difference) is lower than the
contract rent as adjusted by application
of the Table 1 AAF, the comparable rent
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17:17 Mar 29, 2024
Jkt 262001
level (plus any initial difference) will be
the new contract rent. However, the preadjustment contract rent will not be
decreased by application of
comparability.
In all other cases (i.e., unless the
contract rent is reduced by
comparability):
• Table 1 AAF is used for a unit
occupied by a new family since the last
annual contract anniversary.
• Table 2 AAF is used for a unit
occupied by the same family as at the
time of the last annual contract
anniversary.
Category 2: Section 8 Loan Management
Program (24 CFR Part 886, Subpart A)
and Property Disposition Program (24
CFR Part 886, Subpart C)
Category 2 programs are not currently
subject to comparability. Comparability
will again apply if HUD establishes
regulations for conducting
comparability studies under 42 U.S.C.
1437f(c)(2)(C).
The applicable AAF is determined as
follows:
• Table 1 AAF is used for a unit
occupied by a new family since the last
annual contract anniversary.
• Table 2 AAF is used for a unit
occupied by the same family as at the
time of the last annual contract
anniversary.
Category 3: Reserve for Replacement
The amount of the deposit to the
Reserve for Replacement account must
be increased annually using the most
recently published ‘‘Regional AAF with
Highest Utility Excluded’’ for the region
in which the project is located. This
adjustment must be made without
regard to vacancies.
III. When To Use Reduced AAFs (From
AAF Table 2)
In accordance with Section 8(c)(2)(A)
of the United States Housing Act of
1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f(c)(2)(A)), the AAF
is reduced by 0.01:
In Section 8 programs, for a unit occupied
by the same family at the time of the last
annual rent adjustment (and where the rent
is not reduced by application of
comparability (rent reasonableness)).
The law provides that:
[F]or any unit occupied by the same family
at the time of the last annual rental
adjustment, where the assistance contract
provides for the adjustment of the maximum
monthly rent by applying an annual
adjustment factor and where the rent for a
unit is otherwise eligible for an adjustment
based on the full amount of the factor . . .
0.01 shall be subtracted from the amount of
the annual adjustment factor (except that the
factor shall not be reduced to less than 1.0),
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22437
and the adjusted rent shall not exceed the
rent for a comparable unassisted unit of
similar quality, type and age in the market
area. 42 U.S.C. 1437f(c)(2)(A).
Legislative history for this statutory
provision states that ‘‘the rationale [for
lower AAFs for non-turnover units is]
that operating costs are less if tenant
turnover is less . . . .’’ (see Department
of Veteran Affairs and Housing and
Urban Development, and Independent
Agencies Appropriations for 1995,
Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the
Committee on Appropriations 103d
Cong., 2d Sess. 591 (1994)). The
Congressional Record also states the
following:
Because the cost to owners of turnoverrelated vacancies, maintenance, and
marketing are lower for long-term stable
tenants, these tenants are typically charged
less than recent movers in the unassisted
market. Since HUD pays the full amount of
any rent increases for assisted tenants in
section 8 projects . . . HUD should expect to
benefit from this ‘tenure discount.’ Turnover
is lower in assisted properties than in the
unassisted market, so the effect of the current
inconsistency with market-based rent
increases is exacerbated. (140 Cong. Rec.
8659, 8693 (1994)).
IV. How To Find the AAF
AAF Table 1 and Table 2 are posted
on the HUD User website at https://
www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/
aaf.html. There are two numeric
columns in each AAF table. The first
column is used to adjust contract rent
for rental units where the highest cost
utility is included in the contract rent,
i.e., where the owner pays for the
highest cost utility. The second column
is used where the highest cost utility is
not included in the contract rent, i.e.,
where the tenant pays for the highest
cost utility.
The applicable AAF is selected as
follows:
• Determine whether Table 1 or Table
2 is applicable. In Table 1 or Table 2,
locate the AAF for the geographic area
where the contract unit is located.
• Determine whether the highest cost
utility is or is not included in contract
rent for the contract unit.
• If highest cost utility is included,
select the AAF from the column for
‘‘Highest Cost Utility Included.’’ If
highest cost utility is not included,
select the AAF from the column for
‘‘Highest Cost Utility Excluded.’’
V. Methodology
AAFs are rent inflation factors. Two
types of rent inflation factors are
calculated for AAFs: gross rent factors
and shelter rent factors. The gross rent
factor accounts for inflation in the cost
of both the rent of the residence and the
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ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 63 / Monday, April 1, 2024 / Notices
utilities used by the unit; the shelter
rent factor accounts for the inflation in
the rent of the residence but does not
reflect any change in the cost of utilities.
The gross rent inflation factor is
designated as ‘‘Highest Cost Utility
Included’’ and the shelter rent inflation
factor is designated as ‘‘Highest Cost
Utility Excluded.’’ In the past, HUD has
calculated AAFs based on the shelter
and gross rent inflation factors used in
FMR calculations. The source data for
AAFs therefore came from the 23 local
and 4 regional CPI components (rent of
primary residence and household fuels
and utilities) depending on the location
of the AAF area. HUD maintains the
practice of updating the AAF
methodology in line with the FMR
methodology changes that HUD adopted
for FY 2024. For FY 2024, HUD
augmented the CPI data described above
by including available private data
sources along with the CPI data in
calculating a weighted average shelter
and gross rent inflation factor. The
private measures of rent used by HUD
are the RealPage average effective rent
per unit, Moody’s Analytics REIS
average market rent, CoStar Group
average effective rent, CoreLogic, Inc.
single-family combined 3-bedroom
median rent, Apartment List Rent
Estimate, and Zillow Observed Rent
Index.
In calculating the AAF from these
data, HUD first takes the annual average
of each statistic, then its year-to-year
change. HUD then takes the mean of
changes from all available sources for
each area. Next, HUD takes an average
of this private-sector measure of rent
inflation with rent inflation as captured
by the CPI for the area, where the
private-sector measure is weighted at
approximately 55.8 percent and the CPI
rent inflation measure is weighted at
approximately 44.2 percent. HUD has
determined these weights by comparing
the national average of the private rent
changes and changes in CPI rent of
primary residence to changes in the
national average of recent mover rents
from the ACS from 2017 through 2021.
HUD weights the private data averages
and overall CPI rent of primary
residence in such a way as to minimize
the root mean squared error between the
resulting average and the ACS recent
mover rents. For future AAFs, HUD will
update the weights by adding the most
recent years of ACS recent mover rents,
private rent data, and CPI rent of
primary residence to the analysis.
HUD uses a local measure of private
rent inflation for markets that are
covered by at least three of the six
available sources of private rent data.
HUD combines this local measure of
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rent inflation with either the local
metropolitan area CPI rent of primary
residence for the 23 areas where such
data exist, or the regional CPI rent in
areas without a local index. For areas
without at least three of the six private
rent data sources available, HUD uses a
regional average of private rent inflation
factors alongside the regional CPI rent of
primary residence. HUD constructs the
regional average by taking the rental
unit weighted average of the change in
rents of each area in a region that does
have private rent data coverage. This
ensures that smaller areas that are not
covered by the private sources directly
still have current rental market
conditions taken into account in the
calculation of the rent inflation factor
for such areas.
The results of the above calculation
are the ‘‘utility excluded’’ AAF. For the
‘‘utility included’’ AAF, HUD averages
the result of this step with the year-toyear change in the CPI housing fuels
and utilities index for the area in order
to make the resulting inflation measure
reflective of gross rents.
VI. Area Definitions
To make certain that they are using
the correct AAFs, users should refer to
the Area Definitions Table section at
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/
datasets/aaf.html. Furthermore, users
can also search for AAF area definitions
using an online lookup tool available on
HUD User at https://www.huduser.gov/
portal/datasets/aaf.html. AAFs are
based on the updated metropolitan area
definitions published by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) on
September 14, 2018, and first
incorporated by the Census Bureau into
the 2019 American Community Survey
(ACS) data and the corresponding FY
2022 FMRs. On July 21, 2023, OMB
published Bulletin No. 23–01, which
contains revisions to metropolitan area
definitions. However, the Census
Bureau has not yet incorporated these
revisions into the data available to HUD,
and therefore HUD is not using these
new definitions for FY 2024.
Solomon Greene,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Policy Development and Research.
[FR Doc. 2024–06798 Filed 3–29–24; 8:45 am]
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Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R2–ES–2024–N020;
FXES11130200000–245–FF02ENEH00]
Endangered Wildlife; Recovery Permit
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Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of receipt of permit
applications; request for comments.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
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for a permit to conduct activities
intended to recover and enhance
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exceptions, the Endangered Species Act
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permits.
SUMMARY:
To ensure consideration, please
submit your written comments by May
1, 2024.
ADDRESSES:
Document availability: Request
documents from the contact in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
Comment submission: Submit
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fws.gov. Please specify the permit
application you are interested in by
number (e.g., Permit Record No.
PER1234567).
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marty Tuegel, Supervisor,
Environmental Review Division, by
phone at 505–248–6651, or via email at
marty_tuegel@fws.gov. Individuals in
the United States who are deaf,
deafblind, hard of hearing, or have a
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prohibits activities that constitute take
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hunting, shooting, harming, wounding,
or killing, and also such activities as
E:\FR\FM\01APN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 63 (Monday, April 1, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 22436-22438]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-06798]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-6443-N-01]
Section 8 Housing Assistance Payments Program--Annual Adjustment
Factors, Fiscal Year 2024
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and
Research, Department of Housing and Urban Development, HUD.
ACTION: Notice of fiscal year (FY) 2024 Annual Adjustment Factors
(AAFs).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The United States Housing Act of 1937 requires that certain
assistance contracts signed by owners participating in the Department's
Section 8 housing assistance payment programs provide annual
adjustments to monthly rentals for units covered by the contracts. For
owners subject to a Reserve for Replacement deposit requirement, HUD
also requires that the amount of the required deposit be adjusted each
year by the AAF. This notice announces FY 2024 AAFs for adjustment of
contract rents on the anniversary of those assistance contracts. The
factors are based on a formula using residential rent and utility cost
changes from the most recent annual Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
Consumer Price Index (CPI) survey and market rents from a total of six
possible private sector rent data sources. AAFs were historically based
on the shelter and gross rent inflation factors used in HUD's Fair
Market Rent (FMR) calculation, and this notice maintains that practice
by updating the AAF methodology in line with the FMR methodology
changes that HUD adopted for FY 2024.
DATES: The FY 2024 AAFs are effective April 1, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ryan Jones, Director, Management and
Operations Division, Office of Housing Voucher Programs, Office of
Public and Indian Housing, 202-708-1380, for questions relating to the
Moderate Rehabilitation programs (not the Single Room Occupancy
program); Norman A. Suchar, Director, Office of Special Needs
Assistance Programs, Office of Community Planning and Development, 202-
402-5015, for questions regarding the Single Room Occupancy (SRO)
Moderate Rehabilitation program; Katherine Nzive, Director, OAMPO
Program Administration Office, Office of Multifamily Housing, 202-402-
3440, for questions relating to all other Section 8 programs; and Adam
Bibler, Director, Program Parameters and Research Division, Office of
Policy Development and Research, 202-402-6057, for technical
information regarding the development of the schedules for specific
areas or the methods used for calculating the AAFs. The mailing address
for these individuals is: Department of Housing and Urban Development,
451 7th Street SW, Washington, DC 20410. HUD welcomes and is prepared
to receive calls from individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, as
well as individuals with speech or communication disabilities. To learn
more about how to make an accessible telephone call, please visit
https://www.fcc.gov/consumers/guides/telecommunications-relay-service-trs.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The AAFs are applied at the anniversary of
Housing Assistance Payment (HAP) contracts for which rents are to be
adjusted using the AAF for those calendar months commencing after the
AAF effective date listed in this notice. The amount that an owner is
required to deposit to the Reserve for Replacement account is also
adjusted annually by the most recently published AAF, at the HAP
contract anniversary. AAFs are distinct from, and do not apply to the
same properties as, Operating Cost Adjustment Factors (OCAFs). OCAFs
are annual factors used to adjust rents for project-based rental
assistance contracts issued under Section 8 of the United States
Housing Act of 1937 and renewed under section 515 or section 524 of the
Multifamily Assisted Housing Reform and Affordability Act of 1997
(MAHRA). HUD has published OCAFs for 2024 in the Federal Register at 87
FR 68513. The AAFs are also distinct from Renewal Funding Inflation
Factors which help determine renewal funding for public housing
agencies operating the Housing Choice Voucher program. A separate
Federal Register notice, to be published following the passage of FY
2024 HUD appropriations, will contain the 2024 Renewal Funding
Inflation Factors.
Tables showing AAFs will be available electronically from the HUD
data information page at https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/aaf.html.
I. Applying AAFs to Various Section 8 Programs
AAFs established by this notice are used to adjust contract rents
for units assisted in certain Section 8 housing assistance payment
programs during the initial (i.e., pre-renewal) term of the HAP
contract. There are two categories of Section 8 programs that use the
AAFs:
Category 1: The Section 8 New Construction, Substantial
Rehabilitation, and Moderate Rehabilitation programs; and
Category 2: The Section 8 Loan Management Set-Aside (LMSA) and
Property Disposition (PD) programs.
Each Section 8 program category uses the AAFs differently. The
specific application of the AAFs is determined by the law, the HAP
contract, and appropriate program regulations or requirements.
AAFs are not used in the following cases:
Renewal Rents. AAFs are not used to determine renewal rents after
expiration of the original Section 8 HAP contract (either for projects
where the Section 8 HAP contract is renewed under a restructuring plan
adopted under 24 CFR part 401; or renewed without restructuring under
24 CFR part 402). In general, renewal rents are established in
accordance with the statutory provision in MAHRA, as amended, under
which the HAP is renewed. After renewal, annual rent adjustments will
be provided in accordance with MAHRA.
Budget-based Rents. AAFs are not used for budget-based rent
adjustments. For projects receiving Section 8 subsidies under the LMSA
program (24 CFR part 886, subpart A) and for
[[Page 22437]]
projects receiving Section 8 subsidies under the PD program (24 CFR
part 886, subpart C), contract rents are adjusted, at HUD's option,
either by applying the AAFs or by budget-based adjustments in
accordance with 24 CFR 886.112(b) and 24 CFR 886.312(b). Budget-based
adjustments are used for most Section 8/202 projects.
Housing Choice Voucher Program. AAFs are not used to adjust rents
in the Tenant-Based or the Project-Based Voucher programs.
Reserve for Replacement. The amount that an owner is required to
deposit to the Reserve for Replacement account is adjusted annually by
the AAF at the HAP contract anniversary.
II. Adjustment Procedures
This section of the notice provides a broad description of
procedures for adjusting the contract rent. Technical details and
requirements are described in HUD notices H 2002-10 (Section 8 New
Construction and Substantial Rehabilitation, Loan Management, and
Property Disposition) and PIH 97-57 (Moderate Rehabilitation). HUD
publishes two separate AAF Tables, Table 1 and Table 2. The difference
between Table 1 and Table 2 is that each AAF in Table 2 is 0.01 less
than the corresponding AAF in Table 1. Where an AAF in Table 1 would
otherwise be less than 1.0, it is set at 1.0, as required by statute;
the corresponding AAF in Table 2 will also be set at 1.0, as required
by statute. Because of statutory and structural distinctions among the
various Section 8 programs, there are separate rent adjustment
procedures for the three program categories:
Category 1: Section 8 New Construction, Substantial Rehabilitation, and
Moderate Rehabilitation Programs
In the Section 8 New Construction and Substantial Rehabilitation
programs, the published AAF factor is applied to the pre-adjustment
contract rent. In the Section 8 Moderate Rehabilitation program (both
the regular program and the single room occupancy program), the
published AAF is applied to the pre-adjustment base rent.
For Category 1 programs, the Table 1 AAF factor is applied before
determining comparability (rent reasonableness). Comparability applies
if the pre-adjustment gross rent (pre-adjustment contract rent plus any
allowance for tenant-paid utilities) is above the published Fair Market
Rent (FMR).
If the comparable rent level (plus any initial difference) is lower
than the contract rent as adjusted by application of the Table 1 AAF,
the comparable rent level (plus any initial difference) will be the new
contract rent. However, the pre-adjustment contract rent will not be
decreased by application of comparability.
In all other cases (i.e., unless the contract rent is reduced by
comparability):
Table 1 AAF is used for a unit occupied by a new family
since the last annual contract anniversary.
Table 2 AAF is used for a unit occupied by the same family
as at the time of the last annual contract anniversary.
Category 2: Section 8 Loan Management Program (24 CFR Part 886, Subpart
A) and Property Disposition Program (24 CFR Part 886, Subpart C)
Category 2 programs are not currently subject to comparability.
Comparability will again apply if HUD establishes regulations for
conducting comparability studies under 42 U.S.C. 1437f(c)(2)(C).
The applicable AAF is determined as follows:
Table 1 AAF is used for a unit occupied by a new family
since the last annual contract anniversary.
Table 2 AAF is used for a unit occupied by the same family
as at the time of the last annual contract anniversary.
Category 3: Reserve for Replacement
The amount of the deposit to the Reserve for Replacement account
must be increased annually using the most recently published ``Regional
AAF with Highest Utility Excluded'' for the region in which the project
is located. This adjustment must be made without regard to vacancies.
III. When To Use Reduced AAFs (From AAF Table 2)
In accordance with Section 8(c)(2)(A) of the United States Housing
Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f(c)(2)(A)), the AAF is reduced by 0.01:
In Section 8 programs, for a unit occupied by the same family at
the time of the last annual rent adjustment (and where the rent is
not reduced by application of comparability (rent reasonableness)).
The law provides that:
[F]or any unit occupied by the same family at the time of the
last annual rental adjustment, where the assistance contract
provides for the adjustment of the maximum monthly rent by applying
an annual adjustment factor and where the rent for a unit is
otherwise eligible for an adjustment based on the full amount of the
factor . . . 0.01 shall be subtracted from the amount of the annual
adjustment factor (except that the factor shall not be reduced to
less than 1.0), and the adjusted rent shall not exceed the rent for
a comparable unassisted unit of similar quality, type and age in the
market area. 42 U.S.C. 1437f(c)(2)(A).
Legislative history for this statutory provision states that ``the
rationale [for lower AAFs for non-turnover units is] that operating
costs are less if tenant turnover is less . . . .'' (see Department of
Veteran Affairs and Housing and Urban Development, and Independent
Agencies Appropriations for 1995, Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the
Committee on Appropriations 103d Cong., 2d Sess. 591 (1994)). The
Congressional Record also states the following:
Because the cost to owners of turnover-related vacancies,
maintenance, and marketing are lower for long-term stable tenants,
these tenants are typically charged less than recent movers in the
unassisted market. Since HUD pays the full amount of any rent
increases for assisted tenants in section 8 projects . . . HUD
should expect to benefit from this `tenure discount.' Turnover is
lower in assisted properties than in the unassisted market, so the
effect of the current inconsistency with market-based rent increases
is exacerbated. (140 Cong. Rec. 8659, 8693 (1994)).
IV. How To Find the AAF
AAF Table 1 and Table 2 are posted on the HUD User website at
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/aaf.html. There are two numeric
columns in each AAF table. The first column is used to adjust contract
rent for rental units where the highest cost utility is included in the
contract rent, i.e., where the owner pays for the highest cost utility.
The second column is used where the highest cost utility is not
included in the contract rent, i.e., where the tenant pays for the
highest cost utility.
The applicable AAF is selected as follows:
Determine whether Table 1 or Table 2 is applicable. In
Table 1 or Table 2, locate the AAF for the geographic area where the
contract unit is located.
Determine whether the highest cost utility is or is not
included in contract rent for the contract unit.
If highest cost utility is included, select the AAF from
the column for ``Highest Cost Utility Included.'' If highest cost
utility is not included, select the AAF from the column for ``Highest
Cost Utility Excluded.''
V. Methodology
AAFs are rent inflation factors. Two types of rent inflation
factors are calculated for AAFs: gross rent factors and shelter rent
factors. The gross rent factor accounts for inflation in the cost of
both the rent of the residence and the
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utilities used by the unit; the shelter rent factor accounts for the
inflation in the rent of the residence but does not reflect any change
in the cost of utilities. The gross rent inflation factor is designated
as ``Highest Cost Utility Included'' and the shelter rent inflation
factor is designated as ``Highest Cost Utility Excluded.'' In the past,
HUD has calculated AAFs based on the shelter and gross rent inflation
factors used in FMR calculations. The source data for AAFs therefore
came from the 23 local and 4 regional CPI components (rent of primary
residence and household fuels and utilities) depending on the location
of the AAF area. HUD maintains the practice of updating the AAF
methodology in line with the FMR methodology changes that HUD adopted
for FY 2024. For FY 2024, HUD augmented the CPI data described above by
including available private data sources along with the CPI data in
calculating a weighted average shelter and gross rent inflation factor.
The private measures of rent used by HUD are the RealPage average
effective rent per unit, Moody's Analytics REIS average market rent,
CoStar Group average effective rent, CoreLogic, Inc. single-family
combined 3-bedroom median rent, Apartment List Rent Estimate, and
Zillow Observed Rent Index.
In calculating the AAF from these data, HUD first takes the annual
average of each statistic, then its year-to-year change. HUD then takes
the mean of changes from all available sources for each area. Next, HUD
takes an average of this private-sector measure of rent inflation with
rent inflation as captured by the CPI for the area, where the private-
sector measure is weighted at approximately 55.8 percent and the CPI
rent inflation measure is weighted at approximately 44.2 percent. HUD
has determined these weights by comparing the national average of the
private rent changes and changes in CPI rent of primary residence to
changes in the national average of recent mover rents from the ACS from
2017 through 2021. HUD weights the private data averages and overall
CPI rent of primary residence in such a way as to minimize the root
mean squared error between the resulting average and the ACS recent
mover rents. For future AAFs, HUD will update the weights by adding the
most recent years of ACS recent mover rents, private rent data, and CPI
rent of primary residence to the analysis.
HUD uses a local measure of private rent inflation for markets that
are covered by at least three of the six available sources of private
rent data. HUD combines this local measure of rent inflation with
either the local metropolitan area CPI rent of primary residence for
the 23 areas where such data exist, or the regional CPI rent in areas
without a local index. For areas without at least three of the six
private rent data sources available, HUD uses a regional average of
private rent inflation factors alongside the regional CPI rent of
primary residence. HUD constructs the regional average by taking the
rental unit weighted average of the change in rents of each area in a
region that does have private rent data coverage. This ensures that
smaller areas that are not covered by the private sources directly
still have current rental market conditions taken into account in the
calculation of the rent inflation factor for such areas.
The results of the above calculation are the ``utility excluded''
AAF. For the ``utility included'' AAF, HUD averages the result of this
step with the year-to-year change in the CPI housing fuels and
utilities index for the area in order to make the resulting inflation
measure reflective of gross rents.
VI. Area Definitions
To make certain that they are using the correct AAFs, users should
refer to the Area Definitions Table section at https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/aaf.html. Furthermore, users can also search for AAF
area definitions using an online lookup tool available on HUD User at
https://www.huduser.gov/portal/datasets/aaf.html. AAFs are based on the
updated metropolitan area definitions published by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) on September 14, 2018, and first
incorporated by the Census Bureau into the 2019 American Community
Survey (ACS) data and the corresponding FY 2022 FMRs. On July 21, 2023,
OMB published Bulletin No. 23-01, which contains revisions to
metropolitan area definitions. However, the Census Bureau has not yet
incorporated these revisions into the data available to HUD, and
therefore HUD is not using these new definitions for FY 2024.
Solomon Greene,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and
Research.
[FR Doc. 2024-06798 Filed 3-29-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P