Housing Opportunity Through Modernization Act of 2016-Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) and Project-Based Voucher Implementation; Additional Streamlining Changes, 38224-38339 [2024-08601]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 89 / Tuesday, May 7, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Parts 5, 8, 42, 50, 91, 92, 93,
247, 290, 882, 888, 891, 903, 908, 943,
945, 960, 972, 982, 983, 985, and 1000
[Docket No. FR–6092–F–03]
RIN 2577–AD06
Housing Opportunity Through
Modernization Act of 2016—Housing
Choice Voucher (HCV) and ProjectBased Voucher Implementation;
Additional Streamlining Changes
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing, HUD.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule amends HUD’s
regulations to implement changes to the
Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) tenantbased program and the Project-Based
Voucher (PBV) program made by the
Housing Opportunity Through
Modernization Act of 2016 (HOTMA).
HOTMA made several amendments to
the HCV and PBV programs, including
establishing a statutory definition of
public housing agency (PHA)-owned
housing, and amending several elements
of both programs. In response to public
comments, HUD has also included
additional regulatory changes in this
final rule that are intended to reduce the
burden on public housing agencies, by
either modifying requirements or
simplifying and clarifying existing
regulatory language.
DATES:
Effective date: June 6, 2024, except
the following sections, which are
delayed indefinitely: instruction 69,
§ 982.451(c); instruction 98, § 983.154(g)
and (h); instruction 100, § 983.157; and
instruction 103, § 983.204(e).
For more information, see
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
Compliance dates: Compliance with
this rule is required no later than June
6, 2024, except for the following
requirements:
1. 90 days after effective date. PHAs
are not required to comply with changes
to the requirements in the following
sections until September 4, 2024: 24
CFR 982.301; 24 CFR 982.503; 24 CFR
982.625–641; 24 CFR 983.58(b); 24 CFR
983.252; 24 CFR 983.260; and 24 CFR
985.3.
2. 180 days after effective date. PHAs
are not required to comply with the new
requirements in the following section
until December 3, 2024: 24 CFR
982.505.
3. One year after the effective date.
Several sections in this final rule require
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SUMMARY:
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PHAs to update their Administrative
Plans. PHAs are not required to update
their Administrative Plans in
compliance with these new
requirements until June 6, 2025.
Additionally, PHAs are not required to
comply with the new requirements in
the following sections until June 6,
2025: 24 CFR 983.57; 24 CFR
983.155(b); 24 CFR 983.251(e); and 24
CFR 983.262.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ryan Jones, Director, Housing Voucher
Management and Operations Division,
Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 7th Street SW,
Washington, DC 20011; telephone
number 202–708–1112 (this is not a tollfree number); email HOTMAVoucher@
hud.gov. HUD welcomes and is
prepared to receive calls from
individuals who are deaf or hard of
hearing, as well as from 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.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The HOTMA Statute
On July 29, 2016, HOTMA was signed
into law (Pub. L. 114–201, 130 Stat.
782). HOTMA makes numerous
significant changes to statutes that
govern HUD programs, including
section 8 of the United States Housing
Act of 1937 (1937 Act) (42 U.S.C. 1437f).
The Proposed Rule
On October 8, 2020, HUD issued a
proposed rule 1 to codify the HOTMA
provisions that HUD implemented
through the HOTMA Implementation
Notices 2 in the Federal Register. The
proposed rule also sought to make
changes to regulatory provisions
unrelated to HOTMA to eliminate
obsolete regulatory provisions and
reduce the burden on public housing
agencies, by either modifying
requirements or simplifying and
clarifying existing regulatory language.
The proposed rule sought to codify the
following HOTMA provisions:
• Section 101: In accordance with
HOTMA section 101(a)(1), the proposed
rule included a provision regarding non1 Housing Opportunity Through Modernization
Act of 2016-Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) and
Project-Based Voucher Implementation; Additional
Streamlining Changes, 85 FR 63664 (Oct. 8, 2020).
2 See 81 FR 73030 (Oct. 24, 2016); 82 FR 5458
(Jan. 18, 2017); 82 FR 32461 (Jul. 14, 2017);
additional guidance was provided in Notices PIH
2017–18, PIH 2017–20, and PIH 2017–21.
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life-threatening deficiencies and an
alternative inspections requirement in
HOTMA section 101(a)(1) at §§ 982.405,
982.406, and 983.103. The proposed
rule also proposed to revise the
definition of life-threatening
deficiencies at § 982.401. Additionally,
the proposed rule sought to include
regulations to enforce Housing Quality
Standards (HQS) in section 101(a)(3) at
§§ 982.404 and 983.208.
• Section 105: In accordance with
HOTMA section 105, the proposed rule
sought to modify and align the
definition of ‘‘PHA-owned unit’’ with
HOTMA’s revised definition of the term
at §§ 982.4 and 983.3.
• Section 106: In alignment with
HOTMA sections 106(a)(2) and
106(a)(3), the proposed rule proposed to
include regulations on PBV program
cap, PBV units not subject to project cap
or program cap, and PBV project cap in
§§ 983.6, 983.54, and 983.59.
• Section 106: Additionally, to
conform to the changes in HOTMA
section 106(a)(4), the proposed rule
included regulations on entering into a
PBV Housing Assistance Payments
(HAP) contract for rehabilitated and
newly constructed housing projects
without an agreement to enter into HAP
contract at § 983.154. The proposed rule
sought to codify regulations
surrounding PBV additional contract
conditions and tenant-based assistance
for families at termination/expiration
without renewal of PBV HAP contract;
PBV priority of assistance contracts;
PBV adding units to HAP contract
without competition; and PBV initial
term of HAP contract and extension of
term, in sections 106(a)(4) and 106(a)(5)
throughout Part 983. The proposed rule
sought to codify regulations that allow
for rent adjustments using an operating
cost adjustment factor (OCAF) in
HOTMA section 106(a)(6) at § 983.302.
• Section 106: Further, to conform to
the changes in HOTMA sections
106(a)(7) through (a)(9), the proposed
rule sought to codify HOTMA’s changes
to PBV preference for voluntary services
in section 106(a)(7) at § 983.251 and
owner-maintained waiting lists in
section 106(a)(7) at § 983.251. The
proposed rule also sought to codify
changes to environmental requirements
for existing housing in section 106(a)(8)
at § 983.56 and attaching PBVs to
projects where the PHA has an
ownership interest in section 106(a)(9)
at § 983.51.
The proposed rule also sought to
implement the following HOTMA HCV
provision:
• Section 112: In accordance with
HOTMA section 112, the proposed rule
proposed to include the manufactured
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home space rent calculation in section
112 at § 982.623, and to address the
PHA option to make housing assistance
payments directly to families instead of
an owner for manufactured home space
rentals in a proposed change to
§ 982.623.
HUD also proposed changes that were
not statutorily required, to better clarify
or revise existing regulatory
requirements, including changing the
current requirements to refine the DavisBacon wage requirements and inserting
references to obligations under Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
(Section 504) and the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA). Through these
changes, HUD sought to improve the
administration of the program, simplify
program rules, and reduce
administrative burden and cost. For
additional information, please see the
proposed rule.3
HUD received 44 comments on the
proposed rule, which were considered
and are discussed in Section IV of this
preamble. Additional details about the
proposed changes may be found in the
‘‘Housing Opportunity Through
Modernization Act of 2016-Housing
Choice Voucher (HCV) and ProjectBased Voucher Implementation;
Additional Streamlining Changes’’
proposed rule at 85 FR 63664 (Oct. 8,
2020).
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The NSPIRE Rulemaking
On May 11, 2023, after the proposed
rule was published, HUD published the
‘‘Economic Growth Regulatory Relief
and Consumer Protection Act:
Implementation of National Standards
for the Physical Inspection of Real
Estate (NSPIRE) final rulemaking (‘‘the
NSPIRE final rule’’).4 The NSPIRE final
rule established a new approach to
defining and assessing housing quality
by consolidating and modernizing
inspection standards for public housing,
multifamily housing, Community
Planning and Development programs,
and the HCV and PBV programs. Several
of the changes made in this final rule
from the proposed rule are designed to
incorporate or be consistent with the
NSPIRE final rule, and some additional
changes are made to build upon changes
made by the NSPIRE final rule.
II. The Final Rule
After considering the public
comments received on the October 8,
2020, proposed rule, and after further
3 85 FR 63664 (Oct. 8, 2020), https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/2020/10/08/
2020-21400/housing-opportunity-throughmodernization-act-of-2016-housing-choice-voucherhcv-and-project-based.
4 See 88 FR 30442.
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review, HUD makes the following
changes at this final rule stage. Where
a section has been relocated either from
the prior regulations or from what HUD
proposed, the section numbers shown in
the headings of this preamble refer to
the regulation sections as they appear in
this final rule.
Notes concerning application of this
rulemaking to projects underway.
HUD wishes to clarify that no change
in this rulemaking requires a PHA, or
any other party, to repeat a stage in the
selection or development process which
has already been completed for a PBV
project prior to the compliance date of
this rulemaking. If, for instance, a PHA
has selected a site under the prior site
selection standards before the effective
date of this rulemaking, the PHA is not
required to complete a new selection.
Similarly, an Agreement to enter into
HAP contract signed before the effective
date of this rulemaking does not need to
be amended to incorporate changes to
this rulemaking.
Additionally, if parties wish to amend
an existing Agreement to enter into HAP
contract to take advantage of changes
made by this rulemaking, such as the
changes made to include a description
of broadband infrastructure work in the
Agreement, nothing in this rulemaking
prevents such an amendment after the
rule is in effect. However, HUD notes
that if a project is under an Agreement
to enter into HAP contract as of the
effective date of this rule, parties cannot
nullify the Agreement to enter into HAP
contract to proceed without an
Agreement as will be otherwise allowed
under this rule when § 983.154(f) and
(g) take effect.
§ 888.113 Fair Market Rents for
Existing Housing: Methodology
In response to public comments, HUD
revises § 888.113 to increase flexibility
for PHAs. This final rule will provide
PHAs the option in the HCV program to
use Small Area Fair Market Rents
(SAFMRs) in a non-metropolitan area
with notification to their local HUD
field office, which provides PHAs
operating in non-metropolitan counties
the same opportunity to establish
payment standards that better align with
rents that vary significantly between zip
code areas within the non-metropolitan
counties. In paragraph (a) this final rule
modifies the requirement under
§ 888.113 that the FMR calculation
exclude newly built units. HUD no
longer publishes separate FMRs for
newly constructed rental units;
therefore, the FMRs calculated under
§ 888.113 should be reflective of the
entire rental market. This final rule also
clarifies existing practice in paragraph
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(c)(3) that where a PHA that elects to
use SAFMRs may exercise this option in
one metropolitan area or nonmetropolitan county, and is not required
to exercise this option in other
metropolitan areas or non-metropolitan
counties. This final rule changes
paragraph (c)(3) which will allow PHAs
to notify HUD when opting-in to use
SAFMRs, rather than require HUD’s
approval.
This final rule revises paragraph (h) to
align with the change to paragraph (c)(3)
described above and to improve
readability. Paragraph (h) is also revised
to include a cross-reference to separate
requirements regarding applicability of
exception payment standards based on
Small Area FMRs to PBV projects, to
more clearly signal that Small Area
FMRs may impact PBVs both as
described in paragraph (h) and where
HUD approves use of exception
payment standards. This final rule also
revises paragraph (h)(1) to clarify that
the PHA and owner may mutually agree
to apply the SAFMR to a PBV project
where the project was selected before
‘‘either or both’’ the SAFMR designation
and the PHA administrative policy. The
intent of this provision, as explained in
the preamble to the Small Area FMR
final rule (81 FR 80567, published
November 16, 2016), was to permit a
PHA that had established an
Administrative Plan policy to apply
Small Area FMRs to all future PBV
projects to also establish a policy
permitting the PHA to apply the Small
Area FMRs to current PBV projects,
provided the owner was willing to
mutually agree to do so. This approach
was intended to offer ‘‘maximum
flexibility’’ to the PHA for varied
circumstances. However, the prior
language the use of ‘‘both’’ inadvertently
created confusion with respect to
projects selected between the two events
(the Small Area FMR designation and
the PHA administrative policy
extending Small Area FMRs to future
PBV projects). Consequently, HUD is
making a technical correction to
paragraph (h)(1) to clarify that if the
PHA is applying the Small Area FMRs
to future PBV projects, the PHA may
also establish a policy to extend the use
of Small Area FMRs to current PBV
projects, including those projects
selected after the Small Area FMR
designation but prior to the effective
date of the PHA administrative policy,
if the owner is willing to do so.
This final rule also makes minor
revisions to paragraphs (h)(1) and (h)(2).
First, the final rule includes ‘‘countywide FMRs,’’ for consistency with other
changes in the regulation that allow
voluntary use of SAFMRs in non-
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metropolitan areas and to avoid any
implication that the PBV Small Area
FMR flexibilities in paragraph (h) would
not be available in non-metropolitan
counties where HUD publishes
SAFMRs. Second, this final rule
changes ‘‘designation’’ to ‘‘designation/
implementation’’ to improve clarity; this
is not a substantive change, but rather
it reflects that the applicable date for a
PHA that chooses to implement Small
Area FMRs under paragraph (c)(3) of
this section would more appropriately
be termed the date of ‘‘implementation.’’
This final rule also clarifies the effective
date of a rent increase due to Small Area
FMR. The proposed rule left unchanged
a provision stating that the effective date
of a rent increase would occur on the
‘‘first annual anniversary’’ of the HAP
contract, but this final rule replaces
‘‘first annual anniversary’’ with ‘‘next
annual anniversary’’ to clarify that the
effective date of a rent increase occurs
on the next annual anniversary after the
agreement, even if that is not the first
anniversary of the project.
Finally, this final rule revises
paragraph (i)(2) to reflect the
renumbering of § 982.503(e) to (f). This
final rule also revises paragraph (i)(3) to
reflect the phase-out of success rate
payment standards in 982.503(f).
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§ 903.3 What is the purpose of this
subpart?
This final rule clarifies HUD’s intent
regarding applicability of part 903 to the
project-based voucher program.
Previously, § 903.4(a)(2)(i) defined
tenant-based assistance to broadly mean
assistance provided under section 8(o)
of the 1937 Act, which included projectbased assistance under section 8(o)(13).
When § 903.12 was amended to make
express reference to project-based
assistance under section 8(o)(13), an
unintended consequence was confusion
regarding whether the term ‘‘tenantbased assistance’’ should still be
interpreted to include project-based
assistance under section 8(o)(13). In
§ 903.3(b)(2), the term ‘‘project-based’’ is
added to the reference of participants
who benefit from PHA plans as a source
to locate basic PHA policies, rules and
requirements concerning the PHA’s
operations, programs and services.
§ 903.4 What are the public housing
agency plans?
This final rule revises and defines
both tenant-based assistance and
project-based assistance under
903.4(a)(2)(i) to address confusion
regarding whether the existing
regulatory language also covers projectbased assistance under section 8(o)(13).
HUD now also makes specific reference
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to tenant-based assistance, project-based
assistance, and/or tenant and projectbased assistance throughout part 903 to
bring clearer meaning to each provision.
Section 504 or other federal civil rights
requirements. Further explanation of
these issues is located in that discussion
and in HUD’s January 2017 notice.
§ 903.6 What information must a PHA
provide in the 5-Year Plan?
HUD adds paragraph (c) to § 903.6 to
clarify that when a PHA intends to
select one or more projects for projectbased assistance without competition,
the PHA must first include a statement
of this intent in its 5-Year Plan to put
the public on notice. The proposed rule
referenced this requirement in
983.51(c)(1) but only generically
referenced the PHA Plan.
§ 903.11 Are certain PHAs eligible to
submit a streamlined Annual Plan?
§ 903.7 What information must a PHA
provide in the Annual Plan?
This final rule clarifies the
requirements for PHAs that provide
project-based assistance under section
8(o)(13) with respect to what
information a PHA must provide in the
Annual Plan. HUD now makes specific
references to project-based assistance in
paragraphs (a)(1), (c), (d), (e)(4), (f), and
(l)(1)(iii) and (2). HUD also inserts a new
paragraph (r) which contains text that
was previously located in § 903.12, as
HUD determined that the project-based
assistance statement requirement in that
section was not appropriately located.
Finally, in the Federal Register notice
published on January 18, 2017 (82 FR
5458), HUD stated, ‘‘The HOTMA
amendments permit a PHA to establish
a preference based on who qualifies for
voluntary services, including disabilityrelated services, offered in conjunction
with the assisted units.’’ HUD further
provided ‘‘The revised statute permits
such a preference to be established if it
is consistent with the PHA Plan. As part
of the PHA Plan review process, the
Office of Fair Housing and Equal
Opportunity, in consultation with the
Office of General Counsel, will review
each proposed preference for
consistency with fair housing and civil
rights requirements. As part of this
process, HUD may request the PHA or
owner provide any additional
documentation necessary to determine
consistency with the PHA Plan and all
applicable Federal fair housing and civil
rights requirements.’’ In this final rule,
HUD clarifies that the Office of Fair
Housing and Equal Opportunity, in
consultation with the Office of General
Counsel, may review proposed
preferences as part of the PHA Plan
review process. Approval of a PHA Plan
does not constitute compliance with
federal fair housing and civil rights
requirements. As stated in the comment
discussion of § 983.251, adoption of
such preferences cannot conflict with
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HUD makes a minor revision to
§ 903.11(c)(1) and (3) to include the
requirement that a PHA must identify
its participation in the project-based
assistance program in the streamlined
Annual Plan consistent with the
changes to § 903.7 made by this final
rule.
HUD is also revising paragraphs (a)(3)
and (c)(3). These paragraphs allow
PHAs to submit a streamlined Annual
Plan if they do not own or operate
public housing. This final rule clarifies
that PHAs that participate in the projectbased assistance program are still
eligible to submit a streamlined Annual
Plan.
§ 903.12 What are the streamlined
Annual Plan requirements for small
PHAs?
In this final rule, HUD moves the PBV
requirements previously located in
§ 903.12 to § 903.7 as described above.
HUD makes a minor revision to § 903.12
to include the requirement that in the
streamlined Annual Plan for Small
PHAs, a PHA must identify its
participation in the PBV program
consistent with the changes to § 903.7
made by this final rule. HUD also makes
express reference to project-based
assistance in paragraph (b).
§ 903.13 What is a Resident Advisory
Board and what is its role in
development of the Annual Plan?
This final rule clarifies in
§ 903.13(b)(1) and (3) the requirements
that Resident Advisory Board
composition provides for reasonable
representation of families receiving
project-based assistance, in addition to
families receiving tenant-based
assistance.
§ 903.15 What is the relationship of
the public housing agency plans to the
Consolidated Plan and a PHA’s Fair
Housing requirements?
This final rule clarifies in paragraph
(c) that all admission and occupancy
policies for section 8 project-based
housing programs, in addition to public
housing and section 8 tenant-based
must comply with Fair Housing Act
requirements and other civil rights laws
and regulations and with a PHA’s plans
to affirmatively further fair housing.
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§ 982.4 Definitions
In this final rule, HUD has revised the
organizational structure of the crossreferences for clarity and consistency
with cross references in other sections.
In addition, this final rule makes the
following changes to definitions:
HUD adds the definition of
‘‘building,’’ to clarify that a building is
a structure with a roof and walls that
contains one or more dwelling units.
HUD adds the definitions of ‘‘foster
adult’’ and ‘‘foster child’’ to the HCV
program to clarify that foster adult and
foster child are members of the
household, but not members of a family.
These definitions are identical to the
definitions added by the Housing
Opportunity Through Modernization
Act of 2016: Implementation of Sections
102, 103, and 104 final rule.5
HUD revises the definition of
‘‘housing quality standards’’ to make a
technical correction to the existing
definition and eliminate confusion
regarding the use of the alternative
inspection option. Under the statute, the
term ‘‘housing quality standards’’ (HQS)
refers to the standards prescribed by
HUD under section 8(o)(8)(B)(i) or
variations approved by HUD under
section 8(o)(8)(B)(ii) of the United States
Housing Act of 1937. While the
alternative inspection option at
§ 982.406 allows a PHA to comply with
the initial and regular inspection
requirements by relying on an
alternative inspection (i.e., an
inspection conducted for another
housing program), that does not mean
the standards of the alternative
inspection become the applicable HQS
for the HCV program. For example,
assume a PHA places a unit under a
HAP contract by using the alternative
inspection option for initial inspections
under § 982.406(e). Under that option,
the PHA may place a unit under HAP
contract on the basis that the unit
passed an alternative inspection for a
different housing program if certain
conditions are met prior to conducting
its own inspection. However, the PHA
must still conduct its own HQS
inspection within 30 days of receiving
the Request for Tenancy Approval
(RFTA) and may not make housing
assistance payments to the owner until
the PHA has inspected the unit. The
PHA conducts its inspection of the unit
based on the HQS established by HUD
for the HCV program, not the housing
standards that were applicable under
the alternative inspection. Likewise, any
5 See ‘‘Housing Opportunity Through
Modernization Act of 2016: Implementation of
Sections 102, 103, and 104’’ final rule at 88 FR 9600
(Feb. 14, 2023).
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interim inspection conducted by the
PHA for a unit under HAP contract is
to determine that the unit meets the
HQS established by HUD for the HCV
program, regardless of whether the PHA
is relying on an alternative inspection of
another housing program (that may have
different standards) for regular
inspections. For these same reasons,
HUD is also revising the definition of
HQS for the PBV program at § 983.3 and
making conforming changes to
§§ 982.401, 982.605(a), 982.609(a),
982.614(a), 982.618(b), 982.621, and
983.101(a) in this final rule.
HUD revises the definition of
‘‘independent entity’’ from the
definition in the proposed rule to clarify
when the unit of general local
government meets the definition of an
independent entity and more clearly
explain the requirements and prohibited
connections for a HUD-approved entity.
HUD revises the proposed definition
of ‘‘Request for Tenancy Approval
(RFTA)’’ to make clear that the RFTA
may be submitted not just by the family,
but also on behalf of a family.
HUD revises the definition of ‘‘Small
Area Fair Market Rents’’ from the
proposed rule to remove language
suggesting that the definition only
applies to areas meeting the definition
at § 888.113(d)(2). HUD removed this
reference because the SAFMRs in part
982 are not meant to be limited to the
mandatory Small Area FMR
metropolitan areas, and as such the
‘‘Small Area Fair Market Rents’’
definition deleted the citation to
§ 888.113(d)(2), which only covers
mandatory metropolitan areas
designated as Small Area FMR areas.
HUD revises the definition of ‘‘tenantpaid utilities’’ by stating that utilities
and services may include those required
by HUD through Federal Register notice
with opportunity for comment.
§ 982.54 Administrative Plan
This final rule revises the
requirements for the PHA
Administrative Plan. Specifically, this
final rule requires PHAs at
§ 982.54(d)(22) to specify in the
Administrative Plan the PHA’s policy
for withholding HAP for units that do
not meet HQS. This final rule also
requires at § 982.54(d)(4)(iv) that the
PHA Administrative Plan include the
PHA’s policy concerning residency for
foster children and adults and requires
at § 982.54(d)(23) that the PHA’s
Administrative Plan include the PHA’s
policy on assisting families with
relocating and finding a new unit. This
final rule also modifies
§ 982.54(d)(4)(iii) to include §§ 982.552,
982.554, and 982.55 as regulations that
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PHAs must follow in establishing their
standards for denying admission or
terminating assistance based on
criminal activity or alcohol abuse and
which must be included in their
Administrative Plan. HUD’s directives
and guidance on a PHA’s use of
criminal activity as an admission
screening factor are contained in PIH
Notice 2015–19, Guidance for Public
Housing Agencies (PHAs) and Owners
of Federally-Assisted Housing on
Excluding the Use of Arrest Records in
Housing Decisions. Through this notice
and other issuances, such as the 2016
Office of General Counsel’s Guidance on
the Application of Fair Housing Act
Standards to the Use of Criminal
Records by Providers of Housing and
Real Estate-Related Transactions, HUD
has required PHAs to adopt admission
policies that do not intentionally
discriminate against members of a
protected class or otherwise have an
unjustified discriminatory effect on
members of a protected class, even
when the PHA has no intent to
discriminate. HUD urges PHAs to
achieve a sensible and effective balance
between allowing individuals with a
criminal record to access HUDsubsidized housing and ensuring the
safety of all residents of such housing.
Consistent with the NSPIRE final rule,
HUD modifies § 982.54(d)(21)(i) to
require the PHA to include in its
Administrative Plan any life-threatening
deficiencies adopted by the PHA. Under
the proposed rule, the PHA’s
Administrative Plan had to include the
specific life-threatening conditions that
would be identified through the PHA’s
inspections, including the HUD
required life-threatening conditions and
any life-threatening deficiencies
adopted by the PHA prior to January 18,
2017. Since the deficiencies that HUD
requires must be considered lifethreatening are mandatory and not a
matter of PHA administrative policy,
requiring the PHA to list the HUDrequired life-threatening deficiencies in
the Administrative Plan is unnecessary
and burdensome. In addition, singling
out life-threatening deficiencies adopted
by the PHA prior to January 18, 2017,
which was related to how HUD initially
implemented the non-life-threatening
initial inspection option in the HOTMA
Implementation Federal Register notice
(82 FR 5458, published January 18,
2017), may create confusion. The
revised text in this final rule clarifies
that the Administrative Plan must
include a list of any PHA designated
life-threatening deficiencies that, in
addition to all HUD-required lifethreatening deficiencies, will be applied
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§ 982.401
by the PHA, regardless of date that the
PHA designated the deficiency as lifethreatening.
§ 982.301
Selected
Information When Family Is
This final rule makes changes to the
information provided to a family when
they are selected. For transparency and
to ensure equal access, this section
specifies that PHAs must provide
information in a way that ensures
meaningful access to individuals with
limited English proficiency.
Additionally, the final rule expands
upon the requirement in the proposed
rule to provide information on
reasonable accommodation policies and
procedures in the information packet,
by also requiring that the packet
specifically address an increase in the
payment standard as a reasonable
accommodation. The final rule also
includes a requirement that reasonable
accommodations must also be covered
in the oral briefing. In this section, this
final rule removes all references to the
welfare to work program, since it no
longer exists. Finally, this rule
reorganizes paragraph (a) so that
paragraph (a)(1) represents a list of what
must be provided in an oral briefing,
moving some content from paragraphs
(a)(2) and (3); this reorganization does
not change the requirements of
paragraph (a) in any way.
§ 982.305
Tenancy
PHA Approval of Assisted
This final rule reorganizes
§ 982.305(b) of the proposed rule by
relocating paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of the
proposed rule to a new paragraph (b)(3)
and moving the previous paragraph
(b)(3) to a new paragraph (b)(4). For
clarity and simplicity, this final rule
removes the requirement that the PHA
determine that the unit is covered by the
alternative inspection and simplifies
this provision to state that an alternative
inspection is allowed and alternatively
cross references what the PHA is subject
to and the alternative inspection option
at § 982.406. In addition, this final rule
does not make the proposed nonsubstantive change to paragraph (c)(3).
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§ 982.352
Eligible Housing
This final rule changes proposed
§ 982.352(b)(1)(v)(A)(3) by removing the
exception of applicability of
§ 982.405(e), acknowledging that
sometimes independent entities
schedule inspections, and in those
cases, they must consider complaints
and any other information brought to
their attention.
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Housing Quality Standards
NSPIRE includes the new standards
for setting HQS at § 5.703 for all HUD
programs including the standards for
life-threatening and non-life-threatening
conditions and the amount of time
required to correct such deficiencies.
Other than a conforming change related
to the revised definition of HQS
discussed previously in the description
of the changes to § 982.4, this final rule
makes no change to the section as
codified in the NSPIRE rule (88 FR
30442 (May 11, 2023)).
§ 982.404 Maintenance: Owner and
Family Responsibility; PHA Remedies
HUD makes several clarifying
revisions to this section, which includes
changes to certain terminology such as
changing ‘‘fails to comply’’ to ‘‘has HQS
deficiencies’’ and consistently changing
‘‘defect’’ to ‘‘deficiency.’’ These
clarifying changes also make it clear that
a unit is ‘‘not in compliance with HQS’’
when it has deficiencies that are not
remedied within the appropriate
timeframe. This final rule also revises
paragraph (a)(2) to provide clarifying
changes from the proposed rule text that
ensure the paragraph is clear that it does
not provide a different requirement from
the remainder of the section, and
amends paragraph (a)(4) to align with
the HOTMA statutory text. HUD
provides in paragraph (b)(4) that, in the
case of a family being responsible for
HQS deficiency repairs, the family need
not itself make the repairs but rather is
responsible for taking all steps
permissible under the lease and State
and local law to ensure the deficiency
is corrected. This is in response to
commenters who pointed out that in
some cases the lease or local law may
prevent the family from undertaking the
repairs itself.
The proposed rule used varying
terminology to explain HQS inspections
throughout parts 982 and 983. To
promote clarity, this final rule replaces
the varied terminology to explain HQS
inspections and consistently uses the
inspection terms outlined in § 982.405.
This rule specifically names each type
of inspection that exists within its
respective section and specifies when
actions or provisions apply to specific
inspections. As such, this final rule also
removes references to ‘‘regular
inspection’’ since it was undefined in
the proposed rule, and this final rule
clarifies that § 982.404(d) applies to
every inspection type other than initial
inspections. This final rule also adds the
requirement at paragraph (d)(1) that a
PHA’s Administrative Plan contains the
conditions for withholding HAP from an
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owner for such deficiencies, to align
with § 982.54.
In paragraph (d)(2)(i), this final rule
clarifies that the abatement requirement
includes amounts that had previously
been withheld. To better protect
families from homelessness, in
paragraph (d)(2)(ii), HUD outlines the
timeframe in which a PHA must issue
a family its voucher to include at least
30 days prior to the termination of the
HAP contract. In paragraph (d)(3), this
final rule specifies that the family has
discretion to terminate their lease and
that the termination will occur either
immediately or when the family vacates
the unit, whichever is earlier. This final
rule also includes the requirement that
PHAs promptly issue the family a
voucher to move. In paragraph (e)(3),
HUD expands what is included in costs
associated with relocating to include
temporary housing costs. The final rule
further provides that if the PHA uses the
withheld and abated assistance
payments to assist with the family’s
relocation costs, the PHA must provide
security deposit assistance to the family
as necessary, and that PHAs must assist
families with disabilities in locating
available accessible units in accordance
with 24 CFR 8.28(a)(3).
Lastly, in paragraph (f), HUD provides
that the revised § 982.404 applies to
HAP contracts that are executed on or
after the effective date of this final rule,
as well as HAP contracts renewed after
the rule’s effective date.
§ 982.405 PHA Initial and Periodic
Unit Inspection
HUD has made technical
organizational changes to § 982.405 by
dividing paragraphs and changing the
headers to consistently use identifiable
names for each inspection type. New
paragraph (d) splits up the proposed
paragraph (g) to specifically outline the
types of interim inspections to include
life-threatening, non-life-threatening,
and extraordinary circumstances.
§ 982.406 Use of Alternative
Inspections
HUD revises § 982.406 primarily to
address issues with respect to
compatibility between parts 982 and
983. Paragraph (a) now applies only to
HCV, part 982 as HUD moved generally
applicable language at proposed
paragraph (a)(2) to paragraph (d) and
removed the language at proposed
paragraph (a)(3) applicable only to PBV.
HUD also revises paragraph (c)(2)(ii) to
align with the renumbering in § 982.405.
This final rule revises paragraph (d)
regarding use of alternative inspections
to apply to both HCV and PBV, by
removing specific citations to § 982.405.
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These changes continue to require that
any alternative inspection standard be
identified in the PHA Administrative
Plan for both HCV and PBV.
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§ 982.451 Housing Assistance
Payments Contract
In this final rule, the text from
paragraph (c)(1)(i) has been moved
under paragraph (c)(1), resulting in a
renumbering of paragraphs (c)(1)(i)(A)–
(E) from the proposed rule to (c)(1)(i)–
(v) in the final rule. Paragraph (c)(1)
now expressly states the requirement
that the separate legal entity must
execute the HAP contract with the PHA
if it chooses the option of establishing
a separate legal entity to serve as the
owner. HUD deletes paragraph (c)(1)(ii)
of the proposed rule and moves the text
of proposed (c)(2)(i) under paragraph
(c)(2) in the final rule. This final rule
also revises paragraph (c)(2)(i) to clarify
that the PHA-owned certification
obligates the PHA, as the owner, to all
of the requirements of the HAP contract.
This revision prevents confusion with
other regulations that reference HAP
contracts, but not the PHA-owned
certification. Finally, other minor
changes were made in paragraph (c) to
align with corresponding requirements
in § 983.204(e).
§ 982.503 Payment Standard Areas,
Schedule, and Amounts
HUD makes clarifying edits to
paragraph (a)(1) to reflect HUD’s
practice of setting SAFMRs for ZIP
codes outside designated SAFMRs. HUD
also revises paragraph (d)(1) to explain
the areas in which an exception
payment standard may be established.
In addition, in response to public
comment, HUD revises paragraph (d)(2)
to allow PHAs to set SAFMR-based
exception payment standards above 110
percent of the FMR for nonmetropolitan counties, just as they are
currently permitted to do for
metropolitan areas. This ensures parity
between metropolitan and non-metro
PHAs and provides non-metropolitan
PHAs with the ability to establish
exception payment standards that better
reflect actual market conditions based
on HUD’s SAFMR determinations. In
paragraph (d)(2), this final rule also
allows PHAs that qualify for exception
payment standards above 110 percent of
the applicable FMR to set exception
payment standards up to the same
percentage of the SAFMR for the
applicable ZIP code. HUD also divides
proposed paragraph (d)(3) into
paragraphs (d)(3) and (4) and moves
proposed paragraph (d)(4) to (d)(5). In
order to provide PHAs more flexibility
to respond to rapidly changing rental
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markets, paragraph (d)(3) now provides
set situations in which HUD will allow
PHAs the discretion to establish an
exception payment standard amount
between 110 percent and 120 percent of
applicable FMR upon notification to
HUD that the PHA meets a specified
criterion instead of requiring prior HUD
approval. The PHA must meet one of
three criteria: (i) Fewer than 75 percent
of the families to whom the PHA issued
tenant-based rental vouchers during the
most recent 12-month period for which
there is success rate data available have
become participants in the voucher
program; (ii) More than 40 percent of
families with tenant-based rental
assistance administered by the agency
pay more than 30 percent of adjusted
income as the family share; or (iii) Such
other criteria as the Secretary
establishes by notice. This change will
allow PHAs to more quickly respond to
changing rental market conditions,
which will help them better manage
program utilization, success rates, and
rent burdens. New paragraph (d)(4)
outlines how the PHA must request
approval from HUD to establish
payment standards above 110 percent of
the applicable FMR except as provided
in paragraphs (d)(2), (d)(3), and (d)(5).
This new paragraph consolidates
requirements related to exception
payment standards for PHAs in
designated SAFMR areas and for PHAs
subject to the metropolitan area or nonmetropolitan county FMRs. It also
establishes criteria for designated
SAFMR PHAs to request an exception
payment standard over 110 percent of
the SAFMR, which the current
regulation previously stated would be
provided in a separate Federal Register
notice. Further, HUD revises paragraph
(d)(4) to explain the application of the
exception payment standard to the
entire fair market rent area and the use
of rental market data, specifically
allowing the use of local rental market
data. HUD provides clarifying changes
to relocated paragraph (d)(5), which
now specifies existing policy that PHAs
may establish an exception payment
standard of up to 120 percent of the
applicable FMR without prior
notification to HUD if they are seeking
a reasonable accommodation for a
person with a disability.
HUD also amends paragraph (e) by
establishing a modified standard for
approving payment standards below the
basic range which will require a
projection of rent burden based on the
lower payment standard, rather than
measuring rent burden based on current
program participants prior to that
reduction. The standard does allow
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38229
HUD to approve a payment standard
below the basic range to help prevent
termination of assistance in the case of
a PHA budget shortfall. In this final
rule, HUD does not adopt the proposed
rule modification to paragraph (e) and
removes the PHA’s option to go below
the basic payment standard range for
Small Area FMR ZIP code areas without
HUD approval. In addition, HUD
amends paragraph (f) to eliminate the
option to establish success rate payment
standards. HUD determined that the
new flexibility provided in the rule to
set payment standards up to 120 percent
of the FMR makes this option
unnecessary. In paragraph (h), this final
rule specifies that HUD will monitor
rent burdens only of families assisted
with tenant-based rental assistance,
because PBV tenants are unlikely to
have rent burdens above 30 percent.
§ 982.505 How To Calculate Housing
Assistance Payment
In this final rule, HUD revises
paragraph (c)(3)(iv) to eliminate the
option in the proposed rule for PHAs to
adopt different policies related to
applying decreases in payment
standards in different geographic areas
out of concern that this could result in
discriminatory policies. Additionally, in
response to public comment, HUD
revises paragraph (c)(4)(ii) to require
PHAs to apply payment standard
increases at the family’s next regular
reexamination or the next interim
recertification (in addition to the other
events listed) and adds paragraph (c)(5)
to give PHAs the flexibility to adopt
policies to apply increases in the
payment standard earlier than required.
HUD also revised paragraph (c)(6),
which was previously paragraph (c)(5),
to clarify that while the new family unit
size must be used in the recalculation
by the first regular reexamination
following the change, it may be used
immediately.
§ 982.517 Utility Allowance Schedule
In response to public comments HUD
is not going forward with the proposed
§ 982.517(a)(2), which would have
required PHAs to provide the utility
allowance schedule to HUD only when
HUD requests it, and instead maintains
the current requirement that the PHA
provide HUD with the utility allowance
schedule regardless of whether HUD
requests it, and to only require the PHA
to provide information or procedures
used in preparation of the schedule
when HUD requests it. HUD also revises
paragraph (b)(1)(i) to allow for the
possibility of an expansion of utility
allowances in the future through a
Federal Register notice. Additionally, in
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paragraph (b)(1)(ii), this final rule
expands the category of utilities and
services to include applicable
surcharges. In paragraph (b)(1)(iv), HUD
removed wireless internet from the list
of non-essential utility costs so that
HUD could consider such inclusion of
wireless internet as essential in a
Federal Register notice under paragraph
(b)(1)(i).
In paragraph (b)(2)(ii), HUD expands
the utility allowance standards to
include criteria for applying utility
allowance to retrofitted units. The
revised paragraph (b)(2)(ii) clarifies that
while the entire building must meet
Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design (LEED) or Energy
Star standards, in the future HUD may
provide by notice, when an energyefficient utility allowance (EEUA) may
be used for retrofitted units even if the
entire building does not meet the
standard. The revisions notes that there
are only two design standards that can
be used for energy-efficient utility
allowance (EEUA) to prevent EEUAs
from being applied broadly. HUD also
moves paragraph (b)(2)(iv) to paragraph
(b)(2)(v) and adds a new paragraph
(b)(2)(iv) to state that the PHA must use
the project-specific utility allowance
schedule for tenant-based participants
in projects that have an approved
project-specific utility allowance under
§ 983.301(f)(4). This requirement was
previously in § 983.301(f)(4) of the
proposed rule and § 983.301(f)(2)(ii) of
the previous regulatory text but has
been moved from part 983. The
Administrative Plan requirements to
include PHAs state their policy for
utility allowance payments are
consistent with § 982.54.
§ 982.552 PHA Denial or Termination
of Assistance for Family
This final rule makes a conforming
change to remove § 982.552(c)(1)(viii),
which denies housing assistance for a
family’s failure to comply with the FSS
contract of participation, to align with a
statutory amendment to the Family SelfSufficiency (FSS) program authorizing
language and the program’s regulations,
which amended 24 CFR 984.303(b)(5)
through a final rule effective on June 16,
2022 (87 FR 30020). This change is in
accordance with the Economic Growth,
Regulatory Relief, and Consumer
Protection Act (‘‘the Economic Growth
Act’’) (Pub. L. 115–174) 6 which states
that, ‘‘Housing assistance may not be
terminated as a consequence of either
successful completion of the contract of
6 See The Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief,
and Consumer Protection Act (‘‘the Economic
Growth Act’’) (Pub. L. 115–174).
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participation or failure to complete such
contract.’’
§§ 982.605; 982.609; 982.614; 982.618;
982.621
The final rule makes a conforming
change to §§ 982.605; 982.609; 982.614;
982.618; and 982.621 to align the text
with the revised definition of HQS
discussed previously in the description
of the changes to § 982.4.
§ 983.2 When the Tenant-Based
Voucher Rule (24 CFR Part 982) Applies
HUD revises § 983.2(c) to outline the
specific part 982 provisions that do not
apply to PBV assistance and revises
paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) to specify that
the HAP contract retention provisions at
§ 983.158(e)(2) do not apply to PBV
assistance. HUD also clarifies in
paragraph (c)(5) which provisions of
part 982, subpart I do not apply to PBV
assistance and in paragraph (c)(7)(i)
which provisions of § 982.503 do not
apply.
§ 982.641 Homeownership Option:
Applicability of Other Requirements
The final rule amends paragraph (d)
to clarify that § 982.406 (Use of
alternative inspections), along with
§ 982.405 (PHA unit inspection) as the
CFR previously provided, does not
apply to the homeownership option.
Because no HAP or downpayment
assistance may be paid until the PHA
inspects a family’s homeownership unit
and determines it passes HQS (see 24
CFR 982.631(a)), §§ 982.405 and 982.406
describing inspection requirements
particular to rental assistance are
incompatible with the homeownership
option. HUD notes that this is not a
substantive change.
§ 983.3 PBV Definitions
In response to public comment about
the utility of establishing SAFMRs in
some non-metropolitan counties, this
final rule revises the definition of ‘‘area
where vouchers are difficult to use’’ to
include areas where 90 percent of the
SAFMR exceeds 110 percent of FMR not
just for metropolitan areas, but also for
non-metropolitan counties. HUD
determines that, when used in a nonmetropolitan context, the difference
between the SAFMR and FMR remains
an easily identifiable and consistent
data point for determining if an area is
one in which vouchers are difficult to
use.
This final rule also revises the
definition of an ‘‘area where vouchers
are difficult to use’’ to include a census
tract with a poverty rate of 20 percent
or less. This is not a substantive change,
but rather a reorganization of the rule
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text for streamlining. In the proposed
rule, § 983.54(b), regarding the project
cap (income-mixing requirement),
contained two separate categories of
projects that were subject to a higher
project cap: these categories were
projects ‘‘located in a census tract with
a poverty rate of 20 percent or less’’ and
projects ‘‘located in an area where
vouchers are difficult to use.’’ Similarly,
§ 983.6(d), regarding the program cap
(percentage limitation), included both
units ‘‘located in a census tract with a
poverty rate of 20 percent or less’’ and
units ‘‘located in an area where
vouchers are difficult to use’’ as two
separate categories of units eligible for
an increased cap. For both the program
cap and project cap, there was no
difference between the requirements
applicable to the two categories of
projects and units. To simplify
§§ 983.54(b) and 983.6(d), HUD
examined whether the 1937 Act
permitted the PBV regulatory
definitions to consider a project or unit
‘‘located in a census tract with a poverty
rate of 20 percent or less’’ to be a type
of project or unit ‘‘located in an area
where vouchers are difficult to use.’’ In
the case of the program cap, section
8(o)(13)(B)(ii) of the 1937 Act provides
for a specific 10 percent authority
category for areas where vouchers are
difficult to use ‘‘as specified in
subparagraph (D)(ii)(II),’’ which is the
subparagraph applying an exception to
the project cap for areas where vouchers
are difficult to use and for census tracts
with a poverty rate of 20 percent or less.
As a result, HUD determines that the
authority for an exception to the
program cap for census tracts with a
poverty rate of 20 percent or less derives
from the program cap exception for
areas where vouchers are difficult to
use, and therefore it would be more
appropriate to include census tracts
with a poverty rate of 20 percent or less
within the definition of ‘‘areas where
vouchers are difficult to use.’’ While the
project cap exceptions for census tracts
with a poverty rate of 20 percent or less
and areas where vouchers are difficult
to use are both mandated by section
8(o)(13)(D)(ii)(II) of the 1937 Act, given
that the exception is identical for each
category HUD determines the
streamlining benefit makes placing
census tracts with a poverty rate of 20
percent or less in the definition of
‘‘areas where vouchers are difficult to
use’’ appropriate for purposes of
codification of the project cap categories
in the CFR.
Also, in response to public comment,
HUD in this final rule changes the term
‘‘comparable rental assistance’’ to
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‘‘comparable tenant-based rental
assistance,’’ amends the definition
consistent with section 8(o)(13)(E) of the
1937 Act, and outlines the minimum
requirements for assistance to qualify as
comparable tenant-based rental
assistance. HUD also finds that the
proposed definition of ‘‘development
activity,’’ in referring to both
rehabilitation and new construction
done for the project to receive PBV
assistance and for other work occurring
later during the term of the PBV HAP
contract, produced significant
confusion. As a result, HUD removes
work occurring later during the term of
the HAP contract from the proposed
definition of ‘‘development activity’’ in
this final rule and instead covers this
work under a definition of ‘‘substantial
improvement.’’ HUD revises the content
of the term ‘‘substantial improvement’’
for additional clarity. This final rule
also revises the definition of ‘‘excepted
units’’ to clarify that excepted units
exclusively serve certain families in
accordance with § 983.54(c)(2) and to
distinguish its definition from
‘‘excluded units,’’ which is a newly
added definition that excludes units
that meet certain requirements from the
program and project cap.
As suggested by commenters, HUD
revises the definition of ‘‘existing
housing’’ to mean housing that meets or
substantially complies with HQS, which
housing is distinct from housing that
will soon undergo development activity.
‘‘Substantial compliance’’ in this
definition provides specific limitations
to ensure the deficiencies in the project
require minor work that can reasonably
be completed within a 30-day period of
time. These revisions reflect the need to
better distinguish rehabilitated housing
from existing housing so PHAs can
comply with the distinct program
requirements applicable to each housing
type while also recognizing that HQS
corrections may take a longer time than
the period noted in the proposed rule.
HUD changes the relevant time period
in which existing housing is not
expected to undergo or need substantial
improvement from five years to two
years after the HAP contract effective
date in response to public comment.
HUD also revises the definitions of
‘‘newly constructed housing’’ and
‘‘rehabilitated housing’’ by establishing
a standard determined on a projectbasis, rather than the prior unit-basis
which was in the proposed rule,
consistent with prior HUD guidance that
a project can only be one type overall,
and therefore specifying between the
two types on a per-unit basis was
impractical. HUD further amends the
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definition of ‘‘rehabilitated housing’’ to
more directly note the difference
between such projects and ‘‘existing
housing.’’ HUD also clarifies the
definition of ‘‘independent entity’’ to
specify how it relates to the PBV
program and revises the definition of
‘‘waiting list admission’’ to include
owner-maintained waiting lists.
This final rule added to the definition
of ‘‘project’’ to more clearly describe the
discretion PHAs already have to modify
the definition of project in their
Administrative Plans. This final rule
adds a definition of ‘‘tenant rent’’ as
applicable to the PBV program. This
final rule also adds the definitions for
building, gross rent, manufactured
home, PHA Plan, program receipts, total
tenant payment, utility allowance, and
utility reimbursement to clarify that
these terms apply to the PBV program.
This final rule removes the term
‘‘eligible’’ from the definition of ‘‘inplace family,’’ and instead discusses the
eligibility of an in-place family in
§ 983.251. HUD also changes ‘‘proposal
selection date’’ to ‘‘proposal or project
selection date’’ to align with changes
made to § 983.51 (described below).
This final rule makes a conforming
change to align the PBV program
definition of ‘‘housing quality
standards’’ with the revised HCV
program definition discussed previously
in the description of the changes to
§ 982.4.
In addition, this final rule removes
the definition of ‘‘project-based
certificate (PBC) program’’ because it is
no longer in existence. Finally, this final
rule removes the definition of ‘‘request
for release of funds and certification’’
and moves the relevant information that
was contained in the proposed rule to
a more appropriate location, § 983.56.
§ 983.4 Cross-Reference to Other
Federal Requirements
HUD proposed to revise HUD’s labor
standards cross-reference regarding
applicability of regulations
implementing the Davis-Bacon Act, but
HUD at this final rule removes this
change. As explained in the summary of
changes to § 983.153, HUD requires
Davis-Bacon compliance regardless of
whether an Agreement (referring to an
Agreement to enter into a HAP contract)
is used in this final rule so the change
to this section is no longer necessary.
HUD notes that under section 12(a) of
the 1937 Act, the labor standards
provisions cross-referenced in § 983.4
only apply where there is an agreement
for section 8 use before construction or
rehabilitation is commenced. As
discussed in reference to the changes to
§ 983.153, the PHA’s pre-construction
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offer and owner’s acceptance of PBV
assistance to be provided once the units
are constructed or rehabilitated
constitutes an agreement triggering
Davis-Bacon requirements on projects
with 9 or more assisted units, in
accordance with section 12(a) of the
1937 Act, regardless of whether an
Agreement is used.
Finally, as a technical matter, HUD
has revised § 983.4 to remove the
reference to the definitions in 24 CFR
part 5, subpart D. Because HUD has
revised § 982.4(a)(2) to properly
incorporate the relevant definitions in
24 CFR part 5, subpart D, and because
§ 983.4 incorporates 982.4, this
incorporation is not necessary.
§ 983.5 Description of the PBV
Program
HUD makes a minor revision to the
proposed § 983.5(a)(1) to include the
citation to the consolidated annual
contributions contract (ACC). This final
rule also revises paragraph (a)(3) to
better describe the options available for
development of newly constructed and
rehabilitated housing, including adding
reference to the option added in this
final rule to § 983.157 (which is
described in greater detail below). HUD
revises paragraph (c) to require PHAs to
provide notice to HUD when the PHA
executes, amends,7 or extends a HAP
contract, to align with system
development already in progress,8 and
makes changes to align with the
language in § 983.10, to require the PHA
to address all PBV related matters over
which the PHA has policymaking
discretion.
§ 983.6 Maximum Amount of PBV
Assistance (Percentage Limitation)
This final rule revises paragraphs (a)
and (e) to explain how to calculate the
maximum number of PBV units to
prevent the possibility of the PHA
miscalculating the cap and projectbasing more units than it should. This
change reflects that the cap is 20 percent
as adjusted, and not a flat 20 percent of
all Annual Contributions Contract
(ACC) units because the PHA must
remove excluded units when calculating
the cap. This final rule also corrects the
date in paragraph (a)(2), and in
paragraph (a)(3) expands the conditions
under which the PHA may not add units
to PBV HAP contracts to include
7 Amendments in this context refers to changes
such as those that add or substitute contract units,
rather than substantive revisions to contractual text.
The general requirement per 24 CFR 982.162 to use
HUD-prescribed forms, including PBV HAP
contracts, without modification remains in place.
8 See 84 FR 70986 (Dec. 26, 2019); 85 FR 60249
(Sep. 24, 2020); 88 FR 28594 (May 4, 2023).
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paragraph (e). In paragraph (b), HUD
clarifies that the PBV assistance
percentage limitation applies to all PBV
units which the PHA has selected, and
that selection takes place from the time
of the proposal or project selection date.
This final rule also revises language in
paragraph (d)(1)(iii) to require that the
Administrative Plan describe the
availability of supportive services in
alignment with the language in § 983.10.
HUD amends paragraph (d)(1)(iv) to
remove the separate exception category
for census tracts with a poverty rate of
20 percent or less, given the revised
definition of an ‘‘area where vouchers
are difficult to use’’ now includes a
census tract with a poverty rate of 20
percent or less, as explained further in
the discussion of § 983.3 above, and
moves the proposed paragraph (d)(1)(v)
to (d)(1)(iv). HUD adds a new exception
in response to public comment to
paragraph (d)(1)(v) for units that
replace, on a different site, the units
removed from the housing types listed
in § 983.59(b)(1)–(2) (see discussion of
comments received regarding § 983.59).
HUD revises paragraph (d)(2) to increase
the program cap and project cap for PBV
units to include the Fostering Stable
Housing Opportunity (FSHO) authority
enacted in section 103 of division Q of
the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2021 (Pub. L. 116–260, 134 Stat. 1182).9
Pursuant to section 103(c)(1) of FSHO,
the percentage limitation (i.e., the
program cap) now includes units that
are exclusively made available to
eligible youth receiving FUP/FYI
assistance under the 10 percent
increased cap. This final rule adds a
new paragraph (d)(3) to clarify
requirements to fill units under certain
10 percent increased cap categories with
the appropriate families.
This final rule also revises paragraph
(e) by explaining that units previously
subject to federally required rent
restrictions or that received long-term
rental assistance from HUD are removed
for purposes of calculating the
percentages under paragraphs (a) and
(d) of this section.
This final rule also revises paragraph
(1)(ii) by adding ‘‘space service’’ to the
definition of ‘‘veteran’’ to accurately
include types of service encompassed
within the current statutory definition
of ‘‘veteran’’ found in the Department of
Veterans Affairs governing statutes (i.e.,
38 U.S.C. 101(2)). By adding ‘‘space
service,’’ it will ensure that no type of
service for a veteran or veteran family
goes unaccounted for.
9 See
87 FR 3570 (Jan. 24, 2022).
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§ 983.10 PBV Provisions in the
Administrative Plan
HUD revises the structure of § 983.10
to outline the areas in which PHAs have
policymaking discretion specific to the
PBV program and requires these policies
be included in the PHA Administrative
plan. The PHAs’ policymaking
discretion is noted throughout part 983
consistent with this section. Section
983.10 includes a brief description of
the provisions that must be in the
Administrative Plan for a PHA that
operates a PBV program and a citation
in each provision to the regulation that
provides complete details about the
requirement. However, HUD notes that
the policies listed in § 983.10 are the
minimum that the PHA must include in
its Administrative Plan. There are
additional areas, beyond those listed in
§ 983.10, where a PHA may properly
exercise policy-making discretion
consistent with language in other
sections in this part. In cases where a
PHA exercises this discretion, these
additional policies must be included in
the PHA’s Administrative Plan.
§ 983.11 Project-Based Certificate
(PBC) Program
In the proposed rule, HUD proposed
to move § 983.10, dealing with ProjectBased Certificates (PBC), to § 983.11.
However, the PBC program was
replaced by the PBV program in 2001
and no units remain in the PBC
program.10 Therefore, in this final rule,
references to the PBC program have
instead been removed. The currently
codified § 983.10, dealing with PBC, is
instead being removed entirely. Because
the previous § 983.10 is not being
moved to § 983.11, the proposed
§ 983.12 is, in this final rule, moved up
to § 983.11. Section 983.12 of this final
rule is new to this final rule and
discussed further below.
§ 983.11 Prohibition of Excess Public
Assistance
In response to public comments, HUD
revises paragraph (d)(2) dealing with
subsidy layering review. Instead of
requiring Subsidy Layering Review
(SLR) any time new funding of any
amount or percentage is added to the
10 Units under a PBC Agreement executed by the
PHA and Owner prior to January 16, 2001,
remained in the PBC program. The maximum term
for PBCs under standard-form PBC HAP contracts
was an aggregate 15 years (generally, three 5-year
terms). Therefore, no more valid PBC HAP contracts
should exist. Upon expiration of a PBC HAP
contract, a PHA and Owner could agree to renew
the PBC contract as a PBV contract, consistent with
section 6904 of the Troop Readiness, Veterans’
Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq Accountability
Appropriations Act, 2007, Public Law 110–28, and
the now repealed 24 CFR 983.310(b)(1)(ii).
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project during the term of the HAP
contract, HUD will specify when a new
SLR is required via a Federal Register
notice, consistent with current practice.
HUD concluded that finalizing
paragraph (d)(2) as proposed would be
administratively burdensome.
§ 983.12 Project Record Retention
This final rule adds a new § 983.12 to
cover program accounts and records for
the PBV program (§ 982.158 continues
to apply to records applicable to both
the tenant-based and project-based
programs, except as now specified in
§ 983.2). While these documents should
already be maintained for compliance
with HUD’s regulations, this section
provides a specific list of documents,
location, and time period for retention
of the PBV HAP contract and any PBVspecific documents (e.g., Agreement to
enter into HAP contract (Agreement),
completion documents, SLR,
environmental review, selection
materials), including records
demonstrating the independent entity’s
review of a PHA-owned project
selection. This section includes
retention provisions for records newly
required under new PBV program
components of this final rule.
§ 983.51 Proposal and Project
Selection Procedures
This final rule amends § 983.51
throughout to clarify the distinction
between competitive selection of
proposals versus noncompetitive
selection of projects since selection
without competition does not entail
solicitation or selection of competing
proposals. As recommended by
commenters, this final rule revises
paragraph (a) by allowing entities that
have site control to submit PBV
proposals. HUD intends to provide
further guidance on what HUD
considers to be ‘‘site control’’ through
PIH notice.
Paragraph (a) also specifies that an
owner may submit PBV proposals to
cover multiple projects where each
consists of a single-family building.
Consistent with § 983.10, HUD clarifies
the requirement that the PHA
Administrative Plan must describe the
procedures for submission and selection
of PBV proposals under the methods of
competitive selection in paragraph (b)
and selection of projects under an
exception to competitive selection
under paragraph (c), including under
what circumstances the PHA will use
the selection methods described in
paragraphs (b) and (c).
HUD amends paragraph (b)(1) to
address the methods the PHA must use
for competitive selection of PBV
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proposals. This change clarifies that the
PHA request for proposal (RFP)
selection method can be a part of
another competition or run
simultaneously with another
competition. This change also addresses
public concerns about the inability or
difficulty of awarding PBVs to projects
that also compete and receive other
funds, specifically development dollars
through Low-Income Housing Tax
Credits (LIHTC), Housing Trust Fund
(HTF), and HOME investment
partnerships program. HUD also makes
clarifying changes to paragraph (b)(2) to
remove the language concerning LIHTC
and HOME to avoid confusion because,
in practice, LIHTC and HOME almost
always require the PBVs to be awarded
prior to receiving applications.
HUD clarifies in paragraph (c) that
prior to a PHA selecting one or more
projects for PBV assistance without
competition, the PHA must notify the
public of its intent to do so in its 5-Year
Plan. HUD also reorganizes paragraph
(c)(1) in the proposed rule by moving
applicable requirements to new
paragraphs (c)(1)(i)–(ii). Further, in
response to public comments, HUD
adds clarifying language to paragraphs
(c)(1) and (c)(2) to better align with the
statutory language in section 8(o)(13)(N)
of the 1937 Act as amended by HOTMA,
including a clarification under (c)(1)(i)
and a new paragraph at (c)(2)(iv)
regarding the number of units permitted
to be replaced.
This final rule also adds a new
paragraph (c)(3), which provides
increased flexibility for PHAs to
noncompetitively select a project
comprised of PHA-owned units.
HOTMA expressly allows PHAs to
attach PBVs to projects in which the
PHA has an ownership interest without
following a competitive process in cases
where the PHA is engaged in an
initiative to improve, develop, or
replace a public housing property or
site. HUD implemented this provision
in 2017. Based on HUD’s experience
with these noncompetitive selections
and after careful consideration, HUD
believes that it is advisable to extend the
exception to PHA-owned units in
general. The main benefit of this final
rule change is to strengthen the PHA’s
ability to preserve and expand
affordable housing by increasing the
viable options and paths available to the
PHA through strategies such as
acquisition followed by rehabilitation.
HUD further adds paragraph (c)(4) to
streamline the process of project-basing
units when a family chooses to
relinquish their enhanced voucher for
PBV assistance. The new paragraph
extends the types of housing that can be
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selected without going through a
competition. HUD also notes that PIH
Notice 2013–27 provides essential
background on the voluntary
relinquishment of enhanced voucher
assistance (and regular housing choice
voucher assistance) in exchange for PBV
assistance.
HUD clarifies paragraph (e)(2)(i) to
state that all contract units must fully or
substantially comply with HQS on the
proposal or project selection date. HUD
also restructures and amends paragraph
(f) of the proposed rule to add new
paragraphs (1) through (5) to address the
separate notice requirements depending
upon whether a proposal is selected
competitively, or a project is selected
without competition and to provide a
cross-reference to applicable language
that must be in the notice for certain
projects. Finally, HUD clarifies in
paragraph (h) that under no
circumstances may a HAP contract be
effective for any of the subsidized
housing types set forth in § 983.53(a).
§ 983.52 Prohibition of Assistance for
Ineligible Units
HUD clarifies the meaning of
paragraphs (a), (a)(3), (b), and (d) by
replacing the term ‘‘attach’’ with clearer
statements of the prohibited actions for
the listed units, to align with the
changes to § 983.53 described below.
This final rule creates an exception to
the total prohibition in the original PBV
rule on project-basing for manufactured
homes under paragraph (a)(5) where
both the manufactured home is
permanently attached to the ground and
the owner owns both the manufactured
home and the land. Allowing PBVs for
manufactured homes will likely
decrease the cost to build, allow PBVs
to be in areas where traditional building
would be difficult, and avoid requiring
changes to construction plans solely for
the purpose of compliance.
Paragraph (c) provides that a PHA
may attach assistance to an occupied
unit only if the occupant is eligible.
HUD amends paragraph (c) to specify
what ‘‘eligible’’ means in this context,
and to clarify when eligibility is
determined. Eligibility of the family is
determined in accordance with
§ 982.201 prior to attaching assistance to
the unit (i.e., executing a HAP contract
or amending a HAP contract by adding
or substituting a unit). For the unit to be
eligible, the unit must be appropriate for
the size of the family and the tenant’s
total tenant payment (TTP) must be
lower than the gross rent. These changes
in paragraph (c) ensure PHAs are aware
of existing requirements, including that
the family’s TTP cannot be so high as to
eliminate the need for assistance
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(commonly calling being ‘‘zero-HAP’’) at
admission.
HUD updates the exceptions
applicable to paragraph (d), adding that
the requirements are not applicable if
the PHA is undertaking rehabilitation
after HAP contract execution per
§ 983.157 of this final rule. Also,
because an Agreement may be executed
prior to its effective date, HUD revises
paragraph (d) to be clear that the
construction or rehabilitation is
prohibited prior to the Agreement’s
effective date rather than the execution
date. HUD also modifies paragraph (d)
to allow PHAs to approve exceptions, in
recognition that there may be
circumstances in which the prohibition
is inappropriate.
§ 983.53 Prohibition of Assistance for
Units in Subsidized Housing
For better readability, in this final
rule, HUD restructures the list of
subsidized housing that is prevented
from receiving PBV assistance. In
paragraph (a), HUD replaces the
introductory text with ‘‘A HAP contract
may not be effective and no PBV
assistance may be provided for any of
the following:’’ for several reasons. First,
HUD determines that PBV program
requirements should not prevent
execution of an Agreement for the listed
subsidized housing types, as this
reduces administrative flexibility even
though no HAP is paid when an
Agreement is executed. HUD notes that
this is a change from the prior
regulatory requirement and use of this
flexibility will be subject to any
requirements of the relevant non-PBV
subsidy program. Second, because a
HAP contract must be executed prior to
the effective date of the contract (when
HAPs may begin), there was no need to
separately specify that the HAPs cannot
be made for the subsidized housing
types. Finally, HUD believes the
wording changes improve readability.
This final rule also removes proposed
rule paragraphs (e) and (j) concerning
rental assistance payments (RAP) and
rent supplement projects (Rent Supp)
because the Rent Supp and RAP
programs have ended. However, unlike
the Rent Supp program, there were
some RAP projects remaining less than
five years prior to the effective date of
this final rule. Consequently, units in a
few former RAP projects may still
qualify for a limited period of time as
excepted units from the program cap
and project cap under the requirements
at § 983.59. Please see the related
discussion in the description of § 983.59
below regarding the reference to units in
former RAP projects in that section.
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§ 983.54 Cap on Number of PBV Units
in Each Project (Income-Mixing
Requirement)
In this final rule, HUD clarifies in
§ 983.54(a) that a PHA cannot select a
proposal where the project cap is not
being met, in addition to the prohibition
on entering the Agreement or HAP
contract. HUD amends paragraph (b) to
remove the separate exception
categories, given the revision of the
definition of an ‘‘area where vouchers
are difficult to use’’ to include a census
tract with a poverty rate of 20 percent
or less, as explained previously in the
discussion of § 983.3 above. HUD
further clarifies in paragraph (c) that
exception categories in a project may be
combined; expands the exception
categories to include eligible youth
using Family Unification Program (FUP)
assistance in paragraph (c)(2)(ii); and
provides that supportive services must
be made available in a reasonable period
of time not to exceed 120 calendar days
in paragraph (c)(2)(iii). Additionally, in
paragraph (c)(2)(iii), which was
paragraph (c)(2)(ii) in the proposed rule,
this final rule does not include a
requirement that a PHA offering FSS
must not solely rely on FSS to meet the
exception to the project cap. HUD
revises paragraph (c)(3) to specify that
units covered by a PBV HAP contract
under § 983.59 will not count towards
the project cap and that these units are
removed to ensure accuracy when
calculating the percentages of dwelling
units. In paragraph (d), HUD updates
and expands provisions applicable to
HAP contracts already in effect to
include HAP contracts in effect prior to
December 27, 2020, when the FUP
exception became available.
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§ 983.55
Site Selection Standards
HUD revises paragraph (b)(3) to
include the site selection standards that
were formerly found in § 982.401(l) and
were removed in the NSPIRE final rule
(88 FR 30442 (May 11, 2023)). HUD also
takes this opportunity to amend the
standards to add a specific reference to
contamination, which is particularly
important to the health of occupants,
and to add a qualification that the
serious adverse environmental
conditions at issue are those that could
affect the health or safety of the project
occupants. As recommended by
commenters, use of these standards
provides an important protection for
families, especially in cases in which an
environmental review is not performed.
HUD also revises paragraph (e)(7) to
remove a typo concerning ‘‘new
construction,’’ which appears in the
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current regulations and the proposed
rule.
§ 983.56 Environmental Review
In the proposed rule, HUD proposed
to revise the environmental review
requirements for existing housing in
accordance with section 106(a)(8) of
HOTMA to exempt existing housing
from further environmental review if an
existing housing project has ever
undergone an earlier environmental
review pursuant to receiving any form
of Federal assistance. In other words, if
a project that meets the definition of
‘‘existing housing’’ as defined in the
PBV regulations for program purposes
has not previously undergone a Federal
environmental review because it did not
receive Federal assistance, then the
project would not be exempt from an
environmental review.
In endeavoring to give full effect to
the words of section 8(o)(13)(M)(ii) of
the 1937 Act, HUD recognizes the
statute provides only a partial
exemption to environmental reviews.
Specifically, the applicability of the
provision is limited to ‘‘existing
projects.’’ Environmental reviews
continue to be applicable to PBV
rehabilitation and new construction
projects. The limited scope of the
proposed exemption from
environmental reviews reflects
Congress’s continuing emphasis on the
importance of Federal assistance being
used in an environmentally sound
manner.
Upon consideration of comments,
HUD revises paragraph (a)(2) to better
balance the words of the amended
section 8(o)(13)(M)(ii) of the 1937 Act
with Congress’s continued
environmental emphasis by excusing
existing housing from undertaking an
environmental review before entering
into a HAP contract, except where a
Federal environmental review is
required by law or regulation relating to
funding other than PBV housing
assistance payments. This paragraph
(a)(2) applies to projects selected using
the site selection standards applicable
upon the effective date of this final rule.
In paragraph (a)(2), HUD changes the
characterization of the exception for
existing housing so as not to imply that
the project has been determined to be
‘‘exempt’’ pursuant to an environmental
review.
HUD makes minor technical revisions
throughout the section, such as to
consistently use the phrasing of
paragraph (a) of the proposed rule that
environmental reviews apply to
‘‘activities’’ (see responses to comment
on § 983.56 for further discussion of
technical changes). HUD amends the
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description of the ‘‘responsible entity’’
in paragraph (b) to explain more clearly
which unit of general local government
serves as the responsible entity. HUD
also removes the final sentence of
paragraph (b) of the proposed rule, as it
was duplicative of text that appeared
later in the regulation. HUD also
removes the proposed rule’s reference in
paragraph (d) to amending a HAP
contract, to conform to changes
described below relating to § 983.207.
Further, HUD clarifies in (d)(2) that
HUD will approve the Request for
Release of Funds and Certification by
issuing a Letter to Proceed or form
HUD–7015.16 when a responsible entity
must complete an environmental
review. In paragraph (e), HUD clarifies
that the reference to the prohibited
activities refers only to the listed actions
by the PHA, the owner, or its
contractors, rather than the actions by
described in paragraphs (d)(1)–(3) that
are taken by the responsible entity or
HUD. Lastly, HUD revises paragraph (f)
to require PHAs to document mitigating
measures in accordance with part 50 or
58 of title 24, as applicable, and to
complete or require the owner to carry
out such measures and conditions.
§ 983.57 PHA-Owned Units
This final rule makes an edit to
paragraph (b) to remove superfluous
words. HUD also revises paragraph
(b)(1) to clarify that the independent
entity calculates the amount of
reasonable rent and any rent
adjustments by an OCAF, due to
confusion the wording in the proposed
rule raised given that HUD determines
the OCAF. In response to comments
received, HUD removes paragraph (b)(2)
from the proposed rule, which results in
a renumbering of paragraphs (b)(3) and
(b)(4) to paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3) in
this final rule. HUD also revises
redesignated paragraph (b)(3) to clarify
that the independent entity is
responsible for not only reviewing the
work completion certification, but also
determining if the units are compliant
with § 983.156. This final rule also
makes this change to align redesignated
paragraph (b)(3) with corresponding
§ 983.212 (which was § 983.157 in the
proposed rule), per changes to § 983.212
described below. This final rule adds
paragraph (b)(4) to expand the
independent entity functions to include
determining whether to approve
substantial improvement to units under
a HAP contract, since PHAs are required
to perform this function for substantial
improvement on units under a HAP
contract for non-PHA-owned units.
Finally, HUD reorganizes and slightly
modifies the language at paragraph (c) to
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achieve consistency with a similar
provision at 982.352(b)(1)(v)(B)
regarding compensation of independent
entities.
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§ 983.58 PHA Determination Prior to
Selection
In this final rule, HUD revises
proposed § 983.58 for clarity purposes,
to avoid any misinterpretation that
budget authority is intertwined with the
program cap. HUD also adds a new
paragraph (b) to require that PHAs
analyze the impact of having a high
percentage of vouchers committed as
PBVs. The PHA should consider the
needs of the community, including
families on the waiting list and eligible
PBV families that wish to move under
§ 983.261. The analysis performed by
the PHA must be available as part of the
public record.
§ 983.59 Units Excepted From Program
Cap and Project Cap
HUD clarifies in paragraph (b) that
excluded units must fall into one of the
outlined categories provided that the
units are removed from all categories by
the time of execution of the Agreement
or HAP contract. This clarification
aligns with the statutory language
stating, ‘‘units previously subject to
federally required rent restrictions or
receiving another type of long-term
subsidy’’ and means that the units must
no longer be subject to the rent
restriction or receiving subsidy.
This final rule removes paragraph
(b)(1)(v), because the Rent Supplement
Program ended more than five years ago
and no longer exists. HUD notes that the
Rental Assistance Program (RAP)
(section 236(f)(2) of National Housing
Act of 1965) also expired, but, unlike
the Rent Supplement Program, the RAP
expired at the end of 2019, less than 5
years ago. Because paragraph (b) of
§ 983.59 allows project-basing of units
that were removed from the listed
programs up to 5 years prior to the
request for proposals (RFP) or the
proposal or project selection date, RAP
units may still be eligible for projectbasing under paragraph (b).
HUD has amended § 983.59(b)(2) and
included two additional types of units
in the list of units ‘‘previously subject
to federally required rent restrictions’’
that were not included in the list of
excepted units implemented under the
HOTMA Implementation Notices 11 in
the Federal Register: (1) units financed
with Low-Income Housing Tax Credits
(26 U.S.C. 42) and (2) units subsidized
with Section 515 Rural Rental Housing
11 See 81 FR 73030 (Oct. 24, 2016); 82 FR 5458
(Jan. 18, 2017); 82 FR 32461 (Jul. 14, 2017).
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Loans (42 U.S.C. 1485). The final rule
also amends § 983.59(b)(2) to provide
that the list of excepted units
‘‘previously subject to federally required
rent restrictions’’ shall also include any
other program subsequently identified
by HUD through a Federal Register
notice that is subject to public comment.
Further, to provide regulatory
streamlining, this final rule removes
proposed rule paragraph (c) which
provided that other excluded units
include both HUD’s Rental Assistance
Demonstration (RAD) program and HUD
VASH set-aside vouchers from the PBV
program and project caps (these
programs continue to be governed by
the applicable notices and waivers
therein). Instead, HUD redesignates
proposed rule paragraph (d) as
paragraph (c), which discusses
replacement units. In redesignated
paragraph (c), HUD clarifies that
replacement units can be built on the
original project site, instead of the
‘‘public housing development.’’ This
clarification removes the limitation of
‘‘public housing development’’ and
expands the qualification of an original
project site to include all of the formerly
assisted or restricted projects covered by
this section. In new paragraph (e), this
final rule clarifies that the 10 percent
exception under § 983.6 and the project
cap exception under § 983.54(c)(2) are
inapplicable to units excluded under
this section.
§ 983.101 Housing Quality Standards
This final rule makes a conforming
change to align paragraph (a) with the
revised PBV program definition of HQS
at § 983.3.
§ 983.103 Inspecting Units
HUD revises § 983.103(a) to clarify
that the regulatory inspection provisions
of paragraph (c) of this section apply
only when the pre-selection inspection
determines the project meets the
definition of existing housing.
HUD amends paragraph (b) to specify
the times at which an initial inspection
is required for newly constructed or
rehabilitated housing or for units that
underwent substantial improvement
prior to being added to the HAP
contract. The times at which an initial
inspection is required, and the specific
units which are to be inspected, depend
on whether the work was development
activity or substantial improvement,
and, in the case of rehabilitation,
whether the development activity
occurs before or after HAP contract
execution. HUD believes separating the
requirements in this final rule will
improve readability. HUD also revises
paragraph (c)(1) to better explain the
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Administrative Plan provisions that are
applicable.
Paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of the proposed
rule provided that the PHA must give a
notice to families offered a unit with
non-life-threatening deficiencies that
explains, among other things, that the
owner’s failure to correct the
deficiencies within the cure period will
result in removal of the unit from the
HAP contract. This final rule revises
paragraph (c)(2)(ii) to also require the
PHA to provide a similar notice to
families offered units without
deficiencies, if some units in the project
have non-life-threatening deficiencies
and the PHA’s Administrative Plan
provides that the PHA will terminate
the entire PBV HAP contract if the
owner fails to correct the deficiencies
within the cure period.
In paragraph (c)(2)(iv), HUD revises
the regulatory language to be clear that
PHAs must release the withheld
payment to the owner once the
deficiencies are corrected within the
cure period, as required by section
8(o)(8)(G)(ii) the 1937 Act. This
statutory requirement provides that the
PHA must resume assistance payments
and must cover the withheld period if
the owner made the repairs before the
cure period ends. This change to align
the regulations with the statute is also
reflected in paragraphs (c)(3)(vii),
(c)(4)(iv), and (c)(4)(v).
This final rule also modifies
paragraph (c)(2)(v) (which was
mistakenly labeled as paragraph
(c)(2)(iv) in the proposed rule) by
requiring PHAs to provide any affected
family tenant-based assistance when the
PHA terminates the PBV HAP contract
or removes the unit from the HAP
contract due to the owner’s failure to
correct deficiencies. The provision of
tenant-based assistance in this
circumstance is required by section
8(o)(13)(F)(iv) of the 1937 Act and was
inadvertently omitted from the
proposed rule’s description of the
process. This final rule makes the same
modification to paragraphs (c)(3)(viii)
and (c)(4)(vi).
HUD revises paragraphs (c)(3) and
(c)(4) to align with changes in § 982.406
that apply to PBV. This final rule
subjects the PHA’s adoption of an
alternative inspection option to the
procedures and requirements outlined
in § 982.406(b), (c), (d), and (g). The
changes in paragraph (c)(3)(v) provide
clarifying changes to existing
established policy. To ensure that the
PHA is transparent to families that are
referred to and provided a unit with
non-life-threatening deficiencies, this
final rule revises paragraph (c)(4)(i) to
require that PHAs provide these families
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a list of those deficiencies and inform
them of the option to decline the unit
without losing their place on the PBV
waiting list.
In paragraph (c)(4)(v), HUD clarifies
that PHAs make retroactive payments
upon correction of deficiencies
beginning at the later of the effective
date of the HAP contract or the PBV
lease effective dates. This final rule
revises paragraph (c)(4)(v) and (c)(4)(vi)
explaining the PHA’s requirements
when the owner fails to make repairs
within the applicable time periods. For
the safety of the family, this final rule
adds a requirement to paragraph
(c)(4)(v) that explicitly prohibits PHAs
from referring families from the PBV
waiting list to occupy units with lifethreatening deficiencies. In alignment
with § 983.10, paragraph (c)(4)(vi)(B)
clarifies that the PHA’s Administrative
Plan must specify whether the PHA will
remove only a unit with deficiencies
from the HAP contract for the owner’s
failure to correct the deficiencies, as
opposed to terminating the entire HAP
contract (only the latter, terminating the
contract, had been included in
paragraph (c)(4)(vi)(B) of the proposed
rule).
This final rule also amends paragraph
(e) concerning periodic inspections, to
provide that the alternative inspection
option is available for periodic
inspections and to specify which
provisions of § 982.406 apply. HUD
makes changes to paragraph (e) to
specify how to comply with the
sampling requirement in the event that
fewer than 20 percent of contract units
are available for occupancy in
accordance with development activity
occurring under § 983.157. HUD also
makes changes to align with the NSPIRE
final rule (88 FR 30442 (May 11, 2023))
in paragraph (e), which incorporates the
requirement that small rural PHAs
inspect random sample units at least
once every three years. This final rule
makes changes to paragraph (f), which
specifies the PHAs’ timing and
inspection requirements for lifethreatening deficiencies, non-lifethreatening deficiencies, and
extraordinary circumstances, to align
with § 982.405, which covers PHA
inspections. The changes in paragraph
(i) are a change in terminology to avoid
conflict with the term ‘‘mixed finance’’
as used in public housing projects.
§ 983.152 Nature of Development
Activity
This final rule revises § 983.152(a)(2)
to remove discussion of substantial
improvement to add previously
unassisted units and instead provide
reference to the development activity
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applicable to a rehabilitated project
undergoing work after HAP contract
execution per § 983.157 of this final
rule. As discussed in the description of
changes to § 983.3 above, HUD
determines that ‘‘development activity’’
should be clearly distinguished from
‘‘substantial improvement.’’ As a result,
HUD removes the corresponding
reference to activities now classified as
‘‘substantial improvement’’ in (a)(2) and
deletes paragraph (b)(2), moving
pertinent requirements applicable to
substantial improvement to add or
substitute units to § 983.207(d) of this
final rule. The new language of
paragraph (a)(2) is added to clearly
describe the nature of the development
activity under § 983.157, which is
completed following HAP contract
execution instead of beforehand. HUD
also updates paragraph (b) to
appropriately reference the new
requirements applicable to § 983.157.
§ 983.153 Development Requirements
This final rule makes several minor
revisions to citations in § 983.153 for
consistency with the changes to
§ 983.152 described above. Also, this
final rule makes a minor clarifying
revision to the first sentence in
paragraph (b)(2), by requiring subsidy
layering review before a PHA attaches
assistance to a project, instead of
subsidy layering review occurring
before a PHA commits to provide
assistance to a project. This clarifying
change is to prevent any possible
ambiguity about whether the subsidy
layering review is required before the
proposal or project selection date; in
other words, HUD makes clear that the
rule only requires that the subsidy
layering review occur no later than
execution of an Agreement or HAP
contract.
This final rule requires in
§ 983.153(b)(4) that the owner disclose
changes to the information provided for
the subsidy layering review, to ensure
that the change(s) may be reviewed and
that it does not result in excessive
public assistance to the project.
This final rule revises paragraph (c) of
the proposed rule to require DavisBacon compliance regardless of whether
an Agreement is used. The PBV program
is subject to statutory labor standards
provisions in section 12(a) of the 1937
Act. Section 12(a) of the 1937 Act
requires the applicability of DavisBacon prevailing wages to the
development of low-income housing
projects containing nine or more section
8-assisted units, where there is an
agreement for section 8 use before
construction or rehabilitation is
commenced. In reconsidering both
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HUD’s current position and the
alternative suggested in the proposed
rule with respect to the meaning of
‘‘agreement’’ in section 12(a), HUD has
determined that an ‘‘agreement’’ under
section 12(a) encompasses more than
the PBV Agreement (i.e., Form HUD–
52531) and includes the agreement that
consists of the PHA’s project selection
and resulting offer of assistance to the
owner, and the acceptance of PBV
assistance by the owner. HUD also
recognizes the importance of DavisBacon prevailing wage requirements to
the workers in the community where
the owner has sought a commitment of
PBVs in advance of development, as
commenters suggested. Consequently,
HUD will require the notice of proposal
selection to require payment of DavisBacon prevailing wages for development
of newly constructed or rehabilitated
projects containing nine or more section
8-assisted units regardless of whether
the PHA and owner will be using an
Agreement. This final rule also makes a
slight modification to paragraph (c)(1) to
correct the citation in paragraph (c)(1).
HUD also consolidates paragraphs (c)(2)
and (c)(3) of the proposed rule into a
single paragraph (c)(2), to better reflect
that the labor requirements at issue
apply in the case of development
involving nine or more contract units.
This final rule adds a citation to
§ 983.51(f) in paragraph (c)(3) (which
had been paragraph (c)(4) in the
proposed rule) and makes paragraph
(c)(3) consistent with § 983.51(f), which
discusses a PHA’s written notice of
proposal selection.
This final rule revises the
development requirements that apply to
PBV development activity by removing
the reference that section 3 of the HUD
Act of 1968 12 applies (proposed rule
paragraph (d)), since section 3 no longer
applies to PBV per the final rule on
Enhancing and Streamlining the
Implementation of Section 3
Requirements for Creating Economic
Opportunities for Low- and Very LowIncome Persons and Eligible Businesses
(85 FR 61524 (Sep. 29, 2020)). As a
result of this removal, this final rule also
redesignates proposed rule paragraphs
(e) through (g) as final rule paragraphs
(d) through (g). Additional citation
corrections occur in redesignated
paragraphs (d), (e), and (f). Further,
consistent with § 983.51(k), this final
rule expands paragraph (g) to include in
the list of participants ineligible to
participate in Federal programs and
activities those who are debarred,
suspended subject to a limited denial of
participation, or otherwise excluded
12 12
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under 2 CFR part 2424. Finally, HUD
adds a cross-reference § 982.161 to
paragraph (g)(2) of this final rule, to
clarify the existing requirement of the
conflict of interest provision.
§ 983.154 Development Agreement
This final rule amends paragraph (a)
to clarify project-basing of single-family
scattered sites. As commenters
suggested, paragraph (a) allows one
Agreement to cover multiple projects
that each consist of a single-family
building. Finally, this final rule makes
minor amendments to paragraph (a) to
remove reference to § 983.152,
consistent with changes to that section
as described above, and to add reference
to the new paragraph (g).
This final rule specifies in paragraph
(b) that paragraph (f), concerning PHA
discretion to execute an Agreement after
construction or rehabilitation in
compliance with § 983.153, is an
exception for the timing of the
Agreement. HUD also adds clarification
that the Agreement must be executed on
the same day as or in advance of its
effective date.
This final rule inserts a new
paragraph (c) to specify that the PHA
and owner may agree to amend the
Agreement per paragraph (e). In
paragraph (d), this final rule clarifies
that paragraphs (f) and (g) provide
exceptions to the prohibition on
entering into an Agreement if
development activity has commenced.
HUD also makes additional changes in
paragraph (d) to clarify the timing of the
Agreement that correspond to the
change to paragraph (b) described
above. This final rule revises paragraph
(e) to expand the content of the
agreement to include a description of
any rehabilitation work agreed to, a
deadline for the completion of work,
and any additional design, architecture
or quality requirements placed on the
owner by the PHA. The addition of a
deadline for completion of work
addresses the oversight in the proposed
rule wherein § 983.155(a) of the existing
regulation was removed rather than
relocated.
This final rule clarifies in paragraph
(f) when the PHA may execute an
Agreement later than the timing
provided in paragraph (b) and corrects
the applicability of requirements in the
case of a project that is
noncompetitively selected. The changes
in paragraph (f) also provide PHAs with
discretion to not use an Agreement or
execute an Agreement after construction
or rehabilitation for development
activity in compliance with the
requirements under § 983.153.
Paragraph (f) also requires that the PHA
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explain the circumstances under which
the PHA will enter a PBV HAP contract
without first entering into an Agreement
and the circumstances the PHA will
enter into an Agreement after
construction or rehabilitation in the
Administrative Plan. This paragraph
also requires that the PHA comply with
the new requirement at § 983.153(c)(3)
and confirm owner compliance with the
owner’s requirements under § 983.153.
Finally, this final rule makes a minor
amendment to paragraph (f) to remove
reference to § 983.152, consistent with
changes to that section as described
above.
This final rule adds paragraph (g) to
explain the exception to the
requirement to enter into an Agreement
established in § 983.157. Paragraph (g)
also explains the relationship between
the Agreement and the HAP contract in
the event that some work occurs under
an Agreement before the PHA exercises
the option at § 983.157.
Lastly, this final rule adds paragraph
(h) explaining the PHA’s options when
the units are PHA-owned with no
separate legal entity to serve as the
owner. A PHA cannot execute an
Agreement with itself. In the proposed
rule, HUD stated that a PHA-owned
agreement certification is not needed as
an alternative to an Agreement because
projects may now be developed without
an Agreement. Upon further review,
HUD determined that there may be
situations in which development
without an Agreement is not feasible,
such as when a lender requires use of
an Agreement or equivalent
commitment prior to development.
Therefore, this final rule provides that
unless a PHA is exercising its discretion
not to use an Agreement, the PHA will
need to follow a process similar to the
process adopted in this final rule for
executing the HAP contract or an
equivalent certification (see § 983.204).
For consistency with § 983.204 of this
final rule, HUD provides that PHAs
have the option to either establish a
separate legal entity to execute the
Agreement or use a PHA-owned
agreement certification in this final
§ 983.154(h).
§ 983.155 Completion of Work
In tandem with requiring the owner to
submit evidence and certify to the PHA
that development activity or substantial
improvement is completed, this final
rule adds that a PHA must review the
owner’s completion evidence and
determine whether development
activity or substantial improvement was
completed. This final rule also adds a
new paragraph (b) for consistency
throughout part 983 and to specifically
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38237
address completion of work for PHAowned units. Paragraph (b) provides in
the case of a PHA-owned unit, the PHA
must submit that evidence to the
independent entity and the review is the
responsibility of the independent entity.
Finally, HUD clarifies that the form and
manner of the submission and
certification is specified in the PHA’s
Administrative Plan.
§ 983.156 PHA Acceptance of
Completed Units
This final rule makes a minor revision
to paragraph (a) to clarify that the PHA
inspection is to determine whether the
units comply with HQS and additional
PHA requirements. HUD revises
paragraph (b) to provide specific
instruction with regard to completion of
units, depending on whether the units
are completed prior to HAP contract
execution, following HAP contract
execution, or in order to be added to the
HAP contract. These changes to
paragraph (b) accommodate changes to
§§ 983.152 and 983.157, as discussed
further in the description of changes to
those sections. In response to public
comments, this final rule adds a new
paragraph (c) to provide that HAP
contracts for projects that are not subject
to § 983.157 may be executed in stages,
as units in a newly constructed or
rehabilitated project are completed. This
final rule also adds paragraph (d) for
consistency throughout part 983, to
separate PHA-owned units from other
units. Under new paragraph (d), this
final rule requires that independent
entities inspect units and determine
whether those units are HQS-compliant.
§ 983.157 Rehabilitated Housing:
Option for Development Activity After
HAP Contract Execution
In the proposed rule, HUD proposed
to include provisions on substantial
improvements (previously termed
‘‘development activity,’’ as explained in
the discussion of § 983.3 above) to units
under a HAP contract in § 983.157.
However, HUD determines that such
provisions are inappropriate under
subpart D of part 983 (Requirements for
Rehabilitated and Newly Constructed
Units), as placing the provision there
produced confusion about the
distinction between development
activity for newly constructed and
rehabilitated projects and work to
improve units well after a HAP contract
is in effect (which could be performed
in any type of project). Therefore, in this
final rule, the provisions proposed to be
in § 983.157 have been moved to
§ 983.212 and are discussed in that
section below. Section § 983.157, as
codified in this final rule, instead is new
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to this final rule and discussed further
here.
This final rule adds the new
provisions of § 983.157 in response to
public comment. Commenters described
situations in which development
activity would be undertaken in
rehabilitated projects that are already
occupied and may meet HQS. HUD
determined that occupants of such
projects, if they qualify for PBV
assistance, would benefit from receipt of
assistance as soon as possible.
Accordingly, and in addition to the
options already available to the PHA
under current regulations and in this
final rule, § 983.157 of this final rule
provides that the PHA may allow an
owner of a rehabilitated housing project
to conduct some or all of the
development activity during the term of
the HAP contract. Under this option, the
PHA and owner place all proposed PBV
units under the HAP contract before the
owner completes development activity,
subject to the limitations established in
§ 983.157 of this final rule. During the
period of development activity, the PHA
makes assistance payments to the owner
for the contract units that are occupied
and meet HQS. HUD determines this
option is permissible in accordance
with section 106(a)(4) of HOTMA.
Section 983.157 of this final rule
provides for the PHA to exercise its
discretion to use this option in
accordance with the PHA’s
Administrative Plan. It establishes
conditions that must be met to use this
option and a contract framework, which
applies a contract rider during the
development period. Section 983.157 of
this final rule also establishes
requirements applicable to the
occupancy of units during the
rehabilitation period, completing the
rehabilitation, and PHA-owned units.
Under this option, the owner agrees to
develop the contract units to comply
with HQS, and the PHA agrees that,
upon timely completion of such
development activity in accordance
with the terms of the rider, the rider will
terminate and the HAP contract will
remain in effect. HUD makes
conforming changes throughout part 983
to accommodate this option (discussed
further in the review of general
technical changes below). The final rule
clarifies that existing households be
given an absolute selection preference to
return to the project when a household
needed to vacate for development
activity. HUD notes that the leasing of
units in a PBV project must comply
with federal fair housing and related
requirements, including ensuring that
any designated accessible units are
occupied by households who need the
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accessibility features, and that
emergency transfers under VAWA are
provided.
§ 983.202 Purpose of HAP Contract
In response to public comments, HUD
revises paragraph (a) to better clarify the
existing flexibility that allows PHAs and
owners to place multiple projects that
each consist of a single-family building
under one HAP contract.
§ 983.203 HAP Contract Information
HUD in this final rule revises
§ 983.203(h) to require that the HAP
contract include units that are restricted
to certain occupants via the project cap
or program cap. The purpose of the
change is in hopes of minimizing the
possibility of PHAs losing track of what
units must be set aside by ensuring that
the HAP contract clearly specifies units
that are restricted to certain occupants
by virtue of the project cap or program
cap. The changes in this section are
consistent with the Fostering Stable
Housing Opportunities (FSHO) notice,13
which notes that the increased program
cap applies only if a family eligible for
that 10 percent authority resides in the
unit—this means PHAs need to keep
track of the units that are under the
increased program cap that must be set
aside for occupancy by qualifying
families (as was already required for the
project cap).
§ 983.204 Execution of HAP Contract
or PHA-Owned Certification
This final rule amends § 983.204(b)
and (c) to clarify that HAP contracts
must be promptly executed and
effective as described. This final rule
also amends paragraph (c) to specify
requirements applicable to projects
undergoing development activity after
HAP contract execution, as described
further above in the discussion of
changes to § 983.157. This final rule
inserts a new paragraph (d) to clarify
that the effective date of a PBV HAP
contract must be on or after the
execution date of the PBV HAP contract.
HUD also amends and reorganizes
paragraph (e), which was paragraph (d)
in the proposed rule, to align with
corresponding requirements in
§ 982.451(c). Redesignated paragraph
(e)(1) now expressly states the
requirement that the separate legal
entity must execute the HAP contract
with the PHA, and HUD deletes
paragraph (d)(1)(ii) from the proposed
rule. HUD has revised paragraph (e)(2)(i)
of this final rule to clarify that the PHAowned Certification obligates the PHA,
as owner, to all of the requirements of
13 See
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the HAP contract. This revision
prevents ambiguity with other
regulations that reference HAP contracts
but not the PHA certifications.
§ 983.205 Term of HAP Contract
HUD amends the extension of term
provision in § 983.205(b) to clarify the
process for HAP contract term
extensions and, while it retained the
maximum extension term of 20 years
that was in the proposed rule, provides
a mechanism to execute multiple
extensions concurrently as supported by
commenters. Also, HUD removes the
proposed paragraph (c) concerning
independent entity oversight of the
contract term and extensions for PHAowned units, in response to public
comments.
§ 983.206 Contract Termination or
Expiration and Statutory Notice
Requirements
HUD makes changes in this final rule
to clarify the process for when a PHA
manages the issuance of tenant-based
vouchers to tenants at PBV contract
termination, and related issues.
Specifically, for § 983.206(a)(3), this
final rule expands the definition of the
term ‘‘termination’’ to include
termination of the HAP contract by
agreement of PHA and owner. As a
necessary precondition of the statutory
right to remain, in paragraph (b), this
final rule also adds provisions
specifying that the right to remain in a
unit depends on the unit continuing to
be used for rental housing and clarifies
procedures for voucher issuance. As
suggested by public comments, HUD
provides additional clarification in
paragraph (b) to specify that the PHA
must issue vouchers, provide a
timeframe for issuance, and require
units to be removed from the contract if
the family moves. HUD also moved the
language in proposed paragraphs (b)(4)
and (b)(5) into paragraph (b) to cover all
families that are issued a voucher as the
result of a PBV contract termination or
expiration. This final rule made this
change because the language in
paragraphs (b)(4) and (b)(5) are
applicable regardless of whether the
family uses the voucher in the same
project or in other housing.
After consideration of public
comments, this final rule revises
paragraph (b)(4) (proposed paragraph
(b)(6)) to expand upon the exceptions in
which an owner may refuse to initially
lease and to limit ‘‘other good cause’’ to
tenant misconduct and where the owner
uses the unit for a non-residential
purpose or renovates the unit. However,
HUD provides a process by which
families must be permitted to remain in
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or return to the project, if possible,
when a renovation occurs, to best fulfill
the PBV statutory requirement allowing
the family to remain, as provided by
HOTMA section 106(a)(4). This final
rule also changes paragraph (c) to clarify
that expiring funding increments, which
are a normal part of PHA operations, do
not constitute insufficient funding.
Paragraph (c)(2) includes a change
specifying the respective section and
paragraph that applies for HAP contract
breaches involving failure to comply
with HQS and other contract breaches.
Lastly, this final rule adds paragraph (e),
which provides the PHA and owner the
discretion to terminate and how the
owner and PHA can terminate their
HAP contract.
§ 983.207 HAP Contract Amendments
(To Add or Substitute Contract Units)
This final rule clarifies in paragraph
(a) that substituted units may be vacant
or, subject to paragraph (c), occupied.
The final rule also removes the phrase
‘‘and subject to all PBV requirements’’
from paragraph (a) since the phrase is
unnecessary and created confusion as to
what requirements were at issue. HUD
notes that this textual change is made
for clarity only, and substitutions under
paragraph (a) remain subject to all PBV
requirements. HUD also clarifies the
HQS and reasonable rent requirements
to affirm that the unit must meet HQS
and the rent must be reasonable in order
to substitute the unit. Finally, the final
rule includes in paragraph (a) a crossreference to the requirements regarding
units undergoing repairs or renovation
before substitution (paragraph (d) in this
final rule) and units that are newly built
(paragraph (e) in this final rule).
HUD adds a requirement in paragraph
(b), which provides that prior to adding
a unit, the PHA must inspect the unit to
determine that it complies with HQS,
and the PHA must determine the
reasonable rent for the unit. These
additional requirements correspond to
the same requirements that apply when
substituting a unit. This final rule
removes from paragraph (b)(1), which
covers excluded and excepted units to
the program or project cap, the citation
to § 983.6, which discusses the
percentage limitation for PBV units and
discusses the types of units that will
count toward the program cap.
HUD also revises paragraph (b)(3),
moving the content of the proposed
paragraph (b)(3) to a new paragraph (d)
and including in paragraph (b)(3) only
a cross-reference to paragraph (d).
Paragraph (d) also contains significantly
different text than that which appeared
in proposed paragraph (b)(3). In
accordance with the change to the
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definition of ‘‘development activity’’
described above in the discussion of
changes to §§ 983.3 and 983.152, HUD
replaces reference to ‘‘development
activity’’ with reference to ‘‘substantial
improvement.’’ Because projects
containing units needing substantial
improvement within the first two years
must be categorized as rehabilitated
housing (per discussion of changes to
§ 983.3 above), this final rule establishes
that units may not undergo substantial
improvement to be added to the project
during this timeframe, barring
extraordinary circumstances. For units
that will undergo substantial
improvement, HUD adds explanation of
applicable requirements within
paragraph (d), rather than referencing
§ 983.152 as proposed.
HUD similarly revises paragraph
(b)(4) by moving the content of the
proposed paragraph (b)(4) to a new
paragraph (e) and instead including in
paragraph (b)(4) only a cross-reference
to paragraph (e). Paragraph (e) of this
final rule also contains additional
criteria beyond those that appeared in
paragraph (b)(4) of the proposed rule.
This final rule adds, in paragraph (e)(2),
an amendment to the proposed
requirement to address instances in
which contract units are completed in
stages. Further, the rule adds, in
paragraph (e)(3), that a unit can be
added to a HAP contract under certain
situations in which part of the building
is reconfigured into additional units.
This latter addition expands the type of
units that may be added to a HAP
contract.
To clarify the requirements for adding
units that are occupied, this final rule
adds paragraph (b)(5), which crossreferences the requirements regarding
occupied units found in paragraph (c) of
this final rule. This final rule moves
paragraph (c) of the proposed rule to
paragraph (g) and adds new paragraph
(c) to address the requirements for
substituting or adding occupied units
and provide PHAs with the flexibility to
place occupied units on the HAP
contract.
In alignment with the requirements
under § 983.10, HUD adds paragraph (f)
requiring that PHAs describe in their
Administrative Plan under what
circumstances they will add or
substitute contract units.
Finally, this final rule adds a new
paragraph (h) explaining that HUD may
establish procedures via Federal
Register notice for a PHA and owner to
merge two or more HAP contracts or
bifurcate a single HAP contract.
Allowing merger would facilitate
administrative efficiency, to avoid a
PHA having to repeat the same
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38239
administrative actions for multiple
contracts with the owner of a single
project. It also follows from the HOTMA
provision allowing units to be added to
a contract at any time. Under the prior
policy, HUD is aware that there may be
projects for which the PHA and owner
were unable to add units to a HAP
contract due to the three-year limitation
and therefore selected the project again
for a separate HAP contract. This change
would enable the contracts to be aligned
going forward. Allowing bifurcation
would provide administrative relief in
other scenarios, such as if there is cause
to establish separate ownership or
management of two or more portions of
a project.
§ 983.208 Condition of Contract Units
HUD revises § 983.208(a)(3) to require
that the PHA specify conditions under
which it will require additional housing
quality requirements in its
Administrative Plan consistent with
§ 983.10. To ensure that housing is
decent, safe, and sanitary, this final rule
requires in paragraph (b)(1) that the
PHA take enforcement action against
owners who fail to maintain a dwelling
unit in accordance with HQS. HUD
revises paragraph (b)(2) to align with
§ 982.404, and to remove the unclear
phrasing ‘‘considered to be.’’ This final
rule also specifies in paragraph (b)(2)(i)
that ‘‘other inspector’’ is a person who
is authorized by the State or local
government. The proposed rule crossreferenced to §§ 982.401(a)(5)
and 982.401(o) to cover the timeframes
for units in noncompliance with HQS;
however, in this final rule HUD outlines
the timeframes for noncompliant units
in paragraphs (b)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) in
place of the cross-references. HUD
clarifies in paragraph (b)(3) that the
HAP is not withheld or abated in cases
where the PHA waives the owner’s
responsibility for repairs, and revises
the paragraph to better align with
HOTMA in terms of when the waiver
may be applied, namely for an HQS
deficiency that the PHA determines is
caused by the tenant, any member of the
household, or any guest or other person
under the tenant’s control, other than
damage resulting from ordinary use.
HUD adds paragraphs (b)(4) and (5) to
provide flexibility for PHAs to conduct
substantial improvement in the case of
an HQS deficiency caused by an
extraordinary circumstance or to
conduct development activity after HAP
contract execution, respectively, and
requires that the PHA withhold or abate
HAP and remove or terminate HAP as
long as the contract unit with
deficiencies is occupied by an assisted
family.
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HUD also inserts a new paragraph (c)
addressing family obligation. The
addition of paragraph (c) reflects the
contents of § 982.404, as § 982.404 is no
longer applicable to PBVs in accordance
with § 983.2 of this final rule. The
changes in paragraph (c) outline how a
family may be held responsible for a
breach of the HQS, the family’s required
actions to cure the deficiency if the HQS
breach is life-threatening, and the
actions that the PHA must take in case
of a breach of the HQS.
In revised paragraph (d), proposed
paragraph (c), HUD replaces the use of
the undefined term ‘‘regular
inspections’’ with the specific
inspections referred to, consistent with
changes throughout this final rule.
Consistent with § 983.10, revised
paragraph (d) also requires that the PHA
specify the conditions under which it
will withhold HAP and abate HAP or
terminate the contract for units other
than the unit with HQS deficiencies in
its Administrative Plan. Revised
paragraph (d) also outlines the PHA’s
remedies when HQS deficiencies are
identified in an inspection, excluding
pre-selection, initial, or turnover
inspections. In accordance with the
1937 Act as amended by HOTMA, this
final rule revises paragraph (f)
discussing the applicability of § 983.208
to HAP contracts. Per the statute, HUD
determines that paragraph (f) applies to
any dwelling unit for which a HAP
contract is entered into or renewed after
the effective date of this final rule, with
‘‘renew’’ under the statute meaning the
earlier of agreement to extend or
effective date of extension in the case of
PBV.
§ 983.210 Owner Certification
To clarify the meaning of the
certification in paragraph (a), given that
compliance with HQS can include
complying with requirements under
part 983 to take specific actions in
certain circumstances in which units do
not fully meet HQS, HUD amends
paragraph (a) to specify that the owner’s
compliance with HQS is subject to the
requirements of part 983. To prevent a
possible conflict with §§ 983.157 and
983.212, which allow the family to be
temporarily housed while development
activity or substantial improvement
occurs, this final rule revises
§ 983.210(d) to specifically provide
§§ 983.157(g)(6)(ii) and 983.212(a)(3)(ii)
as an exception to the requirement that
the unit be the family’s only residence.
§ 983.211 Removal of Unit From HAP
Contract
HUD moves from § 983.211(c) to
paragraph (b) the requirement that
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reinstatement or substitution must be
permissible under § 983.207. For
clarification, HUD revises this
requirement to reference § 983.207(a)
and (b) specifically. This final rule also
adds clarifying changes to paragraph (c)
to require that the anniversary and
expiration dates match all other units
under the HAP contract. This
clarification prevents the PHA and
owner from matching the dates on the
HAP contract for all other units with the
dates for the reinstated or substituted
units.
§ 983.212 Substantial Improvement to
Units Under a HAP Contract
In this final rule, HUD moves the
proposed § 983.157 to § 983.212 (as
discussed further in the description of
changes to § 983.157). HUD revises this
section to address commenters’
concerns over the timing of substantial
improvement under a HAP contract.
Specifically, HUD is breaking paragraph
(a) into its components and revises
paragraph (a) to outline the conditions
under which the PHA may approve
substantial improvement. The changes
in paragraph (a)(1) set a reasonable
expectation that the condition of
housing placed under a PBV HAP
contract should not need substantial
improvement within the first two years
of the HAP contract, barring the
extraordinary circumstances subject to
the exception in paragraph (a)(1)(i). To
prevent tenants from being permanently
displaced, paragraph (a)(1)(i) allows the
PHA to approve the owner to undergo
substantial improvement after a natural
disaster or other ‘‘extraordinary
circumstances’’ on a previously
compliant unit and clarifies that
‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’ are
unforeseen events that are not the fault
of the owner. In paragraph (a)(1)(ii),
HUD changes the relevant time period
from five years to two years in response
to public comment. Under paragraph
(a)(2), HUD expands the description of
the expected HQS deficiencies that must
be reported to include the items at
§ 5.703(a)(2): components within the
primary and secondary means of egress,
common areas, and systems equipment.
Further, HUD clarifies in paragraph
(a)(2) the substantial improvement at
issue must not include demolition and
new construction of replacement units.
The changes in paragraph (a)(3) allow
HUD to provide families with greater
protection against being moved from the
unit or project unnecessarily and against
being required to remain in unsafe
conditions. For paragraph (a)(3), this
final rule adds several subsections to
instruct the PHA and owner on what to
do when families occupy units that will
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not comply with HQS during the
substantial improvement. Paragraph
(a)(3) also clarifies under what
circumstances the family has to entirely
vacate a unit during substantial
improvement, which would only be
when both in-place substantial
improvement and temporary relocation
cannot be achieved. HUD, in this final
rule, explains whether families remain
PBV participants or tenants under lease
during re-housing and provides
sufficient procedural information for a
PHA and owner to carry out the moves.
Paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(A) adds a
requirement that a family that must be
re-housed be offered an available vacant
contract unit if there is one. In the case
that the PHA issues the family a tenantbased voucher, paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(B)
provides that the PHA must, either
through voucher issuance based on
family eligibility and willingness to
request a voucher pursuant to § 983.261
or through removal of the unit from the
HAP contract, issue the family its
voucher to move. Finally, paragraph
(a)(3)(iii)(C) requires that families that
vacate the project be offered an
opportunity to return. HUD notes that
the leasing of units in a PBV project
must comply with federal fair housing
and related requirements, including
ensuring that any designated accessible
units are occupied by households who
need the accessibility features, and that
emergency transfers under VAWA are
provided.
HUD clarifies that HAP and vacancy
payments must be abated once the unit
has any HQS deficiency during
substantial improvement under
paragraph (a)(4). This final rule adds
paragraph (a)(5) to specify that vacant
units are the units that may be
temporarily removed from the contract
and that failure to complete the
substantial improvement as approved is
a cause for a breach subject to
§ 983.206(c)(2). Paragraph (a)(5) also
requires that the contract specify the
terms of the PHA approval, to facilitate
the PHA options for breach if the owner
fails to comply.
This final rule amends the proposed
paragraphs (b) and does not finalize the
proposed paragraph (c) to conform to
changes made across part 983 to
separately characterize ‘‘development
activity’’ and ‘‘substantial
improvement’’ and remove descriptions
of requirements applicable to
substantial improvement from subpart D
of part 983. Accordingly, paragraph (b)
describes requirements that apply to
substantial improvement. This final rule
also adds a new paragraph (c) to require
that for PHA-owned units an
independent entity must make the
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determinations otherwise made by the
PHA in this section, to avoid a conflict.
§ 983.251 How Participants Are
Selected
In this final rule, HUD clarifies in
paragraph (a)(2) that the PHA
determination of eligibility for a
particular family must use information
received and verified by the PHA. This
is not a change to existing requirements,
but the addition is necessary to ensure
there is no confusion as a result of the
explicit reference in § 983.2 that
§ 982.201(e) is inapplicable to the PBV
program. This final rule also revises
paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)(2) to clarify an
existing requirement that the family
cannot be zero-HAP at admission to the
unit, and clarifies under paragraph
(b)(1) that the eligibility of an in-place
family is determined prior to attaching
assistance to the unit (i.e., executing a
HAP contract or amending a HAP
contract by adding or substituting
units), not at the time the project or unit
is initially selected to receive PBV
assistance. This final rule clarifies
paragraph (b)(3)(ii) regarding when an
owner chooses to terminate or not to
renew the tenant-based lease to remove
language that may have implied the
tenant-based voucher rules on
termination or non-renewal function
differently in the case of a unit proposed
to be project-based. Consistent with
§ 983.10, this final rule also made
changes to require that the PHA identify
in the Administrative Plan details about
how it structures the waiting list for the
PBV program throughout paragraph (c).
HUD also revises paragraph (c)(7)(x) for
consistency and comprehensiveness
with respect to the Department’s
nondiscrimination and equal
opportunity regulations. Additionally,
for organizational reasons, HUD
relocates the requirement for PHAs to
have some mechanism for referring to
accessible PBV units a family that
includes a person with a mobility or
sensory impairment from § 983.252(c)(2)
to § 983.251(c)(9).
To prevent the tenant from being
subject to an impermissible requirement
to accept services involuntarily, this
final rule revises paragraph (d)(2) to
state that the PHA must not require
families to show they participate in
their own equivalent services if they
decline voluntary services. Consistent
with § 983.10, in added paragraph
(e)(2)(iii), HUD requires the PHA define
‘‘good cause’’ in the Administrative
Plan, which, at a minimum, must
include HQS deficiencies; a unit that is
inaccessible or otherwise does not meet
the disability-related needs of a
household member with disabilities;
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circumstances beyond the family’s
control; and health or safety risk due to
being a victim of domestic violence,
dating violence, sexual assault, or
stalking covered by 24 CFR part 5,
subpart L. To benefit the tenants and
based on public comments, HUD
determines that PHAs cannot remove
families from the waiting list when they
reject units for any reason but must
allow families to reject units for ‘‘good
cause’’ without losing their place on the
waiting list. This protects families from
being penalized when a unit is not truly
available to the family because the unit
does not meet the family’s needs.
§ 983.252 PHA Information for
Accepted Family
HUD restructures proposed
§ 983.252(a), and moves the
requirements previously at paragraph
(c)(1) to paragraph (a)(2) so that the
requirements that PHAs take
appropriate steps to ensure effective
communication in accordance with 24
CFR 8.6 and 28 CFR part 35, subpart E,
and provide information on the
reasonable accommodation process,
applies for all families, and not only
where the family head or spouse is a
person with a disability. HUD further
revises proposed § 983.252 to add the
requirement that the PHA include in the
family information packet information
about the family’s right to move in a
new paragraph (b)(5). HUD has also
moved the requirement at paragraph
(c)(2) regarding accessible PBV units to
§ 983.251(c)(9), as discussed in the
previous section. HUD also adds a new
paragraph (c) to clarify the requirement
that the PHA and family sign the
statement of family responsibility. In
accordance with Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 and HUD’s
implementing regulation at 24 CFR part
1, this final rule clarifies in redesignated
paragraph (e) that it is a requirement
that PHAs take reasonable steps to
ensure meaningful access by persons
with limited English proficiency. PHA’s
may reference HUD’s Final Guidance to
Federal Financial Assistance Recipients
Regarding Title VI Prohibition Against
National Origin Discrimination
Affecting Limited English Proficient
Persons (72 FR 2732) for additional
information about how to ensure
meaningful access to persons with
limited English proficiency.
§ 983.254 Vacancies
HUD aligns § 983.254(a)(1) with the
new requirements of § 983.157, as
described in the discussion of changes
to that section. HUD also makes minor
changes to paragraphs (a)(1)(i) and (ii) of
this section to specify that PHAs should
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38241
make every reasonable effort to make
eligibility determinations and refer
sufficient numbers of families to owners
within thirty days.
§ 983.255 Tenant Screening
For consistency purposes and to align
this section with § 983.10, HUD revises
§ 983.255(a)(2) and (c)(4) to require that
the PHA’s tenant screening policies are
in accordance with the policies in the
PHA’s Administrative Plan.
§ 983.257 Owner Termination of
Tenancy and Eviction
This final rule revises § 983.257 to
add that the owner may terminate the
tenancy in accordance with
§§ 983.157(g)(6)(iii) and
983.212(a)(3)(iii).
§ 983.260 Overcrowded, UnderOccupied, and Accessible Units
After considering public comments,
HUD creates additional flexibilities as
requested, while ensuring units do not
continue to remain overcrowded,
underoccupied, or, in the case of
accessible units, occupied by families
that do not require accessibility features.
Accordingly, in paragraph (a)(2)(ii),
HUD provides PHAs with 60 days (an
additional 30 days) to make an offer of
continued housing assistance once a
determination has been made that a
family is occupying a wrong-size unit,
or a unit with accessibility features that
the family does not require and the unit
is needed by a family that requires the
accessibility features. HUD also
reorganizes paragraph (b) and adds
paragraphs (b)(2) to provide that the
PHA must remove the wrong-size or
accessible unit from the HAP contract to
make voucher assistance available to
issue the family a tenant-based voucher
if continued housing assistance under
paragraph (b)(1) is unavailable. HUD
determined this policy change was
necessary to ensure the family living in
a wrong-size or accessible unit would be
able to obtain voucher assistance when
no options under paragraph (b)(1) were
available.
HUD revises paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and
(ii) to clarify the requirements when the
PHA’s offer of assistance is projectbased. HUD also adds paragraph
(c)(2)(iii) to address the requirements
when the PHA’s offer of assistance is
other comparable tenant-based rental
assistance. In response to requests for
additional flexibility, HUD creates
under (c)(2)(i) and (c)(2)(iii) an
opportunity for a family to request and
a PHA to grant one extension not to
exceed 90 days in circumstances where
a family either declines project-based
assistance or accepts or declines other
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comparable tenant-based assistance in
order to accommodate a family’s efforts
to locate affordable, safe, and
geographically proximate replacement
housing.
Finally, HUD adds paragraph (d) to
state that if units are removed under this
section they can be reinstated later. This
final rule also revises paragraph
(b)(1)(iv) to align with the revised
definition for the term ‘‘comparable
tenant-based rental assistance’’ in
§ 983.3.
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§ 983.261 Family Right To Move
In response to public comments, HUD
at this final rule reorganizes, adds
headings to, and revises § 983.261.
Paragraph (a) is revised to clarify that
the family may terminate its lease at any
time after one year of PBV assistance. To
ensure PHAs properly manage voucher
turnover, paragraph (b) requires that if
the search term of a family that
requested to move expires, the PHA
must first issue a voucher to the next
eligible family before issuing another
voucher to the family that requested to
move. This final rule moves the
discussion in paragraphs (c)(1) and (2)
of the rights of a family or a member of
a family who has been the victim of
domestic violence, dating violence,
sexual assault, and stalking under the
PBV program, to new paragraphs (e)
through (g), and expands on these
provisions. Paragraph (d) clarifies that if
the family terminates its lease before
one year of PBV assistance, the family
relinquishes the opportunity for
continued tenant-based assistance under
this right to move section. Lastly,
consistent with § 983.10, this final rule
requires PHAs to have a policy on the
family’s right to move in the
Administrative Plan in paragraph (b)
and (c).
§ 983.262 Occupancy of Units Under
the Increased Program Cap and Project
Cap Excepted Units
This final rule makes overall changes
to § 983.262, to align the PBV rules with
the Fostering Stable Housing
Opportunities (FSHO) notice,14 and to
specify the occupancy requirements
under the 10 percent cap. Additionally,
for ease of reading, this final rule moves
and revises paragraph (f) to paragraph
(b)(4) and distinguishes paragraphs (c)
and (d), the requirements for excepted
units and units under an increased
program cap. This final rule makes
clarifying changes to paragraph (b) by
explaining the requirements applicable
to both excepted units and units under
an increased program cap. For clarity,
14 See
87 FR 3570 (Jan. 24, 2022).
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this final rule amends paragraph
(b)(4)(ii) to provide PHAs with
discretion on whether to reinstate a unit
from the PBV HAP contract. The
changes in paragraph (c) explain the
requirements solely for units under the
increased program cap, which includes
homeless family, veteran family,
supportive housing for persons with
disabilities or elderly persons, and units
for Family Unification Program (FUP)
youth. This final rule requires at
paragraph (c)(3)(ii) that PHAs include
policies on supportive housing for
persons with disabilities or elderly
persons in their Administrative Plan
requirement in alignment with § 983.10.
Revised paragraph (d) outlines the
requirements solely for project cap
excepted units.
Paragraph (e) of this final rule
specifically outlines the requirements
for units for FUP youth under the
increased program cap and project cap
exceptions. This revision is made for
better readability and to distinguish
FUP youth requirements from other
categories of excepted units and units
under an increased program cap.
§ 983.301 Determining the Rent to
Owner
This final rule revises paragraphs
(b)(1) and (c)(2)(i) to align with § 983.10.
This final rule changes (f)(3) to align
with the changes made to the exception
payment standard regulation in
§ 982.503. Paragraph (f)(3) is also
amended to clarify the criteria for
whether an exception payment standard
applies. Finally, HUD amends
paragraph (f)(3) to clarify the purpose
for which an exception payment
standard applies to PBV projects, which
is as a factor for determining rent to
owner under paragraph (a)(2) or a factor
for determining if the unit is a
qualifying tax credit unit for purposes of
setting the rent to owner under
paragraph (c), as applicable.
HUD revises paragraph (f)(4) to
provide HUD with the flexibility to
develop a process to approve projectspecific utility allowances. This final
rule also adds paragraph (f)(5) to state
that the PHA must use the applicable
utility allowance schedule for the
purpose of determining rent to owner
and does not use a higher utility
allowance from a reasonable
accommodation for a person with a
disability. This clarifies the existing
requirement that a higher utility
allowance as a reasonable
accommodation is applied only to the
particular family’s tenant rent (or utility
reimbursement) (see 24 CFR 983.353),
rather than being used to determine the
amount of the rent to owner per 24 CFR
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983.301(b)(1) or (c)(2)(i). This final rule
removes the proposed rule requirement
in paragraph (g) that independent
entities determine project-specific
utility allowance, with the purpose that
HUD will ensure sufficient oversight
through the Federal Register process to
approve project-specific utility
allowances.
§ 983.302 Redetermination of Rent to
Owner
This final rule revises paragraph (a)(2)
to state that the PHA Administrative
Plan must specify any advance notice
the owner must give the PHA to request
a redetermination of rent and the form
of such request. This final rule revises
paragraph (b)(2) to remove the term
‘‘maximum rent,’’ which was undefined,
and state specifically how to calculate
the maximum adjustment by OCAF.
Further, this final rule moves
information that was in paragraph (b)(2)
in the proposed rule to new paragraphs
(b)(3), (b)(4), and (b)(5) with simplified
language for readability. HUD amends
paragraph (b)(6) to conform to
applicable HQS provisions of §§ 983.157
and 983.212.
HUD also clarifies when the rent to
owner must be decreased in the case of
adjustment by OCAF in revised
paragraph (c)(1), to include when there
is a decrease in the fair market rent, tax
credit rent, or reasonable rent, as
applicable, that requires a decrease to
the rent to owner. In response to public
comments on the proposed changes to
rent floors, HUD determined that PHAs
should have discretion whether to elect
at any time, within the HAP contract, to
not reduce rents below the initial rent
to owner, as reflected in revised
paragraph (c)(2). This revision reflects
HUD’s opinion that PHAs are in the best
position to balance local considerations
in making such a determination. To
accomplish this change, HUD removed
from paragraph (c)(2) the limitation on
establishing a rent floor, to account for
circumstances where the rent floor may
need to be established after rents have
fallen beneath the initial rent to owner.
§ 983.303 Reasonable Rent
HUD amends paragraph (b) to add two
new situations in which rent
reasonableness must be redetermined,
which are when a unit is added to the
contract and when development activity
is completed and accepted for a unit
subject to the new option in § 983.157
of this final rule (described in greater
detail in the discussion of § 983.157
above). This final rule adds paragraph
(c)(3) to explain how to calculate rent
reasonableness, which must be based on
actual and documentable conditions
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and not prospective information. HUD
also deletes in paragraph (f)(2) the
phrase ‘‘where the project is located,’’ as
this language modified ‘‘the HUD field
office’’ which has been removed.
§ 983.352 Vacancy Payment
This final rule aligns this section with
§ 983.10 by clarifying that the
Administrative Plan must contain the
PHA policy on the conditions which it
will provide for vacancy payments in a
HAP contract, the duration and amount
of any vacancy payments it will make to
an owner, and the required form and
manner of requests for vacancy
payments.
§ 983.353 Tenant Rent; Payment to
Owner
This final rule revises paragraph (d)(2)
to align it with § 983.10, requiring that
the PHA describe its policies on paying
the utility reimbursement in the
Administrative Plan.
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§ 985.3 Indicators, HUD Verification
Methods and Ratings
This final rule revises paragraphs
(i)(1), (i)(3)(i), and (i)(3)(ii) to align them
with § 982.503. Further, this final rule
clarifies paragraph (l)(1) to state that the
initial unit inspection indicator
includes both initial and turnover
inspections for the PBV program. The
purpose of this revision is to capture
every time a family moves in and not
just capture when a family moves in
before the HAP contract. This final rule
also revises the citation in paragraph
(m)(1) from § 982.405(a) to §§ 982.405
and 983.103(e) to reflect changes made
to those sections in this final rule.
This final rule also revises paragraph
(c)(3)(i)(A) to reflect changes made to
self-certification of assets under 88 FR
9600 (Feb. 14, 2023), which
implemented HOTMA sections 102,
103, and 104. A revision has been made
to the introductory text of this
regulation to reflect that the Federal
award expenditure threshold is
established by 2 CFR subpart F and has
changed from $300,000 to $750,000. The
revision reflects the regulatory citation
for audit thresholds to ensure that
§ 985.3 is always aligned with Federal
audit requirements.
This final rule revises paragraph (p)(1)
and (3)(i)(B) to reflect the renumbering
of § 982.503(e) to (f).
General Technical Changes
Throughout parts 5, 50, 92, 93, 982
and 983, HUD moved, corrected, and
removed outdated citations and revised
headers for clarity purposes. This final
rule also revises terminology throughout
this final rule, including replacing all
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references to ‘‘biennial inspection’’ with
‘‘periodic inspection;’’ ‘‘tenant selection
plan’’ with ‘‘owner waiting list;’’ and
‘‘defects’’ with ‘‘deficiencies.’’ This final
rule also replaces references to ‘‘tenant’s
rent’’ with ‘‘total tenant payment’’ and
replaces references to ‘‘rent to owner’’
with ‘‘gross rent.’’ This final rule
removes all references to the Projectbased certification (PBC) program as it
is no longer in existence. HUD also
redesignated paragraphs for readability
in §§ 982.54, 982.406, 983.53, 983.54,
983.59, 983.153, 983.204, 983.207,
983.211, 983.252 and 983.260. In
addition, HUD moved the definition of
the term ‘‘Request for Release of Funds
and Certification’’ from § 983.3 to
§ 983.56(d)(2). HUD also amended
§§ 985.1 and 985.3 to incorporate the
PBV program in SEMAP and to align
with regulatory changes in § 982.503
which permits additional flexibilities
for PHAs inspections and the NSPIRE
final rule.
HUD also makes changes throughout
this final rule to correspond with the
changes described above adding an
option to complete rehabilitation after
HAP contract execution in § 983.157,
moving proposed § 983.157 to § 983.212
of this final rule, and changing the term
‘‘development activity’’ to ‘‘substantial
improvement’’ for a portion of the work
described as ‘‘development activity’’ in
the proposed rule. HUD adds crossreferences to § 983.157 in this final rule,
and brief descriptions of conforming
changes, in appropriate sections of part
983. Also, HUD removes citations to
§ 983.157 that appeared in the proposed
rule or changes them to instead
reference § 983.212 throughout this final
rule. HUD changes ‘‘development
activity’’ to ‘‘substantial improvement’’
where appropriate throughout this final
rule. Finally, HUD removes references
to activities that constitute substantial
improvements from subpart D of part
983 of this final rule where appropriate
and, accordingly, removes references to
provisions of subpart D from §§ 983.207
and 983.212 where appropriate.
HUD is also revising the definition of
‘‘household’’ at 24 CFR 5.100, consistent
with HUD’s rule implementing HOTMA
at 88 FR 9600 (Feb. 14, 2023), to include
foster children and foster adults. This is
a technical change consistent with the
definitions of ‘‘foster children’’ and
‘‘foster adults’’ present in 24 CFR 5.100.
For more information, see HUD’s
discussion of foster children and adults
at 88 FR 9600, 9602 (Feb. 14, 2023).
Finally, some technical changes
throughout the proposed rule were
either made by the NSPIRE final rule or
rendered moot by the NSPIRE final rule.
For example, HUD proposed to amend
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§ 985.1 to update a reference to ‘‘projectbased component (PBC).’’ This change
was made in NSPIRE, and therefore not
made here.
IV. Effective and Compliance Dates
Effective Dates
Almost all changes in this final rule
are effective thirty days after the
publication of this rule. However, HUD
is delaying the effective date for
§§ 982.451(c), 983.154(h), 983,154(g),
983,157, and 983.204(e) while HUD
completes and publishes the PHAowned certification form and HAP
contract rider that are necessary for
PHAs to implement these changes. HUD
will publish a subsequent publication
establishing an effective date for these
changes, once the form and rider are
ready for use.
Compliance Dates
Compliance with this final rule is
required once the rule becomes
effective, with some exceptions.
Many changes require updates to
PHAs’ Administrative Plans. HUD
recommends that PHAs update their
Administrative Plans at their earliest
convenience. However, to aid in
providing a smooth transition, PHAs are
not required to update their
Administrative Plans in response to this
rule until 365 days after the effective
date of this rule. HUD notes that PHAs
wishing to take advantage of many of
the changes in this rule are required to
update their Administrative Plan to
incorporate those changes.
Other sections have delayed
compliance dates to provide PHAs with
adequate time to update their forms,
procedures, and any other written
materials that reflect new requirements
in accordance with this rule, and to
provide HUD with time to provide
additional resources advising PHAs.
Also of note, §§ 983.57 and 983.155(b)
will require some PHAs to either amend
their independent entity contracts or
select a new independent entity, and
HUD is therefore giving PHAs one year
from the effective date to make those
changes.
V. Public Comments
HUD received 44 public comments
from a wide range of commenters:
individuals; PHAs; public housing and
tenant interest groups; and legal services
organizations. The public comments
and responses to the substantive
comments are found below.
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1. Definitions (§ 982.4)
Definition of Request for Tenancy
Approval (RFTA)
One commenter stated that the
definition of RFTA seems to imply a
requirement that the RFTA be submitted
by the voucher holder and suggested the
definition be amended to clarify that
either the family, or the owner on behalf
of the family, may submit the form.
HUD Response: In this final rule,
HUD has amended the definition of
RFTA to clarify that the form can be
submitted by the family, or on behalf of
the family to the PHA.
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Definition of Tenant-Paid Utility
A commenter suggested that HUD
include the definition of ‘‘utility’’
currently found in guidance to the
regulation because the definition is a
critical part of the program.
HUD Response: The definition of
tenant-paid utility has been added to the
definitions section at § 982.4 and this
definition is now also referenced in the
project-based voucher definition of
tenant-paid utility at § 983.3. The new
definition in § 982.4 clarifies that
tenant-paid utilities are those services
and utilities that are not included in the
rent. HUD modified the definition from
the proposed rule to remove the
definition of which utilities may be
considered as tenant-paid utilities since
this is covered in § 982.517.
Definition of PHA-Owned Units
Commenters supported the proposed
definition of a PHA-owned unit, which
matches the statutory definition offered
by HOTMA. These commenters stated
this was clear and did not need
expansion and supported tracking the
statutory definition and conforming
definitions across HCV and PBV
regulations, notices, and guidance.
A commenter recommended that for a
unit to be PHA-owned that HUD not
rely on a bright-line, percentage of
ownership test to determine control
when a PHA owns more than 50 percent
of the managing member or general
partner, and HUD should not find a unit
to be PHA-owned when a PHA controls
less than 50 percent of a managing
member or general partner interest.
Another commenter supported
excluding units in buildings owned by
entities in which either a PHA is in the
ownership structure, and/or the entity is
subject to a ground lease by a PHA. A
commenter recommended the definition
of ‘‘owned by a public housing agency’’
should allow the statutory text to stand
on its own, so that only units located in
a project ‘‘owned by the PHA, by an
entity wholly controlled by the PHA, or
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by a limited liability company (‘‘LLC’’)
or limited partnership (‘‘LP’’) where the
PHA holds a controlling interest’’ will
be considered ‘‘owned by a public
housing agency.’’ The same commenter
opined that should HUD wish to clarify
the control and other factors it will
evaluate when determining whether a
unit will be considered PHA-owned,
HUD can do so through notice or other
non-binding guidance. This commenter
further stated that the definition of
‘‘controlling interest’’ conflates control
and ownership contrary to
Congressional intent, explaining that
percentage of ownership does not
guarantee control over the owner entity
and that HUD should confirm whether
the PHA exercises functional day-to-day
control over the owner entity.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates
there are many different preferences
regarding the level of ownership or
control that rises to the level of PHAowned. In the interest of consistency,
HUD agrees with the commenters that
supported a definition that follows the
statutory definition, and therefore
declines to accept the suggestions that
HUD avoid a bright-line test or exclude
units in buildings owned by entities in
which either a PHA is in the ownership
structure, and/or the entity is subject to
a ground lease by a PHA. Additionally,
HUD believes that providing a
distinction in the regulation of what
constitutes a controlling interest is
important to clarify the nuances in the
statutory definition of PHA-owned
units, and thus does not accept the
suggestion that any clarifications
beyond the statute should only be made
through non-binding guidance. HUD
disagrees that its definition of the term
controlling interest is contrary to
Congressional intent. The common
definition of ‘‘controlling interest’’
recognizes a majority ownership interest
that serves as the basis for control;
HUD’s definition reflects the most basic
and recognized meaning of the term.
Therefore, this final rule maintains the
proposed rule language without change.
Definition of Independent Entity
A commenter supported the modified
definition of independent entity in the
proposed rule because it would provide
relief to PHAs and maintain a level of
scrutiny and prevent the appearance of
self-dealing. Another commenter
doubted whether there is any
circumstance under which a PHA and
an independent entity should be
connected financially, in the interest of
complete fairness and impartiality
under which an independent entity
should be making decisions.
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One commenter suggested that the
proposed rule would increase the
shortage of vendors for PHAs, especially
located in smaller areas, if every vendor
were disqualified based on prior
contracts with the PHA for services
performed on non-PHA-owned units.
The commenter viewed HUD’s current
procedures in tandem with the PHAs’
inability to exercise control over the
independent entity, as sufficient to
ensure independence.
The same commenter recommended
that HUD revise the definition of
independent entity because it is unclear
what it means for an independent entity
to ‘‘be connected to’’ a PHA, and the
definition would prohibit a PHA from
using a company it already contracts
with as an independent entity. Another
commenter stated the phrase ‘‘or in any
other manner that could cause the PHA
to improperly influence the
independent entity’’ is vague and
subjective, potentially leading to
confusion, disputes, and conflict, and
should be deleted.
For clarity, a commenter suggested
HUD revise the definition as follows:
‘‘HUD-approved independent entities
and PHAs cannot have a legal, financial
(except regarding compensation for
services performed for the PHA), or
other connection that could cause either
party to be improperly influenced by the
other.’’ The same commenter suggested
that this final rule specify the meaning
of ‘‘connected to’’ because the current
meaning could prohibit a PHA from
using an independent entity it currently
contracts with, even when these vendor
contracts are procured at arm’s length.
Another commenter suggested HUD
allow PHAs that may have an allowable
financial relationship with an
independent entity to continue to use
that independent entity if there is no
chance that the PHA will ‘‘improperly
influence’’ the independent entity.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments related to the challenges of
identifying independent entities in rural
areas, as well as the need to ensure
impartiality. HUD revises the proposed
definition in an attempt to balance these
competing interests and ensure that
HUD-approved independent entities are
impartial and autonomous. HUD
believes it is important to provide a
regulatory definition of the term
independent entity, and thus declines
the request that the definition is
consistent with current requirements,
which provide that the PHA cannot
perform any function that would
present a clear conflict (e.g., conducting
inspections and rent setting) for units it
owns. In this final rule, HUD explains
when the unit of general local
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government meets the definition of an
independent entity without requiring
HUD approval. HUD believes keeping
this option in this final rule will reduce
administrative burden and reporting
requirements. While HUD disagrees that
there are financial connections where
there is no chance that the PHA will
‘‘improperly influence’’ the
independent entity, HUD further
clarifies that for HUD-approved
independent entities, a financial
connection would not include
compensation for services performed for
PHA-owned units. HUD believes it is
necessary to maintain language
regarding impartiality of HUD-approved
independent entities, which defines the
types of relationships (e.g., financial
connections) that could interfere with
the entity’s exercise of independent
judgment in carrying out
responsibilities with respect to PHAowned units.
2. Administrative Plan (§ 982.54)
Objections Generally
A commenter stated that HUD should
not add items to the Administrative
Plan that are not necessary for the daily
and core operations of the PHA.
Another comment stated that several of
the proposed additions would require
frequent and burdensome changes for
otherwise insignificant policy changes.
HUD Response: HUD disagrees that
the requirements should not be added to
the regulations. HOTMA offers
significant flexibilities and HUD
proposes to offer additional flexibilities
to PHAs to establish discretionary
policies through this rule. Therefore, it
is critical that discretionary policies be
applied consistently and that such
policies are clearly and transparently
published for the benefit of participant
families, owners, and the general public.
Inclusion of Tenant Selection Plan
(TSP)
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Another commenter suggested that
the requirement that a TSP be included
in the Administrative Plan must be
mentioned in § 982.54.
HUD Response: In finalizing the rule,
HUD replaced all references of the
‘‘tenant selection plan’’ with ‘‘owner
waiting list policy.’’
Question 2: Where could HUD provide
greater discretion to PHAs to support
their efforts to operate their programs
effectively?
A commenter stated that all PHAs
should be allowed to be Moving to Work
(MTW) agencies to decrease regulatory
burdens and provide additional
discretion for PHAs to control their
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local market. This commenter also
recommended that PHAs that have
Affordable Housing Accreditation Board
(AHAB) accreditation and are high
performing under SEMAP and PHAS
should be rewarded with more
discretion because they have shown
their ability to properly operate their
programs.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments requesting that PHAs should
be afforded additional discretion to
reduce regulatory burdens and notes
that HOTMA and HUD, in its
implementation, has made significant
modifications and clarifications
intended to reduce the burden on PHAs
where possible. HUD does not have the
statutory authority to allow all PHAs to
be MTW agencies as suggested by the
commenter.
3. Information When Family Is Selected
(§ 982.301)
Disability-Related Obligations in the
Oral Briefing
Commenters supported HUD’s
requirements wherein PHAs must
provide families that include an
individual with a disability a list of
accessible units known to the PHA and
assistance in locating an accessible unit.
PHAs are already required to provide
this information in the information
packet, and as required in compliance
with HUD’s Section 504 requirements.
One commenter suggested that PHAs be
required to collaborate with local
organizations that can provide housing
search assistance to tenants with
specific accommodation needs. Another
commenter suggested that HUD require
PHAs to keep track of whether tenants
currently in accessible units require the
accessible design features and use a
lease addendum stating that the family
may be required to move if they do not
require the accessible design features.
The same commenter suggested that
HUD provide guidance to PHAs to
proactively identify ways to make units
accessible, including through new
construction or other substantial
rehabilitation.
HUD Response: The HCV program
allows families to choose any eligible
unit in the rental market. In the tenantbased voucher context, an HCV family
leaving a rental unit due to not needing
its features does not mean that unit is
then leased to another HCV family. In
other contexts, such as public housing
and project-based voucher housing, the
owner or manager may require the
applicant to agree to move to a nonaccessible unit and may incorporate this
agreement into the lease, in accordance
with HUD’s Section 504 regulations.
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HUD appreciates the comments and
recommendations to provide guidance
to PHAs on ways to proactively identify
units that meet a household’s disabilityrelated needs and ways to make units
accessible and will consider these ideas
in future guidance.
Exception Payment Standards
A commenter stated that HUD should
include written and oral briefings on
exception payment standards as a
reasonable accommodation, and not
solely include subsidy standards as
required by regulations. The commenter
suggested that PHAs be required to
inform families of the availability of an
exception payment standard, and
particularly for when a more expensive
new construction unit is needed as an
accommodation for a family member’s
disability. Alternatively, another
commenter suggested that the regulation
should not detail that there is a
reasonable accommodation possible for
subsidy standards because reasonable
accommodations are available for all
PHA policies.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the
commenters that PHAs must make
reasonable accommodations in rules,
policies, practices, services, and
procedures to ensure persons with a
disability have equal opportunity to
participate fully in all the PHA’s
programs, privileges, benefits, and
services. Therefore, the voucher briefing
must include information on the PHA’s
reasonable accommodation policies and
procedures. In addition, the PHA may
not know or have reason to know if the
family or families attending the oral
briefing includes a person with
disabilities. Similarly, a family member
who is not disabled may subsequently
become disabled, so it is important that
all families receive information on the
reasonable accommodation process.
Consequently, HUD is revising
§ 982.301(a)(3) to require that
information on the reasonable
accommodation process is provided at
all oral briefings and not limited only to
briefings where the PHA knows that a
family in attendance includes a person
with disabilities. While HUD does not
require in this final rule that the
reasonable accommodation exception
payment standards must be covered in
the oral briefing, HUD is requiring that
an explanation of reasonable
accommodation exception payment
standards must be included in the
briefing packet. HUD believes providing
written guidance in the information
packet will better address the
commenter’s concerns as the family will
have access to guidance on this subject
throughout their housing search.
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Briefing Method
A commenter recommended that the
regulation for the briefing packet should
outline the most critical information for
families when they are provided their
initial voucher, because excessive
amounts of information can be
overwhelming for families. The
commenter also recommended that
PHAs should have the discretion to
determine which method of
communication, including oral, print,
and electronic communications, is
proper for the briefing packet, and the
regulation should explicitly state that
the briefing can be provided in a
manner that is not oral, according to the
PHA’s discretion, while acknowledging
that accessibility and interaction
between staff and families are required.
Another commenter recommended
referencing § 982.301(a), the right to
meaningful language access for families
whose members are limited English
proficient, and how to request and
access meaningful language assistance
from the PHA. The commenter further
stated that in § 982.301(b)(10), HUD
should reference how tenants can
request language assistance, whether via
written translation of documents or oral
interpretation, for the PHA; HUD should
require that the PHA identify staff
members who will coordinate the PHA’s
language access policies; and the tenant
briefing should include translation and
oral interpretation for individuals who
are limited English proficient in
§ 982.301(c).
HUD Response: HUD regulations
require that the briefing packet contain
specific information that is important
for families when they are provided
with their initial voucher. HUD does not
agree that the briefing packet should
categorize which pieces of information
are more important than others, as all
information is required and important
for voucher families. HUD does not
agree that the regulation should allow
for other types of briefings and believes
requiring an oral briefing ensures that
all families fully understand how the
program works and have the
opportunity to ask questions and
discuss information presented. HUD
notes that new paragraph (c) in
§ 982.310 already addresses providing
information for persons with limited
English proficiency. HUD has also
addressed access to translation in PIH
Notice 2020–32 which provides for
alternative briefing methods, as well as
how to ensure meaningful access for
limited English proficient speakers and
believes no additional changes to
§ 982.301 are warranted.
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4. Approval of Assisted Tenancy
(§ 982.305)
60-Day HAP Contract Execution in
§ 982.305(c)(4)
A commenter disagreed with HUD’s
proposal to require a 60-day period to
execute a HAP contract and a lease term
and noted that requiring PHAs to get
permission from HUD to execute a HAP
contract in cases exceeding the 60-day
period is unnecessary because it is not
in the interest of the parties to
unnecessarily delay the process. As an
alternative, the commenter suggested
increasing the contract execution time
from 60 days to 90 days to eliminate the
need for any additional action from the
PHA or HUD and require PHAs to notify
HUD when the PHA goes beyond the 60
days, so that HUD can track the
prevalence of the extensions requests
and re-examine this policy in the future
while avoiding administratively
burdening PHAs and landlords.
Another commenter did not support a
maximum 60-day timeframe between
lease effective date and the date of HAP
contract execution. The commenter
opined that many HCVs are lease-inplace vouchers in rent stabilized units,
so PHAs cannot request that the owner
sign a new lease at the start of the
subsidy without violating local rent
laws.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments and clarifies that the
requirement to execute a HAP contract
no later than 60 days from the beginning
of a lease term is already a requirement
under current regulations at
§ 982.305(c)(4) and not newly proposed.
HUD also understands the concerns of
commenters around extenuating
circumstances and believes that the
proposed change to allow a PHA to
request an extension of HUD sufficiently
addresses those concerns. Therefore,
HUD will finalize § 982.305(c)(4) as
proposed.
5. Eligible Housing (§ 982.352)—
Independent Entity Functions and
Compensation
Questions 5 and 6: Functions, Other
Than Those Identified in the Proposed
Rule, That an Independent Entity
Should Perform in the Case of PHAOwned Units
Functions of Independent Entities
Commenters opposed adding duties to
independent entities. One commenter
stated the functions identified in the
proposed rule are the same as the
current regulation, and that no other
functions should be authorized to an
independent entity. Another commenter
stated that HUD should not require
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independent entities to perform other
functions beyond those proposed
because doing so would increase the
costs as well as decrease funding
availability for other program functions.
One commenter stated that the
independent entity requirements should
be re-examined so that PHAs are not
burdened by the oversight of such
entities, and that PHAs should be
entrusted to carry out the activities,
such as ensuring compliance with
selection process, inspections and rent
setting—just as PHAs are under the
public housing program. The
commenter suggested having the PHAs
carry out these duties with proper
documentation and subject to review
through the required annual
independent audit.
Another commenter disapproved of
HUD requiring an independent entity to
conduct duties that the PHA can do
itself, such as approve contract
renewals, conduct inspections, and
conduct rent reasonableness tests. The
commenter further emphasized the
burden of using independent entities for
activities, such as performing
inspections because there is a shortage
of vendors trained in UPCS–V protocol,
and many PHAs conduct rent
reasonableness tests through third-party
software, making the need for
independent entities obsolete. The
commenter recommended that HUD
require an independent entity to
conduct inspections only for special
inspections or compliance to lessen the
PHA’s burden. While another
commenter noted that HUD’s proposed
list of activities to be performed by an
independent entity is too long,
suggesting HUD reconsider the
requirement that an independent entity
receive evidence that the PHA is
following regulations during the
development activity or rehabilitation.
This commenter noted that there are
already several layers of review at local
and Federal levels, and that, in the case
of mixed-finance, HUD may have
already reviewed the transaction.
A commenter further suggested that
independent entities not be required to
review awards of Low-Income Housing
Tax Credits (LIHTC) or HOME
Investment Partnership Program
(HOME) funds, as well as PHA-owned
project selections and stated that HUD
should defer to the PHA to determine
when revitalization of a former public
housing site is needed. Additionally, the
commenter objected to the requirement
that independent entities (rather than
PHAs) must determine any rent
adjustments by an OCAF as part of their
rent calculation responsibilities for any
PHA-owned units.
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HUD Response: HUD agrees that no
additional duties need to be added to
the independent entity functions but for
the addition of one function under
§ 983.57 requiring the independent
entity to approve substantial
improvement on units under a HAP
contract in accordance with § 983.212
(see the discussion of § 983.57 later in
this preamble). HUD has consistently
maintained that PHAs cannot
appropriately perform any function that
would present a clear conflict for units
they own. 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(11) reflects
this view by requiring that the unit of
general local government or a HUDapproved independent entity perform
inspections and rent determinations. In
addition, while the PHA is generally
responsible for selecting PBV projects in
accordance with § 983.51, including
developing the procedures for
submission and selection of PBV
proposals, HUD believes that, to ensure
fairness and impartiality, it is necessary
for an independent entity or the HUD
field office to review the selection
process the PHA undertook and
determine that the PHA-owned units
were appropriately selected based on
the selection procedures specified in the
PHA Administrative Plan. Finally, as
previously noted, PHAs are statutorily
prohibited from determining rents for
PHA-owned units; calculating the
amount of the reasonable rent and any
rent adjustments by an OCAF are
integral parts of the process.
Accordingly, HUD maintains the
requirement that the independent entity
must calculate any rent adjustments by
an OCAF for PHA-owned units.
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Independent Entity Compensation
A commenter suggested that HUD
expressly permit a PHA to seek
reimbursement of independent entity
expenses from project owners as
operating costs.
HUD Response: Independent entity
functions are not a project owner’s
responsibility. Tasks performed by the
independent entity are administrative
functions that the PHA would otherwise
be performing if the units did not meet
the definition of PHA-owned. PHAs
may therefore compensate the
independent entity from PHA
administrative fees (including fees
credited to the administrative fee
reserve).
Support for PHAs Keeping Documents
Commenters supported PHAs keeping
rent reasonableness and inspection
documents and providing copies to the
field office only upon request. A
commenter noted that this is not
required for non-PHA-owned units, and
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the field offices lack capacity to review
these reports.
HUD Response: HUD retains the
language proposed at
§ 982.352(b)(1)(v)(A) requiring rent
reasonableness and HQS information be
communicated to the family and PHA,
but not submitted to HUD unless upon
request. HUD agrees that this framework
balances HUD’s interest in proper
oversight and PHAs’ administrative
burden.
6. Establishment of Life-Threatening
Conditions (§ 982.401(o))
Some commenters approved of the list
of Life-Threatening Conditions (LTCs).
Other commenters suggested that the
list should include other items such as
mold, due to its harmful impact on
individuals with respiratory and
immune deficiencies; non-functioning
locks; roaches; asbestos; radon; rat
infestations; non-functioning heating or
hot water systems; properties
determined uninhabitable by a city
agency; inability of heating system to
maintain a minimum of 55 degrees
Fahrenheit during cold season; utilities
not in service; an absence of a
functioning toilet; and missing exterior
doors or windows. Another commenter
stated that a missing lightbulb should
not be an LTC.
One commenter suggested condensing
and summarizing the list, as a high level
of detail could lead to errors in
inspections when multiple criteria must
be met to be considered an LTC.
Another commenter supported
HOTMA’s streamlining changes but
stated that it is unwarranted to find
minor HQS violations as a safety hazard
or a reason to terminate HAP assistance.
A separate commenter recommended
that HUD immediately update the HQS
inspector checklists to accurately reflect
LTCs. Another commenter
recommended that HUD only require
the list for initial inspection and not for
regularly scheduled annual or biennial
inspections.
One commenter stated that HUD
should clarify that a unit without a
carbon monoxide (CO) detector should
not be considered an LTC if there is no
CO source in the unit. Another
commenter urged HUD not to add CO
detectors to HQS through HOTMA and
instead ensure consistency across HUD
programs by implementing statutory CO
requirements through standalone
rulemaking. One commenter suggested
that voucher applicants and those
moving with continued assistance
should receive notice of proximity to a
Superfund site or contaminated sites on
the National Priorities List (NPL) at
application, lease signing, and at
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recertification. This commenter also
recommended that HUD expand its
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
with the EPA, which is currently
limited to Project-Based Rental
Assistance (PBRA) and public housing,
to all forms of HUD assistance, and
suggested HUD and EPA map all
assisted projects and their proximity to
sites on the NPL.
Commenters also suggested that PHAs
should be allowed to add other
conditions into their Administrative
Plan. A commenter suggested that HUD
allow PHAs to continue using their own
pre-existing definitions as a replacement
for HUD’s NLT definitions. A
commenter urged HUD not to require
PHAs to adopt the NLT provisions as a
prerequisite for adopting alternate
inspections. One commenter stated that
HUD should only require PHAs to
outline deviations from the definition of
‘‘life-threatening conditions’’ in the
Administrative Plan instead of repeating
HUD’s regulations. Another commenter
suggested HUD waive the on-site
inspection requirement when PHAs use
alternative procedures to correct NLT
deficiencies.
One commenter suggested that HUD
undertake a thorough and public
examination with significant
stakeholder outreach and participation
before changing to the proposed list of
LTCs, which is based on UPCS–V and
imposes a higher standard than is
currently required.
Commenters opposed the expansion
and addition of new HQS fail items
being categorized as life-threatening
because it would limit the PHAs’ ability
to consider local conditions and hinder
applicants from quickly accessing their
units.
HUD Response: HUD has decided not
to finalize the revisions in the proposed
rule to § 982.401 through the HOTMA
final rule. All comments made through
this HOTMA rulemaking process were
taken into consideration in the drafting
of the NSPIRE Standards Notice.
Commenters had another opportunity to
provide feedback through that notice,
published to the Federal Register (87 FR
36426) on June 17, 2022. All current
LTCs are defined in the final NSPIRE
Standards Notice (88 FR 40832)
published June 22, 2023. All future
updates to the LTC list will also be
subject to notice and comment in the
Federal Register.
7. Enforcement of HQS (§§ 982.404,
983.208)
Usage Suggestions for Abated Funds
Commenters suggested various usages
for abated funds, such as security
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deposits, portion of rent, costs for
families moving due to the termination,
application fees, and other mandatory
expenses.
A commenter suggested relocation
assistance for affected tenants should be
mandatory, using funds from the abated
PBV HAP or TPVs. Commenters also
stated that the proposed rule is unclear
as to whether the security deposits and
moving costs are the only eligible
expenses or if the PHA can determine
additional expenses and suggested that
the PHAs should determine what
comprises eligible assistance expenses
and refer to the URA cost schedule for
moving costs.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates
these comments on the use of TPVs and
abated funds. With respect to TPVs,
these vouchers are not provided in
connection with PBV contract
terminations or abatement of assistance.
In addition, HUD cannot mandate the
use of abated funds for relocation
assistance to families. The statute does
not require the PHA to use abated funds
for relocation assistance; instead, it
provides the PHA with discretion to use
funds for this purpose. Specifically,
section 8(G)(vii)(III) of the 1937 Act
states: ‘‘The [PHA] may provide
assistance to the family in finding a new
residence, including use of up to two
months of any assistance amounts
withheld or abated . . . for costs
directly associated with relocation of
the family to a new residence, which
shall include security deposits as
necessary and may include
reimbursements for reasonable moving
expenses incurred by the household, as
established by the Secretary.’’
Consistent with the statutory
language, and in response to the
comments regarding the eligible
expenses that may be covered, HUD has
provided additional language regarding
the permitted uses of abated funds for
relocating tenants. Specifically, HUD
has added that PHAs may assist families
in finding a new unit, including using
up to two months of the withheld and
abated assistance payments for costs
directly associated with relocating to a
new unit, including security deposits,
temporary housing costs, or other
reasonable moving costs as determined
by the PHA based on their locality. HUD
has further clarified that if the PHA is
using withheld or abated assistance
payments to assist with the family’s
relocation costs, the PHA must provide
security deposit assistance as necessary,
as required by the statute.
Protection of Tenants
Many commenters suggested going
further to protect tenants from evictions
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and subsidy terminations in the event
their unit fails an HQS inspection.
Commenters warned that the proposed
rule would allow PHAs to abate and
terminate an entire HAP contract if a
single unit fails HQS and tenants may
face higher rent under HCV rules or face
an owner that evicts them despite the
regulatory language.
Commenters stated that withholding
HAP during the cure period for HQS
violations may create an incentive to
evict tenants. Commenters
recommended HUD require that tenants
cannot be held liable for amounts of
HAP withheld or abated, such
abatement is not grounds for eviction,
and tenants cannot be held liable for
their own portion of the rent during
abatement. A commenter noted that, in
some cases, the PHA withholds HAP for
HQS violations that are not an
immediate threat to health and safety
and do not warrant a tenant to withhold
rent under State law and HUD should
clearly state that when the PHA is
relieved of paying back rent, the tenant
is as well, despite any State law
discrepancies regardless of State law
unless the State law provides stronger
tenant protections. A commenter further
expressed that when HAP is abated, the
tenants should be notified.
Commenters recommended that HUD
explicitly state that if a PHA terminates
a PBV HAP contract based on a breach
of conditions requirements, any of the
units that continue to meet or have been
brought into compliance with HQS
requirements should be allowed to
continue under the program. Another
commenter recommended that HUD
should specify in § 982.404(d)(2)(ii) that
the family’s assistance may only be
terminated in accordance with § 982.555
if a family fails to move within the
allotted time. A commenter also
suggested that HUD clarify
§ 982.404(e)(1) to include that a PHA
may extend the 90 days for families as
needed based on individual
circumstances, without HUD approval,
and state that for relocation protections,
public housing includes properties
either pre- or post-conversion under
RAD, section 18, or other provision of
law, not to include section 9 public
housing.
One commenter requested further
clarity on whether the requirement for
families to be provided at least 90 days
to find a new unit after the HAP
contract is terminated, refers to 90
calendar days or 90 ‘‘tolled’’ days of
voucher time, which is required under
the Family Move regulations.
A commenter also stated that a PHA
must provide a preference to families
who relocated due to HQS deficiencies.
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This commenter sought clarification
from HUD on whether the preference for
the public housing waiting list would
take precedence over other existing
public housing preferences. Another
commenter stated that HUD’s proposed
language in § 982.404(e)(2) does not
consider that PHAs need to manage
limited vacancies to best serve the
residents already within the public
housing program, or for the many
applicants on that program’s waiting
list. This commenter recommended that
HUD modify the proposed language
within § 982.404(e)(2) to clarify that
HCV family participants transfer into
public housing units shall not take
preference over the PHA’s needs for a
Section 504, VAWA, or other emergency
need.
One commenter stated that HUD
providing a public housing preference
for families affected by HCV abatements
unable to find a new voucher unit
would potentially lead to decreased
mobility for HCV participants. The
commenter suggested that it would be
advantageous to allow payments up to
120 percent of fair market rents for such
families, which would enable them to
access higher rental markets within the
spectrum of ZIP codes served by the
PHA. This commenter agreed with the
HOTMA language, permitting the PHA
to use up to two months of the
assistance payments that were withheld
or abated under the family’s terminated
HAP contract for cost directly associated
with the relocation of the family
because these provisions would provide
greater mobility to HCV families.
HUD Response: The language giving
PHAs the option to withhold HAP
during the cure period is required under
HOTMA. In response to the comment
regarding procedures under § 982.555,
HUD cannot override State and local
law regarding enforcement of the lease
agreement. HUD has further clarified
that tenants relocated due to an HQS
deficiency must be given a selection
preference by the PHA for public
housing, where applicable. HUD has
clarified that the PHA must issue the
family a voucher to move at least 30
days prior to termination of the HAP
contract.
HUD has clarified that the
requirement for families to be provided
at least 90 days to find a new unit after
the HAP contract is terminated, refers to
90 calendar days.
HUD appreciates the suggestion to
allow payment standards up to 120
percent of FMR. This change is not
necessary as PHAs may currently apply
for 120 percent fair market rents and/or
SAFMRs under 982.503, which provides
for expanded access to rental markets
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for all families. FMRs are established for
entire geographies, and not on a case-bycase basis, except in the case of a
reasonable accommodation exception
payment standard (RA EPS) for people
with disabilities.
HUD appreciates the recommendation
that HCV participant transfers should
not take preference over Section 504,
VAWA, or other emergency transfers.
HUD agrees and finds that 24 CFR
982.404(e)(2) as drafted in this final rule
is sufficient and notes that Section 504
transfers must occur under the
requirements of 24 CFR part 8,
including 8.28, and VAWA emergency
transfers must occur in accordance with
HUD’s VAWA regulations at 24 CFR
part 5, subpart L, and program
regulations.
Withholding HAP Harms Landlords
A commenter warned that
withholding HAP during the 30-day
correction period would hurt smaller
landlords and potentially discourage
them from future participation.
HUD Response: This language cannot
be changed because the option for PHAs
to withhold HAP during the cure period
is required under HOTMA.
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Mandatory Termination
A commenter opposed requiring a
mandatory termination after 180 days of
abatement because it would be an
administrative burden and decrease
availability of subsidized housing.
Another commenter suggested
clarification on whether the plural
‘‘HAP contracts’’ at § 982.404(a)(2)
reflects other contracts for units besides
noncompliant contracts would be
terminated due to the HQS
noncompliance of one unit. Another
commenter suggested that the 180-day
proposed timeline for termination is a
reasonable balance of interests, as
required by statute.
HUD Response: HUD has maintained
the language around mandatory
termination because HUD finds it
necessary given the importance of
assisted families’ housing meeting
quality standards. The 180 days
maximum is consistent with § 982.455.
HUD has updated § 982.404(a)(2) to
read that if the owner fails to maintain
the dwelling unit in accordance with
HQS, the PHA must take enforcement
action in accordance with this section.
Include Renewed Contracts or HAP
Contracts Entered Into After the Rule
Implementation
A commenter stated that HUD should
expand this rule to include renewed
HAP contracts or HAP contracts that are
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entered into after the rule’s
implementation.
HUD Response: This final rule applies
to both new HAP contracts and HAP
contracts renewed after this rule is
implemented.
90-Day Voucher Terms
One commenter supported the 90-day
voucher terms for contracts cancelled
due to abatement.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
supportive comment.
PHA Discretion To Waive and
Reimburse
A commenter also recommended
clarifying in § 982.404(a)(4) that the
PHA has discretion to waive the
requirement making the owner
responsible for correcting deficiencies
where the damage is not from ordinary
use, and that the waiver is not just the
requirement to be responsible for the
deficiency, but the applicability of the
entire subparagraph including
abatement and withholding provisions.
This commenter also urged HUD to
clarify that PHAs have the discretionary
authority to reimburse the property
owner either for a portion or all HAP
amounts withheld, which the
commenter stated is clearly provided
within HOTMA.
HUD Response: HUD has clarified in
this final rule that the PHA must
identify in its Administrative Plan both
the conditions and amounts for
withholding HAP. This also includes
the conditions and amounts of
payments made for the period HAP was
withheld.
Monitoring
One commenter suggested that HUD
monitor how many PHAs reimburse
funds and review their reimbursement
policies.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates this
suggestion and will consider this
outside of this rulemaking.
Tenant-Caused Damage
Commenters addressed whether the
tenant or PHA should be responsible for
repairs to unit damages. One commenter
suggested that HUD provide an
exception for § 982.404(a)(4) to address
damages that have been caused by
domestic abusers and obligate PHAs to
require the owner to make the repairs in
instances of domestic abuse. This
commenter also suggested not using
incidents of abuse as a means to
terminate a survivor’s tenancy and to
allow the PHA and owner to take all
legal action against the abuser for the
damage.
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Another commenter found the
regulations to be confusing and
potentially in conflict with State laws
and local practice because in many
states tenants are prohibited from
carrying out their own repairs. The
commenter suggested that for HUD to
shift responsibility to the tenant to make
the repairs, then HUD should place a
higher burden on the landlord. The
commenter additionally recommended
that, if the landlord charges the tenants
for repairs to tenant-caused damage,
HUD should require a reasonable
repayment plan and that the PHA must
continue to pay the HAP during the
term of the repayment agreement, so
long as the tenant continues to abide by
the terms of the lease. This commenter
suggested the repayment plan allow
landlords to charge an initial fee, which
must not exceed 40 percent of the
tenant’s income, and then impose a
reasonable period for the tenant to pay
the remainder to the landlord, with
longer repayment periods for tenants
facing financial hardship. This
commenter also recommended PHAs
should terminate a HAP contract due to
tenant-caused damages only after
remedies, consistent with State
landlord-tenant laws, have been
exhausted and HUD should encourage
maintaining units as part of the lowincome housing stock.
Another commenter recommended
that HUD revise § 982.404(a)(4) and
(b)(2) as well as the procedure in the
case of tenant-caused damages,
consistent with HOTMA section
101(a)(3). Another commenter suggested
waiving HQS deficiencies caused by
tenants from the landlord’s
responsibility.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments around tenant-caused
damage to the unit. HUD has revised
§ 982.404(b)(2) and § 983.208(c)(2) to
clarify that in cases of tenant-caused
deficiencies, the tenant is not
necessarily required to physically
correct the deficiencies themselves.
Rather, the tenant is responsible for
ensuring that the deficiencies are
corrected by taking all steps permissible
under the lease and State and local law,
which might include paying the owner
for the costs of the necessary repairs.
HUD has not gone further to require a
PHA to establish a specific repayment
plan. HUD has further revised § 982.404
at paragraph (a)(4) and § 983.208 at
paragraph (b)(3) to better align with
HOTMA section 101(a)(3) in terms of
when the PHA may waive the landlord
responsibility for HQS deficiencies that
have been determined to have been
caused by the tenant, any member of the
household, or any guest or other person
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under the tenant’s control, other than
damage resulting from ordinary use.
HUD has chosen not to add specific
language around tenant damages caused
by domestic abusers in this section.
However, all VAWA housing
protections under 24 CFR part 5,
subpart L apply. HUD appreciates the
commentor’s suggestion but has not
added a regulatory requirement for a
repayment plan for owner correction of
tenant-caused deficiencies. HUD is
concerned that imposing additional
restrictions on the owner in terms of
how and when the owner can recover
amounts owed under the lease will
discourage owner participation in the
HCV program. Nothing in the final rule
would prevent the owner from choosing
to offer a repayment plan to the family.
However, the manner in which the
owner may collect amounts owed under
the lease for tenant-caused damages
should continue to rest with the owner,
subject to the terms of the owner’s lease.
Remote Visual Inspections
Another commenter stated that
Remote Visual Inspections (RVI) should
not be used to verify a HQS deficiency
correction where there is a lifethreatening condition on the property.
The commenter suggested HUD should
require PHAs to conduct in-person
inspections prior to a family moving
into a unit that failed HQS for health
and safety reasons. This commenter
expressed that PHAs should be required
to independently check for lead hazards
in any Housing Choice Voucher (HCV)
home and warned that the proxy to test
for lead-based paint after watching a
short video is insufficient. This
commenter recommended a select use of
RVI to reduce administrative burdens
for PHAs and increase the speed at
which voucher tenants can lease-up,
without impacting the family’s health.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates this
comment but is not addressing the use
of RVI in this rule.
8. PHA Initial Unit Inspection
(§ 982.405)
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Question 4. Are HUD’s proposed
deadlines by which the PHA must both
inspect the unit and notify the owner if
the reported deficiency is confirmed
reasonable?
Commenters found HUD’s proposed
deadline reasonable because the
adoption of the Non-Life-Threatening
(NLT) process is optional. A commenter
suggested that HUD include additional
time in case a resident does not want to
move and requests a ‘‘final appeal,’’ or
courtesy inspection to remain in the
unit if the deficiency is now remedied.
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Another commenter stated that HUD’s
proposal to allow flexibility in the rule
for inspections and notification of
deficiencies is adequate, and that the
30-day extension for inspections will
permit adequate time for PHAs and
owners to schedule the inspection and
discuss deficiencies. One commenter
stated that 24 hours for a PHA to notify
the owner of any life-threatening
deficiency is reasonable, but the
commenter also suggested extending the
timeline to inspect a unit and notify the
landlord for emergency items to two
days.
Commenters supported HUD
maintaining the current timelines for
inspections and repairs due to PHAs’
discretion over whether to undertake
the LTC/NLT process. One commenter
offered 15 days to repair, and another
commenter suggested PHAs have
absolute discretion to establish their
own timelines. Another commenter
opposed the 30-day repair requirement
because PHAs would be required to
define what constitutes ‘‘receipt of
written notice’’ in their Administrative
Plan, which can present a challenge for
PHAs that do not use email. A
commenter recommended modifying
§ 983.103(c)(2) to specify that the 30-day
inspection period applies if a PHA
adopts the NLT exception to
inspections.
Another commenter stated that HUD
should extend the timeline for
emergency inspections from 48 to 72
hours. This commenter further
suggested that PHAs should be required
to adopt HUD’s NLT definition only if
they implement the NLT inspection
option. One commenter suggested that
HUD clarify that the 24-hour correction
period for LTCs should only apply
when the family is in the unit, and that
if the HAP is not being paid while the
family is waiting for the landlord to
correct a deficiency, the family is also
not responsible for making the HAP
payment. Another commenter stated
that HUD is unnecessarily requiring
NLT repairs to be made within 30 days
of the owner receiving written notice of
the defects, and that it is unclear
whether requiring PHAs to proactively
waive an owner’s responsibility to
correct defects will be conducted on a
policy level or whether it will be
conducted on a case-by-case basis,
ultimately requiring notification.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
multiple comments about the
timeframes for unit inspections and
believes the timeframes in the proposed
rule were reasonable. HUD notes that
the requirements under NLT are distinct
from other inspection types and HUD
believes that it is reasonable for NLT
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repairs be made within 30 days, given
that application of the NLT provision is
voluntary, and, under the NLT
provision, the unit has never been in
compliance with HQS.
HUD has clarified that, in the case of
tenant-caused deficiencies, the owner is
responsible until such time as it has
been determined that the tenant is
responsible in a particular case.
9. Housing Assistance Payments
Contract (§§ 982.451, 983.204)
PHA-Owned Unit Certification Option
Commenters supported the proposal
to not require the creation of a separate
legal entity, which commenters stated
would add costs and complexity and
negatively impact PHAs participating in
RAD and section 18 conversions. One
commenter stated that HUD should not
allow a PHA to permit certifications
instead of HAP contracts, explaining
that such permission would create
ambiguity in other regulations that
reference HAP contracts but not
certifications, hurting those that rely on
those regulations to enforce and protect
the rights of tenants.
Another commenter suggested adding
a statement that phasing groups of
contract units into the HAP contract is
acceptable in § 983.204(a). This
commenter recommended adding, ‘‘or
phases thereof’’ after ‘‘HAP contract,’’
for § 983.204(c).
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
support to not require the creation of a
separate legal entity. Concerning PHAowned certifications, in order to
eliminate ambiguity of cross-references
in other regulations, HUD has revised
the language of §§ 982.451(c)(2),
983.204(e)(2) to clarify that the PHAowned certification serves as the
equivalent of the HAP contract as it
relates to the obligations of the PHA as
owner and that, where the PHA has
elected to use the PHA-owned
certification, all references to the HAP
contract throughout parts 982 and 983
shall be interpreted to be references to
the PHA-owned certification.
Further, HUD determined the
explanation of how to implement staged
completion of contract units would be
more appropriate in § 983.156.
Therefore, HUD has added a paragraph
addressing the commenter’s concern to
§ 983.156 and has cross-referenced
§ 983.156 in § 983.204(c).
PBV HAP Contract Effective Date
Another commenter stated that HUD
should not establish a required
maximum 60-day timeframe between
the lease effective date and the HAP
contract execution date, since complex
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development and financing timetables
may make the timeframe too short.
Instead, the commenter recommended a
120-day period before a HAP contract is
required to be prospective for PBV
projects.
HUD Response: The commenter
seems to conflate the rules between the
tenant-based and project-based voucher
programs, as evidenced by submitting
the above comment under the heading
of § 982.305. The long-standing
requirement in the PBV program is that
the effective date of a PBV HAP contract
must be on or after the execution date
of the PBV HAP contract, and the HAP
contract must be effective before the
effective date of the first lease covering
a contract unit occupied by an assisted
family. HUD has clarified this
requirement at § 983.204(d).
10.A. Payment Standard Schedules and
Basic Range Amounts (§ 982.503(b) and
(c))
One commenter suggested that HUD
revise § 982.503(c)(3) to refer to 90 days
instead of three months for consistency.
HUD Response: This is current
regulatory language, and no change was
proposed in the rule. HUD, therefore,
makes no changes in this final rule.
10.B. Exception Payment Standards
(§ 982.503(d))
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Greater Flexibility To Reduce
Administrative Burden (Question 7)
Several commenters stated that HUD
should provide greater flexibility to
PHAs to establish exception payment
standards without HUD approval to
reduce PHAs’ administrative burden
and allow more rapid responses to
changing rental markets. Another
commenter stated that HUD should
grant PHAs this flexibility if the PHA
has the budget authority to support the
increased payment standard as
demonstrated by HUD’s Two-Year Tool,
which calculates the PHA leasing
potential considering current Voucher
Management System (VMS) data, HUDheld reserves (HHR), and Budget
Authority (BA). This commenter
remarked that HUD’s Payment Standard
Tool can also be used to establish
exception payment standards.
One commenter expressed that HUD
should allow exception payment
standards for individual projects rather
than require PHAs to apply exception
payment standards to every project in
the same ZIP code.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments about the need for greater
flexibility in establishing exception
payment standards. In response to these
comments, HUD will allow PHAs to go
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up to 120 percent of the published fair
market rent upon notification to HUD so
long as the PHA meets the required
thresholds as set forth in 24 CFR
982.503(d)(3). HUD disagrees with the
comment that PHAs should be allowed
to establish different payment standards
for individual projects rather than the
same payment standard for the
applicable geographic area. 42 U.S.C.
1437(f)(o)(13)(H) requires that rents
established under PBV HAP contracts
must not exceed 110 percent of the
applicable FMR, or any exception
payment standard approved by the
Secretary for the HCV program.
Accordingly, there is no statutory
authority to establish exception
payment standards for individual PBV
projects. HUD will continue to require
PHAs to adopt one payment standard
for an applicable geographic area.
Allow Higher Payment Standards
Commenters generally urged HUD to
allow for higher payment standards.
Commenters stated that higher
standards would allow PHAs to expand
geographic choices, allow families to
stay in gentrifying neighborhoods, and
make the SAFMR exception payment
tool more cost-effective to expand
housing opportunities in low-poverty
areas. A commenter reasoned that in
cases where the PHA chooses not to
seek HUD approval, families would
benefit from a higher SAFMR, which
would ensure the prudence of policy
because rents would remain subject to
reasonableness.
Another commenter suggested that
increased payment standards up to 120
percent of the SAFMR should apply for
ZIP codes with SAFMRs that exceed the
regional FMR. One commenter stated
that PHAs should have discretion to set
exception payment standards up to 150
percent of SAFMR. Commenters also
supported HUD’s proposed policy at
§ 982.503(d)(4) and (e)(1) allowing PHAs
to choose to set payment standards up
to 110 percent of the SAFMR without
HUD approval, and asked HUD to
clarify this allowance by explicitly
stating it in § 982.503(d)(2). The
commenters stated many PHAs are
unaware of the flexibility the policy
described in § 982.503(d)(2) provides
them.
Commenters stated that HUD’s
proposal in § 982.503(d)(2) to require
the lowest SAFMR in an area with more
than one FMR constrains PHA authority
and HUD should instead allow PHAs to
utilize the highest FMR. As an
alternative, a commenter recommended
that HUD implement a threshold that is
not dependent on the FMR and instead
use a threshold that is reflective of the
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risk of excessively high payment
standards. Another commenter stated
that HUD should rely on its own ZIP
code grouping guidance, which allows
PHAs to set payment standards for a
group of ZIP codes as long as the
payment standard is 90 to 110 percent
of the SAFMR of each ZIP code in the
group. This commenter also stated that
SAFMRs are burdensome and
undesirable for PHAs to determine
payment standards, and as an
alternative, PHAs should be allowed to
provide data to HUD and have the local
field office approve the payment
standards based on actual current
market data. The commenter noted that
there is no reason to change the ability
of owners to request increases below
110 percent of the FMR or the
reasonable rent.
A commenter supported payment
standard increases as providing stability
to families and landlords but urged
HUD to ensure that rent increases occur
at a reasonable rate and not forced with
an abrupt increase.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the
numerous public comments in support
of allowing higher payment standards.
This final rule allows PHAs to set
payment standards up to 120 percent of
the FMR upon notification to HUD that
the PHA meets certain criteria. Since the
publishing of the proposed rule, HUD
has also seen the success of PIH Notice
2022–09, and successor notices, which
provided a streamlined regulatory
waiver process for PHAs to establish
payment standards from 111 to 120
percent of the FMR. Given this, HUD
decided that added flexibility to set
payment standards up to 120 percent of
FMR is sufficient and notes that there
are other avenues for PHAs to request to
establish payment standards at higher
levels.
HUD notes that § 982.503(d)(2) does
explicitly allow PHAs that are not in
designated SAFMR areas or have not
opted voluntarily to adopt SAFMRs to
establish exception payment standards
up to 110 percent of SAFMR without
HUD approval. Additionally, HUD will
allow PHAs to opt-in to the SAFMR by
notification to HUD, rather than
requiring HUD approval by modifying
§ 888.113(c)(3).
HUD does not agree that requiring the
lowest SAFMR in an exception area that
crosses one or more FMR boundaries
constrains PHA authority. Each ZIP
code, regardless of whether it crosses
one or more FMR boundaries has one
established SAFMR amount. Therefore,
a PHA adopting ZIP code-based
SAFMRs will only have one SAFMR to
choose from, which is how many PHAs
establish exception payment standards
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using the SAFMR under this provision.
However, in some cases, PHAs group
ZIP code-based SAFMRs into one FMR
area to reduce administrative burden. In
the case of grouping, the basic range of
all of the selected ZIP codes is still
applicable. Therefore, in lieu of
establishing a unique payment standard
for each ZIP code area, a PHA may use
this flexibility to establish payment
standards for ‘‘grouped’’ ZIP code areas,
provided the payment standard in effect
for each grouped ZIP code area is within
the basic range of the SAFMR for each
ZIP code area in the group. As a result,
HUD finds that the policy is reasonable
and will continue with this final rule as
proposed. HUD also notes that
§ 982.503(d)(4) allows PHAs the
opportunity to provide rental market
data to HUD to support their request for
exception payment standards.
Consolidation of Exception Payment
Standard Requirements
A commenter supported consolidating
exceptions to payment standards in a
single location.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates this
comment and in this final rule HUD
consolidates exception payment
standard regulations in § 982.503(d).
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Rental Market Data
Several commenters opposed HUD
requiring PHAs to submit rent
comparability studies or require
certification of the rental market data in
exchange for higher payment standards.
A commenter stated that HUD does not
indicate that PHAs are providing
insufficient rental data in requests for an
exception payment standard.
Commenters also noted that HUD
requiring data for exception payment
standards to be prepared through a
market study or by a certified appraiser
is administratively and financially
burdensome for PHAs. One commenter
proposed that HUD establish a
procedure to extend payment standards
in rapidly changing, low-vacancy, and
high-cost rental markets, seeing as there
are existing mechanisms to request
exception payment standards within the
HCV program. Other commenters
proposed that HUD accept data from
various sources including local market
studies from the PHA or other local
entities that use data from a reputable or
verifiable source, online surveys of the
local renter community, PHAs that use
a third-party vendor to conduct rent
reasonableness for rental market data,
rental market studies prepared by
institutions of higher education,
industry data, or the rent reasonableness
evaluations.
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A commenter proposed that HUD
expand access to data on low-vacancy
areas by unit size and exclude public
housing developments from calculating
FMR/SAFMR because a concentration of
low rent units in large public housing
developments are in exception payment
standard areas. The commenter further
stated that when there are differentials
with the ACS data, HUD should allow
PHAs to provide local data if the data
is available.
Another commenter encouraged HUD
to establish clear rental data standards
for the exception payment standards
that require HUD’s approval to decrease
the administrative burden so that PHAs
can obtain justified exceptions, while
simultaneously providing reasonable
assurance that the higher standard is
needed to cover market rents in the area.
Another commenter stated that the
exception payment standard assessment
HUD requires for a PHA should be
easily accessible to under-resourced
PHAs and that HUD should provide
funding grants to PHAs that will
conduct a study for purposes of
applying for an EPS. The commenter
also stated that HUD should require
PHAs to make their assessments of
rental market data and rent
comparability data publicly available,
because this would improve advocates’
and residents’ understanding of the
PHA’s assessment of the rental market,
as well as create transparency and an
opportunity to challenge FMR policies
that do not further fair housing goals.
One commenter recommended that
HUD set the data requirements by notice
for easier adjustment based on lessons
learned and when new types of data
become available.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments and intends to issue a PIH
notice with further clarification
regarding data that must be submitted in
support of an exception payment
standard request. However, under this
final rule at § 982.503, PHAs no longer
must submit supporting data for
exception payment standard requests
between 110 and 120 percent of the
FMR if they notify HUD that they meet
certain criteria. Additionally, data
submitted for exception payment
standards greater than 120 percent
usually relies on American Community
Survey and Census data, and therefore
is available to the public already.
Responses to Question 8 (Maximum
Cap)
Several commenters objected to
HUD’s maximum cap on exception
payment standard amounts due to
differences in high-cost markets and
requested PHA flexibility. A commenter
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stated that limits on exception payment
standards should be data driven.
Another commenter recommended that
HUD ensure that PHAs are setting
payment standards to affirmatively
further fair housing and reduce voucher
concentration in high poverty
communities, considering that some
studies have shown that most SAFMR
PHAs set higher payment standards in
low-opportunity communities and
lower payment standards in higheropportunity communities. The
commenter further suggested that HUD
require PHAs to submit rent
comparability studies and payment
standard schedules to HUD, so that
HUD can easily review them and
compile them in a national database.
According to the commenter, the
database would easily allow voucher
holders to explore their options
regarding portability moves and would
help HUD and advocates ensure that
payment standards comply with the
applicable requirements.
A commenter stated an additional
level of scrutiny is reasonable for PBVs,
because requiring approval for an
exception payment standard above 120
percent of FMR for project-basing
vouchers could prevent abuse and make
development deals financially
acceptable and profitable for developers.
A commenter stated that HUD should
allow exception payment standards,
even if they are high, if there is data
showing that the higher standard is
needed to cover typical market rents in
an exception area. The commenter
expressed that instituting a cap
preventing PHAs from establishing
exception payment standards would
risk excluding voucher holders from
areas of the metropolitan area, therefore
reinforcing economic and racial
segregation. In the alternative, the
commenter suggested that if HUD
establishes a cap, it should be set high
enough to ensure that voucher holders
have access to a substantial variety of
low-poverty and high-opportunity areas,
including areas where their own racial
or ethnic group does not predominate.
This commenter also recommended that
HUD adjust the proposed rule to
accommodate the use of SAFMRs for
non-metropolitan ZIP codes and publish
SAFMRs for those ZIP codes whenever
sufficient data is available. The
commenter stated that HUD should
apply the same standard to SAFMRs in
non-metro areas as it does in metro
areas as well as establish SAFMRs in
ZIP codes where there are sufficient
data and defaulting to a county-based
FMR in ZIP codes where there are not.
The commenter added that HUD should
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explicitly state in § 982.503(d)(4) that
PHAs may not require families to pay
more than 30 percent of their income for
rent as a condition for receiving an
exception payment standard for a
reasonable accommodation. The
commenter further noted that the need
for exception payment standards could
be reduced by ensuring that FMRs
reflect actual market rents, particularly
in areas where rents are rapidly rising.
A commenter encouraged HUD to
implement methods for PHAs to
increase payment standards where
appropriate, such as requiring payment
standards in areas with significant
disparity between voucher
concentration in impoverished
neighborhoods and affordable unit
distribution or financial incentives. The
commenter found upper limits on
exception payment standards as
unnecessary and stated that PHAs
should have maximum flexibility to
seek higher standards, as there are
already natural ‘‘limits’’ on requesting
excessive rents. In conclusion, the
commenter objected to using the success
rate payment standards for metro areas
with very low vacancy rates, while
requiring other metro areas to use the
SAFMR flexibilities.
HUD Response: After considering
these comments on HUD’s questions
about instituting a maximum cap on
exception payment standard amounts,
HUD will not institute a maximum cap.
HUD recognizes the need to set payment
standards that are responsive to the rent
conditions in multiple areas. This final
rule also allows voluntary use of
SAFMRs in non-metropolitan ZIP codes
for which HUD publishes SAFMRs, in
order to provide PHA serving those area
greater flexibility to set payment
standards that reflect local market
conditions. While HUD appreciates the
comments on additional flexibilities,
HUD is not making broader changes to
exception payment standards in this
final rule, other than those discussed
above.
Reasonable Accommodation
(§ 982.503(d)(4))
A commenter recommended that HUD
clarify that ‘‘FMR boundaries’’ refers to
the ZIP code boundary and not the
metropolitan boundary. This commenter
further emphasized that HUD must
revise the payment standard regulations
as well as revise or rescind inconsistent
PIH notices, to clearly state that tenants
who request a reasonable
accommodation for an increase in the
payment standard are not required to
pay 40 percent of their income in rent
to see the benefits of the
accommodation. The commenter
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mentioned that the fair housing laws
allow individuals with disabilities to
request higher payment standards as a
reasonable accommodation if there is a
disability-related need for a particular
unit (for example, it has accessibility
features or is located in proximity to
services/supports which will be lost if
the client has to relocate); however, the
commenter noted that HUD should add
to § 982.503(d)(4) because HUD has not
fully implemented the third sentence of
the HOTMA-revised section 8(o)(1)(D),
which prohibits HUD from establishing
additional requirements regarding the
amount of adjusted income paid by a
family receiving a reasonable
accommodation.
HUD Response: Tenants who request
exception payment standards as
reasonable accommodations are not
required to pay 40 percent of their
income in order to benefit from the
accommodation, so no change to this
rule is needed in order to achieve that
result. HUD will issue guidance
clarifying this point.
10.C. Payment Standard Below the
Basic Range (§ 982.503(e))
A commenter suggested proactive
requirements, such as HUD establishing
limits for when PHAs can set payment
standards below the basic range (below
90 percent of the applicable FMR)
because PHAs have financial incentives
to set lower payment standards,
regardless of adverse effects on families.
The commenter also recommended that
HUD require PHAs seeking approval for
payment standards below the basic
range to provide rent data showing that
the requested standard would be
adequate to cover rents and utilities for
at least 40 percent of units in each ZIP
code and show that no more than 40
percent of current voucher holders
would be required to pay more than 30
percent of their income for rent. The
commenter stated that HUD should
eliminate the success rate payment
standard option because the SAFMRbased payment standard flexibility
could effectively accomplish more.
A commenter opposed HUD’s changes
to how it will assess requests for
payment standards below the basic
range. The commenter expressed that
the proposed language threatens the
affordability characteristic of the
voucher program because the proposed
language sets low assessment standards,
does not require PHAs to meet rent
burden or market rents criteria, and
removes the current prohibition on
payment standards below the basic
range at agencies where more than 40
percent of voucher families pay gross
rents above 30 percent of their adjusted
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income. The commenter encouraged
HUD to require PHAs seeking approval
for a payment standard below the basic
range to implement a policy that holds
families harmless where the reduction
in payment standard causes an increase
in the family’s rent. The commenter
stated that requiring PHAs to hold
families harmless would allow PHAs to
incentivize new or moving voucher
families to consider lower poverty
communities, while not penalizing
families who decide to remain in their
current home.
Another commenter objected to
HUD’s proposal to provide PHAs with
discretion to determine lower payment
standards without HUD approval
because PHAs cut corners or costs
which end up falling on the participant.
The commenter remarked that lower
payment standards tend to cause tenants
to pay higher rents they cannot afford,
and to prevent this HUD should ensure
tenants will be held harmless should the
family remain in the unit for a
reasonable period until the family can
relocate to a new affordable unit.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments and will continue to require
the PHA to request approval to establish
a payment standard lower than the basic
range. This final rule states that unless
necessary to prevent terminations, HUD
will not approve payment standards
below the basic range if the payment
standard would cause the family share
to exceed 30 percent of adjusted income
for more that 40 percent of families with
tenant-based vouchers.
Responses to Question 9 (§ 982.503(h))
a. Is 40 percent a reasonable ‘‘significant
percentage of families,’’ or should the
trigger be raised to a higher percentage
of families (for example, the HUD
review would be triggered if 50 percent
of families pay more than 30 percent of
AMI as the family share)?
Commenters stated that 40 percent is
a reasonable ‘‘significant percentage of
families.’’ Some commenters stated that
a higher percentage would create a
burden on families before an assessment
is completed. One commenter stated
that HUD should not increase the
threshold for the share of families
paying more than 30 percent of their
income, as there are already more than
40 percent of voucher families paying
more than 30 percent, and that HUD
should lower the threshold below 40
percent. Another commenter stated that
available data shows that HUD’s
monitoring has not lowered the costburden on households below 40
percent, which the commenter stated is
a high definition of ‘‘significant.’’ This
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commenter proposed that HUD require
PHAs to raise their payment standard
and reduce minimum rents when more
than 40 percent of families pay more
than 30 percent of their adjusted income
or when success rates fall below a
certain percentage, so that they must set
payment standards that avoid rent
burdens and allow voucher families to
lease-up.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments and maintains the current
regulation measurement of 40 percent
being a ‘‘significant percentage of
families’’ as reasonable.
Make Data Public
Commenters recommended that HUD
make the data and evaluations used to
determine rent burdened percentages
public with the opportunity for public
comment, which would allow voucher
holders and other public members to
know how the PHA is doing.
HUD Response: Data on rent burden
is already public in HUD’s two-year tool
and the payment standard tool, which
can be accessed at HUD’s HCV
Utilization page at https://
www.hud.gov/program_offices/public_
indian_housing/programs/hcv/Tools.
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Include Rent Burdens in SEMAP
Commenters suggested that HUD
incorporate rent burdens into SEMAP. A
commenter recommended doing this by
adding an indicator measuring
compliance with the 40 percent
standard. Another commenter
recommended adding two new
indicators measuring the portion of
assisted families that are rent burdened
and the percentage of voucher families
who are not able to lease up within
search periods.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments, but changes to SEMAP are
beyond of the scope of this rulemaking.
b. If HUD were to replace 40 percent
with a higher percentage of families, as
described above, should HUD also
establish an additional threshold that
would trigger a review even though the
number of families paying more than 30
percent of AMI had not reached the
significant percentage?
Commenters objected to HUD’s
proposal to establish an additional
threshold that would trigger a review,
even though the number of families
paying more than 30 percent of AMI had
not reached the significant percentage.
One commenter stated that HUD’s
proposed standards are arbitrary
because PHAs sufficiently conduct
internal tracking to monitor rent burden
and suggested that if HUD implements
a rent burden standard, then PHAs
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should be exempt if they show that they
are trying to address the rent burden
issue by using SAFMRs or high
opportunity payment standards or if
they have an adequate success rate for
voucher holders. Another commenter
noted that it is unnecessary for HUD to
add additional metrics for determining
whether HUD should review a PHA’s
payment standards. One commenter
suggested that the trigger for HUD’s
review should be when 50 percent of
the families pay more than 30 percent
AMI as the family share of the rent. The
commenter explained that families may
stay in a unit and pay more than 30
percent of income in tight rental
markets where locating a new unit may
be financially and administratively
burdensome. This commenter suggested
consistently defining ‘‘significant
percentage’’ in all section 8 programs,
defining ‘‘significant percentage’’ in
regulation to prohibit PHAs from
altering the definition, and providing
additional information on what a PHA
must do if the threshold is met.
HUD Response: As explained above,
HUD appreciates the comments and
maintains the current regulation
measurement of 40 percent being a
‘‘significant percentage of families’’ as
reasonable. HUD received multiple
comments in opposition to changing the
threshold of families paying more than
30 percent of their income as a trigger
for review of a PHA’s payment standard
schedule. Therefore, HUD will continue
its current practice of reviewing a PHA’s
payment standard schedule when HUD
finds that 40 percent or more of families
occupying units of a particular size pay
more than 30 percent of their adjusted
monthly income as the family share.
Responses to Question 10 Regarding
Success Rate Payment Standards
(§ 982.503(f))
Many commenters supported
retaining success rate payment
standards. One commenter objected to
HUD tying additional payment standard
functions to SAFMRs due to the lack of
adoption of SAFMRs. Another
commenter explained that the utility of
the success rate payment standard is
essentially eliminated if PHAs are given
the option of setting exception payment
standards at up to 120 percent of FMR
without HUD approval, and stated that
moving to and from the 40th to 50th
percentile of rent has an almost
identical impact on the resulting
payment standard. This commenter
supported retaining the success rate
payment standard if HUD approval will
still be required for exception payment
standards above 110 percent of FMR.
One commenter opposed retaining
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success rate payment standards. The
commenter stated that the standards, set
at the 50th percentile of the metro FMR,
were ineffective at the stated goal of
increasing housing opportunity for
voucher families. Additionally, the
commenter noted that the SAFMR final
rule eliminated the regulations that
governed the establishment of FMRs
using 50th percentile rents, and HUD is
currently phasing out its use of success
rate payment standards. Another
commenter stated that HUD should
eliminate the success rate payment
standard option because the SAFMRbased payment standard flexibility
could effectively accomplish more.
HUD Response: Because this final rule
increases flexibility for PHAs to set
exception payment standards up to 120
percent of the FMR, HUD has
determined that it is unnecessary to also
retain success rate payment standards.
This final rule eliminates the ability for
PHAs to receive new success rate
payment standards but allows them to
continue to use previously approved
success rate payment standard amounts.
11. How To Calculate Housing
Assistance Payment (§ 982.505)
A commenter stated that HUD must
ensure that participants are provided
due process and a reasonable
opportunity to decide whether the
family can afford to remain in the
subsidized unit if HUD increases
payment standards after the initial HAP
contract. The commenter offered the
following suggestions if HUD increases
payment standards: (1) allow the tenant
60 days after the increase request to
decide or request moving papers; (2)
phase in the rent increase over time or
require that the PHA make up the
difference to the higher standard; or (3)
mirror the timeframe in § 505(c)(3) for
increases and decreases. The commenter
stated the proposed rule fails to
adequately address arising problems
when PHAs create payment standards
that trap residents in low-opportunity,
high poverty, and high crime areas,
when families may need higher
exception rents to access better schools,
employment, or other resources for selfsufficiency. As a remedy, the
commenter recommended that HUD
map where families can live within the
PHA’s payment standards. One
commenter recommended that HUD
remove § 982.505(c)(4)(iii) to streamline
the rent change process and prevent
confusion among families that expect
changes during the recertification
process and not outside of the
recertification process.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments received on when to apply
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increases in the payment standards to
the family. This final rule, at § 982.505,
requires PHAs to apply increases in
payment standards no later than the
earliest of (1) the effective date of an
increase in the gross rent will result in
an increase in the family’s share, (2) the
family’s first regular or interim
reexamination, or (3) one year following
the effective date of the increase in the
payment standard amount. This
approach provides participating families
the benefit of these increases more
consistently and helps ensure that their
portion of the rent remains affordable.
This final rule also allows PHAs to
adopt a policy, at their option, to apply
an increase in the payment standard
before these events occur. HUD will not
remove paragraph (c)(4)(iii) because this
provision eliminates the potential lag
time between an increase in the rent to
owner brought about by an increase in
the payment standard and the increase
in the assistance payment made on
behalf of the family as a result of the
increase in the payment standard.
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Timeline
One commenter supported HUD’s
revisions on when to apply a reduction
in the payment standard because the
changes will promote fairness and
consistency in the voucher program.
Another commenter opposed the twoyear adjustment timeline as an
administrative burden for PHAs and
believed it would provide no tangible
benefit for families over a shorter
timeline. This commenter stated that the
current timeline of the second
recertification already ensures adequate
preparation for families and is when all
contact with the family is planned from
the PHA’s perspective.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
range of comments. HUD in this final
rule will continue with requiring PHAs
to give families two full years from the
date of the application of the payment
standard decrease to ensure all families
have the same period of time to adjust
to the decrease in the payment standard.
Payment Standard Timeline
A commenter supported requiring
application of payment standard
increases on the effective date of a gross
rent increase instead of waiting until the
next annual recertification or one year
after the increase. The commenter
recommended that HUD add a
requirement to § 982.505(c)(4) that
PHAs immediately address payment
standard increases during the HAP
contract term and before the effective
date of the new payment standard, to
protect tenants in rapidly rising rent
markets.
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HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments and this final rule creates
additional required times for when a
payment standard must be increased in
§ 982.505(c)(4). HUD finds that these
additional requirements sufficiently
balance ensuring participants receive
the benefit of payment standards and
PHA administrative burden in applying
increases in the payment standards.
Payment Standard Update Burden
A commenter opposed HUD’s
proposal at paragraph (c)(4) of § 982.505
(How to calculate HAP), adding two
new points at which the family’s
payment standard may be increased, as
unnecessarily burdensome and
expressed concern regarding whether
the number of transactions that would
trigger the payment standard calculation
to determine if an ‘‘increase in the
family share’’ occurred will greatly
outnumber the times the higher
payment standard would be applied
under the rule and expressed an
appreciation for data supporting the
proposed rule.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates
these concerns. When paragraphs (c)(4)
and new paragraph (c)(5) are read in
conjunction, HUD believes the burden
on PHAs of this change is relatively
small and outweighed by the benefit to
the family.
Specifically, the requirement that this
commenter is concerned about, is as
follows: when there is an increase in the
payment standard, and when there is an
increase in the gross rent, and the
increase in gross rent would increase
the family share, then the PHA must
apply the increased payment standard,
to reduce the burden on the family.
This requirement is limited to
situations where the gross rent increase
would increase the family share is
intended to decrease the burden on the
PHA, not increase it. If a PHA would
prefer not to make this calculation, the
PHA may apply the new payment
standard every time there is a gross rent
increase, or indeed as soon as they want
to, regardless of whether the gross rent
increase changes the family share
calculation, per paragraph (c)(5).
12.A. Utility Allowance (UA) Schedule
(§ 982.517)
Commenters suggested HUD allow
PHAs to provide a UA for wireless
internet to expand opportunity. A
commenter noted that there is no
statutory or regulatory prohibition on it
and PHAs can use their own budgetary
judgement to decide if they can afford
to provide a UA for internet. Another
commenter proposed that HUD consider
broad ways to support assisted
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38255
households during and after the
pandemic. One commenter suggested
that HCV UAs should include fees
charged, as well as reflect the actual
rates charged by the major utilities
serving the units and the rate plans used
by most tenants. This commenter also
recommended that HUD not consider
low-income discounts, unless there is
universal access and verified tenant
participation. To ensure transparency,
the commenter also stated that
supporting documentation for the
calculation for the PHA’s UA schedules
for both HCV and PBV programs should
be available to tenants’ rights advocates,
without resorting to cumbersome and
vague FOIA and State public records
acts. The commenter recommended that
HUD’s review should be retained and
strengthened, to ensure compliance
with the regulatory standards and
consistency among UAs in similar
climatic regions and markets, rather
than ending the requirement for PHA
submission of the schedule. Another
commenter suggested that HUD
continue to require PHAs to submit
their UA schedules to HUD, which
would provide a system of checks and
balances and much needed oversight.
HUD Response: HUD is currently
reviewing ways to support internet
access for the families it serves in all
assisted housing programs and how to
best complement subsidies provided
through the Affordable Connectivity
Program (ACP) and Lifeline
administered by the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC).
HUD is working to raise awareness
among PHAs so they can help families
enroll in the ACP and Lifeline programs.
In addition to supporting the FCC
programs, HUD is reviewing its assisted
housing program policies across the
department to align policies and
support broadband. At this time, HUD is
not providing in this final rule that
PHAs may use UA schedules for
internet; however, HUD has removed
the language that explicitly prohibits
wireless internet. In place of language
prohibiting wireless internet, HUD
added language providing that HUD
may add utilities required to pass HQS
by Federal Register notice allowing for
public comment.
The language in § 982.517(b)(1) states
that ‘‘the utility allowance schedule
must be determined based on the typical
cost of utilities and services paid by
energy-conservative households that
occupy housing of similar size and type
in the same locality.’’ The typical cost
of utilities and services includes
surcharges charged by the utility
company. Many PHAs separate the
surcharge out on the UA schedule. For
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example, a family may have natural gas
for their heating, cooking, and water
heating and the natural gas company
charges a monthly surcharge for this
utility. A rate-based utility allowance is
provided on the schedule for each of
these utilities and the PHA also
provides the family with an allowance
for the surcharge if they have one or
more natural gas-powered utilities in
their home. While this is not a change
in policy and HUD believes this is
already the common practice at PHAs,
HUD recognizes that it would be helpful
for the regulation to be clearer. HUD is
adding ‘‘applicable surcharges’’ to the
list of utilities and services on the utility
allowance schedule in
§ 982.517(b)(2)(ii).
PHAs develop their area-wide utility
allowance schedules, both the regular
schedule described in
§ 982.517(b)(v)(2)(i) and the new option
for an energy-efficient schedule
provided in § 982.517(b)(v)(2)(ii), based
on the cost of utilities and services paid
by energy-conservative households that
occupy housing of similar size and type
in the same locality. Household income
or discounts provided to certain
households are not a factor in the
development of the utility allowance
schedule.
HUD understands the concerns
expressed by commenters encouraging
HUD to continue collecting utility
allowance schedules from PHAs. While
the proposed language would have
allowed submission to HUD only upon
request for utility allowance schedules
from PHAs, HUD agrees with
commenters that proactive submission
of utility allowance schedules will help
with oversight. HUD has reverted
§ 982.517(a)(2) in this final rule to the
existing codified language which
requires submission of these schedules
to HUD.
12.B. Area-Wide Energy-Efficient Utility
Allowance Schedule (§ 982.517(b)(2)(ii))
Commenters stated that HUD should
authorize PHAs to use energy-efficient
utility allowance (EEUA) schedules.
Another commenter stated that PHAs
should have the option to implement
alternative utility allowance schedules
though they may be burdensome to
implement. One commenter suggested
that HUD should not require entire
buildings to achieve energy saving
design certifications for an individual
unit to qualify for an EEUA. Further, the
commenter stated that due to the time
and cost, many property owners may
elect to only install energy-efficient
appliances and other design standard
upgrades, and if so, property owners
should not be penalized for their
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inability to achieve energy savings
design certifications for entire buildings
especially where the property owners
can demonstrate that the EEUA
schedule would best encourage
conservation and the efficient use of
HAP funds based on historic utility
consumption data.
Other commenters stated that EEUA
schedules should be voluntary because
they require annual updates and are
costly, and, as a result, they are better
suited to PBV where the owner can be
required to commission an annual
update to keep using the schedule, or
PHAs could make their decision based
on their market areas and funding.
Another commenter stated that utility
allowance options would present a high
possibility for error and could open
PHAs up to charges of discrimination
because it would be hard to identify
units where alternate utility allowances
could be used. A commenter suggested
that HUD use the HUD Utility Schedule
Model (HUSM) for all project types to
minimize project-specific utility’s
administrative burden as well as permit
PHAs the ability to decide their HUSM
approach to determine UAs and be
required to publish this in their
Administrative Plan.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
many comments supporting the option
for PHAs to establish an EEUA. HUD
believes that permitting EEUA for units
that are located in buildings that do not
have a full-scale energy savings design
is premature. While HUD agrees that
allowing PHAs to use an EEUA on
substantially retrofitted units in an older
building could encourage owners to
make units more energy efficient, more
guidance is needed to ensure the EEUA
is not applied too liberally leaving many
tenants with UAs that are too low. This
final rule allows PHAs to implement an
EEUA for units in Energy Star or LEED
certified buildings; however, HUD will
release more guidance before allowing
additional units to use the EEUA
schedule. PHAs must be careful to
ensure that their EEUAs will work for
most energy efficient properties. It
would not be appropriate to use LEED
estimates for UA costs if Energy Star
certified units make up the majority of
energy efficient units in the area. In that
case, a PHA may decide to only apply
the EEUA to LEED certified units or
base the EEUA on Energy Star estimates.
The establishment of an EEUA schedule
is voluntary. PHAs in areas that have a
large percentage of units that are energy
efficient may wish to have a separate
schedule to ensure the utility
allowances for these units are not
unnecessarily high. This may also
reduce requests for project-specific
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allowances in the PBV program that are
often needed due to energy efficient
requirements, since the area-wide EEUA
schedule will also apply to PBV projects
that meet energy efficient requirements.
12.C. Utility Allowance Based on Flat
Fees (§ 982.517(b)(2)(iii))
Several commenters offered
suggestions for HUD’s proposal to
provide PHAs the discretion to
substitute flat fees charged for certain
utilities. One commenter recommended
that HUD modify § 982.517(b)(2)(iii)’s
current language of ‘‘only if the flat fee
charged by the owner is less than,’’ to
‘‘only if the flat fee charged by the
owner [is] no greater than,’’ to account
for the possibility that the flat fee is
equal. One commenter objected to
HUD’s flat fee proposal by stating that
flat fee UAs do not ensure that a tenant
is exceeding their maximum share of the
rent, stating that UA should be based on
actual use.
HUD Response: HUD will adopt in
§ 982.517(b)(2)(iii) the suggested
language changing ‘‘less than’’ to ‘‘no
greater than’’ to make flat fees easier for
PHAs to administer. HUD would like to
clarify that flat fees are meant to be used
only when the landlord charges a set fee
for certain utilities and the fee does not
change based on consumption or other
criteria. If the landlord charges a
variable fee for a utility, then the PHA
would not have the option of using the
flat fee to calculate the utility
allowance. Instead, the PHA would use
the appropriate area-wide utility
allowance based on the size and type of
unit. Applied correctly, tenants will not
pay more than the flat fee used to
calculate the utility allowance.
13. Manufactured Home Space Rental
(§§ 982.620–982.623)
Commenters recommended that HUD
amend § 982.620 to require that PHAs
must provide the option for tenants to
use voucher funds for the costs of
purchasing a manufactured home
because without the requirement, the
HOTMA amendments will be
undermined. A commenter also noted
that section 112 of HOTMA eliminated
the option for a PHA to offer only
assistance under a voucher for the cost
of leasing land on which a
manufactured home is sited (but not for
the annual cost of purchasing a home)
and therefore recommended HUD
amend § 982.620(b)(2) to delete the
phrase ‘‘to a manufactured homeowner
to lease a manufactured home space’’
and add in its place, the words ‘‘under
paragraph (a)(3) of this section.’’
A commenter suggested the following
modification for § 982.620(a)(3): ‘‘The
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PHA may provide assistance for a family
that owns a manufactured home
(including a family that has recurring
expenses to amortize the cost of
purchasing a manufactured home) and
leases only the space. The PHA shall
make this option available upon a bona
fide request from any party in the PHA’s
jurisdiction.’’ The commenter also
recommended deleting the clause, ‘‘to a
manufactured homeowner to lease a
manufactured home space’’ from
§ 982.620(b)(2), since that type of
assistance is no longer authorized. The
commenter requested clarification
behind why HUD proposed to require
PHAs to make separate payments to the
landowner and to the family for debt
costs, rather than only making a single
payment to the family. The commenter
opposed HUD’s requirement that space
owners sign a HAP contract with the
PHA, if the owner waives receiving a
direct PHA payment. The commenter
also proposed that HUD delete the first
sentence under § 982.623(d)(2)
regarding the HAP contract and revise
the second sentence to state that the
owner’s acceptance of the family’s rent
payment is a certification that the space
complies with HQS as specified in
§ 982.621(a) and (b). Some commenters
stated it is unnecessary to require the
tenant pay for the landowner’s HAP
contract of manufactured home space,
because regardless of the tenant timely
paying rent, the landowners must go to
the PHA for payment, which has the
contract. A commenter claimed that
incidental protections that a HAP
contract with the landowner might
provide are not commensurate with the
creation of an additional barrier to using
the voucher option.
HUD Response: HUD does not have
the authority under the statute to
require that PHAs provide
manufactured home space rental
assistance. 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(12) states,
‘‘A public housing agency may make
assistance payments in accordance with
this subsection on behalf of a family that
utilizes a manufactured home as a
principal place of residence and rents
the real property on which the
manufactured home owned by any such
family is located’’ (emphasis added).
The use of the word ‘‘may’’ in the
statute unambiguously means provision
of this assistance is at the PHA’s
discretion. To be eligible for
manufactured home space rental
assistance, the family must own the
manufactured home. The ownership
does not need to be outright, and they
may still be making monthly payments
to amortize the purchase of the
manufactured home. Both scenarios are
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considered ownership similar to how a
person who owns a home with a
mortgage is still considered the
homeowner. For this reason, HUD is
finalizing the language in the proposed
rule for adoption in this final rule.
Owners of manufactured space rental
will still be required to sign a HAP
contract even if the PHA does not pay
them rent directly. The HAP contract is
more than a vehicle for conveyance of
rent payments. The HAP contract is
essential to ensuring compliance with
HQS, including the appropriate utility
hookups, and the owner’s agreement to
comply with rent reasonableness,
among other requirements.
14. Homeownership Counseling
(§ 982.630(e))
A commenter stated that
homeownership counseling services
should only be provided by HUDcertified counselors working with a
HUD-approved housing counseling
agency. Another commenter approved
of HUD requiring certified counseling
for the homeownership program as well
as supported HUD excluding home
equity as an asset and not decreasing the
payment standard of the
homeownership program.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments and will be moving forward
with requiring any homeownership
counseling to be conducted by a HUDcertified housing counselor working for
a HUD-approved housing counseling
agency. This requirement conforms with
current Housing Counseling
requirements.
15. Amount and Distribution of HAP
(§ 982.641(f))
A commenter supported maintaining
utility amounts for homeownership
families based on housing size, instead
of family size.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
supportive comment and will continue
with the proposed language at
§ 982.641(f)(3) stating that the use of a
utility allowance schedule under
§ 982.517(d) does not apply to the
homeownership option because the
utility allowance is always based on the
size of the home bought by the family
receiving homeownership assistance.
16. PBV: When the Tenant-Based
Voucher Rule Applies (§ 983.2)
A commenter supported HUD’s policy
to not require new verification at
briefing for the PBV program and
making the 60-day timeframe
inapplicable under the PBV program
because this approach improves PHAs’
ability to administer PBVs.
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HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
support and agrees that the standard at
§ 982.201(e) is inapplicable to the PBV
program, as families are not issued
vouchers in the PBV program, but notes
that the applicable timeframe for PBV is
codified in § 983.251(a)(2).
17. PBV Definitions (§ 983.3)
Definition of ‘‘Development Activity’’
A commenter expressed concern with
HUD’s definition of ‘‘development
activity,’’ due to its potential harmful
impact given its lack of previous
implementation for other HUD
programs. Another commenter stated
that the definition is adequate because
minor renovations are not included in
the definition of development work. A
commenter stated that the definition of
‘‘development activity,’’ was unclear
and broad and should be limited to new
construction, adaptive reuse, or
substantial rehabilitation of existing
housing in compliance with HQS.
Another commenter suggested that
including replacement of equipment
and materials with items that are of
improved quality in the definition of
‘‘development activity’’ would deter
project owners from modernizing and
completing other updates to properties,
which neither HUD’s regulations nor
form of HAP contract require a project
owner to report to a PHA. This
commenter also recommended that the
development activity should be limited
to instances of new construction or
substantive rehabilitation of housing
that fails to substantially comply with
HQS. This commenter further expressed
that development requirements, such as
subsidy layering review, should not
continue to apply to units once they are
placed under HAP contract or when
units are being added to an existing
HAP contract. A commenter warned
that HUD is exceeding its statutory
authority by having a broad definition of
development activity, because HUD
does not have the Congressional
authority to regulate a project owner’s
ability to engage in development work
following execution of a HAP contract,
and HUD has not historically regulated
this type of development activity. This
commenter stated that the 1937 Act
provides PHAs with discretion on when
to allow owners to engage in
development work.
HUD Response: Upon review of
comments regarding this definition and
other sections of the proposed rule,
HUD determined using a single term to
refer to both rehabilitation and new
construction done in order for the
project to receive PBV assistance and for
other work occurring later during the
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term of the PBV HAP contract produced
significant confusion. Similarly, the
corresponding regulatory structure
resulting from the dual-purpose
definition, such as using the
development requirements of subpart D
(Requirements for Rehabilitated and
Newly Constructed Units) of part 983 to
address certain requirements applicable
to work occurring later during the term
of the PBV HAP contract, produced
significant confusion. As a result, HUD
has removed work occurring later
during the term of the HAP contract
from the proposed definition of
‘‘development activity,’’ and instead
covers this work under the new
definition of ‘‘substantial
improvement.’’ The regulatory structure
also is revised in this final rule to
eliminate this confusion, as described
throughout this preamble. The public
comments on the proposed definition
regarded the portion of the proposed
rule definition of ‘‘development
activity’’ that is instead covered in this
final rule by the definition of
‘‘substantial improvement.’’
HUD disagrees with the commenter’s
characterization of previous
implementation, given HUD’s prior use
of a similar definition, as provided in
the former 24 CFR 983.210(j) (which is
removed in this final rule) and
described in 80 FR 52511 (Mar. 9, 2015),
which drew from requirements of other
programs. HUD appreciates the positive
comment. HUD does not adopt the
proposal to define substantial
improvement as new construction,
adaptive reuse, or substantial
rehabilitation, as HUD believes those
terms are less clear than the proposed
definition. HUD does not believe that
including in the definition a substantial
improvement in the quality or kind of
equipment and materials will deter
owners from modernizing projects,
since this final rule implements a
reasonable process for such activity to
occur. HUD does not adopt the proposal
to define substantial improvement as
new construction or substantive
rehabilitation of existing housing that
fails to substantially comply with HQS,
as HUD finds there is a compelling need
to encompass additional activities that
may greatly impact occupants in the
rules governing substantial
improvement. HUD also notes that it has
a clear mandate under law to ensure
housing occupied by assisted families is
decent, safe, and sanitary, which
includes establishing rules governing
substantial improvement that occurs
following contract execution, as such
activity necessarily impacts occupants.
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Definitions of ‘‘Newly Constructed
Housing’’ and ‘‘Rehabilitated Housing’’
Another commenter proposed that the
definitions of ‘‘newly constructed
housing’’ and ‘‘rehabilitated housing’’
should incorporate the concept of
housing ‘‘under construction’’ that
HOTMA inserted in new section
8(o)(13)(F)(iii). This commenter
suggested that HUD’s proposed rule
failed to account for this provision’s
direction that HUD allow PHAs to enter
a HAP contract for ‘‘any unit that does
not qualify as existing housing and is
under construction[.]’’ This commenter
suggested HUD make clear that projects
which are under construction qualify as
newly constructed.
HUD Response: HUD disagrees that
the wording of the definition of newly
constructed housing forecloses selection
of a project that is under construction.
For example, projects for which
development activity occurred prior to
PBV selection would nevertheless meet
the definition of newly constructed
housing if any of the units in the project
‘‘do not exist on the proposal or project
selection date and are developed after
the date of selection for use under the
PBV program.’’ Likewise, projects may
qualify as rehabilitated housing despite
any development activity that occurred
prior to PBV selection where the project
will be developed for use under the PBV
program and meets the other
components of the definition of
‘‘rehabilitated housing.’’ Further, as
previously provided in the regulations,
contracts for newly constructed and
rehabilitated projects may be executed
in stages, even though the construction
has not been completed, which is not in
conflict with the definitions. Neither
definition contains language barring
projects for which some of the
development occurred earlier from
being considered newly constructed or
rehabilitated; rather, the definitions
affirm that there will be development
that occurs after the proposal or project
selection date for purposes of using the
projects as PBV units. HUD recognizes
that in many cases projects may engage
in development activity for legitimate
reasons unrelated to the plans to
project-base a project prior to the PHA
selection of the project for PBVs. In
order to effectuate the applicable
development requirements at § 983.153
without foreclosing selection of projects
under construction, the regulation at
§ 983.154 requires that, in cases in
which the PHA and owner use an
Agreement prior to development
activity, development activity does not
commence from the date of proposal
submission or board resolution, as
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applicable, until the effective date of the
Agreement, and that, in cases of
development without an Agreement or
use of an Agreement after construction
or rehabilitation has commenced, all
development occurring after the date of
proposal submission or board
resolution, as applicable, complies with
§ 983.153. Further, while HUD does not
change the definitions for the purpose
the commenter proposed, HUD has
provided an additional mechanism for
execution of a HAP contract for a
rehabilitated housing project while it is
under construction in this final rule, as
further explained in the summary of
changes to § 983.157 above. Taken
together, HUD believes §§ 983.3,
983.154, and 983.157 provide an
appropriate balance between
effectuating the development
requirements and providing a
mechanism to allow a PHA to projectbase projects under construction. HUD
therefore declines to expand the
definition of newly constructed housing
to provide an explicit reference to
housing under construction, as doing so
would change the definition from a
statement of the meaning of the term to
a provision that could appear to conflict
with the development requirements in
subpart D of part 983.
Definition of ‘‘Project’’
Commenters approved of HUD’s
proposal to keep its current definition of
‘‘project,’’ which is statutory, and which
a commenter preferred for
administrative consistency and clarity
purposes. Another commenter
recommended that HUD delineate the
definitions for each program.
Commenters suggested that HUD create
a definition that allows for buildings in
scattered sites (i.e., non-contiguous
sites), and establish conditions for the
scattered sites, such as requiring
buildings to have the same owner and
containing a certain number of
subsidized units in each building. A
commenter noted that this would be
consistent with HUD’s position in the
PBV, RAD, and ‘‘Mod’’ programs.
Another commenter noted that
buildings that span multiple blocks in a
city grid and have historically been
operated as part of one project are
classified as individual projects for
purposes of PBV, which creates an
incongruous result. This commenter
further expressed that the statute
appears to support limiting the
definition of ‘‘project’’ to only assessing
whether a project complies with the
income-mixing requirement.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that
retaining the prior definition of
‘‘project,’’ consistent with the statutory
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definition of ‘‘project’’ for purposes of
the income-mixing requirement (project
cap), supports the goals of
administrative consistency and clarity.
However, HUD found that the proposed
rule as written appeared to
inadvertently remove the discretion
PHAs previously had, through the
Administrative Plan, to further define
‘‘project’’ within the statutory
parameters. HUD finds that PHAs may
need such discretion for optimal
program operation in certain cases.
Given these considerations and positive
comments received, HUD restores and
codifies in this final rule the meaning of
the term ‘‘project’’ as it was previously
understood. For programs other than the
PBV program, the definition of ‘‘project’’
applicable to such programs can be
found in those programs’ governing
rules.
HUD declines to further define
‘‘project’’ to allow scattered sites to
constitute one project. Doing so would
increase the complexity of determining
what constitutes a project, for purposes
of the income-mixing requirement and
for other purposes, to a level
unwarranted by a relatively small
administrative advantage in a small
number of cases. However, HUD will
continue to allow multiple projects,
each consisting of a single-family
building (defined in this § 983.3(b) as no
more than four total dwelling units), to
be under one HAP contract. HUD has
taken this opportunity to update the
language in § 983.202(a) to more clearly
state that placing multiple projects, each
consisting of a single-family building,
under one HAP contract is allowable.
HUD has also updated § 983.154(a) to
clarify that it is allowable to place under
one Agreement multiple projects that
each consist of a single-family building
and § 983.51(a) to clarify that PBV
proposals may cover multiple projects
where each consists of a single-family
building. HUD agrees that whenever a
HAP contract covers multiple projects
all such projects must be owned by a
single owner because, as a general
principle, an owner can only execute a
HAP contract for units the owner has
authority to commit in a HAP contract
(or a certification, in the case of a PHAowned project exercising the option in
§ 983.204(e)(2)). The number of
subsidized units in each project will
continue to be governed by existing PBV
requirements, particularly the incomemixing requirement (see § 983.54(a)).
Regarding the concern about
buildings that span multiple blocks
being classified as individual projects
for purposes of PBV, HUD clarifies that
the definition of ‘‘project’’ can include
parcels separated by a public way, so
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long as such parcels can reasonably be
considered contiguous (defined in this
§ 983.3(b) for this purpose to include
‘‘adjacent to’’ or ‘‘touching along a
boundary or a point’’). For simplicity,
the definition describes in general terms
the buildings and parcels of land that
qualify as ‘‘projects’’ in the vast majority
of cases. Where natural or engineered
features make up a boundary between
buildings or parcels, PHAs are expected
to reasonably determine if the buildings
or parcels make up a project.
Considerations include the extent and
difficulty of access from one building to
another, public regard of the buildings
as interrelated, and whether the
classification proposed would serve the
statutory purpose of the income-mixing
requirement. HUD intends to publish
further guidance on this matter.
Definition of Request for Release of
Funds and Certification
A commenter suggested HUD delete
the definition of ‘‘request for release of
funds and certification,’’ which is not
used in the regulations and creates an
unintended parallel process to the
environmental review and replace it
with the definition of ‘‘letter to
proceed,’’ which is used in the
regulations. This commenter suggested
in the alternative to change ‘‘PHAs’’ to
‘‘responsible entities,’’ because the
responsible entity signs the request for
release of funds under 24 CFR part 58
for environmental reviews, and reorder
the current language under 24 CFR part
58 because it suggests that Authority to
Use Grant Funds (AUGF) would
authorize a HAP, which is inaccurate.
HUD Response: HUD has considered
this comment and determined that,
while ‘‘request for release of funds and
certification’’ is in fact used in § 983.56
of the regulation and is not the same as
a ‘‘letter to proceed,’’ which is issued by
HUD, the lack of clarity the commenter
points out is best addressed by moving
the content of the definition of ‘‘request
for release of funds and certification’’
from § 983.2 to the appropriate section
of § 983.56.
Definition of Comparable Rental
Assistance
A commenter stated that the
definition of comparable rental
assistance does not explicitly include
the statutory requirement that assistance
must be tenant-based. This commenter
suggested HUD specify that comparable
assistance cannot be time-limited or
subject to requirements that do not
apply under section 8(o).
HUD Response: HUD agrees that the
definition of comparable rental
assistance should include the statutory
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requirement that assistance must be
tenant-based. HUD therefore amends the
definition, in this final rule termed
‘‘comparable tenant-based rental
assistance’’ at § 983.3(b) to be consistent
with the statute. HUD notes that the
terminology used in § 983.261(b)–(c)
before publication of this final rule was
consistent with section 8(o)(13)(E) of the
1937 Act. HUD therefore views this
change only as a clarifying change to the
definition. HUD additionally specifies
the essential elements of comparable
tenant-based rental assistance in this
final rule. That is, comparable tenantbased rental assistance enables a family
to obtain decent, safe, and sanitary
housing in which: (1) a family’s
monthly payment is not more than 40
percent of adjusted income; (2) the
rental assistance is not time-limited; (3)
the rental assistance is not conditioned
on a work or supportive service
requirement; and (4) the rental
assistance affords the family a
portability option. HUD does not in this
final definition prohibit the assistance
being subject to requirements that do
not apply under 8(o) because doing so
would reduce options available to PHAs
and families, as many tenant-based
rental assistance programs across the
country likely do not meet every HCV
program requirement. Such a
requirement could increase wait times
for families wishing to move from PBV
units with tenant-based assistance.
HUD in this final rule also takes this
opportunity to clarify that the ‘‘gross
rent’’ calculation refers to the family’s
share of the gross rent, and not the total
gross rent. This is a clarifying change
consistent with how HUD already
applies this definition. Additionally, to
consolidate definitional language, this
final rule removes language explaining
the meaning of ‘‘comparable tenantbased rental assistance’’ at
§ 983.260(b)(4) such that the complete
definition is in this final rule at
§ 983.3(b).
Existing Housing
Support and Disagreement
A commenter supported the proposed
definition of ‘‘existing housing’’ in
relation to how long it would take to
make any repairs needed to comply
with applicable quality standards and
stated that it is a significant
improvement over the use of a fixed and
arbitrary cost of repairs as HUD
proposed previously.
Other commenters found the current
existing housing definition more
flexible for PHAs. The commenters
stated that the proposed definition did
not clarify the existing requirement and
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could create different implementation
across the country. One commenter
stated that PHAs should retain
discretion to determine whether a
project constitutes existing housing and
to define substantial compliance with
HQS in their Administrative Plans.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
supportive comment and proceeds with
a standard that does not include cost, as
further discussed below. HUD finds that
including a definition of ‘‘substantially
comply’’ in this final rule will improve
consistency and predictability in
implementation of the PBV program
across the country.
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Potential Regulatory Burdens
One commenter urged HUD to
reconsider the definition change due to
the potential regulatory burden of
narrowly defining ‘‘existing housing’’
while simultaneously expanding the
definition of ‘‘development activity,’’
which could have chilling implications
on PBV programs. Another commenter
stated that treating some of the units as
‘‘existing’’ and some as ‘‘rehabilitation’’
would be confusing and regulatory
burdensome for PBV purposes.
HUD Response: HUD concludes that,
given the strong use of rehabilitated
housing in the PBV program,
clarification that a project is
rehabilitated housing when an owner is
undertaking extensive or lengthy work
will not chill participation. However,
HUD believes that the new option at
§ 983.157 for rehabilitated housing to
complete development activity after
HAP contract execution will provide
additional flexibility needed to attract
more PBV owners. In response to
comments, HUD has revised the
definitions of existing housing, newly
constructed housing, and rehabilitated
housing to clarify that the classification
of project type is on a project basis.
Potential Rent Cost Burdens
A commenter opposed shifting from
building condition (e.g., current HQS
status) to building correction plan (e.g.,
ability to make repairs) as too high a
burden, especially as the standard
correction period is 30 days. This
commenter warned that the proposed
definition would likely result in
additional rent burdens for tenants in
units that cannot qualify as existing
housing and encouraged HUD to define
existing housing based on the
percentage of units that pass HQS.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the
commenter that it is appropriate to
incorporate into the definition of
‘‘substantially comply with HQS’’ the
standard deficiency cure period
applicable to the program, since that
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period best represents an overall
correction timeline that remains
compliant with HQS enforcement
standards. This change is reflected in
this final rule’s definition of ‘‘existing
housing’’ at § 983.3. HUD considered
the suggestion to use, instead of the
proposed definition, percentage of units
passing HQS but determined such a
standard would inappropriately allow
classification of units with
rehabilitation needs as existing housing.
HUD appreciates the concern for the
rent burden of tenants while awaiting
assistance but determines that it is
better addressed by adding the new
option at § 983.157 for rehabilitated
housing to complete development
activity after HAP contract execution
and maintaining the options at
§ 983.103(c) for initial execution before
HQS compliance is determined via
inspection. In other words, amending
the definition of existing housing to
include units immediately undergoing
extensive work would have been an
inappropriate mechanism to address the
concern.
General Comments About Existing
Housing Restriction
One commenter supported HUD’s
putting restrictions on the applicability
of the definition of existing housing and
noted it had experience with projects
seeking to circumvent executing an
Agreement for rehabilitation by
requesting the project be defined as
existing housing based on the units
being already occupied, even though the
owner was planning some level of
rehabilitation.
Another commenter disagreed with
the framing of the question because it
suggests that PHAs and project owners
are ‘‘circumventing’’ rehabilitation
program requirements when selecting
existing housing projects that comply
with HUD’s definition of existing
housing.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates
commenters’ perspectives regarding
circumventing rehabilitation
requirements and believes that PHAs
and owners will be better able to
determine when rehabilitation rules
apply using this final rule’s definitions.
Question 13. Is the 48-hour standard
reasonable, particularly for larger
projects?
One commenter supported HUD’s
proposed definition of ‘‘substantially
complies with Housing Quality
Standards (HQS).’’ Other commenters
stated that the 48-hour timeframe is
unreasonable, especially for large
projects with multiple units requiring
minor repairs or in housing markets
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where contractors are scarce because
some units require renovations that are
impossible to complete in a 48-hour
timeframe.
HUD Response: Commenters’
explanations of when a 48-hour
standard may be infeasible were
persuasive, and HUD has changed the
standard in this final rule.
Alternative Timeframes
One commenter suggested that the 48hour timeframe only apply to individual
units and not the entire building.
Commenters also suggested alternative
timeframes to cure HQS deficiencies
including 72 hours for projects with
more than 20 failed inspections, and a
maximum of 5 or 10 business days to
cure deficiencies.
A commenter expressed that the
HOTMA alternatives to initial
inspections are unusable if HUD
requires a PHA to conduct and a project
to pass an HQS inspection before
making an existing housing
determination.
One commenter proposed allowing
PHAs to integrate in their policies a
specific timeline for completion of the
repairs based on local conditions.
Another commenter recommended
defining the timeframe based on the
time it takes to complete a repair, rather
than the time it takes to begin a repair.
HUD Response: In this final rule,
HUD adopts a timeframe based upon the
standard deficiency cure period as part
of a reasonable representation of
substantial compliance with HQS.
Under this final rule, PHAs must
determine whether, taking into
consideration the totality of the
deficiencies in the project, the owner
will be able to correct the deficiencies
in a 30-day period. HUD does not
impose through this definition a
requirement that correction occur at a
specific time; the standards at
§ 983.103(c) dictate when the
corrections must occur, depending in
large part on whether the PHA has
adopted the discretionary options for
initial inspection. HUD believes that
this definition provides sufficient
flexibility to account for local
conditions and differences in unit repair
times while still adequately
distinguishing existing housing from
housing properly characterized as
rehabilitated.
HUD’s Previous Proposed Definition
of Existing Housing ($1,000) 15
One commenter supported the prior
proposed definition because it was clear
15 See The Housing and Economic Recovery Act
of 2008 (HERA): Changes to the Section 8 TenantBased Voucher and Section 8 Project-Based
Voucher Programs, 77 FR 28741 (May 15, 2012).
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and unambiguous. However, other
commenters disagreed with the prior
proposed rule and suggested that
existing housing projects should not be
permitted to make over $1,000 of
improvements per unit within the first
year of their HAP contract or to make
significant improvements within the
first 5 years, unless there are
extenuating circumstances as
determined by the PHA.
Commenters suggested that the
definition should include units where
planned rehab exceeds $1,000 over the
next year per unit, as this amount is too
low in many high-cost areas. Another
commenter stated that the $1,000 limit
previously proposed by HUD was not
required by HOTMA. A commenter
suggested that HUD permit PHA
discretion to create alternative standards
based on a reasonable cost for each unit,
considering that 48 hours for deficiency
correction may be impractical for large
projects or in national emergency
situations.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
benefit mentioned by commenters of a
clear dollar threshold or PHA
discretionary amount but determines
not to adopt the suggestion because the
differing impact of a dollar threshold
across markets with different local
conditions will result in an inconsistent
meaning of ‘‘existing housing’’
nationwide. HUD considered the
suggestion to define ‘‘existing housing’’
based on cost or extent of work
occurring shortly after contract
execution. In this final rule, HUD adopts
that suggestion in part. HUD defines
‘‘existing housing’’ based on the
condition of the units at the proposal or
project selection date and incorporates a
requirement that the PHA determine,
and the owner certify, the units will not
need or undergo substantial
improvement from the date of proposal
submission or board resolution, as
applicable, to two years after the HAP
contract. In conjunction with this
change, HUD codifies in this final rule
complete standards for correction of
deficiencies (see discussion of § 983.103
below) and substantial improvement
(see discussion of § 983.212 below)
following contract execution.
Alternative Definitions of Existing
Housing
Commenters suggested that the
standard should be a percentage of local
rehabilitation or development costs or
whether the apartment is occupied or
available for occupancy. Another
commenter supported the proposed
definition of ‘‘existing housing,’’ but
found the reliance on proposal selection
date as impractical compared to using
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the HAP execution date because there
can be a significant gap between
selection and HAP execution. One
commenter opposed the imposition of a
bright line threshold that fails to
account for PHA discretion and local
circumstances as well as thresholds
based on time or money because the test
will affect project owners differently
based on availability and costs of
materials and labor associated with
routine maintenance. Another
commenter suggested that the standard
for existing housing should be ‘‘housing
that does not need to be rehabilitated,’’
which would require HUD to chart the
cost threshold and number of PBV units
in a development, and developments
that must spend above the threshold to
make PBV units HQS-compliant would
not be considered ‘‘existing housing.’’
HUD Response: HUD does not adopt
the suggestion to use a percentage of
local costs in the definition out of
concern that the approach may make
housing type classification
unpredictable over time and may
require significant administrative
burden to estimate costs in advance of
work. HUD declines to adopt a standard
that defines ‘‘existing housing’’ based on
whether the unit is occupied or
available for occupancy; HUD finds the
former does not afford sufficient
protection against assistance being
provided to units that do not meet HQS
and the latter is not sufficiently clear to
be applied uniformly. In addition, HUD
does not adopt the suggestion to use the
contract execution date rather than the
proposal or project selection date, as the
PHA must establish the housing type
well before the contract execution date
to follow the appropriate pre-contract
program requirements.
HUD believes the linkage in this final
rule to a standard cure period addresses
the concern regarding a bright line
threshold. HUD generally agrees that the
nature of existing housing should be
‘‘housing that does not need to be
rehabilitated,’’ but has implemented this
principle in a manner different from
what the commenter suggests. HUD has
in this final rule defined ‘‘substantially
comply’’ based on the nature of the
correction of HQS deficiencies—
whether they require only repairs to the
unit’s current components or
replacement of equipment and/or
materials by items of substantially the
same kind to correct—in addition to the
likelihood of compliance with HQS
within the standard cure period.
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PHA Determination Whether a Project
Will be Ready To Be Placed Under a
HAP Contract
Commenters stated that PHAs should
have discretion to determine whether a
project is ready to be placed under a
HAP contract with ‘‘minimal delay’’
because the PHA is best positioned to
judge whether the owner will quickly
complete repairs and make the
determination consistent with PHAs’
own policies regarding the time that
may elapse between the initial
inspection and the HAP contract’s
execution.
HUD Response: Upon consideration
of comments, HUD finds that the timing
of execution of the HAP contract is
difficult to estimate based on condition
of units alone, given the many factors
impacting execution, and will not
provide sufficient clarity to use the
definition consistently. Therefore, HUD
removes the proposed ‘‘minimal delay’’
element from the definition of ‘‘existing
housing’’ in this final rule at § 983.3.
Definition of ‘‘Building’’
One commenter suggested that HUD
define the word ‘‘building’’ under
§ 983.103(d), and specifically as it
relates to conducting an inspection of 20
percent of a building’s units. The
commenter stated that while the
definition of ‘‘building’’ may be
obvious, the definition is obscure, and
the commenter suggested changing
‘‘building’’ to ‘‘project.’’
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the
commenter that the term ‘‘building’’
may not always be clear. Therefore,
HUD adopts in § 982.4 the following
definition: ‘‘a structure with a roof and
walls that contains one or more
dwelling units.’’ Where the term
‘‘building’’ is used regarding periodic
inspection of a sample of units (now
located in § 983.103(e)), HUD intends
that the requirement apply to buildings,
not projects. HUD believes that the
sample should be drawn on a building
basis to get a good cross-section of the
condition of the units in a project.
Further discussion of this matter is at 70
FR 59892, 59905 (Oct. 13, 2005).
Definition of ‘‘Areas Where Vouchers
Are Difficult To Use’’
Give PHAs Discretion
Several commenters suggested HUD
should allow PHAs to define areas
where vouchers are ‘‘difficult to use’’
because PHAs can consider local and
recent conditions and handle complex
calculations.
HUD Response: HUD declines to give
PHAs discretion to define areas where
vouchers are ‘‘difficult to use’’ because
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such an approach could lead to highly
inconsistent application of the program
and project caps across the country.
Opposition to Proposed Definition
A commenter warned that the
proposed definition of ‘‘difficult to use’’
may inaccurately reflect the current
status of rental markets at either end of
the income spectrum and may
insufficiently adjust if rapid market
changes occur.
HUD Response: HUD determined that
the proposed measure is appropriate
given the targeted incomes that the
voucher program is intended to serve.
HUD agrees that FMRs may take time to
adjust to market changes but determines
the benefit of using FMR data, which is
held to a high standard of accuracy,
outweighs this concern. HUD continues
its commitment to continually
improving FMR calculations in order
capture the most current market
conditions.
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Base on Vacancy Rates
Commenters supported HUD’s
proposal to define areas where vouchers
are ‘‘difficult to use’’ based on vacancy
rates. Some commenters stated that
HUD should use a three or four percent
or lower target vacancy percentage for
metropolitan Fair Market Rent areas and
use ZIP code areas to analyze vacancy
rates and allow exceptions in areas with
accurate data at lower levels, such as
census tracts. A commenter noted that
it would be beneficial to examine
vacancy rates separated by bedroom
size, since bedroom size may impact
vacancy rates. One commenter opposed
HUD defining ‘‘difficult to use’’ based
on vacancy rates because of the
challenges and inaccuracies behind
identifying vacancy rates based on ZIP
code.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
commenters’ support of HUD’s proposal
to define areas where vouchers are
‘‘difficult to use’’ based on vacancy
rates. HUD considered a more restrictive
target vacancy percentage as some
commenters proposed but determined
the proposed four percent threshold
provides PHAs an appropriate level of
discretion to respond to local conditions
and is consistent with other uses of a
vacancy threshold in HUD programs.
HUD does not provide for additional
definition on the basis of areas smaller
than ZIP code or of bedroom size
because such data are not consistently
available. Determining vacancy rates
based on ZIP code is currently possible
using reliable and available data, so
HUD maintains this change in this final
rule.
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Other Suggestions
A commenter suggested that HUD add
three additional criteria to define areas
where it is ‘‘difficult to use’’ vouchers:
(1) in areas experiencing rapid rent
appreciation as shown by increases in
fair market rent, (2) areas with low
vacancy rates, and (3) areas undergoing
revitalization. The commenter pointed
out that these additional criteria would
allow PHAs to preserve affordability in
rapidly changing areas as well as
present residents with the ability to
choose whether to move or remain in
areas of opportunity when they may
otherwise be priced out. Moreover, this
commenter stated that HUD should
consider areas with defined exception
payment standards as ‘‘difficult to use,’’
and ‘‘difficult to develop,’’ because it
consolidates efforts to improve fair
housing opportunities. Another
commenter recommended that HUD
identify areas where costs are high
relative to metropolitan area FMRs
based on a median salary comparison to
SAFMR because it would identify areas
where rent dramatically increases, but
salaries remain stagnant.
One commenter suggested that
defining areas where vouchers are
‘‘difficult to use’’ should include a
poverty threshold to avoid voucher
concentrations in high-poverty areas.
This commenter also stated that the
Small Area FMR (SAFMR) standard is a
good proxy for areas of opportunity.
Another commenter expressed that
another means to identify areas where
vouchers are difficult to use is by
comparing actual costs to the area’s
FMR, since using other parameters may
be complex to calculate and laborintensive.
HUD Response: This final rule
incorporates into the definition of ‘‘area
where vouchers are difficult to use’’ the
proposed rule’s measure of low vacancy
rates. HUD reviewed the suggestion to
add areas experiencing rapid rent
appreciation and areas undergoing
revitalization but determined that data
on such measures are not available or
updated frequently enough to be
meaningful. HUD appreciates the
benefit of preserving affordability in
rapidly changing areas and allowing
residents to remain in areas of
opportunity but determined that the
data limitation will require that PHAs
explore use of the 20 percent program
cap and other exceptions to the cap to
meet these objectives. HUD disagrees
that areas with exception payment
standards in place should be
incorporated into the definition, as
exception payment standard use can
reflect conditions beyond the sole
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criterion this definition is intended to
reflect (whether vouchers are difficult to
use) and their use in the definition
would result in broad and inconsistent
application of the program and project
cap exceptions.
HUD appreciates the commenter’s
recommendation to incorporate highcost areas but retains the proposed
rule’s definition because the criteria
therein appear to provide adequate
coverage of areas where vouchers are
difficult to use. HUD intends to monitor
the impact of this definition over time
and consider this additional criterion
for future rulemaking if the definition
proves insufficient. HUD also declines
to add a poverty threshold to this
definition because the standards
regarding deconcentration of poverty
when siting PBV projects are adequately
covered by existing requirements at
§ 983.55. HUD reviewed other methods
to determine actual costs as
recommended by commenters but
determined none are available and
verifiable in a manner adequate to be
relied upon consistently on a national
scale.
18. Description of PBV Program
(§ 983.5)
Operating Without an Agreement
A commenter supported HUD’s
proposal to allow development without
an Agreement to increase flexibility and
reduce burdens on PBV developments.
Other commenters suggested that HUD
clearly state, potentially in the
definition of ‘‘newly constructed,’’ that
a PHA may enter an Agreement contract
with prospective units of a property
under construction.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
positive comment and discusses further
comments on the topic of development
without an Agreement in the discussion
of § 983.154 later in this preamble. The
comments concerning the definition of
‘‘newly constructed’’ have been
addressed in the discussion of § 983.3
earlier in this preamble.
19. Maximum Amount of PBV
Assistance (§ 983.6)
Outline Calculation Situations
One commenter requested that HUD
outline in the preamble the situations in
which a PHA would have to conduct a
calculation.
HUD Response: In this final rule at
§ 983.58, HUD clarifies that the PHA
must calculate the number of authorized
voucher units that it is permitted to
project-base in accordance with § 983.6.
The calculation must include a
determination of the amount of budget
authority that it has available for
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project-basing in accordance with
§ 983.5(b). The PHA’s calculations must
occur before it issues a request for
proposal in accordance with
§ 983.51(b)(1), makes a selection based
on a previous competition in
accordance with § 983.51(b)(2), amends
an existing HAP contract to add units in
accordance with § 983.207(b), or
noncompetitively selects a project in
accordance with § 983.51(c). Further,
PHAs must perform an analysis of the
impact if project-basing 50 percent or
more of the units under the
Consolidated Annual Contributions
Contract (ACC). The analysis should
consider the ability of the PHA to meet
the needs of the community across its
tenant-based and project-based voucher
portfolio, including the impact on,
among others, families on the waiting
list and eligible PBV families that wish
to move under § 983.261.
Reducing Units
A commenter recommended that a
PHA should never be required to reduce
units under an Agreement or HAP
contract but should only be unable to
enter new commitments, Agreements, or
HAP contracts until they are back below
the cap. This commenter stated that
owners and PHAs need stability in the
PBV program and should not be subject
to reduction after Agreements or HAP
contracts are entered. Therefore, this
commenter recommended that HUD
strike the first clause of § 983.6(a)(3),
limiting the paragraph to paragraphs
(a)(1) and (2) of the same section.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed
the comment and determined that this
final rule already affords relief when a
PHA would otherwise be out of
compliance with the statutory program
cap simply because of a change in the
number of authorized voucher units. In
such cases, this final rule maintains the
proposed rule provision that states the
PHA is not required to reduce the
number of units to which it has
committed PBV assistance under an
Agreement or HAP contract.
Notwithstanding, this final rule
prohibits the PHA from adding units to
PBV HAP contracts or entering into new
Agreements or HAP contracts (except
for HAP contracts resulting from
Agreements entered into before the
reduction of authorized units or April
18, 2017, as applicable). Further, the
PHA could add units if the unit meets
one of the increased cap exceptions and
adding the unit does not place the PHA
outside of the program cap or increased
program cap. The same principle
applies where the noncompliance is
simply the result of the change in
statute (from budget authority to
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authorized units). Conversely, HUD has
an obligation to ensure that statutory
requirements are met, and, therefore,
has no discretion to allow for the same
policy where the noncompliance with
the statutory requirement is based on
PHA error and under this final rule,
HUD will not strike the first clause of
§ 983.6(a)(3). HUD takes this
opportunity, however, to clarify that the
PHA may also add units in the instances
described above, if the unit does not
count toward the program cap under the
requirements of § 983.59.
Technical Edit
A commenter recommended using
‘‘authorized units’’ instead of ‘‘budget
authority’’ in § 983.6(c).
HUD Response: HUD reviewed the
comment and determined that the
reference is accurate and the PHA is
responsible for determining the amount
of budget authority that is available for
project-based vouchers and for ensuring
that the amount of assistance that is
attached to units is within the amounts
available.
The Census Tract Data
A commenter stated that the use of
census tract data ‘‘as determined by
HUD’’ in §§ 983.6(d)(2)(iv) and
983.54(b)(1) is unclear whether it is
determined by census data or other
metrics, as the commenter believed it
would be determined by census data,
but the text suggests HUD may seek to
use other metrics.
HUD Response: This final rule
maintains HUD discretion to determine
the most appropriate data source and
metric to use in making this
determination. HUD will ensure that
stakeholders are notified and fully
informed once such determinations are
made. HUD notes that these provisions
have now moved to the definition of
‘‘area where vouchers are difficult to
use’’ in § 983.3.
Definition of Veterans
Commenters objected to HUD
excluding dishonorably discharged
veterans in its proposed definition of
‘‘veterans’’ and find it is counter to both
other HUD programs and Congressional
intent, because the proposed definition
undermines local efforts to end veteran
homelessness by denying assistance to
dishonorably discharged veterans, who
are likely to face barriers to stable
housing. A commenter suggested that
HUD should allow PHAs to define
‘‘families with veterans.’’
HUD Response: Under this final rule,
HUD makes the change commenters
suggested in defining veteran, solely for
purposes of applying the additional 10
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38263
percent veteran exception to the PBV
program cap, to ‘‘a person who served
in the active military, naval, air, or
space service, and who was discharged
or released therefrom.’’ HUD determines
that the change from the proposed rule
definition is likely to better prevent and
address homelessness and unstable
housing among those who served and
their families by providing PHAs an
option to attach more PBV assistance to
projects serving this population. HUD
does not make the change suggested by
a commenter to give PHAs discretion to
establish the definition of ‘‘veteran’’ for
this purpose. HUD is concerned about
the different treatment of applicants that
would result from divergent definitions
around the country.
Supportive Services Limitation
One commenter disagreed with HUD’s
proposal to continue its existing policy
that allows PHAs to exceed the 20
percent limitation on project-basing of
authorized voucher units for ‘‘units that
provide supportive housing to persons
with disabilities or elderly persons’’
only when ‘‘the project makes
supportive services available for all the
assisted families in the project.’’ The
commenter recommended that the
statutory requirement to offer services to
‘‘all the assisted families in the project’’
be removed from this final rule.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
commenter’s suggestion; however, HUD
is unable to implement such a change
through regulation because it would be
in conflict with the current statutory
language under section 106(a)(2) of
HOTMA, which amends section
8(o)(13)(B) of the 1937 Act. Under
HOTMA, a PHA may project-base an
additional 10 percent of its ACC
authorized units above the 20 percent
program limit, provided the additional
units fall into one of the eligible
exception categories, one of which is
providing supportive housing to persons
with disabilities or elderly persons. The
use of the term ‘‘supportive housing’’ in
section 8(o)(13)(B) of the 1937 Act
means that the project must be making
the supportive services available for all
the assisted families in the project, not
just individual families.
Survivors of Domestic Violence
A commenter suggested including
survivors of domestic violence, sexual
assault, and stalking to the list of
circumstances under which PBV units
may exceed the cap.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
commenter’s suggestion; however, HUD
is unable to implement such a change
through regulation because it would be
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in conflict with the current statutory
language.
program, to address the commenter’s
concern.
20. PBV Provisions in the
Administrative Plan (§ 983.10)
A commenter stated that § 983.10(a) is
unclear in its requirements and
recommended this paragraph be
guidance instead of a requirement. This
commenter also suggested HUD clarify
in § 983.10(b)(7)(ii) that PHAs can use a
combination of general, site-based, and
owner-maintained waiting lists, as
determined by the PHA’s discretion.
Finally, this commenter suggested that
HUD create a section similar to § 983.10
for PHA Plan requirements or, if already
identified in part 903, create a crossreference, because combining
requirements makes monitoring and
compliance easier.
HUD Response: HUD’s longstanding
requirement has been that the
Administrative Plan must state PHA
policy on matters for which the PHA
has discretion to establish local policies.
As provided in § 983.2, the HCV
program regulation governing
Administrative Plans (§ 982.54) applies
to the PBV program. Section 983.10, as
amended in this final rule, provides a
list of additional Administrative Plan
policies that a PHA must also adopt, to
the extent applicable, if it has
implemented or plans to implement a
PBV program. HUD has reviewed the
language of § 983.10(a) in response to
this comment and edited it to better
explain these requirements.
HUD’s position is that § 983.251(c) is
the appropriate location to explain
PHAs’ options to use a combination of
general, site-based, and ownermaintained waiting lists. Section
983.10(b)(7) merely requires the PHA to
include in the Administrative Plan a
description of the waiting list policies
the PHA has chosen to adopt; it does not
impose a limitation different from
§ 983.251(c). To prevent any potential
confusion, HUD revised this section to
limit the discussion of each PHA policy
in § 983.10 to a short description only.
PHAs must look to the cross-referenced
section for complete information about
the contents of and requirements for
each PHA policy.
As provided in § 983.2, the HCV
program regulation explaining the
relationship between the Administrative
Plan and PHA Plan (§ 982.54(b)) applies
to the PBV program. PHA Plan
requirements themselves are contained
in 24 CFR part 903 and HUD finds that
repeating them in part 983 would be
duplicative. However, HUD has clarified
in § 983.3(b) that the definition of PHA
Plan in § 982.4(b), which crossreferences part 903, applies to the PBV
21. Prohibition of Excess Public
Assistance (§ 983.11)
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Subsidy Layering, Standards, and
Review
Several commenters opposed HUD’s
proposal to permit subsidy layering
review upon rehabilitation or
development activity. Commenters
found the change administratively
burdensome and recommended that
subsidy layering reviews be limited to
additional Federal resources for
operating assistance or recommended
that SLR only be applied at the time of
signing an Agreement. Another
commenter objected to the language in
§ 983.12(d)(1) (§ 983.11(d)(1) in this
final rule) as harmfully broadening
subsidy layering requirements, which is
not done in other programs and,
historically in PBV and Project Based
Rental Assistance, has only been
required when the PBVs are awarded,
not for any subsequent rehabilitation or
assistance. The commenter stated that
this will be administratively
burdensome for owners and PHAs,
especially given the ninety-day plus
review periods.
A commenter suggested that HUD
clarify that rehabilitation projects which
may be done without any additional
funding, and which are unlikely to
result in a rent increase, are exempt
from the subsidy layering requirements.
A commenter questioned whether HUD
has the capacity and expertise to
conduct the additional subsidy layering
reviews that would be required by the
proposed regulations. Another
commenter stated that HUD’s
Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) is
silent with respect to subsidy layering
reviews.
HUD Response: HUD has considered
the comments and agrees that it would
be unnecessarily administratively
burdensome for a new SLR to be
performed every time any amount of
additional related assistance is added to
a newly constructed or rehabilitated
project after the HAP contract is
effective. As such, HUD has revised the
rule to clarify that the criteria for
whether the addition of assistance
requires a new SLR will continue to be
located in the PBV SLR Administrative
Guidelines published in the Federal
Register. With regard to the concern that
§ 983.11(d)(1) broadens subsidy layering
requirements, HUD clarifies that it is
and has long been a requirement in the
PBV HAP contract for newly
constructed and rehabilitated housing
that the owner must disclose public
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assistance that is made available during
the term of the HAP contract. This
requirement was reinforced and further
explained in 75 FR 39561 (Jul. 9, 2010),
79 FR 57955 (Sep. 26, 2014), 85 FR
12001 (Feb. 28, 2020), and the most
recently applicable notice at 88 FR
15443 (Mar. 13, 2023).
Section 983.153(b)(1) clarifies that an
SLR is required for rehabilitated
housing projects only when housing
assistance payment subsidy under the
PBV program is combined with other
governmental housing assistance from
Federal, State, or local agencies. HUD
confirms it has the capacity and
expertise to conduct the required SLRs.
HUD’s statement in the RIA was that
changes that are merely codifications of
current HUD practice would not be
analyzed. As discussed above, this final
rule aligns with the policy in effect in
the most recently applicable SLR
Guidelines.
22. Proposal and Project Selection
Procedures (§ 983.51)
Responses to Question 15 Regarding
Additional Exemptions
Several commenters supported HUD
exempting the placement of PBVs that
are used to replace previously federally
assisted or rent-restricted property from
the competitive selection requirements.
One commenter stated that PHAs and
project owners of affordable housing
units should not have to compete with
private owners to preserve existing units
through on-site or off-site development.
This commenter expressed that PHAs
and owners can use the voucher
commitment to obtain additional
financing to rehabilitate and preserve
the affordable housing units, many of
which have struggled due to insufficient
appropriations, below-market rents, and
unfunded capital needs. Another
commenter stated that HUD should
allow exceptions to the competitive
selection process in housing-emergency
situations, such as when the PHA is part
of a local partnership to save Naturally
Occurring Affordable Housing (NOAH)
or to relieve homeless encampments.
Other commenters suggested that
HUD exempt tax credit properties where
the compliance period has come to an
end to help protect the affordability of
the units. One commenter stated that
HUD should add Project-based Veterans
Affairs Supportive Housing (VASH)
vouchers on the condition that the local
Veteran Affairs Office supports doing
so. One commenter stated that HUD
should remove the competitive selection
requirements when PBVs are submitted
with an application for a LIHTC credit,
to ease the ability of entities to submit
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LIHTC proposals. Another commenter
stated that PBVs in income-restricted
developments create a mix of incomes
while providing financial stability for
affordable developments.
HUD Response: HUD considered the
comments and determined an additional
exemption category should be added at
§ 983.51(c)(3) to include PHA-owned
units as defined under § 982.4. The
exemption from the proposed rule
requires for a PHA to be ‘‘engaged in an
initiative to improve, develop, or
replace a public housing property or
site,’’ but in all cases HUD means
housing assisted under section 9 of the
1937 Act when referring to public
housing. Adding PHA-owned units to
the exemption will streamline and
support a PHA’s ability to develop long
term affordable units in its community.
If a PHA has identified preserving
affordable housing or serving veterans
and the homeless as a local priority, the
PHA can incorporate that goal into their
RFP or strategically utilize other
funding competitions to select such
projects. As a limited resource, PBV
should be used to address local needs
and priorities using a method that is
intended to identify the best project.
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Previous Competition Requirement
A commenter encouraged HUD to
remove the requirement that projects be
selected solely based on previous
competition, if the previous competition
did not involve consideration of the
PBVs, because most tax credit and other
funding selections will require a
provisional commitment of PBV
assistance. The commenter warned that
this puts PHAs and project owners in an
untenable position, since they cannot
compete for vouchers without tax
credits, and PHAs cannot compete for
tax credits without PBV assistance.
HUD Response: HUD understands the
limitations presented by the commentor
because of the provision that prohibits
a PHA from selecting a housing
assistance proposal that included any
consideration that the project would
receive PBV assistance; however, this
provision maintains the integrity of a
competitive selection method and will
not be revised in this final rule.
Language was added to § 983.51(b)(1)
clarifying that a PHA may establish
selection procedures that combine or are
in conjunction with other Federal, State,
or local government housing assistance,
community development, or supportive
services competitive selection
processes, and HUD intends to provide
future guidance to support PHAs in
using these methods in combination
with other funding sources.
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Clarification Request
A commenter suggested removing
‘‘regard to,’’ from § 983.51(c)(1) and (2)
and modifying the statement, ‘‘newly
developed or replacement housing,’’ in
§ 983.51(c)(1) to ‘‘newly developed,
rehabilitated, or replacement housing.’’
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the
commenter and has removed the
language ‘‘regard to’’ and revised the
language ‘‘newly developed or
replacement housing.’’ Additional
language revisions were made to
§ 983.51(c) for better readability.
23. Prohibition of Assistance for
Ineligible Units (§ 983.52)
One commenter recommended
deleting § 983.52(d). In the alternative,
the commenter urged HUD to revise the
requirement from applying upon
‘‘proposal submission’’ to only be
triggered following ‘‘proposal
selection.’’ According to the commenter,
if the owner submits a proposal and that
proposal is not successful (perhaps
because there are not enough PBVs at
that time or it is simply not awarded),
this language will foreclose the owner’s
future participation in the PBV program.
HUD Response: HUD has retained
proposed § 983.52(d) in this final rule.
The provision has not changed from the
requirement in place under the prior
regulation, except with respect to units
developed without the use of an
Agreement and rehabilitated projects
developed after HAP contract execution,
and it continues to be necessary to
ensure critical development
requirements are followed. HUD
declines to amend the language to
require applicability only after proposal
selection, because doing so could result
in development occurring prior to
completion of critical development
requirements. HUD clarifies, however,
that if the PHA does not select the
project for PBVs, the project is not
subject to program requirements and the
provision does not apply.
HUD also takes this opportunity to
amend the prohibition on using PBVs in
manufactured homes. Under this final
rule, PHAs may use PBVs in
manufactured homes so long as they are
permanently affixed to a permanent
foundation and the owner owns the
land on which the manufactured home
is located, as these are necessary
preconditions for compliance with the
PBV program rules (all standard PBV
rules continue to apply). Using PBVs in
manufactured homes also means that
the manufactured home can be made
accessible in accordance with HUD’s
accessibility requirements, including
requirements under HUD’s Section 504
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38265
requirements at 24 CFR part 8. HUD
finds this change necessary given the
changes in industry practice since the
rule was written.
24. Cap on Number of PBV Units in
Each Project (§ 983.54)
Question 16: Whether the proposed rule
sufficiently addressed the project cap
requirements in relation to a unit losing
its excepted status?
One commenter supported HUD’s
changes as beneficial for families and
PHAs. Other commenters suggested that
HUD permit a continued excepted status
for families that lose their excepted
status, whether due to the death of an
elderly family member or other reasons.
Commenters warned that removing the
unit could have negative financial
implications especially when the project
has been underwritten against the
number of subsidized units. A
commenter stated that this would align
HUD with PIH Notice 2017–21, because
this would allow units to remain
excepted until turnover if the family no
longer qualifies for the exception
through no fault of its own.
One commenter proposed that HUD
adopt a ‘‘next available unit’’ rule,
which would allow a PHA and project
owner to continue counting units as
excepted so long as the next available
unit is subsequently leased to an eligible
family at turnover. In the alternative,
this commenter suggested a cure period
of 90 days, in which the project owner
and PHA could avoid default under the
HAP contract while assessing options,
ensuring compliance, amending the
HAP contract, and engaging in other
related tasks. Another commenter
suggested that PHAs should enforce
families’ excepted status without HUD
intervention and that a de minimis
standard should be set so a minimal
number of units can be out of excepted
status without changes needed to the
PBV contract.
HUD Response: HUD reviewed the
comment and determined that § 983.262
of this final rule already affords
discretion to PHAs to allow the elderly
exception to continue to apply to the
unit where, through circumstances
beyond control of the family (e.g., death
of the elderly family member, long term
or permanent hospitalization, or nursing
care), the elderly family member no
longer resides in the unit. Further,
should HUD adopt a ‘‘next available
unit’’ policy, such a policy would be at
odds with statutory requirements, as
would be the ‘‘de minimis’’ standard
suggested by another commenter.
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Question 17: Whether other options not
considered by the proposed rule should
be available to the PHA when a unit
loses its excepted status?
Alternative Options
A commenter noted that no other
options need to be considered. Another
commenter suggested unit substitution
as an option to PHAs when a unit loses
its excepted status.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed
the comment and has determined that
§ 983.262 of the proposed rule already
offers unit substitution as an option.
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HCV Conversion
A commenter suggested PHAs have
discretion, but not the obligation, to
provide families with an HCV because
requiring PHAs to provide all families
in formerly excepted units with an HCV
could create a loophole where families
who are initially eligible for the
excepted unit move in and promptly
remove a household member from the
lease to prematurely access an HCV.
One commenter expressed that the
option to temporarily convert to HCV
seems burdensome to PHAs. Another
commenter suggested that for
§ 983.262(f) (now moved to
§ 983.262(b)(4) in this final rule), HUD
should require the owner to accept the
tenant-based voucher issued to the
family if the family chooses to remain
or is unable to locate another suitable
unit.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
perspective provided by commenters
concerning the option to temporarily
remove the unit from the PBV HAP
contract and provide the family with a
tenant-based voucher when a unit loses
its excepted status; however, under the
proposed rule, this was meant to be one
of several options that a PHA could use
to manage the loss of the exception.
Additionally, given the discretion
provided at § 983.262(c)(3) and (d)(1)–
(2), HUD expects a unit losing its
excepted status not to be a frequent
occurrence. Additionally, there is no
reason to assume that families will start
removing members from the lease just to
receive a tenant-based voucher.
Combining Exception Categories
One commenter encouraged HUD to
retain references to combining
exception categories in a project and to
permit the designation of units as
elderly or eligible for supportive
services in projects that are exempt from
the income-mixing requirement. This
commenter stated that HUD is not
statutorily required to prohibit PHAs
from designating units under the HAP
contract once the income-mixing
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requirement does not apply, due to
reasons beyond income-mixing, such as
complying with various set asides and
pointing allocations in LIHTC
applications or seeking to convert
existing elderly designated public
housing to PBV.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with
commenters that reinstating
§ 983.56(b)(3) in this final rule would be
helpful. While the provision was
initially removed because the
supportive services exception requires
that supportive services are made
available to all PBV families in the
project, HUD agrees that this
‘‘combining exception categories’’
provision is not at odds with that
requirement and re-inserting it makes
clear that PHAs may designate units in
the HAP contract for specific
exceptions. This final rule restores the
provision at § 983.54(c)(1) with textual
changes to clarify that the provision
allows that some units may be under
different exception or exclusion
categories than others in a single
project. HUD disagrees with the
comment that a unit may be excepted
when it is already excluded. Where a
unit is excluded, the statute provides no
basis for an additional exception.
Supportive Services
One commenter supported HUD’s
emphasis that the use of supportive
services is voluntary. Another
commenter thought that families
receiving drug and alcohol treatment as
a condition of living in an excepted unit
should agree to supportive services, if
needed, and to comply with PBV
regulations including following their
supportive service plan and timely
paying their rent.
HUD Response: HUD does not make
participation in supportive services
mandatory and the statute conveys that
participation in such supportive
services is voluntary.
Question 18: Does the regulation clearly
convey how the Family Self-Sufficiency
(FSS) program may be used in meeting
the supportive services exception?
Many commenters stated that the
proposed rule is clear on how FSS can
be used in meeting supportive services.
A commenter supported the change that
prohibits owners from terminating a
family’s lease for failure to complete an
FSS contract without good cause. In
response to question 18, one commenter
found the proposed rule unclear on
whether ‘‘supportive services used in
connection to the FSS program’’ could
be the sole services offered to families
to meet the exception. Another
commenter suggested putting the
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proposed rule on hold until HUD
finalizes the FSS proposed rule 16 to
avoid any potential conflict between
both rules.
HUD Response: While HUD
appreciates the comments received
concerning the clarity of the FSS
provisions, upon reflection, HUD has
determined that a PHA that administers
an FSS program can choose to solely use
FSS in meeting the supportive services
exception. This is because PBV families
are eligible to enroll in FSS (and,
therefore, eligible for the supportive
services that are made available through
the FSS program) and enrollment in FSS
is voluntary. However, if the family fails
to comply, without good cause, with the
requirements of the FSS contract of
participation, the family may be
terminated from FSS. If the family’s FSS
contract of participation is terminated,
the PBV unit would lose its excepted
status if the PHA solely uses FSS in
meeting the supportive services
exception and the PHA policy in the
FSS Action Plan prohibits the reenrollment of all members of a
household that enrolled in FSS but did
not complete the program successfully
(were terminated from FSS or left the
program voluntarily); as provided in
§ 983.262(d)(3)(iii) of this final rule, the
unit loses its excepted status only if the
entire family becomes ineligible for all
supportive services for a reason other
than that the family successfully
completed the services.
PHAs that choose to rely solely on
FSS to meet the supportive services
exception must, therefore, plan carefully
for such an eventuality. The PHA may
consider the following in making a
determination on whether to rely solely
on FSS: (a) FSS graduation rates,
because if the PHA has low FSS
graduation rates and a policy
prohibiting the re-enrollment of
previous FSS participants, this could
potentially result in a high number of
PBV units losing their excepted status;
and (b) availability of an FSS slot at the
time of the PBV family’s request for
enrollment since the supportive services
must be made available to the family
within a reasonable time, as defined by
the PHA but not to exceed 120 calendar
days from the family’s request, for the
exception to apply. Further, the PHA
could avoid the potential loss of the
PBV unit’s excepted status by making
the supportive services used in
connection with the FSS program
available to non-FSS PBV families at the
project. Notwithstanding, PHAs cannot
use the FSS grant-funded coordinators
to serve non-FSS PBV families but non16 85
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FSS services can serve non-FSS PBV
families.
With respect to the commenter’s
suggestion to put this proposed rule on
hold, the FSS rule was published on
May 17, 2022, with an effective date of
June 16, 2022 (compliance with the FSS
rule was required no later than
November 14, 2022). As a result, HUD
can ensure all HOTMA final rule
provisions are aligned with the FSS rule
to avoid any potential conflict between
both rules. HUD has also taken this
opportunity to clarify that, to meet the
exception, the supportive services must
be made available to the family within
a reasonable time, as defined by the
PHA but not to exceed 120 calendar
days from the family’s request.
25. Site Selection Standards (§ 983.55)
Another commenter supported
permitting PHAs to use project-based
vouchers in new construction
developments in areas with poverty
rates greater than 20 percent, but
suggested HUD does not require the
PHA to have gathered five years of
information regarding poverty rates first.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
commenter’s support pertaining to
permitting PHAs to use project-based
vouchers in new construction
developments in areas with poverty
rates greater than 20 percent. In this
final rule, HUD continues to require the
PHA to have gathered five years of
information regarding poverty rates first,
which must be consistent with the PHA
Plan under 24 CFR part 903 and the
PHA Administrative Plan, because HUD
believes doing so will improve
compliance with the requirement at
section 8(o)(13)(c)(ii) of the 1937 Act
that the PBV HAP contract be consistent
with the goal of deconcentrating poverty
and expanding housing and economic
opportunities.
26. Environmental Review (§ 983.56)
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Support for the Proposed Rule
One commenter supported an
environmental review exception for
existing housing that is formerly
federally assisted property. Another
agreed with the proposed rule but
suggested broadening the definition of
existing housing to encompass more
properties.
HUD Response: HUD has not adopted
this aspect of the proposed rule, as
further explained below in this
discussion of comments regarding
§ 983.56.
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Responses to Questions 19 and 20
Regarding Evidence of Past
Environmental Reviews
Commenters warned that requiring
owners to demonstrate that an
environmental review was previously
conducted would be an administrative
burden. A commenter stated that it is
unreasonable to require that new
owners of older buildings provide
environmental review documentation.
Commenters stated that an exemption
should be allowed even if
documentation of prior review is
unavailable. Commenters also stated
that HUD should infer that those
previous federally assisted projects must
have conducted an environmental
review and HUD should assume that the
review was properly conducted and met
environmental review requirements
especially if the owner is in good
standing with HUD. A commenter
suggested an owner should be allowed
to self-certify that the property was
formerly federally assisted. Another
commenter expressed that Congress set
a bright line standard to exempt all
existing housing from demonstrating
that an environmental review was
previously conducted, and, as such,
there should be a rebuttable
presumption that the existing housing
received a proper environmental review,
unless HUD can show otherwise. A
commenter stated that if the PHA’s
environmental review records are
unavailable, then a new review should
be conducted.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that
requiring owners to demonstrate that an
environmental review was previously
conducted would have presented some
administrative burden and has removed
this requirement.
HUD Should Exempt All Existing
Housing
Commenters expressed that HUD
should exempt all existing housing that
only receives HAP Federal assistance. A
commenter suggested this exemption
should not expire. Commenters stated
that the statute clearly provides an
exemption broader than HUD’s proposal
and noted legislative history shows that
Congress intended such an exemption.
A commenter stated that HUD’s citation
of Church of the Holy Trinity v. United
States, 143 U.S. 457 (1892), as support
for the proposed rule’s environmental
review position is inapplicable because
there is no evidence that a plain reading
of the text would be in contravention of
Congress’s intent that site-based housing
comply with environmental review
requirements. This commenter
expressed that the HUD’s Regulatory
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Impact Assessment concedes that the
Housing and Economic Recovery Act
(HERA) and HOTMA requirements
contradict Congressional support for
environmental review.
One commenter stated that HUD
should exempt existing housing to
prioritize environmental review for new
construction and rehabilitation projects
because they pose the greatest
environmental risk. Another commenter
stated that this requirement would do
nothing to protect tenants from adverse
environmental conditions. Another
commenter found HUD’s proposal
legally questionable and unnecessary to
protect subsidized tenants from living in
areas with adverse environmental
conditions. Commenters suggested that
HUD allow exemption of existing
housing from environmental review if it
meets the criteria for environmental
acceptability under § 982.401(l)(2).
Another commenter also questioned
HUD’s statutory authority to impose an
environmental review requirement on
project owners of existing structures and
suggested that HUD eliminate this
requirement because it is significantly
burdensome on responsible entities,
PHAs, and project owners as the
document retention policies adopted by
responsible entities are not uniform.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that
requiring owners to submit past reports
of environmental reviews may result in
a burden to the owner without reducing
the risk of unhealthy environmental
conditions. Upon consideration of this
and other comments, HUD determines
that revising the rule to provide that
environmental review is not required to
be undertaken before entering into a
HAP contract for existing housing,
except where the review is required by
law or regulation relating to funding
other than PBV housing assistance
payments, best balances HOTMA’s
textual change with Congress’s
continuing emphasis on the importance
of Federal assistance being used in an
environmentally sound manner. HUD
agrees that existing housing projects
pose lesser environmental risk than
newly constructed and rehabilitated
projects given that the existing housing
structures at issue are not altered,
though HUD recognizes existing
housing is not without risk. HUD agrees
with commenters that compliance with
standards for environmental
acceptability as part of the review of site
selection standards in § 983.55 (formerly
under § 982.401(l)(2)) can contribute to
the mitigation of environmental harm to
and the risk of exposure to adverse
environmental conditions in existing
housing.
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Requirements Following Contract
Effective Date
A commenter stated that adding units
generally does not create an
environmental impact. The commenter
encouraged HUD to provide technical
and financial assistance to responsible
entities and PHAs if HUD requires an
environmental review for a project that
seeks to add units to an existing HAP
contract that has already undergone
review, to ensure sufficient capacity and
expertise. Another commenter suggested
that HUD should not require review at
the five-year review period if
environmental conditions have not
changed in the intervening years.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that
adding units generally does not have an
environmental impact. PBV regulations
do not require review every five years
nor was such a requirement proposed.
HUD appreciates the comment
encouraging technical and financial
assistance to responsible entities and
PHAs. HUD intends to provide
additional technical assistance
regarding changes to the PBV program
following publication of this final rule.
HUD will consider the need for
financial assistance in existing HUD
programs and any relevant new funding
opportunities that become available.
Allow Alternatives
Commenters supported the current
environmental review requirements,
and requested HUD allow acceptable
alternatives, such as an abbreviated
review or other local environmental
review reports.
HUD Response: HUD considered
whether the regulation previously in
effect should be amended to allow for
alternatives, but determined that such
an approach would not be appropriate
for newly constructed or rehabilitated
housing, which are subject to
environmental review under law, and
that requiring no environmental review
before entering into a HAP contract for
existing housing is a better approach,
given that the housing remains as it was
prior to receiving PBV assistance and
assisted families remain protected by
HQS.
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Require Environmental Review Near
Documented Hazard Sites
One commenter recommended that
existing housing projects be required to
undergo environmental review if the
site is located near a documented
hazard site and suggested that HUD
require PHAs to notify tenants and
update HQS inspection lists when a
housing project is close to a Superfund
site or on the National Priorities List.
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HUD Response: HUD finds that it
would be impractical to require
environmental review when
environmental issues are near the
housing because, in many cases, the
issue would become known only
through environmental review and in
the remaining cases, the PHA would be
prohibited from selecting any such site
if it presented a hazard in accordance
with site selection standards.
Use HEROS To Track Environmental
Reviews
One commenter encouraged HUD to
continue tracking environmental
reviews via HUD’s Environmental
Review Online System (HEROS).
HUD Response: HUD intends to
continue use of HEROS.
Technical Edit Suggestions
A commenter stated that § 983.56
should refer to parts 50 and 58 instead
of summarizing the requirements to
prevent inconsistencies. This
commenter also stated that if there are
differences between parts 50 and 58, the
regulations should identify the
deviations. This commenter further
suggested that HUD revise § 983.56(d)(2)
to read, ‘‘The responsible entity has
completed the environmental review
procedures required by 24 CFR part 58,
and HUD has either issued authority to
use grant funds or Letter to Proceed.’’
The commenter recommended revising
§ 983.56(e) to ensure consistent use of
terminology with part 58. The
commenter additionally expressed that
§ 983.56(f) is inapplicable to HUD,
because PHAs cannot direct HUD’s
compliance with its own requirements.
Another commenter suggested HUD
clarify that a transfer of ownership of a
property should not impact the
definition of existing housing for
environmental review purposes.
HUD Response: In this final rule,
HUD amended some of the language of
proposed § 983.56 to ensure there were
no inconsistencies with parts 50 and 58.
HUD amends paragraph (f) to better
reflect part 50 and 58 requirements and
paragraph (d)(2) to clarify the
applicability of the Letter to Proceed.
HUD does not find clarification
regarding transfer of ownership to be
necessary, as the definition of existing
housing is clear that the condition of the
units, rather than the ownership of the
units, is the relevant criterion, and the
environmental review regulation clearly
provides that no environmental review
is required before entering into a HAP
contract for existing housing.
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Expand Definition To Match PIH Notice
A commenter suggested expanding
the definition of existing housing to
include the entirety of the PIH Notice
2016–22 definition, which ‘‘clarifies the
applicability of environmental reviews
under 24 CFR parts 50 and 58 to all
PHA activities at project site(s) assisted
or to be assisted by HUD.’’
HUD Response: HUD has determined
to change the requirements for
environmental review for the reasons
explained above in this discussion of
comments regarding § 983.56; upon the
effective date of this final rule, portions
of PIH Notice 2016–22 relating to PBV
will become obsolete. HUD intends to
issue guidance replacing PIH Notice
2016–22.
Change the Deadline for Submitting an
Environmental Review
A commenter suggested that HUD
allow two years to write an
environmental review.
HUD Response: HUD determined that
procedural changes to the manner in
which HUD or a responsible entity
conducts environmental reviews are
beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
Question 21: Time Limit for Accepting
Previously Assisted Properties’
Environmental Reviews
Some commenters stated that there
should be no time limit for when prior
environmental reviews must have been
conducted to be accepted for purposes
of the exemption if no changes occurred
during the intervening years. Other
commenters suggested time ranges. One
commenter suggested an environmental
review for federally assisted property
that has undergone significant work or
rehabilitation in the past ten years.
Another commenter objected to HUD
establishing a time limit but suggested
a review if the property has changed
use. A commenter suggested every thirty
years to remain coterminous with early
PBV HAP contracts. Another commenter
recommended every five years
consistent with HUD’s general
recommendation. One commenter
expressed that there should be a tenyear limit for the exemption since
neighborhoods often change on a
decadal scale, and another commenter
stated that time limits should be tied to
past evolution of the rule, rather than an
arbitrary period.
HUD Response: HUD does not
proceed with the proposed reliance on
prior environmental reviews in this
final rule for the reasons explained
above in this discussion of comments
regarding § 983.56, and therefore does
not adopt any time limit for prior
environmental reviews.
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Question 22: Alternative Approaches To
Conducting NEPA Reviews
Commenters stated that no national
standard would be an adequate
substitute for the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) review.
One commenter expressed that most
lending institutions will require an
American Society for Testing and
Materials (ASTM) Phase I site
assessment but believed this would not
be adequate because most will not
include review of historic building
elements, endangered species, noise,
airport waste storage and groundwater
flow. Some commenters suggested that
HUD allow projects to use local
requirements to conduct environmental
reviews because most local jurisdictions
have rigorous environmental review
requirements.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
examples of environmental standards
other than Federal environmental
review provided by commenters and the
discussion of the limitations of those
standards. HUD finds that none of the
examples provided are easily
determined to address the same criteria
as Federal environmental review nor are
they uniformly applicable on a national
basis. HUD appreciates that many
projects will be subject to these
alternative standards and expects PHAs
will thoroughly consider the results of
reviews undertaken in response to
lender or local requirements, including
whether the results impact the PHA’s
site selection determination.
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27. PHA-Owned Units (§ 983.57)
A commenter stated that it is unclear
the conflict HUD is attempting to avoid
by requiring independent entity
oversight of development activity.
Another commenter suggested that the
PHA plan should contain details about
the rights and obligations of the
independent entity with respect to both
the PHA and the tenants, and that HUD
should require that applicants and
tenants receive a written disclosure
explaining: (1) the relationship between
the PHA and independent entity; (2)
contact information for the independent
entity; (3) what rights the tenants may
have; and (4) what to do in the case of
a complaint. That same commenter
stated that special care is needed to
achieve the intended quality results
from PBV investments, suggesting that
HUD should ensure that PHA affiliateowned PBV units receive adequate
independent oversight—including
compliance with HQS and civil rights
obligations—by another public entity or
HUD.
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HUD Response: HUD maintains the
position that the PHA cannot perform
any function that would present a clear
conflict (ensuring compliance with
selection process, inspections and rent
setting) for units they own. 42 U.S.C.
1437f(o)(11) requires that the unit of
general local government or a HUDapproved independent entity perform
inspections and rent determinations for
any PHA-owned units. When the owner
carries out development activity under
§ 983.152 or substantial improvement
under §§ 983.207(d) or 983.212, the
independent entity is required to review
the evidence and work completion
certification submitted by the owner in
accordance with § 983.155(b) and
determine if the units are in complete
accordance with § 983.156. This is an
inspection function. To assist
independent entities in carrying out
these inspection responsibilities and
avoid further conflicts, one function was
added to § 983.57, requiring the
independent entity to approve
substantial improvement on units under
a HAP contract in accordance with
§ 983.212 (which was § 983.157 in the
proposed rule).
HUD does not believe it is necessary
to add additional disclosures. When a
family is accepted into the PBV
program, § 983.252 requires the PHA to
conduct an oral briefing and provide a
written information packet. Although
the topics listed in the comments are
not explicitly covered in the rule, HUD
believes that many of these items would
be covered in meeting the requirements
at § 983.252, such as how the program
works and family and owner
responsibilities. Additionally,
§ 982.352(b) sets conditions on assisted
units that are PHA-owned, including
that the PHA must inform the family,
both orally and in writing, that the
family has the right to select any eligible
unit available for lease; the PHA-owned
unit must be freely selected by the
family, without PHA pressure or
steering; and the PHA must obtain the
services of an independent entity.
28. Units Excepted From Program Cap
and Project Cap (§ 983.59)
Question 23: Should PHAs that wish to
PBV over a certain number threshold be
required to analyze the impact on the
availability of vouchers and
demonstrate that they will still have
sufficient tenant-based vouchers
available within a reasonable period of
time for eligible PBV families that wish
to move?
Some commenters disagreed with a
cap on the number of PBVs a PHA can
use based on the number of available
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38269
HCVs. Commenters supported PHAs
allocating PBVs and tenant-based
vouchers (TBVs) based on local
conditions, which some noted as
Congressional intent for PHAs. One
commenter expressed that HUD lacks
the statutory authority to restrict a
PHA’s ability to project-base vouchers.
This commenter stated that HUD’s
concerns about unintended
consequences of cap exceptions are
unfounded, given studies finding that
Moving to Work (MTW) agencies
usually fall within statutory program
caps, and PHAs already consider the
availability of vouchers due to families’
right to move. The commenter further
criticized HUD’s analysis requirement of
available vouchers for eligible PBV
families as an unfunded mandate and
duplicative of existing efforts. This
commenter also recommended that the
list of formerly assisted housing
excluded from the portfolio cap should
include HOME, and that replacement
units excluded from the portfolio cap
should include off-site replacement
units, to enable owners and PHAs to site
replacement housing in high
opportunity areas, low vacancy areas,
and areas outside of minority
concentrations, which are locations that
HUD has prioritized as important fair
housing goals and has recognized as
being better for the residents. The
commenter further suggested that, in the
case of newly constructed units
developed to replace units that meet the
criteria of § 983.59(b), units should be
excluded even if the replacement units
are built on a different site and the
requirement at proposed § 983.59(d)(2)
should require that the identification of
the housing as replacement housing
occur prior to PBV award rather than
prior to demolition.
Commenters recommended that HUD
establish an overall hard cap of 50
percent of vouchers, with exceptions to
allow PHAs to project-base vouchers if
local conditions warrant. Another
commenter preferred PBV assistance
over tenant-based assistance because it
eliminates the barriers to lease from a
private landlord in the open rental
market. A commenter suggested the
threshold at which the PHA or HUD
should focus on the impact of providing
PBV families with a meaningful
opportunity should be when the waiting
list is five years long.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates all
the comments received regarding this
question. With respect to the comments
that HUD establish a hard cap of 50
percent of the number of vouchers the
PHA may project-base (with exceptions
based on local services) or remove the
limitation cap entirely, the cap and the
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exceptions to the cap are statutory
requirements and consequently HUD
cannot alter or remove the cap through
rulemaking. HUD further agrees with
the comments that the determination to
choose to project-base vouchers rests
with the PHA, including the decision to
project-base vouchers in units that, as a
result of the HOTMA amendments to 42
U.S.C. 1437f(o)(13)(B), do not count
against the percentage limitation on
PBV units. However, nothing in the
HOTMA provision that excludes units
previously subject to federally required
rent restrictions or that were receiving
another type of long-term housing
subsidy provided by HUD from the
percentage limitation relieves the PHA
of its responsibility to administer its
PBV program in accordance with all
other program requirements. In cases
where the percentage of units the PHA
is contemplating project-basing is over
50 percent of ACC units, HUD is
concerned about the potential impact on
the PHA’s ability to fulfill its obligations
under 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(13)(E). Section
1437f(o)(13)(E) provides that families
may move from the PBV unit at any
time after the family occupied the unit
for 12 months, and that upon such a
move, the PHA shall provide the family
with HCV tenant-based assistance or
other comparable tenant-based
assistance, and further provides that if
such assistance is not immediately
available, this requirement may be met
by providing the family priority to
receive the next voucher or comparable
tenant-based rental assistance.
The use of PBV assistance can be an
effective preservation tool and HUD is
supportive of the use of PBV to prevent
the loss of affordable housing units in
their communities. However, in cases
where a PHA is selecting a project for
PBV assistance that would result in a
situation where the PHA would be
project-basing 50 percent or more of the
PHA’s authorized units, HUD believes
that it is critical that the PHA has first
fully considered the ramifications of
that decision for its program, including
if and how the PHA will be able to
fulfill its statutory obligation to provide
priority for tenant-based rental
assistance to PBV families that wish to
move consistent with 42 U.S.C.
1437f(o)(13)(E). Furthermore, since
available vouchers would need to be
prioritized for PBV families exercising
their statutory right to move with
tenant-based assistance, PHAs should
also want to take the potential impact
on families on the PHA’s tenant-based
waiting list into consideration.
Consequently, this final rule provides
that PHAs must perform an analysis of
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the impact prior to selecting a project
for PBV assistance if project-basing 50
percent or more of the PHA’s authorized
voucher units, and the analysis should
consider the PHA’s ability to fulfill its
responsibilities to provide tenant-based
assistance to PBV families that wish to
move and the impact on the tenantbased waiting list in such cases.
Replacement Housing and Units
One commenter proposed that HUD
exempt off-site public housing
replacement from caps to help
deconcentrate poverty. Another
commenter recommended that HUD
allow off-site public housing
replacement to maximize flexibility to
use PBVs to replace public housing.
Another commenter expressed concern
over § 983.59, because replacement
units should reflect the number and size
of units required by the original
residents to maximize their preference
to return, reduce displacement, and
maximize the preservation of site-based
units in the community, according to
the commenter. The commenter
requested a civil rights review if there
is any loss of units or change in unit
size. As part of the redevelopment
process, the commenter suggested that
developers be required to survey
residents about their housing size needs
and only alter unit sizes if the survey
demonstrates that the original residents
require fewer or different sized units.
The commenter further recommended
the following: (1) that a reduction in the
total assisted replacement units should
be prohibited, unless the civil rights
review makes no adverse finding; (2) the
developer must demonstrate that the
unit is in a voucher friendly area as well
as located in a census tract where the
poverty rate is greater than 20 percent;
and (3) the resident notice and
consultation reflect a desire not to
return to PBV units. Commenters
additionally opposed HUD’s limitations
that replacement units be on the same
physical site as improper on fair
housing grounds and overly restrictive,
which the commenters stated was an
unnecessary restriction and reinforced
racial segregation.
HUD Response: First, HUD clarifies
that nothing in the proposed rule
prohibited off-site replacement. The
provision at § 983.59(d) of the proposed
rule served only to clarify which units
are excluded, by statute (section
106(a)(2) of HOTMA), from the
percentage limitation and incomemixing requirement. Under both the
proposed rule and this final rule, PHAs
may project-base units to replace
formerly assisted or rent-restricted units
off-site. However, a PHA’s choice to
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replace units off-site does not result in
those units being excluded from the
percentage limitation or income-mixing
requirement. Because the exclusion in
section 106(a)(2) of HOTMA provided
only that ‘‘units of project-based
assistance that are attached to units
previously subject to federally required
rent restrictions or receiving another
type of long-term housing subsidy
provided by the Secretary shall not
count toward the percentage
limitation,’’ units located on an entirely
different site from those replaced do not
qualify for the statutory exclusion from
the percentage limitation. Similarly,
such units do not qualify for the
statutory exclusion from the incomemixing requirement at section 106(a)(3)
of HOTMA, which excluded only ‘‘units
previously subject to federally required
rent restrictions or receiving other
project-based assistance provided by the
Secretary.’’
HUD recognizes Congress’s intent to
preserve public and other affordable
housing under the PBV program by (1)
providing that on-site replacement units
do not count toward the PBV percentage
limitation and (2) giving HUD the
authority to create additional exception
categories. HUD acknowledges that
sometimes attaching PBVs at an off-site
location may better advance fair housing
goals, including to racially integrate
communities and to provide
replacement housing of adequate
bedroom size, which commenters cited
as concerns. In many cases, the off-site
project would be eligible for the
increased cap at § 983.6(d)(1)(iv)
(projects in areas where vouchers are
difficult to use). In addition, to more
directly facilitate opportunities to
replace housing off-site, HUD is adding
at § 983.6(d)(v) of this final rule an
exception category specifically for offsite PBV replacement housing under the
PHA’s increased cap authority (under
which the PHA may project-base an
additional 10 percent of authorized
voucher units). HUD believes this
additional category will address the
concerns raised and further notes that
PHAs have other options beyond this
new exception authority to develop offsite replacement housing with PBV
assistance. Under the RAD PBV
program, HUD waived section
8(o)(13)(B) of the 1937 Act so that
covered projects, including those RAD
PBV projects developed at a new
location, do not count against the PBV
percentage at all. Finally, PHAs can and
should be making efforts to improve
their tenant-based voucher programs to
better address the aforementioned fair
housing concerns.
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Exclusion for LIHTC and 515 Loans
Commenters supported HUD’s
proposal to include units that
previously received LIHTC allocations
or 515 loans as excepted units.
However, commenters stated HUD lacks
statutory authority to limit this
exclusion to properties that have been
subject to rent limitations or received
specified types of assistance within five
years prior to PHA commitment of
PBVs. Commenters recommended
removing this limitation or
incorporating an exception for
replacement of old public housing
properties.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed
the comments and has determined that
HUD has the statutory authority to limit
this exclusion to properties that have
been subject to rent limitations or
received specified types of assistance
within five years prior to PHA
commitment of PBVs.
General Opposition
A commenter stated that requiring
PHAs to analyze the impact on the
availability of vouchers and
demonstrate that they will still have
sufficient tenant-based vouchers
available within a reasonable period of
time for eligible PBV families that wish
to move is costly and burdensome to
PHAs. One commenter opposed HUD
requiring an analysis as a pre-requisite
for project-basing additional vouchers,
due to a concern that an analysis will
remove the PHA’s discretion to decide
to project-base, which would impact
PHAs’ broader plans to serve their
communities.
HUD Response: In this final rule, an
analysis of impact in § 983.58
appropriately addresses the risk of
unintended or unanticipated
consequences that over-use of PHAs’
broad and unlimited exception
authority to project-base formerly
restricted or assisted units may have
without creating undue burden.
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Opposition to Setting a Specific
Threshold
A commenter opposed HUD setting
additional thresholds based on the
percentage of vouchers and found the
current turnover method for PBV
assistance sufficient. This commenter
stated that high rates of turnover at a
property indicate the need for
improvement and retention of tenants.
Another commenter recommended that
HUD provide PHAs with additional
discretion in allowing PBV tenants to
leave with their voucher or extending
the occupancy requirement in PBV to
two years, which is consistent with
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RAD, due to PBVs’ higher turnover rate
than other developments, which
increases HCV waitlists. Commenters
also recommended alternating the
turnover voucher issuance between
households on the HCV list or other
waiting list.
HUD Response: HUD is unable to
modify families’ option to move with
tenant-based assistance because it is
required by statute.
Recommended Threshold Percentage of
Vouchers
A commenter stated that the increase
in a PBV household’s eligibility to
request vouchers leads to a waitlist
backlog and an impact on occupancy in
some locations, increased vacancy rates,
and higher turnover costs. This
commenter recommended that PHAs
have the flexibility to administer a 25
percent cap on tenant-based attrition
vouchers to eligible requesting PBV
households, so that 75 percent of
attrition vouchers go to HCV waitlist
families. The commenter suggested this
approach as equitable to house
unsubsidized families faster while
preserving PBV residents’ rights to
continued HCV assistance.
HUD Response: HUD reviewed the
comment and has determined that HUD
is unable to modify PBV families’ option
to move with tenant-based assistance
because it is required by statute.
Alternative Suggestions
A commenter stated that the uncertain
availability of tenant-based vouchers
due to attrition, being over-leased or
under-leased, and spending shortfalls,
makes it difficult to set a threshold that
would ensure that PBV participants can
be issued a tenant-based voucher within
a certain timeframe. This commenter
stated that the PBV cap as a percentage
of a PHA’s total allocation is a better
predictor that tenant-based vouchers
will be anticipated to be available for
program transfers. The commenter also
stated that PBV assistance is preferable
over tenant-based assistance because
PBV property owners target certain
special needs population, eliminating
the barriers experienced to lease from a
private landlord in the open rental
market.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed
the comment and determined that this
final rule will require an analysis of
impact in § 983.58, which is required if
project-basing 50 percent or more of
units under the ACC.
Congressional Authority
Commenters stated that HUD does not
have the statutory authority to control a
PHA’s authority to project-base
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38271
vouchers. One commenter stated that if
HUD decides to place more restrictions
on PHAs, then it should be
Congressionally authorized. Another
commenter recommended that HUD
increase the number of housing
vouchers in general.
HUD Response: With regard to the
comment that if HUD decides to place
more restrictions on PHAs in terms of
the number of vouchers that may be
project-based, the restrictions should be
Congressionally authorized, HUD agrees
that the determination to choose to
project-base vouchers rests with the
PHA, including the decision to projectbase vouchers in units that do not count
against the percentage limitation on
PBV units. The final rule does not place
additional restriction on the number or
percentage of vouchers that the PHA
may project-base. However, nothing in
the HOTMA provision that excludes
units previously subject to federally
required rent restrictions or that were
receiving another type of long-term
housing subsidy from the percentage
limitation relieves the PHA from its
responsibility to administer its PBV
program in accordance with all other
program requirements. HUD is
concerned about the PHA’s ability to
fulfill its obligations under 42 U.S.C.
1437f(o)(13)(E) in cases where most or
all of the PHA’s vouchers are projectbased. Section 1437f(o)(13)(E) provides
that families may move from the PBV
unit at any time after the family
occupied the unit for 12 months, and
that upon such a move, the PHA shall
provide the family with HCV tenantbased assistance or other comparable
tenant-based assistance, and further
provides that if such assistance is not
immediately available, this requirement
may be met by providing the family
priority to receive the next voucher or
comparable tenant-based rental
assistance. The use of PBV assistance
can be an effective preservation tool and
HUD is supportive of the use of PBV to
prevent the loss of affordable housing
units in their communities. However,
when a PHA is considering projectbasing a high percentage of its
authorized units, HUD believes that it is
critical that the PHA should take into
account if and how the PHA will be able
to fulfill its statutory obligation to
provide tenant-based rental assistance to
PBV families that wish to move.
Further, since available vouchers would
need to be prioritized for PBV families
exercising their statutory right to move
with tenant-based assistance, PHAs
would also want to take the potential
ramifications for reaching families on
the PHA’s tenant-based waiting list into
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consideration. Consequently, this final
rule provides that in cases where a PHA
is selecting a project for PBV assistance
that would result in a situation where
the PHA would be project-basing 50
percent or more of the PHA’s authorized
units, the PHA must perform an analysis
of the impact of its program.
With regard to the commenter
recommendation that HUD increase the
number of housing vouchers in general,
HUD cannot increase the number of
authorized vouchers through this final
rule. New vouchers and the funds to
support them are provided by Congress
through HUD’s appropriations acts.
HUD Report/Study
A commenter stated that families
should not be forced to wait in
potentially unsafe housing while they
wait for the PHA to process the PBV-toHCV transfer. Therefore, commenters
suggested that HUD and PHAs monitor
and report from the next three to five
years increases in wait times for HCV
assistance from PBV families where
PHAs have increased the availability of
PBV assistance, due to HOTMA.
HUD Response: HUD’s position has
always been that families should not be
forced to wait in potentially unsafe
housing while they wait for the PHA to
process a family’s right to move.
29. Inspecting Units (§ 983.103)
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Question 24: Non-Life-Threatening
(NLT) Conditions for New Construction
and Rehabilitation Housing
One commenter stated that NLTs
could effectively be used when newly
constructed developments have units
ready for occupancy, but the public
space areas are still not fully developed,
and the development can obtain a
temporary certificate of occupancy. A
commenter proposed that HUD continue
to use the current definition for NLT
conditions for new construction and
rehabilitation housing because it
streamlines standards and provides
owners with the opportunity to address
minor issues that arise from
construction or rehabilitation work.
A commenter stated that there is no
reason for new construction or
rehabilitation to fail HQS when they
have the final certificate of occupancy,
especially where new construction is
built under strict county and local
requirements. Another commenter
urged that new construction or
rehabilitated units should be subject to
regular HQS inspections, and not NLT
or alternative inspections. However, this
commenter suggested that PHAs should
have discretion in applying NLT or
alternative inspection options.
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Another commenter expressed that
while NLT conditions may occur in new
construction or rehabilitated properties,
other units, including PBVs, can use
NLT/alternative inspections as well. A
commenter stated that NLT provisions
could be helpful on rehabilitation or
new construction when minor defects
fail HQS and NLT conditions are found.
This commenter expressed that for
rehabilitation or new construction, the
NLT option could be helpful in
expediting assistance approvals. This
commenter also recommended changing
the allowable timeframe, rather than
eliminating the alternative inspection
option, would be a better solution to the
problem of the alternative inspection
occurring prior to rehabilitation.
One commenter recommended that
under § 983.103(b), inspection timing
and procedures of new construction and
rehabilitation projects be consistent
with the NLT option, and that under
§ 983.103(f) additional time should be
permitted for inspections of units in
which the owner or family refuse access
to the PHA, unless the regulation states
otherwise. This commenter also
supported HUD revising the repair time
under § 983.103(f) to 30 days after the
PHA provides owner notification of the
deficiency.
One commenter supported HUD’s
proposal of alternative inspections, by
stating that alternative inspections can
fulfill the obligation for initial HQS
inspection in unsafe circumstances for
tenants and inspectors to enter units
that are occupied. Another commenter
noted the administrative burdens of
alternative inspections such as tracking
the units, notifying the landlords and
tenants, scheduling the inspections, and
obtaining results from the owner, or the
agency doing the inspection. This
commenter stated that this may create
delays in assisting tenants, especially
for units that must pass a PHA
inspection. This commenter
recommended that HUD use alternative
verification methods of corrections to
failed inspection items, which will help
administratively and with producing
positive relationships with landlords as
well as assisting families quickly. This
commenter also noted that PHA-owned
housing should not have a problem
passing HQS.
A commenter stated that PHAs should
have the ability to utilize alternative
inspection and NLT options with
respect to PBV new construction and
rehabilitation projects, because these
projects must meet local code standards
to receive a certificate of occupancy,
and, therefore, they are unlikely to be
uninhabitable. The commenter stated
that, while minor items may remain,
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these items do not threaten the lives of
renters, and they should not prevent a
PHA from placing the unit under a HAP
contract.
Commenters expressed that PHAs
should have discretion deciding
whether to implement NLT inspections
for units because requiring NLT
inspections for certain units makes
implementation overly complex. Other
commenters noted confusion and
requested HUD clarify that PHAs can
decide whether to apply initial
inspection flexibilities project-byproject. Another commenter stated that
another form of acceptable alternative
inspections could include a city
inspection or a certificate of occupancy.
One commenter suggested that HUD
incorporate alternative requirements
from PIH Notice 2020–33.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments both in favor of and against
extending the NLT provision to new
construction and rehabilitation PBV.
HUD has chosen not to extend the NLT
option to new construction or
rehabilitation at this time. Additionally,
HUD is not extending the alternative
inspection option to new construction
or rehabilitation to ensure the PHA
inspects the newly completed work.
HUD agrees with the comments stating
that the NLT provision may be applied
to existing housing at the discretion of
the PHA and this is reflected in this
final rule.
30. Nature of Development Activity
(§ 983.152)
Previously Unassisted Units
A commenter stated that adding
previously unassisted units to a HAP
contract should not be considered
development activity, as it is often due
to availability of funding and/or
eligibility of in-place families, and, as
such, no additional regulatory approvals
should be necessary.
HUD Response: Section 983.152(b)(2)
of the proposed rule did not operate to
include in the definition of
‘‘development activity’’ the act of
adding previously unassisted units to a
HAP contract. Rather, ‘‘development
activity’’ was defined in § 983.3(b) and
§ 983.152(b)(2) of the proposed rule
addressed cases in which development
activity occurred to add previously
unassisted units in the project to the
HAP contract. However, HUD
determined that including such activity
under the definition of ‘‘development
activity’’ and in subpart D of part 983
led to significant confusion among
commenters in interpreting the rule as
a whole. As a result, in this final rule
HUD amends the definition of
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‘‘development activity’’ as described
above in discussion of comments
pertaining to § 983.3, such that
‘‘substantial improvements’’ undertaken
in order to add units to a contract are
clearly distinct. Accordingly, HUD
removes discussion of substantial
improvements from § 983.152 of this
final rule. Section 983.207 of this final
rule contains provisions applicable to
adding units, including when
substantial improvement will occur in
order to add the units.
Broadband
A commenter suggested that the
broadband requirements referenced in
§ 983.152(b)(2) should not apply when
adding previously unassisted units to a
HAP contract because the installation of
broadband infrastructure requires
construction work and should be
triggered only if work is being done.
HUD Response: The proposed
§ 983.152(b)(2), as restructured and
moved in this final rule to § 983.207(d),
applies only when substantial
improvement is undertaken to add
previously unassisted units in the
project to the HAP contract, and the
requirement to install broadband
infrastructure is further limited as
provided therein. As a result, this final
rule does align with the commenter’s
proposed limitation that the broadband
infrastructure requirement applies only
when work is being done.
31. Development Requirements
(§ 983.153)
Subsequent Rehabilitation or
Development Activity
A commenter recommended that HUD
continue to only require subsidy
layering review for initial awards of
PBV assistance and not upon
subsequent rehabilitation or
development activity because it will be
administratively burdensome for project
owners and PHAs.
HUD Response: This comment is
addressed in the discussion of § 983.11
above.
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Section 3 Compliance
This commenter also stated that
HUD’s section 3 compliance proposal is
neither authorized by statute nor
consistent with regulations in part 135,
and, therefore, the commenter proposed
that HUD delete section 3 compliance as
a development requirement, because
section 3 does not apply to monthly
rental assistance payments.
HUD Response: Pursuant to the
section 3 final rule published at 85 FR
61524 (Sep. 29, 2020) and codified at 24
CFR 75.3, which eliminated the
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applicability of section 3 to assistance
under section 8 of the 1937 Act, HUD
does not retain section 3 compliance as
a development requirement in this final
rule. The section 3 rule does make clear
that residents of housing receiving
section 8 assistance and who are
employed by a section 3 business
concern are included in the definition of
section 3 worker. The PHA must report
the number of hours worked by section
3 workers.
Applicability of Davis-Bacon
Requirements
Commenters stated that it would be
unreasonable for HUD to require a PHA
to enforce owner compliance with labor
standards, specifically Davis-Bacon, in
circumstances where there was no
Agreement. A commenter further added
that where a project’s development does
not depend on the provision of PBVs, as
few obstacles as possible should be
provided to permit affordability,
because these developments do not
need PBV assistance to be built and they
are often the most desirable, best
located, and most advantageous
developments. Another commenter
expressed that it is unclear how to
reconcile the exemption of nonAgreement projects from Davis-Bacon
(§ 983.153(c)(1) of the proposed rule)
and the proposal that projects that do
not enter Agreements must comply with
the development requirements of
§ 983.153 (§ 983.154(e)(2) of the
proposed rule, which has been moved to
§ 983.154(f)(2) of this final rule). Some
commenters opposed excluding
rehabilitated and newly constructed
projects from the Davis-Bacon wage rate
requirements. A commenter stated that
PHAs do not have flexibility under the
statute to exclude rehabilitation or new
construction of PBV projects from
Davis-Bacon coverage. A commenter
suggested giving PHAs discretion to
exclude rehabilitation or new
construction from Davis-Bacon wage
requirements.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments in support of the exclusion of
units developed without an Agreement
from the labor standards at
§ 983.153(c)(1) of the proposed rule, but
does not adopt the proposed language in
this final rule. While the impact of
paying prevailing wages on a project’s
development cost could be viewed as an
obstacle to development, HUD agrees
with commenters who pointed out that
this cost must be balanced against the
historical reasons for the labor
standards, including ensuring that
federally assisted projects do not
depress local wage standards. HUD
appreciates the commenter’s support of
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38273
PHA discretion regarding use of DavisBacon wage requirements, but has
determined upon further reflection that
the PHAs’ new option to decline to use
an Agreement does not impact the
applicability of Davis-Bacon wage
requirements. In the case of a newly
constructed or rehabilitated project, the
owner is seeking a commitment of PBVs
in advance of development of the
project, regardless of whether the PHA
and owner enter into an Agreement, and
the PHA’s pre-construction offer and
owner’s acceptance of the PBV offer
constitutes the agreement triggering
Davis-Bacon requirements in
accordance with section 12 of the 1937
Act. Therefore, HUD provides in this
final rule that a PHA decision to use no
Agreement or to execute an Agreement
after construction or rehabilitation has
commenced will not relieve an owner’s
responsibility to pay Davis-Bacon
prevailing wages, consistent with the
statutory intent of section 106(a)(4) of
HOTMA and section 12 of the 1937 Act.
HUD appreciates the comment
regarding the relationship between
§ 983.153(c) and § 983.154(e) (now
§ 983.154(f) in this final rule). In
response, HUD amends § 983.154(f) to
better clarify that the owner need only
comply with development requirements
of § 983.153 that are applicable to the
particular project when the
development occurs without
Agreement. For example, the DavisBacon compliance requirement is
applicable only if the HAP contract will
assist nine or more units.
Use of an Alternative Document
A commenter stated that HUD should
not require Davis-Bacon coverage
through an alternate document. Another
commenter suggested using an alternate
document or a document created by a
PHA. One commenter urged HUD to
provide a clear and consistent policy
regarding how to execute alternate
documents to avoid confusion.
HUD Response: HUD determines that,
where the PHA will not use an
Agreement, the PHA’s notice of
selection of the project and the owner’s
acceptance is the mechanism by which
the owner agrees to compliance with
Davis-Bacon requirements. This final
rule adds explanatory text regarding the
notice of selection in §§ 983.51(f) and
983.153(c), in response to comment.
32. Development Agreement (§ 983.154)
Begin After Environmental Abatement
A commenter suggested that
development activity for new
construction should exclude
environmental abatement.
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HUD Response: Environmental
abatement may constitute a significant
or inseparable portion of work involved
in new construction. Therefore, in cases
in which the nature of environmental
abatement itself constitutes
commencement of development activity
or in which environmental abatement
involves work that occurs following the
commencement of development
activity, HUD determines it is
appropriate for such abatement to be
subject to the standard rules governing
development activity in this part 983.
Consult With Interested Parties
A commenter recommended that HUD
consult with industry groups and
interested parties and utilize
nonbinding notice documents to define
and develop additional guidance on the
term, ‘‘rehabilitation activity’’ noted in
§ 983.154(c)(2).
HUD Response: HUD appreciates this
comment and will consider it when
developing guidance on the PBV
program.
33. Term of HAP Contract (§ 983.205)
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Question 27: Contract Extensions
Commenters urged HUD to allow HAP
contract extensions beyond 40 years to
permit sufficient time to secure
recapitalization and facilitate
preservation. A commenter explained
that HAP contracts do not always align
with other regulatory agreements and
projects may need to secure long-term
financing during their regulatory
agreement. Another commenter
suggested that HUD allow for extensions
60 months prior to the contract
expiration instead of the existing
contract extension beyond 40 years until
24 months prior to the HAP contract
expiration. Other commenters proposed
that HUD allow PHAs to commit PBV
contract extensions where resyndication extends the affordable term
tied to financing beyond the term of the
PBVs and allow PHAs to establish the
terms of the PBV HAP contracts as
provided by PIH Notice 2017–21.
A commenter stated that HUD should
modify § 983.205(b)(4) to allow the PHA
and the owner to agree in advance to
additional conditions applying to
continuation, termination, or expiration
of the contracts; instead of keeping the
existing language, which the commenter
stated requires that PHAs only use the
contracts provided by HUD. One
commenter stated that independent
entities are unsuitable to determine the
appropriateness of contract renewals,
and that PHAs should make this
determination because PHAs can assess
resources and the local housing market
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demand to determine the best interests
of the PHA’s portfolio and residents.
HUD Response: In review of
comments received, it became apparent
that the language of § 983.205(b) in the
proposed rule was not sufficiently clear
that HUD does allow a HAP contract to
be extended beyond 40 years. Therefore,
HUD has revised § 983.205(b) in this
final rule to clarify this point.
In consideration of public comments,
HUD also revises § 983.205(b) in this
final rule to provide that, at any given
time before a PBV HAP contract expires,
the PHA may execute any number of
extensions (with terms up to 20 years
each) such that there are up to 40
remaining years on the contract. HUD
believes this will provide PHAs
sufficient flexibility to extend the HAP
contract term as needed to meet the
needs of the local community and align
with common preservation efforts as
described by commenters, while striking
a reasonable balance with the PHA’s
obligation to make its statutorily
required determination prior to
extension. As such, the rule continues
to require the PHA to determine that
each extension is appropriate to
continue providing affordable housing
for low-income families or to expand
housing opportunities but recognizes
PHAs are in the best position to
determine the appropriate time to
consider an extension. Additionally,
this change streamlines and simplifies
PBV processes.
With respect to comments that
propose that HUD allow the PHA and
the owner to agree in advance to
additional conditions applying to
continuation, termination, or expiration
of the contracts, the statute authorizes
HUD (not the PHA) to impose such
conditions. HUD has chosen not to do
so. Lastly, with respect to the comment
concerning the role of the independent
entity in making determinations on HAP
contract extensions, HUD finds the
commenter’s explanation persuasive
and, further, determines that PHAs are
best positioned to set the initial term of
the contract. Therefore, HUD removes
the independent entity function in
agreeing to the initial term and
extensions in this final rule.
34. Contract Termination or Expiration
and Statutory Notice Requirements
(§ 983.206)
Commenters suggested adding to
§ 983.206(d) a requirement that an
owner’s termination of the PBV contract
because the PHA has lowered the rent
below the initial rent cannot be effective
until the PHA has (1) notified tenants of
the upcoming change to HCVs; (2)
executed the required tenant-based
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voucher HAP contract between the
owner and PHA; and (3) provided
tenant-based vouchers to the tenants.
This commenter recommended
requiring PHAs to complete these tasks
within a specified timeframe (and PHAs
can avoid this by agreeing in the initial
contract or extension not to reduce rents
below the initial rent to the owner).
Some commenters supported
prohibiting owners from terminating the
family’s housing assistance due to the
termination or expiration of a PBV HAP
contract. Another commenter supported
HUD not requiring that families be
allowed to stay in their same units, and
instead, allowing a PHA and owner to
make decisions about handling
terminations locally. This commenter
claimed that HUD lacks the statutory
authority to mandate that families be
allowed to stay in their own units, since
the statute explicitly mentions
remaining in the same project.
Another commenter suggested
modifying § 983.206, to state that
tenants whose PBV units are redeveloped should not be treated as
contract terminations. One commenter
supported families remaining in the
same unit and not just the same project.
In § 983.206(b) and (b)(6), regarding
tenants’ right to remain, a commenter
recommended that the ‘‘other good
cause’’ reference to the HCV rule at
§ 982.310 be limited to tenant
misconduct; there should also include
conforming language inserted into the
HUD PBV tenancy addendum. This
commenter also suggested that section
106 of the HOTMA statute extends the
tenant’s right to remain to the project,
and not just the unit, as a guarantee for
tenant housing stability upon subsidy
expiration or termination in
circumstances where family size has
changed, or the current unit may need
rehabilitation that requires extended
absence. Another commenter supported
families with disabled individuals or
children remaining in the same unit due
to hardships caused by moving and
recommended letting the extension
expire when they voluntarily leave or
become ineligible for PBV.
A commenter recommended stating in
§ 983.206(d) that under situations of
PBV HAP contract termination, that the
PHA may not re-screen for eligibility
beyond income when providing HCVs
to former PBV tenants. The commenter
suggested clearly stating tenants’ right to
replacement assistance and housing
stability, despite PHA or HUD
administrative delays in providing the
required assistance. The commenter also
stated that under § 983.206(d), the
proposed exception to the one-year
notice requirement for an owner who
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terminates a PBV HAP contract after the
PHA reduces the contract rent below the
initial rent to owner is statutorily
unauthorized. A commenter suggested
revising § 983.206(a)(4) to clarify that
the tenant has the right to remain at
prior rent until the owner has provided
legally required notice and that notice
period has elapsed, not just for the oneyear period.
HUD Response: HUD has adopted
commenters’ recommendations in part.
Section 983.206 in this final rule
provides a timeframe by which a PHA
must issue families a tenant-based
voucher before planned contract
termination, except in limited
circumstances specified by HUD, and
requires sufficient notice by the owner
to the PHA to allow such voucher
issuance. HUD declines to adopt the
recommendation that the PBV HAP
contract not be terminated until
execution of a tenant-based voucher
HAP contract. The provision
implemented in this final rule, at
§ 983.206(b), requires the PHA to issue
families tenant-based vouchers, not to
assure that families locate units to lease
with the vouchers. The tenant-based
voucher HAP contracts for tenants who
stay in place must not be effective prior
to the date of termination (end date) of
the PBV HAP contract, and
circumstances may arise in which the
actual end date must change from the
planned end date. In this final rule,
§ 982.305 provides PHAs sufficient
flexibility to execute the tenant-based
HAP contracts retroactively if all
contracts cannot be executed timely in
relation to termination of the PBV HAP
contract. In cases in which families
choose to use their tenant-based
assistance elsewhere, using target dates
for execution of each tenant-based HAP
contract to determine the end date of the
PBV HAP contract would be
unworkable.
HUD has considered the comments
regarding whether a family should have
the ability to remain in the same unit
and has determined to retain the
proposed rule language allowing a
family instead to remain in the same
project. While HUD recognizes that
moves may cause hardship for families,
HUD determines that PHAs are in the
best position to consider conditions and
limitations surrounding specific
contract terminations and expirations
and assist families to secure the best
possible housing for them given those
considerations. Notwithstanding,
retaining the proposed language on
allowing a family to remain in the same
project does not exempt a PHA from
receiving, processing, or granting a
reasonable accommodation to remain in
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the unit. Regarding the comments
concerning redevelopment, HUD is not
adopting the proposed change. Section
983.212 in this final rule allows PHAs
and owners to engage in substantial
improvement on units under HAP
contract without terminating the HAP
contract, and where PHAs and owners
agree to do so they must follow the rules
set forth in § 983.212. Section 983.206,
by contrast, has the requirements in
cases of contract termination.
With regard to good cause for
termination, HUD adopts the
commenter’s suggestion in part. HUD in
this final rule allows for lease
terminations on the basis of certain
grounds in § 982.310, to include family
duties, which the family has failed to
fulfill and other family misconduct, as
well as when the owner will use the
unit for a non-residential purpose or to
renovate the unit. Nothing in this final
§ 983.206 is intended to preempt
operation of State and local laws that
provide additional limitations regarding
allowable causes for lease termination.
HUD intends to issue a tenancy
addendum specific to families who were
residing in a PBV project at contract
termination who elected to remain in
the project with tenant-based assistance,
which will also reflect the specific
grounds on which the family’s lease
may be terminated. HUD determines
this final rule allows for meaningful
election by families to remain in the
project while also providing exceptions
for situations under which the owner
cannot reasonably be expected to allow
a family to remain.
HUD does not make changes in this
final rule in response to the comment on
re-screening when families get tenantbased vouchers, as the proposed
§ 983.206(b)(4), retained in this final
rule, adequately explains that such
families are not new admissions; rather,
they are and remain section 8 voucher
participants, subject to the rules relating
to participants (as further explained in
the definition of ‘‘admission’’ in
§ 983.3). As discussed above, HUD has
clarified some of the provisions in
§ 983.206 to better explain the
timeframes involved in provision of
tenant-based assistance. Finally, section
8(c)(8) of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937
defines the term ‘‘termination’’ for
purposes of the owner notice
requirement as ‘‘the expiration of the
assistance contract or an owner’s refusal
to renew the assistance contract. . . .’’
HUD declines to further extend the oneyear notification requirement to an
owner’s termination of the contract
during its term due to a reduction below
initial rent, to preserve the existing
authority of the owner to terminate
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38275
timely, given the owner’s substantial
interest in maintaining sufficient project
income. However, HUD has added a 90day notice requirement, so as to provide
the PHA sufficient time for voucher
issuance per § 983.206(b). HUD has also
taken this opportunity to clarify when
mutual termination of a PBV HAP
contract during its term would be
allowable and to specify that in those
cases the full notice period is required.
With regard to the comment on
§ 983.206(a)(4), HUD does not believe a
change is necessary as the text is already
clear that the family may remain ‘‘for
the required notice period,’’ which
aligns with the comment.
Insufficient Funding
A commenter stated that HUD’s
implementation of the insufficient
funding requirement (HOTMA section
106(a)(4), to be codified at 42 U.S.C.
1437f(o)(13)(F)(i)(I)), is critical to
developers’ ability to finance PBVs with
minimal transition reserves.
Commenters also recommended
modifying language in § 983.206(c)(1) to
clarify that sufficient funding is not
necessary for a PHA to make PBV
contract payments for a full year,
despite unpredictable timing of full-year
appropriations bills and the frequency
of continuing resolutions.
A commenter stated that the
legislative history indicates that
Congress intended PHAs to prioritize
project-based HAP contracts and
provided neither HUD nor PHAs with
the discretion contemplated by the
proposed regulations.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments regarding the nature of
sufficient funding and agrees that PHAs
need not consider sufficient funding as
requiring a full year’s PBV contract
payments to be on hand. HUD has
amended § 983.206(c)(1) accordingly.
Regarding the comment on
prioritizing project-based HAP
contracts, HOTMA section 106(a)(4), to
be codified at 42 U.S.C.
1437f(o)(13)(F)(i)(I), provides ‘‘that in
the event of insufficient appropriated
funds, payments due under contracts
under this paragraph shall take priority
if other cost-saving measures that do not
require the termination of an existing
contract are available to the agency
. . .’’ (emphasis added). Per this
language, PHAs retain discretion to
establish an Administrative Plan policy,
as described in § 983.206(c)(1), for
actions it will take if no cost-saving
measures other than HCV or PBV
contract termination are available.
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35. HAP Contract Amendments (To Add
or Substitute Contract Units) (§ 983.207)
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Cost of Reinstating Units
A commenter suggested that HUD
should revise § 983.207(b)(3) to reinstate
units under a HAP contract without
being subject to development
requirements at § 983.152(b) because
without it, PHAs would be subject to
subsidy layering reviews and other
burdens and it would place a significant
burden and cost upon project owners.
This commenter also urged that HUD
does not apply the set of ‘‘development
activity’’ requirements to projects that
undertake modifications to PBV units
which result in adjustments to preexisting contracts because PHAs may
need to add units or substitute units
after HAP signing, and this would make
that process very burdensome.
HUD Response: In all cases in which
units are added to a PBV HAP contract
per § 983.207(b), including where a unit
is being reinstated after having
previously been removed, HUD
determines it is appropriate for certain
requirements at § 983.207(d) to apply
when the unit is undergoing substantial
improvement. As discussed earlier in
this preamble, this final rule separately
defines ‘‘substantial improvement’’ and
‘‘development activity,’’ and applies
appropriate requirements to each.
Substantial improvement undertaken
during the term of the HAP contract, as
defined in § 983.3(b), is significant work
and, as such, application of the specific
requirements listed in § 983.207(d)
represents a reasonable balance of the
costs to project owners and the interests
of HUD in maintaining housing quality
and program integrity. As for the
comment about ‘‘development activity’’
requirements, HUD determined that the
limited requirements applicable to
substantial improvement undertaken to
add units to a contract, including when
the added unit is a substitution for a
contract unit, represent the minimum
necessary requirements for such
relatively intensive activity. Therefore,
HUD retains both requirements in this
final rule.
36. Owner Certification (§ 983.210)—
Davis Bacon, Other Conforming
Changes
Commenters supported the proposed
Davis-Bacon changes that would remove
the current owner certification under
the HAP contract at § 983.210(j) that
repair work on a project selected as an
existing project may constitute
development activity and, if determined
to be development activity, the repair
work shall be in compliance with DavisBacon requirements. One commenter
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supported HUD’s Davis-Bacon wage rate
requirement proposal due to its
potential reduction in development
costs; permittance of State
independence to apply their own wage
requirements; and the reduction of
administrative burden on projects that
have multiple funding sources. Another
commenter expressed that the DavisBacon changes would encourage owners
and operators of existing housing to
incorporate PBVs while maintaining
and improving living conditions for
residents.
Commenters supported the removal of
‘‘existing housing’’ from the DavisBacon wage rate requirement. One
commenter stated that excluding
existing housing provides clarity,
because it aligns with the language and
spirit of the 1937 Act. Another
commenter stated that applying the
wage requirement to existing housing
significantly increases the cost of
developing affordable housing and
reducing the number of households that
could be served by the PBV program.
One commenter stated that eliminating
existing housing from the Davis-Bacon
wage rate requirements would allow
owners to utilize more PBVs and
potentially erase operating deficits,
reach more ELI and VLI residents, and
reduce reliance on gap financing when
seeking to refinance.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
comments in support of removing
§ 983.210(j), and in this final rule
proceeds with the removal as proposed.
As previously discussed in the preamble
of the proposed rule, HUD
acknowledges that the broad, openended definition of ‘‘existing housing’’
in place prior to this final rule has
proven insufficient to ensure that PHAs
properly classify PBV housing types and
contributed to the Davis-Bacon issues
that HUD attempted to address through
the addition of the owner certification
in § 983.210(j) in 79 FR 36146 (Jun. 25,
2014). In order to remedy this problem
and other related issues with respect to
other Federal requirements such as
subsidy layering reviews, this final rule
provides a much more specific and
tighter definition of ‘‘existing housing,’’
which is described in detail elsewhere
in this preamble.
37. Substantial Improvement to Units
Under a HAP Contract (§ 983.212)
Support
Several commenters supported HUD’s
proposal to establish a five-year
timeframe, within which development
work would not be permitted except in
extraordinary circumstances. A
commenter stated that permitting
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development work within the first five
years is only reasonable to prevent the
circumvention of certain requirements
that would normally be stipulated in an
Agreement.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
supportive comments, but reduces the
general five-year limitation proposed to
two years in this final rule (both the
proposed and final rule contain
exceptions to the general limitation).
HUD believes doing so continues to
ensure housing intended for immediate
rehabilitation is subject to appropriate
requirements governing rehabilitation.
However, HUD believes a two-year
period in which work will not occur is
more reasonable to foresee.
Opposition
Other commenters opposed HUD’s
proposal to establish a five-year
timeframe because it is overly
restrictive. Commenters stated that
requiring a burdensome permitting
process would disincentivize owners of
older housing from making periodic
substantial repairs and renovations to
maintain the housing in good condition.
A commenter expressed that it is
challenging to anticipate all physical
needs in a five-year period. Another
commenter stated that HUD’s proposal
would have a significant impact on
residents by discouraging owners from
conducting voluntary repairs and
replacements that would improve the
quality of life for residents and may stall
or prevent the start of a HAP contract for
units that would otherwise be eligible to
receive PBVs.
A commenter warned that the fiveyear period would impact projects that
may need work within five years of
being built due to flawed work by the
original builder. A commenter stated
that the HUD-prescribed process to
request development activity (called
‘‘substantial improvement’’ in this final
rule, per discussion of changes to
§ 983.3 above) would create an
additional administrative burden for
PHAs without the process and expertise
to assess development requests and
determinations. A commenter warned
that HUD’s proposal would require nonMTW PHAs to obtain a waiver or to
adopt a MTW demonstration activity to
complete the unit rehabilitation and
would require non-MTW agencies
attempting to pursue public housing
repositioning to need regulatory
waivers. Another commenter stated that
HUD’s proposal may present challenges
to create affordable housing through the
PBV program because of the
disincentive to perform capital work
within five years of HAP contract
signing and would force owners to
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conduct a heavier workload upfront,
which may be unsupported through
existing financing tools.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that it
would have been difficult for PHAs and
owners to anticipate all physical needs
requiring a significant improvement
over a five-year period, and therefore
changes the period to two years in this
final rule.
HUD disagrees that the rule
discourages repairs, replacements, and
renovations. The owner is required to
meet HQS and continues to be able to
replace equipment and materials
rendered unsatisfactory because of
normal wear and tear by items of
substantially the same kind (this is not
substantial improvement as defined in
§ 983.3(b)), which should enable the
owner to maintain the housing in good
condition. An owner that instead has an
immediate desire to undertake
development activity remains able to do
so through the process of project-basing
rehabilitated housing, and HUD
provides further flexibility at § 983.157
of this final rule to better accommodate
these situations. An owner faced with
an urgent, unanticipated need to engage
in substantial improvement during the
first two years of the contract may be
able to receive PHA approval to do so
under the exception for extraordinary
circumstances. Taken as a whole, HUD
determines that this final rule provides
the greatest latitude possible to owners
while still ensuring appropriate projects
are subject to pre-development
requirements such as subsidy layering
review, Federal funds are used only in
quality housing, and PBV-assisted
families are housed stably.
The PHA (or independent entity, in
the case of PHA-owned units) approval
process codified in this final rule
reflects minimum oversight necessary to
ensure compliance with PBV
requirements and protection of families.
HUD incorporates into this final rule
additional clarity for PHAs regarding
the basis upon which to approve or
disapprove owner requests. HUD does
not anticipate that this final rule
increases the potential need for waiver,
as the prior rule also contained
divergent processes to project-base
rehabilitated housing versus existing
housing, including limitations on
development activity that could occur
after HAP contract execution. This final
rule improves the clarity and safeguards
of existing limitations.
HUD is aware that project-basing
rehabilitated housing entails a heavier
workload upfront. Completing the
development activity upfront typically
has the intended result that the housing
is in good condition longer and
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therefore is better positioned to serve as
long-term housing for families. HUD
expects that PHAs select existing
housing for PBVs when the housing is
in good enough condition to serve
families for the contract period, without
immediate housing instability due to
substantial improvement. PBV funding
supports rents to house assisted
families, which may cover a project’s
ongoing operating expenses; it is not
development funding.
Suggestions and Alternatives
Some commenters suggested HUD
allow for exceptions in instances where
improvement or upgrading is needed for
the substantial improvement, such as
energy efficiency efforts, security
precautions, and previously scheduled
projects that are part of effective longterm property maintenance plans. A
commenter also stated that HUD should
include a catch-all provision to allow
improvements to protect the housing
quality for assisted families or protect
the viability of the project. Another
commenter suggested that HUD create a
‘‘pass-through’’ of rental assistance
where construction improvements are to
be made in a property, similar to what
is allowed in other project-based rental
assistance. Commenters also
recommended that PHAs have the
discretion over permissibility, oversight,
and monitoring of substantial
improvement that commences after the
beginning of the HAP contract as a
means for PHAs to remain accountable
to HUD for monitoring compliance and
development requirements. Another
commenter suggested that HUD adopt a
three-year timeframe instead of a fiveyear timeframe.
HUD Response: HUD reviewed the
examples commenters provided and
determines they are adequately
addressed by this final rule. HUD does
not anticipate that projects that met
HQS applicable to qualify for PBV
assistance will then require nonemergency substantial improvement
soon after contract execution to remain
viable and compliant with HQS; usual
maintenance should suffice. HUD does
not add a pass-through option because
doing so is not consistent with PBV
program requirements. For example,
section 8(o)(13)(K)(i) of the 1937 Act
allows payment for vacant units only
when vacancies are not the fault of the
owner, section 8(o)(10)(A) requires that
rent for a unit receiving HAP be
reasonable at all times, and section
8(o)(8)(G) prescribes the required PHA
actions with respect to HAP for units
that do not comply with HQS and is
incompatible with providing HAP for
the purpose of housing a family who is
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leasing a noncompliant unit and living
elsewhere. This final rule provides
significant discretion to PHAs, balanced
against adequate safeguards for assisted
families and reasonable limitations to
ensure the PBV program operates as
intended. HUD adopts a two-year
timeframe in this final rule rather than
the three-year timeframe suggested by
the commenter, because HUD believes
the owner and PHA are better able to
anticipate the need for substantial
improvement over a two-year period.
Proposal Would Have No Effect
A commenter expressed that because
project owners are often required to
utilize several funding sources to fund
substantial rehabilitation, it is likely
that other funding sources used to
finance the substantial improvement
may independently trigger many of the
cross-cutting requirements that HUD
cites in question 25. Another
commenter further stated that PHAs
have mechanisms in place to ensure that
projects comply with development
requirements; adding an additional
mechanism to substantial improvement
after HAP contract signing would be
burdensome.
HUD Response: HUD supports the
additional oversight that other funding
sources and PHAs independently
require but finds it necessary to retain
and clarify this section in this final rule
to ensure PHAs can easily reference and
comply with the PBV-specific
requirements relevant to post-contract
substantial improvement.
Rehousing During Rehabilitation
Commenters suggested that HUD add
clarifying language stating that owners
are permitted to continue receiving HAP
for the family’s re-housing during a
fixed period of rehabilitation.
HUD Response: Housing assistance
payments provide rental assistance for
participant families, and therefore must
not be paid to owners for units not
occupied by participants. Under this
final rule, the PHA may pay HAP for
occupied contract units that meet HQS,
except when the unit is temporarily
vacant for a calendar month or less.
Emergency Site Work
A commenter asked HUD to provide
detail regarding emergency site work
performed for health and safety,
emergency rehabilitation work
conducted for health and safety, and fitout of non-residential spaces occurring
under a different general contractor
contract. The commenter also expressed
uncertainty pertaining to the
applicability of these types of activities
under the definition of ‘‘substantial
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improvement’’ (which was included in
the definition of ‘‘development activity’’
in the proposed rule) and the
requirements pertaining to substantial
improvement because this work is done
in a manner that is either unanticipated
in the project planning phase or falls
outside a typical PBV project planning
scope.
HUD Response: This final rule
clarifies the term ‘‘extraordinary
circumstances’’ in response to this
comment. Emergencies generally qualify
as extraordinary circumstances under
this rule, though situations may arise in
which an emergency instead constitutes
a breach of HAP contract or a matter
falling under the provisions for
enforcement of HQS.
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38. How Participants Are Selected
(§ 983.251)
Site-Based Waiting Lists
One commenter suggested that HUD
allow owners to maintain their own sitebased waiting lists to expedite the
tenant selection process as well as allow
PHAs to establish compliance reviews
to oversee owners. Another commenter
encouraged HUD to maintain provisions
describing roles and responsibilities of
the owner and PHA in the guidance
documents. This commenter disagreed
with HUD requiring PHAs to formally
incorporate site-specific tenant selection
plans into their Administrative Plans if
the plan is on file with the PHA and
available to the public because
incorporating the plans into the
Administrative Plan will be burdensome
for PHAs, due to frequent minor
updates. The commenter also expressed
concern regarding the statement in
§ 983.251(c)(7)(x) that HUD may act
against the owner, PHA, or both, and
suggested that if HUD intends to hold
PHAs responsible for an owner’s
project-based waiting list, the
regulations need to state that the PHA
also has the right to take enforcement
action directly against the owner. The
commenter stated that in cases where a
PHA has commenced enforcement
actions against an owner, then HUD
should not seek additional enforcement
against the PHA.
Another commenter suggested
deleting § 983.251(c)(7)(i). A commenter
objected to the proposed requirement
that a tenant selection plan (TSP) be
included in the Administrative Plan for
every owner. The commenter stated that
owners may make frequent adjustments
to their TSP, such as to respond to
updates under the Violence Against
Women Act or updated screening
standards, and therefore every small
TSP change, even if unrelated to waiting
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lists or preferences, would require an
Administrative Plan amendment, and
the PHA’s Administrative Plan would
have to be amended for every PBV
project when the project is selected and
then again when the TSP is approved by
the PHA. The commenter suggested that
selection plans should be on file with
the PHA and posted online with the
Administrative Plan but should not be
specifically part of the Administrative
Plan.
HUD Response: Under this final rule,
HUD provides PHAs discretion to allow
owners to maintain their own site-based
waiting lists to expedite the tenant
selection process. HUD requires PHAs
that exercise this discretion to establish
oversight procedures, which may
include compliance reviews to oversee
owners. HUD determined it is necessary
for the minimum requirements codified
in this final rule describing the roles
and responsibilities of the owner and
PHA to be located in the regulation so
as to be easily located and consistently
enforced, rather than only in guidance
documents. As noted in this final rule,
PHAs must formally incorporate the
site-specific owner waiting list policies
into their Administrative Plans. HUD
does not believe incorporating the
owner waiting list policy into the
Administrative Plan will be
cumbersome for PHAs because of
frequent minor updates.
HUD maintains § 983.251(c)(7)(x) to
ensure that the owner, PHA, or both, are
held accountable and responsible for an
owner’s project-based waiting list. The
administrative policy that is
incorporated in a PHAs’ Administrative
Plan may state that the PHA also has the
right to take enforcement action directly
against the owner. Although there may
be cases where a PHA has commenced
enforcement actions against an owner,
depending on the nature of the
enforcement actions, HUD may still take
additional enforcement actions against
the PHA, if applicable.
HUD does not delete the requirement,
as suggested by a commenter, at
§ 983.251(c)(7)(i). This final rule,
however, does revise both §§ 983.251
and 983.10 by replacing tenant selection
plan with owner waiting list policy. As
a result of this change, the owner
waiting list policy, not tenant selection
plan, must be incorporated in the PHA’s
Administrative Plan.
Civil Rights
A commenter recommended that the
proposed rule’s preamble discussion
that projects using preferences for
families eligible for supportive services,
including disability-specific services,
must comply with Section 504, the
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Americans with Disabilities Act, and the
Home and Community-Based Settings
requirements be placed in § 983.251.
Another commenter suggested § 983.251
be revised to require that tenant
selection plans, criteria, and preferences
must comply with all applicable civil
rights requirements, and that all tenant
selection criteria must be demonstrably
related to the applicant’s ability to fulfill
the obligations of a subsidized tenancy,
which would eliminate poor credit or
eviction for nonpayment of unassisted
rent or most criminal history as grounds
for denial of tenancy. The commenter
further stated that the rejection notice
should require specific content, such as
sufficient facts and the legal basis
supporting the rejection as well as due
process procedures to enable a fair
review, even absent a tenant’s request
for a hearing. The commenter also
suggested modifying § 983.251(c)(6) to
require that applicants on the HCV
waitlist receive a PHA offer to be placed
on the PBV waitlists.
One commenter approved of HUD’s
modification to § 983.251 to require
eligible families to qualify for services
as well as removing restrictions that
limit service preferences only to
families with severe disabilities for
whom such services cannot be provided
in non-segregated housing. Another
commenter urged HUD to revise
§ 983.251, to prioritize housing
survivors of violence who are in the
PBV program and require an emergency
transfer under VAWA. Another
commenter opposed banning
preferences for people within a category
of disability under § 983.251(d)(1) and
stated that this conflicts with the
Section 504 rules and is a violation of
HOTMA, which permits preferences
based on the class of disability
associated with a project’s supportive
services. This commenter stated that a
ban on disability-specific preferences
also interferes with procuring capital
resources for housing because non-PBV
resources often target permanent
supportive housing for people within
specific categories of disability. The
commenter suggested that HUD defer to
the PHA’s preference plan for people
who qualify for disability-specific
services. The commenter also explained
that the waiver and remedial action
process conflicts with HOTMA, which
delegates the decision to the PHA, and
the process is intrusive as well as costly.
The commenter encouraged HUD to
adopt a similar process to RAD, where
the PHA and project owner in
consultation with the partnering State
and local officials, determine the scope
of a disability-specific preference.
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This commenter also suggested that
HUD adopt the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services Homes and
Community-Based Services (CMS
HCBS) rules on what is the most
integrated setting possible, found in 42
CFR 441.710(a), because projects
meeting those standards do not require
additional waiver or remedial action
approval. The commenter recommended
that HUD use flexible approaches to
concentration, because the existing rigid
policies applied to projects with
dwellings for families receiving
supportive services conflict with the
exception to PBV income-mixing
standards, which permits owners to
exceed the PBV project cap for units
providing supportive services.
Therefore, the commenter concluded
that HUD should define, within the PBV
rule, integrated places that do not
impose fixed limits on the concentration
of disabled individuals in a
development and, ultimately, meet the
standards for a community-based
setting.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
commenters’ recommendations. A
PHA’s preference for families who
qualify for voluntary services, including
disability-specific services under
§ 983.251(d), must not conflict with
Section 504 rules.17 Further, PHAs have
a duty to ensure that the PBV project is
compliant with all applicable
nondiscrimination and equal
opportunity requirements, including,
but not limited to, the requirement to
administer services, programs, and
activities in a nondiscriminatory
manner and meet the needs of qualified
individuals with a disability under
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act,
Title II of the Americans with
Disabilities Act, and the Fair Housing
Act. See 24 CFR 5.105(a), 24 CFR part
8; 28 CFR part 35; 24 CFR part 100. In
addition, this language allowing a
preference to families who qualify for
voluntary services, including disabilityspecific services, must be implemented
consistent with the integration mandate
under Section 504 and Title II of the
ADA, wherein entities are obligated to
administer their programs and activities
in the most integrated setting
appropriate to the needs of qualified
individuals with disabilities. 24 CFR
17 HUD notes that § 983.251(d)(1) of this final rule
cross-references the prohibition against adopting a
preference for admission of persons with a specific
disability at 24 CFR 982.207(b)(3). The prohibition
at 24 CFR 982.207(b)(3) is not intended to detract
from PHAs’ discretion to give preferences to
families who qualify for disability-specific
services.’’
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8.4(d) and 28 CFR 35.130(d)).18
Additionally, if a PBV project offers
Medicaid-funded home and communitybased services as part of ‘‘disabilityspecific services,’’ the PHA must also
fully comply with the Federal home and
community-based settings requirements
found at 42 CFR 441.301(c)(4), (5)
(‘‘Home and Community-Based
Settings’’). In addition, PHAs are
obliged to ensure that assisted units for
persons with a disability are distributed
throughout a project (24 CFR 8.26) and
to make housing assistance available in
the most integrated setting appropriate
to the needs of qualified individuals
with disabilities—i.e., a setting that
enables individuals with disabilities to
interact with nondisabled persons to the
fullest extent possible. (See the
Statement of the Department of Housing
and Urban Development on the Role of
Housing in Accomplishing the Goals of
Olmstead at https://www.hud.gov/sites/
documents/
OLMSTEADGUIDNC060413.PDF).
In response to the commenter that
suggested revision of § 983.251 to
provide that tenant selection criteria be
demonstrably related to the applicant’s
ability to fulfill the obligations of a
subsidized tenancy and proposing that
HUD prescribe the contents of the
rejection notice, HUD believes the
commenter’s concerns would not be
appropriately addressed in § 983.251.
Given the revision to § 983.251 in this
final rule (described above in this
discussion of § 983.251) to require the
owner waiting list policy, not tenant
selection plan, to be incorporated in the
PHA’s Administrative Plan where there
will be an owner-maintained waiting
list, § 983.251 is not an appropriate
location for requirements relating to the
owner’s screening and selection of
tenants.19 The elements of the owner
tenant selection policies and procedures
at issue are instead covered by
§§ 983.253 and 983.255. Section
983.255(b) of the current PBV
regulations contains owner screening
requirements and was not proposed for
revision in this rulemaking. HUD
determines the changes to the owner
screening requirements the commenter
proposes would require separate
rulemaking, with opportunity for public
18 See also The Statement of the Department of
Housing and Urban Development on the Role of
Housing in Accomplishing the Goals of Olmstead at
https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/
OLMSTEADGUIDNC060413.PDF.
19 HUD notes that in the case of an ownermaintained waiting list, the notice and hearing
requirements when a family is denied admission to
the waiting list are at 24 CFR 982.554, which was
not proposed for change in this rulemaking, and,
per § 983.251(c)(7)(vii) of this final rule, the owner
provides the notice to the family.
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comment. HUD notes, however, that the
owner’s practices under § 983.255(b)
remain subject to § 983.253(a)(2), which
states: ‘‘The owner is responsible for
adopting written tenant selection
procedures that are consistent with the
purpose of improving housing
opportunities for very low-income
families and reasonably related to
program eligibility and an applicant’s
ability to perform the lease obligations.’’
HUD believes these current
requirements governing the owner’s
screening practices adequately reflect
the PBV program’s purpose of serving
low-income families. The owner notice
of grounds for rejection is currently
codified at § 983.253(a)(3). HUD adds to
that provision, in this final rule, a
requirement for the owner to provide a
copy of the notice to the PHA. If, upon
receipt of the notice, the PHA finds that
the owner is noncompliant with
program requirements, including
§ 983.253(a)(2), the PHA may take action
for breach of the HAP contract. HUD
intends to provide further guidance on
the operation of §§ 983.253 and 983.255.
HUD notes that PHAs already have
the authority to and are encouraged to
prioritize victims of domestic violence,
dating violence, sexual assault, or
stalking who are in the PBV program
and require an emergency transfer under
VAWA in its Administrative Plan. As
stated earlier, VAWA emergency
transfers must occur in accordance with
HUD’s VAWA regulations at 24 CFR
part 5, subpart L, and program
regulations.
HUD declines to modify
§ 983.251(c)(6). If the PHA chooses
under its Administrative Plan to use a
separate waiting list for admission to
PBV units, under paragraphs (c)(2)(i)
and (iii) of § 983.251 as proposed the
PHA already must offer to place
applicants who are listed on the waiting
list for tenant-based assistance on the
waiting list for PBV assistance
(including owner-maintained PBV
waiting lists).
Question 30. Should HUD establish
additional or different criteria for the
removal of the family from the PBV
waiting list when a family rejects an
offer, or the owner rejects the family?
One commenter recommended that
HUD streamline the PBV waiting lists
process for easier oversight and efficient
enforcement. Other commenters stated
that HUD should allow PHAs to develop
their own procedures to remove families
from the PBV waiting list if the
procedures are outlined in the
Administrative Plan. Another
commenter stated that PHAs should
manage the removal of the family from
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the PBV waiting list when a family
rejects an offer as adopted within their
Administrative Plan. This commenter
expressed that it should be optional for
PHAs to monitor owner-maintained
waiting lists because HUD would hold
the PHA accountable for actions beyond
the PHA’s control. Another commenter
stated HUD should not establish
additional criteria; if a family rejects the
unit, they should be removed from the
list; and if an owner rejects the family,
they should be removed from the
project-based list.
One commenter stated that if a family
meets the eligibility criteria and fulfilled
all its obligations, an owner’s rejection
should not adversely affect the family’s
position on the PBV waiting list. One
commenter stated there is no additional
administrative burden involved in
leaving a family on the general PBV list
if the family rejects an opportunity or an
owner rejects the family.
Another commenter expressed that
owner-managed waiting lists have a
history of discrimination, and that the
proposed rule does not require
enforcement, only an undefined
‘‘oversight.’’ The commenter stated that
the authorities cited at § 5.105(a) are
solely a list of Federal civil rights laws
covering housing programs, and do not
provide for specific oversight. A
commenter suggested that HUD should
revise § 983.251 to identify safety
concerns for domestic violence
survivors as a good cause to reject a
unit, to prevent the survivor from
choosing between housing and safety.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
commenters’ recommendations. This
final rule provides PHAs with the
procedural tools within their
Administrative Plans to effectively
streamline their PBV waiting list to
create effective oversight and efficient
enforcement as addressed in § 983.251.
Further, this final rule allows PHAs to
develop their own procedures to remove
families from the PBV waiting list as
long as the procedures are legally
permissible and are outlined in their
Administrative Plans in the case of a
central PBV waiting list. Under this
final rule, for an owner-maintained
waiting list, the owner, not the PHA, is
responsible for managing the waiting
list, including processing changes in an
applicant’s information, contacting
families when their name is reached on
the waiting list, removing applicant
names from the waiting list, and
opening and closing the waiting list.
Although HUD appreciates the
commenters’ suggestions that HUD
should not establish additional criteria,
there can be situations in which the unit
in question is not conducive to the
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needs of the family and is rejected, but
the family still needs suitable housing,
and, as a result, should not be removed
from the project-based list. Therefore,
HUD requires in this final rule that if a
family rejects the offer of PBV assistance
for good cause then the family cannot be
removed from the PBV waiting list.
Moreover, separate from this process, a
family can always request a reasonable
accommodation that may be necessary
for a household member with a
disability to remain on the PBV waiting
list, including when the unit does not
meet one’s disability-related needs.
Further, PHAs and owners are subject to
all applicable Federal fair housing and
civil rights requirements, including in
their administration of this process.
Even if the circumstances do not rise to
the level of ‘‘good cause’’ as determined
by the entity, a family may request a
reasonable accommodation in
accordance with Federal civil rights
laws.
As for revising § 983.251 to identify
safety concerns for domestic violence
survivors, HUD already has protections
for victims of domestic violence, dating
violence, sexual assault, or stalking in
24 CFR part 5, subpart L, and these
protections apply to admission to the
project-based voucher program.
Additionally, the provision added to
this final rule specifying that if a family
that rejects the offer of PBV assistance
for good cause then the family cannot be
removed from the PBV waiting list
applies to these families; the safety
concerns described in the comment
constitute good cause.
Other Questions and Suggested
Modifications
One commenter stated that HUD
should revise § 983.251(c)(7)(x) to not
take enforcement action against a PHA
due to actions of an owner. This
commenter stated that HUD should have
the ability to act against the owner, and
HUD should explicitly state it will not
act against the PHA, especially when
the PHA is acting in good faith to
provide oversight. Another commenter
recommended that HUD streamline the
process for PHAs, families, and owners,
modifying § 983.251(c)(7)(viii) to state
that PHAs should provide the oral
briefing while the owner refers a family
to the PHA for a final eligibility
determination to provide the family
with the information needed to
determine whether to accept an owner’s
offer and eliminate the need to submit
income and other eligibility-related
information to the PHA.
Commenters suggested that PHAs
should be given the discretion to
manage their waiting lists, including
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how families reject the offer of
assistance or if the owner rejects the
family. One commenter favored HUD
keeping the provisions under
§ 983.251(c), regarding selection from a
waiting list, in nonbinding guidance.
Another commenter stated that PHAs
should have discretion over ownermaintained waiting lists because the
PHA cannot control whether an owner
would comply. Other commenters
suggested that HUD’s rule should
clearly state that PHAs may permit
owners to maintain their own lists,
regardless of whether the PHA itself
maintains separate waiting lists for
some or all its PBV properties in
§ 983.251(c)(2)(iii) and (c)(7)).
A commenter suggested that the rule
should explicitly state that owners and
PHAs are subject to all civil rights and
fair housing requirements throughout
§ 983.251(c)(7). Another commenter
suggested that HUD amend
§ 983.251(e)(1) and (3) to allow PHAs
additional discretion in deciding how to
handle the family’s position on the PHA
waiting list if the family turns down
PBV. This commenter also supported
PHAs having discretion over the
number of offers a family may reject.
Another commenter recommended that
HUD should not permit PHAs to alter a
family’s place on a central PBV waiting
list based on an owner’s rejection of a
family because it would harmfully
impact a family’s admission with
respect to any other property with a
PBV contract and violate a pre-HOTMA
sentence of section 8(o)(13)(J) of the
1937 Act.
Commenters also recommended
deleting the final sentence of
§ 983.251(b)(2), because HCV
participants are not subject to a denial
of assistance, and deleting the part
explaining that the usual termination
grounds would apply, as well as
signaling that rescreening by PHAs is
allowed.
HUD Response: HUD declines to
revise § 983.251(c)(7)(x). Section
983.251(c)(7)(x) allows HUD to take
enforcement actions for non-compliance
against the PHA and the owner. If the
PHA is not acting in good faith to
provide oversight in accordance with
§ 983.251(c)(7)(x), HUD has the
authority to enforce HUD’s
requirements.
As for § 983.251(c)(7)(viii), HUD
maintains the process for PHAs to
determine eligibility for the program.
This ensures that all parties
appropriately coordinate the placement
of the family in the unit and will ensure
compliance by PHAs with their
continued responsibility for eligibility
determinations. This final rule also
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maintains the authority for PHAs,
consistent with their Administrative
Plan, to determine whether to allow for
owner-maintained waiting lists. Further,
HUD’s final rule explicitly states that
PHAs may permit owners to maintain
their own lists regardless of whether the
PHA itself maintains separate waiting
lists for some or all its PBV properties
in § 983.251(c)(2)(iii) and (c)(7). HUD
will not amend § 983.251(e)(1) and (3) to
limit flexibility to the PHA and owner
and HUD maintains the proposed rule’s
option that the PHA may alter a family’s
place on a central PBV waiting list
based on an owner’s rejection of a
family. HUD also declines to adopt the
commenter’s request to delete the final
sentence of § 983.251(b)(2), because
families remain subject to standard
requirements for denial or termination
of assistance. Lastly, HUD’s final rule
maintains the proposed rule
requirements that owners and PHAs
must comply with all applicable
Federal, State, and local
nondiscrimination and equal
opportunity requirements (see 24 CFR
983.251(c)(7)(x) of the final rule
(below)).
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39. PHA Information for Accepted
Family (§ 983.252)
One commenter suggested that the
briefing packet include written
information on the selected family’s
right to move with the next available
voucher, because the right is
unavailable to the family until after one
year and so the family should be
informed of the right in writing. The
commenter also suggested that HUD
modify § 983.252 to apply to both
families selected by the PHA from its
waiting list and to families selected
from an owner-maintained list.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the
commenter about providing such
written information and has revised the
requirement to include written
information on the selected family’s
right to move at § 983.252(b)(5). HUD
will not make a change to the language
regarding families selected off the
waiting list but notes that the language
in the proposed rule and finalized in
this rule does apply to any accepted
family, including participants selected
from an owner-maintained list.
40. Leasing of Contract Units
(§ 983.253)
A commenter recommended that HUD
add the following language to § 983.253:
‘‘PHAs are responsible for monitoring
owner actions that may indicate
rejection of applicants for legally
impermissible reasons, as well as for
informing applicants of other tenant-
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based and PBV waiting list options,
whether referred by the PHA or on an
owner’s site-based waiting list.’’
HUD Response: HUD declines to
implement the commenter’s suggested
change in this final rule. PHAs have a
duty and responsibility to monitor
owner’s actions that may indicate
rejection of applicants for impermissible
reasons.
41. Vacancies (§ 983.254)
Question 32. What would be a
reasonable timeframe for the PHA to
complete this final eligibility
determination?
Commenters suggested a broad set of
timeframes for the PHA to complete its
final eligibility determination. Some
commenters agreed that two weeks, 30
or 60 days is a reasonable timeframe for
PHAs to complete final eligibility
determinations. Other commenters
noted that more time may be required
on a case-by-case basis, to ensure proper
eligibility review. Some commenters
also suggested a 15-day timeframe to
complete final eligibility determination
for applicants on owner-maintained
waiting lists. A commenter suggested
that PHAs determine the timeframe for
final eligibility determinations, because
the PHAs may face uncontrollable
factors that require more time than 30
days.
One commenter encouraged HUD to
include in this final rule a reference to
the authority granted to applicants by
the last sentence of section 8(o)(13)(K),
the Vacancies statutory provision, to
bring legal actions to compel a PHA to
reduce the number of PBV units
committed under the contract if a unit
is vacant for more than 120 days and
use the funds for additional tenantbased assistance.
A commenter encouraged HUD to
provide PHAs 30 calendar days to make
an eligibility determination, and another
commenter proposed two weeks for a
PHA to make final eligibility
determination. Another commenter
objected to HUD’s requirement that
owners notify PHAs of actual or
expected vacancies, and instead, the
commenter proposed that owners refer
families on waiting lists to the PHA, in
advance of an actual vacancy, to reduce
delay in filling the unit. This
commenter stated that there is no reason
to require a notification because the
PHA is not responsible for referring
applicants to the owner, rather than
referring the selected family to the PHA.
The commenter added that owners and
PHAs should have a coordinated system
to schedule PHA appointments as
quickly as possible for the PHA and the
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selected family. This commenter
recommended that PHAs be obligated to
make reasonable efforts to promptly
make the final eligibility determination
and schedule the required oral briefing
as well as eligibility. A commenter
expressed that HUD should not specify
a timeframe for the PHA to complete a
final eligibility determination after
receiving an application from an owner
because PHAs have an interest in
making determinations quickly, but
frequent extenuating circumstances
prolong resolving issues in the interest
of the family, owner, or PHA.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed
the comments and has determined that
in this final rule a 30-day notification to
applicants to determine final eligibility
determinations is reasonable. If PHAs
face uncontrollable factors that require
more time than 30 days to complete
their final eligibility determinations,
then the PHA remains compliant with
the regulation so long as PHAs make
every reasonable effort to complete the
determination within the required
timeframe. This final rule also continues
to require an owner to notify the PHA
of actual or expected vacancies.
42. Security Deposit: Amounts Owed by
Tenant (§ 983.259)
A commenter supported HUD’s
proposed prohibition on charging a
PBV-assisted family a higher security
deposit than an unassisted family
because it encourages and authorizes
source of income discrimination.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
public comment supporting the addition
of § 983.259(b) prohibiting a PHA from
charging assisted tenants security
deposits in excess of private market
practice, or in excess of amounts
charged by the owner to unassisted
tenants and adopts this language in this
final rule.
43. Overcrowded, Under-Occupied, and
Accessible Units (§ 983.260)
Question 33. Are these proposed
timeframes reasonable?
Several commenters viewed the 30day timeframe for the PHA to provide
notice to the family and owner to
remain in a wrong-sized unit, as well as
the 90-day timeframe in which the
family must move out, as reasonable if
PHAs are permitted to extend the
timeframe when needed.
Other commenters opposed HUD’s
timeframes for a family to move from
wrong-sized or accessible units. One
commenter stated that the timeframes
are overly strict for the PHA to notify a
family and owner that they are placed
in either an overcrowded, under-
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occupied, or accessible unit. This
commenter stated that a longer
timeframe is reasonable because PHAs
need time for processing, and the family
should be given adequate time to find a
suitable home rather than taking the
first unit available. Some commenters
suggested increasing the maximum time
for a family to move from 90 days to 180
days since this timeframe is for a
scenario where the PHA offers ‘‘another
form of continued housing assistance
(other than a tenant-based voucher)’’
which will be subject to the availability
of other units within the PBV portfolio
which are outside of the family’s
control. One commenter proposed 180
days to eliminate PHAs having to decide
between terminating families or
skipping their continued assistance
policies. Another commenter suggested
that the timeframe should be 90 days or
the next annual recertification,
whichever is longer, while another
commenter found 90 days as a more
appropriate notification deadline and
180 days sufficient time to move. One
commenter disagreed with the 90-day
timeframe because PHAs with a large
population in RAD units may lack
sufficient turnover to support families
moving out of wrong-sized units, and
the 90-day limit would create an
inconsistency and an unfair standard for
PHAs in low-vacancy areas which
usually allow 120 days for use of
vouchers. This commenter supported
PHAs having discretion to determine
appropriate timeframes for local
conditions and specify those policies in
the Administrative Plan. Another
commenter found the 90-day timeframe
insufficient considering the current
housing crisis and the need for
additional time for families to locate
alternative units.
One commenter requested that HUD
clarify § 983.260(c)(2) to express that the
timeframe begins once the PHA offers
the family assistance in another unit
and not from the time that the PHA
determines the family is in the wrongsized unit. Another commenter stated
that HUD’s proposal is not required by
HOTMA and does not recognize the
limits imposed by PBV turnover and
right-sized unit availability, whether
with external partners or within a PHA’s
agency-owned portfolio. Another
commenter expressed that for families
that live in a wrong-sized PBV unit or
a unit with unneeded accessible
features, the PHAs should offer the
option to move with the next available
tenant-based voucher, and if the
voucher is unavailable or is not the
family’s preference, then the PHA
should offer the family alternative
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housing assistance. The commenter also
disagreed with the option of reducing
the number of units under the PBV
contract because a PHA is unlikely to
reduce the subsidy attached to the
project to offer the tenant a suitable
alternative unit, unless the PHA has no
tenant-based voucher available within a
reasonable time and does not own
public housing, and the owner has no
turnover in a suitable unit. The
commenter further stated that the rule
should require PHAs to help families
locate a new suitable unit with the
tenant-based voucher they receive to
relinquish correct-sized and accessible
units, which is required under § 982.403
and is consistent with HOTMA
requirements to assist families that need
to move due to unrepaired unit defects.
One commenter stated that the proposed
timeframes are overly prescriptive and
administratively burdensome for PHAs
to follow.
HUD Response: This section outlines
steps the PHA must take when they
have determined a family is occupying
a wrong-sized unit (according to the
PHA subsidy standards), or a unit with
accessibility features that the family
does not require, and the unit is needed
for another family that requires the
unit’s accessible features. Under these
circumstances, it is necessary that the
family move and to provide certainty
regarding the amount of time a family
may remain in the unit. In response to
concerns raised, in this final rule, HUD
lengthens the amount of time the PHA
is afforded to offer a form of continued
assistance, in accordance with
§ 983.260(b), to within 60 days of the
PHA’s determination.
The 90-day timeframe, related to the
termination of the housing assistance
payments for the wrong-sized or
accessible unit and removal of the unit
from the HAP contract, begins once the
PHA offers a form of continued
assistance. The comments submitted to
HUD are persuasive that a more flexible
timeframe would be more practical to
suit the needs of the family moving out,
the unit owner, a prospective family
moving in, and the PHA. At the same
time, for certainty, accountability, and
to encourage the owner to continue to
make their unit with accessible features
available to the PHA’s HCV program,
some limits on the timeframe need to be
maintained. Therefore, HUD has
included revisions at § 983.260(c)(2)(i)
and (iii) to include additional flexibility
in the form of the option for a family to
request and the PHA to grant one
extension not to exceed up to an
additional 90 days to accommodate the
family’s efforts to locate affordable, safe,
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and geographically proximate
replacement housing.
In accordance with § 983.260(b)(1),
the continued assistance offered may be
in the form of project-based voucher
assistance in an appropriate-size unit (in
the same project or in another project);
other project-based housing assistance
(e.g., by occupancy of a public housing
unit); tenant-based rental assistance
under the voucher program; or other
comparable tenant-based assistance.
Based on comments received, a new
section was added at § 983.260(b)(2) that
requires the PHA to remove the wrongsize or accessible unit from the HAP
contract to make voucher assistance
available to issue the family a tenantbased voucher if no continued housing
assistance under paragraph (b)(1) is
available. The unit can then be
reinstated after the family vacates the
property under a new provision at
§ 983.260(d). This will support the
availability of funding the PHA can use
to assist the family with continued
assistance.
44. Family Right To Move (§ 983.261)
Question 40: Right To Move and
§ 983.261
One commenter suggested that HUD
clearly define the first year of
occupancy in § 983.261(a). A
commenter recommended that § 983.261
clearly state the roles and
responsibilities of domestic violence
survivors and PHAs, considering that
some PHAs view their obligation to
provide continued assistance to a
survivor as discretionary. This
commenter suggested clarifying that a
‘‘PHA must assure that the victim
retains assistance’’ and ‘‘must’’ offer
continued tenant-based assistance,
subject to availability of funds. One
commenter suggested § 983.261(d) have
a VAWA exception, because survivors
should not be penalized and lose tenantbased assistance if they must terminate
their lease before the end of the one-year
requirement because of violence. This
commenter offered the following
suggestions: (1) allowing a survivor to
request another form of assistance
before the family issues a written notice
to vacate, at the time it issues the notice,
or thereafter; (2) the PHA should also
offer a tenant-based voucher or
comparable tenant-based rental
assistance if the notice to vacate is due
to violence; and (3) if such assistance is
not available, then the survivor should
receive priority for the next tenantbased voucher and the PHA should be
encouraged to reach out to area PHAs
(with survivor consent) about available
units or vouchers. In case the survivor
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does not feel safe in the existing unit,
the commenter recommended that the
PHA provide a safe unit in the interim
while the survivor waits for the tenantbased voucher or allow the survivor to
transfer to another PBV unit.
Another commenter stated that under
§ 983.261, the PHA should demonstrate
the availability of tenant-based vouchers
for eligible PBV families that exercise
their right to move based on tenantbased voucher attrition rate. This
commenter also recommended that
HUD expand the PHA’s discretion to set
timeframes, and not be limited to ‘‘any
time after the first year of occupancy’’
under § 983.261(a)), if the project
provides housing assistance to families
that require intensive supportive
services. Another commenter
recommended that HUD clarify
§ 983.261 to include language on
terminations, by stating that a family
living in a PBV-assisted unit for 12
months that has requested an HCV need
not stay in the PBV unit while waiting
for the transfer, as well as that a PHA
may not terminate the tenants from the
PBV program. One commenter
suggested that HUD expand the list of
reasons for transfer to include
intimidated witnesses and crime victims
before the one-year transfer period. A
commenter suggested HUD clarify that
the tenant is not automatically provided
HCV assistance after 1 year of lease, and
that the tenant may apply for the
transfer list and may receive assistance
when a voucher is available.
One commenter recommended
clarifying in the rule that PHAs should
periodically notify families of the right
to move with continued tenant-based
rental assistance, which could be
provided as part of the regular income
recertification process. This commenter
suggested that HUD clearly state the
actions the PHA must take if neither a
regular voucher nor ‘‘comparable
tenant-based rental assistance’’ is
available at the family’s requests
because basic due process requires that
PHAs maintain a written list of families
that have requested a voucher to move
from a PBV property after 12 months of
occupancy and have a right to receive
the next available voucher or
comparable assistance.
Other commenters stated that
§ 983.261 is clear, but suggested
splitting § 983.261(c)(1) into additional
sentences for clarity.
HUD Response: HUD has revised this
section by adding titles and reorganizing
information so that the requirements are
easier to follow. HUD added language to
§§ 983.261(a) and 983.261(d) that
clarifies the family must have received
PBV assistance for at least a year to be
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eligible for continued assistance under
§ 983.261(b). The eligibility for
continued assistance is based on the
total length of time a family has
received PBV assistance and not the
length of time the family has resided in
the PBV unit. Section 983.261(a) does
not prohibit a family from terminating
their lease prior to a year, just doing so
would make them ineligible for
continued assistance. At any time, the
family must give the owner advance
written notice of intent to vacate (with
a copy to the PHA) in accordance with
the lease, unless the family meets the
exclusion criteria at § 983.261(e) related
to VAWA.
The new § 983.261(f) further clarifies
that PHAs must address project-based
vouchers in their Emergency Transfer
Plan consistent with the requirements in
24 CFR 5.2005(e), including when the
victim has received PBV assistance for
less than one year and is not eligible for
continued assistance under § 983.261(b).
Under a PHA’s existing VAWA
obligations, a family may still
potentially receive tenant-based rental
assistance as an external emergency
transfer, even if they have not received
PBV assistance for more than a year.
The emergency transfer requirements do
not supersede any eligibility or
occupancy requirements that may apply
under a covered housing program
(§ 5.2005(e)(13)). This language was
added to clarify the requirement of
planning for these situations, but HUD
cannot supersede the eligibility
requirements of continued assistance.
To assist the family’s understanding of
their right to move and the PHA’s
implementation of these policies, HUD
has added language to §§ 983.261(b) and
983.261(c) that outlines the right to
move information that must be included
in the Administrative Plan, including
their written policy on whether the PHA
will offer families continued assistance
under the voucher program or other
comparable tenant-based rental
assistance, procedures for how the
family must contact the PHA, and how
the PHA documents families waiting for
continued tenant-based rental
assistance.
45. When Occupancy May Exceed the
Project Cap (§ 983.262)
Question 34: Does the proposed rule
sufficiently address the project cap
requirements in relation to a unit losing
its excepted status?
A commenter stated that § 983.262(f)
(now moved to § 983.262(b)(4) in this
final rule) sufficiently addresses the
project cap requirements in relation to
a unit losing its excepted status.
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Another commenter suggested adding:
‘‘or a family eligible for supportive
services, or a family that otherwise
qualifies to reside in an excepted unit
under paragraphs (c) or (d) of this
section’’ to § 983.262(b). The commenter
encouraged HUD to clearly state in
§ 983.262(c) (now moved to
§ 983.262(d)(3) in this final rule) the
qualifications for the supportive
services exception, including: (1) if any
member of the family is eligible for one
or more of the available services; (2) if
a member of the family successfully
completes a service program and
subsequently no other member of the
household is eligible for one of the
offered services. The commenter also
proposed that HUD revise the third
sentence of § 983.262 to clearly state
that the exception applies even if the
household member who successfully
completes a service program leaves the
household.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
edits offered by commenters and
believes changes to this section provide
additional clarity. The proposed
regulation conveyed that the unit retains
its exception if any member of the
family resides in the unit (not just the
member that successfully completed the
supportive services) and HUD,
therefore, does not believe an edit is
required to provide that clarification.
46. Determining the Rent to Owner
(§ 983.301)
Question 37: Streamlining HUD’s Utility
Allowance Policies Across the RAD
PBV, Traditional PBV, and HCV
Programs
One commenter recommended
providing PHAs with maximum
flexibility in setting utility allowances
for RAD PBV, traditional PBV, and HCV,
noting that the statute is not very
proscriptive. Another commenter stated
that HUD should allow all of these
programs to use the same utility
allowance. A commenter stated that
allowing project owners and PHAs to
utilize project-specific UAs at
traditional PBV properties will
streamline policies between RAD PBV
units and traditional PBV units and will
streamline UA requirements between
traditional PBV units and HOME
program requirements which are
incompatible and require regulatory
waiver.
HUD Response: PHAs have the ability
to use the same UA for RAD PBV,
traditional PBV, and HCV by using the
PHA’s HCV UA schedule for all of these
programs. Through this final rule, PHAs
will have the additional flexibility of
setting an area-wide EEUA that may also
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be used for qualified energy-efficient
RAD PBV and traditional PBV
properties. Project-specific UAs add
complexity, but they are optional for
PHAs to implement. HUD may provide
additional flexibility for setting projectspecific UAs, however, HUD must
ensure the policy results in accurate
UAs that do not overly burden tenants.
HUD recognizes the need to consider
the alignment of project-specific UAs
with other programs like HOME and
will consider this in a notice
implementing project-specific UAs.
Question 38: Should HUD permit the
use of a project-specific utility
allowance schedule for the HCV
program?
Many commenters supported HUD
allowing project-specific UAs. Some
commenters said PHAs should have
maximum flexibility in setting projectspecific UAs, while others
recommended HUD issue more
requirements to ensure project-specific
UAs do not negatively impact families.
Commenters stated that project-specific
UA schedules would eliminate conflicts
with other funding sources, including
HOME. One commenter recommended
that PHAs have the discretion to allow
project-specific UAs on a case-by-case
basis or throughout their HCV program
to ensure families neither experience an
undue cost nor are discouraged from
conserving energy.
Commenters stated that any
requirement to implement site-specific
UAs would be administratively
burdensome for the PHA, stating that it
would not streamline requirements
across programs and that PHAs’ SEMAP
scores may be negatively impacted due
to difficulties in applying the correct
UA schedule. Commenters stated that
HUD’s efforts to reduce program
expenditures and promote energy
efficiency need to be consistent with
statutory tenant affordability
protections. Another commenter noted
that HUD has not provided evidence
that reduced UAs will promote energy
conservation and that the relationship
between reducing UAs and avoiding
wasteful consumption is tenuous
considering the relative inelasticity of
demand for energy among low-income
households.
Another commenter stated that while
a project-specific UA is appropriate in
instances where another housing
program has established an alternative
EEUA, the standard should be based on
accuracy and not whether allowances
would create an undue cost on families
or discourage efficient use of HAP
funds. A commenter recommended that
HUD should remove the requirement to
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have PHAs update UA schedules when
there is a rate change of 10 percent or
more; streamlining would be achieved if
the local HUD field office performs the
UA analysis for their respective
geographic areas. Another commenter
proposed that HUD issue UAs based on
locality like FMRs.
Commenters recommended that HUD
delay making this provision effective
until it can issue further guidance
providing specific standards and
requirements for developing the projectspecific UAs and how to ensure tenants
are not negatively impacted and
allowing for public comment.
Commenters additionally expressed that
using average consumption of the
dataset is unreasonable for low-income
tenants because it results in effectively
50 percent of the tenants receiving a UA
that is too low. Commenters also
supported consideration of the impact
of time-of-use rate plans and tenants
with special needs or larger families,
which require higher consumption for
special equipment or because tenants
spend more time at home. Projectspecific UAs that are determined based
on an engineering analysis need to be
carefully reviewed and subject to a
periodic adjustment to ensure they
reflect actual costs in the project. This
commenter recommended HUD apply
the same methodology for multifamily
properties, which uses actual
consumption data. One commenter
recommended that HUD’s approval
process include adequate notice and
comment for PBV tenants affected by
any PHA proposal submitted to HUD, as
well as require that PBV tenants timely
complete supporting information, and
receive adequate time for analysis (at
least 60 days), because the data
complexity will usually require
additional expertise.
One commenter stated that there
should be no need for a PHA to engage
another independent entity to approve
proposed project-specific UAs, as HUD’s
independent review and approval
should be sufficient to avoid a conflict
of interest.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates
commenters’ support of project-specific
UAs. Project-specific UAs provide an
opportunity for streamlining and a more
accurate UA based on project-specific
consumption data that will (1) allow
projects to be viable where the areawide utility allowance is unnecessarily
high, and (2) ensure participants living
in the same property are receiving the
same UA subsidy. Per § 983.301(f)(4)
PHAs that implement a project-specific
UA for a PBV property must use the
same UA for tenant-based participants
residing in that project. To ensure this
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policy is clear, HUD has added this
requirement into this final rule in part
982 (§ 982.517(b)(2)(iv)). While projectspecific allowances may cause some
burden to administer, they are
completely optional. PHAs must
consider the costs and benefits to their
specific program and the impact on
families before deciding to request a
project-specific UA.
Many suggestions were made on how
to protect participant families from
having a project-specific UA that is too
low. HUD agrees that further protections
are needed to ensure that families are
not negatively impacted. HUD clarified
under § 983.301(f)(4) that § 982.517(c)
applies and an annual review of rates is
required. HUD added that PHAs must
review project-specific UAs after one
year if they were not based on actual
consumption data. Additional time is
required to develop a process that
ensures PHAs and PBV property owners
are adequately considering the impact of
project-specific UAs on families. HUD
will continue to process these requests
as waivers at HUD Headquarters until
more guidance is issued via notice.
HUD appreciates the commenter’s
suggestion that PHAs should have the
flexibility to apply project-specific or
case-specific UAs for any HCV tenant,
but this policy would be very difficult
to manage and even more difficult to
provide effective oversight. UAs provide
for some adjustments through specific
policies without creating a separate
utility allowance for every HCV
participant. Families that have
additional utility allowance needs due
to individual circumstances related to a
disability are always able to request a
reasonable accommodation
(§ 982.517(e)). This applies to
participants in the project-based and
tenant-based programs. HUD is
amending this final rule to clarify that
reasonable accommodation UAs will not
impact the determination of the contract
rent for project-based units. Instead, the
cap on contract rent will be determined
using the appropriate area-wide UA
(§ 983.301(f)(5)).
HUD has removed the regulatory
requirement in § 983.301(g) that PHAs
have an independent entity determine
the project-specific UA for PHA-owned
units. HUD will establish requirements
for project-specific UAs in PHA-owned
units in a Federal Register notice.
Request for Clarification
A commenter suggested HUD clarify
§ 983.301(b)(1) by including that the
rent to owner can differ from the PHA’s
payment standard for the HCV program,
as the statute specifies, since many
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PHAs and other stakeholders have not
understood this flexibility.
HUD Response: HUD believes that
§ 983.301(b)(1) is sufficiently clear that
the rent to owner can differ from the
PHA’s payment standard for the HCV
program. However, HUD has taken this
opportunity to clarify the corresponding
provision at § 983.2(c)(6)(i) and the
§ 983.301(b)(1) language regarding when
the PHA may use an amount greater
than 110 percent of the applicable FMR
in its calculations.
47. Redetermination of Rent to Owner
(§ 983.302)
Question 39: Agreeing to Maximum
OCAF Adjustments
Commenters supported implementing
the HOTMA provisions allowing an
owner to request additional changes up
to the statutory maximum if the OCAF
is insufficient because these changes
would help make PBV projects more
competitive. A commenter suggested
HUD consider this limit to be
duplicative, because rent reasonableness
standards must still be met, in effect
keeping the rent amount in check.
Another commenter stated that owners
subject to OCAF should have the benefit
of having the full OCAF percentage
applied to better manage operations and
improve on a property’s ability to cover
existing debt, and that further reducing
the applicable percentage increase to
properties puts additional financial
strain on owners.
HUD Response: HUD appreciate the
comments; however, HUD does not
consider the PHA’s rent limit to be
duplicative rent reasonableness
standards because the PHA may have
reason to set the limit below the
reasonable rent. Under this final rule,
HUD retains the requirement that the
increases through OCAF may not exceed
the maximum rent for the PBV project,
as determined by the PHA pursuant to
§ 983.301 as proposed.
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Align OCAF Adjustments With Other
Programs
Commenters recommended a ‘‘lesser
of’’ test, like that used in the Mod Rehab
program, of OCAF or 110 percent of
FMR. A commenter suggested PHAs
should have sole discretion to choose
OCAF or 110 percent of FMR, if HUD
determines that the PBV rent increase
amount should be discretionary. A
commenter recommended HUD treat
OCAF adjustments in a traditional PBV
context the same as it would in a RAD
PBV context and as permitted elsewhere
for properties with HUD section 8
contracts. This commenter noted that
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OCAF adjustments applied elsewhere in
the PBV program should not be
arbitrarily capped by the FMR and
SAFMR established by HUD. The
commenter also encouraged HUD to
explore ways in which the FMRs and
SAFMRs can be better aligned with rent
reasonableness assessments to ensure
that FMRs and SAFMRs are able to keep
up with the OCAF adjustments that
properties receive, which would avoid
this problem altogether.
HUD Response: HUD declines to
adopt the commenter’s recommendation
to use a ‘‘lesser of’’ test and retains the
proposed rule policy, as described
earlier in this section of the preamble.
HUD intends to consider this rule’s
applicability to RAD, given HUD’s
waiver authority with respect to RAD,
following publication of this final rule.
HUD continues its commitment to
ensuring FMRs and SAFMRs are
accurate and updated.
OCAF Adjustments to Units Not
Otherwise Regulated by Local Rent
Increase Regulation Related Rules
A commenter suggested providing the
option of OCAF adjustments to those
units that are not otherwise regulated by
local rent increase regulations or any
other regulatory agreement.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed
the comment and has determined, as a
matter of equitable treatment, all OCAF
adjustments will remain aligned in
accordance with the statutory provision
in section (8)(o)(13)(H) of the 1937 Act.
Automatic Adjustments
A commenter supported the inclusion
of OCAF rent increases as a
discretionary option for PHAs. One
commenter stated that PHAs would risk
funding shortfalls if they guaranteed
annual rent adjustment, and some
owners may not request an increase
every year, which benefits the PHA
because it allows for those funds to be
used elsewhere and for units in highercost areas.
HUD Response: HUD acknowledges
commenters’ support. HUD is
maintaining automatic adjustments
pursuant to § 983.302(b) which states
that a rent increase may occur through
automatic adjustment by an operating
cost adjustment factor (OCAF) or as the
result of an owner request for such an
increase. However, the OCAF option is
optional and PHAs concerned about
shortfalls or anticipating a lower owner
request may decide not to use OCAFs.
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Periodic Adjustment Frequency
One commenter recommended that
HUD also clarify proposed
§ 983.302(b)(2)(ii)(B) to state that
periodic adjustments above the OCAFadjusted rent level may be less
frequently than annually. This
commenter also suggested that the
contract specify how frequently a PHA
must consider such requests if made by
the owner, because allowing increases
annually, beyond the OCAF level,
would undermine the time- and costsaving purpose of using an OCAF.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the
commenter’s suggestion. HUD decided
to allow adjustments to occur during the
term of the contract and prohibit a rent
adjustment by an OCAF from exceeding
the maximum rent (see
§ 983.302(b)(2)(i)). HUD also declines to
require that the HAP contract specify
how frequently a PHA must consider
rent increase requests. Instead, as noted
in this final rule, an owner can make a
written request for a rent increase at any
time during the term of a HAP contract.
Lastly, as a point of clarification, the
proposed § 983.302(b)(2)(ii)(B) has been
relocated in this final rule to
§ 983.302(b)(3)(i).
Rent Floor
One commenter supported HUD’s
proposal to allow PHAs to reduce PBV
rents below the initial rent to owner at
any time during the HAP contract. The
commenter further urged HUD to
provide PHAs the tools to rectify
unintended negative consequences
stemming from an unestablished floor
for rents and PBV rents falling below
their initial rents, harming the initial
underwriting.
HUD Response: HUD has considered
the comment and determined that it
should remain within PHA discretion
whether to reduce rents below the
initial rent to owner at any time during
the HAP contract. HUD believes that
PHAs are in the best position to balance
local considerations in making such a
determination. Therefore, in this final
rule, HUD has deleted the sentences of
the proposed rule that said: ‘‘If the rents
have already been reduced below the
initial rent to owner, the PHA may not
make such an election as a way to
increase the rents. If rents increase
(pursuant to paragraph (b) of this
section) above the initial rent to owner,
then the PHA may once again make that
choice.’’
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48. Additional Requests for Comment
Question 41. HUD Is Interested in
Aligning PBV Program Requirements
With Housing Trust Fund (HTF)
Program Requirements and Solicits
Input From Stakeholders Regarding
Areas in Which Alignment Will Be
Particularly Beneficial
One commenter recommended
modifying PBV affordability terms to 30year contracts to mirror HTF to address
the incompatibility between
affordability requirements as well as
remove the challenge in obtaining
financing.
Other commenters supported HTF
requirements conforming to the HCV/
PBV requirements, rather than the
opposite. A commenter encouraged
HUD to work with state HTF funding
recipients to incorporate preferences
and/or additional points in the HTF
Allocation Plans for applicants that seek
to couple the receipt of HTF funds with
section 8 project-based vouchers. This
commenter also supported streamlining
environmental review requirements
under § 983.301(f) and substantial
rehab/new construction through parts
50 and 58, as well as HUD allowing a
single environmental review to satisfy
the requirements for both HTF and the
PBV program. The commenter stated
that the proposed suggestion is needed
because of HUD’s increased flexibility
due to the absence of a HTF statutory
environmental review requirement.
Furthermore, the commenter stated that
the current requirements often result in
projects receiving HTF and PBV funding
to undergo separate and duplicative
environmental reviews.
Another commenter suggested that
additional vouchers be made available
to communities that offer resources for
low-income households, including
access to public transportation and jobs,
where rents are prohibitive. This
commenter also suggested using a
voucher pool to connect developments
that have HTF investments to bring
development and operation funding to
create more opportunities.
HUD Response: HOTMA section
106(a)(4) does not allow for the contract
to go beyond an initial term of 20 years;
however, a PHA may execute any
number of extensions (for terms up to 20
years each) such that there are up to 40
remaining years on the contract, further
explained above in this discussion of
comments regarding § 983.205.
Amendments to the HTF program
requirements are beyond the scope of
this rulemaking. Nonetheless, where the
State is selecting HTF applications
submitted by eligible recipients, HUD
notes that the HTF Allocation Plan
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requires HTF grantees to provide
priority for funding for projects with
Federal project-based rental assistance.
See 24 CFR 91.320(k)(5). The underlying
PBV environmental review
requirements generally are statutory;
HUD cannot unilaterally amend the
applicability of NEPA and other laws
and executive orders. HUD notes that
the HTF environmental provisions are
outcome-based and exclude certain
consultation procedures that are
otherwise required for environmental
reviews under 24 CFR parts 50 and 58.
HUD intends to consider these
comments for future collaborations with
the HTF program.
HUD allocates funding that can be
used for project-based vouchers at the
PHA’s discretion. How PBV funding is
allocated is an essential program
requirement and revising it is beyond
the scope of this rulemaking. See
response below to Question 43 for
additional information on how PBV
works and is funded.
RAD and Transfers of Assistance
(Answers to Question 42)
Commenters suggested that HUD
create a new regulatory provision
governing the transfer of assistance. One
commenter suggested that HUD should
allow both partial and full transfer of
PBV assistance from one project to
another. Other commenters suggested
that the transfer be a voluntary
agreement modeled after the PBRA
provision. Some commenters stated that
HUD should keep the transfer of
assistance process as clear and simple as
possible, as it has progressively become
overregulated, with two of these
commenters citing specifically the
environmental review process and the
inspection process. One commenter
stated that the local PHAs can and
should make the appropriate policy
regarding when PBV assistance, which
they awarded and oversee, can be
transferred to another property.
A commenter stated that PHAs should
continue to use their vouchers awarded
in connection with the Rental
Assistance Demonstration (RAD) where
appropriate and in compliance with the
HAP contract. Another commenter
stated that additional regulatory
provisions are not required to govern
transfers of HAP contracts because
PHAs will not experience a reduction in
Annual Contributions Contract (ACC)
authorized units when terminating a
PBV HAP contract; instead, HUD should
address needs on a case-by-case basis.
This commenter also stated that HUD
should eliminate the 1-year notice of
termination when PBV assistance is
relocated without a gap in subsidy, so
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long as any relocation is conducted in
accordance with applicable Federal
requirements.
One commenter recommended
defining a RAD project based on its
funding stream or ownership structure,
rather than lots or sites. One commenter
also recommended that HUD allow
PHAs flexibility to develop new PBV or
public housing units if it does not
exceed its Faircloth limit.
A commenter suggested that
regulations governing RAD transfers of
assistance consider the following
factors: (1) placing proposed transfers of
assistance in the PHA Annual or MTW
Plan and ensuring consistency with the
Consolidated Plan as well as improving
the resident notification and
consultation requirements triggered
with a transfer of assistance and having
each transfer meet the notice and
comment requirements; (2) transfers of
assistance must receive certificates of
compliance for fair housing and civil
rights requirements and undergo
multiple reviews such as: HUD’s civil
rights review, review for compliance
with site selection standards under
§ 983.55, 8(bb), poverty concentration
standards, change in number of units,
availability of accessible units or units
for families with children, change in
admission preferences, relocation, and
change in income eligibility; (3)
explicitly prohibiting re-screening
tenants for factors such as criminal
history and credit scores as well as not
applying new screening criteria to a
family coming from public housing and
prohibiting unreasonable screening
criteria in subsequent recertifications;
(4) prohibiting PHAs from changing unit
type or size without the written consent
of the individual tenants; (5) refusing
involuntary permanent relocation,
however explicitly stating the voluntary
relocation processes, including the
option to select a public housing unit of
the PHA, and the PHA/owner must
document compliance with Uniform
Relocation Act (URA) and RAD
relocation rights and publicize those
records to HUD upon request; (6) HUD
should closely evaluate and promulgate
specific rules for transfers of assistance
far from the current RAD site, and
consider whether the distance would
impose a significant burden on
residents’ access to existing
employment, transportation options,
schooling or other critical services, and
whether the transfer advances or
impedes fair housing and deconcentration goals; and (7) section 3
obligations once transfers are combined
with rehabilitation and new
construction.
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HUD Response: HUD has considered
the comments and agrees that it is
unnecessary to create a new regulatory
process by which PBV assistance may
be transferred from one property to
another (though HUD has expanded
options for termination of PBV contracts
at § 983.206). Under this final rule, a
PBV contract may terminate, as
provided in § 983.206, with no
corresponding reduction in the PHA’s
ACC units or HAP allocation. A PHA
may, in conjunction with such
termination, engage in the selection
process in § 983.51 to select and place
under contract a different PBV project,
subject to all requirements of part 983.
A PHA may give preference to families
living in the former PBV project who
wish to move (voluntarily) to the new
PBV project, so long as such preference
is consistent with the requirements of
§ 982.207, and subject to the provisions
regarding in-place families at
§ 983.251(b), accessible units at
§ 983.251(c)(9), and excepted units at
§ 983.262(b)(2). This final rule therefore
gives sufficient flexibility to PHAs to
end PBV assistance at one project and
begin PBV assistance at another.
HUD has reviewed the suggestions
that transfer of assistance be modeled on
Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA)
transfers and determined that parallel
conditions, namely with respect to HUD
oversight and funding authority, do not
exist in the PBV program that would
enable use of the same process.
Additionally, HUD does not have the
statutory authority to alter several
provisions of part 983 to facilitate a
transfer of PBV assistance as other
commenters suggested. These
provisions include environmental
review, inspection, and the one-year
notice of contract termination. HUD
notes that, aside from this statutory
limitation, these aspects of the PBV
program are critical elements to the
purpose and functionality of the PBV
program and to ensuring PBV tenants
reside in decent, safe, and sanitary
housing.
HUD notes that the provisions for
RAD transfer of assistance, and other
RAD requirements, continue to be
located in the governing notices for the
RAD program and are not altered by this
final rule. HUD finds it inappropriate to
codify in part 983 the alternative
provisions created pursuant to waiver
authority specific to the Demonstration.
HUD encourages commenters wishing to
revise the RAD requirements to respond
to requests for comment on RAD
provisions in the Federal Register. HUD
further notes that PBV units are
unrelated to PHAs’ Faircloth authority
and HUD will not consider changes to
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Faircloth authority as it relates to the
public housing program as part of this
rulemaking, given the need for robust
public comment on that topic.
Question 43: Executive Order 13878 and
Affordable Housing
Commenters suggested that HUD
condition its funding to localities that
reduce local barriers against expensive
projects and provide funding only if
local governments provide local fee
reductions for affordable housing or
adopt by-right zoning.
One commenter recommended that
HUD increase the allocation of PBVs
that PHAs could apply for. This
commenter also suggested making the
applications for the new PBVs available
to jurisdictions that demonstrate that
they are reducing local regulatory
burden such as permitting streamlining,
fee waivers, and caps on local developer
fees, to incentivize decreased
development and production cost.
Another commenter suggested that
HUD should not consider any policies
relating to PBVs designed to incentivize
communities to reduce local regulatory
barriers to development and production
of housing. Instead, the commenter
proposed that local housing authorities
should be allowed to implement PBVs
based on their local conditions. This
commenter suggested that HUD use
direct rewards and other programs
relating to those municipal jurisdictions
as an incentive to change local rules,
instead of using the PHA as the
middleman.
HUD Response: The PBV program is
administered by a PHA that already
administers the tenant-based voucher
program under an annual contributions
contract (ACC) with HUD (§ 983.5(a)(1)).
If a PHA decides to operate a PBV
program, the PHA’s PBV program is
funded with a portion of appropriated
funding (budget authority) available
under the PHA’s voucher ACC. This
pool of funding is used to pay housing
assistance for both tenant-based and
project-based voucher units and to pay
PHA administrative fees for
administration of tenant-based and
project-based voucher assistance, and
there is no special or additional funding
for project-based vouchers (§ 983.5(b)).
Additionally, A PHA has discretion
whether to operate a PBV program
(§ 983.5(c)). These are essential program
requirements HUD will not change and
implementing the recommendations
would fundamentally alter how the PBV
program works and is funded.
Typographic Corrections
One commenter had the following
typographical corrections: corrected
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38287
§ 983.5(3) to cite to § 983.154(e) and not
§ 983.155(e), which does not exist;
corrected the reference in § 983.52(d) to
§ 983.155(e), which should be to
§ 983.154(e); suggested HUD use ‘‘new’’
instead of ‘‘newly’’ in § 983.12(a) and
elsewhere for consistency; in
§ 983.59(a), suggested HUD delete ‘‘for
exclusion’’ to avoid redundancy; in
§ 983.59(e), corrected two references to
‘‘program limitation’’ that should be
‘‘program cap;’’ and in
§ 983.204(d)(2)(iii), this commenter
suggested replacing ‘‘PHA functions in
accordance’’ with ‘‘PHA functions
identified in.’’
HUD Response: HUD thanks the
commenter for these comments. HUD
has revised the reference to § 983.155(e)
in § 983.5(a)(3) (the reference is now to
§ 983.154(f), due to this correction and
renumbering that occurred in this final
rule) and has removed § 983.52(d). The
term ‘‘newly’’ must continue to be used
in the context of regulations concerning
‘‘newly constructed housing’’ as defined
in § 983.3(b), to maintain consistency
with that term and definition, as well as
to avoid confusion with the activity of
new construction applicable in other
contexts within the PBV regulations.
However, HUD notes that
‘‘rehabilitation’’ as used in proposed
§ 983.12(a) was not consistent with the
term ‘‘rehabilitated housing’’ at
§ 983.3(b), so has amended that term
accordingly. HUD disagrees with
removal of the term ‘‘for exclusion’’ in
§ 983.59(a). However, HUD notes that
the two references to ‘‘program
limitation’’ as used in proposed
§ 983.59(e) were not consistent with the
term ‘‘program cap,’’ so HUD has
amended that term accordingly. HUD
agrees with the commentor’s suggestion
to replace the language ‘‘PHA functions
in accordance’’ with ‘‘PHA functions
identified in’’ at § 982.451(c)(2)(iii) and
§ 983.204(f)(iii).
General Comment
One commenter suggested that HUD
allow PHAs to convert public housing to
PBV without HCV to retain the PBVs,
for ACC unit consistency and to benefit
PHAs going through the RAD process.
HUD Response: PHAs must have an
ACC to administer a voucher program,
per § 982.151. This is an essential
requirement which HUD will not
change.
VI. Findings and Certifications
Regulatory Review—Executive Orders
12866, 13563, and 14094
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
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alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health, and safety
effects; distributive impacts; and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility.
Under Executive Order 12866
(Regulatory Planning and Review), a
determination must be made whether a
regulatory action is significant and,
therefore, subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) in
accordance with the requirements of the
order. Executive Order 14094
(Modernizing Regulatory Review)
amends section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866, among other things.
This final rule would update HUD’s
regulations for the HCV and PBV
programs to conform to changes made
by HOTMA. These changes include
alternatives to HUD’s HQS inspection
requirement, establishing a statutory
definition of PHA-owned housing, and
other elements of both programs,
ranging from owner proposal selection
procedures to how participants are
selected. In addition to implementing
these HOTMA provisions, HUD has
included changes that are intended to
reduce the burden on public housing
agencies, by either modifying
requirements or simplifying and
clarifying existing regulatory language.
This final rule was determined to be
a significant regulatory action under
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866
(although not an economically
significant regulatory action under the
Order). HUD has prepared a Regulatory
Impact Analysis (RIA) that addresses the
costs and benefits of this final rule.
HUD’s RIA is part of the docket file for
this rule, which is available for public
inspection at www.regulations.gov.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) generally requires
an agency to conduct a regulatory
flexibility analysis of any rule subject to
notice and comment rulemaking
requirements, unless the agency certifies
that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
For purposes of this rule, HUD
defines a small PHA as a PHA for which
the sum of the number of public
housing dwelling units administered by
the agency and the number of vouchers
is 550 or fewer. There are approximately
2,700 such agencies; some are voucheronly, some are combined, some are
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public housing-only. HUD includes all
of these agencies among the number that
could be affected by the proposed rule.
For those that operate voucher
programs, the potential to be affected is
evident. For public housing-only
agencies, the potential effect of this final
rule depends on whether the agency
removes its public housing from the
public housing program via one of the
available legal removal tools, then
project-bases any tenant protection
vouchers awarded in connection with
that removal.
This final rule revises HUD
regulations to reduce the burden on or
provide flexibility for all PHAs, owners,
and other responsible entities,
irrespective of whether they are small
entities. For example, this final rule
leverages Small Area Fair Market Rents
to provide PHAs with greater autonomy
in setting exception payment standard
amounts. It will implement HOTMA’s
exceptions to the program and project
caps under the PBV program, such as
authorizing a PHA to project-base 100
percent of the units in any project with
25 units or fewer. It extends from 15 to
20 years the permissible duration of a
PBV HAP contract, resulting in less
frequent need for extensions, and
eliminates the three-year window
during which units may be added to an
existing contract without a PHA issuing
a new request for proposals (RFP). The
rule will eliminate extraneous
requirements specific to the projectbasing of HUD–VASH and FUP
vouchers, if project-basing is done
consistent with PBV program rules. It
will provide PHAs with greater
flexibility in the establishment of utility
allowance schedules. It will also
implement new discretionary authority
for a PHA to enter into a PBV HAP
contract with an owner for housing that
is newly constructed or recently
rehabilitated, as long as PBV program
rules are followed, even if construction
or rehabilitation commenced prior to
the PHA issuing an RFP. HUD estimates
that such changes have the potential to
generate a range of cost savings but is
unable to estimate the number of small
entities that would experience cost
savings as a result of changes proposed
by this rule, as such savings depend
largely on actions that PHAs will take
(or not) at their own discretion.
For the reasons presented, the
undersigned certifies that this rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
Information Collection Requirements
The information collection
requirements contained in this final rule
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have been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520) and assigned
OMB control number 2577–0226. In
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, an agency may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of
information, unless the collection
displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) establishes
requirements for Federal agencies to
assess the effects of their regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal
governments and the private sector.
This final rule will not impose any
Federal mandates on any State, local, or
tribal governments or the private sector
within the meaning of UMRA.
Environmental Review
A Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) with respect to the
environment has been made in
accordance with HUD regulations in 24
CFR part 50 that implement section
102(2)(C) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C.
4332(2)(C)). The FONSI is available
online at www.regulations.gov.
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (entitled
‘‘Federalism’’) prohibits an agency from
publishing any rule that has federalism
implications if the rule either imposes
substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments and is not
required by statute, or the rule preempts
State law, unless the agency meets the
consultation and funding requirements
of section 6 of the Executive Order. This
final rule does not have federalism
implications and does not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments nor
preempt State law within the meaning
of the Executive Order.
Lists of Subjects
24 CFR Part 5
Administrative practice and
procedure, Aged, Claims, Crime,
Government contracts, Grant programshousing and community development,
Individuals with disabilities,
Intergovernmental relations, Loan
programs-housing and community
development, Low and moderate
income housing, Mortgage insurance,
Penalties, Pets, Public housing, Rent
subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Social security,
Unemployment compensation, Wages.
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24 CFR Part 8
Administrative practice and
procedure, Civil rights, Equal
employment opportunity, Grant
programs-housing and community
development, Individuals with
disabilities, Loan programs-housing and
community development, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 891
24 CFR Part 42
Administrative practice and
procedure, Grant programs, Loan
programs, Manufactured homes, Rates
and fares, Relocation assistance, and
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 903
Administrative practice and
procedure, Public housing, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 908
Computer technology, Grant
programs-housing and community
development, Rent subsidies, and
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 50
Environmental impact statements.
24 CFR Part 91
Aged, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Homeless,
Individuals with disabilities, Low and
moderate income housing, and
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 943
Public Housing and Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 945
24 CFR Part 92
Administrative practice and
procedure, Low and moderate income
housing, Manufactured homes, Rent
subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 93
Administrative practice and
procedure, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Low and
moderate income housing,
Manufactured homes, Rent subsidies,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 247
Grant programs-housing and
community development, Loan
programs-housing and community
development, Low and moderate
income housing, and Rent subsidies.
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24 CFR Part 290
Loan programs-housing and
community development, Low and
moderate income housing, Mortgage
insurance, and Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 882
Grant programs-housing and
community development, Homeless,
Lead poisoning, Manufactured homes,
Rent subsidies, and Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 888
Grant programs-housing and
community development, rent
subsidies.
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Aged, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Individuals
with disabilities, Loan programshousing and community development,
Low and moderate income housing,
Public assistance programs, Rent
subsidies, and Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Aged, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Individuals
with disabilities, Public housing,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 960
Aged, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Individuals
with disabilities, Pets, and Public
housing.
24 CFR Part 972
Grant programs-housing and
community development, Public
housing, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 982
Grant programs-housing and
community development, Grant
programs-Indians, Indians, Public
housing, Rent subsidies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 983
Grant programs-housing and
community development, Low and
moderate income housing, Rent
subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 985
Grant programs-housing and
community development, Public
housing, Rent subsidies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 1000
Aged, Community development block
grants, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Grant
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38289
programs-Indians, Indians, Individuals
with disabilities, Public housing,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated in
the preamble, HUD amends 24 CFR
parts 5, 8, 42, 50, 91, 92, 93, 247, 290,
882, 888, 891, 903, 908, 943, 945, 972,
982, 983, 985, and 1000 as follows:
PART 5—GENERAL HUD PROGRAM
REQUIREMENTS; WAIVERS
1. The authority for part 5 continues
to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701x; 42 U.S.C.
1437a, 1437c, 1437f, 1437n, 3535(d); 42
U.S.C. 2000bb et seq.; 34 U.S.C. 12471 et seq.;
Sec. 327, Pub. L. 109–115, 119 Stat. 2396;
E.O. 13279, 67 FR 77141, 3 CFR, 2002 Comp.,
p. 258; E.O. 13559, 75 FR 71319, 3 CFR, 2010
Comp., p. 273; E.O. 14156, 86 FR 10007, 3
CFR, 2021 Comp., p. 517.
2. Amend § 5.100 by revising the
definitions of ‘‘Household’’ and
‘‘Responsible entity’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 5.100
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Household, for purposes of 24 CFR
part 5, subpart I, and parts 960, 966,
882, and 982 of this title, means the
family, foster children and adults, and
PHA-approved live-in aide.
*
*
*
*
*
Responsible entity means the person
or entity responsible for administering
the restrictions on providing assistance
to noncitizens with ineligible
immigrations status. The entity
responsible for administering the
restrictions on providing assistance to
noncitizens with ineligible immigration
status under the various covered
programs is as follows:
(1) For the Section 235 Program, the
mortgagee.
(2) For Public Housing, the Section 8
Rental Voucher, and the Section 8
Moderate Rehabilitation programs, the
PHA administering the program under
an ACC with HUD.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 5.504 by revising and
republishing the definition of
‘‘Responsible’’ to read as follows:
§ 5.504
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Responsible entity means the person
or entity responsible for administering
the restrictions on providing assistance
to noncitizens with ineligible
immigrations status. The entity
responsible for administering the
restrictions on providing assistance to
noncitizens with ineligible immigration
status under the various covered
programs is as follows:
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(1) For the Section 235 Program, the
mortgagee.
(2) For Public Housing, the Section 8
Rental Voucher, and the Section 8
Moderate Rehabilitation programs, the
PHA administering the program under
an ACC with HUD.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 5.514
[AMENDED]
4. Amend § 5.514 by:
a. Adding to the end of paragraph
(f)(2)(i)(A), the word ‘‘and’’;
■ b. Amending paragraph (f)(2)(i)(B) by
removing ‘‘; or’’ and adding, in its place,
a period;
■ c. Removing paragraph (f)(2)(i)(C); and
■ d. In paragraphs (i)(1) introductory
text and (i)(2), removing the phrase
‘‘Rental Certificate,’’.
■
■
§ 5.630
[AMENDED]
5. Amend § 5.630(a)(2) by removing
the phrase ‘‘, and certificate’’.
■
6. Remove the words ‘‘certificate or’’
in the following places:
■ a. Section 5.632(b)(2);
■ b. Section 5.653(a);
■ c. Section 5.655(a);
■ d. Section 5.657(a); and
■ e. Section 5.659(a).
■
17. The authority for part 92
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d) and 12701–
12839, 12 U.S.C. 1701x.
§ 92.202
[AMENDED]
18. Amend § 92.202(b) by removing
the citation ‘‘24 CFR 983.57(e)(2) and
(3)’’ and adding, in its place, the citation
‘‘24 CFR 983.55(e)(2) and (3)’’.
■
§ 92.253
[AMENDED]
19. Amend § 92.253(d)(4) by removing
the words ‘‘certificate or’’, and by
removing the phrase ‘‘certificate,
voucher,’’ and adding, in its place, the
word ‘‘voucher’’.
■
§ 92.508
[AMENDED]
20. Amend § 92.508(a)(3)(xiii) by
removing the citation to ‘‘24 CFR
983.57(e)(2) and (e)(3)’’ and adding, in
its place, the citation to ‘‘24 CFR
983.55(e)(2) and (3)’’.
■
PART 93—HOUSING TRUST FUND
11. The authority for part 42
continues to read as follows:
§ 42.350
21. The authority for part 93
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 4601, 5304,
and 12705(b).
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 12 U.S.C.
4568.
[AMENDED]
§ 93.150
12. Amend § 42.350(e)(1) by
removing, both times it appears, the
phrase ‘‘certificate or’’.
■
7. Amend § 5.801 by:
a. In paragraph (a)(2)(ii) removing the
word ‘‘Certificate’’ and adding, in its
place, the word ‘‘Voucher;
■ b. In paragraph (a)(2)(iv) removing the
words ‘‘Certificate and’’;
■ c. In paragraph (a)(3)(ii) removing the
word ‘‘Certificate’’ and adding, in its
place, the word ‘‘Voucher’’.
■
■
PART 50—PROTECTION AND
ENHANCEMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL
QUALITY
13. The authority for part 50
continues to read as follows:
■
[AMENDED]
8. Remove ‘‘project-based certificate
or’’ in the following places:
■ a. In § 5.853(b), in the definition of
‘‘Responsible entity’’;
■ b. In § 5.902, in the definition of
‘‘Responsible entity’’; and
■ c. Section 5.903(e)(1)(i)(C).
§ 50.17
[AMENDED]
14. Amend § 50.17(e) by removing the
word ‘‘Certificate’’ and adding, in its
place, the word ‘‘Voucher’’.
■
PART 8—NONDISCRIMINATION
BASED ON HANDICAP IN FEDERALLY
ASSISTED PROGRAMS AND
ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
HOUSING AND URBAN
DEVELOPMENT
[AMENDED]
22. Amend § 93.150(b) by removing
the citation to ‘‘24 CFR 983.57(e)(2)’’
and adding, in its place, a citation to
‘‘24 CFR 983.55(e)(2)’’.
■
PART 247—EVICTIONS FROM
CERTAIN SUBSIDIZED AND HUDOWNED PROJECTS
23. The authority for part 247
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d) and 4321–
4335; and Executive Order 11991, 3 CFR,
1977 Comp., p. 123.
■
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Housing voucher programs.
(a) * * *
(5) If necessary as a reasonable
accommodation for a person with
disabilities, approve a family request for
an exception payment standard under
§ 982.503(d)(5) for a regular tenancy
under the Section 8 voucher program so
that the program is readily accessible to
and usable by persons with disabilities.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 92—HOME INVESTMENT
PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
■
[AMENDED]
§§ 5.853, 5.902, and 5.903
§ 8.28
PART 42—DISPLACEMENT,
RELOCATION ASSISTANCE, AND
REAL PROPERTY ACQUISITION FOR
HUD AND HUD-ASSISTED PROGRAMS
§§ 5.632, 5.653, 5.655, 5.657, and 5.659
[AMENDED]
§ 5.801
b. Removing from paragraph (a)
introductory text the words ‘‘Existing
housing Certificate program or a’’;
■ c. Removing ‘‘Housing Certificate or’’
from paragraph (a)(3);
■ d. Removing ‘‘Housing Certificates or’’
from paragraph (a)(4); and
■ e. Revising paragraph (a)(5).
The revisions read as follows:
■
PART 91—CONSOLIDATED
SUBMISSIONS FOR COMMUNITY
PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAMS
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701q, 1701s, 1715b,
1715l, and 1715z–1; 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c,
1437f, and 3535(d).
§ 247.1
[AMENDED]
24. Amend § 247.1(a) by removing the
words ‘‘Section 8 Existing Housing
Certificate or’’.
■
PART 290—DISPOSITION OF
MULTIFAMILY PROJECTS AND SALE
OF HUD-HELD MULTIFAMILY
MORTGAGES
15. The authority for part 91
continues to read as follows:
■
9. The authority for part 8 continues
to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 3601–3619,
5301–5315, 11331–11388, 12701–12711,
12741–12756, and 12901–12912.
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 794; 42 U.S.C. 3535(d)
and 5309.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701z–11, 1701z–12,
1713, 1715b, 1715z–1b, 1715z–11a; 42 U.S.C.
3535(d) and 3535(i).
§ 91.2
§ 290.3
■
■
■
10. Amend § 8.28 by:
a. Revising the section heading;
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■
25. The authority for part 290
continues to read as follows:
[AMENDED]
16. Amend § 91.2(c) by removing the
words ‘‘Certificate and’’.
■
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[AMENDED]
26. In § 290.3, amend the definition of
‘‘Sufficient, habitable, affordable, rental
■
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housing is available’’ by removing the
words ‘‘certificates or’’ from paragraph
(4).
§ 290.9
[AMENDED]
27. Amend § 290.9 by:
a. In paragraph (b)(2), removing the
words ‘‘or rental certificate’’;
■ b. In paragraph (b)(4):
■ i. Removing the words ‘‘or rental
certificate’’ from the paragraph heading;
and
■ ii. Removing the words ‘‘or
certificates’’.
■ 28. Revise and republish § 290.19 to
read as follows:
■
■
§ 290.19 Restrictions concerning
nondiscrimination against Section 8
voucher holders.
The purchaser of any multifamily
housing project shall not refuse
unreasonably to lease a dwelling unit
offered for rent, offer to sell cooperative
stock, or otherwise discriminate in the
terms of tenancy or cooperative
purchase and sale because any tenant or
purchaser is the holder of a Voucher
under Section 8 of the United States
Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f),
or any successor legislation. The
purchaser’s agreement to this condition
must be contained in any contract of
sale and also may be contained in any
regulatory agreement, use agreement, or
deed entered into in connection with
the disposition.
§ 290.39
[AMENDED]
29. Amend § 290.39(a) by removing
the words ‘‘certificate or’’.
■
PART 882—SECTION 8 MODERATE
REHABILITATION PROGRAMS
30. The authority for part 882
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
§ 882.514
[AMENDED]
31. Amend § 882.514(e) by removing
the words ‘‘certificate or’’ wherever they
appear.
■
PART 888—SECTION 8 HOUSING
ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS
PROGRAM—FAIR MARKET RENTS
AND CONTRACT RENT ANNUAL
ADJUSTMENT FACTORS
32. The authority for part 888
continues to read as follows:
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■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535d.
33. Amend § 888.113 by:
a. Revising paragraphs (a) and (c)(3),
and revising and republishing paragraph
(h);
■ b. In paragraph (i)(2), removing the
citation ‘‘24 CFR 982.503(f)’’ and
■
■
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adding, in its place, the citation ‘‘24
CFR 982.503(g)’’; and
■ c. Revising the first sentence of
paragraph (i)(3).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 888.113 Fair market rents for existing
housing: Methodology.
(a) Basis for setting fair market rents.
Fair Market Rents (FMRs) are estimates
of rent plus the cost of utilities, except
telephone. FMRs are housing marketwide estimates of rents that provide
opportunities to rent standard quality
housing throughout the geographic area
in which rental housing units are in
competition. The level at which FMRs
are set is expressed as a percentile point
within the rent distribution of standard
quality rental housing units in the FMR
area. FMRs are set at the 40th percentile
rent, the dollar amount below which the
rent for 40 percent of standard quality
rental housing units fall within the FMR
area. The 40th percentile rent is drawn
from the distribution of rents of all units
within the FMR area that are occupied
by recent movers. Adjustments are made
to exclude public housing units and
substandard units.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) If a metropolitan area meets the
criteria of paragraph (c)(1) of this
section, Small Area FMRs will apply to
the metropolitan area and all PHAs
administering HCV programs in that
area will be required to use Small Area
FMRs. A PHA administering an HCV
program in either a metropolitan area
not subject to the application of Small
Area FMRs or in a non-metropolitan
area for which HUD publishes Small
Area FMRs may choose to use Small
Area FMRs after notification to HUD. A
PHA that exercises this option in one
metropolitan area or non-metropolitan
county is not required to exercise this
option in other metropolitan areas or
non-metropolitan counties.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Small Area FMRs and projectbased vouchers. Unless one of the
following exceptions apply, Small Area
FMRs do not apply to project-based
vouchers regardless of whether HUD
designates the metropolitan area or the
PHA notifies HUD and implements the
Small Area FMRs under paragraph (c)(3)
of this section. (See 24 CFR 983.301(f)(3)
for separate requirements regarding the
applicability of exception payment
standards based on Small Area FMRs to
PBV projects.)
(1) Where the proposal or project
selection date under 24 CFR 983.51(g)
was on or before the effective dates of
either or both the Small Area FMR
designation/implementation and the
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38291
PHA administrative policy, the PHA
and owner may mutually agree to apply
the Small Area FMR. The application of
the Small Area FMRs must be
prospective and consistent with the
PHA Administrative Plan. The owner
and PHA may not subsequently choose
to revert back to the use of the
metropolitan-wide or county-wide
FMRs for the PBV project. If the rent to
owner will increase as a result of the
mutual agreement to apply the Small
Area FMRs to the PBV project, the rent
increase shall not be effective until the
next annual anniversary of the HAP
contract in accordance with 24 CFR
983.302(b).
(2) Where the proposal or project
selection date under 24 CFR 983.51(g)
was after the effective dates of both the
Small Area FMR designation/
implementation and the PHA
administrative policy, the Small Area
FMRs shall apply to the PBV project if
the PHA Administrative Plan provides
that Small Area FMRs are used for all
future PBV projects. If the PHA chooses
to implement this administrative policy,
the Small Area FMRs must apply to all
future PBV projects located within the
same metropolitan area or nonmetropolitan county where the Small
Area FMRs are in effect for the PHA’s
HCV program. An owner and the PHA
may not subsequently choose to apply
the metropolitan area or county FMR to
the project, regardless of whether the
PHA subsequently changes its
Administrative Plan to revert to the use
of metropolitan-wide or county-wide
FMR for future PBV projects.
(3) For purposes of this section, the
term ‘‘effective date of the Small Area
FMR designation’’ means:
(i) The date that HUD designated a
metropolitan area as a Small Area FMR
area; or
(ii) The date that HUD approved a
PHA request to voluntarily opt to use
Small Area FMRs for its HCV program,
as applicable.
(4) For purposes of this section, the
term ‘‘effective date of the PHA
administrative policy’’ means the date
the administrative policy was formally
adopted as part of the PHA
administrative plan by the PHA Board
of Commissioners or other authorized
PHA officials in accordance with
§ 982.54(a).
(i) * * *
(3) HUD will calculate the 50th
percentile rents for certain metropolitan
areas for this purpose. * * *
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e. Redesignating paragraph (r) as
paragraph (s) and adding new paragraph
(r).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
■
PART 891—SUPPORTIVE HOUSING
FOR THE ELDERLY AND PERSONS
WITH DISABILITIES
34. The authority for part 891
continues to read as follows:
■
§ 903.7 What information must a PHA
provide in the Annual Plan?
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701q; 42 U.S.C.
1437f, 3535(d), and 8013.
§ 891.125
*
[AMENDED]
35. Amend § 891.125(c)(3)(iii)(F) by
removing the words ‘‘Certificate and’’.
■
PART 903—PUBLIC HOUSING
AGENCY PLANS
36. The authority for part 903
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437c; 42 U.S.C.
1437c–1; Pub. L. 110–289; 42 U.S.C. 3535d.
§ 903.3
[AMENDED]
37. Amend § 903.3(b)(2) by adding the
words ‘‘and project-based’’ after the
words ‘‘tenant-based’’.
■ 38. Revise § 903.4(a)(2)(i) to read as
follows:
■
§ 903.4 What are the public housing
agency plans?
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Section 8 assistance (tenant-based
assistance (24 CFR part 982) and
project-based assistance (24 CFR part
983) under Section 8(o) of the U.S.
Housing Act of 1937, 42 U.S.C.
1437f(o)); or
*
*
*
*
*
■ 39. Amend § 903.6 by adding
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 903.6 What information must a PHA
provide in the 5-Year Plan?
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*
*
*
*
*
(c) If a PHA intends to select one or
more projects for project-based
assistance without competition in
accordance with § 983.51(c), the PHA
must include a statement of this intent
in its 5-Year Plan (or an amendment to
the 5-Year Plan) in order to notify the
public prior to making a noncompetitive
selection.
■ 40. Amend § 903.7 by:
■ a. In the introductory text, removing
the phrase ‘‘both public housing and
tenant-based assistance’’ and adding, in
its place, the phrase ‘‘public housing,
tenant-based assistance, and projectbased assistance’’;
■ b. Revising paragraph (a)(1)
introductory text, and paragraphs (b)(3),
(c), (d), and (e)(4);
■ c. In paragraph (f), adding ‘‘and
project-based assistance’’ after the
phrase ‘‘tenant-based assistance’’;
■ d. Revising paragraphs (l)(1)(iii) and
(2); and
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*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) This statement must address the
housing needs of the low-income and
very low-income families who reside in
the jurisdiction served by the PHA, and
other families who are on the public
housing and Section 8 tenant-based and
project-based assistance waiting lists,
including:
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) Other admissions policies. The
PHA’s admission policies that include
any other PHA policies that govern
eligibility, selection and admissions for
the public housing (see part 960 of this
title) and tenant-based assistance
programs (see part 982, subpart E of this
title) and project-based assistance
programs (see part 982, subpart E of this
title except as provided in § 983.3, and
subpart F of 983). (The information
requested on site-based waiting lists and
deconcentration is applicable only to
public housing.)
(c) A statement of financial resources.
This statement must address the
financial resources that are available to
the PHA for the support of Federal
public housing, tenant-based assistance,
and project-based assistance programs
administered by the PHA during the
plan year. The statement must include
a listing, by general categories, of the
PHA’s anticipated resources, such as
PHA operating, capital and other
anticipated Federal resources available
to the PHA, as well as tenant rents and
other income available to support public
housing, tenant-based assistance, and
project-based assistance. The statement
also should include the non-Federal
sources of funds supporting each
Federal program, and state the planned
uses for the resources.
(d) A statement of the PHA’s rent
determination policies. This statement
must describe the PHA’s basic
discretionary policies that govern rents
charged for public housing units,
applicable flat rents, and the rental
contributions of families receiving
tenant-based assistance and projectbased assistance. For tenant-based
assistance and project-based assistance,
this statement also shall cover any
discretionary minimum tenant rents and
payment standard policies.
(e) * * *
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(4) The information requested on a
PHA’s rules, standards and policies
regarding management and maintenance
of housing applies only to public
housing. The information requested on
PHA program management and listing
of administered programs applies to
public housing, tenant-based assistance,
and project-based assistance.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) How the PHA will comply with
the requirements of section 12(c) and (d)
of the 1937 Act (42 U.S.C. 1437j(c) and
(d)). These statutory provisions relate to
community service by public housing
residents and treatment of income
changes in public housing, tenant-based
assistance, and project-based assistance
recipients resulting from welfare
program requirements. PHAs must
address any cooperation agreements, as
described in section 12(d)(7) of the 1937
Act (42 U.S.C. 1437j(d)(7)), that the PHA
has entered into or plans to enter into.
(2) The information required by
paragraph (l) of this section is
applicable to public housing, tenantbased assistance, and project-based
assistance, except that the information
regarding the PHA’s compliance with
the community service requirement
applies only to public housing.
*
*
*
*
*
(r) A statement of participation in the
project-based assistance program. If a
PHA participates in the project-based
assistance program, the PHA’s Annual
Plan must include a statement of the
projected number of project-based units,
the general location of the project-based
units, and how project-basing would be
consistent with its Annual Plan.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 903.11
[AMENDED]
41. Amend § 903.11 by:
a. In paragraph (a)(3), adding ‘‘and/or
project-based assistance’’ after ‘‘tenantbased assistance’’;
■ b. In paragraph (c)(1), removing the
reference ‘‘§ 903.7(a), (b), (c), (d), (g), (h),
(k), (m), (n), (o), (p) and (r)’’ and adding,
in its place, the reference ‘‘903.7(a), (b),
(c), (d), (g), (h), (k), (m), (n), (o), (p), (r),
and (s)’’;
■ c. In paragraph (c)(3), adding ‘‘and/or
project-based assistance’’ after ‘‘tenantbased assistance’’, and removing the
reference ‘‘903.7(a), (b), (c), (d), (g), (h),
(k), (m), (n), (o), (p) and (r)’’ and adding,
in its place, the reference ‘‘903.7(a), (b),
(c), (d), (g), (h), (k), (m), (n), (o), (p), (r),
and (s)’’.
■ 42. Amend § 903.12 by:
■ a. Revising paragraphs (b) and (c)(1);
■
■
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b. Removing paragraph (c)(2) and
redesignating paragraph (c)(3) as
paragraph (c)(2); and
■ c. In redesignated paragraph (c)(2),
removing the reference to ‘‘and (r)’’ and
adding. in its place, a reference to ‘‘and
(s)’’.
The revisions read as follows:
■
§ 903.12 What are the streamlined Annual
Plan requirements for small PHAs?
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Streamlined Annual Plan
requirements for fiscal years in which its
5-Year Plan is also due. For the fiscal
year in which its 5-Year Plan is also
due, the streamlined Annual Plan of the
small PHA shall consist of the
information required by § 903.7(a), (b),
(c), (d), (g), (h), (k), (o) (r), and (s). The
information required by § 903.7(a) must
be included only to the extent it
pertains to the housing needs of families
that are on the PHA’s public housing
and Section 8 tenant-based assistance
and project-based assistance waiting
lists. The information required by
§ 903.7(k) must be included only to the
extent that the PHA participates in
homeownership programs under
Section 8(y) of the 1937 Act. The
information required in § 903.7(r) must
be included only to the extent that the
PHA participates in the project-based
assistance program.
(c) * * *
(1) The information required by
§ 903.7(g) and (o) and, if applicable,
§ 903.7(b)(2) with respect to site-based
waiting lists, § 903.7(k)(1)(i) with
respect to homeownership programs
under Section 8(y) of the 1937 Act, and
§ 903.7(r) with respect to participation
in the project-based assistance program;
*
*
*
*
*
§ 903.13
[AMENDED]
43. Amend § 903.13(b)(1) and (3) by
adding ‘‘and/or project-based
assistance’’ after ‘‘tenant-based
assistance’’ every time it appears.
■ 44. Amend § 903.15 by revising
paragraph (c) introductory text to read
as follows:
■
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§ 960.202
Tenant selection policies.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Priority for tenant-based and
project-based voucher families
displaced due to HQS non-compliance.
The PHA must adopt a preference for
tenant-based and project-based families
displaced due to HQS noncompliance in
accordance with § 982.404(e)(2) and
§ 983.208(d)(6)(ii).
*
*
*
*
*
PART 972—CONVERSION OF PUBLIC
HOUSING TO TENANT-BASED
ASSISTANCE
54. The authority citation for part 972
continues to read as follows:
■
45. The authority citation for part 908
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f, 3535(d), 3543,
3544, and 3608a.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437t, 1437z–5, and
3535(d).
46. Revise the part heading to read as
set forth above.
§ 972.218
■
§ 908.101
[AMENDED]
47. Amend § 908.101 by removing the
phrase ‘‘Rental Certificate,’’.
■
PART 943—PUBLIC HOUSING
AGENCY CONSORTIA AND JOINT
VENTURES
48. The authority for part 943
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437k and 3535(d).
[AMENDED]
55. Amend § 972.218(c)(2)(i) by
removing the words ‘‘certificates or’’.
■
PART 982—SECTION 8 TENANTBASED ASSISTANCE: HOUSING
CHOICE VOUCHER PROGRAM
56. The authority citation for part 982
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
■
PART 982 [AMENDED]
57. Amend part 982 by revising all
references to ‘‘administrative plan’’ and
‘‘Administrative plan’’ to read
‘‘Administrative Plan.’’
■ 58. Amend § 982.4 by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (a); and
■ b. In paragraph (b):
■ c. Adding in alphabetical order
definitions for ‘‘Abatement’’,
‘‘Authorized voucher units’’, and
‘‘Building’’;
■ d. Revising the definition of ‘‘Fair
market rent (FMR)’’;
■ e. Adding in alphabetical order
definitions for ‘‘Foster adult’’, ‘‘Foster
child’’;
■ f. Revising the definition of ‘‘Housing
quality standards (HQS)’’;
■ g. Adding in alphabetical order
definitions for ‘‘Independent entity’’,
‘‘PHA-owned unit’’, ‘‘Request for
Tenancy Approval (RFTA)’’, ‘‘Section 8
Management Assessment Program
(SEMAP)’’, ‘‘Small Area Fair Market
Rents (SAFMRs)’’, ‘‘Tenant-paid
utilities’’, and ‘‘Withholding’’.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 943.120
[AMENDED]
49. Amend § 943.120(a)(2) by:
a. Removing the words ‘‘and
certificate’’ and ‘‘certificate and’’; and
■ b. Removing the word ‘‘programs’’
and adding, in its place, the word
‘‘program’’.
■
■
PART 945—DESIGNATED HOUSING—
PUBLIC HOUSING DESIGNATED FOR
OCCUPANCY BY DISABLED,
ELDERLY, OR DISABLED AND
ELDERLY FAMILIES
50. The authority for part 945
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1473e and 3535(d).
§ 945.103
[AMENDED]
51. Amend § 945.103(b)(2) by
removing the words ‘‘certificates and’’.
■
*
*
*
*
(c) Fair housing requirements. A PHA
is obligated to affirmatively further fair
housing in its operating policies,
procedures, and capital activities. All
admission and occupancy policies for
public housing and Section 8 tenantbased and project-based housing
programs must comply with Fair
Housing Act requirements and other
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PART 908—ELECTRONIC
TRANSMISSION OF REQUIRED
FAMILY DATA FOR PUBLIC HOUSING,
INDIAN HOUSING, AND THE SECTION
8 RENTAL VOUCHER, AND
MODERATE REHABILITATION
PROGRAMS
■
§ 903.15 What is the relationship of the
public housing agency plans to the
Consolidated Plan and a PHA’s Fair
Housing Requirements?
*
civil rights laws and regulations and
with a PHA’s plans to affirmatively
further fair housing. The PHA may not
impose any specific income or racial
quotas for any development or
developments.
*
*
*
*
*
38293
PART 960—ADMISSION TO, AND
OCCUPANCY OF, PUBLIC HOUSING
52. The authority citation for part 960
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437d,
1437n, 1437z–3, and 3535(d).
53. Amend § 960.202 by redesignating
(c) as paragraph (d) and adding new
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
■
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§ 982.4
Definitions.
(a) Definitions found elsewhere. (1)
The following terms are defined in 24
CFR part 5, subpart A: 1937 Act,
Covered person, Drug, Drug-related
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criminal activity, federally assisted
housing, Guest, Household, HUD, MSA,
Other person under the tenant’s control,
Public housing, Section 8, and Violent
criminal activity.
(2) The following terms are defined in
24 CFR part 5, subpart D: Disabled
family, Elderly family, Near-elderly
family, and Person with disabilities.
(3) The following terms are defined in
24 CFR part 5, subpart F: Adjusted
income, Annual income, Extremely low
income family, Total tenant payment,
Utility allowance, and Welfare
assistance.
(b) * * *
Abatement. Stopping HAP payments
to an owner with no potential for
retroactive payment.
*
*
*
*
*
Authorized voucher units. The
number of units for which a PHA is
authorized to make assistance payments
to owners under its annual
contributions contract.
*
*
*
*
*
Building. A structure with a roof and
walls that contains one or more
dwelling units.
*
*
*
*
*
Fair market rent (FMR). The rent,
including the cost of utilities (except
telephone), as established by HUD for
units of varying sizes (by number of
bedrooms), that must be paid in the
housing market area to rent privately
owned, existing, decent, safe and
sanitary rental housing of modest (nonluxury) nature with suitable amenities.
In the HCV program, the FMR may be
established at the ZIP code level (see
definition of Small Area Fair Market
Rents), metropolitan area level, or nonmetropolitan county level.
*
*
*
*
*
Foster adult. A member of the
household who is 18 years of age or
older and meets the definition of a foster
adult under State law. In general, a
foster adult is a person who is 18 years
of age or older, is unable to live
independently due to a debilitating
physical or mental condition and is
placed with the family by an authorized
placement agency or by judgment,
decree, or other order of any court of
competent jurisdiction.
Foster child. A member of the
household who meets the definition of
a foster child under State law. In
general, a foster child is placed with the
family by an authorized placement
agency (e.g., public child welfare
agency) or by judgment, decree, or other
order of any court of competent
jurisdiction.
*
*
*
*
*
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Housing quality standards (HQS). The
minimum quality standards developed
by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR
5.703 for the HCV program, including
any variations approved by HUD for the
PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3).
Independent entity. (i) The unit of
general local government; however, if
the PHA itself is the unit of general local
government or an agency of such
government, then only the next level of
general local government (or an agency
of such government) or higher may
serve as the independent entity; or
(ii) A HUD-approved entity that is
autonomous and recognized under State
law as a separate legal entity from the
PHA. The entity must not be connected
financially (except regarding
compensation for services performed for
PHA-owned units) or in any other
manner that could result in the PHA
improperly influencing the entity.
*
*
*
*
*
PHA-owned unit. (i) A dwelling unit
in a project that is:
(A) Owned by the PHA (including
having a controlling interest in the
entity that owns the project);
(B) Owned by an entity wholly
controlled by the PHA; or
(C) Owned by a limited liability
company or limited partnership in
which the PHA (or an entity wholly
controlled by the PHA) holds a
controlling interest in the managing
member or general partner.
(ii) A controlling interest is:
(A) Holding more than 50 percent of
the stock of any corporation;
(B) Having the power to appoint more
than 50 percent of the members of the
board of directors of a non-stock
corporation (such as a nonprofit
corporation);
(C) Where more than 50 percent of the
members of the board of directors of any
corporation also serve as directors,
officers, or employees of the PHA;
(D) Holding more than 50 percent of
all managing member interests in an
LLC;
(E) Holding more than 50 percent of
all general partner interests in a
partnership; or
(F) Equivalent levels of control in
other ownership structures.
*
*
*
*
*
Request for Tenancy Approval
(RFTA). A form (form HUD–52517)
submitted by or on behalf of a family to
a PHA once the family has identified a
unit that it wishes to rent using tenantbased voucher assistance.
*
*
*
*
*
Section 8 Management Assessment
Program (SEMAP). A system used by
HUD to measure PHA performance in
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key Section 8 program areas. See 24 CFR
part 985.
*
*
*
*
*
Small Area Fair Market Rents
(SAFMRs or Small Area FMRs). Small
Area FMRs are FMRs established for
U.S. Postal Service ZIP code areas and
are calculated in accordance with 24
CFR 888.113(a) and (b).
*
*
*
*
*
Tenant-paid utilities. Utilities and
services that are not included in the rent
to owner and are the responsibility of
the assisted family, regardless of
whether the payment goes to the utility
company or the owner. The utilities and
services are those necessary in the
locality to provide housing that
complies with HQS. The utilities and
services may also include those required
by HUD through a Federal Register
notice after providing opportunity for
public comment.
*
*
*
*
*
Withholding. Stopping HAP payments
to an owner while holding them for
potential retroactive disbursement.
■ 59. Amend § 982.54 by:
■ a. In paragraph (b), removing the term
‘‘PHA plan’’ and adding, in its place, the
term ‘‘PHA Plan’’;
■ b. Revising paragraph (d) introductory
text and paragraph (d)(4)(iii);
■ c. Adding new paragraph (d)(4)(iv);
■ d. Revising paragraphs (d)(14), (18),
(21), (22), and (23); and
■ e. Adding paragraphs (d)(24) through
(26).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 982.54
Administrative Plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The PHA Administrative Plan
must cover all the PHA’s local policies
for administration of the program,
including the PHA’s policies on the
following subjects (see 24 CFR 983.10
for a list of subjects specific to the
project-based voucher (PBV) program
that also must be included in the
Administrative Plan of a PHA that
operates a PBV program):
(4) * * *
(iii) Standards for denying admission
or terminating assistance based on
criminal activity or alcohol abuse in
accordance with § 982.553, or other
factors in accordance with §§ 982.552,
982.554, and 982.555; and
(iv) Policies concerning residency by
a foster child, foster adult, or live-in
aide, including defining when PHA
consent for occupancy by a foster child,
foster adult, or live-in aide must be
given or may be denied;
*
*
*
*
*
(14) Payment standard policies,
including:
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(i) The process for establishing and
revising payment standards, including
whether the PHA has voluntarily
adopted the use of Small Area Fair
Market Rents (SAFMRs);
(ii) A description of how the PHA will
administer decreases in the payment
standard amount for a family continuing
to reside in a unit for which the family
is receiving assistance (see
§ 982.505(c)(3)); and
(iii) If the PHA establishes different
payment standard amounts for
designated areas within its jurisdiction,
including exception areas, the criteria
used to determine the designated areas
and the payment standard amounts for
those designated areas. (See
§ 982.503(a)(2)). All such areas must be
described in the PHA’s Administrative
Plan or payment standard schedule;
*
*
*
*
*
(18) Policies concerning interim
redeterminations of family income and
composition, the frequency of
determinations of family income, and
income-determination practices,
including whether the PHA will accept
a family declaration of assets;
*
*
*
*
*
(21) Procedural guidelines and
performance standards for conducting
required HQS inspections, including:
(i) Any deficiency that the PHA has
adopted as a life-threatening deficiency
that is not a HUD-required lifethreatening deficiency.
(ii) For PHAs that adopt the initial
inspection non-life-threatening
deficiency option:
(A) The PHA’s policy on whether the
provision will apply to all initial
inspections or a portion of initial
inspections.
(B) The PHA’s policy on whether the
provision will be applied to only some
inspections and how the units will be
selected.
(C) The PHA’s policy on using
withheld HAP funds to repay an owner
once the unit is in compliance with
HQS.
(iii) For PHAs that adopt the
alternative inspection provision:
(A) The PHA’s policy on how it will
apply the provision to initial and
periodic inspections.
(B) The specific alternative inspection
method used by the PHA.
(C) The specific properties or types of
properties where the alternative
inspection method will be employed.
(D) For initial inspections, the
maximum amount of time the PHA will
withhold HAP if the owner does not
correct the HQS deficiencies within the
cure period, and the period of time after
which the PHA will terminate the HAP
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contract for the owner’s failure to
correct the deficiencies, which may not
exceed 180 days from the effective date
of the HAP contract.
(iv) The PHA’s policy on charging a
reinspection fee to owners.
(22) The PHA’s policy on withholding
HAP for units that do not meet HQS (see
§ 982.404(d)(1));
(23) The PHA’s policy on assisting
families with relocating and finding a
new unit (see § 982.404(e)(3));
(24) The PHA’s policy on screening of
applicants for family behavior or
suitability for tenancy;
(25) Whether the PHA will permit a
family to submit more than one Request
for Tenancy Approval at a time (see
§ 982.302(b)); and
(26) In the event of insufficient
funding, taking into account any costsavings measures taken by the PHA, a
description of the factors the PHA will
consider when determining which HAP
contracts to terminate first (e.g.,
prioritization of PBV HAP contracts
over tenant-based HAP contracts or
prioritization of contracts that serve
vulnerable families or individuals).
■ 60. Amend § 982.301 by:
■ a. Revising and republishing
paragraph (a)
■ b. Revising paragraphs (b)(8), (10),
(12), (14) and (15);
■ c. Adding paragraph (c).
The revisions, addition, and
republication read as follows:
§ 982.301
selected.
Information when family is
(a) Oral briefing. When the PHA
selects a family to participate in a
tenant-based program, the PHA must
give the family an oral briefing.
(1) The briefing must include
information on the following subjects:
(i) A description of how the program
works;
(ii) Family and owner responsibilities;
(iii) Where the family may lease a
unit, including renting a dwelling unit
inside or outside the PHA jurisdiction,
and any information on selecting a unit
that HUD provides;
(iv) An explanation of how portability
works; and
(v) An explanation of the advantages
of areas that do not have a high
concentration of low-income families.
(2) The PHA may not discourage the
family from choosing to live anywhere
in the PHA jurisdiction, or outside the
PHA jurisdiction under portability
procedures, unless otherwise expressly
authorized by statute, regulation, PIH
Notice, or court order. The family must
be informed of how portability may
affect the family’s assistance through
screening, subsidy standards, payment
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38295
standards, and any other elements of the
portability process which may affect the
family’s assistance.
(3) The PHA must take appropriate
steps to ensure effective communication
in accordance with 24 CFR 8.6 and 28
CFR part 35, subpart E, and must
provide information on the reasonable
accommodation process.
(b) * * *
(8) PHA subsidy standards, including
when the PHA will consider granting
exceptions to the standards as allowed
by 24 CFR 982.402(b)(8), and when
exceptions are required as a reasonable
accommodation for persons with
disabilities under Section 504, the Fair
Housing Act, or the Americans with
Disabilities Act;
*
*
*
*
*
(10) Information on Federal, State,
and local equal opportunity laws, the
contact information for the Section 504
coordinator, a copy of the housing
discrimination complaint form, and
information on how to request a
reasonable accommodation or
modification (including information on
requesting exception payment standards
as a reasonable accommodation) under
Section 504, the Fair Housing Act, and
the Americans with Disabilities Act;
*
*
*
*
*
(12) Notice that if the family includes
a person with disabilities, the PHA is
subject to the requirement under 24 CFR
8.28(a)(3) to provide a current listing of
accessible units known to the PHA and,
if necessary, other assistance in locating
an available accessible dwelling unit;
*
*
*
*
*
(14) The advantages of areas that do
not have a high concentration of lowincome families which may include,
access to accessible and high-quality
housing, transit, employment
opportunities, educational
opportunities, recreational facilities,
public safety stations, retail services,
and health services; and
(15) A description of when the PHA
is required to give a participant family
the opportunity for an informal hearing
and how to request a hearing.
(c) Providing information for persons
with limited English proficiency (LEP).
The PHA must take reasonable steps to
ensure meaningful access by persons
with limited English proficiency in
accordance with Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act of 1964 and HUD’s
implementing regulations at 24 CFR part
1.
■ 61. Amend § 982.305 by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (a) introductory
text and paragraph (b)(1) introductory
text;
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b. Adding paragraph (b)(2)
introductory text;
■ c. Revising paragraph (b)(2)(ii);
■ d. Redesignating paragraph (b)(3) as
paragraph (b)(4), and adding new
paragraph (b)(3);
■ e. Revising paragraph (c)(4); and
■ f. Adding paragraph (f).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
■
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§ 982.305
tenancy.
PHA approval of assisted
(a) Program requirements. The PHA
may not give approval for the family of
the assisted tenancy, or execute a HAP
contract, until the PHA has determined
that:
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) The following must be completed
before the beginning of the initial term
of the lease for a unit:
*
*
*
*
*
(2) The timeframes for inspection:
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) The 15-day clock (under
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section) is
suspended during any period when the
unit is not available for inspection.
(3) If the PHA has implemented, and
the unit is covered by, the alternative
inspection option for initial inspections
under § 982.406(e), the PHA is not
subject to paragraphs (a)(2), (b)(1)(i), and
(b)(2) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(4) Any HAP contract executed after
the 60-day period is void, and the PHA
may not pay any housing assistance
payment to the owner, unless there are
extenuating circumstances that prevent
or prevented the PHA from meeting the
60-day deadline, then the PHA may
submit to the HUD field office a request
for an extension. The request, which
must be submitted no later than two
weeks after the 60-day deadline, must
include an explanation of the
extenuating circumstances and any
supporting documentation. HUD at its
sole discretion will determine if the
extension request is approved.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Initial HQS inspection
requirements. (1) Unless the PHA has
implemented, and determined that the
unit is covered by, either of the two
initial HQS inspection options in
paragraphs (f)(2) and (3) of this section,
the unit must be inspected by the PHA
and pass HQS before:
(i) The PHA may approve the assisted
tenancy and execute the HAP contract,
and
(ii) The beginning of the initial lease
term.
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(2) If the PHA has implemented, and
determines that the unit is covered by,
the non-life-threatening deficiencies
option at § 982.405(j), the unit must be
inspected by the PHA and must have no
life-threatening deficiencies before:
(i) The PHA may approve the assisted
tenancy and execute the HAP contract;
and
(ii) The beginning of the initial lease
term.
(3) If the PHA has implemented and
determines that the unit is covered by
the alternative inspection option at
§ 982.406(e), then the PHA must
determine that the unit was inspected in
the previous 24 months by an
inspection that meets the requirements
of § 982.406 before:
(i) The PHA may approve the assisted
tenancy and execute the HAP contract;
and
(ii) The beginning of the initial lease
term.
(4) If the PHA has implemented and
determines that the unit is covered by
both the no life-threatening deficiencies
option and the alternative inspection
option, the unit is subject only to
paragraph (f)(3) of this section, not
paragraph (f)(2) of this section.
■ 62. Amend § 982.352 by:
■ a. Adding ‘‘or’’ at the end of paragraph
(a)(5); and
■ b. Revising paragraph (b).
The revision reads as follows:
§ 982.352
Eligible housing.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) PHA-owned housing. (1) PHAowned units, as defined in § 982.4, may
be assisted under the tenant-based
program only if all the following
conditions are satisfied:
(i) The PHA must inform the family,
both orally and in writing, that the
family has the right to select any eligible
unit available for lease.
(ii) A PHA-owned unit is freely
selected by the family, without PHA
pressure or steering.
(iii) The unit selected by the family is
not ineligible housing.
(iv) During assisted occupancy, the
family may not benefit from any form of
housing subsidy that is prohibited
under paragraph (c) of this section.
(v)(A) The PHA must obtain the
services of an independent entity, as
defined in § 982.4, to perform the
following PHA functions as required
under the program rule:
(1) To determine rent reasonableness
in accordance with § 982.507. The
independent entity shall communicate
the rent reasonableness determination to
the family and the PHA.
(2) To assist the family in negotiating
the rent to owner in accordance with
§ 982.506.
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(3) To inspect the unit for compliance
with HQS in accordance with
§§ 982.305(a) and 982.405. The
independent entity shall communicate
the results of each such inspection to
the family and the PHA.
(B) The PHA may compensate the
independent entity from PHA
administrative fees (including fees
credited to the administrative fee
reserve) for the services performed by
the independent entity. The PHA may
not use other program receipts to
compensate the independent entity for
such services. The PHA and the
independent entity may not charge the
family any fee or charge for the services
provided by the independent entity.
(2) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
■ 63. Revise § 982.401 to read as
follows:
§ 982.401
Housing quality standards.
As defined in § 982.4, HQS refers to
the minimum quality standards
developed by HUD in accordance with
24 CFR 5.703, including any variations
approved by HUD for the PHA under 24
CFR 5.705(a)(3).
§ 982.402
[Amended]
64. Amend § 982.402(b)(2) by
removing the words ‘‘housing quality
standards (HQS)’’ and adding, in their
place, the term ‘‘HQS’’.
■ 65. Revise and republish § 982.404 to
read as follows:
■
§ 982.404 Maintenance: Owner and family
responsibility; PHA remedies.
(a) Owner obligation. (1) The owner
must maintain the unit in accordance
with HQS. A unit is not in compliance
with HQS if the PHA or other inspector
authorized by the State or local
government determines that the unit has
HQS deficiencies based upon an
inspection, the agency or inspector
notifies the owner in writing of the HQS
deficiencies, and the deficiencies are
not remedied within the appropriate
timeframe.
(2) If the owner fails to maintain the
dwelling unit in accordance with HQS,
the PHA must take enforcement action
in accordance with this section.
(3) If a deficiency is life-threatening,
the owner must correct the deficiency
within 24 hours of notification. For
other deficiencies, the owner must
correct the deficiency within 30
calendar days of notification (or any
reasonable PHA-approved extension).
(4) In the case of an HQS deficiency
that the PHA determines is caused by
the tenant, any member of the
household, or any guest or other person
under the tenant’s control, other than
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any damage resulting from ordinary use,
the PHA may waive the owner’s
responsibility to remedy the violation.
The HAP to the owner may not be
withheld or abated if the owner
responsibility has been waived.
However, the PHA may terminate
assistance to a family because of an HQS
breach beyond damage resulting from
ordinary use caused by any member of
the household or any guest or other
person under the tenant’s control.
(b) Family obligation. (1) The family
may be held responsible for a breach of
the HQS that is caused by any of the
following:
(i) The family fails to pay for any
utilities that the owner is not required
to pay for, but which are to be paid by
the tenant;
(ii) The family fails to provide and
maintain any appliances that the owner
is not required to provide, but which are
to be provided by the tenant; or
(iii) Any member of the household or
guest damages the dwelling unit or
premises (damages beyond ordinary
wear and tear)
(2) If the PHA has waived the owner’s
responsibility to remedy the violation in
accordance with paragraph (a)(4) of this
section, the following applies:
(i) If the HQS breach caused by the
family is life-threatening, the family
must take all steps permissible under
the lease and State and local law to
ensure the deficiency is corrected
within 24 hours of notification.
(ii) For other family-caused
deficiencies, the family must take all
steps permissible under the lease and
State and local law to ensure that the
deficiency is corrected within 30
calendar days of notification (or any
PHA-approved extension).
(3) If the family has caused a breach
of the HQS, the PHA must take prompt
and vigorous action to enforce the
family obligations. The PHA may
terminate assistance for the family in
accordance with § 982.552.
(c) Determination of noncompliance
with HQS. The unit is in noncompliance
with HQS if:
(1) The PHA or authorized inspector
determines the unit has HQS
deficiencies based upon an inspection;
(2) The PHA notified the owner in
writing of the unit HQS deficiencies;
and
(3) The unit HQS deficiencies are not
corrected in accordance with the
timeframes established in paragraph
(a)(3) of this section.
(d) PHA remedies for HQS
deficiencies identified during
inspections other than the initial
inspection. This subsection covers PHA
actions when HQS deficiencies are
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identified as a result of an inspection
other than the initial inspection (see
§ 982.405). For PHA HQS enforcement
actions for HQS deficiencies under the
initial HQS inspection NLT or
alternative inspection options, see
§§ 982.405(j) and 982.406(e),
respectively.
(1) A PHA may withhold assistance
payments for units that have HQS
deficiencies once the PHA has notified
the owner in writing of the deficiencies.
The PHA must identify in its
Administrative Plan the conditions
under which it will withhold HAP. If
the unit is brought into compliance
during the applicable cure period
(within 24 hours of notification for lifethreatening deficiencies and within 30
days of notification (or other reasonable
period established by the PHA) for nonlife-threatening deficiencies), the PHA:
(i) Must resume assistance payments;
and
(ii) Must provide assistance payments
to cover the time period for which the
assistance payments were withheld.
(2)(i) The PHA must abate the HAP,
including amounts that had been
withheld, if the owner fails to make the
repairs within the applicable cure
period (within 24 hours of notification
for life-threatening deficiencies and
within 30 days of notification (or other
reasonable period established by the
PHA) for non-life-threatening
deficiencies).
(ii) If a PHA abates the assistance
payments under this paragraph, the
PHA must notify the family and the
owner that it is abating payments and
that if the unit does not meet HQS
within 60 days (or a reasonable longer
period established by the PHA) after the
determination of noncompliance in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section, the PHA will terminate the HAP
contract for the unit, and the family will
have to move if the family wishes to
receive continued assistance. The PHA
must issue the family its voucher to
move at least 30 days prior to the
termination of the HAP contract.
(3) An owner may not terminate the
tenancy of any family due to the
withholding or abatement of assistance
under paragraph (a) of this section.
During the period that assistance is
abated, the family may terminate the
tenancy by notifying the owner and the
PHA. If the family chooses to terminate
the tenancy, the HAP contract will
automatically terminate on the effective
date of the tenancy termination or the
date the family vacates the unit,
whichever is earlier. The PHA must
promptly issue the family its voucher to
move.
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(4) If the family did not terminate the
tenancy and the owner makes the
repairs and the unit complies with HQS
within 60 days (or a reasonable longer
period established by the PHA) of the
notice of abatement, the PHA must
recommence payments to the owner.
The PHA does not make any payments
to the owner for the period of time that
the payments were abated.
(5) If the owner fails to make the
repairs within 60 days (or a reasonable
longer period established by the PHA) of
the notice of abatement, the PHA must
terminate the HAP contract.
(e) Relocation due to HQS
deficiencies. (1) The PHA must give any
family residing in a unit for which the
HAP contract is terminated under
paragraph (d)(5) of this section due to a
failure to correct HQS deficiencies at
least 90 days or a longer period as the
PHA determines is reasonably necessary
following the termination of the HAP
contract to lease a new unit.
(2) If the family is unable to lease a
new unit within the period provided by
the PHA under paragraph (e)(1) of this
section and the PHA owns or operates
public housing, the PHA must offer,
and, if accepted, provide the family a
selection preference for an appropriatesize public housing unit that first
becomes available for occupancy after
the time period expires.
(3) PHAs may assist families
relocating under this paragraph (e) in
finding a new unit, including using up
to 2 months of the withheld and abated
assistance payments for costs directly
associated with relocating to a new unit,
including security deposits, temporary
housing costs, or other reasonable
moving costs as determined by the PHA
based on their locality. If the PHA uses
the withheld and abated assistance
payments to assist with the family’s
relocation costs, the PHA must provide
security deposit assistance to the family
as necessary. PHAs must assist families
with disabilities in locating available
accessible units in accordance with 24
CFR 8.28(a)(3). If the family receives
security deposit assistance from the
PHA for the new unit, the PHA may
require the family to remit the security
deposit returned by the owner of the
new unit at such time that the lease is
terminated, up to the amount of the
security deposit assistance provided by
the PHA for that unit. The PHA must
include in its Administrative Plan the
policies it will implement for this
provision.
(f) Applicability. This section is
applicable to HAP contracts that were
either executed on or after or renewed
after June 6, 2024. For purposes of this
paragraph, a HAP contract is renewed if
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the HAP contract continues beyond the
initial term of the lease. For all other
HAP contracts, § 982.404 as in effect on
June 6, 2024 remains applicable.
■ 66. Revise § 982.405 to read as
follows:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 982.405
PHA unit inspection.
(a) Initial Inspections. The PHA must
inspect the unit leased to a family prior
to the initial term of the lease to
determine if the unit meets the HQS.
(See § 982.305(b)(2) concerning timing
of initial inspection by the PHA.)
(b) Periodic Inspections. The PHA
must inspect the unit at least biennially
during assisted occupancy to ensure
that the unit continues to meet the HQS,
except that a small rural PHA, as
defined in § 902.101 of this title, must
inspect a unit once every three years
during assisted occupancy to ensure
that the unit continues to meet the HQS.
(c) Supervisory Quality Control
Inspections. The PHA must conduct
supervisory quality control HQS
inspections.
(d) Interim Inspections. When a
participant family or government
official notifies the PHA of a potential
deficiency, the following conditions
apply:
(1) Life-Threatening. If the reported
deficiency is life-threatening, the PHA
must, within 24 hours of notification,
both inspect the housing unit and notify
the owner if the life-threatening
deficiency is confirmed. The owner
must then make the repairs within 24
hours of PHA notification.
(2) Non-Life-Threatening. If the
reported deficiency is non-lifethreatening, the PHA must, within 15
days of notification, both inspect the
unit and notify the owner if the
deficiency is confirmed. The owner
must then make the repairs within 30
days of notification from the PHA or
within any PHA-approved extension.
(3) Extraordinary circumstances. In
the event of extraordinary
circumstances, such as if a unit is
within a presidentially declared disaster
area, HUD may approve an exception of
the 24-hour or the 15-day inspection
requirement until such time as an
inspection is feasible.
(e) Scheduling inspections. In
scheduling inspections, the PHA must
consider complaints and any other
information brought to the attention of
the PHA.
(f) PHA notification of owner. The
PHA must notify the owner of
deficiencies shown by the inspection.
(g) Charge to family for inspection.
The PHA may not charge the family for
an initial inspection or reinspection of
the unit.
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(h) Charge to owner for inspection.
The PHA may not charge the owner for
the inspection of the unit prior to the
initial term of the lease or for a first
inspection during assisted occupancy of
the unit. The PHA may establish a
reasonable fee to owners for a
reinspection if an owner notifies the
PHA that a repair has been made or the
allotted time for repairs has elapsed and
a reinspection reveals that any
deficiency cited in the previous
inspection that the owner is responsible
for repairing, pursuant to § 982.404(a),
was not corrected. The owner may not
pass this fee along to the family. Fees
collected under this paragraph (h) will
be included in a PHA’s administrative
fee reserve and may be used only for
activities related to the provision of the
HCV program.
(i) Verification methods. When a PHA
must verify correction of a deficiency,
the PHA may use verification methods
other than another on-site inspection.
The PHA may establish different
verification methods for initial and noninitial inspections or for different HQS
deficiencies. Upon either an inspection
for initial occupancy or a reinspection,
the PHA may accept photographic
evidence or other reliable evidence from
the owner to verify that a deficiency has
been corrected.
(j) Initial HQS inspection option: No
life-threatening deficiencies. (1) A PHA
may elect to approve an assisted
tenancy, execute the HAP contract, and
begin making assistance payments for a
unit that failed the initial HQS
inspection, provided that the unit has
no life-threatening deficiencies. A PHA
that implements this option (NLT
option) may apply the option to all the
PHA’s initial inspections or may limit
the use of the option to certain units.
The PHA’s Administrative Plan must
specify the circumstances under which
the PHA will exercise the NLT option.
If the PHA has established, and the unit
is covered by, both the NLT option and
the alternative inspections option for
the initial HQS inspection, see
§ 982.406(f).
(2) The PHA must notify the owner
and the family if the NLT option is
available for the unit selected by the
family. After completing the inspection
and determining there are no lifethreatening deficiencies, the PHA
provides both the owner and the family
with a list of all the non-life-threatening
deficiencies identified by the initial
HQS inspection and, should the owner
not complete the repairs within 30 days,
the maximum amount of time the PHA
will withhold HAP before abating
assistance. The PHA must also inform
the family that if the family accepts the
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unit and the owner fails to make the
repairs within the cure period, which
may not exceed 180 days from the
effective date of the HAP contract, the
PHA will terminate the HAP contract,
and the family will have to move to
another unit in order to receive voucher
assistance. The family may choose to
decline the unit based on the
deficiencies and continue its housing
search.
(3) If the family decides to lease the
unit, the PHA and the owner execute
the HAP contract, and the family enters
into the assisted lease with the owner.
The PHA commences making assistance
payments to the owner.
(4) The owner must correct the
deficiencies within 30 days from the
effective date of the HAP contract. If the
owner fails to correct the deficiencies
within the 30-day cure period, the PHA
must withhold the housing assistance
payments until the owner makes the
repairs and the PHA verifies the
correction. Once the deficiencies are
corrected, the PHA may use the
withheld housing assistance payments
to make payments for the period that
payments were withheld.
(5) A PHA relying on the non-lifethreatening inspection provision must
identify in the PHA Administrative Plan
all the optional policies identified in
§ 982.54(d)(21)(i) and (ii).
(6) The PHA establishes in the
Administrative Plan:
(i) The maximum amount of time it
will withhold payments if the owner
fails to correct the deficiencies within
the required cure period before abating
payments; and
(ii) The date by which the PHA will
terminate the HAP contract for the
owner’s failure to correct the
deficiencies, which may not exceed 180
days from the effective date of the HAP
contract.
■ 67. Revise and republish § 982.406 to
read as follows:
§ 982.406
Use of alternative inspections.
(a) In general. A PHA may comply
with the inspection requirements in
§ 982.405(a) and (b) by relying on an
alternative inspection (i.e., an
inspection conducted for another
housing program) only if the PHA is
able to obtain the results of the
alternative inspection. The PHA may
implement the use of alternative
inspections for both initial and periodic
inspections or may limit the use of
alternative inspections to either initial
or periodic inspections. The PHA may
limit the use of alternative inspections
to certain units, as provided in the
PHA’s Administrative Plan.
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(b) Administrative Plan. A PHA
relying on an alternative inspection
must identify in the PHA
Administrative Plan all the optional
policies identified in § 982.54(d)(21)(iii).
(c) Eligible inspection methods. (1) A
PHA may rely upon inspections of
housing assisted under the HOME
Investment Partnerships (HOME)
program or housing financed using LowIncome Housing Tax Credits (LIHTCs),
or inspections performed by HUD.
(2) If a PHA wishes to rely on an
inspection method other than a method
listed in paragraph (c)(1) of this section,
then, prior to amending its
administrative plan, the PHA must
submit to the Real Estate Assessment
Center (REAC) a copy of the inspection
method it wishes to use, along with its
analysis of the inspection method that
shows that the method ‘‘provides the
same or greater protection to occupants
of dwelling units’’ as would HQS.
(i) A PHA may rely upon such
alternative inspection method only
upon receiving approval from REAC to
do so.
(ii) A PHA that uses an alternative
inspection method approved under this
paragraph must monitor changes to the
standards and requirements applicable
to such method. If any change is made
to the alternative inspection method,
then the PHA must submit to REAC a
copy of the revised standards and
requirements, along with a revised
comparison to HQS. If the PHA or REAC
determines that the revision would
cause the alternative inspection to no
longer meet or exceed HQS, then the
PHA may no longer rely upon the
alternative inspection method to comply
with the inspection requirement at
§ 982.405(a) and (b).
(d) Use of alternative inspection. (1) If
an alternative inspection method
employs sampling, then a PHA may rely
on such alternative inspection method
for purposes of an initial or periodic
inspection only if units occupied by
voucher program participants are
included in the population of units
forming the basis of the sample.
(2) In order for a PHA to rely upon the
results of an alternative inspection for
purposes of an initial or periodic
inspection, a property inspected
pursuant to such method must meet the
standards or requirements regarding
housing quality or safety applicable to
properties assisted under the program
using the alternative inspection method.
To make the determination of whether
such standards or requirements are met,
the PHA must adhere to the following
procedures:
(i) If a property is inspected under an
alternative inspection method, and the
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property receives a ‘‘pass’’ score, then
the PHA may rely on that inspection.
(ii) If a property is inspected under an
alternative inspection method, and the
property receives a ‘‘fail’’ score, then the
PHA may not rely on that inspection.
(iii) If a property is inspected under
an alternative inspection method that
does not employ a pass/fail
determination—for example, in the case
of a program where deficiencies are
simply identified—then the PHA must
review the list of deficiencies to
determine whether any cited deficiency
would have resulted in a ‘‘fail’’ score
under HQS. If no such deficiency exists,
then the PHA may rely on the
inspection. If such a deficiency does
exist, then the PHA may not rely on the
inspection.
(3) Under any circumstance described
in paragraph (d)(2) of this section in
which a PHA is prohibited from relying
on an alternative inspection method for
a property, the PHA must, within a
reasonable period of time, conduct an
HQS inspection of any units in the
property occupied by voucher program
participants and follow HQS procedures
to remedy any identified deficiencies.
(e) Initial inspections using the
alternative inspection option. (1) The
PHA may approve the tenancy, allow
the family to enter into the lease
agreement, and execute the HAP
contract for a unit that has been
inspected in the previous 24 months
where the alternative inspection meets
the requirements of this section. If the
PHA has established and the unit is
covered by both the NLT option under
§ 982.405(j) and the alternative
inspections option for the initial HQS
inspection, see paragraph (f) of this
section.
(2) The PHA notifies the owner and
the family that the unit selected by the
family is eligible for the alternative
inspection option. The PHA must
provide the family with the PHA list of
HQS deficiencies that are considered
life-threatening as part of this
notification. If the owner and family
agree to the use of this option, the PHA
approves the assisted tenancy, allows
the family to enter into the lease
agreement with the owner, and executes
the HAP contract on the basis of the
alternative inspection.
(3) The PHA must conduct an HQS
inspection within 30 days of receiving
the Request for Tenancy Approval. If the
family reports a deficiency to the PHA
prior to the PHA’s HQS inspection, the
PHA must inspect the unit within the
time period required under § 982.405(d)
or within 30 days of the effective date
of the HAP contract, whichever time
period ends first.
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(4) The PHA must enter into the HAP
contract with the owner before
conducting the HQS inspection. The
PHA may not make housing assistance
payments to the owner until the PHA
has inspected the unit.
(5) The PHA may commence housing
assistance payments to the owner and
make housing assistance payments
retroactive to the effective date of the
HAP contract only after the unit passes
the PHA’s HQS inspection. If the unit
does not pass the HQS inspection, the
PHA may not make housing assistance
payments to the owner until all the
deficiencies have been corrected. If a
deficiency is life-threatening, the owner
must correct the deficiency within 24
hours of notification from the PHA. For
other deficiencies, the owner must
correct the deficiency within no more
than 30 calendar days (or any PHAapproved extension) of notification from
the PHA. If the owner corrects the
deficiencies within the required cure
period, the PHA makes the housing
assistance payments retroactive to the
effective date of the HAP contract.
(6) The PHA establishes in the
Administrative Plan:
(i) The maximum amount of time it
will withhold payments if the owner
does not correct the deficiencies within
the required cure period before abating
payments; and
(ii) The date by which the PHA will
terminate the HAP contract for the
owner’s failure to correct the
deficiencies, which may not exceed 180
days from the effective date of the HAP
contract.
(f) Initial inspection: using the
alternative inspection option in
combination with the non-lifethreatening deficiencies option. (1) The
PHA notifies the owner and the family
that both the alternative inspection
option and the NLT option are available
for the unit selected by the family. The
PHA must provide the family the list of
HQS deficiencies that are considered
life-threatening as part of this
notification. If the owner and family
agree to the use of both options, the
PHA approves the assisted tenancy,
allows the family to enter into the lease
agreement with the owner, and executes
the HAP contract on the basis of the
alternative inspection.
(2) The PHA must conduct an HQS
inspection within 30 days after the
family and owner submit a complete
Request for Tenancy Approval. If the
family reports a deficiency to the PHA
prior to the PHA’s HQS inspection, the
PHA must inspect the unit within the
time period required under § 982.405(d)
or within 30 days of the effective date
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of the HAP contract, whichever time
period ends first.
(3) The PHA must enter into the HAP
contract with the owner before
conducting the HQS inspection. The
PHA may not make housing assistance
payments to the owner until the PHA
has inspected the unit. If the unit passes
the HQS inspection, the PHA
commences making housing assistance
payments to the owner and makes
payments retroactive to the effective
date of the HAP contract.
(4) If the unit fails the PHA’s HQS
inspection but has no life-threatening
deficiencies, the PHA commences
making housing assistance payments,
which are made retroactive to the
effective date of the HAP contract. The
owner must correct the deficiencies
within 30 days from the effective date
of the HAP contract. If the owner fails
to correct the deficiencies within the 30day cure period, the PHA must
withhold the housing assistance
payments until the owner makes the
repairs and the PHA verifies the
correction. Once the unit is in
compliance with HQS, the PHA may use
the withheld housing assistance
payments to make payments for the
period that payments were withheld.
(5) If the unit does not pass the HQS
inspection and has life-threatening
deficiencies, the PHA may not
commence making housing assistance
payments to the owner until all the
deficiencies have been corrected. The
owner must correct all life-threatening
deficiencies within 24 hours of
notification from the PHA. For other
deficiencies, the owner must correct the
deficiency within 30 days (or any PHAapproved extension) of notification from
the PHA. If the owner corrects the
deficiencies within the required cure
period, the PHA makes the housing
assistance payments retroactive to the
effective date of the HAP contract.
(6) The PHA establishes in the
Administrative Plan:
(i) The maximum amount of time it
will withhold payments if the owner
fails to correct the deficiencies within
the required cure period before abating
payments; and
(ii) The date by which the PHA will
terminate the HAP contract for the
owner’s failure to correct the
deficiencies, which may not exceed 180
days from the effective date of the HAP
contract.
(g) Records retention. As with all
other inspection reports, and as required
by § 982.158(f)(4), reports for
inspections conducted pursuant to an
alternative inspection method must be
obtained by the PHA. Such reports must
be available for HUD inspection for at
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least three years from the date of the
latest inspection.
■ 68. Amend § 982.451 by:
■ a. Adding paragraph headings to
paragraphs (a) and (b);
■ b. Revising paragraph (b)(4)(i)
introductory text;
■ c. In paragraph (b)(5)(iii) removing the
phrase ‘‘program; or’’ and adding in its
place the phrase ‘‘program or’’.
The revision and additions read as
follows:
§ 982.451
contract.
Housing assistance payments
(a) Form and term.
*
*
*
*
(b) Housing assistance payment
amount.
(4)(i) The part of the rent to owner
that is paid by the tenant may not be
more than:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 69. Delayed indefinitely, amend
§ 982.451 by adding paragraph (c) to
read as follows:
*
§ 982.451
contract.
Housing assistance payments
*
*
*
*
*
(c) PHA-owned units. For PHA-owned
units that are not owned by a separate
legal entity from the PHA (e.g., an entity
wholly controlled by the PHA or a
limited liability company or limited
partnership owned by the PHA), the
PHA must choose one of the following
options:
(1) Prior to execution of a HAP
contract, the PHA must establish a
separate legal entity to serve as the
owner. That separate legal entity must
execute the HAP contract with the PHA.
The separate legal entity must have the
legal capacity to lease units and must be
one of the following:
(i) A non-profit affiliate or
instrumentality of the PHA;
(ii) A limited liability corporation;
(iii) A limited partnership;
(iv) A corporation; or
(v) Any other legally acceptable entity
recognized under State law.
(2) The PHA signs the HUDprescribed PHA-owned certification
covering a PHA-owned unit instead of
executing the HAP contract for the PHAowned unit. By signing the PHA-owned
certification, the PHA certifies that it
will fulfill all the required program
responsibilities of the private owner
under the HAP contract, and that it will
also fulfill all of the program
responsibilities required of the PHA for
the PHA-owned unit.
(i) The PHA-owned certification
serves as the equivalent of the HAP
contract, and subjects the PHA, as
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owner, to all of the requirements of the
HAP contract contained in part 982.
Where the PHA has elected to use the
PHA-owned certification, all references
to the HAP contract throughout part 982
must be interpreted to be references to
the PHA-owned certification.
(ii) The PHA must obtain the services
of an independent entity to perform the
required PHA functions identified in
§ 982.352(b)(1)(v)(A) before signing the
PHA-owned certification.
(iii) The PHA may not use the PHAowned certification if the PHA-owned
unit is owned by a separate legal entity
from the PHA (e.g., an entity wholly
controlled by the PHA or a limited
liability corporation or limited
partnership controlled by the PHA).
■ 70. Revise § 982.503 to read as
follows:
§ 982.503 Payment standard areas,
schedule, and amounts.
(a) Payment standard areas. (1)
Annually, HUD publishes fair market
rents (FMRs) for U.S. Postal Service ZIP
code areas, metropolitan areas, and
nonmetropolitan counties (see 24 CFR
888.113). Within each of these FMR
areas, the applicable FMR is:
(i) The HUD-published Small Area
FMR for:
(A) Any metropolitan area designated
as a Small Area FMR area by HUD in
accordance with 24 CFR 888.113(c)(1).
(B) Any area where a PHA has
notified HUD that the PHA will
voluntarily use SAFMRs in accordance
with 24 CFR 888.113(c)(3).
(ii) The HUD-published metropolitan
FMR for any other metropolitan area.
(iii) The HUD-published FMR for any
other non-metropolitan county.
(2) The PHA must adopt a payment
standard schedule that establishes
voucher payment standard amounts for
each FMR area in the PHA jurisdiction.
These payment standard amounts are
used to calculate the monthly housing
assistance payment for a family
(§ 982.505).
(3) The PHA may designate payment
standard areas within each FMR area.
The PHA may establish different
payment standard amounts for such
designated areas. If the PHA designates
payment standard areas, then it must
include in its Administrative Plan the
criteria used to determine the
designated areas and the payment
standard amounts for those areas.
(i) The PHA may designate payment
standard areas within which payment
standards will be established according
to paragraph (c) (basic range) or
paragraph (d) (exception payment
standard), of this section.
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(ii) A PHA-designated payment
standard area may be no smaller than a
census tract block group.
(b) Payment standard schedule. For
each payment standard area, the PHA
must establish a payment standard
amount for each unit size, measured by
number of bedrooms (zero-bedroom,
one-bedroom, and so on). These
payment standard amounts comprise
the PHA’s payment standard schedule.
(c) Basic range payment standard
amounts. A basic range payment
standard amount is any dollar amount
that is in the range from 90 percent up
to 110 percent of the published FMR for
a unit size.
(1) The PHA may establish a payment
standard amount within the basic range
without HUD approval or prior
notification to HUD.
(2) The PHA’s basic range payment
standard amount for each unit size may
be based on the same percentage of the
published FMR (i.e., all payment
standard amounts may be set at 100
percent of the FMR), or the PHA may
establish different payment standard
amounts for different unit sizes (for
example, 90 percent for efficiencies, 100
percent for 1-bedroom units, 110
percent for larger units).
(3) The PHA must revise its payment
standard amounts and schedule no later
than 3 months following the effective
date of the published FMR if revisions
are necessary to stay within the basic
range.
(d) Exception payment standard
amounts. An exception payment
standard amount is a dollar amount that
exceeds 110 percent of the published
FMR.
(1) The PHA may establish exception
payment standard amounts for all units,
or for units of a particular size. The
exception payment standard may be
established for a designated part of the
FMR area (called an ‘‘exception area’’)
or for the entire FMR area. The
exception area must meet the minimum
area requirement at § 982.503(a)(3)(ii).
(2) A PHA that is not in a designated
Small Area FMR area or has not opted
voluntarily to implement Small Area
FMRs under 24 CFR 888.113(c)(3) may
establish exception payment standards
for a ZIP code area that exceed the basic
range for the metropolitan area or
county FMR as long as the amounts
established by the PHA do not exceed
110 percent of the HUD published
SAFMR for the applicable ZIP code. The
exception payment standard must apply
to the entire ZIP code area. If an
exception area crosses one or more FMR
boundaries, then the maximum
exception payment standard amount
that a PHA may adopt for the exception
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area without HUD approval is 110
percent of the ZIP code area with the
lowest SAFMR amount. If the PHA
qualifies for an exception payment
standard above 110 percent of the
applicable FMR under paragraph (d)(3)
or (4) of this section, it may establish
exception payment standards up to the
same percentage of the SAFMR for the
applicable ZIP code.
(3) A PHA may establish exception
payment standard amounts between 110
percent and 120 percent of the
applicable FMR for such duration as
HUD specifies by notice upon
notification to HUD that the PHA meets
at least one of the following criteria:
(i) Fewer than 75 percent of the
families to whom the PHA issued
tenant-based rental vouchers during the
most recent 12-month period for which
there is success rate data available have
become participants in the voucher
program;
(ii) More than 40 percent of families
with tenant-based rental assistance
administered by the agency pay more
than 30 percent of adjusted income as
the family share; or
(iii) Such other criteria as the
Secretary establishes by notice.
(4) Except as provided in paragraphs
(d)(2), (3), and (5) of this section, the
PHA must request approval from HUD
to establish an exception payment
standard amount that exceeds 110
percent of the applicable FMR. In its
request to HUD, the PHA must provide
rental market data demonstrating that
the requested exception payment
standard amount is needed for families
to access rental units. The rental market
data must include a rent estimate for the
entire FMR area compared with a rent
estimate for the proposed exception
area. To apply the exception payment
standard to the entire FMR area, the
rental market data provided by the PHA
must also provide data that
demonstrates that the annual percentage
of rent inflation in the FMR area is
greater than the rental inflation
adjustment factor in the calculation of
the published FMR. Once HUD has
approved the exception payment
standard for the requesting PHA, any
other PHA with jurisdiction in the HUD
approved exception payment standard
area may also use the exception
payment standard amount.
(5) If required as a reasonable
accommodation in accordance with 24
CFR part 8 for a person with a disability,
the PHA may establish, without HUD
approval or prior notification to HUD,
an exception payment standard amount
for an individual family that does not
exceed 120 percent of the applicable
FMR. A PHA may establish a payment
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38301
standard greater than 120 percent of the
applicable FMR as a reasonable
accommodation for a person with a
disability in accordance with 24 CFR
part 8, after requesting and receiving
HUD approval.
(e) Payment standard amount below
90 percent of the applicable FMR. HUD
may consider a PHA request for
approval to establish a payment
standard amount that is lower than the
basic range. At HUD’s sole discretion,
HUD may approve PHA establishment
of a payment standard lower than the
basic range. In determining whether to
approve the PHA request, HUD will
consider appropriate factors, including
rent burden of families assisted under
the program. Unless it is necessary to
prevent termination of program
participants, HUD will not approve a
lower payment standard if the proposed
payment standard would, if it were used
to calculate the housing assistance
payments for current participants in the
PHA’s voucher program using currently
available data, cause the family share for
more than 40 percent of participants
with tenant-based rental assistance to
exceed 30 percent of adjusted monthly
income.
(f) Phaseout of success rate payment
standard amounts. HUD will no longer
approve success rate payment
standards. However, a PHA that was
approved to establish a success rate
payment standard amount under this
paragraph as in effect prior to June 6,
2024 shall not be required to reduce
such payment standard amount as a
result of the discontinuance of success
rate payment standards.
(g) Payment standard protection for
PHAs that meet deconcentration
objectives. This paragraph applies only
to a PHA with jurisdiction in an FMR
area where the FMR had previously
been set at the 50th percentile rent to
provide a broad range of housing
opportunities throughout a metropolitan
area, pursuant to 24 CFR 888.113(i)(3),
but is now set at the 40th percentile
rent.
(1) Such a PHA may obtain HUD Field
Office approval of a payment standard
amount based on the 50th percentile
rent if the PHA scored the maximum
number of points on the
deconcentration bonus indicator in 24
CFR 985.3(h) in the prior year, or in two
of the last three years.
(2) HUD approval of payment
standard amounts based on the 50th
percentile rent shall be for all unit sizes
in the FMR area that had previously
been set at the 50th percentile rent
pursuant to 24 CFR 888.113(i)(3). A
PHA may opt to establish a payment
standard amount based on the 50th
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percentile rent for one or more unit
sizes in all or a designated part of the
PHA jurisdiction within the FMR area.
(h) HUD review of PHA payment
standard schedules. (1) HUD will
monitor rent burdens of families
assisted with tenant-based rental
assistance in a PHA’s voucher program.
HUD will review the PHA’s payment
standard for a particular unit size if
HUD finds that 40 percent or more of
such families occupying units of that
unit size currently pay more than 30
percent of adjusted monthly income as
the family share. Such determination
may be based on the most recent
examinations of family income.
(2) After such review, HUD may, at its
discretion, require the PHA to modify
payment standard amounts for any unit
size on the PHA payment standard
schedule. HUD may require the PHA to
establish an increased payment standard
amount within the basic range.
■ 71. Amend § 982.505 by revising and
republishing paragraph (c) and
removing paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
§ 982.505 How to calculate housing
assistance payment.
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*
*
*
*
*
(c) Payment standard for family—(1)
Applying the payment standard. The
payment standard for the family is the
lower of:
(i) The payment standard amount for
the family unit size; or
(ii) The payment standard amount for
the size of the dwelling unit rented by
the family.
(2) Separate payment standards. If the
PHA has established a separate payment
standard amount for a designated part of
an FMR area in accordance with
§ 982.503 (including an exception
payment standard amount as
determined in accordance with
§ 982.503(d)), and the dwelling unit is
located in such designated part, the
PHA must use the appropriate payment
standard amount for such designated
part to calculate the payment standard
for the family.
(3) Decrease in the payment standard
amount during the HAP contract term.
The PHA may choose not to reduce the
payment standard amount used to
calculate the subsidy for a family for as
long as the family continues to reside in
the unit for which the family is
receiving assistance.
(i) If the PHA chooses to reduce the
payment standard amount used to
calculate such a family’s subsidy in
accordance with its Administrative
Plan, then the initial reduction to the
family’s payment standard amount may
not be applied any earlier than two
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years following the effective date of the
decrease in the payment standard, and
then only if the family has received the
notice required under paragraph
(c)(3)(iii) of this section.
(ii) The PHA may choose to reduce
the payment standard amount for the
family to the current payment standard
amount in effect on the PHA voucher
payment standard schedule, or it may
reduce the payment standard amount to
an amount that is higher than the
normally applicable payment standard
amount on the PHA voucher payment
standard schedule. After an initial
reduction, the PHA may further reduce
the payment standard amount for the
family during the time the family
resides in the unit, provided any
subsequent reductions continue to
result in a payment standard amount
that meets or exceeds the normally
applicable payment standard amount on
the PHA voucher payment standard
schedule.
(iii) The PHA must provide the family
with at least 12 months’ written notice
of any reduction in the payment
standard amount that will affect the
family if the family remains in place. In
the written notice, the PHA must state
the new payment standard amount,
explain that the family’s new payment
standard amount will be the greater of
the amount listed in the current written
notice or the new amount (if any) on the
PHA’s payment standard schedule at the
end of the 12-month period, and make
clear where the family will find the
PHA’s payment standard schedule.
(iv) The PHA must administer
decreases in the payment standard
amount for the family in accordance
with the PHA policy as described in the
PHA Administrative Plan.
(4) Increase in the payment standard
amount during the HAP contract term.
If the payment standard amount is
increased during the term of the HAP
contract, the PHA must use the
increased payment standard amount to
calculate the monthly housing
assistance payment for the family
beginning no later than the earliest of:
(i) The effective date of an increase in
the gross rent that would result in an
increase in the family share;
(ii) The family’s first regular or
interim reexamination; or
(iii) One year following the effective
date of the increase in the payment
standard amount.
(5) PHA policy on payment standard
increases. The PHA may adopt a policy
to apply a payment standard increase at
any time earlier than the date calculated
according to paragraph (c)(4).
(6) Changes in family unit size during
the HAP contract term. Irrespective of
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any increase or decrease in the payment
standard amount, if the family unit size
either increases or decreases during the
HAP contract term, the new family unit
size may be used to determine the
payment standard amount for the family
immediately but no later than the
family’s first regular reexamination
following the change in family unit size.
■ 72. Amend § 982.517 by revising the
first sentence of paragraph (a)(2), and
paragraphs (b) and (e) to read as follows:
§ 982.517
Utility allowance schedule.
(a) * * *
(2) The PHA must provide a copy of
the utility allowance schedule to HUD.
* * *
(b) How allowances are determined.
(1)(i) A PHA’s utility allowance
schedule, and the utility allowance for
an individual family, must include the
utilities and services that are necessary
in the locality to provide housing that
complies with HQS. The PHA’s utility
allowance schedule and utility
allowance for families must also include
any utilities and services required by
HUD after publication in the Federal
Register for public comment.
(ii) In the utility allowance schedule,
the PHA must classify utilities and other
housing services according to the
following general categories: space
heating; air conditioning; cooking; water
heating; water; sewer; trash collection
(disposal of waste and refuse); other
electric; refrigerator (cost of tenantsupplied refrigerator); range (cost of
tenant-supplied range); applicable
surcharges; and other specified housing
services.
(iii) The PHA must provide a utility
allowance for tenant-paid airconditioning costs if the majority of
housing units in the market provide
centrally air-conditioned units or there
is appropriate wiring for tenantinstalled air conditioners.
(iv) The PHA may not provide any
allowance for non-essential utility costs,
such as costs of cable or satellite
television.
(2)(i) The PHA must maintain an areawide utility allowance schedule. The
area-wide utility allowance schedule
must be determined based on the typical
cost of utilities and services paid by
energy-conservative households that
occupy housing of similar size and type
in the same locality. In developing the
schedule, the PHA must use normal
patterns of consumption for the
community as a whole and current
utility rates.
(ii) The PHA may maintain an areawide, energy-efficient utility allowance
schedule to be used for units that are in
a building that meets Leadership in
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Energy and Environmental Design
(LEED) or Energy Star standards. HUD
may subsequently identify additional
Energy Savings Design standards or
criteria for applying the allowance to
retrofitted units in a building that does
not meet the standard, which will be
modified or added through a document
published in the Federal Register for 30
days of public comment, followed by a
final document announcing the
modified standards and the date on
which the modifications take effect. The
energy-efficient utility allowance
(EEUA) schedule is to be maintained in
addition to, not in place of, the areawide utility allowance schedule
described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, unless all units within a PHA’s
jurisdiction meet one or more of the
required standards.
(iii) The PHA may base its utility
allowance payments on actual flat fees
charged by an owner for utilities that are
billed directly by the owner, but only if
the flat fee charged by the owner is no
greater than the PHA’s applicable utility
allowance for the utilities covered by
the fee. If an owner charges a flat fee for
only some of the utilities, then the PHA
must pay a separate allowance for any
tenant-paid utilities that are not covered
in the flat fee.
(iv) For tenant-based participants
residing in units within a project that
has an approved project-specific utility
allowance under § 983.301(f)(4), the
PHA must use the project-specific
utility allowance schedule (see 24 CFR
983.301(f)(4)).
(v) The PHA must state its policy for
utility allowance payments in its
Administrative Plan and apply it
consistently to all similarly situated
households.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Higher utility allowance as
reasonable accommodation for a person
with disabilities. On request from a
household that includes a person with
disabilities, the PHA must approve a
utility allowance which is higher than
the applicable amount on the utility
allowance schedule if a higher utility
allowance is needed as a reasonable
accommodation under 24 CFR part 8,
the Fair Housing Act and 24 CFR part
100, or Titles II or III of the Americans
with Disabilities Act and 28 CFR parts
35 and 36, to make the program
accessible to and usable by the
household member with a disability.
§ 982.552
[AMENDED]
73. Amend § 982.552 by removing
paragraph (c)(1)(viii) and redesignating
paragraphs (c)(1)(ix) through (xi) as
paragraphs (c)(1)(viii) through (x)
respectively.
■
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74. Amend § 982.605 by revising the
first sentence of paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
■
§ 982.605
SRO: Housing quality standards.
(a) * * * As defined in § 982.4, HQS
refers to the minimum quality standards
developed by HUD in accordance with
24 CFR 5.703 for housing assisted under
the HCV program, including any
variations approved by HUD for the
PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3). * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 75. Amend § 982.609 by revising the
first sentence of paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
§ 982.609 Congregate housing: Housing
quality standards.
(a) * * * As defined in § 982.4, HQS
refers to the minimum quality standards
developed by HUD in accordance with
24 CFR 5.703 for housing assisted under
the HCV program, including any
variations approved by HUD for the
PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3). * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 76. Amend § 982.614 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 982.614 Group home: Housing quality
standards.
(a) Compliance with HQS. The PHA
may not give approval to reside in a
group home unless the unit, including
the portion of the unit available for use
by the assisted person under the lease,
meets HQS. As defined in § 982.4, HQS
refers to the minimum quality standards
developed by HUD in accordance with
24 CFR 5.703 for housing assisted under
the HCV program, including any
variations approved by HUD for the
PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 77. Amend § 982.618 by revising
paragraph (a) and the first sentence of
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 982.618 Shared housing: Housing quality
standards.
(a) Compliance with HQS. The PHA
may not give approval to reside in
shared housing unless the entire unit,
including the portion of the unit
available for use by the assisted family
under its lease, meets HQS.
(b) * * * As defined in § 982.4, HQS
refers to the minimum quality standards
developed by HUD in accordance with
24 CFR 5.703 for housing assisted under
the HCV program, including any
variations approved by HUD for the
PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3). * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 78. Amend § 982.621 by revising the
first sentence of the introductory text to
read as follows:
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38303
§ 982.621 Manufactured home space
rental: Housing quality standards.
As defined in § 982.4, HQS refers to
the minimum quality standards
developed by HUD in accordance with
24 CFR 5.703 for housing assisted under
the HCV program, including any
variations approved by HUD for the
PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3). * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 79. Revise § 982.623 to read as
follows:
§ 982.623 Manufactured home space
rental: Housing assistance payment.
(a) Amount of monthly housing
assistance payment. The monthly
housing assistance payment is
calculated as the lower of:
(1) The PHA payment standard,
determined in accordance with
§ 982.503 minus the total tenant
payment; or
(2) The family’s eligible housing
expenses minus the total tenant
payment.
(b) Eligible housing expenses. The
family’s eligible housing expenses are
the total of:
(1) The rent charged by the owner for
the manufactured home space.
(2) Charges for the maintenance and
management the space owner must
provide under the lease.
(3) The monthly payments made by
the family to amortize the cost of
purchasing the manufactured home
established at the time of application to
a lender for financing the purchase of
the manufactured home if monthly
payments are still being made,
including any required insurance and
property taxes included in the loan
payment to the lender.
(i) Any increase in debt service or
term due to refinancing after purchase
of the home may not be included in the
amortization cost.
(ii) Debt service for installation
charges incurred by a family may be
included in the monthly amortization
payments. Installation charges incurred
before the family became an assisted
family may be included in the
amortization cost if monthly payments
are still being made to amortize the
charges.
(4) The applicable allowances for
tenant-paid utilities, as determined
under §§ 982.517 and 982.624.
(c) Distribution of housing assistance
payment. In general, the monthly
housing assistance payment is
distributed as follows:
(1) The PHA pays the owner of the
space the lesser of the housing
assistance payment or the portion of the
monthly rent due to the owner. The
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portion of the monthly rent due to the
owner is the total of:
(i) The actual rent charged by the
owner for the manufactured home
space; and
(ii) Charges for the maintenance and
management the space owner must
provide under the lease.
(2) If the housing assistance payment
exceeds the portion of the monthly rent
due to the owner, the PHA may pay the
balance of the housing assistance
payment to the family. Alternatively,
the PHA may pay the balance to the
lender or utility company, in an amount
no greater than the amount due for the
month to each, respectively, subject to
the lender’s or utility company’s
willingness to accept the PHA’s
payment on behalf of the family. If the
PHA elects to pay the lender or the
utility company directly, the PHA must
notify the family of the amount paid to
the lender or the utility company and
must pay any remaining balance
directly to the family.
(d) PHA option: Single housing
assistance payment to the family. (1) If
the owner of the manufactured home
space agrees, the PHA may make the
entire housing assistance payment to the
family, and the family shall be
responsible for paying the owner
directly for the full amount of rent of the
manufactured home space due to the
owner, including owner maintenance
and management charges. If the PHA
exercises this option, the PHA may not
make any payments directly to the
lender or utility company.
(2) The PHA and owner of the
manufactured home space must still
execute the HAP contract, and the
owner is still responsible for fulfilling
all of the owner obligations under the
HAP contract, including but not limited
to complying with HQS and rent
reasonableness requirements. The
owner’s acceptance of the family’s
monthly rent payment during the term
of the HAP contract serves as the
owner’s certification to the
reasonableness of the rent charged for
the space in accordance with
§ 982.622(b)(4).
(3) If the family and owner agree to
the single housing assistance payment,
the owner is responsible for collecting
the full amount of the rent and other
charges under the lease directly from
the family. The PHA is not responsible
for any amounts owed by the family to
the owner and may not pay any claim
by the owner against the family.
■ 80. Amend § 982.625 by adding
headings to paragraphs (a), (b), (c)(1), (f),
and (g) to read as follows:
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§ 982.625
General.
Homeownership option:
(a) Applicability. * * *
(b) Family status. * * *
(c) * * *
(1) Allowable forms of
homeownership assistance. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Live-in aide. * * *
(g) PHA capacity. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 81. Amend § 982.628 by:
■ a. In paragraph (a)(1), removing ‘‘,
(a)(7)’’ from the citation; and
■ b. Revising paragraphs (d)
introductory text, (d)(3) introductory
text, and (e)(3).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 982.628
units.
Homeownership option: Eligible
*
*
*
*
*
(d) PHA-owned units. A family may
purchase a PHA-owned unit, as defined
in § 982.4, with homeownership
assistance only if the following
conditions are satisfied:
*
*
*
*
*
(3) The PHA must obtain the services
of an independent entity, as defined in
§ 982.4 and in accordance with
§ 982.352(b)(1)(v)(B), to perform the
following PHA functions:
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(3) The unit has passed the required
HQS inspection (see § 982.631(a)) and
independent inspection (see
§ 982.631(b)).
■ 82. Amend § 982.630 by:
■ a. Adding headings to paragraphs (a),
(b), (c), and (d); and
■ b. Revising paragraph (e).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
§ 982.630 Homeownership option:
Homeownership counseling.
(a) Pre-assistance counseling. * * *
(b) Counseling topics. * * *
(c) Local circumstances. * * *
(d) Additional counseling. * * *
(e) HUD-certified housing counselor.
Any homeownership counseling
provided to families in connection with
this section must be conducted by a
HUD certified housing counselor
working for an agency approved to
participate in HUD’s Housing
Counseling Program.
■ 83. Amend § 982.635 by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (b)(3); and
■ b. In paragraphs (c)(2)(vii) and (3)(vii),
removing ‘‘part 8 of this title’’ and
adding, in its place, ‘‘parts 8 and 100 of
this title’’.
The revision reads as follows:
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§ 982.635 Homeownership option: Amount
and distribution of monthly homeownership
assistance payment.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) The payment standard amount
may not be lower than what the
payment standard amount was at
commencement of homeownership
assistance.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 84. Amend § 982.641 by removing
‘‘and’’ from the end of paragraph (d)(2),
revising paragraph (d)(3), adding
paragraph (d)(4), and revising paragraph
(f)(3) to read as follows:
§ 982.641 Homeownership option:
Applicability of other requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(3) Section 982.405 (PHA unit
inspection); and
(4) Section 982.406 (Use of alternative
inspections).
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(3) Section 982.517 (Utility allowance
schedule), except that § 982.517(d) does
not apply because the utility allowance
is always based on the size of the home
bought by the family with
homeownership assistance.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 983—PROJECT-BASED
VOUCHER (PBV) PROGRAM
85. The authority for part 983
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
Subpart A—General
86. Amend § 983.2 by revising and
republishing paragraph (c) to read as
follows:
■
§ 983.2 When the tenant-based voucher
rule (24 CFR part 982) applies.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Specific 24 CFR part 982
provisions that do not apply to PBV
assistance. The following specific
provisions in 24 CFR part 982 do not
apply to PBV assistance under part 983:
(1) In subpart D of part 982: paragraph
(e)(2) of 24 CFR 982.158;
(2) In subpart E of part 982: paragraph
(e) of 24 CFR 982.201, paragraph (b)(2)
of 24 CFR 982.202, and paragraph (d) of
24 CFR 982.204;
(3) Subpart G of part 982 does not
apply, with the following exceptions:
(i) Section 982.310 (owner
termination of tenancy) applies to the
PBV program, but to the extent that
those provisions differ from § 983.257,
the provisions of § 983.257 govern; and
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(ii) Section 982.312 (absence from
unit) applies to the PBV Program, but to
the extent that those provisions differ
from § 983.256(g), the provisions of
§ 983.256(g) govern; and
(iii) Section 982.316 (live-in aide)
applies to the PBV Program;
(4) Subpart H of part 982;
(5) In subpart I of part 982: 24 CFR
982.401; paragraphs (a)(3), (c), and (d) of
24 CFR 982.402; 24 CFR 982.403; 24
CFR 982.404; paragraphs (a), (b), (d), (i),
and (j) of 24 CFR 982.405; paragraphs
(a), (e), and (f) of 24 CFR 982.406; and
24 CFR 982.407;
(6) In subpart J of part 982: paragraphs
(a), (b)(3), (b)(4), and (c) of § 982.451;
and § 982.455;
(7) Subpart K of part 982: subpart K
does not apply, except that the
following provisions apply to the PBV
Program:
(i) In 24 CFR 982.503, paragraphs
(a)(1) and (d)(1)–(4) do apply;
(ii) Section 982.516 (family income
and composition; regular and interim
examinations);
(iii) Section 982.517 of this title
(utility allowance schedule), except that
24 CFR 982.517(d) does not apply.
(8) In subpart M of part 982:
(i) Sections 982.603, 982.607, 982.611,
982.613(c)(2), 982.619(a), (b)(1), (b)(4),
(c); and
(ii) Provisions concerning shared
housing (§ 982.615 through § 982.618),
manufactured home space rental
(§ 982.622 through § 982.624), and the
homeownership option (§ 982.625
through § 982.641).
■ 87. Revise and republish § 983.3 to
read as follows:
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§ 983.3
PBV definitions.
(a) General. This section defines PBV
terms used in this part. For
administrative ease and convenience,
those part 982 terms that are also used
in this part are identified in this section.
In limited cases, where there is a slight
difference with the part 982 term, an
annotation is made in this section.
(b) Definitions. The following
definitions apply to this part:
Abatement. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Administrative fee. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Administrative fee reserve. See 24
CFR 982.4.
Administrative Plan. See 24 CFR
982.4.
Admission. The point when the
family becomes a participant in the
PHA’s tenant-based or project-based
voucher program. If the family is not
already a tenant-based voucher
participant, the date of admission for
the project-based voucher program is
the first day of the initial lease term (the
commencement of the assisted tenancy)
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in the PBV unit. After admission, and so
long as the family is continuously
assisted with tenant-based or projectbased voucher assistance from the PHA,
a shift from tenant-based or projectbased assistance to the other form of
voucher assistance is not a new
admission.
Agreement to enter into HAP contract
(Agreement). A written contract
between the PHA and the owner in the
form prescribed by HUD. The
Agreement defines requirements for
development activity undertaken for
units to be assisted under this section.
When development is completed by the
owner in accordance with the
Agreement, the PHA enters into a HAP
contract with the owner. The Agreement
is not used for existing housing assisted
under this section.
Applicant. A family that has applied
for admission to the PBV program but is
not yet a program participant.
Area where vouchers are difficult to
use. An area where a voucher is difficult
to use is:
(i) A census tract with a poverty rate
of 20 percent or less, as determined by
HUD;
(ii) A ZIP code area where the rental
vacancy rate is less than 4 percent, as
determined by HUD; or
(iii) A ZIP code area where 90 percent
of the Small Area FMR is more than 110
percent of the metropolitan area or
county FMR.
Assisted living facility. A residence
facility (including a facility located in a
larger multifamily property) that meets
all the following criteria:
(i) The facility is licensed and
regulated as an assisted living facility by
the State, municipality, or other
political subdivision;
(ii) The facility makes available
supportive services to assist residents in
carrying out activities of daily living;
and
(iii) The facility provides separate
dwelling units for residents and
includes common rooms and other
facilities appropriate and available to
provide supportive services for the
residents.
Authorized voucher units. See 24 CFR
982.4.
Budget authority. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Building. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Comparable tenant-based rental
assistance. A tenant-based subsidy to
enable a family to obtain decent, safe,
and sanitary housing in the PHA
jurisdiction, which meets the following
minimum requirements:
(i) The family’s monthly payment is
not more than 40 percent of the family’s
adjusted monthly gross income;
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38305
(ii) The rental assistance contains no
limitation as to the length of time the
family may receive the assistance;
(iii) The family is not required to be
employed, to seek employment, or to
participate in supportive services in
order to receive the rental assistance;
and
(iv) The family is able to use the
rental assistance in one or more other
PHAs’ jurisdictions.
Congregate housing. See 24 CFR
982.4.
Continuously assisted. See 24 CFR
982.4.
Contract units. The housing units
covered by a HAP contract.
Cooperative. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Cooperative member. See 24 CFR
982.4.
Covered housing provider. For the
PBV program, ‘‘covered housing
provider,’’ as such term is used in
HUD’s regulations in 24 CFR part 5,
subpart L (Protection for Victims of
Domestic Violence, Dating Violence,
Sexual Assault, or Stalking) refers to the
PHA or owner (as defined in 24 CFR
982.4), as applicable given the
responsibilities of the covered housing
provider as set forth in 24 CFR part 5,
subpart L. For example, the PHA is the
covered housing provider responsible
for providing the notice of occupancy
rights under VAWA and certification
form described at 24 CFR 5.2005(a). In
addition, the owner is the covered
housing provider that may choose to
bifurcate a lease as described at 24 CFR
5.2009(a), while the PHA is the covered
housing provider responsible for
complying with emergency transfer plan
provisions at 24 CFR 5.2005(e).
Development activity. New
construction or rehabilitation work done
after the proposal or project selection
date in order for a newly constructed or
rehabilitated housing project to be
covered by a PBV HAP contract,
including work done pursuant to a rider
to the HAP contract in accordance with
§ 983.157.
Excepted units. Units in a project not
counted toward the project cap because
they exclusively serve or are made
available to certain families. See
§ 983.54(c)(2).
Excluded units. Units in a project not
counted toward the program cap or
project cap because they meet certain
criteria. See § 983.59.
Existing housing. A project that meets
the following criteria:
(i) All the proposed contract units in
the project either fully comply or
substantially comply with HQS on the
proposal or project selection date, as
determined per § 983.103(a). (The units
must fully comply with HQS at the time
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required by § 983.103(c)). The units
substantially comply with HQS if:
(A) The units only require repairs to
current components or replacement of
equipment and/or materials by items of
substantially the same kind to correct
deficiencies; and
(B) The PHA determines all
deficiencies can reasonably be corrected
within a 30-day period, taking into
consideration the totality of the
deficiencies in the project.
(ii) The PHA determines the project is
not reasonably expected to require
substantial improvement and the owner
certifies it has no plans to undertake
substantial improvement from the
proposal submission date (for projects
subject to competitive selection) or the
project selection date (for projects
excepted from competitive selection)
through the first two years of the HAP
contract.
Family. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Family self-sufficiency program. See
24 CFR 982.4.
Gross rent. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Group home. See 24 CFR 982.4.
HAP contract. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Household. See 24 CFR 5.100.
Housing assistance payment. The
monthly assistance payment for a PBV
unit by a PHA, which includes:
(i) A payment to the owner for rent to
owner under the family’s lease minus
the tenant rent; and
(ii) An additional payment to or on
behalf of the family, if the utility
allowance exceeds the total tenant
payment, in the amount of such excess.
Housing credit agency. For purposes
of performing subsidy layering reviews
for proposed PBV projects, a housing
credit agency includes a State housing
finance agency, a State participating
jurisdiction under HUD’s HOME
program (see 24 CFR part 92), or other
State housing agencies that meet the
definition of ‘‘housing credit agency’’ as
defined by Section 42 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986.
Housing quality standards (HQS). The
minimum quality standards developed
by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR
5.703 for the PBV program, including
any variations approved by HUD for the
PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3).
Independent entity. See 24 CFR 982.4,
except that the independent entity is
subject to the requirements in § 983.57
(instead of 24 CFR 982.352(b) and 24
CFR 982.628(d)) for the PBV program.
Initial rent to owner. See 24 CFR
982.4.
In-place family. A family residing in
a proposed contract unit on the proposal
or project selection date.
Jurisdiction. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Lease. See 24 CFR 982.4.
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Manufactured home. See 24 CFR
982.4.
Multifamily building. A building with
five or more dwelling units (assisted or
unassisted).
Newly constructed housing. A project
containing housing units that do not
exist on the proposal or project selection
date and are developed after the date of
selection for use under the PBV
program.
Owner. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Partially assisted project. A project in
which there are fewer contract units
than residential units.
Participant. A family that has been
admitted and is currently assisted in the
PBV (or HCV) program. If the family is
not already a tenant-based voucher
participant, the family becomes a
participant on the effective date of the
initial lease term (the commencement of
the assisted tenancy) in the PBV unit.
PHA Plan. See 24 CFR 982.4.
PHA-owned unit. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Premises. The project in which the
contract unit is located, including
common areas and grounds.
Program. The voucher program under
Section 8 of the 1937 Act, including
tenant-based or project-based assistance.
Program receipts. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Project. A project can be a single
building, multiple contiguous buildings,
or multiple buildings on contiguous
parcels of land. ‘‘Contiguous’’ in this
definition includes ‘‘adjacent to,’’ as
well as touching along a boundary or a
point. A PHA may, in its Administrative
Plan, establish the circumstances under
which it will define a project as only
one of the following: a single building,
multiple contiguous buildings, or
multiple buildings on contiguous
parcels of land.
Proposal or project selection date. See
§ 983.51(g).
Public housing agency (PHA). See 24
CFR 982.4.
Reasonable rent. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Rehabilitated housing. A project
which is developed for use under the
PBV program, in which all proposed
contract units exist on the proposal or
project selection date, but which does
not qualify as existing housing.
Rent to owner. The total monthly rent
payable by the family and the PHA to
the owner under the lease for a contract
unit. Rent to owner includes payment
for any housing services, maintenance,
and utilities to be provided by the
owner in accordance with the lease.
(Rent to owner must not include charges
for non-housing services including
payment for food, furniture, or
supportive services provided in
accordance with the lease.)
Responsible entity (RE) (for
environmental review). The unit of
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general local government within which
the project is located that exercises land
use responsibility or, if HUD determines
this infeasible, the county or, if HUD
determines that infeasible, the State.
Single-family building. A building
with no more than four dwelling units
(assisted or unassisted).
Single room occupancy housing
(SRO). See 24 CFR 982.4.
Site. The grounds where the contract
units are located or will be located after
development.
Small Area Fair Market Rents
(SAFMRs). See 24 CFR 982.4. (See also
24 CFR 888.113(c)(5).)
Special housing type. Subpart M of 24
CFR part 982 states the special
regulatory requirements for different
special housing types. Subpart M
provisions on shared housing,
manufactured home space rental, and
the homeownership option do not apply
to PBV assistance under this part.
Subsidy standards. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Substantial improvement. One of the
following activities undertaken at a time
beginning from the proposal submission
date (for projects subject to competitive
selection) or from the project selection
date (for projects excepted from
competitive selection), or undertaken
during the term of the PBV HAP
contract:
(i) Remodeling that alters the nature
or type of housing units in a project;
(ii) Reconstruction; or
(iii) A substantial improvement in the
quality or kind of equipment and
materials. The replacement of
equipment and/or materials rendered
unsatisfactory because of normal wear
and tear by items of substantially the
same kind does not constitute
substantial improvement.
Tenant. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Tenant rent. The amount payable
monthly by the family as rent to the unit
owner, as described in § 983.353(b). (See
also 24 CFR 5.520(c)(1)).
Tenant-paid utilities. See 24 CFR
982.4.
Total tenant payment. See 24 CFR
5.628.
Utility allowance. See 24 CFR 5.603.
Utility reimbursement. See 24 CFR
5.603.
Waiting list admission. An admission
from the PHA- or owner-maintained
PBV waiting list in accordance with
§ 983.251.
Wrong-size unit. A unit occupied by
a family that does not conform to the
PHA’s subsidy standard for family size,
by being either too large or too small
compared to the standard.
§ 983.4
[Amended]
88. Amend § 983.4 by removing the
provision for ‘‘Definitions.’’.
■
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89. Revise and republish § 983.5 to
read as follows:
■
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 983.5
Description of the PBV program.
(a) How PBV works. (1) The PBV
program is administered by a PHA that
already administers the tenant-based
voucher program under the
consolidated annual contributions
contract (ACC) in 24 CFR 982.151. In
the PBV program, the assistance is
‘‘attached to the structure,’’ which may
be a multifamily building or singlefamily building. (See description of the
difference between ‘‘project-based’’ and
‘‘tenant-based’’ rental assistance at 24
CFR 982.1(b)).
(2) The PHA enters into a HAP
contract with an owner for units in
existing housing or in newly
constructed or rehabilitated housing.
(3) In the case of new construction or
rehabilitation, the owner may develop
the housing pursuant to an Agreement
(§ 983.154) between the owner and the
PHA. In the Agreement, the PHA agrees
to execute a HAP contract after the
owner completes the construction or
rehabilitation of the units. Alternatively:
(i) The owner may develop the
housing without an Agreement, before
execution of a HAP contract, in
accordance with § 983.154(f); or
(ii) In the case of rehabilitation, the
owner may develop the housing or
complete development activity after
execution of the HAP contract, in
accordance with § 983.157.
(4) During the term of the HAP
contract, the PHA makes housing
assistance payments to the owner for
units leased and occupied by eligible
families.
(b) How PBV is funded. If a PHA
decides to operate a PBV program, the
PHA’s PBV program is funded with a
portion of appropriated funding (budget
authority) available under the PHA’s
voucher ACC. This funding is used to
pay housing assistance for both tenantbased and project-based voucher units.
Likewise, the administrative fee funding
made available to a PHA is used for the
administration of both tenant-based and
project-based voucher assistance.
(c) PHA discretion to operate PBV
program. A PHA has discretion whether
to operate a PBV program. HUD
approval is not required, except that the
PHA must notify HUD of its intent to
project-base its vouchers and when the
PHA executes, amends, or extends a
HAP contract. The PHA must also state
in its Administrative Plan that it will
engage in project-basing and must
amend its Administrative Plan to
include all PBV-related matters over
which the PHA is exercising its
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policymaking discretion, including the
subjects listed in § 983.10, as applicable.
■ 90. Revise and republish § 983.6 to
read as follows:
§ 983.6 Maximum number of PBV units
(percentage limitation).
(a) In general. Except as provided in
paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section, a
PHA may commit project-based
assistance to no more than 20 percent of
its authorized voucher units, as adjusted
as provided in paragraph (e) of this
section, at the time of commitment. An
analysis of impact must be conducted in
accordance with § 983.58, if a PHA is
project-basing 50 percent or more of the
PHA’s authorized voucher units.
(1) A PHA is not required to reduce
the number of units to which it has
committed PBV assistance under an
Agreement or HAP contract if the
number of authorized voucher units is
subsequently reduced and the number
of PBV units consequently exceeds the
program limitation.
(2) A PHA that was within the
program limit prior to April 18, 2017,
and exceeded the program limit on that
date due solely to the change in how the
program cap is calculated is not
required to reduce the number of PBV
units under an Agreement or HAP
contract.
(3) In the circumstances described in
paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this section,
the PHA may not add units to PBV HAP
contracts, or enter into new Agreements
or HAP contracts (except for HAP
contracts resulting from Agreements
entered into before the reduction of
authorized units or April 18, 2017, as
applicable), unless such units meet the
conditions described in paragraph (d) or
(e) of this section.
(b) Units subject to percentage
limitation. All PBV units which the
PHA has selected (from the time of the
proposal or project selection date) or
which are under an Agreement or HAP
contract for PBV assistance count
toward the 20 percent maximum or
increased cap, as applicable, except as
provided in paragraph (e).
(c) PHA determination. The PHA is
responsible for determining the amount
of budget authority that is available for
project-based vouchers and for ensuring
that the amount of assistance that is
attached to units is within the amounts
available under the ACC.
(d) Increased cap. A PHA may
project-base an additional 10 percent of
its authorized voucher units at the time
of commitment, as adjusted as provided
in paragraph (e) of this section,
provided the additional units meet the
conditions in paragraphs (d)(1) or (2) of
this section:
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38307
(1) The units are part of a HAP
contract executed on or after April 18,
2017, or are added on or after that date
to any current HAP contract, including
a contract entered into prior to April 18,
2017, and the units fall into at least one
of the following categories:
(i) The units are specifically made
available to house individuals and
families that meet the definition of
homeless under Section 103 of the
McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance
Act (42 U.S.C. 11302), included in 24
CFR 578.3.
(ii) The units are specifically made
available to house families that are
comprised of or include a veteran. For
purposes of the increased cap, a veteran
means a person who served in the active
military, naval, air, or space service, and
who was discharged or released
therefrom.
(iii) The units provide supportive
housing to persons with disabilities or
to elderly persons, as defined in 24 CFR
5.403. Supportive housing means that
the project makes supportive services
available for all of the assisted families
in the project and provides a range of
services tailored to the needs of the
residents occupying such housing. Such
supportive services need not be
provided by the owner or on site but
must be reasonably available to the
families receiving PBV assistance in the
project. The PHA’s Administrative Plan
must describe the type and availability
of supportive services the PHA will
consider as qualifying for the 10 percent
increased cap.
(iv) The units are located in an area
where vouchers are difficult to use as
defined in § 983.3.
(v) The units replace, on a different
site, the units listed in § 983.59(b)(1)
and (2) for which the PHA had authority
under § 983.59 to commit PBV
assistance on the original site without
the units counting toward the program
cap or project cap. The units are eligible
under this category only if the PHA has
not committed and will not commit PBV
assistance to the original site pursuant
to the normally applicable exclusions of
those units under § 983.59. If the PHA
subsequently plans to commit PBV
assistance to units on the original site,
those proposed units count toward and
must comply with the 20 percent
maximum or increased cap of this
section, as applicable, and the project
cap requirements of § 983.54.
(2) The units are part of a HAP
contract executed on or after December
27, 2020, or are added on or after that
date to any current HAP contract,
including a contract entered into prior
to December 27, 2020, and meet the
following requirements:
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(i) The units are exclusively made
available to eligible youth as described
in Section 8(x)(2)(B) of the U.S. Housing
Act; and
(ii) If the units exclusively made
available to eligible youth use Family
Unification Program (FUP) assistance
that is normally available for eligible
families and youth described in Section
8(x)(2) of the U.S. Housing Act, the PHA
determines and documents that the
limitation of the units to youth is
consistent with the local housing needs
of both eligible FUP populations
(families and youth) and amends its
Administrative Plan to specify that FUP
PBV assistance is solely for eligible
youth.
(3) The PBV HAP contract must
specify, and the owner must set aside,
the number of units meeting the
conditions of paragraphs (d)(1)(i), (ii),
(iii) and (d)(2) of this section. To qualify
for the increased program cap for units
meeting the conditions of paragraphs
(d)(1)(i), (ii), (iii) and (d)(2) of this
section, the unit must be occupied by
the type of family specified in the
applicable paragraph consistent with
the requirements of § 983.262.
(e) Units previously subject to
federally required rent restrictions or
that received long-term rental assistance
from HUD. Units that meet the
requirements of § 983.59 do not count
toward the program cap. Such units are
removed from the number of authorized
voucher units for purposes of
calculating the percentages under
paragraphs (a) and (d) of this section.
■ 91. Revise § 983.10 to read as follows:
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§ 983.10 PBV provisions in the
Administrative Plan.
(a) PHA policymaking discretion. If a
PHA exercises its discretion to operate
a PBV program, the PHA’s
Administrative Plan as required by 24
CFR 982.54 of this title must include all
the PHA’s local policies on PBV-related
matters over which the PHA is
exercising its policymaking discretion.
(b) PHA policies. The PHA
Administrative Plan must cover, at a
minimum, the following PHA policies,
as applicable:
(1) The definition of ‘‘project’’ as
consistent with this part (§ 983.3(b));
(2) The program cap:
(i) A description of the types and
availability of services that will qualify
units under the supportive services
authority under the program cap
(§ 983.6(d)(1)(iii)); and
(ii) The PHA’s policy limiting Family
Unification Program assistance normally
available for eligible families and youth
described in Section 8(x)(2) of the U.S.
Housing Act to youth (§ 983.6(d)(2)(ii));
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(3) A description of the circumstances
under which the PHA will use the
competitive and noncompetitive
selection methods and the procedures
for submission and selection of PBV
proposals (§ 983.51(a));
(3) A description of the circumstances
under which the PHA will use the
competitive and noncompetitive
selection methods and the procedures
for submission and selection of PBV
proposals (§ 983.51(a));
(4) The project cap:
(i) The PHA’s policy limiting Family
Unification Program assistance normally
available for eligible families and youth
described in Section 8(x)(2) of the U.S.
Housing Act to youth (§ 983.54(c)(2)(ii));
and
(ii) A description of the types and
availability of services that will qualify
units under the supportive services
exception from the project cap
(§ 983.54(c)(2)(iii));
(5) The site selection standards:
(i) The PHA’s standard for
deconcentrating poverty and expanding
housing and economic opportunities
(§ 983.55(b)(1)); and
(ii) The PHA’s site selection policy
(§ 983.55(c));
(6) PHA inspection policies:
(i) The timing of an initial inspection
of existing housing (§ 983.103(c)(1));
(ii) Whether the PHA adopts for initial
inspection of PBV existing housing the
non-life-threatening deficiencies option,
the alternative inspection option, or
both, and whether the PHA adopts for
periodic inspection of PBV housing the
alternative inspection option. If so, state
all policies as required by 24 CFR
982.54(d)(21)(ii) and (iii), as they relate
to the PHA’s PBV program
(§ 983.103(c)(2) through (4) and (e)(3));
(iii) The frequency of periodic
inspections (§ 983.103(e) and (i)); and
(iv) Any verification methods other
than on-site inspection for different
inspection types or for different HQS
deficiencies (§ 983.103(h)).
(7) A description of the circumstances
(if any) under which the PHA will
establish additional requirements for
quality, architecture, or design of PBV
housing at the time of initial
rehabilitation or new construction
(§§ 983.154(e)(11), 983.157(e)(4));
(8) A description of the circumstances
(if any) under which the PHA will enter
a PBV HAP contract for newly
constructed and rehabilitated housing
without first entering into an Agreement
or execute an Agreement after
construction or rehabilitation that
complied with applicable requirements
of § 983.153 has commenced
(§ 983.154(f)(1));
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(9) The PHA’s policy on the form and
manner in which the owner must
submit evidence and certify that work
has been completed (§ 983.155);
(10) Rehabilitated housing developed
after HAP contract execution:
(i) A description of the circumstances
(if any) under which the PHA will enter
a PBV HAP contract for rehabilitated
housing that allows for development
activity to occur after HAP contract
execution (§ 983.157(a)(2));
(ii) The timing of the initial
inspection (§ 983.157(c)(4));
(iii) The form and manner of owner
notifications of changes in the status of
contract units (§ 983.157(e)(5)); and
(iv) The period for compliance (if any)
for development activity that has not
been completed by the deadline
(§ 983.157(h)(1));
(11) The PHA’s policy on amending
PBV HAP contracts to substitute or add
contract units (§ 983.207(f));
(12) PHA housing quality policies;
(i) A description of the circumstances
(if any) under which the PHA will
establish additional requirements for
continued compliance with quality,
architecture, or design of PBV housing
during the term of the HAP contract
(§ 983.208(a)(3));
(ii) The PHA’s policy on the
conditions under which it will withhold
HAP and the conditions under which it
will abate HAP or terminate the contract
for units other than the unit with HQS
deficiencies (§ 983.208(d)); and
(iii) The PHA’s policy on assisting
families with relocating and finding a
new unit (§ 983.208(d)(6)(iii));
(13) A description of the PHA’s
waiting list policies for admission to
PBV units, including any information
on the owner waiting list policy
(§ 983.251(c) and (e));
(14) A description of the PHA’s policy
on whether to conduct tenant screening
and offer information to an owner
(§ 983.255(a)(2) and (c)(4));
(15) The PHA’s policy on continued
housing assistance for a family that
occupies a wrong-sized unit or a unit
with accessibility features that the
family does not require (§ 983.260(b));
(16) The PHA’s policy on a family’s
right to move:
(i) The form of tenant-based rental
assistance that the PHA will offer
families (§ 983.261(b)); and
(ii) The procedures for tenants to
request tenant-based rental assistance to
move (§ 983.261(c));
(17) The PHA’s policy regarding
which options it will take if a unit is no
longer qualified for excepted status or
the increased program cap
(§ 983.262(b)(4));
(18) The PHA’s policy regarding
continued occupancy of a unit under
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the increased program cap for
supportive housing for persons with
disabilities or elderly persons and units
excepted based on elderly or disabled
family status after a change in family
composition removing the elderly
family member or family member with
a disability (§ 983.262(c)(3)(ii), (d)(1),
and (d)(2));
(19) The PHA’s policy regarding the
PHA-determined amount it will use to
calculate rent to owner (§ 983.301(b)(1)
and (c)(2)(i));
(20) The PHA’s policy on the required
timing and form of owner requests for
a rent increase (§ 983.302(a)(1));
(21) The PHA’s policy on providing
vacancy payments, including the
required form and manner of requests
for vacancy payments (§ 983.352(b)(1)
and (4));
(22) The PHA’s policy on utility
reimbursements (§ 983.353(d)(2)); and
(23) The PHA’s policy on applying
SAFMRs to its PBV program per 24 CFR
888.113(h).
■ 92. Add § 983.11 to subpart A to read
as follows:
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§ 983.11 Prohibition of excess public
assistance.
(a) PBV assistance for newly
constructed and rehabilitated housing.
The PHA may provide PBV assistance
for newly constructed and rehabilitated
housing only in accordance with HUD
subsidy layering regulations (24 CFR
4.13) and other requirements.
(b) PBV assistance for existing
housing. The subsidy layering
requirements are not applicable to
existing housing.
(c) Development activity before HAP
contract. For the subsidy layering
requirements related to development
activity to place newly constructed or
rehabilitated housing under a HAP
contract, see § 983.153(b).
(d) Additional assistance after HAP
contract. (1) For newly constructed or
rehabilitated housing under a HAP
contract, the owner must disclose to the
PHA, in accordance with HUD
requirements, information regarding any
additional related assistance from the
Federal Government, a State, or a unit
of general local government, or any
agency or instrumentality thereof. Such
related assistance includes but is not
limited to any loan, grant, guarantee,
insurance, payment, rebate, subsidy,
credit, tax benefit, or any other form of
direct or indirect assistance.
(2) If the additional related assistance
in paragraph (d)(1) of this section meets
certain threshold and other
requirements established by HUD
through publication in the Federal
Register, a subsidy layering review may
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be required to determine if it would
result in excess public assistance to the
project.
(3) Housing assistance payments must
not be more than is necessary, as
determined in accordance with HUD
requirements, to provide affordable
housing after taking account of such
related assistance. The PHA must
adjust, in accordance with HUD
requirements, the amount of the housing
assistance payments to the owner to
compensate in whole or in part for such
related assistance.
■ 93. Add § 983.12 to subpart A to read
as follows:
§ 983.12
Project record retention.
(a) Records retained according to the
contract term. For each PBV project, the
PHA must maintain the following
records throughout the HAP contract
term and for three years thereafter:
(1) Records to document the basis for
PHA selection of the proposal, if
selection is competitive, or project, if
selection is noncompetitive, including
records of the PHA’s site selection
determination (see § 983.55) and records
to document the completion of the
review of the selection process in the
case of PHA-owned units and copies of
the written notice of proposal selection
and response of the appropriate party;
(2) The analysis of impact (see
§ 983.58(b)), if applicable;
(3) The subsidy layering
determination, if applicable;
(4) The environmental review record,
if applicable;
(5) The Agreement to enter into HAP
contract, if applicable;
(6) Evidence of completion (see
§ 983.155), if applicable;
(7) The HAP contract and any rider
and/or amendments, including
amendments to extend the term of the
contract;
(8) Records to document the basis for
PHA determination and redetermination
of rent to owner;
(9) Records to document HUD
approval of the independent entity or
entities, in the case of PHA-owned
units;
(10) Records of the accessibility
features of the project and each contract
unit; and
(11) Other records as HUD may
require.
(b) [RESERVED]
■ 94. Revise subpart B to read as
follows:
Subpart B—Selection of PBV
Proposals and Projects
Sec.
983.51 Proposal and project selection
procedures.
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38309
983.52 Prohibition of assistance for
ineligible units.
983.53 Prohibition of assistance for units in
subsidized housing.
983.54 Cap on number of PBV units in each
project (income-mixing requirement).
983.55 Site selection standards.
983.56 Environmental review.
983.57 PHA-owned units.
983.58 PHA determination prior to
selection.
983.59 Units excepted from program cap
and project cap.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
§ 983.51 Proposal and project selection
procedures.
(a) General procedures for submission
and selection. The PHA Administrative
Plan must describe the procedures for
submission and selection of PBV
proposals under the methods of
competitive selection in paragraph (b) of
this section and selection of projects
under an exception to competitive
selection under paragraph (c) of this
section. The description must include
under what circumstances the PHA will
use the selection methods described in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
The PHA may allow for entities that
have site control to submit proposals
provided the entity will be the owner
prior to entering into the Agreement or
HAP contract. Before selecting a PBV
proposal or project, the PHA must
determine that the PBV proposal or
project complies with HUD program
regulations and requirements, including
a determination that the property is
eligible housing (§§ 983.52 and 983.53),
complies with the cap on the number of
PBV units per project (§ 983.54), and
meets the site selection standards
(§ 983.55). An owner may submit, and a
PHA may select, a single proposal
covering multiple projects where each
project consists of a single-family
building, provided all projects are the
same housing type (existing,
rehabilitated, or newly constructed).
(b) Methods of competitive selection.
The PHA must select PBV proposals in
accordance with the selection
procedures in the PHA Administrative
Plan. (See paragraph (f) of this section
for information about the selection of
PHA-owned units.) The PHA must
select PBV proposals by either of the
following two methods:
(1) The PHA may issue a request for
proposals (RFP), selecting a PBV
proposal through a competition. The
PHA’s RFP may not limit proposals to
a single site or impose restrictions that
explicitly or practically preclude owner
submission of proposals for PBV
housing on different sites. A PHA may
establish selection procedures in the
Administrative Plan that combine or are
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in conjunction with other Federal, State,
or local government housing assistance,
community development, or supportive
services competitive selection
processes. If the PHA selection process
is combined and administered in
conjunction with another RFP process,
the PHA remains responsible for
complying with § 983.51. See
§ 983.157(a)(2) for additional
requirements for an RFP for
rehabilitated housing.
(2) The PHA may select, without
issuing an RFP, a proposal for housing
assisted under a Federal, State, or local
government housing assistance,
community development, or supportive
services program that required
competitive selection of proposals,
where the proposal has been selected in
accordance with such program’s
competitive selection requirements
within three years of the PBV proposal
selection date. The PHA may not select
a housing assistance proposal using this
method if the competition involved any
consideration that the project would
receive PBV assistance.
(c) Exceptions to competitive
selection. Prior to selection under this
paragraph (c), the PHA must notify the
public of its intent to noncompetitively
select one or more projects for PBV
assistance through its 5-Year Plan.
(1) A PHA engaged in an initiative to
improve, develop, or replace a public
housing property or site may select for
PBV assistance an existing, newly
constructed, or rehabilitated project in
which the PHA has an ownership
interest or over which the PHA has
control without following a competitive
process.
(i) With respect to replacement
housing, the PHA does not have to
replace the housing on the same site as
the original public housing, but the
number of contract units in the
replacement project may not exceed the
number of units in the original public
housing project by more than a de
minimis amount for this exception to
apply.
(ii) The public housing properties or
sites may be in the public housing
inventory at the time of project selection
or they may have been removed from
the public housing inventory through
any available legal removal tool within
five years of the project selection date.
(2) A PHA may select for future PBV
assistance a project currently under the
public housing program, or a project
that is replacing the public housing
project, in which a PHA has no
ownership interest, or which a PHA has
no control over, without following a
competitive process, provided:
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(i) The public housing project is either
still in the public housing inventory or
had been removed from the public
housing inventory through any available
legal removal tool within five years of
the project selection date;
(ii) The PHA that owned or owns the
public housing project does not
administer the HCV program;
(iii) The project selected for PBV
assistance was specifically identified as
replacement housing for the impacted
public housing residents as part of the
public housing demolition/disposition
application, voluntary conversion
application, or any other application
process submitted to and approved by
HUD to remove the public housing
project from the public housing
inventory; and
(iv) With respect to replacement
housing, the PHA does not have to
replace the housing on the same site as
the original public housing, but the
number of contract units in the
replacement project may not exceed the
number of units in the original public
housing project by more than a de
minimis amount for this exception to
apply.
(3) A PHA may select for PBV
assistance a project consisting of PHAowned units as defined at 24 CFR 982.4
without following a competitive
process.
(i) The project units must continue to
meet the definition of PHA-owned for
the initial two years of the HAP contract
unless there is a transfer of ownership
approved by HUD.
(ii) The PHA must meet any
conditions with respect to selection for
PBV assistance of a project consisting of
PHA-owned units without following a
competitive process as may be
established by HUD through publication
in the Federal Register notice after
providing opportunity for public
comment.
(4) A PHA may select for PBV
assistance a project that underwent an
eligibility event within five years of the
project selection date, in which a family
(or families) qualifies for enhanced
voucher assistance under Section 8(t) of
the Act and provides informed consent
to relinquish its enhanced voucher for
PBV assistance, without following a
competitive process.
(d) Public notice of PHA request for
PBV proposals. If the PHA will be
selecting proposals under paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, PHA procedures
for selecting PBV proposals must be
designed and actually operated to
provide broad public notice of the
opportunity to offer PBV proposals for
consideration by the PHA. The public
notice procedures may include
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publication of the public notice in a
local newspaper of general circulation
and other means designed and actually
operated to provide broad public notice.
The public notice of the PHA request for
PBV proposals must specify the
submission deadline. Detailed
application and selection information
must be provided at the request of
interested parties.
(e) Inspections required prior to
proposal or project selection. (1) The
PHA must examine the proposed site
before the proposal or project selection
date to determine whether the site
complies with the site selection
standards in accordance with § 983.55.
(2) The PHA may execute a HAP
contract for existing housing if:
(i) All proposed contract units in the
project fully or substantially comply
with the HQS on the proposal or project
selection date, which the PHA must
determine via inspection;
(iii) The project meets the initial
inspection requirements in accordance
with § 983.103(c).
(iii) The project meets the initial
inspection requirements in accordance
with § 983.103(c).
(f) PHA written notice of proposal or
project selection. (1) For selection of
proposals through competitive methods
under paragraph (b) of this section, the
PHA must give prompt written notice of
proposal selection to the party that
submitted a selected proposal and must
also give prompt public notice of such
selection. The PHA’s requirement to
provide public notice may be met via
publication of the public notice in a
local newspaper of general circulation
or other means designed and actually
operated to provide broad public notice.
The written notice of proposal selection
must require the owner or party that
submitted the selected proposal to
provide a written response to the PHA
accepting the terms and requirements
stated in the notice.
(2) For selection of projects through
exceptions to competition under
paragraph (c) of this section, the PHA
must give prompt written notice of
project selection to the owner following
the PHA board’s resolution approving
the project-basing of assistance at the
specific project. The written notice of
project selection must require the owner
of the project selected to provide a
written response to the PHA accepting
the terms and requirements stated in the
notice.
(3) Regardless of the method of
selection, if the project contains PHAowned units that are not owned by a
separate legal entity from the PHA, the
PHA must provide the written notice of
proposal or project selection to the
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responsible PHA official, and that
official must certify in writing that the
PHA accepts the terms and
requirements stated in the notice.
(4) When an environmental review is
required, if such a review has not been
conducted prior to the project or
proposal selection date, the PHA’s
written notice of project or proposal
selection must state that the selection is
subject to completion of a favorable
environmental review and that the
project or proposal may be rejected
based on the results of the
environmental review in accordance
with 983.56(c).
(5) See § 983.153(c)(3) for additional
notice requirements for newly
constructed housing and rehabilitated
housing.
(g) Proposal or project selection date.
(1) The proposal selection date is the
date on which the PHA provides written
notice to the party that submitted the
selected proposal under either
paragraph (b)(1) or (2) of this section.
(2) For properties selected in
accordance with § 983.51(c), the project
selection date is the date of the PHA’s
board resolution approving the projectbasing of assistance at the specific
project.
(h) PHA-owned units. A PHA-owned
unit may be assisted under the PBV
program only if the HUD field office or
the independent entity reviews the
project selection process the PHA
undertook and determines that the
project was appropriately selected based
on the selection procedures specified in
the PHA Administrative Plan. Under no
circumstance may a HAP contract be
effective for any of the subsidized
housing types set forth in § 983.53(a).
With the exception of projects selected
in accordance with § 983.51(c), the
PHA’s selection procedures must be
designed in a manner that does not
effectively eliminate the submission of
proposals for non-PHA-owned units or
give preferential treatment (e.g.,
additional points) to PHA-owned units.
(i) Public review of PHA selection
decision documentation. The PHA must
make documentation available for
public inspection regarding the basis for
the PHA selection of a PBV proposal.
(j) Previous participation clearance.
HUD approval of specific projects or
owners is not required. For example,
owner proposal selection does not
require submission of form HUD–2530
(Previous Participation Certification) or
other HUD previous participation
clearance.
(k) Excluded from Federal
procurement. A PHA may not commit
project-based assistance to a project if
the owner or any principal or interested
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party is debarred, suspended subject to
a limited denial of participation, or
otherwise excluded under 2 CFR part
2424 or is listed on the U.S. General
Services Administration list of parties
excluded from Federal procurement or
non-procurement programs.
§ 983.52 Prohibition of assistance for
ineligible units.
(a) Ineligible unit. A HAP contract
must not be effective and no PBV
assistance may be provided for any of
the following:
(1) Shared housing;
(2) Units on the grounds of a penal,
reformatory, medical, mental, or similar
public or private institution;
(3) Nursing homes or facilities
providing continuous psychiatric,
medical, nursing services, board and
care, or intermediate care. However, the
PHA may execute a HAP contract and
provide PBV assistance for a dwelling
unit in an assisted living facility that
provides home health care services such
as nursing and therapy for residents of
the housing;
(4) Units that are owned or controlled
by an educational institution or its
affiliate and are designated for
occupancy by students of the
institution;
(5) Manufactured homes are ineligible
only if the manufactured home is not
permanently affixed to a permanent
foundation or the owner does not own
fee title to the real property (land) on
which the manufactured home is
located; and
(6) Transitional Housing.
(b) Prohibition against assistance for
owner-occupied unit. A HAP contract
must not be effective and no PBV
assistance may be provided for a unit
occupied by an owner of the housing. A
member of a cooperative who owns
shares in the project assisted under the
PBV program shall not be considered an
owner for purposes of participation in
the PBV program.
(c) Prohibition against selecting unit
occupied by an ineligible family. Before
a PHA places a specific unit under a
HAP contract, the PHA must determine
whether the unit is occupied and, if
occupied, whether the unit’s occupants
are eligible for assistance in accordance
with § 982.201 of this title.
Additionally, for a family to be eligible
for assistance in the specific unit, the
unit must be appropriate for the size of
the family under the PHA’s subsidy
standards and the total tenant payment
for the family must be less than the
gross rent for the unit, such that the unit
will be eligible for a monthly HAP. The
PHA must not enter into a HAP contract
for a unit occupied by a family
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38311
ineligible for participation in the PBV
program.
(d) Prohibition against assistance for
units for which commencement of
construction or rehabilitation occurred
in violation of program requirements.
Unless a PHA has exercised the
discretion at § 983.154(f), to undertake
development activity without an
Agreement or to execute an Agreement
after construction or rehabilitation that
complied with applicable requirements
of § 983.153 has commenced, or at
§ 983.157, to undertake development
activity after execution of the HAP
contract, the PHA may not execute a
HAP contract for units on which
construction or rehabilitation
commenced after the date of proposal
submission (for housing subject to
competitive selection) or the date of the
PHA’s board resolution approving the
project-basing of assistance at the
project (for housing excepted from
competitive selection) and prior to the
effective date of an Agreement. At
HUD’s sole discretion, HUD may
approve a PHA’s request for an
exception to this prohibition. In
determining whether to approve the
PHA request, HUD will consider
appropriate factors, including the nature
and extent of the construction or
rehabilitation that has commenced.
(1) Units for which rehabilitation or
new construction began after proposal
submission or the date of board
resolution but prior to the effective date
of an Agreement (if applicable), as
described in this paragraph (d), do not
subsequently qualify as existing
housing.
(2) Units that were newly constructed
or rehabilitated in violation of program
requirements do not qualify as existing
housing.
§ 983.53 Prohibition of assistance for units
in subsidized housing.
(a) Types of subsidized housing
prohibited from receiving PBV
assistance. A HAP contract must not be
effective and no PBV assistance may be
provided for any of the following:
(1) A public housing dwelling unit;
(2) A unit subsidized with any other
form of Section 8 assistance (tenantbased or project-based);
(3) A unit subsidized with any
governmental rent subsidy (a subsidy
that pays all or any part of the rent);
(4) A unit subsidized with any
governmental subsidy that covers all or
any part of the operating costs of the
housing;
(5) A unit subsidized with rental
assistance payments under Section 521
of the Housing Act of 1949, 42 U.S.C.
1490a (a Rural Housing Service
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Program). However, the PHA may attach
assistance for a unit subsidized with
Section 515 interest reduction payments
(42 U.S.C. 1485);
(6) A Section 202 project for nonelderly persons with disabilities
(assistance under Section 162 of the
Housing and Community Development
Act of 1987, 12 U.S.C. 1701q note);
(7) Section 811 project-based
supportive housing for persons with
disabilities (42 U.S.C. 8013);
(8) Section 202 supportive housing for
the elderly (12 U.S.C. 1701q);
(9) A unit subsidized with any form
of tenant-based rental assistance (as
defined at 24 CFR 982.1(b)(2)) (e.g., a
unit subsidized with tenant-based rental
assistance under the HOME program, 42
U.S.C. 12701 et seq.); or
(10) A unit with any other duplicative
Federal, State, or local housing subsidy,
as determined by HUD or by the PHA
in accordance with HUD requirements.
For this purpose, ‘‘housing subsidy’’
does not include the housing
component of a welfare payment; a
social security payment; or a Federal,
State, or local tax concession (such as
relief from local real property taxes).
(b) [RESERVED]
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§ 983.54 Cap on number of PBV units in
each project (income-mixing requirement).
(a) Project cap. Except as provided in
paragraph (b) or (c) of this section, a
PHA may not select a proposal to
provide PBV assistance or enter into an
Agreement or HAP contract if the
number of assisted units in a project is
more than the greater of 25 percent of
the number of dwelling units (assisted
and unassisted, as adjusted as provided
in paragraph (c)(3)) in the project or 25
units.
(b) Higher project cap. A PHA may
provide PBV assistance to the greater of
25 units or 40 percent of the number of
dwelling units (assisted and unassisted,
as adjusted as provided in paragraph
(c)(3) of this section) in the project if the
project is located in an area where
vouchers are difficult to use as defined
in § 983.3.
(c) Exceptions to the project cap. (1)
A project is not limited to a single
exception category but may include
excepted units from any of the
exception categories under paragraph
(2) and excluded units under paragraph
(3) below.
(2) PBV units are not counted toward
the project cap in the following cases:
(i) Units exclusively serving elderly
families, as defined in 24 CFR 5.403;
(ii) Units exclusively made available
to eligible youth described in Section
8(x)(2)(B) of the U.S. Housing Act. If the
units exclusively made available to
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eligible youth use Family Unification
Program (FUP) assistance that is
normally available for eligible families
and youth, the PHA must determine that
the limitation of the units to youth is
consistent with the local housing needs
of both eligible FUP populations
(families and youth), maintain
documentation to support this
determination, and amend its
Administrative Plan to include the
limitation of these FUP PBV units to
eligible youth; or
(iii) Units exclusively made available
to households eligible for supportive
services available to the residents of the
project assisted with PBV assistance.
The project must make supportive
services available to all PBV-assisted
families in the project, but the family
may not be required to participate in the
services as a condition of living in the
excepted unit. Such supportive services
need not be provided by the owner or
on-site but must be reasonably available
to the families receiving PBV assistance
in the project and designed to help the
families in the project achieve selfsufficiency or live in the community as
independently as possible. The
supportive services must be made
available to the family within a
reasonable time as defined by the PHA,
but not to exceed 120 calendar days
from the family’s request. The PHA
must include in its Administrative Plan
the types of services offered to families
that will enable the units to qualify
under the exception and the extent to
which such services will be provided
(e.g., length of time services will be
provided to a family, frequency of
services, and depth of services), and the
reasonable time by which such services
must be made available to the family,
not to exceed 120 calendar days. A PHA
that manages an FSS program may offer
FSS to meet the exception. The PHA
may also make the supportive services
used in connection with the FSS
program available to non-FSS PBV
families at the project.
(3) Units that are excluded under
§ 983.59 do not count toward the project
cap. Such units are removed from the
number of dwelling units for purposes
of calculating the percentages under
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.
(4)(i) The PBV HAP contract must
specify, and the owner must set aside,
the number of excepted units made
available for occupancy by families who
qualify for the exception.
(ii) For a unit to be considered
excepted it must be occupied by a
family who qualifies for the exception.
(d) HAP contracts already in effect. (1)
In general, HAP contracts in effect prior
to April 18, 2017, when the exception
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at paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section
came into effect and a prior exception
for disabled families was removed, or
prior to December 27, 2020, when the
exception at paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this
section came into effect, are governed by
those HAP contracts’ terms concerning
the number and type of excepted units
in a project. The owner must continue
to designate the same number of
contract units and assist the same
number and type of excepted units as
provided under the HAP contract during
the remaining term of the HAP contract
and any extension.
(2) The owner and the PHA may
mutually agree to change the
requirements for excepted units under
the HAP contract to comply with the
excepted unit requirements in
subsection (c) of this section. However,
any change to the HAP contract may
only be made if the change does not
jeopardize an assisted family’s
eligibility for continued assistance at the
project.
(e) PHA determination. The PHA
determines the number of units in the
project for which the PHA will provide
project-based assistance, including
whether and how many units will be
excepted, subject to the provisions of
this section. See § 983.262 for
occupancy requirements of excepted
units.
(f) HUD monitoring. HUD may
establish additional monitoring and
oversight requirements for PBV projects
in which more than 40 percent of the
dwelling units are assisted under a PBV
HAP contract through a Federal
Register Notice, subject to public
comment.
§ 983.55
Site selection standards.
(a) Applicability. The site selection
requirements in paragraph (d) of this
section apply only to site selection for
existing housing and rehabilitated PBV
housing. The site selection requirements
in paragraph (e) of this section apply
only to site selection for newly
constructed PBV housing. Other
provisions of this section apply to
selection of a site for any form of PBV
housing, including existing housing,
newly constructed housing, and
rehabilitated housing.
(b) Compliance with PBV goals, civil
rights requirements, and site and
neighborhood standards. The PHA may
not select a project or proposal for
existing, newly constructed, or
rehabilitated PBV housing on a site or
enter into an Agreement or HAP
contract for units on the site, unless the
PHA has determined that:
(1) Project-based assistance for
housing at the selected site is consistent
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with the goal of deconcentrating poverty
and expanding housing and economic
opportunities. The standard for
deconcentrating poverty and expanding
housing and economic opportunities
must be consistent with the PHA Plan
under 24 CFR part 903 and the PHA
Administrative Plan. In developing the
standards to apply in determining
whether a proposed PBV development
will be selected, a PHA must consider
the following:
(i) Whether the census tract in which
the proposed PBV development will be
located is in a HUD-designated
Enterprise Zone, Economic Community,
or Renewal Community;
(ii) Whether a PBV development will
be located in a census tract where the
concentration of assisted units will be or
has decreased as a result of public
housing demolition;
(iii) Whether the census tract in
which the proposed PBV development
will be located is undergoing significant
revitalization;
(iv) Whether State, local, or Federal
dollars have been invested in the area
that has assisted in the achievement of
the statutory requirement;
(v) Whether new market rate units are
being developed in the same census
tract where the proposed PBV
development will be located and the
likelihood that such market rate units
will positively impact the poverty rate
in the area;
(vi) If the poverty rate in the area
where the proposed PBV development
will be located is greater than 20
percent, the PHA must consider
whether in the past five years there has
been an overall decline in the poverty
rate;
(vii) Whether there are meaningful
opportunities for educational and
economic advancement in the census
tract where the proposed PBV
development will be located.
(2) The site is suitable from the
standpoint of facilitating and furthering
full compliance with the applicable
provisions of Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d–2000d(4))
and HUD’s implementing regulations at
24 CFR part 1; Title VIII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1968 (42 U.S.C. 3601–
3629) and HUD’s implementing
regulations at 24 CFR parts 100 through
199; Executive Order 11063 (27 FR
11527; 3 CFR, 1959–1963 Comp., p. 652)
and HUD’s implementing regulations at
24 CFR part 107. The site must also be
suitable from the standpoint of
facilitating and furthering full
compliance with the applicable
provisions of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. 12131–12134)
and implementing regulations (28 CFR
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part 35), and Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C.
794) and HUD’s implementing
regulations at 24 CFR part 8, including
meeting the Section 504 site selection
requirements described in 24 CFR
8.4(b)(5).
(3) The site and neighborhood is
reasonably free from disturbing noises
and reverberations and other dangers to
the health, safety, and general welfare of
the occupants. The site and
neighborhood may not be subject to
serious adverse environmental
conditions, natural or manmade, that
could affect the health or safety of the
project occupants, such as dangerous
walks or steps; contamination;
instability; flooding, poor drainage,
septic tank back-ups or sewage hazards;
mudslides; abnormal air pollution,
smoke or dust; excessive noise,
vibration or vehicular traffic; excessive
accumulations of trash; vermin or
rodent infestation; or fire hazards.
(c) PHA PBV site selection policy. (1)
The PHA Administrative Plan must
establish the PHA’s policy for selection
of PBV sites in accordance with this
section.
(2) The site selection policy must
explain how the PHA’s site selection
procedures promote the PBV goals.
(3) The PHA must select PBV sites in
accordance with the PHA’s site
selection policy in the PHA
Administrative Plan.
(d) Existing and rehabilitated housing
site and neighborhood standards. A site
for existing or rehabilitated housing
must meet the following site and
neighborhood standards. The site must:
(1) Be adequate in size, exposure, and
contour to accommodate the number
and type of units proposed, and
adequate utilities and streets must be
available to service the site. (The
existence of a private disposal system
and private sanitary water supply for
the site, approved in accordance with
law, may be considered adequate
utilities.)
(2) Promote greater choice of housing
opportunities and avoid undue
concentration of assisted persons in
areas containing a high proportion of
low-income persons.
(3) Be accessible to social,
recreational, educational, commercial,
and health facilities and services and
other municipal facilities and services
that are at least equivalent to those
typically found in neighborhoods
consisting largely of unassisted,
standard housing of similar market
rents.
(4) Be so located that travel time and
cost via public transportation or private
automobile from the neighborhood to
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38313
places of employment providing a range
of jobs for lower-income workers is not
excessive. While it is important that
housing for the elderly not be totally
isolated from employment
opportunities, this requirement need not
be adhered to rigidly for such projects.
(e) New construction site and
neighborhood standards. A site for
newly constructed housing must meet
the following site and neighborhood
standards:
(1) The site must be adequate in size,
exposure, and contour to accommodate
the number and type of units proposed,
and adequate utilities (water, sewer, gas,
and electricity) and streets must be
available to service the site.
(2) The site must not be located in an
area of minority concentration, except
as permitted under paragraph (e)(3) of
this section, and must not be located in
a racially mixed area if the project will
cause a significant increase in the
proportion of minority to non-minority
residents in the area.
(3) A project may be located in an area
of minority concentration only if:
(i) Sufficient, comparable
opportunities exist for housing for
minority families in the income range to
be served by the proposed project
outside areas of minority concentration
(see paragraphs (e)(3)(iii) through (v) of
this section for further guidance on this
criterion); or
(ii) The project is necessary to meet
overriding housing needs that cannot be
met in that housing market area (see
paragraph (e)(3)(vi) of this section for
further guidance on this criterion).
(iii) As used in paragraph (e)(3)(i) of
this section, ‘‘sufficient’’ does not
require that in every locality there be an
equal number of assisted units within
and outside of areas of minority
concentration. Rather, application of
this standard should produce a
reasonable distribution of assisted units
each year, that, over a period of several
years, will approach an appropriate
balance of housing choices within and
outside areas of minority concentration.
An appropriate balance in any
jurisdiction must be determined in light
of local conditions affecting the range of
housing choices available for lowincome minority families and in relation
to the racial mix of the locality’s
population.
(iv) Units may be considered
‘‘comparable opportunities,’’ as used in
paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this section, if they
have the same household type (elderly,
disabled, family, large family) and
tenure type (owner/renter); require
approximately the same tenant
contribution towards rent; serve the
same income group; are located in the
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 89 / Tuesday, May 7, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
same housing market; and are in
standard condition.
(v) Application of this sufficient,
comparable opportunities standard
involves assessing the overall impact of
HUD-assisted housing on the
availability of housing choices for lowincome minority families in and outside
areas of minority concentration, and
must take into account the extent to
which the following factors are present,
along with other factors relevant to
housing choice:
(A) A significant number of assisted
housing units are available outside areas
of minority concentration.
(B) There is significant integration of
assisted housing projects constructed or
rehabilitated in the past 10 years,
relative to the racial mix of the eligible
population.
(C) There are racially integrated
neighborhoods in the locality.
(D) Programs are operated by the
locality to assist minority families that
wish to find housing outside areas of
minority concentration.
(E) Minority families have benefited
from local activities (e.g., acquisition
and write-down of sites, tax relief
programs for homeowners, acquisitions
of units for use as assisted housing
units) undertaken to expand choice for
minority families outside of areas of
minority concentration.
(F) A significant proportion of
minority households has been
successful in finding units in nonminority areas under the tenant-based
assistance programs.
(G) Comparable housing opportunities
have been made available outside areas
of minority concentration through other
programs.
(vi) Application of the ‘‘overriding
housing needs’’ criterion, for example,
permits approval of sites that are an
integral part of an overall local strategy
for the preservation or restoration of the
immediate neighborhood and of sites in
a neighborhood experiencing significant
private investment that is demonstrably
improving the economic character of the
area (a ‘‘revitalizing area’’). An
‘‘overriding housing need,’’ however,
may not serve as the basis for
determining that a site is acceptable, if
the only reason the need cannot
otherwise be feasibly met is that
discrimination on the basis of race,
color, religion, sex, national origin, age,
familial status, or disability renders sites
outside areas of minority concentration
unavailable or if the use of this standard
in recent years has had the effect of
circumventing the obligation to provide
housing choice.
(4) The site must promote greater
choice of housing opportunities and
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avoid undue concentration of assisted
persons in areas containing a high
proportion of low-income persons.
(5) The neighborhood must not be one
that is seriously detrimental to family
life or in which substandard dwellings
or other undesirable conditions
predominate, unless there is actively in
progress a concerted program to remedy
the undesirable conditions.
(6) The housing must be accessible to
social, recreational, educational,
commercial, and health facilities and
services and other municipal facilities
and services that are at least equivalent
to those typically found in
neighborhoods consisting largely of
unassisted, standard housing of similar
market rents.
(7) Except for housing designed for
elderly persons, travel time and cost via
public transportation or private
automobile from the neighborhood to
places of employment providing a range
of jobs for lower-income workers, must
not be excessive.
§ 983.56
Environmental review.
(a) HUD environmental regulations.
(1) HUD environmental regulations at 24
CFR parts 50 and 58 apply to activities
under the PBV program, except as
provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this
section.
(2) For projects or proposals that were
selected in accordance with the site
selection standards at § 983.55 in effect
on or after June 6, 2024, no
environmental review is required to be
undertaken before entering into a HAP
contract for existing housing, except to
the extent a Federal environmental
review is required by law or regulation
relating to funding other than PBV
housing assistance payments.
(b) Who performs the environmental
review? Under 24 CFR part 58, the unit
of general local government within
which the project is located that
exercises land use responsibility, the
county, or the State (the ‘‘responsible
entity’’ or ‘‘RE’’), is responsible for the
Federal environmental review under the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and related
applicable Federal laws and authorities
in accordance with 24 CFR 58.5 and
58.6. If a PHA objects in writing to
having the RE perform the Federal
environmental review, or if the RE
declines to perform it, then HUD may
perform the review itself (24 CFR 58.11).
24 CFR part 50 governs HUD
performance of the review.
(c) Notice of applicability. When an
environmental review is required, if
such a review has not been conducted
prior to the proposal or project selection
date, then the PHA’s written notice of
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proposal or project selection must state
that the selection is subject to
completion of a favorable environmental
review and that the project may be
rejected based on the results of the
environmental review.
(d) Environmental review limitations.
When an environmental review is
required, a PHA may not execute an
Agreement or HAP contract with an
owner, and the PHA, the owner, and its
contractors may not acquire,
rehabilitate, convert, lease, repair,
dispose of, demolish, or construct real
property or commit or expend program
or local funds for these activities, until
one of the following occurs:
(1) The responsible entity has
determined that the activities to be
undertaken are exempt under 24 CFR
58.34(a) or categorically excluded and
not subject to compliance with
environmental laws under 24 CFR
58.35(b);
(2) The responsible entity has
completed the environmental review
procedures required by 24 CFR part 58,
and HUD has approved the PHA’s
Request for Release of Funds and
Certification (form HUD–7015.15). HUD
approves the Request for Release of
Funds and Certification by issuing a
Letter to Proceed or form HUD–7015.16,
thereby authorizing the PHA to execute
an Agreement or HAP contract, as
applicable; or
(3) HUD has performed an
environmental review under 24 CFR
part 50 and has notified the PHA in
writing of environmental clearance.
(e) Environmental review restrictions.
HUD will not issue a Letter to Proceed
or form HUD–7015.16 to the PHA or
provide environmental clearance if the
PHA, the owner, or its contractors have
undertaken any of the activities
described in paragraph (d) of this
section.
(f) Mitigating measures. The PHA
must document any mitigating measures
or other conditions as provided in 24
CFR part 50 or 58, as applicable, and
must complete or require the owner to
carry out such measures and conditions.
(g) PHA duty to supply information.
The PHA must supply all available,
relevant information necessary for the
RE (or HUD, if applicable) to perform
the required environmental review.
§ 983.57
PHA-owned units.
(a) Selection of PHA-owned units. The
selection of PHA-owned units must be
done in accordance with § 983.51(h).
(b) Independent entity functions. In
connection with PHA-owned units:
(1) The independent entity must
determine rent to owner, including rent
reasonableness and calculating any rent
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adjustments by an OCAF (where
applicable), in accordance with
§§ 983.301 through 983.305.
(2) The independent entity must
perform unit inspections in accordance
with § 983.103(g).
(3) When the owner carries out
development activity under § 983.152 or
substantial improvement under
§§ 983.207(d) or 983.212, the
independent entity must review the
evidence and work completion
certification submitted by the owner in
accordance with § 983.155(b) and
determine if the units are complete in
accordance with § 983.156.
(4) The independent entity must
determine whether to approve
substantial improvement to units under
a HAP contract in accordance with
§ 983.212.
(c) Payment to independent entity.
The PHA may compensate the
independent entity from PHA
administrative fees (including fees
credited to the administrative fee
reserve) for the services performed by
the independent entity. The PHA may
not use other program receipts to
compensate the independent entity for
such services. The PHA and the
independent entity may not charge the
family any fee or charge for the services
provided by the independent entity.
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§ 983.58 PHA determination prior to
selection.
(a) Analysis of units and budget. A
PHA must calculate the number of
authorized voucher units that it is
permitted to project-base in accordance
with § 983.6 and determine the amount
of budget authority that it has available
for project-basing in accordance with
§ 983.5(b), before it issues a request for
proposals in accordance with
§ 983.51(b)(1), makes a selection based
on a previous competition in
accordance with § 983.51(b)(2), amends
an existing HAP contract to add units in
accordance with § 983.207(b), or
noncompetitively selects a project in
accordance with § 983.51(c).
(b) Analysis of impact. Prior to
selecting a project for PBV assistance, a
PHA must perform an analysis of the
impact if project-basing 50 percent or
more of the PHA’s authorized voucher
units. The analysis should consider the
ability of the PHA to meet the needs of
the community across its tenant-based
and project-based voucher portfolio,
including the impact on, among others:
families on the waiting list and eligible
PBV families that wish to move under
§ 983.261. The analysis performed by
the PHA must be available as part of the
public record.
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§ 983.59 Units excluded from program cap
and project cap.
(a) General. For HAP contracts
entered into on or after April 18, 2017,
the PHA may commit project-based
assistance to units that meet the
requirements for exclusion in paragraph
(b) of this section. Such units do not
count toward the program cap or project
cap described in §§ 983.6 and 983.54,
respectively.
(b) Requirements for exclusion of
existing or rehabilitated units. Excluded
units must, in the five years prior to the
request for proposals (RFP) or the
proposal or project selection date in the
case of selection without RFP, fall into
one of the following categories provided
that the units are removed from all
categories prior to the effective date of
the HAP contract:
(1) The units have received one of the
following forms of HUD assistance:
(i) Public Housing Capital or
Operating Funds (Section 9 of the 1937
Act);
(ii) Project-Based Rental Assistance
(Section 8 of the 1937 Act). Projectbased rental assistance under Section 8
includes the Section 8 moderate
rehabilitation program, including the
single-room occupancy (SRO) program;
(iii) Housing For the Elderly (Section
202 of the Housing Act of 1959);
(iv) Housing for Persons with
Disabilities (Section 811 of the
Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable
Housing Act);
(v) Rental Assistance Program (RAP)
(Section 236(f)(2) of the National
Housing Act); or
(vi) Flexible Subsidy Program
(Section 201 of the Housing and
Community Development Amendments
Act of 1978).
(2) The units have been subject to a
federally required rent restriction under
one of the following programs:
(i) The Low-Income Housing Tax
Credit program (26 U.S.C. 42);
(ii) Section 515 Rural Rental Housing
Loans (42 U.S.C. 1485); or
(iii) The following HUD programs:
(A) Section 236;
(B) Section 221(d)(3) Below Market
Interest Rate;
(C) Housing For the Elderly (Section
202 of the Housing Act of 1959);
(D) Housing for Persons with
Disabilities (Section 811 of the
Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable
Housing Act);
(E) Flexible Subsidy Program (Section
201 of the Housing and Community
Development Amendments Act of
1978); or
(iv) Any other program identified by
HUD through Federal Register notice
subject to public comment.
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38315
(c) Replacement units. Newly
constructed units developed under the
PBV program may be excluded from the
program cap and project cap provided
the primary purpose of the newly
constructed units is or was to replace
units that meet the criteria of paragraph
(b)(1) or (2) of this section. The newly
constructed unit must be located on the
same site as the unit it is replacing;
however, an expansion of or
modification to the prior project’s site
boundaries as a result of the design of
the newly constructed project is
acceptable as long as a majority of the
replacement units are built back on the
site of the original project and any
replacement units that are not located
on the existing site are part of a project
that shares a common border with, are
across a public right of way from, or
touch that site. In addition, in order for
the replacement units to be excluded
from the program and project caps, one
of the following must be true:
(1) Former residents of the original
project must be provided with a
selection preference that provides the
residents with the right of first
occupancy at the PBV newly
constructed project when it is ready for
occupancy.
(2) Prior to the demolition of the
original project, the PBV newly
constructed project must have been
identified as replacement housing for
that original project as part of a
documented plan for the redevelopment
of the site.
(d) Unit size configuration and
number of units for newly constructed
and rehabilitated projects. The unit size
configuration of the PBV newly
constructed or rehabilitated project may
differ from the unit size configuration of
the original project that the PBV units
are replacing. In addition, the total
number of PBV-assisted units may differ
from the number of units in the original
project. However, only the total number
of units in the original project are
excluded from the program cap and the
project cap. Units that exceed the total
number of covered units in the original
project are subject to the program cap
and the project cap.
(e) Inapplicability of other program
and project cap exceptions. The 10
percent exception under § 983.6 and the
project cap exception under
§ 983.54(c)(2) are inapplicable to
excluded units under this section.
Subpart C—Dwelling Units
95. Amend § 983.101 by revising
paragraphs (a) and (e) to read as follows:
■
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§ 983.101
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Housing quality standards.
(a) HQS applicability. As defined in
§ 983.3, HQS refers to the minimum
quality standards developed by HUD in
accordance with 24 CFR 5.703 of this
title for housing assisted under the PBV
program, including any variations
approved by HUD for the PHA under 24
CFR 5.705(a)(3).
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Additional PHA quality and design
requirements. This section establishes
the minimum federal housing quality
standards for PBV housing. However,
the PHA may elect to establish
additional requirements for quality,
architecture, or design of PBV housing.
■ 96. Revise § 983.103 to read as
follows:
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§ 983.103
Inspecting units.
(a) Pre-selection inspection. If the
units to be assisted already exist, the
PHA must inspect all units before the
proposal or project selection date and
must determine if the project meets the
definition of existing housing. If the
project is existing housing, the PHA
may not execute the HAP contract until
all units meet the initial inspection
requirements in accordance with
paragraph (c) of this section.
(b) Initial inspection of newly
constructed and rehabilitated projects
and units that underwent substantial
improvement to be added to a HAP
contract. Following completion of work
pursuant to § 983.155, the PHA must
complete the following inspection(s), as
applicable in accordance with
§ 983.156:
(1) For rehabilitated housing that is
developed prior to the HAP contract
term or newly constructed housing, the
PHA must inspect each proposed newly
constructed and rehabilitated PBV unit
before execution of the HAP contract.
Each proposed PBV unit must fully
comply with HQS prior to HAP contract
execution.
(2) For rehabilitated housing that will
undergo development activity after HAP
contract execution per § 983.157, the
PHA must conduct unit inspections in
accordance with the requirements of
§ 983.157.
(3) Inspect each unit that underwent
substantial improvement pursuant to
§§ 983.207(d) or 983.212. Each PBV unit
that underwent substantial
improvement must fully comply with
HQS prior to the PHA adding the unit
to the HAP contract, returning the unit
temporarily removed to the HAP
contract, allowing re-occupancy of the
unit, and resuming housing assistance
payments, as applicable.
(c) Initial inspection requirements for
existing housing—(1) In general. In
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accordance with this paragraph, the
PHA may adopt in its Administrative
Plan the non-life-threatening
deficiencies option or the alternative
inspection option, or both, for initial
inspections of existing housing. If the
PHA has not adopted the initial
inspection non-life-threatening
deficiency option (NLT option) or the
alternative inspection option for the
project, the PHA must inspect and
determine that all of the proposed PBV
units fully comply with HQS before
entering the HAP contract. The PHA
must establish in its Administrative
Plan the amount of time that may elapse
between the initial inspection of
existing housing and execution of a
HAP contract for that unit.
(2) Initial inspection—NLT option. (i)
A PHA may execute the HAP contract
and begin making assistance payments
for all of the assisted units, including
units that failed the initial HQS
inspection, provided that no units have
life-threatening deficiencies and if the
owner agrees to the NLT option. If the
PHA has established and the unit is
covered by both the NLT option and the
alternative inspections option under
paragraph (c)(3) of this section for the
initial HQS inspection, see paragraph
(c)(4) of this section.
(ii) After completing the inspections
and determining there are no lifethreatening deficiencies, for any unit
with non-life-threatening deficiencies,
the PHA must provide both the owner
and the family (any eligible in-place
family (§ 983.251(d)) or any family
referred from the PBV waiting list being
offered that unit) a list of the non-lifethreatening deficiencies identified by
the initial HQS inspection and an
explanation of the maximum amount of
time the PHA will withhold HAP before
abating assistance if the owner does not
complete the repairs within 30 days.
The PHA must also inform the family
that if the family accepts the unit and
the owner fails to make the repairs
within the cure period, which may not
exceed 180 days from the effective date
of the HAP contract, the PHA will
remove the unit from the HAP contract,
and the family will be issued a voucher
to move to another unit in order to
receive voucher assistance. If the PHA’s
Administrative Plan provides that the
PHA will terminate the PBV HAP
contract if the owner fails to correct
deficiencies in any unit in the project
within the cure period, the PHA must
also provide the notice described above
to families referred to units without any
deficiencies. The family referred from
the waiting list may choose to decline
the unit and remain on the waiting list.
An eligible in-place family may decline
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the unit, and the PHA must issue the
family a tenant-based voucher to move
from the unit in that circumstance.
(iii) If the family decides to lease the
unit, the family enters into the assisted
lease with the owner. The PHA
commences making assistance payments
to the owner.
(iv) The owner must correct the
deficiencies within 30 days from the
effective date of the HAP contract. If the
owner fails to correct the deficiencies
within the 30-day cure period, the PHA
must withhold the housing assistance
payments for the unit until the owner
makes the repairs and the PHA verifies
the correction. Once the deficiencies are
corrected, the PHA must use the
withheld housing assistance payments
to make payments for the period that
payments were withheld.
(v) The PHA must state in its
Administrative Plan the maximum
amount of time it will withhold
payments before abating payments and
the number of days after which the PHA
will either terminate the PBV HAP
contract or remove the unit from the
HAP contract as a result of the owner’s
failure to correct the deficiencies, which
may not exceed 180 days from the
effective date of the HAP contract. If the
PHA terminates the PBV HAP contract
or removes the unit from the HAP
contract as a result of the owner’s failure
to correct the deficiencies, the PHA
must provide any affected family tenantbased assistance as provided in
§ 983.206(b).
(vi) The owner may not terminate the
tenancy of a family because of the
withholding or abatement of assistance
payments. During any period the
assistance is abated under the NLT
option, the family may terminate the
tenancy by notifying the owner and the
PHA, and the PHA must provide the
family tenant-based assistance. In the
case of an in-place family, the family
may also choose to terminate the
tenancy during the withholding period
following the 30-day cure period, and
the PHA must offer the family either
another assisted unit in the PBV project
that fully complies with HQS or tenantbased assistance.
(3) Initial inspection—alternative
inspection option. The PHA may adopt
the alternative inspection option for
initial inspections of existing housing,
subject to the procedures and
requirements specified in 24 CFR
982.406(b), (c), (d), and (g).
(i) After the PHA determines the
project meets the definition of existing
housing in accordance with paragraph
(a) of this section, the PHA may execute
the HAP contract for the project if the
project has been inspected in the
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previous 24 months using an alternative
inspection that meets the requirements
of 24 CFR 982.406, as opposed to reinspecting the project to make sure all
units fully comply with HQS before
executing the HAP contract, if the
owner agrees to the use of the
alternative inspection option. If the PHA
has established and the unit is covered
by both the NLT option under paragraph
(c)(2) of this section and the alternative
inspection option for the initial HQS
inspection, see paragraph (c)(4) of this
section.
(ii) The PHA notifies all families (any
eligible in-place family (§ 983.251(d)) or
any family referred from the PBV
waiting list being offered a contract
unit) that will occupy a contract unit
before the PHA conducts the HQS
inspection that the alternative
inspection option is in effect for the
project. The PHA must provide each
family with the PHA list of HQS
deficiencies that are considered lifethreatening as part of this notification.
A family on the waiting list may decline
to accept an offered unit due to unit
conditions and retain its place on the
PBV waiting list.
(iii) The PHA must conduct an HQS
inspection within 30 days of the
proposal or project selection date. If the
family reports a deficiency to the PHA
prior to the PHA’s inspection, the PHA
must inspect the unit within the time
period required under paragraph (f) of
this section or within 30 days of the
effective date of the HAP contract,
whichever time period ends first.
(iv) The PHA may not commence
housing assistance payments to the
owner until the PHA has inspected all
the units under the HAP contract and
determined they meet HQS.
(v) If the PHA inspection finds that
any contract unit contains HQS
deficiencies, the PHA may not make
housing assistance payments to the
owner until all the deficiencies have
been corrected in all contract units. If a
deficiency is life-threatening, the owner
must correct the deficiency within 24
hours of notification from the PHA. For
other deficiencies, the owner must
correct the deficiency within 30
calendar days (or any PHA-approved
extension) of notification from the PHA.
If the owner corrects the deficiencies
within the required cure period, the
PHA makes the housing assistance
payments retroactive to the effective
date of the HAP contract or the PBV
lease effective dates, whichever is later.
(vi) The PHA establishes in the
Administrative Plan the maximum
amount of time it will withhold
payments if the owner does not correct
the deficiencies within the required
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cure period before abating payments
and the date by which the PHA will
either remove the unit from the HAP
contract or terminate the HAP contract
for the owner’s failure to correct the
deficiencies, which may not exceed 180
days from the effective date of the HAP
contract. If the PHA terminates the PBV
HAP contract or removes the unit from
the HAP contract as a result of the
owner’s failure to correct the
deficiencies, the PHA must provide any
affected family tenant-based assistance
as provided in § 983.206(b) of this title.
(vii) If the owner fails to make the
repairs within the applicable time
periods, the PHA must abate the
payments for the non-compliant units,
while continuing to withhold payments
for the HQS compliant units until all the
units meet HQS or the unit removal or
contract termination occurs. If the
deficiencies are corrected, the PHA
must use the withheld housing
assistance payments to make payments
for the period that payments were
withheld.
(viii) The owner may not terminate
the tenancy of a family because of the
withholding or abatement of assistance
payments. During the abatement period,
a family may terminate the tenancy by
notifying the owner, and the PHA must
provide the family tenant-based
assistance. If the PHA terminates the
PBV HAP contract or removes the unit
from the HAP contract as a result of the
owner’s failure to correct the
deficiencies, the PHA must provide any
affected family tenant-based assistance
as provided in § 983.206(b) of this title.
(4) Initial inspection—use of both the
NLT and alternative options. The PHA
may adopt both the NLT option and the
alternative inspection option for initial
inspections of existing housing, subject
to the procedures and requirements
specified in 24 CFR 982.406(b), (c), (d),
and (g).
(i) If the owner agrees to both the NLT
option and the alternative inspection
option, then the PHA notifies all
families (any eligible in-place family
(§ 983.251(d)) or any family referred
from the PBV waiting list that will
occupy the unit before the PHA
conducts the HQS inspection) that both
the NLT option and the alternative
inspection option will be used for the
family’s unit. As part of this
notification, the PHA must provide the
family with the PHA’s list of HQS
deficiencies that are considered lifethreatening. A family on the waiting list
may decline to move into a unit due to
unit conditions and retain its place on
the PBV waiting list. Following
inspection (see paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of
this section), the PHA must provide any
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38317
family referred from the PBV waiting
list that will occupy a unit with nonlife-threatening deficiencies a list of the
non-life-threatening deficiencies
identified by the initial HQS inspection
and an explanation of the maximum
amount of time the PHA will withhold
HAP before abating assistance if the
owner does not complete the repairs
within 30 days. The PHA must also
inform the family that if the family
accepts the unit and the owner fails to
make the repairs within the cure period,
which may not exceed 180 days from
the effective date of the HAP contract,
the PHA will remove the unit from the
HAP contract, and the family will be
issued a voucher to move to another
unit in order to receive voucher
assistance. The family referred from the
waiting list may choose to decline the
unit and remain on the PBV waiting list.
(ii) The PHA executes the HAP
contract with the owner on the basis of
the alternative inspection. The PHA
must conduct an HQS inspection within
30 days after the proposal or project
selection date. If the family reports a
deficiency to the PHA during this
interim period, the PHA must inspect
the unit within the time period required
under paragraph (f) of this section or
within 30 days of the proposal or project
selection date, whichever time period
ends first.
(iii) The PHA may not make housing
assistance payments to the owner until
the PHA has inspected all the assisted
units.
(iv) If none of the units have any lifethreatening deficiencies, the PHA
commences payments and makes
retroactive payments to the effective
date of the HAP contract or the PBV
lease effective dates, whichever is later,
for all the assisted units. For any unit
that failed the PHA’s HQS inspection
but has no life-threatening deficiencies,
the owner must correct the deficiencies
within no more than 30 days from the
effective date of the HAP contract. If the
owner fails to correct the deficiencies
within the 30-day cure period, the PHA
must withhold the housing assistance
payments for that unit until the owner
makes the repairs and the PHA verifies
the correction. Once the unit is in
compliance with HQS, the PHA must
use the withheld housing assistance
payments to make payments for the
period that payments were withheld.
(v) If any units have life-threatening
deficiencies, the PHA may not
commence making housing assistance
payments to the owner for any units
until all the HQS deficiencies (lifethreatening and non-life-threatening)
have been corrected. The PHA must not
refer families from the PBV waiting list
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to occupy units with life-threatening
deficiencies. The owner must correct all
life-threatening deficiencies within no
more than 24 hours. For other
deficiencies, the owner must correct the
deficiency within no more than 30
calendar days (or any PHA-approved
extension). If the owner corrects all of
the deficiencies within the required
cure period, the PHA must make the
housing assistance payments retroactive
to the effective date of the HAP contract
or the PBV lease effective dates,
whichever is later. If the owner fails to
make the repairs within the applicable
time periods, the PHA must abate the
payments for the non-compliant units,
while continuing to withhold payments
for the HQS compliant units until all the
units meet HQS or the unit removal or
contract termination occurs. If the
deficiencies are corrected, the PHA
must use the withheld housing
assistance payments to make payments
for the period that payments were
withheld.
(vi) The owner may not terminate the
tenancy of the family because of the
withholding or abatement of assistance
payments. During the period the
assistance is abated, a family may
terminate the tenancy by notifying the
owner, and the PHA must provide the
family tenant-based assistance. If the
PHA terminates the PBV HAP contract
or removes the unit from the HAP
contract as a result of the owner’s failure
to correct the deficiencies, the PHA
must provide any affected family with
tenant-based assistance as provided in
§ 983.206(b) of this title. The PHA must
establish in its Administrative Plan:
(A) The maximum amount of time it
will withhold payments if the owner
fails to correct the deficiencies within
the required cure period before abating
payments; and
(B) The number of days after which
the PHA will terminate the HAP
contract or remove the unit from the
HAP contract for the owner’s failure to
correct the deficiencies, which may not
exceed 180 days from the effective date
of the HAP contract.
(d) Turnover inspections. Before
providing assistance to a new family in
a contract unit, the PHA must inspect
the unit. The PHA must not provide
assistance on behalf of a family for a
unit that fails to comply fully with HQS.
(e) Periodic inspections. (1) At least
biennially during the term of the HAP
contract, the PHA must inspect a
random sample, consisting of at least 20
percent of the contract units in each
building, to determine if the contract
units and the premises are maintained
in accordance with HQS. Turnover
inspections pursuant to paragraph (d) of
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this section are not counted toward
meeting this inspection requirement.
Instead of biennially, a small rural PHA,
as defined in § 902.101 of this title, must
inspect the random sample of units in
accordance with this paragraph at least
once every three years. The PHA must
establish in its Administrative Plan the
frequency of periodic inspections. This
requirement applies in the case of a
HAP contract that is undergoing
development activity after HAP contract
execution per § 983.157; however, if the
periodic inspection occurs during the
period of development activity covered
by the rider and fewer than 20 percent
of contract units in each building are
designated in the rider as available for
occupancy, the PHA is only required to
inspect the units in that building that
are designated as available for
occupancy.
(2) If more than 20 percent of the
sample of inspected contract units in a
building fail the initial inspection, then
the PHA must reinspect 100 percent of
the contract units in the building.
(3) A PHA may also use alternative
inspections to meet the requirements for
periodic inspections in this paragraph
(e), subject to the procedures and
requirements specified in 24 CFR
982.406(b), (c), (d), and (g).
(f) Other inspections. (1) Interim
inspections: When a participant family
or government official notifies the PHA
of a potential deficiency, the following
conditions apply:
(i) Life-threatening. If the reported
deficiency is life-threatening, the PHA
must, within 24 hours, both inspect the
housing unit and notify the owner if the
life-threatening deficiency is confirmed.
The owner must then make the repairs
within 24 hours of PHA notification.
(ii) Non-life-threatening. If the
reported deficiency is non-lifethreatening, the PHA must, within 15
days, both inspect the unit and notify
the owner if the deficiency is confirmed.
The owner must then make the repairs
within 30 days of the notification from
the PHA or within any PHA-approved
extension.
(iii) Extraordinary circumstances. In
the event of extraordinary
circumstances, such as if a unit is
within a presidentially declared disaster
area, HUD may approve an exception of
the 24-hour or the 15-day inspection
requirement until such time as an
inspection is feasible.
(2) Follow-up inspections: The PHA
must conduct follow-up inspections
needed to determine if the owner (or, if
applicable, the family) has corrected an
HQS violation, except where the PHA is
using a verification method as described
in paragraph (h) of this section, and
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must conduct inspections to determine
the basis for exercise of contractual and
other remedies for owner or family
violation of the HQS. (Family HQS
obligations are specified in 24 CFR
982.404(b).)
(3) Supervisory quality control
inspections: In conducting PHA
supervisory quality control HQS
inspections, the PHA should include a
representative sample of both tenantbased and project-based units.
(g) Inspecting PHA-owned units. (1) In
the case of PHA-owned units, the
inspections required under this section
must be performed by an independent
entity designated in accordance with
§ 983.57, rather than by the PHA.
(2) The independent entity must
furnish a copy of each inspection report
to the PHA.
(3) The PHA must take all necessary
actions in response to inspection reports
from the independent entity, including
exercise of contractual remedies for
violation of the HAP contract by the
PHA owner.
(h) Verification methods. When a
PHA must verify correction of a
deficiency, the PHA may use
verification methods other than another
on-site inspection. The PHA may
establish different verification methods
for initial and subsequent inspections or
for different HQS deficiencies, which
must be detailed in its Administrative
Plan. Upon either an inspection for
initial occupancy or a reinspection, the
PHA may accept photographic evidence
or other reliable evidence from the
owner to verify that a deficiency has
been corrected.
(i) Projects with government
financing. In the case of a PBV project
financed under a Federal, State, or local
housing program that is subject to an
alternative inspection, the PHA may
rely upon inspections conducted at least
triennially to demonstrate compliance
with the alternative inspection option
under paragraph (c) of this section or
the periodic inspection requirement of
paragraph (e) of this section, in
accordance with its policy established
in the PHA Administrative Plan.
■ 97. In subpart D, revise § 983.151
through § 983.156 to read as follows:
Subpart D—Requirements for
Rehabilitated and Newly Constructed
Units
Sec.
983.151 Applicability.
983.152 Nature of development activity.
983.153 Development requirements.
983.154 Development agreement.
983.155 Completion of work.
983.156 PHA acceptance of completed
units.
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§ 983.151
Applicability.
This subpart applies to development
activity, as defined in § 983.3, under the
PBV program.
§ 983.152
Nature of development activity.
(a) Purpose of development activity.
An owner may undertake development
activity, as defined at § 983.3, for the
purpose of:
(1) Placing a newly constructed or
rehabilitated project under a HAP
contract; or
(2) For a rehabilitated project that will
undergo development activity after HAP
contract execution, completing the
requirements of the rider in accordance
with § 983.157.
(b) Development requirements.
Development activity must comply with
the requirements of §§ 983.153 through
983.157.
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§ 983.153
Development requirements.
(a) Environmental review
requirements. The development activity
must comply with any applicable
environmental review requirements at
§ 983.56.
(b) Subsidy layering review. (1) The
PHA may provide PBV assistance only
in accordance with the HUD subsidy
layering regulations (24 CFR 4.13) and
other requirements. A subsidy layering
review is required when an owner
undertakes development activity and
housing assistance payment subsidy
under the PBV program is combined
with other governmental housing
assistance from Federal, State, or local
agencies, including assistance such as
tax concessions or tax credits. The
subsidy layering review is intended to
prevent excessive public assistance for
the housing by combining (layering)
housing assistance payment subsidy
under the PBV program with other
governmental housing assistance from
Federal, State, or local agencies,
including assistance such as tax
concessions or tax credits.
(2) When a subsidy layering review is
required, it must occur before a PHA
attaches assistance to a project.
Specifically, the PHA may not execute
an Agreement or HAP contract with an
owner until HUD or a housing credit
agency approved by HUD has conducted
any required subsidy layering review
and determined that the PBV assistance
is in accordance with HUD subsidy
layering requirements.
(3) A further subsidy layering review
is not required if HUD’s designee has
conducted a review in accordance with
HUD’s PBV subsidy layering review
guidelines and that review included a
review of PBV assistance.
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(4) The owner must disclose to the
PHA any change to the information
provided for purposes of the subsidy
layering review, including the amount
of assistance or number of units to be
developed, that occurs after the subsidy
layering review has been conducted and
before all contract units are placed
under the HAP contract, in accordance
with HUD requirements. A subsidy
layering review may be required to
determine if such a change would result
in excess public assistance to the
project, as required by HUD through
notification in the Federal Register.
(5) The HAP contract must contain
the owner’s certification that the project
has not received and will not receive
(before or during the term of the HAP
contract) any public assistance for
acquisition, development, or operation
of the housing other than assistance
disclosed in the subsidy layering review
in accordance with HUD requirements,
unless the owner discloses additional
assistance in accordance with HUD
requirements. A subsidy layering review
is required for newly constructed or
rehabilitated housing under a HAP
contract that receives additional
assistance, as described in § 983.11(d).
(6) Existing housing is exempt from
subsidy layering requirements.
(c) Labor standards. (1) Labor
standards as described in paragraphs
(c)(2) of this section apply to
development activity. When the PHA
exercises its discretion at §§ 983.154(f)
or 983.157(a) to allow the owner to
conduct some or all development
activity while the proposed PBV units
are not under an Agreement or HAP
contract, the applicable parties must
comply with the labor standards in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section from the
date of proposal submission (for
housing subject to competitive
selection) or from the date of the PHA’s
board resolution approving the projectbasing of assistance at the project (for
housing excepted from competitive
selection).
(2) In the case of development
involving nine or more contract units
(whether or not completed in stages):
(i) The owner and the owner’s
contractors and subcontractors must pay
Davis-Bacon wages to laborers and
mechanics employed in development of
the housing; and
(ii) The owner and the owner’s
contractors and subcontractors must
comply with the Contract Work Hours
and Safety Standards Act, Department
of Labor regulations in 29 CFR part 5,
and other applicable Federal labor
relations laws and regulations. The PHA
must monitor compliance with labor
standards.
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38319
(3) For any project to which labor
standards apply, the PHA’s written
notice to the party that submitted the
selected proposal or board resolution
approving project-basing of assistance at
the specific project, as applicable per
§ 983.51(f), must state that any
construction contracts must incorporate
a Davis-Bacon contract clause and the
current applicable prevailing wage
determination.
(d) Equal employment opportunity.
Development activity is subject to the
Federal equal employment opportunity
requirements of Executive Orders 11246
as amended (3 CFR, 1964–1965 Comp.,
p. 339), 11625 (3 CFR, 1971–1975
Comp., p. 616), 12432 (3 CFR, 1983
Comp., p. 198), and 12138 (3 CFR, 1977
Comp., p. 393).
(e) Accessibility. As applicable, the
design and construction requirements of
the Fair Housing Act and implementing
regulations at 24 CFR 100.205; the
accessibility requirements of Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29
U.S.C. 794) and implementing
regulations at 24 CFR part 8, including
8.22 and 8.23; and Title II of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (42
U.S.C. 12131–12134) and implementing
regulations at 28 CFR part 35, including
§§ 35.150 and 35.151, apply to
development activity. A description of
any required work item resulting from
these requirements must be included in
the Agreement (if applicable), as
specified in § 983.154(e)(6) or HAP
contract (if applicable), as specified in
§ 983.157(e)(1).
(f) Broadband infrastructure. (1) Any
development activity that constitutes
substantial rehabilitation as defined by
24 CFR 5.100 of a building with more
than four rental units and where the
proposal or project selection date or the
start of the development activity while
under a HAP contract is after January
19, 2017, must include installation of
broadband infrastructure, as this term is
defined in 24 CFR 5.100, except where
the owner determines and documents
the determination that:
(i) The location of the new
construction or substantial
rehabilitation makes installation of
broadband infrastructure infeasible;
(ii) The cost of installing broadband
infrastructure would result in a
fundamental alteration in the nature of
its program or activity or in an undue
financial burden; or
(iii) The structure of the housing to be
substantially rehabilitated makes
installation of broadband infrastructure
infeasible.
(2) A description of any required work
item resulting from this requirement
must be included in the Agreement (if
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applicable), as specified in
§ 983.154(e)(7) or HAP contract (if
applicable), as specified in
§ 983.157(e)(2).
(g) Eligibility to participate in Federal
programs and activities. (1) An owner or
project principal who is on the U.S.
General Services Administration list of
parties excluded from Federal
procurement and non-procurement
programs, or who is debarred,
suspended subject to a limited denial of
participation, or otherwise excluded
under 2 CFR part 2424, may not
participate in development activity or
the rehabilitation of units subject to a
HAP contract. Both the Agreement (if
applicable) and the HAP contract must
include a certification by the owner that
the owner and other project principals
(including the officers and principal
members, shareholders, investors, and
other parties having a substantial
interest in the project) are not on such
list and are not debarred, suspended
subject to a limited denial of
participation, or otherwise excluded
under 2 CFR part 2424.
(2) An owner must disclose any
possible conflict of interest that would
be a violation of the Agreement (if
applicable), the HAP contract, or HUD
regulations, in accordance with
§ 982.161 of this title.
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§ 983.154
Development agreement.
(a) Agreement to enter into HAP
contract (Agreement). Except as
specified in paragraphs (f) and (g) of this
section, the PHA and owner must enter
into an Agreement that will govern
development activity. In the Agreement,
the owner agrees to develop the contract
units to comply with HQS, and the PHA
agrees that, upon timely completion of
such development activity in
accordance with the terms of the
Agreement, the PHA will enter into an
initial HAP contract with the owner for
the contract units. The Agreement must
cover a single project, except one
Agreement may cover multiple projects
that each consist of a single-family
building.
(b) Timing of Agreement. The
effective date of the Agreement must be
on or after the date the Agreement is
executed. The Agreement must be
executed and effective prior to the
commencement of development activity
as described in paragraph (d) of this
section, except as provided in
paragraphs (f) and (g) of this section,
and must be in the form required by
HUD (see 24 CFR 982.162(b)).
(c) Agreement amendment. The PHA
and owner may agree to amend the
contents of the Agreement described in
paragraph (e) of this section by
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executing an addendum to the
Agreement, so long as such amendments
are consistent with all requirements of
this part 983. The PHA and owner may
only execute an addendum affecting a
unit prior to the PHA accepting the
completed unit.
(d) Commencement of development
activity. Development activity must not
commence after the date of proposal
submission (for housing subject to
competitive selection) or the date of the
PHA’s board resolution approving the
project-basing of assistance at the
project (for housing excepted from
competitive selection) and before the
effective date of the Agreement, except
as provided in paragraphs (f) and (g) of
this section.
(1) In the case of new construction,
development activity begins with
excavation or site preparation
(including clearing of the land).
(2) In the case of rehabilitation,
development activity begins with the
physical commencement of
rehabilitation activity on the housing.
(e) Contents of Agreement. At a
minimum, the Agreement must describe
the following features of the housing to
be developed and assisted under the
PBV program and development activity
to be performed:
(1) The site;
(2) The location of contract units on
site;
(3) The number of contract units by
area (square footage) and number of
bedrooms and bathrooms;
(4) The services, maintenance, or
equipment to be supplied by the owner
without charges in addition to the rent
to owner;
(5) The utilities available to the
contract units, including a specification
of utility services to be paid by the
owner (without charges in addition to
rent) and utility services to be paid by
the tenant;
(6) A description of any required work
item necessary to comply with the
accessibility requirements of
§ 983.153(e);
(7) A description of any required work
item if the requirement at § 983.153(f) to
install broadband infrastructure applies;
(8) Estimated initial rents to owner for
the contract units;
(9) A description of the work to be
performed under the Agreement:
(i) For rehabilitation, the work
description must include the
rehabilitation work write-up and, where
determined necessary by the PHA,
specifications and plans (see paragraph
(g) of this section for additional
requirements that apply under the
option for development activity after
HAP contract at 983.157); and
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(ii) For new construction, the work
description must include the working
drawings and specifications;
(10) The deadline for completion of
the work to be performed under the
Agreement; and
(11) Any requirements the PHA elects
to establish in addition to HQS for
design, architecture, or quality. The
PHA must specify the conditions under
which it will require additional housing
quality requirements in the
Administrative Plan.
(f) PHA discretion. With respect to
development activity, the PHA may
decide not to use an Agreement or may
choose to execute an Agreement after
construction or rehabilitation that
complied with applicable requirements
of § 983.153 has commenced.
(1) In its Administrative Plan, the
PHA must explain the circumstances (if
any) under which the PHA will enter a
PBV HAP contract for newly
constructed or rehabilitated housing
without first entering into an Agreement
and under which the PHA will enter
into an Agreement after construction or
rehabilitation that complied with
applicable requirements of § 983.153
has commenced.
(2) The following conditions apply:
(i) The owner of the project must be
able to document its compliance with
all applicable requirements of § 983.153
from the date of proposal submission
(for housing subject to competitive
selection) or from the date of the PHA’s
board resolution approving the projectbasing of assistance at the project (for
housing excepted from competitive
selection);
(ii) For housing subject to competitive
selection, the PHA must confirm prior
to the proposal selection date that the
owner has complied with all applicable
requirements of § 983.153 from the date
of proposal submission. For housing
excepted from competitive selection, the
PHA must confirm prior to executing
the Agreement (if applicable) or HAP
contract that the owner has complied
with all applicable requirements of
§ 983.153 from the date of the PHA’s
board resolution approving the projectbasing of assistance at the project; and
(iii) The PHA must comply with the
notice requirement of § 983.153(c)(3).
§ 983.155
Completion of work.
(a) General requirement. The owner
must submit evidence and certify to the
PHA, in the form and manner required
by the PHA’s Administrative Plan, that
development activity under § 983.152 or
substantial improvement under
§§ 983.207(d) or 983.212 has been
completed, and that all such work was
completed in accordance with the
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applicable requirements. The PHA must
review the evidence to determine
whether the development activity or
substantial improvement was completed
in accordance with the applicable
requirements.
(b) PHA-owned units. In the case of
PHA-owned units, the owner must
submit evidence and certify to the
independent entity (see § 983.57(b)(3)),
in the form and manner required by the
PHA’s Administrative Plan, that
development activity under § 983.152 or
substantial improvement under
§§ 983.207(d) or 983.212 has been
completed, and that all such work was
completed in accordance with the
applicable requirements. The
independent entity must review the
evidence to determine whether the
development activity or substantial
improvement was completed in
accordance with the applicable
requirements.
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§ 983.156
units.
PHA acceptance of completed
(a) Inspection of units. After the PHA
has received all required evidence of
completion and the owner’s certification
that all work was completed in
accordance with the applicable
requirements, the PHA must inspect the
completed units to determine whether
they comply with HUD’s HQS (see
§ 983.103(b)) and any additional design,
architecture, or quality requirements
specified by the PHA.
(b) Execution or amendment of the
HAP contract. If the PHA determines
that the development activity or
substantial improvement was completed
in accordance with the applicable
requirements at § 983.155 and the
completed units meet HUD’s HQS and
any additional design, architecture, or
quality requirements specified by the
PHA per paragraph (a) of this section,
then the PHA must:
(1) For units developed pursuant to
§ 983.152(a)(1) which will not undergo
development activity after HAP contract
execution per § 983.157, submit the
HAP contract for execution by the
owner and execute the HAP contract;
(2) For rehabilitated housing projects
for which development activity has
commenced prior to HAP contract
execution, but which will undergo
development activity after HAP contract
execution under § 983.157(b), submit
the HAP contract for execution by the
owner and execute the HAP contract;
(3) For development activity
conducted after HAP contract execution,
amend the HAP contract rider to
designate the completed units as
available for occupancy
(§ 983.157(f)(1)(ii)) or, if the owner has
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completed all development activity as
provided in the rider, amend the HAP
contract to terminate the rider
(§ 983.157(d)); or
(4) For units that underwent
substantial improvement in order to be
added to the HAP contract, amend the
HAP contract to add the units to the
HAP contract (§ 983.207(d)).
(c) Staged completion of contract
units. Contract units developed
pursuant to § 983.152(a)(1) which will
not undergo development activity after
HAP contract execution per § 983.157
may be placed under the HAP contract
in stages commencing on different
dates. In such a case, the PHA must
determine separately for each stage
whether the development activity was
completed in accordance with the
applicable requirements per § 983.155
and that the units meet HUD’s HQS and
any additional design, architecture, or
quality requirements specified by the
PHA per paragraph (a) of this section. If
the first stage is determined compliant,
then the PHA must submit the HAP
contract for execution by the owner and
must execute the HAP contract for PBV
rehabilitated housing and newly
constructed housing projects. As each
subsequent stage is determined
compliant, the PHA and owner must
amend the HAP contract to add the
units to the HAP contract (see
§ 983.207(g)).
(d) PHA-owned units. The
independent entity must perform the
inspection required in paragraph (a) of
this section and make the
determination(s) required in paragraphs
(b) and (c) of this section in the case of
PHA-owned units (see § 983.57(b)(3)).
■ 98. Delayed indefinitely, amend
§ 983.154 by adding paragraphs (g) and
(h) to read as follows:
§ 983.154
Development agreement.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Rehabilitated housing option:
development activity during HAP
contract term. The PHA may permit
some or all development activity to
occur during the term of the HAP
contract under the rehabilitated housing
option in § 983.157. Under this option,
the PHA may choose to execute an
Agreement for any development activity
undertaken before the HAP contract is
effect. If the PHA will execute an
Agreement for development activity
undertaken before the HAP contract is
effective, the work description required
per paragraph (e)(9)(i) of this section
must specify the work activities that
will be performed during the term of the
Agreement.
(h) PHA-owned units. For PBV
projects containing PHA-owned units
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38321
that are not owned by a separate legal
entity from the PHA (e.g., an entity
wholly controlled by the PHA or a
limited liability company or limited
partnership owned by the PHA), the
PHA must choose one of the following
options if it does not exercise its
discretion at paragraphs (f) or (g) of this
section not to use an Agreement:
(1) Prior to execution of the
Agreement, the PHA must establish a
separate legal entity to serve as the
owner. That separate legal entity must
execute the Agreement with the PHA.
The separate legal entity must have the
legal capacity to lease units and must be
one of the following:
(i) A non-profit affiliate or
instrumentality of the PHA;
(ii) A limited liability corporation;
(iii) A limited partnership;
(iv) A corporation; or
(v) Any other legally acceptable entity
recognized under State law.
(2) The PHA signs the HUDprescribed PHA-owned agreement
certification covering a PHA-owned
unit, instead of executing the Agreement
for the PHA-owned unit. By signing the
PHA-owned agreement certification, the
PHA certifies that it will fulfill all the
required program responsibilities of the
private owner under the Agreement, and
that it will also fulfill all of the program
responsibilities required of the PHA for
the PHA-owned unit.
(i) The PHA-owned agreement
certification serves as the equivalent of
the Agreement, and subjects the PHA, as
owner, to all of the requirements of the
Agreement contained in parts 982 and
983. Where the PHA has elected to use
the PHA-owned agreement certification,
all references to the Agreement
throughout parts 982 and 983 must be
interpreted to be references to the PHAowned agreement certification.
(ii) The PHA may not use the PHAowned agreement certification if the
PHA-owned PBV project is owned by a
separate legal entity from the PHA (e.g.,
an entity wholly controlled by the PHA
or a limited liability corporation or
limited partnership controlled by the
PHA).
■ 99. Delayed indefinitely, add
§ 983.157 to read as follows:
§ 983.157 Rehabilitated housing: option
for development activity after HAP contract
execution.
(a) PHA discretion. (1) The PHA may
allow an owner of a rehabilitated
housing project to conduct some or all
of the development activity during the
term of the HAP contract, as provided
in this section. Under this option, the
PHA and owner place all proposed PBV
units under the HAP contract at the time
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provided in paragraph (c) of this section
and before the owner completes
development activity. During the period
of development activity, the PHA makes
assistance payments to the owner for the
contract units that are occupied and
meet HQS.
(2) In its Administrative Plan, the
PHA must explain the circumstances (if
any) under which the PHA will enter a
PBV HAP contract for rehabilitated
housing that allows for development
activity on contract units. The
Administrative Plan may provide for
execution of HAP contracts in
accordance with this section prior to
commencement of development
activity, following commencement of
development activity, or both. When the
PHA uses the competitive selection
method at § 983.51(b)(1), the PHA’s
policy must be disclosed in the request
for proposals.
(b) Projects that have commenced
rehabilitation. If the PHA allows for
execution of a HAP contract following
commencement of development
activity, the following requirements
apply to the development activity that
occurs before HAP contract execution:
(1) For rehabilitation undertaken
under an Agreement, the development
activity must have complied with the
Agreement executed pursuant to
§ 983.154, including completion of any
work items and completion and
acceptance of any units which were to
be completed under the Agreement
under §§ 983.155 and 983.156; or
(2) For rehabilitation undertaken
without an Agreement pursuant to
§ 983.154(f):
(i) The owner of the project must be
able to document its compliance with
all applicable requirements of § 983.153
from the date of proposal submission
(for housing subject to competitive
selection) or from the date of the PHA’s
board resolution approving the projectbasing of assistance at the project (for
housing excepted from competitive
selection); and
(ii) For housing subject to competitive
selection, the PHA must confirm prior
to the proposal selection date that the
owner has complied with all applicable
requirements of § 983.153 from the date
of proposal submission. For housing
excepted from competitive selection, the
PHA must confirm prior to executing
the HAP contract that the owner has
complied with all applicable
requirements of § 983.153 from the date
of the PHA’s board resolution approving
the project-basing of assistance at the
project.
(c) Timing of HAP contract execution.
The PHA may execute the HAP contract
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for a project covered by this section after
all of the following have occurred:
(1) The applicable requirement of
§ 983.56(d) (environmental review) has
been met;
(2) If applicable, the subsidy layering
review has been completed, in
accordance with § 983.153(b)(2);
(3) If applicable, the PHA has
determined that development activity
that has commenced met the
requirements of paragraph (b) of this
section;
(4) The PHA has conducted an
inspection (see § 983.103(b)(2)) of all
units that the owner proposes to make
available for occupancy by an assisted
family at the beginning of the HAP
contract term and the PHA has
determined that at least one of those
proposed contract units, including items
and components within the primary and
secondary means of egress, common
features, and systems equipment as
described by 24 CFR 5.703(a)(2), fully
complies with HQS. The PHA may
make the determination of compliance
with HQS regardless of whether the
HQS-compliant unit is expected to
undergo rehabilitation. The owner may
make repairs to correct HQS
deficiencies identified during the PHA
inspection as part of the development
activity that occurs prior to HAP
contract execution (see paragraph (b) of
this section) to make the unit available
for occupancy at the beginning of the
HAP contract term. The PHA must
establish in its Administrative Plan the
amount of time that may elapse between
the inspection and the execution of the
HAP contract; and
(5) Occupants (if any) of proposed
PBV units that were not inspected
pursuant to paragraph (c)(4) of this
section or that do not fully comply with
HQS have moved and such units are
vacant. These units must be identified
as unavailable for occupancy in
accordance with paragraph (e)(5)(ii) of
this section. Any inspected unit that
does not fully comply with HQS must
undergo development activity, followed
by inspection under § 983.156(a), prior
to being designated for occupancy under
paragraph (f)(1)(ii) of this section.
(6) Occupants (if any) who do not
accept PBV assistance have moved and
such units are vacant.
(7) The PHA may decline to place
proposed PBV units that do not meet the
criteria in paragraphs (c)(5) or (6) of this
section on the HAP contract in order to
execute the HAP contract before the
units have been vacated. The PHA may
add the units to the HAP contract once
the units are vacant in accordance with
§ 983.207, except that the inspection
requirement of § 983.207 does not apply
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if the unit will initially be categorized
as unavailable for occupancy as
provided in paragraph (e)(5)(ii) of this
section.
(d) HAP contract requirements. The
PHA and owner must execute the HAP
contract (see § 983.204(c)) with a rider
to the HAP contract that will govern
development activity occurring during
the term of the HAP contract. The
contents of the HAP contract apply and
are supplemented by the additional
terms and conditions provided in the
rider during the period the rider is in
effect. When executing the HAP contract
and rider, the PHA and owner complete
the information in the HAP contract as
provided in § 983.203 in addition to the
information in the rider as provided in
paragraph (e) of this section. The rider
must be in the form required by HUD
(see 24 CFR 982.162(b)). In the rider, the
owner agrees to develop the contract
units to comply with HQS, and the PHA
agrees that, upon timely completion of
such development activity in
accordance with the terms of the rider,
the rider will terminate and the HAP
contract will remain in effect. The PHA
determination that development activity
has been completed and the rider may
be terminated is made when all work
has been completed in accordance with
the applicable requirements at § 983.155
and all contract units fully comply with
HQS, as provided in § 983.156(b)(3).
(e) Contents of HAP contract rider. At
a minimum, the rider must describe the
following features of the housing to be
rehabilitated and assisted under the
PBV program and development activity
to be performed:
(1) A description of any required work
item necessary to comply with the
accessibility requirements of
§ 983.153(e);
(2) A description of any required work
item if the requirement at § 983.153(f) to
install broadband infrastructure applies;
(3) A description of the work to be
performed under the rider, including
the rehabilitation work write-up and,
where determined necessary by the
PHA, specifications and plans;
(4) Any requirements the PHA elects
to establish in addition to HQS for
design, architecture, or quality. The
PHA must specify the conditions under
which it will require additional housing
quality requirements in the
Administrative Plan.
(5) The development status of each
specific contract unit. Specifically:
(i) The rider must list each unit that
is available for occupancy by an assisted
family at the time the unit is placed on
the HAP contract. Each contract unit
that fully complies with HQS in
accordance with the PHA determination
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under paragraph (c)(4) of this section
and that the owner will make available
for occupancy by an assisted family
must be initially categorized as available
for occupancy. For each unit that is
available for occupancy, the rider must
specify whether the owner will
undertake development activity in the
unit after it is occupied by an assisted
family. The owner may initiate the
development activity in the unit while
it is occupied, subject to paragraph
(g)(6) of this section, or when it becomes
vacant, which may change the status of
the unit for purposes of this paragraph.
The owner must promptly notify the
PHA of any change in the status of each
unit throughout the period of
development activity, in the form and
manner required by the PHA’s
Administrative Plan;
(ii) The rider must list each unit that
is unavailable for occupancy at the time
the unit is placed on the HAP contract.
Each contract unit that has not been
inspected in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4) of this section or that has been
inspected and did not fully comply with
HQS must be initially categorized as
unavailable for occupancy. The owner
must promptly notify the PHA of any
change in the status of each unit
throughout the period of development
activity, in the form and manner
required by the PHA’s Administrative
Plan; and
(6) The deadline for completion of the
work to be performed under the rider,
which must be no more than five years
from the date the HAP contract is
effective (the five-year maximum
includes any extensions granted by the
PHA).
(f) Contract and rider amendment. In
general, the PHA and owner may agree
to amend the contents of the rider
described in paragraph (e) of this
section by executing an addendum to
the rider, so long as such amendments
are consistent with all requirements of
this part 983. However, the following
requirements apply:
(1) In the case of additions or
substitutions of units, the provisions of
§ 983.207 apply, except:
(i) The PHA and owner must also
amend the rider to update the
information described in paragraph
(e)(5) of this section;
(ii) The units to be added must not
undergo repairs or renovation prior to
amending the PBV HAP contract to add
the unit; and
(iii) Addition of a unit is prohibited
while the rider is in effect if such
addition will increase the number of
contract units from eight or fewer units
to nine or more units.
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(2) The PHA and owner may only
execute an addendum amending the
items in paragraphs (e)(1)–(4) of this
section affecting a unit prior to the PHA
accepting the completed unit.
(g) Occupancy of units during
rehabilitation period. The following
requirements apply with respect to
contract units that are available for
occupancy at the time that the HAP
contract is executed and during the
period of development activity covered
by the rider in accordance with
paragraph (d) of this section:
(1) The PHA must select families as
provided in § 983.251 for PBV
assistance in a contract unit that is
available for occupancy. Upon PHA
acceptance of a completed unit (see
§ 983.156(b)(3)) that is vacant, the PHA
may either select a family from the
waiting list for PBV assistance in the
newly completed unit or offer to transfer
a family assisted in a different contract
unit to the newly completed unit as
described in paragraph (g)(6)(iii) of this
section.
(2) The PHA may refer a family for
occupancy of a contract unit only if the
unit fully complies with HQS as
determined by the PHA inspection.
(3) The PHA must provide a notice to
the family upon selection explaining:
(i) The expected nature and duration
of the development activity at the
project;
(ii) That if the family accepts the unit
and the owner fails to complete the
development activity in accordance
with applicable requirements, the PHA
may terminate the HAP contract, in
which case the family will be issued a
tenant-based voucher and may be able
to remain in the project with tenantbased assistance (see § 983.206(b));
(iii) If development activity is
expected to occur in the family’s unit
per paragraph (e)(5) of this section, that
the family may be required to vacate the
unit temporarily or with continued
voucher assistance;
(iv) That the family may choose to
decline the unit and remain on the
waiting list; and
(v) If applicable, in the case of an
eligible in-place family, that the family
may choose not to accept PBV
assistance in the unit.
(4) The PHA must conduct periodic
and other inspections on occupied
contract units in accordance with the
requirements of § 983.103(e) and (f) and
must vigorously enforce the owner’s
obligation to maintain contract units
occupied by an assisted family in
accordance with the requirements of
§ 983.208.
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38323
(5) The PHA makes payments to the
owner for occupied units as provided in
§ 983.351.
(6) When an owner will undertake
development activity in a unit currently
occupied by an assisted family as
provided in paragraph (e)(5) of this
section, the requirements of this
paragraph (g)(6) govern where the
family will live during the
rehabilitation. For purposes of this
paragraph, all references to the HQS
applicable to the unit include items and
components within the primary and
secondary means of egress, common
features, and systems equipment as
described by 24 CFR 5.703(a)(2).
(i) The owner must complete the
development activity without the family
vacating the unit if the PHA reasonably
expects that the owner can complete the
development activity in a manner that:
(A) Does not result in life-threatening
deficiencies;
(B) Does not result in any other
deficiencies under the HQS that are not
corrected within 30 days; and
(C) Is mutually agreeable to the owner
and the family;
(ii) If the conditions for in-place
development activity in paragraph
(g)(6)(i) of this section cannot be
achieved, the owner must temporarily
relocate the family to complete the
development activity if:
(A) The PHA reasonably expects that
the owner can complete the relocation
and development activity within a
single calendar month (beginning no
sooner than the first day of a month and
ending no later than the last day of the
same month); and
(B) The family can be relocated to a
location and in a manner mutually
agreeable to the owner and the family;
and
(iii) If the conditions for in-place
development activity in paragraph
(g)(6)(i) of this section and temporary
relocation in paragraph (g)(6)(ii) of this
section cannot be achieved, the
following protocol for lease termination
and relocation applies:
(A) If there are contract units within
the project that are designated as
available for occupancy and that are
vacant or expected to become vacant at
the time of the planned lease
termination, the PHA must refer the
family to the owner for occupancy of an
appropriate-size contract unit. If the
family accepts the offered unit, the
owner must provide the family with a
reasonable time to move to the offered
unit, must pay the family’s reasonable
moving expenses, must execute a lease
with the family for the offered unit to be
effective at the time of the family’s
move, and must terminate the lease for
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the family’s original unit at the time of
the family’s move. The owner must
terminate the family’s lease if the family
rejects the offered unit; however, the
PHA must first offer the family a
different unit or tenant-based assistance
under paragraph (g)(6)(iii)(B) of this
section if needed as a reasonable
accommodation under Section 504, the
Fair Housing Act, or the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA), for a household
member who is a person with
disabilities. The PHA must consider
other family requests for a different unit
or tenant-based assistance under
paragraph (g)(6)(iii)(B) of this section;
(B) If no other contract unit within the
project is available for the family to
lease during the period of development
activity, the PHA must issue the family
a tenant-based voucher. However, the
PHA is not required to issue the family
a voucher if the PHA has offered the
family an alternative housing option
(e.g., an assisted unit in another PBV
project), and the family chooses to
accept the alternative housing option
instead of the voucher. The PHA may
also issue the family a tenant-based
voucher to accommodate the family’s
need or request as provided in
paragraph (g)(6)(iii)(A) of this section.
The PHA must issue the voucher no
fewer than 90 calendar days prior to the
planned lease termination. If the family
is eligible and willing to request a
voucher to move in accordance with
§ 983.261, the PHA must issue the
family the voucher to move under that
section. If the family is not eligible or is
unwilling to request a voucher to move
under § 983.261, the PHA must remove
the family’s unit from the PBV HAP
contract and issue the family its voucher
to move with tenant-based assistance
and subsequently add a unit back to the
PBV HAP contract at the earlier of the
time that the PHA has an authorized
voucher unit available or the time that
the unit is ready for occupancy. The
PHA must extend the voucher term
until the family either leases a unit with
the tenant-based voucher or accepts a
contract unit, whichever occurs first;
(C) If the family moves from the
project in order for the owner to
undertake development activity in the
family’s unit, the PHA must offer the
family the option to return to the project
with PBV assistance, if the family is
eligible for PBV assistance, following
completion of development activity at
the project. The PHA, or owner in the
case of an owner-maintained waiting
list, must place the family on the PBV
waiting list with an absolute selection
preference for occupancy in the project;
and
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(D) If the family moves from the
project in order for the owner to
undertake development activity in the
family’s unit, the PHA must not refer
any family for occupancy of the unit
until after rehabilitation of the unit and
PHA acceptance of the completed unit
(see § 983.156(b)(3)).
(h) Owner breach. The owner’s failure
to complete the development activity as
provided in the rider is a breach of the
HAP contract and may result in the
termination of the HAP contract, in
accordance with the following
requirements:
(1) If the owner has not completed the
development activity by the deadline
specified in the rider, which includes
any extensions granted by the PHA, (see
paragraph (e)(6) of this section), the
PHA may grant an additional period for
compliance to allow the owner more
time to complete the development
activity. The granting of any such period
must be consistent with the PHA’s
Administrative Plan and must not
exceed 180 days. If the owner has not
completed the development activity
following the period for compliance, the
PHA must terminate the contract. In
addition to termination, the PHA may
exercise any of its other rights or
remedies under the HAP contract. At
HUD’s sole discretion, HUD may
approve a PHA’s request for an
extension of the period for compliance
beyond 180 days. In determining
whether to approve the PHA request,
HUD will consider appropriate factors,
including any extenuating
circumstances that contributed to the
delay.
(2) The owner’s failure to comply
with the development requirements of
§ 983.153 constitutes a breach of the
HAP contract (see § 983.206(c)(2)). In
the event that the owner’s failure
constituted only a de minimis error in
the owner’s compliance with the
development requirements of § 983.153,
the PHA may decide to take an action
other than termination of the HAP
contract. In all other cases, the PHA
must terminate the HAP contract, in
addition to any other rights and
remedies the PHA chooses to exercise
under the HAP contract.
(i) PHA-owned units. For PHA-owned
units, the independent entity must
perform the inspections required under
paragraphs (b)(1) and (g) of this section
and make the determinations in
paragraphs (g)(6)(i) and (g)(6)(ii)(A)
when the owner will undertake
development activity in a unit currently
occupied by an assisted family, as
applicable.
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Subpart E—Housing Assistance
Payments Contract
100. Amend § 983.202 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
■
§ 983.202
Purpose of HAP contract.
(a) Requirement. The PHA must enter
into a HAP contract with the owner.
Except as provided in this paragraph, a
HAP contract shall cover a single
project. If multiple projects exist, each
project shall be covered by a separate
HAP contract. However, a PHA and
owner may agree to place multiple
projects, each consisting of a singlefamily building, under one HAP
contract. The HAP contract must be in
such form as may be prescribed by
HUD.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 101. Amend § 983.203 by:
■ a. Revising paragraphs (f) and (h);
■ b. In paragraph (i), removing the
period and adding, in its place, adding
‘‘; and’’; and
■ b. Adding paragraph (j).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 983.203
HAP contract information.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Features provided to comply with
program accessibility requirements of
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and implementing
regulations at 24 CFR part 8, the Fair
Housing Act, and the Americans with
Disabilities Act, as applicable;
*
*
*
*
*
(h) The number of contract units
under the increased program cap (as
described in § 983.6(d)) or excepted
from the project cap (as described in
§ 983.54(c)) which will be set aside for
occupancy by families who qualify for
such a unit;
*
*
*
*
*
(j) Whether the PHA has elected not
to reduce rents below the initial rent to
owner in accordance with 24 CFR
983.302(c)(2).
■ 102. Revise § 983.204 to read as
follows:
§ 983.204 Execution of HAP Contract or
PHA-owned Certification.
(a) PHA inspection of housing. Before
execution of the HAP contract, the PHA
must determine that applicable pre-HAP
contract HQS requirements have been
met in accordance with § 983.103(b) or
(c) as applicable. The PHA may not
execute the HAP contract for any
contract unit that does not meet the preHAP contract HQS requirements, except
as provided in paragraph (c).
(b) Existing housing. For existing
housing, the HAP contract must be
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executed and effective promptly after
PHA selection of the owner proposal
and PHA determination that the
applicable pre-HAP contract HQS
requirements have been met.
(c) Newly constructed or rehabilitated
housing. For newly constructed or
rehabilitated housing developed
pursuant to § 983.152(a)(1) which will
not undergo development activity after
HAP contract execution per § 983.157,
the HAP contract must be executed and
effective promptly after the PHA
determines that the housing was
completed in accordance with the
applicable requirements, HUD’s HQS,
and any additional design, architecture,
or quality requirements specified by the
PHA, in accordance with § 983.156(b)(1)
or (c). For rehabilitated housing that
will undergo development activity after
HAP contract execution per § 983.157,
the HAP contract must be executed and
effective promptly after the
requirements of § 983.157(c) are met (all
proposed PBV units are added to the
contract at this time, including units
that do not comply with HQS or that
will undergo development activity).
(d) Effective date of the PBV HAP
contract. The effective date of the HAP
contract must be on or after the date the
HAP contract is executed. The HAP
contract must be effective before the
effective date of the first lease covering
a contract unit occupied by an assisted
family, and the PHA may not pay any
housing assistance payment to the
owner until the HAP contract is
effective.
■ 103. Delayed indefinitely, amend
§ 983.204 by adding paragraph (e) to
read as follows:
§ 983.204 Execution of HAP Contract or
PHA-owned Certification.
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*
*
*
*
*
(e) PHA-owned units. For PBV
projects containing PHA-owned units
that are not owned by a separate legal
entity from the PHA (e.g., an entity
wholly controlled by the PHA or a
limited liability company or limited
partnership owned by the PHA), the
PHA must choose one of the following
options:
(1) Prior to execution of the HAP
contract, the PHA must establish a
separate legal entity to serve as the
owner. That separate legal entity must
execute the HAP contract with the PHA.
The separate legal entity must have the
legal capacity to lease units and must be
one of the following:
(i) A non-profit affiliate or
instrumentality of the PHA;
(ii) A limited liability corporation;
(iii) A limited partnership;
(iv) A corporation; or
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(v) Any other legally acceptable entity
recognized under State law.
(2) The PHA signs the HUDprescribed PHA-owned certification
covering a PHA-owned unit instead of
executing the HAP contract for the PHAowned unit. By signing the PHA-owned
certification, the PHA certifies that it
will fulfill all the required program
responsibilities of the private owner
under the PBV HAP contract, and that
it will also fulfill all of the program
responsibilities required of the PHA for
the PHA-owned unit.
(i) The PHA-owned certification
serves as the equivalent of the HAP
contract, and subjects the PHA, as
owner, to all of the requirements of the
HAP contract contained in parts 982
and 983. Where the PHA has elected to
use the PHA-owned certification, all
references to the HAP contract
throughout parts 982 and 983 must be
interpreted to be references to the PHAowned certification.
(ii) The PHA must obtain the services
of an independent entity to perform the
required PHA functions identified in
§ 983.57(b) before signing the PHAowned certification.
(iii) The PHA may not use the PHAowned certification if the PHA-owned
PBV project is owned by a separate legal
entity from the PHA (e.g., an entity
wholly controlled by the PHA or a
limited liability corporation or limited
partnership controlled by the PHA).
■ 104. Revise § 983.205 to read as
follows:
§ 983.205
Term of HAP contract.
(a) Initial term. The PHA may enter
into a HAP contract with an owner for
an initial term of up to 20 years for each
contract unit. The length of the term of
the HAP contract for any contract unit
may not be less than one year, nor more
than 20 years.
(b) Extension of term. The PHA and
owner may agree at any time before
expiration of the HAP contract to
execute one or more extensions of the
HAP contract term. The following
conditions apply:
(1) Each extension executed must
have a term that does not exceed 20
years;
(2) At no time may the total remaining
term of the HAP contract, with
extensions, exceed 40 years;
(3) Before agreeing to an extension,
the PHA must determine that the
extension is appropriate to continue
providing affordable housing for lowincome families or to expand housing
opportunities; and
(4) Each extension must be on the
form and subject to the conditions
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38325
prescribed by HUD at the time of the
extension.
■ 105. Revise § 983.206 to read as
follows:
§ 983.206 Contract termination or
expiration and statutory notice
requirements.
(a) Nonextension by owner—notice
requirements. (1) Notices required in
accordance with this section must be
provided in the form prescribed by
HUD.
(2) Not less than one year before
termination of a PBV HAP contract, the
owner must notify the PHA and assisted
tenants of the termination.
(3) The term ‘‘termination’’ for
applicability of this notice requirement
means the expiration of the HAP
contract, termination of the HAP
contract by agreement of PHA and
owner per paragraph (e) of this section,
or an owner’s refusal to renew the HAP
contract.
(4) If an owner fails to provide the
required notice, the owner must permit
the tenants in assisted units to remain
in their units for the required notice
period with no increase in the tenant
portion of their rent, and with no
eviction as a result of an owner’s
inability to collect an increased tenant
portion of rent.
(5) An owner and PHA may agree to
extend the terminating contract for a
period of time sufficient to provide
tenants with the required notice, under
such terms as HUD may require.
(b) Termination or expiration without
extension—required provision of tenantbased assistance. Unless a termination
or expiration without extension occurs
due to a determination of insufficient
funding pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of
this section or other extraordinary
circumstances determined by HUD, the
PHA shall issue each family occupying
a contract unit a tenant-based voucher
based on the termination or expiration
of the contract no fewer than 60
calendar days prior to the planned
termination or expiration of the PBV
HAP contract. However, the PHA is not
required to issue the family a voucher
if the PHA has offered the family an
alternative housing option (e.g., an
assisted unit in another PBV project),
and the family chooses to accept the
alternative housing option instead of the
voucher. Such a family is not a new
admission to the tenant-based program
and shall not count toward the PHA’s
income-targeting requirements at 24
CFR 982.201(b)(2)(i). The voucher
issued to the family is the voucher
attached to its unit under the expiring
or terminating PBV contract.
Consequently, if the family vacates the
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contract unit following the issuance of
the tenant-based voucher and prior to
the contract termination or expiration
date, the PHA must remove the unit
from the PBV HAP contract at the time
the family vacates the unit. The PBV
HAP contract must provide that, if the
units continue to be used for rental
housing upon termination or expiration
without extension of a PBV HAP
contract, each assisted family may elect
to use its tenant-based assistance to
remain in the same project, subject to
the following:
(1) The unit must comply with HUD’s
HQS;
(2) The PHA must determine or have
determined that the rent for the unit is
reasonable;
(3) The family must pay its required
share of the rent and the amount, if any,
by which the unit rent (including the
amount allowed for tenant-based
utilities) exceeds the applicable
payment standard (the limitation at 24
CFR 982.508 regarding maximum family
share at initial occupancy shall not
apply); and
(4) The owner may not refuse to
initially lease a unit in the project to a
family that elects to use their tenantbased assistance to remain in the same
project, except where the owner will use
the unit for a purpose other than a
residential rental unit. The owner may
not later terminate the tenancy of such
a family, except for the following
grounds:
(i) The grounds in 24 CFR 982.310 of
this title, except paragraphs 24 CFR
982.310(d)(1)(iii) and (iv);
(ii) The owner’s desire to use the unit
for a purpose other than a residential
rental unit; and
(iii) The owner’s desire to renovate
the unit, subject to the following:
(A) The owner must consider whether
a reasonable alternative to terminating
the lease exists. If a reasonable
alternative exists, the owner must not
terminate the lease. The owner must
consider the following alternatives:
(1) Completing renovations without
the family vacating the unit, if the
renovations can be completed in a
manner that does not result in lifethreatening conditions, does not result
in deficiencies under HQS that are not
corrected within 30 days, and is
mutually agreeable to the owner and the
family; and
(2) Temporarily relocating the family
to complete the renovations, if the
relocation and renovations can be
completed within a single calendar
month (beginning no sooner than the
first day of a month and ending no later
than the last day of the same month)
and the family can be relocated to a
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location and in a manner mutually
agreeable to the owner and the family;
(B) If the owner terminates the lease
for renovation, the owner must make
every reasonable effort to make available
and lease the family another unit within
the project that meets the tenant-based
voucher program requirements; and
(C) If no other unit within the project
is available for the family to lease
during the renovation period or the
family chooses to move from the project
during the renovation period, the owner
must make every reasonable effort to
make available and lease the family a
unit within the project upon completion
of renovations.
(c) Termination by PHA. (1) The HAP
contract must provide that the PHA may
terminate the contract for insufficient
funding, subject to HUD requirements.
(i) Consistent with the policies in the
PHA’s Administrative Plan, the PHA
has the option of terminating a PBV
HAP contract based on ‘‘insufficient
funding’’ only if:
(A) The PHA determines in
accordance with HUD requirements that
it lacks sufficient HAP funding
(including HAP reserves) to continue to
make housing assistance payments for
all voucher units currently under a HAP
contract;
(B) The PHA has taken cost-saving
measures specified by HUD;
(C) The PHA notifies HUD of its
determination and provides the
information required by HUD; and
(D) HUD determines that the PHA
lacks sufficient funding and notifies the
PHA it may terminate HAP contracts as
a result.
(2) If the PHA determines that the
owner has breached the HAP contract,
the PHA may exercise any of its rights
or remedies under the HAP contract,
including but not limited to contract
termination. The provisions of § 983.208
apply for HAP contract breaches
involving failure to comply with HQS.
For any other contract termination due
to breach, paragraph (b) of this section
on provision of tenant-based assistance
applies.
(d) Termination by owner—reduction
below initial rent. If the amount of the
rent to owner for any contract unit, as
adjusted in accordance with § 983.302,
is reduced below the amount of the
initial rent to owner, the owner may
terminate the HAP contract, upon notice
to the PHA no fewer than 90 calendar
days prior to the planned termination,
and families must be provided tenantbased assistance and may elect to
remain in the project in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section. The owner
is not required to provide the one-year
notice of the termination of the HAP
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contract to the family and the PHA, as
described in paragraph (a) of this
section, when terminating the HAP
contract due to rent reduction below the
initial rent to owner.
(e) Termination by agreement of PHA
and owner. The PHA and owner may
agree to terminate the HAP contract
prior to the end of the term. The owner’s
notice in paragraph (a) of this section is
required prior to termination, and the
families must be provided tenant-based
assistance and may elect to remain in
the project in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section.
■ 106. Revise § 983.207 to read as
follows:
§ 983.207 HAP contract amendments (to
add or substitute contract units).
(a) Amendment to substitute contract
units. At the discretion of the PHA, the
PHA and owner may execute an
amendment to the HAP contract to
substitute a different unit with the same
number of bedrooms in the same project
for a previously covered contract unit.
Prior to such substitution, the PHA must
inspect the proposed substitute unit (the
unit must comply with HQS to be
substituted) and must determine the
reasonable rent for such unit (the rent to
owner must be reasonable for the unit
to be substituted). The proposed
substituted unit may be vacant or,
subject to the requirements of paragraph
(c) of this section, it may be occupied.
The proposed substituted unit may
undergo repairs or renovation prior to
amending the PBV HAP contract to
substitute the unit, as provided in
paragraph (d) of this section. The
proposed substituted unit must have
existed at the time described in
paragraph (e) of this section.
(b) Amendment to add contract units.
At the discretion of the PHA, and
provided that the total number of units
in a project that will receive PBV
assistance will not exceed the
limitations in § 983.6 or § 983.54, the
PHA and owner may execute an
amendment to the HAP contract to add
PBV units in the same project to the
contract, without a new proposal
selection. Prior to such addition, the
PHA must inspect the proposed added
unit (the unit must comply with HQS to
be added) and must determine the
reasonable rent for such unit (the rent to
owner must be reasonable for the unit
to be added).
(1) Added units that qualify for an
exclusion from the program cap (as
described in § 983.59) or an exception to
or exclusion from the project cap (as
described in § 983.54(c) and § 983.59,
respectively) will not count toward such
cap(s).
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(2) The anniversary and expiration
dates of the HAP contract for the
additional units must be the same as the
anniversary and expiration dates of the
HAP contract term for the PBV units
originally placed under HAP contract.
(3) The added unit may be vacant or,
subject to the requirements of paragraph
(c) of this section, it may be occupied.
(4) The unit may undergo repairs or
renovation prior to amending the PBV
HAP contract to add the unit, as
provided in paragraph (d) of this
section.
(5) The added unit must have existed
at the time described in paragraph (e) of
this section.
(c) Substituting or adding occupied
units. The PHA may place occupied
units on the HAP contract under
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section,
subject to the following:
(1) The family occupying the unit
must be eligible for assistance per
§§ 983.53(a)(3) and 983.251(a);
(2) The unit must be appropriate for
the size of the family occupying the unit
under the PHA’s subsidy standards;
(3) The family must be selected from
the waiting list in accordance with the
applicable selection policies; and
(4) The unit may be occupied by a
family who was assisted with a tenantbased voucher immediately prior to the
unit being placed on the PBV HAP
contract. The tenant-based HAP contract
for the unit must terminate before the
unit may be placed under the PBV HAP
contract. The family occupying the unit
is not a new admission to the voucher
program. The option described in this
paragraph (c)(4) is subject to the
following conditions:
(i) If the family is in the initial term
of the tenant-based lease, the family
agreed to mutually terminate the tenantbased lease with the owner and enter
into a PBV lease.
(ii) If the initial term of the tenantbased lease has passed or the end of that
term coincides with the time at which
the unit will be placed on the PBV HAP
contract, upon the owner’s decision not
to renew the tenant-based lease or to
terminate the tenant-based lease in
accordance with 24 CFR 982.308 or
982.310, respectively, the family agreed
to relinquish the tenant-based voucher
and enter into a PBV lease.
(d) Substituting or adding units that
underwent repairs or renovation. A unit
that is not under a HAP contract but is
in a project with other units that are
under a HAP contract may undergo
repairs or renovation prior to amending
the PBV HAP contract to add or
substitute the unit, except in the case of
a contract subject to a rider under the
rehabilitated housing option for
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development activity after HAP contract
execution in accordance with § 983.157.
If such repairs or renovation constitute
substantial improvement as defined in
§ 983.3, then:
(1) The substantial improvement must
not proceed prior to the first two years
of the effective date of the HAP contract,
except in extraordinary circumstances
(e.g., the units were damaged by fire,
natural disaster, etc.).
(2) The substantial improvement is
subject to the Federal equal employment
opportunity requirements of Executive
Orders 11246 as amended (3 CFR, 1964–
1965 Comp., p. 339), 11625 (3 CFR,
1971–1975 Comp., p. 616), 12432 (3
CFR, 1983 Comp., p. 198), and 12138 (3
CFR, 1977 Comp., p. 393).
(3) As applicable, the design and
construction requirements of the Fair
Housing Act and implementing
regulations at 24 CFR 100.205; the
accessibility requirements of Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29
U.S.C. 794) and implementing
regulations at 24 CFR part 8, including
8.22 and 8.23; and Title II of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (42
U.S.C. 12131–12134) and implementing
regulations at 28 CFR part 35, including
§§ 35.150 and 35.151, apply to
substantial improvement.
(4) Any substantial improvement that
constitutes substantial rehabilitation as
defined by 24 CFR 5.100 of a building
with more than four rental units and
where the proposal or project selection
date or the start of the substantial
improvement while under a HAP
contract is after January 19, 2017, must
include installation of broadband
infrastructure, as this term is defined in
24 CFR 5.100, except where the owner
determines and documents the
determination that:
(i) The location of the substantial
rehabilitation makes installation of
broadband infrastructure infeasible;
(ii) The cost of installing broadband
infrastructure would result in a
fundamental alteration in the nature of
its program or activity or in an undue
financial burden; or
(iii) The structure of the housing to be
substantially rehabilitated makes
installation of broadband infrastructure
infeasible.
(5) An owner or project principal who
is on the U.S. General Services
Administration list of parties excluded
from Federal procurement and nonprocurement programs, or who is
debarred, suspended subject to a limited
denial of participation, or otherwise
excluded under 2 CFR part 2424, may
not participate in substantial
improvement. The HAP contract must
include a certification by the owner that
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38327
the owner and other project principals
(including the officers and principal
members, shareholders, investors, and
other parties having a substantial
interest in the project) are not on such
list and are not debarred, suspended
subject to a limited denial of
participation, or otherwise excluded
under 2 CFR part 2424.
(6) An owner must disclose any
possible conflict of interest that would
be a violation of the HAP contract or
HUD regulations, in accordance with
§ 982.161 of this title.
(7) The requirements for additional
assistance after HAP contract at
§ 983.11(d) apply.
(8) Section 983.155, Completion of
work, applies.
(9) Paragraphs (a), (b)(4), and (d) of
§ 983.156, PHA acceptance of completed
units, apply.
(e) Restriction on substituting or
adding newly built units. Units may
only be added to the HAP contract or
substituted for a previously covered
contract unit if one of the following
conditions applies:
(1) The units to be added or
substituted existed at the time of HAP
contract execution;
(2) In the case of a project completed
in stages, the units to be added or
substituted existed at the time of PHA
acceptance of the last completed unit(s)
per § 983.156(c); or
(3) A unit, office space, or common
area within the interior of a building
containing contract units existed at the
time described in paragraph (e)(1) or (2)
of this section, as applicable, and is
reconfigured without impacting the
building envelope, subject to paragraph
(d) of this section, into one or more
units to be added or substituted.
(f) Administrative Plan requirement.
The PHA must describe in the
Administrative Plan the circumstances
under which it will add or substitute
contract units, and how those
circumstances support the goals of the
PBV program.
(g) Staged completion of contract
units. Even if contract units are placed
under the HAP contract in stages
commencing on different dates, there is
a single annual anniversary for all
contract units under the HAP contract.
The annual anniversary for all contract
units is the annual anniversary date for
the first contract units placed under the
HAP contract. The expiration of the
HAP contract for all the contract units
completed in stages must be concurrent
with the end of the HAP contract term
for the units originally placed under
HAP contract.
(h) Amendment to merge or bifurcate
HAP contracts. HUD may establish a
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process allowing the PHA and owner to
agree to merge two or more HAP
contracts for PBV assistance on the same
project, or to bifurcate a HAP contract,
by Federal Register notice subject to
public comment.
■ 107. Revise and republish § 983.208 to
read as follows:
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§ 983.208
Condition of contract units.
(a) Owner maintenance and operation.
(1) The owner must maintain and
operate the contract units and premises
in accordance with the HQS, including
performance of ordinary and
extraordinary maintenance.
(2) The owner must provide all the
services, maintenance, equipment, and
utilities specified in the HAP contract
with the PHA and in the lease with each
assisted family.
(3) At the discretion of the PHA, the
HAP contract may also require
continuing owner compliance during
the HAP contract term with additional
housing quality requirements specified
by the PHA (in addition to, but not in
place of, compliance with HUD’s HQS).
Such additional requirements may be
designed to assure continued
compliance with any design,
architecture, or quality requirement
specified by the PHA (§ 983.204(c)). The
PHA must specify the conditions under
which it will require additional housing
quality requirements in the
Administrative Plan.
(b) Enforcement of HQS. (1) The PHA
must vigorously enforce the owner’s
obligation to maintain contract units in
accordance with HUD’s HQS. If the
owner fails to maintain the dwelling
unit in accordance with HQS, the PHA
must take enforcement action in
accordance with this section.
(2) The unit is in noncompliance with
HQS if:
(i) The PHA or other inspector
authorized by the State or local
government determines the unit has
HQS deficiencies based upon an
inspection;
(ii) The agency or inspector notifies
the owner in writing of the unit HQS
deficiencies; and
(iii) The unit HQS deficiencies are not
remedied within the following
timeframes:
(A) For life-threatening deficiencies,
the owner must correct the deficiency
within 24 hours of notification.
(B) For other deficiencies, the owner
must correct the deficiency within 30
calendar days of notification (or any
reasonable PHA-approved extension).
(3) In the case of an HQS deficiency
that the PHA determines is caused by
the tenant, any member of the
household, or any guest or other person
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under the tenant’s control, other than
any damage resulting from ordinary use,
the PHA may waive the owner’s
responsibility to remedy the violation.
Housing assistance payments to the
owner may not be withheld or abated if
the owner responsibility has been
waived. However, the PHA may
terminate assistance to a family because
of an HQS breach beyond damage
resulting from ordinary use caused by
any member of the household or any
guest or other person under the tenant’s
control, which may result in removing
the unit from the HAP contract.
(4) In the case of an HQS deficiency
that is caused by fire, natural disaster,
or similar extraordinary circumstances,
the PHA may permit the owner to
undertake substantial improvement in
accordance with § 983.212. However, so
long as the contract unit with
deficiencies is occupied, the PHA must
withhold or abate housing assistance
payments and remove units from or
terminate the HAP contract as described
in this section.
(5) In the case of a project that is
undergoing development activity after
HAP contract execution per § 983.157,
the remedies of paragraph (d) of this
section do not apply to units designated
as unavailable for occupancy during the
period of development activity in
accordance with the rider. However, in
the case of any contract unit with
deficiencies that is occupied, the PHA
must withhold or abate housing
assistance payments and remove units
from or terminate the HAP contract as
described in this section.
(c) Family obligation. (1) The family
may be held responsible for a breach of
the HQS that is caused by any of the
following:
(i) The family fails to pay for any
utilities that the owner is not required
to pay for, but which are to be paid by
the tenant;
(ii) The family fails to provide and
maintain any appliances that the owner
is not required to provide, but which are
to be provided by the tenant; or
(iii) Any member of the household or
guest damages the dwelling unit or
premises (damages beyond ordinary
wear and tear).
(2) If the PHA has waived the owner’s
responsibility to remedy the violation in
accordance with paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, the following applies:
(i) If the HQS breach caused by the
family is life-threatening, the family
must take all steps permissible under
the lease and State and local law to
ensure the deficiency is corrected
within 24 hours of notification.
(ii) For other family-caused
deficiencies, the family must take all
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steps permissible under the lease and
State and local law to ensure the
deficiency is corrected within 30
calendar days of notification (or any
PHA-approved extension).
(3) If the family has caused a breach
of the HQS, the PHA must take prompt
and vigorous action to enforce the
family obligations. The PHA may
terminate assistance for the family in
accordance with 24 CFR 982.552.
(d) PHA remedies. These remedies
apply when HQS deficiencies are
identified as the result of an inspection
other than a pre-selection, initial, or
turnover inspection. (See § 983.103
generally, and see § 983.103(c) in
particular for PHA enforcement actions
related to the initial HQS inspection for
existing housing). The PHA must
identify in its Administrative Plan the
conditions under which it will withhold
HAP and the conditions under which it
will abate HAP or terminate the HAP
contract for units other than the unit
with HQS deficiencies.
(1) A PHA may withhold HAP for an
individual unit that has HQS
deficiencies once the PHA has notified
the owner in writing of the deficiencies.
If the unit is brought into compliance
during the applicable cure period
(within 24 hours from notification for
life-threatening deficiencies and within
30 days from notification (or other
reasonable period established by the
PHA for non-life-threatening
deficiencies), the PHA:
(i) Must resume assistance payments;
and
(ii) Must provide assistance payments
to cover the time period for which the
assistance payments were withheld.
(2)(i) The PHA must abate the HAP,
including amounts that had been
withheld, for the PBV unit with
deficiencies if the owner fails to make
the repairs within the applicable cure
period (within 24 hours from
notification for life-threatening
deficiencies and within 30 days from
notification (or other reasonable period
established by the PHA) for non-lifethreatening deficiencies).
(ii) The PHA may choose to abate
payments for all units covered by the
HAP contract due to a contract unit’s
noncompliance with the HQS, even if
some of the contract units continue to
meet HQS.
(iii) If a PHA abates the HAP for a
unit, the PHA must notify the family
and the owner that it is abating
payments and that if the unit with
deficiencies does not meet HQS within
60 days after the determination of
noncompliance (or a reasonable longer
period established by the PHA), the
PHA will either terminate the HAP
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contract or remove the unit with
deficiencies from the HAP contract, and
any family residing in a unit that does
not comply with HQS will have to move
if the family wishes to receive
continued assistance.
(3) An owner may not terminate the
tenancy of any family due to the
withholding or abatement of assistance.
During the period that assistance is
abated, the family may terminate the
tenancy by notifying the owner. The
PHA must promptly issue the family a
tenant-based voucher to move.
(4) If the owner makes the repairs and
the unit complies with HQS within 60
days (or a reasonable longer period
established by the PHA) of the notice of
abatement, the PHA must recommence
payments to the owner if the unit is still
occupied by an assisted family. The
PHA does not make any payments for
the unit to the owner for the period of
time that the payments were abated.
(5) If the owner fails to make the
repairs within 60 days (or a reasonable
longer period established by the PHA) of
the notice of abatement, the PHA must
either remove the unit from the HAP
contract or terminate the HAP contract
in its entirety. The PHA must issue the
family whose unit will be removed or
all families residing in contract units, if
the PHA is terminating the HAP
contract, a tenant-based voucher to
move at least 30 days prior to the
removal of the unit from the HAP
contract or termination of the HAP
contract. A family may elect to remain
in the project in accordance with
§ 983.206(b) if the project contains a
unit that meets the requirements of that
section, with priority given to families
who will remain in the same unit if
there are insufficient units available to
accommodate all families that wish to
remain.
(6)(i) The PHA must give any family
residing in a unit that is either removed
from the HAP contract or for which the
HAP contract is terminated under this
paragraph (d) due to a failure to correct
HQS deficiencies at least 90 days or a
longer period as the PHA determines is
reasonably necessary following the
termination of the HAP contract or
removal of the unit from the HAP
contract to lease a unit with tenantbased assistance.
(ii) If the family is unable to lease a
new unit within the period provided by
the PHA under paragraph (d)(6)(i) of
this section and the PHA owns or
operates public housing, the PHA must
offer, and, if accepted, provide the
family a selection preference for an
appropriate-size public housing unit
that first becomes available for
occupancy after the time period expires.
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(iii) PHAs may assist families
relocating under this paragraph (d) in
finding a new unit, including using up
to 2 months of the withheld and abated
assistance payments for costs directly
associated with relocating to a new unit,
including security deposits, temporary
housing costs, or other reasonable
moving costs as determined by the PHA
based on their locality. PHAs must
assist families with disabilities in
locating available accessible units in
accordance with 24 CFR 8.28(a)(3). If
the PHA uses the withheld and abated
assistance payments to assist with the
family’s relocation costs, the PHA must
provide security deposit assistance to
the family as necessary. If the family
receives security deposit assistance from
the PHA for the new unit, the PHA may
require the family to remit the security
deposit returned by the owner of the
new unit at such time that the lease is
terminated, up to the amount of the
security deposit assistance provided by
the PHA for that unit. The PHA must
include in its Administrative Plan the
policies it will implement for this
provision.
(e) Maintenance and replacement—
Owner’s standard practice. Maintenance
and replacement (including
redecoration) must be in accordance
with the standard practice for the
building concerned as established by
the owner.
(f) Applicability. This section is
applicable to HAP contracts executed on
or after or extended on or after June 6,
2024. For purposes of this paragraph, a
HAP contract is extended the earlier of
the effective date of the next extension
period or the date the PHA and owner
agree to the next extension. For all other
HAP contracts, § 983.208 as in effect on
June 5, 2024 remains applicable.
However, the PHA and owner may agree
to apply this section to a HAP contract
executed before June 6, 2024 prior to
extension.
■ 108. Amend § 983.210 by revising
paragraphs (a), (c), (d) and (e), and
removing paragraph (j), to read as
follows:
§ 983.210
Owner certification.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) The owner is maintaining the
premises and all contract units in
accordance with HUD’s HQS under the
requirements of this part 983.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Each contract unit for which the
owner is receiving housing assistance
payments is leased to an eligible family
referred by the PHA or selected from the
owner-maintained waiting list in
accordance with § 983.251, and the
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lease is in accordance with the HAP
contract and HUD requirements.
(d) To the best of the owner’s
knowledge, the members of the family
reside in each contract unit for which
the owner is receiving housing
assistance payments, and the unit is the
family’s only residence, except as
provided in §§ 983.157(g)(6)(ii) and
983.212(a)(3)(ii).
(e) The owner (including a principal
or other interested party) is not the
spouse, parent, child, grandparent,
grandchild, sister, or brother of any
member of a family residing in a
contract unit unless needed as a
reasonable accommodation under
Section 504, the Fair Housing Act, or
the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA), for a household member who is
a person with disabilities.
*
*
*
*
*
109. Revise § 983.211 to read as
follows:
■
§ 983.211 Removal of unit from HAP
contract based on a family’s increased
income.
(a) Removal of a unit based on a
family’s increased income. Units
occupied by families whose income has
increased during their tenancy resulting
in the total tenant payment equaling the
gross rent shall be removed from the
HAP contract 180 days following the
last housing assistance payment on
behalf of the family.
(b) Reinstatement or substitution of
HAP contracts. If the project is fully
assisted, a PHA may reinstate the unit
removed under paragraph (a) of this
section to the HAP contract after the
ineligible family vacates the property. If
the project is partially assisted, a PHA
may substitute a different unit for the
unit removed under paragraph (a) of
this section to the HAP contract when
the first eligible substitute becomes
available. A reinstatement or
substitution of units under the HAP
contract, in accordance with this
paragraph, must be permissible under
§ 983.207(b) or (a), respectively.
(c) Additional requirements. The
anniversary and expirations dates of the
reinstated or substituted unit must be
the same as all other units under the
HAP contract (i.e., the annual
anniversary and expiration dates for the
first contract units placed under the
HAP contract). Families must be
selected in accordance with program
requirements under § 983.251 of this
part.
110. Add § 983.212 to subpart E to
read as follows:
■
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§ 983.212 Substantial improvement to
units under a HAP contract.
(a) Substantial improvement to units
under a HAP contract. The owner may
undertake substantial improvement on a
unit currently under a HAP contract,
except a contract subject to a rider
under the rehabilitated housing option
for development activity after HAP
contract execution in accordance with
§ 983.157, if approved to do so by the
PHA. The owner may request PHA
approval no earlier than the effective
date of the HAP contract. The following
conditions apply:
(1) The PHA may approve the
substantial improvement only if one of
the following conditions apply:
(i) The unit has been damaged by fire
or natural disaster, or other
extraordinary circumstances exist which
require a unit previously compliant
with HQS to urgently undergo
substantial improvement. For this
purpose, ‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’
are unforeseen events that are not the
fault of the owner. The PHA may
provide approval for substantial
improvement resulting from the damage
or extraordinary circumstances
described in this paragraph (a)(1)(i) after
the owner submits the request.
(ii) The owner requests to engage in
substantial improvement that will
commence following the first two years
of the effective date of the HAP contract.
The PHA may provide approval for
substantial improvement occurring as
described in this paragraph (a)(1)(ii)
after the owner submits the request, but
no earlier than twenty-one months after
the effective date of the HAP contract.
(2) The owner’s request must include
a description of the substantial
improvement proposed to be
undertaken and the length of time, if
any, the owner anticipates that the unit,
including items and components within
the primary and secondary means of
egress, common features, and systems
equipment as described by 24 CFR
5.703(a)(2), will not meet HQS. The
PHA must not approve as substantial
improvement, under this section, an
owner’s request to demolish a building
containing contract units and newly
construct replacement units (see
requirements for contract termination at
§ 983.206 and requirements for newly
constructed housing in this part 983).
(3) If the unit is occupied and will not
meet HQS during any part of the period
of the substantial improvement, the
owner’s request must include a
description of the owner’s plan to house
the family during the period the unit
will not meet HQS. The PHA must not
approve the substantial improvement
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unless the owner’s plan complies with
one of the following requirements:
(i) The owner must complete the
substantial improvement without the
family vacating the unit if the PHA
reasonably expects that the owner can
complete the substantial improvement
in a manner that:
(A) Does not result in life-threatening
deficiencies;
(B) Does not result in any other
deficiencies under the HQS that are not
corrected within 30 days; and
(C) Is mutually agreeable to the owner
and the family;
(ii) If the conditions for in-place
substantial improvement in paragraph
(a)(3)(i) of this section cannot be
achieved, the owner must temporarily
relocate the family to complete the
substantial improvement if:
(A) The PHA reasonably expects that
the owner can complete the relocation
and substantial improvement within a
single calendar month (beginning no
sooner than the first day of a month and
ending no later than the last day of the
same month); and
(B) The family can be relocated to a
location and in a manner mutually
agreeable to the owner and the family;
and
(iii) If the conditions for in-place
substantial improvement in paragraph
(a)(3)(i) of this section and temporary
relocation in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of this
section cannot be achieved, the
following protocol for lease termination
and relocation applies:
(A) If there are contract units within
the project will meet HQS during the
period of substantial improvement and
that are vacant or expected to become
vacant at the time of the planned lease
termination, the PHA must refer the
family to the owner for occupancy of an
appropriate-size contract unit. If the
family accepts the offered unit, the
owner must provide the family with a
reasonable time to move to the offered
unit, must pay the family’s reasonable
moving expenses, must execute a lease
with the family for the offered unit to be
effective at the time of the family’s
move, and must terminate the lease for
the family’s original unit at the time of
the family’s move. The owner must
terminate the family’s lease if the family
rejects the offered unit; however, the
PHA must first offer the family a
different unit or tenant-based assistance
under paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(B) of this
section if needed as a reasonable
accommodation under Section 504, the
Fair Housing Act, or the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA), for a household
member who is a person with
disabilities. The PHA must consider
other family requests for a different unit
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or tenant-based assistance under
paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(B) of this section;
(B) If no other contract unit within the
project is available for the family to
lease during the period of substantial
improvement, the PHA must issue the
family a tenant-based voucher.
However, the PHA is not required to
issue the family a voucher if the PHA
has offered the family an alternative
housing option (e.g., an assisted unit in
another PBV project), and the family
chooses to accept the alternative
housing option instead of the voucher.
The PHA may also issue the family a
tenant-based voucher to accommodate
the family’s need or request as provided
in paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(A) of this section.
The PHA must issue the voucher no
fewer than 90 calendar days prior to the
planned lease termination in the case of
substantial improvement pursuant to
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section. The
PHA must issue the voucher as soon as
practicable in the case of substantial
improvement pursuant to paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of this section. If the family is
eligible and willing to request a voucher
to move in accordance with § 983.261,
the PHA must issue the family the
voucher to move under that section. If
the family is not eligible or is unwilling
to request a voucher to move under
§ 983.261, the PHA must remove the
family’s unit from the PBV HAP
contract and issue the family its voucher
to move with tenant-based assistance
and subsequently add a unit back to the
PBV HAP contract at such time that the
unit is ready for occupancy. The PHA
must extend the voucher term until the
family either leases a unit with the
tenant-based voucher or accepts a
contract unit, whichever occurs first;
and
(C) If the family moves from the
project during the period of substantial
improvement, the PHA must offer the
family the option to return to the project
with PBV assistance, if the family is
eligible for PBV assistance, following
completion of substantial improvement
at the project. The PHA, or owner in the
case of an absolute selection preference
for occupancy in the project.
(4) The PHA must abate housing
assistance payments for a unit beginning
at the time the unit has any deficiency
under HUD’s HQS during the period of
substantial improvement. The timing for
the PHA to begin withholding and
abatement specified in § 983.208(d) does
not apply to deficiencies occurring
during the period of substantial
improvement. When all deficiencies in
the unit are corrected, the PHA must
recommence payments to the owner if
the unit is still occupied by an assisted
family, subject to paragraphs (a)(5) and
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(b)(1) of this section. Additionally, the
PHA must not pay vacancy payments
during the period of substantial
improvement.
(5) The terms of the PHA approval
must be recorded in an addendum to the
HAP contract. The PHA may choose to
temporarily remove vacant units from
the PBV HAP contract during the time
the units will not meet HQS during the
substantial improvement. If the PHA
temporarily removes a unit, the PHA
reinstates the unit in accordance with
§ 983.207(b). Owner failure to complete
the substantial improvement as
approved shall be a breach of the HAP
contract and the PHA may exercise any
of its rights or remedies under the HAP
contract, including but not limited to
contract termination pursuant to
§ 983.206(c)(2).
(b) Applicable requirements. (1)
Substantial improvement undertaken on
units that are currently under a HAP
contract is subject to the Federal equal
employment opportunity requirements
of Executive Orders 11246 as amended
(3 CFR, 1964–1965 Comp., p. 339),
11625 (3 CFR, 1971–1975 Comp., p.
616), 12432 (3 CFR, 1983 Comp., p.
198), and 12138 (3 CFR, 1977 Comp., p.
393).
(2) As applicable, the design and
construction requirements of the Fair
Housing Act and implementing
regulations at 24 CFR 100.205; the
accessibility requirements of Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29
U.S.C. 794) and implementing
regulations at 24 CFR part 8, including
8.22 and 8.23; and Title II of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (42
U.S.C. 12131–12134) and implementing
regulations at 28 CFR part 35, including
§§ 35.150 and 35.151, apply to
substantial improvement undertaken on
units that are currently under a HAP
contract.
(3) Any substantial improvement
undertaken on units that are currently
under a HAP contract that constitutes
substantial rehabilitation as defined by
24 CFR 5.100 of a building with more
than four rental units and where the
proposal or project selection date or the
start of the substantial improvement
while under a HAP contract is after
January 19, 2017, must include
installation of broadband infrastructure,
as this term is defined in 24 CFR 5.100,
except where the owner determines and
documents the determination that:
(i) The location of the substantial
rehabilitation makes installation of
broadband infrastructure infeasible;
(ii) The cost of installing broadband
infrastructure would result in a
fundamental alteration in the nature of
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its program or activity or in an undue
financial burden; or
(iii) The structure of the housing to be
substantially rehabilitated makes
installation of broadband infrastructure
infeasible.
(4) An owner or project principal who
is on the U.S. General Services
Administration list of parties excluded
from Federal procurement and nonprocurement programs, or who is
debarred, suspended subject to a limited
denial of participation, or otherwise
excluded under 2 CFR part 2424, may
not participate in substantial
improvement undertaken on units
subject to a HAP contract. The HAP
contract must include a certification by
the owner that the owner and other
project principals (including the officers
and principal members, shareholders,
investors, and other parties having a
substantial interest in the project) are
not on such list and are not debarred,
suspended subject to a limited denial of
participation, or otherwise excluded
under 2 CFR part 2424.
(5) An owner must disclose any
possible conflict of interest that would
be a violation of the HAP contract or
HUD regulations, in accordance with
§ 982.161 of this title.
(6) The requirements for additional
assistance after HAP contract at
§ 983.11(d) apply to substantial
improvement undertaken on units that
are currently under a HAP contract.
(7) Section 983.155, Completion of
work, applies to substantial
improvement undertaken on units that
are currently under a HAP contract.
(8) Section 983.156(a), Inspection of
units, and (d), PHA-owned units, apply
to substantial improvement undertaken
on units that are currently under a HAP
contract.
(c) PHA-owned units. For PHA-owned
units, the independent entity must
determine whether to approve the PHA
proposal to undertake substantial
improvement as provided in paragraph
(a) of this section, including making the
determinations in paragraphs (a)(3)(i)
and (a)(3)(ii)(A) when the owner will
undertake substantial improvement in a
unit currently occupied by an assisted
family, as applicable (see § 983.57(b)(4)).
The independent entity must approve
the proposal if:
(1) The proposed substantial
improvement meets one of the
conditions of paragraph (a)(1) of this
section;
(2) The description of the substantial
improvement does not include plans to
demolish a building containing contract
units and newly construct replacement
units; and
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38331
(3) The plan to house each family
during the period that family’s unit will
not meet HQS complies with the
requirements of paragraph (a)(3).
Subpart F—Occupancy
111. Revise and republish § 983.251 to
read as follows:
■
§ 983.251
How participants are selected.
(a) Who may receive PBV assistance?
(1) The PHA may select families who
are participants in the PHA’s tenantbased voucher program and families
who have applied for admission to the
voucher program.
(2) Except for voucher participants
(determined eligible at original
admission to the voucher program), the
PHA may only select families
determined eligible for admission at
commencement of PBV assistance, using
information received and verified by the
PHA within a period of 60 days before
commencement of PBV assistance. For
all families, the PHA must determine
the total tenant payment for the family
is less than the gross rent, such that the
unit will be eligible for a monthly HAP.
(3) The protections for victims of
domestic violence, dating violence,
sexual assault, or stalking in 24 CFR
part 5, subpart L, apply to admission to
the project-based program.
(4) A PHA may not approve a tenancy
if the owner (including a principal or
other interested party) of a unit is the
parent, child, grandparent, grandchild,
sister, or brother of any member of the
family, unless the PHA determines that
approving the unit would provide
reasonable accommodation under
Section 504, the Fair Housing Act, or
the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA), for a household member who is
a person with disabilities.
(b) Protection of in-place families. (1)
To minimize displacement of in-place
families, if an in-place family is
determined to be eligible prior to
placement of the family’s unit on the
HAP contract, the in-place family must
be placed on the PBV waiting list (if the
family is not already on the list) and
given an absolute selection preference.
If the PHA’s waiting list for PBV
assistance is not a project-specific
waiting list, the PHA must refer the
family to the applicable project owner
for an appropriate-size PBV unit in the
specific project.
(2) If the in-place family is a tenantbased voucher participant, program
eligibility is not re-determined.
However, the PHA must determine that
the total tenant payment for the family
is less than the gross rent for the unit,
such that the unit will be eligible for a
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monthly HAP, and the PHA may deny
or terminate assistance for the grounds
specified in 24 CFR 982.552 and
982.553.
(3)(i) During the initial term of the
lease under the tenant-based tenancy, an
in-place tenant-based voucher family
may agree, but is not required, to
mutually terminate the lease with the
owner and enter into a lease and
tenancy under the PBV program. If the
family chooses to continue the tenantbased assisted tenancy, the unit may not
be added to the PBV HAP contract. The
owner may not terminate the lease for
other good cause during the initial term
unless the owner is terminating the
tenancy because of something the family
did or failed to do in accordance with
24 CFR 982.310(d)(2). The owner is
expressly prohibited from terminating
the tenancy during the initial term of
the lease based on the family’s failure to
accept the offer of a new lease or
revision, or for a business or economic
reason.
(ii) If, after the initial term, the owner
chooses not to renew the lease or
terminates the lease for other good cause
(as defined in 24 CFR 982.310(d)) to end
the tenant-based assisted tenancy, the
family would be required to move with
continued tenant-based assistance or
relinquish the tenant-based voucher and
enter into a new lease to receive PBV
assistance in order to remain in the unit.
(4) Admission of in-place families is
not subject to income-targeting under 24
CFR 982.201(b)(2)(i).
(c) Selection from waiting list. (1)
Applicants who will occupy PBV units
must be selected from the waiting list
for the PBV program.
(2) The PHA must identify in the
Administrative Plan which of the
following options it will use to structure
the waiting list for the PBV program:
(i) The PHA may use a separate,
central, waiting list comprised of more
than one, or all, PBV projects;
(ii) The PHA may use the same
waiting list for both tenant-based
assistance and some or all PBV projects;
or
(iii) The PHA may use separate
waiting lists for PBV units in individual
projects or buildings (or for sets of such
units). This option may be used in
combination with the option in
paragraph (c)(2)(i) or (ii) of this section.
The PHA must specify the name of the
PBV project in the Administrative Plan.
The PHA may permit the owner to
maintain such waiting lists (see
paragraph (c)(7) of this section for more
information).
(3) For any of the options under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the PHA
may establish in its Administrative Plan
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any preferences for occupancy of
particular units including the name of
the project(s) and the specific
preferences that are to be used by
project. Criteria for occupancy of units
(e.g., elderly families) may also be
established; however, selection of
families must be done through an
admissions preference.
(4) The PHA may merge the waiting
list for PBV assistance with the PHA
waiting list for admission to another
assisted housing program.
(5) Where applicable, the PHA may
place families referred by the PBV
owner on its PBV waiting list.
(6) If the PHA chooses to use a
separate waiting list for admission to
PBV units under paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and
(iii) of this section, the PHA must offer
to place applicants who are listed on the
waiting list for tenant-based assistance
on the waiting list for PBV assistance
(including owner-maintained PBV
waiting lists).
(7) PHAs using separate waiting lists
for individual projects or buildings, as
described in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this
section, may establish in their
Administrative Plan that owners will
maintain such waiting lists. PHAs may
choose to use owner-maintained PBV
waiting lists for specific owners or
projects. PHAs may permit an owner to
maintain a single waiting list across
multiple projects owned by the owner.
Under an owner-maintained waiting
list, the owner is responsible for
carrying out responsibilities including,
but not limited to, processing changes in
applicant information, removing an
applicant’s name from the waiting list,
opening and closing the waiting list.
PHAs must identify in their
Administrative Plans the name of the
project(s), the oversight procedures the
PHA will use to ensure ownermaintained waiting lists are
administered properly and in
accordance with program requirements,
and the approval process of an owner’s
waiting list policy (including any
preferences). Where a PHA allows for
owner-maintained waiting lists, all the
following apply:
(i) The owner must develop and
submit a written owner waiting list
policy to the PHA for approval. The
owner waiting list policy must include
policies and procedures concerning
waiting list management and selection
of applicants from the project’s waiting
list, including any admission
preferences, procedures for removing
applicant names from the waiting list,
and procedures for closing and
reopening the waiting list. The owner
must receive approval from the PHA of
its owner waiting list policy in
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accordance with the process established
in the PHA’s Administrative Plan. The
owner’s waiting list policy must be
incorporated in the PHA’s
Administrative Plan.
(ii) The owner must receive approval
from the PHA for any preferences that
will be applicable to the project. The
PHA will approve such preferences as
part of its approval of the owner’s
waiting list policy. Each project may
have a different set of preferences.
Preferences must be consistent with the
PHA Plan and listed in the owner’s
waiting list policy.
(iii) The owner is responsible for
opening and closing the waiting list,
including providing public notice when
the owner opens the waiting list in
accordance with 24 CFR 982.206. If the
owner-maintained waiting list is open
and additional applicants are needed to
fill vacant units, the owner must give
public notice in accordance with the
requirements of 24 CFR 982.206 and the
owner waiting list policy.
(iv) The applicant may apply directly
at the project, or the applicant may
request that the PHA refer the applicant
to the owner for placement on the
project’s waiting list. The PHA must
disclose to the applicant all the PBV
projects available to the applicant,
including the projects’ contact
information and other basic information
about the project.
(v) Applicants already on the PHA’s
waiting list must be permitted to place
their names on the project’s waiting
lists.
(vi) At the discretion of the PHA, the
owner may make preliminary eligibility
determinations for purposes of placing
the family on the waiting list, and
preference eligibility determinations.
The PHA may choose to make this
determination rather than delegating it
to the owner.
(vii) If the PHA delegated the
preliminary eligibility and preference
determinations to the owner, the owner
is responsible for notifying the family of
the owner’s determination not to place
the applicant on the waiting list and a
determination that the family is not
eligible for a preference. In such a case,
the owner is responsible to provide the
notice at 24 CFR 982.554(a) of this title.
The PHA is then responsible for
conducting the informal review.
(viii) Once an owner selects the
family from the waiting list, the owner
refers the family to the PHA who then
determines the family’s final program
eligibility. The owner may not offer a
unit to the family until the PHA
determines that the family is eligible for
the program.
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(ix) All HCV waiting list
administration requirements that apply
to the PBV program (24 CFR part 982,
subpart E, other than 24 CFR 982.201(e),
982.202(b)(2), and 982.204(d)) apply to
owner-maintained waiting lists.
(x) The PHA is responsible for
oversight of owner-maintained waiting
lists to ensure that they are
administered properly and in
accordance with program requirements,
including but not limited to
nondiscrimination and equal
opportunity requirements under the
authorities cited at 24 CFR 5.105(a). The
owner is responsible for maintaining
complete and accurate records as
described in 24 CFR 982.158. The owner
must give the PHA, HUD, and the
Comptroller General full and free access
to its offices and records concerning
waiting list management, as described
in 24 CFR 982.158(c). HUD may
undertake investigation to determine
whether the PHA or owner is in
violation of authorities and, if unable to
reach a voluntary resolution to correct
the violation, take an enforcement
action against either the owner or the
PHA, or both.
(8) Not less than 75 percent of the
families admitted to a PHA’s tenantbased and project-based voucher
programs during the PHA fiscal year
from the PHA waiting list shall be
extremely low-income families. The
income-targeting requirements at 24
CFR 982.201(b)(2) apply to the total of
admissions to the PHA’s project-based
voucher program and tenant-based
voucher program during the PHA fiscal
year from the PHA waiting list
(including owner-maintained PBV
waiting lists) for such programs.
(9) Families who require particular
accessibility features for persons with
disabilities must be selected first to
occupy PBV units with such
accessibility features (see 24 CFR 8.26,
8.27, and 100.202). Also see § 983.260.
The PHA shall have some mechanism
for referring to accessible PBV units a
family that includes a person with a
mobility or sensory impairment.
(d) Preference for services offered. In
selecting families, PHAs (or owners in
the case of owner-maintained waiting
lists) may give preference to families
who qualify for voluntary services,
including disability-specific services,
offered at a particular project, consistent
with the PHA Plan and Administrative
Plan.
(1) The prohibition on granting
preferences to persons with a specific
disability at 24 CFR 982.207(b)(3)
continues to apply.
(2) Families must not be required to
accept the particular services offered at
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the project nor shall families be required
to provide their own equivalent services
if they decline the project’s services.
(3) In advertising the project, the
owner may advertise the project as
offering services for a particular type of
disability; however, the preference must
be provided to all applicants who
qualify for the voluntary services offered
in conjunction with the assisted units.
(e) Offer of PBV assistance or owner’s
rejection. (1) If a family refuses the
PHA’s offer of PBV assistance or the
owner rejects a family for admission to
the owner’s PBV units, the family’s
position on the PHA waiting list for
tenant-based assistance is not affected
regardless of the type of PBV waiting list
used by the PHA.
(2) The impact (of a family’s rejection
of the offer or the owner’s rejection of
the family) on a family’s position on the
PBV waiting list will be determined as
follows:
(i) If a central PBV waiting list is used,
the PHA’s Administrative Plan must
address the number of offers a family
may reject without good cause before
the family is removed from the PBV
waiting list and whether the owner’s
rejection will impact the family’s place
on the PBV waiting list.
(ii) If a project-specific PBV waiting
list is used, the family’s name is
removed from the project’s waiting list
connected to the family’s rejection of
the offer without good cause or the
owner’s rejection of the family. The
family’s position on any other projectspecific PBV waiting list is not affected.
(iii) The PHA must define ‘‘good
cause’’ for purposes of paragraphs
(e)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section in its
Administrative Plan. The PHA’s
definition of good cause must include,
at minimum, that:
(A) The family determines the unit is
not accessible to a household member
with a disability or otherwise does not
meet the member’s disability-related
needs;
(B) The unit has HQS deficiencies;
(C) The family is unable to accept the
offer due to circumstances beyond the
family’s control (such as hospitalization,
temporary economic hardship, or
natural disaster); and
(D) The family determines the unit
presents a health or safety risk to a
household member who is or has been
a victim of domestic violence, dating
violence, sexual assault, or stalking, as
provided in part 5, subpart L of this
title.
(3) None of the following actions may
be taken against an applicant solely
because the applicant has applied for,
received, or refused an offer of PBV
assistance:
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(i) Refuse to list the applicant on the
PHA waiting list for tenant-based
assistance or any other available PBV
waiting list. However, the PHA (or
owner in the case of owner-maintained
waiting lists) is not required to open a
closed waiting list to place the family on
that waiting list.
(ii) Deny any admission preference for
which the applicant is currently
qualified.
(iii) Change the applicant’s place on
the waiting list based on preference,
date, and time of application, or other
factors affecting selection from the
waiting list.
(iv) Remove the applicant from the
waiting list for tenant-based voucher
assistance.
■ 112. Revise and republish § 983.252 to
read as follows:
§ 983.252
family.
PHA information for accepted
(a) Oral briefing. When a family
accepts an offer of PBV assistance, the
PHA must give the family an oral
briefing.
(1) The briefing must include
information on the following subjects:
(i) A description of how the program
works;
(ii) Family and owner responsibilities;
and
(iii) Family right to move.
(2) The PHA must take appropriate
steps to ensure effective communication
in accordance with 24 CFR 8.6 and 28
CFR part 35, subpart E, and must
provide information on the reasonable
accommodation process.
(b) Information packet. The PHA must
give the family a packet that includes
information on the following subjects:
(1) How the PHA determines the total
tenant payment for a family;
(2) Family obligations under the
program; and
(3) Information on Federal, State, and
local equal opportunity laws, the
contact information for the Section 504
coordinator, a copy of the housing
discrimination complaint form, and
information on how to request a
reasonable accommodation or
modification under Section 504, the Fair
Housing Act, and the Americans with
Disabilities Act;
(4) PHA subsidy standards, including
when the PHA will consider granting
exceptions to the standards as allowed
by 24 CFR 982.402(b)(8), and when
exceptions are required as a reasonable
accommodation for a person with
disabilities under Section 504, the Fair
Housing Act, or the Americans with
Disabilities Act; and
(5) Family right to move.
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(c) Statement of family responsibility.
The PHA and family must sign the
statement of family responsibility.
(d) Providing information for persons
with limited English proficiency. The
PHA must take reasonable steps to
ensure meaningful access by persons
with limited English proficiency in
accordance with obligations and
procedures contained in Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, and HUD’s
implementing regulation at 24 CFR part
1., Executive Order 13166, and HUD’s
Final Guidance to Federal Financial
Assistance Recipients Regarding Title VI
Prohibition Against National Origin
Discrimination Affecting Limited
English Proficient Persons (72 FR 2732)
or successor authority.
■ 113. Amend § 983.253 by revising
paragraphs (a)(1) and (3) to read as
follows:
§ 983.253
Leasing of contract units.
(a) * * *
(1) During the term of the HAP
contract, the owner must lease contract
units only to eligible families selected
from the waiting list for the PBV
program in accordance with § 983.251 of
this part.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) An owner must promptly notify in
writing any rejected applicant of the
grounds for any rejection. The owner
must provide a copy of such rejection
notice to the PHA.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 114. Revise § 983.254 to read as
follows:
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§ 983.254
Vacancies.
(a) Filling vacant units. (1) The PHA
and the owner must make reasonable
good-faith efforts to minimize the
likelihood and length of any vacancy in
a contract unit. However, contract units
in a rehabilitated housing project
undergoing development activity after
HAP contract execution that are not
available for occupancy in accordance
with § 983.157(e)(5) are not subject to
this requirement.
(i) If an owner-maintained waiting list
is used, in accordance with § 983.251,
the owner must promptly notify the
PHA of any vacancy or expected
vacancy in a contract unit and refer the
family to the PHA for final eligibility
determination. The PHA must make
every reasonable effort to make such
final eligibility determination within 30
calendar days.
(ii) If a PHA-maintained waiting list is
used, in accordance with § 983.251, the
owner must promptly notify the PHA of
any vacancy or expected vacancy in a
contract unit, and the PHA must, after
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receiving the owner notice, make every
reasonable effort to promptly refer a
sufficient number of families for the
owner to fill such vacancies within 30
calendar days.
(2) The owner must lease vacant
contract units only to families
determined eligible by the PHA.
(b) Reducing number of contract
units. If any contract units have been
vacant for a period of 120 days or more
since owner notice of vacancy, as
required in paragraph (a) of this section,
and notwithstanding the reasonable
good-faith efforts of the PHA and the
owner to fill such vacancies, the PHA
may give notice to the owner amending
the HAP contract to reduce the number
of contract units by subtracting the
number of contract units (by number of
bedrooms) that have been vacant for
such period.
■ 115. Amend § 983.255 by revising
paragraphs (a)(2) and (c)(4) to read as
follows:
§ 983.255
Tenant screening.
(a) * * *
(2) The PHA must conduct tenant
screening of applicants in accordance
with policies stated in the PHA
Administrative Plan.
(c) * * *
(4) The PHA policy must be stated in
the Administrative Plan and provide
that the PHA will give the same types
of information to all owners.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 116. Revise § 983.257 to read as
follows:
§ 983.257 Owner termination of tenancy
and eviction.
24 CFR 982.310 of this title applies
with the exception that 24 CFR
982.310(d)(1)(iii) and (iv) does not apply
to the PBV program. (In the PBV
program, ‘‘good cause’’ does not include
a business or economic reason or desire
to use the unit for an individual, family,
or non-residential rental purpose.) In
addition, the owner may terminate the
tenancy in accordance with the
requirements related to lease
terminations for development activity
on units under a HAP contract as
provided in § 983.157(g)(6)(iii) and for
substantial improvement to units under
a HAP contract as provided in
§ 983.212(a)(3)(iii). 24 CFR 5.858
through 5.861 on eviction for drug and
alcohol abuse and 24 CFR part 5,
subpart L (Protection for Victims of
Domestic Violence, Dating Violence,
Sexual Assault, or Stalking) apply to the
PBV program.
■ 117. Amend § 983.259 by:
■ a. Adding a heading to paragraph (a);
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b. Revising paragraph (b); and
c. Adding headings to paragraphs (c)
through (e).
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 983.259 Security deposit: Amounts owed
by tenant.
(a) Security deposit permitted. * * *
(b) Amount of security deposit. The
PHA must prohibit the owner from
charging assisted tenants security
deposits in excess of private market
practice, or in excess of amounts
charged by the owner to unassisted
tenants.
(c) Use of security deposit. * * *
(d) Security deposit reimbursement to
owner. * * *
(e) Insufficiency of security deposit.
* * *
■ 118. Revise § 983.260 to read as
follows:
§ 983.260 Overcrowded, under-occupied,
and accessible units.
(a) Family occupancy of wrong-size or
accessible unit. (1) The PHA subsidy
standards determine the appropriate
unit size for the family size and
composition.
(2) If the PHA determines that a
family is occupying a wrong-size unit,
or a unit with accessibility features that
the family does not require and the unit
is needed by a family that requires the
accessibility features (see 24 CFR 8.27),
the PHA must:
(i) Within 30 days from the PHA’s
determination, notify the family and the
owner of this determination; and
(ii) Within 60 days from the PHA’s
determination, offer the family
continued housing assistance, pursuant
to paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) PHA offer of continued assistance.
(1) The PHA policy on continued
housing assistance must be stated in the
Administrative Plan and may be in the
form of:
(i) PBV assistance in an appropriatesize unit (in the same project or in
another project);
(ii) Other project-based housing
assistance (e.g., by occupancy of a
public housing unit);
(iii) Tenant-based rental assistance
under the voucher program; or
(iv) Other comparable tenant-based
rental assistance.
(2) If no continued housing assistance
as described in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section is available, the PHA must
remove the wrong-size or accessible unit
from the HAP contract to make voucher
assistance available to issue the family
a tenant-based voucher. Section
983.206(b) does not apply to families
issued a tenant-based voucher under the
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circumstance described in this
paragraph (b)(2).
(c) PHA termination of housing
assistance payments. (1) If the PHA
offers the family the opportunity to
receive tenant-based rental assistance
under the voucher program:
(i) The PHA must terminate the
housing assistance payments for a
wrong-sized or accessible unit at the
earlier of the expiration of the term of
the family’s voucher (including any
extension granted by the PHA) or the
date upon which the family vacates the
unit.
(ii) If the family does not move out of
the wrong-sized unit or accessible unit
by the expiration date of the term of the
family’s voucher, the PHA must remove
the unit from the HAP contract.
(2) If the PHA offers the family
another form of continued housing
assistance (other than tenant-based
rental assistance under the voucher
program), in accordance with paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, the PHA must
terminate the housing assistance
payments for the wrong-sized or
accessible unit and remove the unit
from the HAP contract when:
(i) In the case of an offer by the PHA
of PBV assistance or other project-based
housing assistance in an appropriatesize unit, the family does not accept the
offer and does not move out of the PBV
unit within a reasonable time as
determined by the PHA, not to exceed
90 days. The family may request and the
PHA may grant one extension not to
exceed up to an additional 90 days to
accommodate the family’s efforts to
locate affordable, safe, and
geographically proximate replacement
housing.
(ii) In the case of an offer by the PHA
of PBV assistance or other project-based
housing assistance in an appropriate
size unit, the family accepts the offer
but does not move out of the PBV unit
within a reasonable time as determined
by the PHA, not to exceed 90 days.
(iii) In the case of an offer by the PHA
of other comparable tenant-based rental
assistance, the family either accepts or
does not accept the offer but does not
move out of the PBV unit within a
reasonable time as determined by the
PHA, not to exceed 90 days. The family
may request and the PHA may grant one
extension not to exceed up to an
additional 90 days to accommodate the
family’s efforts to locate, affordable,
safe, and geographically proximate
replacement housing.
(d) Reinstatement. The PHA may
reinstate a unit removed under
paragraph (b)(2), (c)(1)(ii), or (c)(2) of
this section to the HAP contract after the
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family vacates the property, in
accordance with § 983.207(b).
■ 119. Revise § 983.261 to read as
follows:
§ 983.261
Family right to move.
(a) Termination of assisted lease after
one year. The family may terminate the
assisted lease at any time after one year
of PBV assistance. The family must give
the owner advance written notice of
intent to vacate (with a copy to the
PHA) in accordance with the lease.
(b) Continued assistance. If the family
has elected to terminate the lease in
accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section, the PHA must offer the family
the opportunity for continued tenantbased rental assistance. The PHA must
specify in the Administrative Plan
whether it will offer families assistance
under the voucher program or other
comparable tenant-based rental
assistance. If voucher assistance is
offered to the family and the search term
expires, the PHA must issue the voucher
to the next eligible family.
(c) Contacting the PHA. Before
providing notice to terminate the lease
under paragraph (a) of this section, a
family must contact the PHA to request
a voucher or comparable tenant-based
rental assistance if the family wishes to
move with continued assistance. If a
voucher or other comparable tenantbased rental assistance is not
immediately available to the family
upon the family’s request to the PHA,
the PHA must give the family priority to
receive the next available opportunity
for continued tenant-based rental
assistance. The PHA must describe in its
Administrative Plan its policies and
procedures for how the family must
contact the PHA and how the PHA
documents families waiting for
continued tenant-based rental
assistance.
(d) Termination of assisted lease
before one year. If the family terminates
the assisted lease before one year of PBV
assistance, the family relinquishes the
opportunity for continued tenant-based
assistance under this section.
(e) Notice exclusion. When the family
or a member of the family is or has been
the victim of domestic violence, dating
violence, sexual assault, or stalking, as
provided in 24 CFR part 5, subpart L,
and the move is needed to protect the
health or safety of the family or family
member, the family is not required to
give the owner advance written notice
or contact the PHA under paragraph (a)
and (c), respectively, of this section
before moving from the unit.
Additionally, when any family member
has been the victim of a sexual assault
that occurred on the premises during
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38335
the 90-calendar-day period preceding
the family’s request to move, the family
is not required to give the owner
advance written notice or contact the
PHA under paragraph (a) and (c),
respectively, of this section before
moving from the unit. A PHA may not
terminate the assistance of a family due
to a move occurring under the
circumstances in this paragraph (e) and
must offer the family the opportunity for
continued tenant-based assistance if the
family had received at least one year of
PBV assistance prior to moving.
(f) Emergency Transfer Plans. In the
case of a move due to domestic
violence, dating violence, sexual
assault, or stalking, as provided in 24
CFR part 5, subpart L, PHAs must
describe policies for facilitating
emergency transfers for families with
PBV assistance in their Emergency
Transfer Plan, consistent with the
requirements in 24 CFR 5.2005(e),
including when the victim has received
PBV assistance for less than one year
and is not eligible for continued
assistance under § 983.261(b).
(g) Family break-up. If a family breakup results from an occurrence of
domestic violence, dating violence,
sexual assault, or stalking as provided in
24 CFR part 5, subpart L (Protection for
Victims of Domestic Violence, Dating
Violence, Sexual Assault, or Stalking),
the PHA must ensure that the victim
retains assistance in accordance with 24
CFR 982.315(a)(2).
■ 120. Revise § 983.262 to read as
follows:
§ 983.262 Occupancy of units under the
increased program cap and project cap
excepted units.
(a) General. Pursuant to § 983.6(a), a
PHA may commit project-based
assistance to no more than 20 percent of
its authorized voucher units at the time
of commitment. There are certain units
eligible for an increased program cap as
described in § 983.6(d). Pursuant to
§ 983.54(a), the PHA may not select a
proposal to provide PBV assistance or
place units under an Agreement or a
HAP contract in excess of the project
cap. There are certain exceptions to the
project cap as described in § 983.54(c).
This section provides more detail on the
occupancy requirements of both the
excepted units from the project cap
under § 983.54(c)(2) and units under the
increased program cap under § 983.6(d).
(b) Requirements applicable to both
excepted units and units under an
increased program cap. (1) The unit
must be occupied by a family who
meets the applicable exception.
(2) The family must be selected from
the waiting list for the PBV program
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through an admissions preference (see
§ 983.251).
(3) Once the family vacates the unit,
the unit must be made available to and
occupied by a family that meets the
applicable exception.
(4) The PHA must specify in its
Administrative Plan which of the
options below the PHA will take if a
unit is no longer qualified for its
excepted status or the increased
program cap:
(i) Substitute the unit for another unit
if it is possible to do so in accordance
with § 983.207(a), so that the overall
number of excepted units or units under
the increased program cap in the project
is not reduced. A PHA may, in
conjunction with such substitution, add
the original unit to the HAP contract if
it is possible to do so in accordance
with § 983.207(b), including that such
addition does not cause the PHA to
exceed the program cap or become noncompliant with the project cap.
(ii) Remove the unit from the PBV
HAP contract. In conjunction with the
removal, the PHA may provide the
family with tenant-based assistance, if
the family is eligible for tenant-based
assistance. The family and the owner
may agree to use the tenant-based
voucher in the unit; otherwise, the
family must move from the unit with
the tenant-based voucher. If the family
later vacates the unit, the PHA may add
the unit to the PBV HAP contract in
accordance with § 983.207.
(iii) Change the unit’s status under the
project cap or program cap, as
applicable, provided that the change
does not cause the PHA to exceed the
program cap or become non-compliant
with the project cap.
(c) Requirements for units under the
increased program cap—(1) Homeless
family. A unit qualifies under the
increased program cap at § 983.6(d)(1)(i)
if the family meets the definition of
homeless under Section 103 of the
McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance
Act (42 U.S.C. 11302), included in 24
CFR 578.3, at the time the family first
occupies the unit.
(2) Veteran family. A unit qualifies
under the increased program cap at
§ 983.6(d)(1)(ii) if the family is
comprised of or includes a veteran (a
person who served in the active
military, naval, air, or space service, and
who was discharged or released
therefrom) at the time the family first
occupies the unit.
(3) Supportive housing for persons
with disabilities or elderly persons. The
following applies to the increased
program cap category at
§ 983.6(d)(1)(iii):
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(i) A disabled or elderly member of
the family must be eligible for one or
more of the supportive services at the
time the family first occupies the unit.
The member of the family may choose
not to participate in the services.
(ii) The PHA must state in its
Administrative Plan whether it will
allow a family that initially qualified for
supportive housing for persons with
disabilities or elderly persons to
continue to reside in a unit, where
through circumstances beyond the
control of the family (e.g., death of the
elderly family member or family
member with a disability or long term
or permanent hospitalization or nursing
care), the elderly family member or
family member with a disability no
longer resides in the unit. In this case,
the unit may continue to count under
the increased program cap category for
as long as the family resides in that unit.
However, the requirements of § 983.260,
concerning wrong-sized units, apply. If
the PHA chooses not to exercise this
discretion, the unit no longer counts
under the increased program cap
category and, if the family is not
required to move from the unit as a
result of § 983.260, the PHA may use
one of the options described in
paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(4) Units for Family Unification
Program (FUP) youth. See paragraph (e)
of this section for requirements relating
to the increased program cap category at
§ 983.6(d)(2).
(d) Requirements for project cap
excepted units—(1) Elderly family. A
unit under the project cap exception
category at § 983.54(c)(2)(i) must be
occupied by an elderly family, as
defined in 24 CFR 5.403. The PHA must
state in its Administrative Plan whether
it will allow a family that initially
qualified for occupancy of an excepted
unit based on elderly family status to
continue to reside in a unit, where
through circumstances beyond the
control of the family (e.g., death of the
elderly family member or long term or
permanent hospitalization or nursing
care), the elderly family member no
longer resides in the unit. In this case,
the unit may continue to count as an
excepted unit for as long as the family
resides in that unit. However, the
requirements of § 983.260, concerning
wrong-sized units, apply. If the PHA
chooses not to exercise this discretion,
the unit is no longer considered
excepted and, if the family is not
required to move from the unit as a
result of § 983.260, the PHA may use
one of the options described in
paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(2) Disabled family. The same
provisions of paragraph (d)(1) of this
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section apply to units previously
excepted based on disabled family
status under a HAP contract in effect
prior to April 18, 2017.
(3) Supportive services. The following
applies under the project cap exception
category at § 983.54(c)(2)(iii):
(i) A unit is excepted if any member
of the family is eligible for one or more
of the supportive services even if the
family chooses not to participate in the
services.
(ii) If any member of the family
chooses to participate and successfully
completes the supportive services, the
unit continues to be excepted for as long
as any member of the family resides in
the unit, even if the members that
continue to reside in the unit are
ineligible during tenancy for all
available supportive services.
(iii) The unit loses its excepted status
only if the entire family becomes
ineligible during the tenancy for all
supportive services available to the
family. This provision does not apply
where any member of the family has
successfully completed the supportive
services under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section.
(iv) A family cannot be terminated
from the program or evicted from the
unit because they become ineligible for
all supportive services during the
tenancy.
(4) Units for FUP youth. See
paragraph (e) of this section for
requirements relating to the increased
project cap exception category at
§ 983.54(c)(2)(ii).
(e) Requirements for units for FUP
youth under the increased program cap
and project cap exception. The
following applies under the project cap
exception category at § 983.54(c)(2)(ii)
and the increased program cap category
at § 983.6(d)(2):
(1) A unit is excepted from the project
cap or qualifies under the increased
program cap, as applicable, if the unit
is occupied by an eligible youth
receiving FUP assistance.
(2) The youth must vacate the unit
once the FUP assistance has expired.
The unit loses its excepted status or no
longer qualifies under the increased
program cap, as applicable, if the youth
does not move from the unit upon the
expiration of the FUP assistance.
Subpart G—Rent to Owner
121. Amend § 983.301 by revising
paragraphs (b)(1), (c)(2)(i), (f), and (g) to
read as follows:
■
§ 983.301
*
Determining the rent to owner.
*
*
(b) * * *
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*
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(1) An amount determined by the
PHA in accordance with the
Administrative Plan not to exceed 110
percent of the applicable fair market
rent (or the amount of any applicable
exception payment standard) for the
unit bedroom size minus any utility
allowance;
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) An amount determined by the PHA
in accordance with the Administrative
Plan, not to exceed the tax credit rent
minus any utility allowance;
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Use of FMRs and utility allowance
schedule in determining the amount of
rent to owner. (1) When determining the
initial rent to owner, the PHA shall use
the most recently published FMR in
effect and the utility allowance schedule
in effect at execution of the HAP
contract. At its discretion, the PHA may
use the amounts in effect at any time
during the 30-day period immediately
before the beginning date of the HAP
contract.
(2) When redetermining the rent to
owner, the PHA shall use the most
recently published FMR and the PHA
utility allowance schedule in effect at
the time of redetermination. At its
discretion, the PHA may use the
amounts in effect at any time during the
30-day period immediately before the
redetermination date.
(3)(i) For PBV projects that are not
located in a designated SAFMR area
under 24 CFR 888.113(c)(1), or for PBV
projects not located in a ZIP code where
the PHA has opted in under 24 CFR
888.113(c)(3), any exception payment
standard amount approved under 24
CFR 982.503(d)(2)–(4) applies for
purposes of paragraphs (b)(1) and
(c)(1)(iv) of this section. HUD will not
approve a different payment standard
amount for use in the PBV program.
(ii) For PBV projects that are located
in a designated SAFMR area under 24
CFR 888.113(c)(1), or for PBV projects
located in a ZIP code where the PHA
has opted in under 24 CFR
888.113(c)(3), an exception payment
standard amount approved under 24
CFR 982.503(d)(3)–(4) will apply for
purposes of paragraphs (b)(1) and
(c)(1)(iv) of this section only if the PHA
has adopted a policy applying SAFMRs
to its PBV program and met all other
requirements in accordance with 24
CFR 888.113(h).
(4) HUD may establish a process
allowing PHAs to adopt project-specific
utility allowances by notification in the
Federal Register subject to public
comment. Absent the establishment of
such a project-specific utility allowance,
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the PHA’s utility allowance schedule as
determined under 24 CFR
982.517(b)(2)(i) or (ii) applies to both
the tenant-based and PBV programs.
(5) The PHA must continue to use the
applicable utility allowance schedule
for the purpose of determining the
initial rent to owner and redetermining
the rent to owner for contract units, as
outlined in this 24 CFR 983.301,
regardless of whether the PHA approves
a higher utility allowance as a
reasonable accommodation for a person
with disabilities living in a contract unit
(see 24 CFR 982.517(e)).
(g) PHA-owned units. For PHA-owned
PBV units, the initial rent to owner and
the annual redetermination of rent at the
annual anniversary of the HAP contract
must be determined by the independent
entity approved by HUD in accordance
with § 983.57. The PHA must use the
rent to owner established by the
independent entity.
■ 122. Revise § 983.302 to read as
follows:
§ 983.302
owner.
Redetermination of rent to
(a) Requirement to redetermine the
rent to owner. The PHA must
redetermine the rent to owner:
(1) When there is a 10 percent
decrease in the published FMR;
(2) Upon the owner’s request
consistent with requirements
established in the PHA’s Administrative
Plan. The Administrative Plan must
specify any advance notice the owner
must give the PHA and the form the
request must take; or
(3) At the time of the automatic
adjustment by an operating cost
adjustment factor (OCAF) in accordance
with paragraph (b)(3).
(b) Rent increase. (1) An owner may
receive an increase in the rent to owner
during the term of a HAP contract. Any
such increase will go into effect at the
annual anniversary of the HAP contract.
(Provisions for special adjustments of
contract rent pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
1437f(c)(2)(B) do not apply to the
voucher program.)
(2) A rent increase may occur through
automatic adjustment by an operating
cost adjustment factor (OCAF) or as the
result of an owner request for such an
increase. A rent increase as the result of
an owner request must be determined
by the PHA pursuant to § 983.301(b) or
(c), as applicable. A rent increase
through an adjustment by an OCAF is
likewise subject to § 983.301(b) or (c), as
applicable, except there is no rent
request by the owner to take into
account since the PHA redetermines the
rent automatically under that option.
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38337
(3) By agreement of the parties, the
HAP contract may provide for rent
adjustments using an operating cost
adjustment factor (OCAF) established by
the Secretary pursuant to Section 524(c)
of the Multifamily Assisted Housing
Reform and Affordability Act of 1997 at
each annual anniversary of the HAP
contract. OCAFs are established by the
Secretary and published annually in the
Federal Register. The provisions in the
following paragraphs apply to a contract
that provides for rent adjustments using
an OCAF:
(i) The contract may require an
additional increase up to an amount
determined by the PHA pursuant to
§ 983.301(b) or (c), as applicable, if
requested by the owner in writing,
periodically during the term of the
contract.
(ii) The contract shall require an
additional increase up to an amount
determined by the PHA pursuant to
§ 983.301(b) or (c), as applicable, at the
point of contract extension, if requested
by the owner in writing.
(4) If the HAP contract does not
provide for automatic adjustment by an
OCAF, then an owner who wishes to
receive an increase in the rent to owner
must request such an increase at the
annual anniversary of the HAP contract
by written notice to the PHA.
(5) The PHA must establish the length
of the required notice period for any
rent increase that requires a written
request from the owner. The written
request must be submitted as required
by the PHA (e.g., to a particular mailing
address or email address).
(6) The PHA may not approve and the
owner may not receive any increase of
rent to owner until and unless the
owner has complied with all
requirements of the HAP contract,
including compliance with the HQS
(except that HQS compliance is not
required for purposes of this provision
for units undergoing development
activity that complies with § 983.157 or
substantial improvement that complies
with § 983.212). The owner may not
receive any retroactive increase of rent
for any period of noncompliance.
(c) Rent decrease. (1) If the HAP
contract provides for rent adjustments
by an OCAF and there is a decrease in
the fair market rent, tax credit rent, or
reasonable rent that requires a decrease
to the rent to owner (see paragraph
(b)(2)), the rent to owner must be
decreased. If the HAP contract does not
provide for adjustment by an OCAF and
there is a decrease in the rent to owner,
as established in accordance with
§ 983.301, the rent to owner must be
decreased, regardless of whether the
owner requests a rent adjustment.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 89 / Tuesday, May 7, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
(2) At any time during the term of the
HAP contract, the PHA may elect within
the HAP contract to not reduce rents
below the initial rent to owner. Where
a PHA makes such an election, the rent
to owner shall not be reduced below the
initial rent to owner, except:
(i) To correct errors in calculations in
accordance with HUD requirements;
(ii) If additional housing assistance
has been combined with PBV assistance
after the execution of the initial HAP
contract and a rent decrease is required
pursuant to § 983.153(b); or
(iii) If a decrease in rent to owner is
required based on changes in the
allocation of responsibility for utilities
between the owner and the tenant.
(d) Notice of change in rent to owner.
Whenever there is a change in rent to
owner, the PHA must provide written
notice to the owner specifying the
amount of the new rent to owner (as
determined in accordance with
§§ 983.301 and 983.302). The PHA
notice of the rent change in rent to
owner constitutes an amendment of the
rent to owner specified in the HAP
contract.
(e) Contract year and annual
anniversary of the HAP contract. (1) The
contract year is the period of 12
calendar months preceding each annual
anniversary of the HAP contract during
the HAP contract term. The initial
contract year is calculated from the first
day of the first calendar month of the
HAP contract term.
(2) The annual anniversary of the
HAP contract is the first day of the first
calendar month after the end of the
preceding contract year. The adjusted
rent to owner amount applies for the
period of 12 calendar months from the
annual anniversary of the HAP contract.
(3) The annual anniversary of the
HAP contract for contract units
completed in stages must follow
§ 983.207(g).
■ 123. Amend § 983.303 by:
■ a. Removing from paragraph (a) the
citation to ‘‘§ 983.302(e)(2)’’ and adding,
in its place, a citation to
‘‘§ 983.302(c)(2)’’;
■ b. Revising paragraph (b)(3);
■ c. Redesignating paragraph (b)(4) as
paragraph (b)(5) and adding a new
paragraph (b)(4);
■ d. Adding paragraph (c)(3); and
■ e. Revising paragraph (f).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 983.303
Reasonable rent.
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) Whenever the HAP contract is
amended to add a contract unit or
substitute a different contract unit in the
same building or project;
16:13 May 06, 2024
Subpart H—Payment to Owner
124. Amend § 983.352 by adding a
sentence to the end of paragraph (b)(1)
to read as follows:
■
§ 983.352
Vacancy payment.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * * The PHA must include in
its Administrative Plan the PHA’s
policy on the conditions under which it
will allow vacancy payments in a HAP
contract, the duration of the payments,
amount of vacancy payments it will
make to an owner, and the required
form and manner of requests for
vacancy payments, in accordance with
paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 125. Amend § 983.353 by revising
paragraph (d)(2) to read as follows:
§ 983.353
Tenant rent; payment to owner.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(2) The PHA must describe in its
Administrative Plan its policies on
paying the utility reimbursement
directly to the family or directly to the
utility supplier.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 985—SECTION 8 MANAGEMENT
ASSESSMENT PROGRAM (SEMAP)
126. The authority for part 985
continues to read as follows:
■
*
VerDate Sep<11>2014
(4) Whenever the PHA accepts a
completed unit after development
activity that is conducted after HAP
contract execution (see § 983.156(b)(3));
and
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) The reasonable rent determination
must be based on the condition of the
assisted unit at the time of the
determination and not on anticipated
future unit conditions.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Determining reasonable rent for
PHA-owned units. (1) For PHA-owned
units, the amount of the reasonable rent
must be determined by an independent
entity in accordance with § 983.57,
rather than by the PHA. The reasonable
rent must be determined in accordance
with this section.
(2) The independent entity must
furnish a copy of the independent entity
determination of reasonable rent for
PHA-owned units to the PHA.
Jkt 262001
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
127. Amend § 985.3 by:
a. Revising the second paragraph of
the undesignated introductory text and
■
■
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the parenthetical at the end of paragraph
(b)(1);
■ b. In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), removing
the reference to ‘‘§ 982.507 of this
chapter’’ and adding, in its place, a
reference to ‘‘§§ 982.507 and 983.303 of
this chapter, as applicable’’;
■ c. Revising paragraph (c)(3)(i)(A);
■ d. In paragraph (e)(3)(i), removing the
citation to ‘‘§ 983.2’’ and adding, in its
place, a citation to ‘‘§ 985.2’’; and
■ e. Revising paragraphs (i)(1), (i)(3),
(k)(1), (k)(2), and (l), the heading of
paragraph (m), and paragraphs (m)(1),
(m)(3), (p)(1), and (p)(3)(i)(B).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 985.3 Indicators, HUD verification
methods and ratings.
*
*
*
*
*
A PHA that expends less than its
Federal award expenditure threshold in
2 CFR Subpart F, and whose Section 8
programs are not audited by an
independent auditor (IA), will not be
rated under the SEMAP indicators in
paragraphs (a) through (g) of this section
for which the annual IA audit report is
a HUD verification method.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * * (24 CFR 982.4, 24 CFR
982.54(d)(15), 982.158(f)(7), 982.507,
and 983.303)
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) The PHA obtains third party
verification, as appropriate, of reported
family annual income, the value of
assets, expenses related to deductions
from annual income, and other factors
that affect the determination of adjusted
income, and uses the verified
information in determining adjusted
income, and/or documents tenant files
to show why third party verification
was not available;
*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(1) This indicator shows whether the
PHA has adopted payment standard
schedule(s) in accordance with
§ 982.503.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Rating:
(i) The PHA’s voucher program
payment standard schedule contains
payment standards set in accordance
with 24 CFR 982.503. 5 points.
(ii) The PHA’s voucher program
payment standard schedule contains
payment standards that were not set in
accordance with § 982.503. 0 points.
*
*
*
*
*
(k) * * *
(1) This indicator shows whether the
PHA correctly calculates the family’s
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share of the rent to owner in the rental
voucher program. (24 CFR part 982,
subpart K).
(2) HUD verification method: MTCS
report—Shows percent of tenant rent
and family’s share of the rent to owner
calculations that are incorrect based on
data sent to HUD by the PHA on Forms
HUD–50058. The MTCS data used for
verification cover only voucher program
tenancies, and do not include rent
calculation discrepancies for
manufactured home owner rentals of
manufactured home spaces for proration
of assistance under the noncitizen rule.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) Initial unit inspections. (1) This
indicator shows whether newly leased
units pass HQS inspection within the
time period required. This includes both
initial and turnover inspections for the
PBV program. (24 CFR 982.305 and
983.103(b) through (d)).
(2) HUD verification method: MTCS
report—Shows percent of newly leased
units where the beginning date of the
assistance contract is before the date the
unit passed the initial unit inspection
or, if the PHA employed the PHA initial
inspection option for non-lifethreatening deficiencies or alternative
inspections, the timing requirements for
the applicable PHA initial inspection
option.
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Jkt 262001
(3) Rating:
(i) 98 to 100 percent of newly leased
units passed HQS inspection within the
time period required. 5 points.
(ii) Fewer than 98 percent of newly
leased units passed HQS inspection
within the time period required. 0
points.
(m) Periodic HQS inspections. (1)
This indicator shows whether the PHA
has met its periodic inspection
requirement for its units under contract
(24 CFR 982.405 and 983.103(e)).
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Rating:
(i) Fewer than 5 percent of periodic
HQS inspections of units under contract
are more than 2 months overdue. 10
points.
(ii) 5 to 10 percent of all periodic HQS
inspections of units under contract are
more than 2 months overdue. 5 points.
(iii) More than 10 percent of all
periodic HQS inspections of units under
contract are more than 2 months
overdue. 0 points.
*
*
*
*
*
(p) * * *
(1) This indicator shows whether
voucher holders were successful in
leasing units with voucher assistance.
This indicator applies only to PHAs that
established success rate payment
PO 00000
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38339
standard amounts in accordance with
§ 982.503(f) prior to June 6, 2024.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(B) The proportion of families issued
rental vouchers that became participants
in the program during the six month
period utilized to determine eligibility
for success rate payment standards
under § 982.503(f) plus 5 percentage
points; and
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1000—NATIVE AMERICAN
HOUSING ACTIVITIES
128. The authority for part 985
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 25 U.S.C. 4101 et seq.; 42 U.S.C.
3535(d).
§ 1000.302
[AMENDED]
129. In § 1000.302, amend the
definition of ‘‘Section 8 unit’’ by
removing the words ‘‘certificates,
vouchers,’’ and adding, in their place,
the word ‘‘vouchers’’.
■
Damon Smith,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2024–08601 Filed 5–6–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 89 (Tuesday, May 7, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 38224-38339]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-08601]
[[Page 38223]]
Vol. 89
Tuesday,
No. 89
May 7, 2024
Part II
Department of Housing and Urban Development
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
24 CFR Parts 5, 8, 42, et al.
Housing Opportunity Through Modernization Act of 2016--Housing Choice
Voucher (HCV) and Project-Based Voucher Implementation; Additional
Streamlining Changes; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 89 , No. 89 / Tuesday, May 7, 2024 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 38224]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Parts 5, 8, 42, 50, 91, 92, 93, 247, 290, 882, 888, 891,
903, 908, 943, 945, 960, 972, 982, 983, 985, and 1000
[Docket No. FR-6092-F-03]
RIN 2577-AD06
Housing Opportunity Through Modernization Act of 2016--Housing
Choice Voucher (HCV) and Project-Based Voucher Implementation;
Additional Streamlining Changes
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian
Housing, HUD.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule amends HUD's regulations to implement changes
to the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) tenant-based program and the
Project-Based Voucher (PBV) program made by the Housing Opportunity
Through Modernization Act of 2016 (HOTMA). HOTMA made several
amendments to the HCV and PBV programs, including establishing a
statutory definition of public housing agency (PHA)-owned housing, and
amending several elements of both programs. In response to public
comments, HUD has also included additional regulatory changes in this
final rule that are intended to reduce the burden on public housing
agencies, by either modifying requirements or simplifying and
clarifying existing regulatory language.
DATES:
Effective date: June 6, 2024, except the following sections, which
are delayed indefinitely: instruction 69, Sec. 982.451(c); instruction
98, Sec. 983.154(g) and (h); instruction 100, Sec. 983.157; and
instruction 103, Sec. 983.204(e).
For more information, see SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
Compliance dates: Compliance with this rule is required no later
than June 6, 2024, except for the following requirements:
1. 90 days after effective date. PHAs are not required to comply
with changes to the requirements in the following sections until
September 4, 2024: 24 CFR 982.301; 24 CFR 982.503; 24 CFR 982.625-641;
24 CFR 983.58(b); 24 CFR 983.252; 24 CFR 983.260; and 24 CFR 985.3.
2. 180 days after effective date. PHAs are not required to comply
with the new requirements in the following section until December 3,
2024: 24 CFR 982.505.
3. One year after the effective date. Several sections in this
final rule require PHAs to update their Administrative Plans. PHAs are
not required to update their Administrative Plans in compliance with
these new requirements until June 6, 2025. Additionally, PHAs are not
required to comply with the new requirements in the following sections
until June 6, 2025: 24 CFR 983.57; 24 CFR 983.155(b); 24 CFR
983.251(e); and 24 CFR 983.262.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ryan Jones, Director, Housing Voucher
Management and Operations Division, Department of Housing and Urban
Development, 451 7th Street SW, Washington, DC 20011; telephone number
202-708-1112 (this is not a toll-free number); email
[email protected]. HUD welcomes and is prepared to receive calls
from individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing, as well as from
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:
I. Background
The HOTMA Statute
On July 29, 2016, HOTMA was signed into law (Pub. L. 114-201, 130
Stat. 782). HOTMA makes numerous significant changes to statutes that
govern HUD programs, including section 8 of the United States Housing
Act of 1937 (1937 Act) (42 U.S.C. 1437f).
The Proposed Rule
On October 8, 2020, HUD issued a proposed rule \1\ to codify the
HOTMA provisions that HUD implemented through the HOTMA Implementation
Notices \2\ in the Federal Register. The proposed rule also sought to
make changes to regulatory provisions unrelated to HOTMA to eliminate
obsolete regulatory provisions and reduce the burden on public housing
agencies, by either modifying requirements or simplifying and
clarifying existing regulatory language. The proposed rule sought to
codify the following HOTMA provisions:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Housing Opportunity Through Modernization Act of 2016-
Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) and Project-Based Voucher
Implementation; Additional Streamlining Changes, 85 FR 63664 (Oct.
8, 2020).
\2\ See 81 FR 73030 (Oct. 24, 2016); 82 FR 5458 (Jan. 18, 2017);
82 FR 32461 (Jul. 14, 2017); additional guidance was provided in
Notices PIH 2017-18, PIH 2017-20, and PIH 2017-21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 101: In accordance with HOTMA section 101(a)(1),
the proposed rule included a provision regarding non-life-threatening
deficiencies and an alternative inspections requirement in HOTMA
section 101(a)(1) at Sec. Sec. 982.405, 982.406, and 983.103. The
proposed rule also proposed to revise the definition of life-
threatening deficiencies at Sec. 982.401. Additionally, the proposed
rule sought to include regulations to enforce Housing Quality Standards
(HQS) in section 101(a)(3) at Sec. Sec. 982.404 and 983.208.
Section 105: In accordance with HOTMA section 105, the
proposed rule sought to modify and align the definition of ``PHA-owned
unit'' with HOTMA's revised definition of the term at Sec. Sec. 982.4
and 983.3.
Section 106: In alignment with HOTMA sections 106(a)(2)
and 106(a)(3), the proposed rule proposed to include regulations on PBV
program cap, PBV units not subject to project cap or program cap, and
PBV project cap in Sec. Sec. 983.6, 983.54, and 983.59.
Section 106: Additionally, to conform to the changes in
HOTMA section 106(a)(4), the proposed rule included regulations on
entering into a PBV Housing Assistance Payments (HAP) contract for
rehabilitated and newly constructed housing projects without an
agreement to enter into HAP contract at Sec. 983.154. The proposed
rule sought to codify regulations surrounding PBV additional contract
conditions and tenant-based assistance for families at termination/
expiration without renewal of PBV HAP contract; PBV priority of
assistance contracts; PBV adding units to HAP contract without
competition; and PBV initial term of HAP contract and extension of
term, in sections 106(a)(4) and 106(a)(5) throughout Part 983. The
proposed rule sought to codify regulations that allow for rent
adjustments using an operating cost adjustment factor (OCAF) in HOTMA
section 106(a)(6) at Sec. 983.302.
Section 106: Further, to conform to the changes in HOTMA
sections 106(a)(7) through (a)(9), the proposed rule sought to codify
HOTMA's changes to PBV preference for voluntary services in section
106(a)(7) at Sec. 983.251 and owner-maintained waiting lists in
section 106(a)(7) at Sec. 983.251. The proposed rule also sought to
codify changes to environmental requirements for existing housing in
section 106(a)(8) at Sec. 983.56 and attaching PBVs to projects where
the PHA has an ownership interest in section 106(a)(9) at Sec. 983.51.
The proposed rule also sought to implement the following HOTMA HCV
provision:
Section 112: In accordance with HOTMA section 112, the
proposed rule proposed to include the manufactured
[[Page 38225]]
home space rent calculation in section 112 at Sec. 982.623, and to
address the PHA option to make housing assistance payments directly to
families instead of an owner for manufactured home space rentals in a
proposed change to Sec. 982.623.
HUD also proposed changes that were not statutorily required, to
better clarify or revise existing regulatory requirements, including
changing the current requirements to refine the Davis-Bacon wage
requirements and inserting references to obligations under Section 504
of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (Section 504) and the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA). Through these changes, HUD sought to improve
the administration of the program, simplify program rules, and reduce
administrative burden and cost. For additional information, please see
the proposed rule.\3\
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\3\ 85 FR 63664 (Oct. 8, 2020), https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2020/10/08/2020-21400/housing-opportunity-through-modernization-act-of-2016-housing-choice-voucher-hcv-and-project-based.
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HUD received 44 comments on the proposed rule, which were
considered and are discussed in Section IV of this preamble. Additional
details about the proposed changes may be found in the ``Housing
Opportunity Through Modernization Act of 2016-Housing Choice Voucher
(HCV) and Project-Based Voucher Implementation; Additional Streamlining
Changes'' proposed rule at 85 FR 63664 (Oct. 8, 2020).
The NSPIRE Rulemaking
On May 11, 2023, after the proposed rule was published, HUD
published the ``Economic Growth Regulatory Relief and Consumer
Protection Act: Implementation of National Standards for the Physical
Inspection of Real Estate (NSPIRE) final rulemaking (``the NSPIRE final
rule'').\4\ The NSPIRE final rule established a new approach to
defining and assessing housing quality by consolidating and modernizing
inspection standards for public housing, multifamily housing, Community
Planning and Development programs, and the HCV and PBV programs.
Several of the changes made in this final rule from the proposed rule
are designed to incorporate or be consistent with the NSPIRE final
rule, and some additional changes are made to build upon changes made
by the NSPIRE final rule.
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\4\ See 88 FR 30442.
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II. The Final Rule
After considering the public comments received on the October 8,
2020, proposed rule, and after further review, HUD makes the following
changes at this final rule stage. Where a section has been relocated
either from the prior regulations or from what HUD proposed, the
section numbers shown in the headings of this preamble refer to the
regulation sections as they appear in this final rule.
Notes concerning application of this rulemaking to projects
underway.
HUD wishes to clarify that no change in this rulemaking requires a
PHA, or any other party, to repeat a stage in the selection or
development process which has already been completed for a PBV project
prior to the compliance date of this rulemaking. If, for instance, a
PHA has selected a site under the prior site selection standards before
the effective date of this rulemaking, the PHA is not required to
complete a new selection. Similarly, an Agreement to enter into HAP
contract signed before the effective date of this rulemaking does not
need to be amended to incorporate changes to this rulemaking.
Additionally, if parties wish to amend an existing Agreement to
enter into HAP contract to take advantage of changes made by this
rulemaking, such as the changes made to include a description of
broadband infrastructure work in the Agreement, nothing in this
rulemaking prevents such an amendment after the rule is in effect.
However, HUD notes that if a project is under an Agreement to enter
into HAP contract as of the effective date of this rule, parties cannot
nullify the Agreement to enter into HAP contract to proceed without an
Agreement as will be otherwise allowed under this rule when Sec.
983.154(f) and (g) take effect.
Sec. 888.113 Fair Market Rents for Existing Housing: Methodology
In response to public comments, HUD revises Sec. 888.113 to
increase flexibility for PHAs. This final rule will provide PHAs the
option in the HCV program to use Small Area Fair Market Rents (SAFMRs)
in a non-metropolitan area with notification to their local HUD field
office, which provides PHAs operating in non-metropolitan counties the
same opportunity to establish payment standards that better align with
rents that vary significantly between zip code areas within the non-
metropolitan counties. In paragraph (a) this final rule modifies the
requirement under Sec. 888.113 that the FMR calculation exclude newly
built units. HUD no longer publishes separate FMRs for newly
constructed rental units; therefore, the FMRs calculated under Sec.
888.113 should be reflective of the entire rental market. This final
rule also clarifies existing practice in paragraph (c)(3) that where a
PHA that elects to use SAFMRs may exercise this option in one
metropolitan area or non-metropolitan county, and is not required to
exercise this option in other metropolitan areas or non-metropolitan
counties. This final rule changes paragraph (c)(3) which will allow
PHAs to notify HUD when opting-in to use SAFMRs, rather than require
HUD's approval.
This final rule revises paragraph (h) to align with the change to
paragraph (c)(3) described above and to improve readability. Paragraph
(h) is also revised to include a cross-reference to separate
requirements regarding applicability of exception payment standards
based on Small Area FMRs to PBV projects, to more clearly signal that
Small Area FMRs may impact PBVs both as described in paragraph (h) and
where HUD approves use of exception payment standards. This final rule
also revises paragraph (h)(1) to clarify that the PHA and owner may
mutually agree to apply the SAFMR to a PBV project where the project
was selected before ``either or both'' the SAFMR designation and the
PHA administrative policy. The intent of this provision, as explained
in the preamble to the Small Area FMR final rule (81 FR 80567,
published November 16, 2016), was to permit a PHA that had established
an Administrative Plan policy to apply Small Area FMRs to all future
PBV projects to also establish a policy permitting the PHA to apply the
Small Area FMRs to current PBV projects, provided the owner was willing
to mutually agree to do so. This approach was intended to offer
``maximum flexibility'' to the PHA for varied circumstances. However,
the prior language the use of ``both'' inadvertently created confusion
with respect to projects selected between the two events (the Small
Area FMR designation and the PHA administrative policy extending Small
Area FMRs to future PBV projects). Consequently, HUD is making a
technical correction to paragraph (h)(1) to clarify that if the PHA is
applying the Small Area FMRs to future PBV projects, the PHA may also
establish a policy to extend the use of Small Area FMRs to current PBV
projects, including those projects selected after the Small Area FMR
designation but prior to the effective date of the PHA administrative
policy, if the owner is willing to do so.
This final rule also makes minor revisions to paragraphs (h)(1) and
(h)(2). First, the final rule includes ``county-wide FMRs,'' for
consistency with other changes in the regulation that allow voluntary
use of SAFMRs in non-
[[Page 38226]]
metropolitan areas and to avoid any implication that the PBV Small Area
FMR flexibilities in paragraph (h) would not be available in non-
metropolitan counties where HUD publishes SAFMRs. Second, this final
rule changes ``designation'' to ``designation/implementation'' to
improve clarity; this is not a substantive change, but rather it
reflects that the applicable date for a PHA that chooses to implement
Small Area FMRs under paragraph (c)(3) of this section would more
appropriately be termed the date of ``implementation.'' This final rule
also clarifies the effective date of a rent increase due to Small Area
FMR. The proposed rule left unchanged a provision stating that the
effective date of a rent increase would occur on the ``first annual
anniversary'' of the HAP contract, but this final rule replaces ``first
annual anniversary'' with ``next annual anniversary'' to clarify that
the effective date of a rent increase occurs on the next annual
anniversary after the agreement, even if that is not the first
anniversary of the project.
Finally, this final rule revises paragraph (i)(2) to reflect the
renumbering of Sec. 982.503(e) to (f). This final rule also revises
paragraph (i)(3) to reflect the phase-out of success rate payment
standards in 982.503(f).
Sec. 903.3 What is the purpose of this subpart?
This final rule clarifies HUD's intent regarding applicability of
part 903 to the project-based voucher program. Previously, Sec.
903.4(a)(2)(i) defined tenant-based assistance to broadly mean
assistance provided under section 8(o) of the 1937 Act, which included
project-based assistance under section 8(o)(13). When Sec. 903.12 was
amended to make express reference to project-based assistance under
section 8(o)(13), an unintended consequence was confusion regarding
whether the term ``tenant-based assistance'' should still be
interpreted to include project-based assistance under section 8(o)(13).
In Sec. 903.3(b)(2), the term ``project-based'' is added to the
reference of participants who benefit from PHA plans as a source to
locate basic PHA policies, rules and requirements concerning the PHA's
operations, programs and services.
Sec. 903.4 What are the public housing agency plans?
This final rule revises and defines both tenant-based assistance
and project-based assistance under 903.4(a)(2)(i) to address confusion
regarding whether the existing regulatory language also covers project-
based assistance under section 8(o)(13). HUD now also makes specific
reference to tenant-based assistance, project-based assistance, and/or
tenant and project-based assistance throughout part 903 to bring
clearer meaning to each provision.
Sec. 903.6 What information must a PHA provide in the 5-Year Plan?
HUD adds paragraph (c) to Sec. 903.6 to clarify that when a PHA
intends to select one or more projects for project-based assistance
without competition, the PHA must first include a statement of this
intent in its 5-Year Plan to put the public on notice. The proposed
rule referenced this requirement in 983.51(c)(1) but only generically
referenced the PHA Plan.
Sec. 903.7 What information must a PHA provide in the Annual Plan?
This final rule clarifies the requirements for PHAs that provide
project-based assistance under section 8(o)(13) with respect to what
information a PHA must provide in the Annual Plan. HUD now makes
specific references to project-based assistance in paragraphs (a)(1),
(c), (d), (e)(4), (f), and (l)(1)(iii) and (2). HUD also inserts a new
paragraph (r) which contains text that was previously located in Sec.
903.12, as HUD determined that the project-based assistance statement
requirement in that section was not appropriately located.
Finally, in the Federal Register notice published on January 18,
2017 (82 FR 5458), HUD stated, ``The HOTMA amendments permit a PHA to
establish a preference based on who qualifies for voluntary services,
including disability-related services, offered in conjunction with the
assisted units.'' HUD further provided ``The revised statute permits
such a preference to be established if it is consistent with the PHA
Plan. As part of the PHA Plan review process, the Office of Fair
Housing and Equal Opportunity, in consultation with the Office of
General Counsel, will review each proposed preference for consistency
with fair housing and civil rights requirements. As part of this
process, HUD may request the PHA or owner provide any additional
documentation necessary to determine consistency with the PHA Plan and
all applicable Federal fair housing and civil rights requirements.'' In
this final rule, HUD clarifies that the Office of Fair Housing and
Equal Opportunity, in consultation with the Office of General Counsel,
may review proposed preferences as part of the PHA Plan review process.
Approval of a PHA Plan does not constitute compliance with federal fair
housing and civil rights requirements. As stated in the comment
discussion of Sec. 983.251, adoption of such preferences cannot
conflict with Section 504 or other federal civil rights requirements.
Further explanation of these issues is located in that discussion and
in HUD's January 2017 notice.
Sec. 903.11 Are certain PHAs eligible to submit a streamlined Annual
Plan?
HUD makes a minor revision to Sec. 903.11(c)(1) and (3) to include
the requirement that a PHA must identify its participation in the
project-based assistance program in the streamlined Annual Plan
consistent with the changes to Sec. 903.7 made by this final rule.
HUD is also revising paragraphs (a)(3) and (c)(3). These paragraphs
allow PHAs to submit a streamlined Annual Plan if they do not own or
operate public housing. This final rule clarifies that PHAs that
participate in the project-based assistance program are still eligible
to submit a streamlined Annual Plan.
Sec. 903.12 What are the streamlined Annual Plan requirements for
small PHAs?
In this final rule, HUD moves the PBV requirements previously
located in Sec. 903.12 to Sec. 903.7 as described above. HUD makes a
minor revision to Sec. 903.12 to include the requirement that in the
streamlined Annual Plan for Small PHAs, a PHA must identify its
participation in the PBV program consistent with the changes to Sec.
903.7 made by this final rule. HUD also makes express reference to
project-based assistance in paragraph (b).
Sec. 903.13 What is a Resident Advisory Board and what is its role in
development of the Annual Plan?
This final rule clarifies in Sec. 903.13(b)(1) and (3) the
requirements that Resident Advisory Board composition provides for
reasonable representation of families receiving project-based
assistance, in addition to families receiving tenant-based assistance.
Sec. 903.15 What is the relationship of the public housing agency
plans to the Consolidated Plan and a PHA's Fair Housing requirements?
This final rule clarifies in paragraph (c) that all admission and
occupancy policies for section 8 project-based housing programs, in
addition to public housing and section 8 tenant-based must comply with
Fair Housing Act requirements and other civil rights laws and
regulations and with a PHA's plans to affirmatively further fair
housing.
[[Page 38227]]
Sec. 982.4 Definitions
In this final rule, HUD has revised the organizational structure of
the cross-references for clarity and consistency with cross references
in other sections. In addition, this final rule makes the following
changes to definitions:
HUD adds the definition of ``building,'' to clarify that a building
is a structure with a roof and walls that contains one or more dwelling
units.
HUD adds the definitions of ``foster adult'' and ``foster child''
to the HCV program to clarify that foster adult and foster child are
members of the household, but not members of a family. These
definitions are identical to the definitions added by the Housing
Opportunity Through Modernization Act of 2016: Implementation of
Sections 102, 103, and 104 final rule.\5\
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\5\ See ``Housing Opportunity Through Modernization Act of 2016:
Implementation of Sections 102, 103, and 104'' final rule at 88 FR
9600 (Feb. 14, 2023).
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HUD revises the definition of ``housing quality standards'' to make
a technical correction to the existing definition and eliminate
confusion regarding the use of the alternative inspection option. Under
the statute, the term ``housing quality standards'' (HQS) refers to the
standards prescribed by HUD under section 8(o)(8)(B)(i) or variations
approved by HUD under section 8(o)(8)(B)(ii) of the United States
Housing Act of 1937. While the alternative inspection option at Sec.
982.406 allows a PHA to comply with the initial and regular inspection
requirements by relying on an alternative inspection (i.e., an
inspection conducted for another housing program), that does not mean
the standards of the alternative inspection become the applicable HQS
for the HCV program. For example, assume a PHA places a unit under a
HAP contract by using the alternative inspection option for initial
inspections under Sec. 982.406(e). Under that option, the PHA may
place a unit under HAP contract on the basis that the unit passed an
alternative inspection for a different housing program if certain
conditions are met prior to conducting its own inspection. However, the
PHA must still conduct its own HQS inspection within 30 days of
receiving the Request for Tenancy Approval (RFTA) and may not make
housing assistance payments to the owner until the PHA has inspected
the unit. The PHA conducts its inspection of the unit based on the HQS
established by HUD for the HCV program, not the housing standards that
were applicable under the alternative inspection. Likewise, any interim
inspection conducted by the PHA for a unit under HAP contract is to
determine that the unit meets the HQS established by HUD for the HCV
program, regardless of whether the PHA is relying on an alternative
inspection of another housing program (that may have different
standards) for regular inspections. For these same reasons, HUD is also
revising the definition of HQS for the PBV program at Sec. 983.3 and
making conforming changes to Sec. Sec. 982.401, 982.605(a),
982.609(a), 982.614(a), 982.618(b), 982.621, and 983.101(a) in this
final rule.
HUD revises the definition of ``independent entity'' from the
definition in the proposed rule to clarify when the unit of general
local government meets the definition of an independent entity and more
clearly explain the requirements and prohibited connections for a HUD-
approved entity.
HUD revises the proposed definition of ``Request for Tenancy
Approval (RFTA)'' to make clear that the RFTA may be submitted not just
by the family, but also on behalf of a family.
HUD revises the definition of ``Small Area Fair Market Rents'' from
the proposed rule to remove language suggesting that the definition
only applies to areas meeting the definition at Sec. 888.113(d)(2).
HUD removed this reference because the SAFMRs in part 982 are not meant
to be limited to the mandatory Small Area FMR metropolitan areas, and
as such the ``Small Area Fair Market Rents'' definition deleted the
citation to Sec. 888.113(d)(2), which only covers mandatory
metropolitan areas designated as Small Area FMR areas.
HUD revises the definition of ``tenant-paid utilities'' by stating
that utilities and services may include those required by HUD through
Federal Register notice with opportunity for comment.
Sec. 982.54 Administrative Plan
This final rule revises the requirements for the PHA Administrative
Plan. Specifically, this final rule requires PHAs at Sec.
982.54(d)(22) to specify in the Administrative Plan the PHA's policy
for withholding HAP for units that do not meet HQS. This final rule
also requires at Sec. 982.54(d)(4)(iv) that the PHA Administrative
Plan include the PHA's policy concerning residency for foster children
and adults and requires at Sec. 982.54(d)(23) that the PHA's
Administrative Plan include the PHA's policy on assisting families with
relocating and finding a new unit. This final rule also modifies Sec.
982.54(d)(4)(iii) to include Sec. Sec. 982.552, 982.554, and 982.55 as
regulations that PHAs must follow in establishing their standards for
denying admission or terminating assistance based on criminal activity
or alcohol abuse and which must be included in their Administrative
Plan. HUD's directives and guidance on a PHA's use of criminal activity
as an admission screening factor are contained in PIH Notice 2015-19,
Guidance for Public Housing Agencies (PHAs) and Owners of Federally-
Assisted Housing on Excluding the Use of Arrest Records in Housing
Decisions. Through this notice and other issuances, such as the 2016
Office of General Counsel's Guidance on the Application of Fair Housing
Act Standards to the Use of Criminal Records by Providers of Housing
and Real Estate-Related Transactions, HUD has required PHAs to adopt
admission policies that do not intentionally discriminate against
members of a protected class or otherwise have an unjustified
discriminatory effect on members of a protected class, even when the
PHA has no intent to discriminate. HUD urges PHAs to achieve a sensible
and effective balance between allowing individuals with a criminal
record to access HUD-subsidized housing and ensuring the safety of all
residents of such housing.
Consistent with the NSPIRE final rule, HUD modifies Sec.
982.54(d)(21)(i) to require the PHA to include in its Administrative
Plan any life-threatening deficiencies adopted by the PHA. Under the
proposed rule, the PHA's Administrative Plan had to include the
specific life-threatening conditions that would be identified through
the PHA's inspections, including the HUD required life-threatening
conditions and any life-threatening deficiencies adopted by the PHA
prior to January 18, 2017. Since the deficiencies that HUD requires
must be considered life-threatening are mandatory and not a matter of
PHA administrative policy, requiring the PHA to list the HUD-required
life-threatening deficiencies in the Administrative Plan is unnecessary
and burdensome. In addition, singling out life-threatening deficiencies
adopted by the PHA prior to January 18, 2017, which was related to how
HUD initially implemented the non-life-threatening initial inspection
option in the HOTMA Implementation Federal Register notice (82 FR 5458,
published January 18, 2017), may create confusion. The revised text in
this final rule clarifies that the Administrative Plan must include a
list of any PHA designated life-threatening deficiencies that, in
addition to all HUD-required life-threatening deficiencies, will be
applied
[[Page 38228]]
by the PHA, regardless of date that the PHA designated the deficiency
as life-threatening.
Sec. 982.301 Information When Family Is Selected
This final rule makes changes to the information provided to a
family when they are selected. For transparency and to ensure equal
access, this section specifies that PHAs must provide information in a
way that ensures meaningful access to individuals with limited English
proficiency. Additionally, the final rule expands upon the requirement
in the proposed rule to provide information on reasonable accommodation
policies and procedures in the information packet, by also requiring
that the packet specifically address an increase in the payment
standard as a reasonable accommodation. The final rule also includes a
requirement that reasonable accommodations must also be covered in the
oral briefing. In this section, this final rule removes all references
to the welfare to work program, since it no longer exists. Finally,
this rule reorganizes paragraph (a) so that paragraph (a)(1) represents
a list of what must be provided in an oral briefing, moving some
content from paragraphs (a)(2) and (3); this reorganization does not
change the requirements of paragraph (a) in any way.
Sec. 982.305 PHA Approval of Assisted Tenancy
This final rule reorganizes Sec. 982.305(b) of the proposed rule
by relocating paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of the proposed rule to a new
paragraph (b)(3) and moving the previous paragraph (b)(3) to a new
paragraph (b)(4). For clarity and simplicity, this final rule removes
the requirement that the PHA determine that the unit is covered by the
alternative inspection and simplifies this provision to state that an
alternative inspection is allowed and alternatively cross references
what the PHA is subject to and the alternative inspection option at
Sec. 982.406. In addition, this final rule does not make the proposed
non-substantive change to paragraph (c)(3).
Sec. 982.352 Eligible Housing
This final rule changes proposed Sec. 982.352(b)(1)(v)(A)(3) by
removing the exception of applicability of Sec. 982.405(e),
acknowledging that sometimes independent entities schedule inspections,
and in those cases, they must consider complaints and any other
information brought to their attention.
Sec. 982.401 Housing Quality Standards
NSPIRE includes the new standards for setting HQS at Sec. 5.703
for all HUD programs including the standards for life-threatening and
non-life-threatening conditions and the amount of time required to
correct such deficiencies. Other than a conforming change related to
the revised definition of HQS discussed previously in the description
of the changes to Sec. 982.4, this final rule makes no change to the
section as codified in the NSPIRE rule (88 FR 30442 (May 11, 2023)).
Sec. 982.404 Maintenance: Owner and Family Responsibility; PHA
Remedies
HUD makes several clarifying revisions to this section, which
includes changes to certain terminology such as changing ``fails to
comply'' to ``has HQS deficiencies'' and consistently changing
``defect'' to ``deficiency.'' These clarifying changes also make it
clear that a unit is ``not in compliance with HQS'' when it has
deficiencies that are not remedied within the appropriate timeframe.
This final rule also revises paragraph (a)(2) to provide clarifying
changes from the proposed rule text that ensure the paragraph is clear
that it does not provide a different requirement from the remainder of
the section, and amends paragraph (a)(4) to align with the HOTMA
statutory text. HUD provides in paragraph (b)(4) that, in the case of a
family being responsible for HQS deficiency repairs, the family need
not itself make the repairs but rather is responsible for taking all
steps permissible under the lease and State and local law to ensure the
deficiency is corrected. This is in response to commenters who pointed
out that in some cases the lease or local law may prevent the family
from undertaking the repairs itself.
The proposed rule used varying terminology to explain HQS
inspections throughout parts 982 and 983. To promote clarity, this
final rule replaces the varied terminology to explain HQS inspections
and consistently uses the inspection terms outlined in Sec. 982.405.
This rule specifically names each type of inspection that exists within
its respective section and specifies when actions or provisions apply
to specific inspections. As such, this final rule also removes
references to ``regular inspection'' since it was undefined in the
proposed rule, and this final rule clarifies that Sec. 982.404(d)
applies to every inspection type other than initial inspections. This
final rule also adds the requirement at paragraph (d)(1) that a PHA's
Administrative Plan contains the conditions for withholding HAP from an
owner for such deficiencies, to align with Sec. 982.54.
In paragraph (d)(2)(i), this final rule clarifies that the
abatement requirement includes amounts that had previously been
withheld. To better protect families from homelessness, in paragraph
(d)(2)(ii), HUD outlines the timeframe in which a PHA must issue a
family its voucher to include at least 30 days prior to the termination
of the HAP contract. In paragraph (d)(3), this final rule specifies
that the family has discretion to terminate their lease and that the
termination will occur either immediately or when the family vacates
the unit, whichever is earlier. This final rule also includes the
requirement that PHAs promptly issue the family a voucher to move. In
paragraph (e)(3), HUD expands what is included in costs associated with
relocating to include temporary housing costs. The final rule further
provides that if the PHA uses the withheld and abated assistance
payments to assist with the family's relocation costs, the PHA must
provide security deposit assistance to the family as necessary, and
that PHAs must assist families with disabilities in locating available
accessible units in accordance with 24 CFR 8.28(a)(3).
Lastly, in paragraph (f), HUD provides that the revised Sec.
982.404 applies to HAP contracts that are executed on or after the
effective date of this final rule, as well as HAP contracts renewed
after the rule's effective date.
Sec. 982.405 PHA Initial and Periodic Unit Inspection
HUD has made technical organizational changes to Sec. 982.405 by
dividing paragraphs and changing the headers to consistently use
identifiable names for each inspection type. New paragraph (d) splits
up the proposed paragraph (g) to specifically outline the types of
interim inspections to include life-threatening, non-life-threatening,
and extraordinary circumstances.
Sec. 982.406 Use of Alternative Inspections
HUD revises Sec. 982.406 primarily to address issues with respect
to compatibility between parts 982 and 983. Paragraph (a) now applies
only to HCV, part 982 as HUD moved generally applicable language at
proposed paragraph (a)(2) to paragraph (d) and removed the language at
proposed paragraph (a)(3) applicable only to PBV. HUD also revises
paragraph (c)(2)(ii) to align with the renumbering in Sec. 982.405.
This final rule revises paragraph (d) regarding use of alternative
inspections to apply to both HCV and PBV, by removing specific
citations to Sec. 982.405.
[[Page 38229]]
These changes continue to require that any alternative inspection
standard be identified in the PHA Administrative Plan for both HCV and
PBV.
Sec. 982.451 Housing Assistance Payments Contract
In this final rule, the text from paragraph (c)(1)(i) has been
moved under paragraph (c)(1), resulting in a renumbering of paragraphs
(c)(1)(i)(A)-(E) from the proposed rule to (c)(1)(i)-(v) in the final
rule. Paragraph (c)(1) now expressly states the requirement that the
separate legal entity must execute the HAP contract with the PHA if it
chooses the option of establishing a separate legal entity to serve as
the owner. HUD deletes paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of the proposed rule and
moves the text of proposed (c)(2)(i) under paragraph (c)(2) in the
final rule. This final rule also revises paragraph (c)(2)(i) to clarify
that the PHA-owned certification obligates the PHA, as the owner, to
all of the requirements of the HAP contract. This revision prevents
confusion with other regulations that reference HAP contracts, but not
the PHA-owned certification. Finally, other minor changes were made in
paragraph (c) to align with corresponding requirements in Sec.
983.204(e).
Sec. 982.503 Payment Standard Areas, Schedule, and Amounts
HUD makes clarifying edits to paragraph (a)(1) to reflect HUD's
practice of setting SAFMRs for ZIP codes outside designated SAFMRs. HUD
also revises paragraph (d)(1) to explain the areas in which an
exception payment standard may be established. In addition, in response
to public comment, HUD revises paragraph (d)(2) to allow PHAs to set
SAFMR-based exception payment standards above 110 percent of the FMR
for non-metropolitan counties, just as they are currently permitted to
do for metropolitan areas. This ensures parity between metropolitan and
non-metro PHAs and provides non-metropolitan PHAs with the ability to
establish exception payment standards that better reflect actual market
conditions based on HUD's SAFMR determinations. In paragraph (d)(2),
this final rule also allows PHAs that qualify for exception payment
standards above 110 percent of the applicable FMR to set exception
payment standards up to the same percentage of the SAFMR for the
applicable ZIP code. HUD also divides proposed paragraph (d)(3) into
paragraphs (d)(3) and (4) and moves proposed paragraph (d)(4) to
(d)(5). In order to provide PHAs more flexibility to respond to rapidly
changing rental markets, paragraph (d)(3) now provides set situations
in which HUD will allow PHAs the discretion to establish an exception
payment standard amount between 110 percent and 120 percent of
applicable FMR upon notification to HUD that the PHA meets a specified
criterion instead of requiring prior HUD approval. The PHA must meet
one of three criteria: (i) Fewer than 75 percent of the families to
whom the PHA issued tenant-based rental vouchers during the most recent
12-month period for which there is success rate data available have
become participants in the voucher program; (ii) More than 40 percent
of families with tenant-based rental assistance administered by the
agency pay more than 30 percent of adjusted income as the family share;
or (iii) Such other criteria as the Secretary establishes by notice.
This change will allow PHAs to more quickly respond to changing rental
market conditions, which will help them better manage program
utilization, success rates, and rent burdens. New paragraph (d)(4)
outlines how the PHA must request approval from HUD to establish
payment standards above 110 percent of the applicable FMR except as
provided in paragraphs (d)(2), (d)(3), and (d)(5). This new paragraph
consolidates requirements related to exception payment standards for
PHAs in designated SAFMR areas and for PHAs subject to the metropolitan
area or non-metropolitan county FMRs. It also establishes criteria for
designated SAFMR PHAs to request an exception payment standard over 110
percent of the SAFMR, which the current regulation previously stated
would be provided in a separate Federal Register notice. Further, HUD
revises paragraph (d)(4) to explain the application of the exception
payment standard to the entire fair market rent area and the use of
rental market data, specifically allowing the use of local rental
market data. HUD provides clarifying changes to relocated paragraph
(d)(5), which now specifies existing policy that PHAs may establish an
exception payment standard of up to 120 percent of the applicable FMR
without prior notification to HUD if they are seeking a reasonable
accommodation for a person with a disability.
HUD also amends paragraph (e) by establishing a modified standard
for approving payment standards below the basic range which will
require a projection of rent burden based on the lower payment
standard, rather than measuring rent burden based on current program
participants prior to that reduction. The standard does allow HUD to
approve a payment standard below the basic range to help prevent
termination of assistance in the case of a PHA budget shortfall. In
this final rule, HUD does not adopt the proposed rule modification to
paragraph (e) and removes the PHA's option to go below the basic
payment standard range for Small Area FMR ZIP code areas without HUD
approval. In addition, HUD amends paragraph (f) to eliminate the option
to establish success rate payment standards. HUD determined that the
new flexibility provided in the rule to set payment standards up to 120
percent of the FMR makes this option unnecessary. In paragraph (h),
this final rule specifies that HUD will monitor rent burdens only of
families assisted with tenant-based rental assistance, because PBV
tenants are unlikely to have rent burdens above 30 percent.
Sec. 982.505 How To Calculate Housing Assistance Payment
In this final rule, HUD revises paragraph (c)(3)(iv) to eliminate
the option in the proposed rule for PHAs to adopt different policies
related to applying decreases in payment standards in different
geographic areas out of concern that this could result in
discriminatory policies. Additionally, in response to public comment,
HUD revises paragraph (c)(4)(ii) to require PHAs to apply payment
standard increases at the family's next regular reexamination or the
next interim recertification (in addition to the other events listed)
and adds paragraph (c)(5) to give PHAs the flexibility to adopt
policies to apply increases in the payment standard earlier than
required. HUD also revised paragraph (c)(6), which was previously
paragraph (c)(5), to clarify that while the new family unit size must
be used in the recalculation by the first regular reexamination
following the change, it may be used immediately.
Sec. 982.517 Utility Allowance Schedule
In response to public comments HUD is not going forward with the
proposed Sec. 982.517(a)(2), which would have required PHAs to provide
the utility allowance schedule to HUD only when HUD requests it, and
instead maintains the current requirement that the PHA provide HUD with
the utility allowance schedule regardless of whether HUD requests it,
and to only require the PHA to provide information or procedures used
in preparation of the schedule when HUD requests it. HUD also revises
paragraph (b)(1)(i) to allow for the possibility of an expansion of
utility allowances in the future through a Federal Register notice.
Additionally, in
[[Page 38230]]
paragraph (b)(1)(ii), this final rule expands the category of utilities
and services to include applicable surcharges. In paragraph (b)(1)(iv),
HUD removed wireless internet from the list of non-essential utility
costs so that HUD could consider such inclusion of wireless internet as
essential in a Federal Register notice under paragraph (b)(1)(i).
In paragraph (b)(2)(ii), HUD expands the utility allowance
standards to include criteria for applying utility allowance to
retrofitted units. The revised paragraph (b)(2)(ii) clarifies that
while the entire building must meet Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design (LEED) or Energy Star standards, in the future HUD
may provide by notice, when an energy-efficient utility allowance
(EEUA) may be used for retrofitted units even if the entire building
does not meet the standard. The revisions notes that there are only two
design standards that can be used for energy-efficient utility
allowance (EEUA) to prevent EEUAs from being applied broadly. HUD also
moves paragraph (b)(2)(iv) to paragraph (b)(2)(v) and adds a new
paragraph (b)(2)(iv) to state that the PHA must use the project-
specific utility allowance schedule for tenant-based participants in
projects that have an approved project-specific utility allowance under
Sec. 983.301(f)(4). This requirement was previously in Sec.
983.301(f)(4) of the proposed rule and Sec. 983.301(f)(2)(ii) of the
previous regulatory text but has been moved from part 983. The
Administrative Plan requirements to include PHAs state their policy for
utility allowance payments are consistent with Sec. 982.54.
Sec. 982.552 PHA Denial or Termination of Assistance for Family
This final rule makes a conforming change to remove Sec.
982.552(c)(1)(viii), which denies housing assistance for a family's
failure to comply with the FSS contract of participation, to align with
a statutory amendment to the Family Self-Sufficiency (FSS) program
authorizing language and the program's regulations, which amended 24
CFR 984.303(b)(5) through a final rule effective on June 16, 2022 (87
FR 30020). This change is in accordance with the Economic Growth,
Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act (``the Economic Growth
Act'') (Pub. L. 115-174) \6\ which states that, ``Housing assistance
may not be terminated as a consequence of either successful completion
of the contract of participation or failure to complete such
contract.''
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\6\ See The Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer
Protection Act (``the Economic Growth Act'') (Pub. L. 115-174).
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Sec. Sec. 982.605; 982.609; 982.614; 982.618; 982.621
The final rule makes a conforming change to Sec. Sec. 982.605;
982.609; 982.614; 982.618; and 982.621 to align the text with the
revised definition of HQS discussed previously in the description of
the changes to Sec. 982.4.
Sec. 983.2 When the Tenant-Based Voucher Rule (24 CFR Part 982)
Applies
HUD revises Sec. 983.2(c) to outline the specific part 982
provisions that do not apply to PBV assistance and revises paragraphs
(c)(1) and (2) to specify that the HAP contract retention provisions at
Sec. 983.158(e)(2) do not apply to PBV assistance. HUD also clarifies
in paragraph (c)(5) which provisions of part 982, subpart I do not
apply to PBV assistance and in paragraph (c)(7)(i) which provisions of
Sec. 982.503 do not apply.
Sec. 982.641 Homeownership Option: Applicability of Other Requirements
The final rule amends paragraph (d) to clarify that Sec. 982.406
(Use of alternative inspections), along with Sec. 982.405 (PHA unit
inspection) as the CFR previously provided, does not apply to the
homeownership option. Because no HAP or downpayment assistance may be
paid until the PHA inspects a family's homeownership unit and
determines it passes HQS (see 24 CFR 982.631(a)), Sec. Sec. 982.405
and 982.406 describing inspection requirements particular to rental
assistance are incompatible with the homeownership option. HUD notes
that this is not a substantive change.
Sec. 983.3 PBV Definitions
In response to public comment about the utility of establishing
SAFMRs in some non-metropolitan counties, this final rule revises the
definition of ``area where vouchers are difficult to use'' to include
areas where 90 percent of the SAFMR exceeds 110 percent of FMR not just
for metropolitan areas, but also for non-metropolitan counties. HUD
determines that, when used in a non-metropolitan context, the
difference between the SAFMR and FMR remains an easily identifiable and
consistent data point for determining if an area is one in which
vouchers are difficult to use.
This final rule also revises the definition of an ``area where
vouchers are difficult to use'' to include a census tract with a
poverty rate of 20 percent or less. This is not a substantive change,
but rather a reorganization of the rule text for streamlining. In the
proposed rule, Sec. 983.54(b), regarding the project cap (income-
mixing requirement), contained two separate categories of projects that
were subject to a higher project cap: these categories were projects
``located in a census tract with a poverty rate of 20 percent or less''
and projects ``located in an area where vouchers are difficult to
use.'' Similarly, Sec. 983.6(d), regarding the program cap (percentage
limitation), included both units ``located in a census tract with a
poverty rate of 20 percent or less'' and units ``located in an area
where vouchers are difficult to use'' as two separate categories of
units eligible for an increased cap. For both the program cap and
project cap, there was no difference between the requirements
applicable to the two categories of projects and units. To simplify
Sec. Sec. 983.54(b) and 983.6(d), HUD examined whether the 1937 Act
permitted the PBV regulatory definitions to consider a project or unit
``located in a census tract with a poverty rate of 20 percent or less''
to be a type of project or unit ``located in an area where vouchers are
difficult to use.'' In the case of the program cap, section
8(o)(13)(B)(ii) of the 1937 Act provides for a specific 10 percent
authority category for areas where vouchers are difficult to use ``as
specified in subparagraph (D)(ii)(II),'' which is the subparagraph
applying an exception to the project cap for areas where vouchers are
difficult to use and for census tracts with a poverty rate of 20
percent or less. As a result, HUD determines that the authority for an
exception to the program cap for census tracts with a poverty rate of
20 percent or less derives from the program cap exception for areas
where vouchers are difficult to use, and therefore it would be more
appropriate to include census tracts with a poverty rate of 20 percent
or less within the definition of ``areas where vouchers are difficult
to use.'' While the project cap exceptions for census tracts with a
poverty rate of 20 percent or less and areas where vouchers are
difficult to use are both mandated by section 8(o)(13)(D)(ii)(II) of
the 1937 Act, given that the exception is identical for each category
HUD determines the streamlining benefit makes placing census tracts
with a poverty rate of 20 percent or less in the definition of ``areas
where vouchers are difficult to use'' appropriate for purposes of
codification of the project cap categories in the CFR.
Also, in response to public comment, HUD in this final rule changes
the term ``comparable rental assistance'' to
[[Page 38231]]
``comparable tenant-based rental assistance,'' amends the definition
consistent with section 8(o)(13)(E) of the 1937 Act, and outlines the
minimum requirements for assistance to qualify as comparable tenant-
based rental assistance. HUD also finds that the proposed definition of
``development activity,'' in referring to both rehabilitation and new
construction done for the project to receive PBV assistance and for
other work occurring later during the term of the PBV HAP contract,
produced significant confusion. As a result, HUD removes work occurring
later during the term of the HAP contract from the proposed definition
of ``development activity'' in this final rule and instead covers this
work under a definition of ``substantial improvement.'' HUD revises the
content of the term ``substantial improvement'' for additional clarity.
This final rule also revises the definition of ``excepted units'' to
clarify that excepted units exclusively serve certain families in
accordance with Sec. 983.54(c)(2) and to distinguish its definition
from ``excluded units,'' which is a newly added definition that
excludes units that meet certain requirements from the program and
project cap.
As suggested by commenters, HUD revises the definition of
``existing housing'' to mean housing that meets or substantially
complies with HQS, which housing is distinct from housing that will
soon undergo development activity. ``Substantial compliance'' in this
definition provides specific limitations to ensure the deficiencies in
the project require minor work that can reasonably be completed within
a 30-day period of time. These revisions reflect the need to better
distinguish rehabilitated housing from existing housing so PHAs can
comply with the distinct program requirements applicable to each
housing type while also recognizing that HQS corrections may take a
longer time than the period noted in the proposed rule. HUD changes the
relevant time period in which existing housing is not expected to
undergo or need substantial improvement from five years to two years
after the HAP contract effective date in response to public comment.
HUD also revises the definitions of ``newly constructed housing'' and
``rehabilitated housing'' by establishing a standard determined on a
project-basis, rather than the prior unit-basis which was in the
proposed rule, consistent with prior HUD guidance that a project can
only be one type overall, and therefore specifying between the two
types on a per-unit basis was impractical. HUD further amends the
definition of ``rehabilitated housing'' to more directly note the
difference between such projects and ``existing housing.'' HUD also
clarifies the definition of ``independent entity'' to specify how it
relates to the PBV program and revises the definition of ``waiting list
admission'' to include owner-maintained waiting lists.
This final rule added to the definition of ``project'' to more
clearly describe the discretion PHAs already have to modify the
definition of project in their Administrative Plans. This final rule
adds a definition of ``tenant rent'' as applicable to the PBV program.
This final rule also adds the definitions for building, gross rent,
manufactured home, PHA Plan, program receipts, total tenant payment,
utility allowance, and utility reimbursement to clarify that these
terms apply to the PBV program.
This final rule removes the term ``eligible'' from the definition
of ``in-place family,'' and instead discusses the eligibility of an in-
place family in Sec. 983.251. HUD also changes ``proposal selection
date'' to ``proposal or project selection date'' to align with changes
made to Sec. 983.51 (described below).
This final rule makes a conforming change to align the PBV program
definition of ``housing quality standards'' with the revised HCV
program definition discussed previously in the description of the
changes to Sec. 982.4.
In addition, this final rule removes the definition of ``project-
based certificate (PBC) program'' because it is no longer in existence.
Finally, this final rule removes the definition of ``request for
release of funds and certification'' and moves the relevant information
that was contained in the proposed rule to a more appropriate location,
Sec. 983.56.
Sec. 983.4 Cross-Reference to Other Federal Requirements
HUD proposed to revise HUD's labor standards cross-reference
regarding applicability of regulations implementing the Davis-Bacon
Act, but HUD at this final rule removes this change. As explained in
the summary of changes to Sec. 983.153, HUD requires Davis-Bacon
compliance regardless of whether an Agreement (referring to an
Agreement to enter into a HAP contract) is used in this final rule so
the change to this section is no longer necessary. HUD notes that under
section 12(a) of the 1937 Act, the labor standards provisions cross-
referenced in Sec. 983.4 only apply where there is an agreement for
section 8 use before construction or rehabilitation is commenced. As
discussed in reference to the changes to Sec. 983.153, the PHA's pre-
construction offer and owner's acceptance of PBV assistance to be
provided once the units are constructed or rehabilitated constitutes an
agreement triggering Davis-Bacon requirements on projects with 9 or
more assisted units, in accordance with section 12(a) of the 1937 Act,
regardless of whether an Agreement is used.
Finally, as a technical matter, HUD has revised Sec. 983.4 to
remove the reference to the definitions in 24 CFR part 5, subpart D.
Because HUD has revised Sec. 982.4(a)(2) to properly incorporate the
relevant definitions in 24 CFR part 5, subpart D, and because Sec.
983.4 incorporates 982.4, this incorporation is not necessary.
Sec. 983.5 Description of the PBV Program
HUD makes a minor revision to the proposed Sec. 983.5(a)(1) to
include the citation to the consolidated annual contributions contract
(ACC). This final rule also revises paragraph (a)(3) to better describe
the options available for development of newly constructed and
rehabilitated housing, including adding reference to the option added
in this final rule to Sec. 983.157 (which is described in greater
detail below). HUD revises paragraph (c) to require PHAs to provide
notice to HUD when the PHA executes, amends,\7\ or extends a HAP
contract, to align with system development already in progress,\8\ and
makes changes to align with the language in Sec. 983.10, to require
the PHA to address all PBV related matters over which the PHA has
policymaking discretion.
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\7\ Amendments in this context refers to changes such as those
that add or substitute contract units, rather than substantive
revisions to contractual text. The general requirement per 24 CFR
982.162 to use HUD-prescribed forms, including PBV HAP contracts,
without modification remains in place.
\8\ See 84 FR 70986 (Dec. 26, 2019); 85 FR 60249 (Sep. 24,
2020); 88 FR 28594 (May 4, 2023).
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Sec. 983.6 Maximum Amount of PBV Assistance (Percentage Limitation)
This final rule revises paragraphs (a) and (e) to explain how to
calculate the maximum number of PBV units to prevent the possibility of
the PHA miscalculating the cap and project-basing more units than it
should. This change reflects that the cap is 20 percent as adjusted,
and not a flat 20 percent of all Annual Contributions Contract (ACC)
units because the PHA must remove excluded units when calculating the
cap. This final rule also corrects the date in paragraph (a)(2), and in
paragraph (a)(3) expands the conditions under which the PHA may not add
units to PBV HAP contracts to include
[[Page 38232]]
paragraph (e). In paragraph (b), HUD clarifies that the PBV assistance
percentage limitation applies to all PBV units which the PHA has
selected, and that selection takes place from the time of the proposal
or project selection date.
This final rule also revises language in paragraph (d)(1)(iii) to
require that the Administrative Plan describe the availability of
supportive services in alignment with the language in Sec. 983.10. HUD
amends paragraph (d)(1)(iv) to remove the separate exception category
for census tracts with a poverty rate of 20 percent or less, given the
revised definition of an ``area where vouchers are difficult to use''
now includes a census tract with a poverty rate of 20 percent or less,
as explained further in the discussion of Sec. 983.3 above, and moves
the proposed paragraph (d)(1)(v) to (d)(1)(iv). HUD adds a new
exception in response to public comment to paragraph (d)(1)(v) for
units that replace, on a different site, the units removed from the
housing types listed in Sec. 983.59(b)(1)-(2) (see discussion of
comments received regarding Sec. 983.59). HUD revises paragraph (d)(2)
to increase the program cap and project cap for PBV units to include
the Fostering Stable Housing Opportunity (FSHO) authority enacted in
section 103 of division Q of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021
(Pub. L. 116-260, 134 Stat. 1182).\9\ Pursuant to section 103(c)(1) of
FSHO, the percentage limitation (i.e., the program cap) now includes
units that are exclusively made available to eligible youth receiving
FUP/FYI assistance under the 10 percent increased cap. This final rule
adds a new paragraph (d)(3) to clarify requirements to fill units under
certain 10 percent increased cap categories with the appropriate
families.
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\9\ See 87 FR 3570 (Jan. 24, 2022).
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This final rule also revises paragraph (e) by explaining that units
previously subject to federally required rent restrictions or that
received long-term rental assistance from HUD are removed for purposes
of calculating the percentages under paragraphs (a) and (d) of this
section.
This final rule also revises paragraph (1)(ii) by adding ``space
service'' to the definition of ``veteran'' to accurately include types
of service encompassed within the current statutory definition of
``veteran'' found in the Department of Veterans Affairs governing
statutes (i.e., 38 U.S.C. 101(2)). By adding ``space service,'' it will
ensure that no type of service for a veteran or veteran family goes
unaccounted for.
Sec. 983.10 PBV Provisions in the Administrative Plan
HUD revises the structure of Sec. 983.10 to outline the areas in
which PHAs have policymaking discretion specific to the PBV program and
requires these policies be included in the PHA Administrative plan. The
PHAs' policymaking discretion is noted throughout part 983 consistent
with this section. Section 983.10 includes a brief description of the
provisions that must be in the Administrative Plan for a PHA that
operates a PBV program and a citation in each provision to the
regulation that provides complete details about the requirement.
However, HUD notes that the policies listed in Sec. 983.10 are the
minimum that the PHA must include in its Administrative Plan. There are
additional areas, beyond those listed in Sec. 983.10, where a PHA may
properly exercise policy-making discretion consistent with language in
other sections in this part. In cases where a PHA exercises this
discretion, these additional policies must be included in the PHA's
Administrative Plan.
Sec. 983.11 Project-Based Certificate (PBC) Program
In the proposed rule, HUD proposed to move Sec. 983.10, dealing
with Project-Based Certificates (PBC), to Sec. 983.11. However, the
PBC program was replaced by the PBV program in 2001 and no units remain
in the PBC program.\10\ Therefore, in this final rule, references to
the PBC program have instead been removed. The currently codified Sec.
983.10, dealing with PBC, is instead being removed entirely. Because
the previous Sec. 983.10 is not being moved to Sec. 983.11, the
proposed Sec. 983.12 is, in this final rule, moved up to Sec. 983.11.
Section 983.12 of this final rule is new to this final rule and
discussed further below.
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\10\ Units under a PBC Agreement executed by the PHA and Owner
prior to January 16, 2001, remained in the PBC program. The maximum
term for PBCs under standard-form PBC HAP contracts was an aggregate
15 years (generally, three 5-year terms). Therefore, no more valid
PBC HAP contracts should exist. Upon expiration of a PBC HAP
contract, a PHA and Owner could agree to renew the PBC contract as a
PBV contract, consistent with section 6904 of the Troop Readiness,
Veterans' Care, Katrina Recovery, and Iraq Accountability
Appropriations Act, 2007, Public Law 110-28, and the now repealed 24
CFR 983.310(b)(1)(ii).
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Sec. 983.11 Prohibition of Excess Public Assistance
In response to public comments, HUD revises paragraph (d)(2)
dealing with subsidy layering review. Instead of requiring Subsidy
Layering Review (SLR) any time new funding of any amount or percentage
is added to the project during the term of the HAP contract, HUD will
specify when a new SLR is required via a Federal Register notice,
consistent with current practice. HUD concluded that finalizing
paragraph (d)(2) as proposed would be administratively burdensome.
Sec. 983.12 Project Record Retention
This final rule adds a new Sec. 983.12 to cover program accounts
and records for the PBV program (Sec. 982.158 continues to apply to
records applicable to both the tenant-based and project-based programs,
except as now specified in Sec. 983.2). While these documents should
already be maintained for compliance with HUD's regulations, this
section provides a specific list of documents, location, and time
period for retention of the PBV HAP contract and any PBV-specific
documents (e.g., Agreement to enter into HAP contract (Agreement),
completion documents, SLR, environmental review, selection materials),
including records demonstrating the independent entity's review of a
PHA-owned project selection. This section includes retention provisions
for records newly required under new PBV program components of this
final rule.
Sec. 983.51 Proposal and Project Selection Procedures
This final rule amends Sec. 983.51 throughout to clarify the
distinction between competitive selection of proposals versus
noncompetitive selection of projects since selection without
competition does not entail solicitation or selection of competing
proposals. As recommended by commenters, this final rule revises
paragraph (a) by allowing entities that have site control to submit PBV
proposals. HUD intends to provide further guidance on what HUD
considers to be ``site control'' through PIH notice.
Paragraph (a) also specifies that an owner may submit PBV proposals
to cover multiple projects where each consists of a single-family
building. Consistent with Sec. 983.10, HUD clarifies the requirement
that the PHA Administrative Plan must describe the procedures for
submission and selection of PBV proposals under the methods of
competitive selection in paragraph (b) and selection of projects under
an exception to competitive selection under paragraph (c), including
under what circumstances the PHA will use the selection methods
described in paragraphs (b) and (c).
HUD amends paragraph (b)(1) to address the methods the PHA must use
for competitive selection of PBV
[[Page 38233]]
proposals. This change clarifies that the PHA request for proposal
(RFP) selection method can be a part of another competition or run
simultaneously with another competition. This change also addresses
public concerns about the inability or difficulty of awarding PBVs to
projects that also compete and receive other funds, specifically
development dollars through Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC),
Housing Trust Fund (HTF), and HOME investment partnerships program. HUD
also makes clarifying changes to paragraph (b)(2) to remove the
language concerning LIHTC and HOME to avoid confusion because, in
practice, LIHTC and HOME almost always require the PBVs to be awarded
prior to receiving applications.
HUD clarifies in paragraph (c) that prior to a PHA selecting one or
more projects for PBV assistance without competition, the PHA must
notify the public of its intent to do so in its 5-Year Plan. HUD also
reorganizes paragraph (c)(1) in the proposed rule by moving applicable
requirements to new paragraphs (c)(1)(i)-(ii). Further, in response to
public comments, HUD adds clarifying language to paragraphs (c)(1) and
(c)(2) to better align with the statutory language in section
8(o)(13)(N) of the 1937 Act as amended by HOTMA, including a
clarification under (c)(1)(i) and a new paragraph at (c)(2)(iv)
regarding the number of units permitted to be replaced.
This final rule also adds a new paragraph (c)(3), which provides
increased flexibility for PHAs to noncompetitively select a project
comprised of PHA-owned units. HOTMA expressly allows PHAs to attach
PBVs to projects in which the PHA has an ownership interest without
following a competitive process in cases where the PHA is engaged in an
initiative to improve, develop, or replace a public housing property or
site. HUD implemented this provision in 2017. Based on HUD's experience
with these noncompetitive selections and after careful consideration,
HUD believes that it is advisable to extend the exception to PHA-owned
units in general. The main benefit of this final rule change is to
strengthen the PHA's ability to preserve and expand affordable housing
by increasing the viable options and paths available to the PHA through
strategies such as acquisition followed by rehabilitation. HUD further
adds paragraph (c)(4) to streamline the process of project-basing units
when a family chooses to relinquish their enhanced voucher for PBV
assistance. The new paragraph extends the types of housing that can be
selected without going through a competition. HUD also notes that PIH
Notice 2013-27 provides essential background on the voluntary
relinquishment of enhanced voucher assistance (and regular housing
choice voucher assistance) in exchange for PBV assistance.
HUD clarifies paragraph (e)(2)(i) to state that all contract units
must fully or substantially comply with HQS on the proposal or project
selection date. HUD also restructures and amends paragraph (f) of the
proposed rule to add new paragraphs (1) through (5) to address the
separate notice requirements depending upon whether a proposal is
selected competitively, or a project is selected without competition
and to provide a cross-reference to applicable language that must be in
the notice for certain projects. Finally, HUD clarifies in paragraph
(h) that under no circumstances may a HAP contract be effective for any
of the subsidized housing types set forth in Sec. 983.53(a).
Sec. 983.52 Prohibition of Assistance for Ineligible Units
HUD clarifies the meaning of paragraphs (a), (a)(3), (b), and (d)
by replacing the term ``attach'' with clearer statements of the
prohibited actions for the listed units, to align with the changes to
Sec. 983.53 described below. This final rule creates an exception to
the total prohibition in the original PBV rule on project-basing for
manufactured homes under paragraph (a)(5) where both the manufactured
home is permanently attached to the ground and the owner owns both the
manufactured home and the land. Allowing PBVs for manufactured homes
will likely decrease the cost to build, allow PBVs to be in areas where
traditional building would be difficult, and avoid requiring changes to
construction plans solely for the purpose of compliance.
Paragraph (c) provides that a PHA may attach assistance to an
occupied unit only if the occupant is eligible. HUD amends paragraph
(c) to specify what ``eligible'' means in this context, and to clarify
when eligibility is determined. Eligibility of the family is determined
in accordance with Sec. 982.201 prior to attaching assistance to the
unit (i.e., executing a HAP contract or amending a HAP contract by
adding or substituting a unit). For the unit to be eligible, the unit
must be appropriate for the size of the family and the tenant's total
tenant payment (TTP) must be lower than the gross rent. These changes
in paragraph (c) ensure PHAs are aware of existing requirements,
including that the family's TTP cannot be so high as to eliminate the
need for assistance (commonly calling being ``zero-HAP'') at admission.
HUD updates the exceptions applicable to paragraph (d), adding that
the requirements are not applicable if the PHA is undertaking
rehabilitation after HAP contract execution per Sec. 983.157 of this
final rule. Also, because an Agreement may be executed prior to its
effective date, HUD revises paragraph (d) to be clear that the
construction or rehabilitation is prohibited prior to the Agreement's
effective date rather than the execution date. HUD also modifies
paragraph (d) to allow PHAs to approve exceptions, in recognition that
there may be circumstances in which the prohibition is inappropriate.
Sec. 983.53 Prohibition of Assistance for Units in Subsidized Housing
For better readability, in this final rule, HUD restructures the
list of subsidized housing that is prevented from receiving PBV
assistance. In paragraph (a), HUD replaces the introductory text with
``A HAP contract may not be effective and no PBV assistance may be
provided for any of the following:'' for several reasons. First, HUD
determines that PBV program requirements should not prevent execution
of an Agreement for the listed subsidized housing types, as this
reduces administrative flexibility even though no HAP is paid when an
Agreement is executed. HUD notes that this is a change from the prior
regulatory requirement and use of this flexibility will be subject to
any requirements of the relevant non-PBV subsidy program. Second,
because a HAP contract must be executed prior to the effective date of
the contract (when HAPs may begin), there was no need to separately
specify that the HAPs cannot be made for the subsidized housing types.
Finally, HUD believes the wording changes improve readability. This
final rule also removes proposed rule paragraphs (e) and (j) concerning
rental assistance payments (RAP) and rent supplement projects (Rent
Supp) because the Rent Supp and RAP programs have ended. However,
unlike the Rent Supp program, there were some RAP projects remaining
less than five years prior to the effective date of this final rule.
Consequently, units in a few former RAP projects may still qualify for
a limited period of time as excepted units from the program cap and
project cap under the requirements at Sec. 983.59. Please see the
related discussion in the description of Sec. 983.59 below regarding
the reference to units in former RAP projects in that section.
[[Page 38234]]
Sec. 983.54 Cap on Number of PBV Units in Each Project (Income-Mixing
Requirement)
In this final rule, HUD clarifies in Sec. 983.54(a) that a PHA
cannot select a proposal where the project cap is not being met, in
addition to the prohibition on entering the Agreement or HAP contract.
HUD amends paragraph (b) to remove the separate exception categories,
given the revision of the definition of an ``area where vouchers are
difficult to use'' to include a census tract with a poverty rate of 20
percent or less, as explained previously in the discussion of Sec.
983.3 above. HUD further clarifies in paragraph (c) that exception
categories in a project may be combined; expands the exception
categories to include eligible youth using Family Unification Program
(FUP) assistance in paragraph (c)(2)(ii); and provides that supportive
services must be made available in a reasonable period of time not to
exceed 120 calendar days in paragraph (c)(2)(iii). Additionally, in
paragraph (c)(2)(iii), which was paragraph (c)(2)(ii) in the proposed
rule, this final rule does not include a requirement that a PHA
offering FSS must not solely rely on FSS to meet the exception to the
project cap. HUD revises paragraph (c)(3) to specify that units covered
by a PBV HAP contract under Sec. 983.59 will not count towards the
project cap and that these units are removed to ensure accuracy when
calculating the percentages of dwelling units. In paragraph (d), HUD
updates and expands provisions applicable to HAP contracts already in
effect to include HAP contracts in effect prior to December 27, 2020,
when the FUP exception became available.
Sec. 983.55 Site Selection Standards
HUD revises paragraph (b)(3) to include the site selection
standards that were formerly found in Sec. 982.401(l) and were removed
in the NSPIRE final rule (88 FR 30442 (May 11, 2023)). HUD also takes
this opportunity to amend the standards to add a specific reference to
contamination, which is particularly important to the health of
occupants, and to add a qualification that the serious adverse
environmental conditions at issue are those that could affect the
health or safety of the project occupants. As recommended by
commenters, use of these standards provides an important protection for
families, especially in cases in which an environmental review is not
performed. HUD also revises paragraph (e)(7) to remove a typo
concerning ``new construction,'' which appears in the current
regulations and the proposed rule.
Sec. 983.56 Environmental Review
In the proposed rule, HUD proposed to revise the environmental
review requirements for existing housing in accordance with section
106(a)(8) of HOTMA to exempt existing housing from further
environmental review if an existing housing project has ever undergone
an earlier environmental review pursuant to receiving any form of
Federal assistance. In other words, if a project that meets the
definition of ``existing housing'' as defined in the PBV regulations
for program purposes has not previously undergone a Federal
environmental review because it did not receive Federal assistance,
then the project would not be exempt from an environmental review.
In endeavoring to give full effect to the words of section
8(o)(13)(M)(ii) of the 1937 Act, HUD recognizes the statute provides
only a partial exemption to environmental reviews. Specifically, the
applicability of the provision is limited to ``existing projects.''
Environmental reviews continue to be applicable to PBV rehabilitation
and new construction projects. The limited scope of the proposed
exemption from environmental reviews reflects Congress's continuing
emphasis on the importance of Federal assistance being used in an
environmentally sound manner.
Upon consideration of comments, HUD revises paragraph (a)(2) to
better balance the words of the amended section 8(o)(13)(M)(ii) of the
1937 Act with Congress's continued environmental emphasis by excusing
existing housing from undertaking an environmental review before
entering into a HAP contract, except where a Federal environmental
review is required by law or regulation relating to funding other than
PBV housing assistance payments. This paragraph (a)(2) applies to
projects selected using the site selection standards applicable upon
the effective date of this final rule. In paragraph (a)(2), HUD changes
the characterization of the exception for existing housing so as not to
imply that the project has been determined to be ``exempt'' pursuant to
an environmental review.
HUD makes minor technical revisions throughout the section, such as
to consistently use the phrasing of paragraph (a) of the proposed rule
that environmental reviews apply to ``activities'' (see responses to
comment on Sec. 983.56 for further discussion of technical changes).
HUD amends the description of the ``responsible entity'' in paragraph
(b) to explain more clearly which unit of general local government
serves as the responsible entity. HUD also removes the final sentence
of paragraph (b) of the proposed rule, as it was duplicative of text
that appeared later in the regulation. HUD also removes the proposed
rule's reference in paragraph (d) to amending a HAP contract, to
conform to changes described below relating to Sec. 983.207. Further,
HUD clarifies in (d)(2) that HUD will approve the Request for Release
of Funds and Certification by issuing a Letter to Proceed or form HUD-
7015.16 when a responsible entity must complete an environmental
review. In paragraph (e), HUD clarifies that the reference to the
prohibited activities refers only to the listed actions by the PHA, the
owner, or its contractors, rather than the actions by described in
paragraphs (d)(1)-(3) that are taken by the responsible entity or HUD.
Lastly, HUD revises paragraph (f) to require PHAs to document
mitigating measures in accordance with part 50 or 58 of title 24, as
applicable, and to complete or require the owner to carry out such
measures and conditions.
Sec. 983.57 PHA-Owned Units
This final rule makes an edit to paragraph (b) to remove
superfluous words. HUD also revises paragraph (b)(1) to clarify that
the independent entity calculates the amount of reasonable rent and any
rent adjustments by an OCAF, due to confusion the wording in the
proposed rule raised given that HUD determines the OCAF. In response to
comments received, HUD removes paragraph (b)(2) from the proposed rule,
which results in a renumbering of paragraphs (b)(3) and (b)(4) to
paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3) in this final rule. HUD also revises
redesignated paragraph (b)(3) to clarify that the independent entity is
responsible for not only reviewing the work completion certification,
but also determining if the units are compliant with Sec. 983.156.
This final rule also makes this change to align redesignated paragraph
(b)(3) with corresponding Sec. 983.212 (which was Sec. 983.157 in the
proposed rule), per changes to Sec. 983.212 described below. This
final rule adds paragraph (b)(4) to expand the independent entity
functions to include determining whether to approve substantial
improvement to units under a HAP contract, since PHAs are required to
perform this function for substantial improvement on units under a HAP
contract for non-PHA-owned units.
Finally, HUD reorganizes and slightly modifies the language at
paragraph (c) to
[[Page 38235]]
achieve consistency with a similar provision at 982.352(b)(1)(v)(B)
regarding compensation of independent entities.
Sec. 983.58 PHA Determination Prior to Selection
In this final rule, HUD revises proposed Sec. 983.58 for clarity
purposes, to avoid any misinterpretation that budget authority is
intertwined with the program cap. HUD also adds a new paragraph (b) to
require that PHAs analyze the impact of having a high percentage of
vouchers committed as PBVs. The PHA should consider the needs of the
community, including families on the waiting list and eligible PBV
families that wish to move under Sec. 983.261. The analysis performed
by the PHA must be available as part of the public record.
Sec. 983.59 Units Excepted From Program Cap and Project Cap
HUD clarifies in paragraph (b) that excluded units must fall into
one of the outlined categories provided that the units are removed from
all categories by the time of execution of the Agreement or HAP
contract. This clarification aligns with the statutory language
stating, ``units previously subject to federally required rent
restrictions or receiving another type of long-term subsidy'' and means
that the units must no longer be subject to the rent restriction or
receiving subsidy.
This final rule removes paragraph (b)(1)(v), because the Rent
Supplement Program ended more than five years ago and no longer exists.
HUD notes that the Rental Assistance Program (RAP) (section 236(f)(2)
of National Housing Act of 1965) also expired, but, unlike the Rent
Supplement Program, the RAP expired at the end of 2019, less than 5
years ago. Because paragraph (b) of Sec. 983.59 allows project-basing
of units that were removed from the listed programs up to 5 years prior
to the request for proposals (RFP) or the proposal or project selection
date, RAP units may still be eligible for project-basing under
paragraph (b).
HUD has amended Sec. 983.59(b)(2) and included two additional
types of units in the list of units ``previously subject to federally
required rent restrictions'' that were not included in the list of
excepted units implemented under the HOTMA Implementation Notices \11\
in the Federal Register: (1) units financed with Low-Income Housing Tax
Credits (26 U.S.C. 42) and (2) units subsidized with Section 515 Rural
Rental Housing Loans (42 U.S.C. 1485). The final rule also amends Sec.
983.59(b)(2) to provide that the list of excepted units ``previously
subject to federally required rent restrictions'' shall also include
any other program subsequently identified by HUD through a Federal
Register notice that is subject to public comment.
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\11\ See 81 FR 73030 (Oct. 24, 2016); 82 FR 5458 (Jan. 18,
2017); 82 FR 32461 (Jul. 14, 2017).
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Further, to provide regulatory streamlining, this final rule
removes proposed rule paragraph (c) which provided that other excluded
units include both HUD's Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD) program
and HUD VASH set-aside vouchers from the PBV program and project caps
(these programs continue to be governed by the applicable notices and
waivers therein). Instead, HUD redesignates proposed rule paragraph (d)
as paragraph (c), which discusses replacement units. In redesignated
paragraph (c), HUD clarifies that replacement units can be built on the
original project site, instead of the ``public housing development.''
This clarification removes the limitation of ``public housing
development'' and expands the qualification of an original project site
to include all of the formerly assisted or restricted projects covered
by this section. In new paragraph (e), this final rule clarifies that
the 10 percent exception under Sec. 983.6 and the project cap
exception under Sec. 983.54(c)(2) are inapplicable to units excluded
under this section.
Sec. 983.101 Housing Quality Standards
This final rule makes a conforming change to align paragraph (a)
with the revised PBV program definition of HQS at Sec. 983.3.
Sec. 983.103 Inspecting Units
HUD revises Sec. 983.103(a) to clarify that the regulatory
inspection provisions of paragraph (c) of this section apply only when
the pre-selection inspection determines the project meets the
definition of existing housing.
HUD amends paragraph (b) to specify the times at which an initial
inspection is required for newly constructed or rehabilitated housing
or for units that underwent substantial improvement prior to being
added to the HAP contract. The times at which an initial inspection is
required, and the specific units which are to be inspected, depend on
whether the work was development activity or substantial improvement,
and, in the case of rehabilitation, whether the development activity
occurs before or after HAP contract execution. HUD believes separating
the requirements in this final rule will improve readability. HUD also
revises paragraph (c)(1) to better explain the Administrative Plan
provisions that are applicable.
Paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of the proposed rule provided that the PHA
must give a notice to families offered a unit with non-life-threatening
deficiencies that explains, among other things, that the owner's
failure to correct the deficiencies within the cure period will result
in removal of the unit from the HAP contract. This final rule revises
paragraph (c)(2)(ii) to also require the PHA to provide a similar
notice to families offered units without deficiencies, if some units in
the project have non-life-threatening deficiencies and the PHA's
Administrative Plan provides that the PHA will terminate the entire PBV
HAP contract if the owner fails to correct the deficiencies within the
cure period.
In paragraph (c)(2)(iv), HUD revises the regulatory language to be
clear that PHAs must release the withheld payment to the owner once the
deficiencies are corrected within the cure period, as required by
section 8(o)(8)(G)(ii) the 1937 Act. This statutory requirement
provides that the PHA must resume assistance payments and must cover
the withheld period if the owner made the repairs before the cure
period ends. This change to align the regulations with the statute is
also reflected in paragraphs (c)(3)(vii), (c)(4)(iv), and (c)(4)(v).
This final rule also modifies paragraph (c)(2)(v) (which was
mistakenly labeled as paragraph (c)(2)(iv) in the proposed rule) by
requiring PHAs to provide any affected family tenant-based assistance
when the PHA terminates the PBV HAP contract or removes the unit from
the HAP contract due to the owner's failure to correct deficiencies.
The provision of tenant-based assistance in this circumstance is
required by section 8(o)(13)(F)(iv) of the 1937 Act and was
inadvertently omitted from the proposed rule's description of the
process. This final rule makes the same modification to paragraphs
(c)(3)(viii) and (c)(4)(vi).
HUD revises paragraphs (c)(3) and (c)(4) to align with changes in
Sec. 982.406 that apply to PBV. This final rule subjects the PHA's
adoption of an alternative inspection option to the procedures and
requirements outlined in Sec. 982.406(b), (c), (d), and (g). The
changes in paragraph (c)(3)(v) provide clarifying changes to existing
established policy. To ensure that the PHA is transparent to families
that are referred to and provided a unit with non-life-threatening
deficiencies, this final rule revises paragraph (c)(4)(i) to require
that PHAs provide these families
[[Page 38236]]
a list of those deficiencies and inform them of the option to decline
the unit without losing their place on the PBV waiting list.
In paragraph (c)(4)(v), HUD clarifies that PHAs make retroactive
payments upon correction of deficiencies beginning at the later of the
effective date of the HAP contract or the PBV lease effective dates.
This final rule revises paragraph (c)(4)(v) and (c)(4)(vi) explaining
the PHA's requirements when the owner fails to make repairs within the
applicable time periods. For the safety of the family, this final rule
adds a requirement to paragraph (c)(4)(v) that explicitly prohibits
PHAs from referring families from the PBV waiting list to occupy units
with life-threatening deficiencies. In alignment with Sec. 983.10,
paragraph (c)(4)(vi)(B) clarifies that the PHA's Administrative Plan
must specify whether the PHA will remove only a unit with deficiencies
from the HAP contract for the owner's failure to correct the
deficiencies, as opposed to terminating the entire HAP contract (only
the latter, terminating the contract, had been included in paragraph
(c)(4)(vi)(B) of the proposed rule).
This final rule also amends paragraph (e) concerning periodic
inspections, to provide that the alternative inspection option is
available for periodic inspections and to specify which provisions of
Sec. 982.406 apply. HUD makes changes to paragraph (e) to specify how
to comply with the sampling requirement in the event that fewer than 20
percent of contract units are available for occupancy in accordance
with development activity occurring under Sec. 983.157. HUD also makes
changes to align with the NSPIRE final rule (88 FR 30442 (May 11,
2023)) in paragraph (e), which incorporates the requirement that small
rural PHAs inspect random sample units at least once every three years.
This final rule makes changes to paragraph (f), which specifies the
PHAs' timing and inspection requirements for life-threatening
deficiencies, non-life-threatening deficiencies, and extraordinary
circumstances, to align with Sec. 982.405, which covers PHA
inspections. The changes in paragraph (i) are a change in terminology
to avoid conflict with the term ``mixed finance'' as used in public
housing projects.
Sec. 983.152 Nature of Development Activity
This final rule revises Sec. 983.152(a)(2) to remove discussion of
substantial improvement to add previously unassisted units and instead
provide reference to the development activity applicable to a
rehabilitated project undergoing work after HAP contract execution per
Sec. 983.157 of this final rule. As discussed in the description of
changes to Sec. 983.3 above, HUD determines that ``development
activity'' should be clearly distinguished from ``substantial
improvement.'' As a result, HUD removes the corresponding reference to
activities now classified as ``substantial improvement'' in (a)(2) and
deletes paragraph (b)(2), moving pertinent requirements applicable to
substantial improvement to add or substitute units to Sec. 983.207(d)
of this final rule. The new language of paragraph (a)(2) is added to
clearly describe the nature of the development activity under Sec.
983.157, which is completed following HAP contract execution instead of
beforehand. HUD also updates paragraph (b) to appropriately reference
the new requirements applicable to Sec. 983.157.
Sec. 983.153 Development Requirements
This final rule makes several minor revisions to citations in Sec.
983.153 for consistency with the changes to Sec. 983.152 described
above. Also, this final rule makes a minor clarifying revision to the
first sentence in paragraph (b)(2), by requiring subsidy layering
review before a PHA attaches assistance to a project, instead of
subsidy layering review occurring before a PHA commits to provide
assistance to a project. This clarifying change is to prevent any
possible ambiguity about whether the subsidy layering review is
required before the proposal or project selection date; in other words,
HUD makes clear that the rule only requires that the subsidy layering
review occur no later than execution of an Agreement or HAP contract.
This final rule requires in Sec. 983.153(b)(4) that the owner
disclose changes to the information provided for the subsidy layering
review, to ensure that the change(s) may be reviewed and that it does
not result in excessive public assistance to the project.
This final rule revises paragraph (c) of the proposed rule to
require Davis-Bacon compliance regardless of whether an Agreement is
used. The PBV program is subject to statutory labor standards
provisions in section 12(a) of the 1937 Act. Section 12(a) of the 1937
Act requires the applicability of Davis-Bacon prevailing wages to the
development of low-income housing projects containing nine or more
section 8-assisted units, where there is an agreement for section 8 use
before construction or rehabilitation is commenced. In reconsidering
both HUD's current position and the alternative suggested in the
proposed rule with respect to the meaning of ``agreement'' in section
12(a), HUD has determined that an ``agreement'' under section 12(a)
encompasses more than the PBV Agreement (i.e., Form HUD-52531) and
includes the agreement that consists of the PHA's project selection and
resulting offer of assistance to the owner, and the acceptance of PBV
assistance by the owner. HUD also recognizes the importance of Davis-
Bacon prevailing wage requirements to the workers in the community
where the owner has sought a commitment of PBVs in advance of
development, as commenters suggested. Consequently, HUD will require
the notice of proposal selection to require payment of Davis-Bacon
prevailing wages for development of newly constructed or rehabilitated
projects containing nine or more section 8-assisted units regardless of
whether the PHA and owner will be using an Agreement. This final rule
also makes a slight modification to paragraph (c)(1) to correct the
citation in paragraph (c)(1). HUD also consolidates paragraphs (c)(2)
and (c)(3) of the proposed rule into a single paragraph (c)(2), to
better reflect that the labor requirements at issue apply in the case
of development involving nine or more contract units. This final rule
adds a citation to Sec. 983.51(f) in paragraph (c)(3) (which had been
paragraph (c)(4) in the proposed rule) and makes paragraph (c)(3)
consistent with Sec. 983.51(f), which discusses a PHA's written notice
of proposal selection.
This final rule revises the development requirements that apply to
PBV development activity by removing the reference that section 3 of
the HUD Act of 1968 \12\ applies (proposed rule paragraph (d)), since
section 3 no longer applies to PBV per the final rule on Enhancing and
Streamlining the Implementation of Section 3 Requirements for Creating
Economic Opportunities for Low- and Very Low-Income Persons and
Eligible Businesses (85 FR 61524 (Sep. 29, 2020)). As a result of this
removal, this final rule also redesignates proposed rule paragraphs (e)
through (g) as final rule paragraphs (d) through (g). Additional
citation corrections occur in redesignated paragraphs (d), (e), and
(f). Further, consistent with Sec. 983.51(k), this final rule expands
paragraph (g) to include in the list of participants ineligible to
participate in Federal programs and activities those who are debarred,
suspended subject to a limited denial of participation, or otherwise
excluded
[[Page 38237]]
under 2 CFR part 2424. Finally, HUD adds a cross-reference Sec.
982.161 to paragraph (g)(2) of this final rule, to clarify the existing
requirement of the conflict of interest provision.
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\12\ 12 U.S.C. 1701u.
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Sec. 983.154 Development Agreement
This final rule amends paragraph (a) to clarify project-basing of
single-family scattered sites. As commenters suggested, paragraph (a)
allows one Agreement to cover multiple projects that each consist of a
single-family building. Finally, this final rule makes minor amendments
to paragraph (a) to remove reference to Sec. 983.152, consistent with
changes to that section as described above, and to add reference to the
new paragraph (g).
This final rule specifies in paragraph (b) that paragraph (f),
concerning PHA discretion to execute an Agreement after construction or
rehabilitation in compliance with Sec. 983.153, is an exception for
the timing of the Agreement. HUD also adds clarification that the
Agreement must be executed on the same day as or in advance of its
effective date.
This final rule inserts a new paragraph (c) to specify that the PHA
and owner may agree to amend the Agreement per paragraph (e). In
paragraph (d), this final rule clarifies that paragraphs (f) and (g)
provide exceptions to the prohibition on entering into an Agreement if
development activity has commenced. HUD also makes additional changes
in paragraph (d) to clarify the timing of the Agreement that correspond
to the change to paragraph (b) described above. This final rule revises
paragraph (e) to expand the content of the agreement to include a
description of any rehabilitation work agreed to, a deadline for the
completion of work, and any additional design, architecture or quality
requirements placed on the owner by the PHA. The addition of a deadline
for completion of work addresses the oversight in the proposed rule
wherein Sec. 983.155(a) of the existing regulation was removed rather
than relocated.
This final rule clarifies in paragraph (f) when the PHA may execute
an Agreement later than the timing provided in paragraph (b) and
corrects the applicability of requirements in the case of a project
that is noncompetitively selected. The changes in paragraph (f) also
provide PHAs with discretion to not use an Agreement or execute an
Agreement after construction or rehabilitation for development activity
in compliance with the requirements under Sec. 983.153. Paragraph (f)
also requires that the PHA explain the circumstances under which the
PHA will enter a PBV HAP contract without first entering into an
Agreement and the circumstances the PHA will enter into an Agreement
after construction or rehabilitation in the Administrative Plan. This
paragraph also requires that the PHA comply with the new requirement at
Sec. 983.153(c)(3) and confirm owner compliance with the owner's
requirements under Sec. 983.153. Finally, this final rule makes a
minor amendment to paragraph (f) to remove reference to Sec. 983.152,
consistent with changes to that section as described above.
This final rule adds paragraph (g) to explain the exception to the
requirement to enter into an Agreement established in Sec. 983.157.
Paragraph (g) also explains the relationship between the Agreement and
the HAP contract in the event that some work occurs under an Agreement
before the PHA exercises the option at Sec. 983.157.
Lastly, this final rule adds paragraph (h) explaining the PHA's
options when the units are PHA-owned with no separate legal entity to
serve as the owner. A PHA cannot execute an Agreement with itself. In
the proposed rule, HUD stated that a PHA-owned agreement certification
is not needed as an alternative to an Agreement because projects may
now be developed without an Agreement. Upon further review, HUD
determined that there may be situations in which development without an
Agreement is not feasible, such as when a lender requires use of an
Agreement or equivalent commitment prior to development. Therefore,
this final rule provides that unless a PHA is exercising its discretion
not to use an Agreement, the PHA will need to follow a process similar
to the process adopted in this final rule for executing the HAP
contract or an equivalent certification (see Sec. 983.204). For
consistency with Sec. 983.204 of this final rule, HUD provides that
PHAs have the option to either establish a separate legal entity to
execute the Agreement or use a PHA-owned agreement certification in
this final Sec. 983.154(h).
Sec. 983.155 Completion of Work
In tandem with requiring the owner to submit evidence and certify
to the PHA that development activity or substantial improvement is
completed, this final rule adds that a PHA must review the owner's
completion evidence and determine whether development activity or
substantial improvement was completed. This final rule also adds a new
paragraph (b) for consistency throughout part 983 and to specifically
address completion of work for PHA-owned units. Paragraph (b) provides
in the case of a PHA-owned unit, the PHA must submit that evidence to
the independent entity and the review is the responsibility of the
independent entity. Finally, HUD clarifies that the form and manner of
the submission and certification is specified in the PHA's
Administrative Plan.
Sec. 983.156 PHA Acceptance of Completed Units
This final rule makes a minor revision to paragraph (a) to clarify
that the PHA inspection is to determine whether the units comply with
HQS and additional PHA requirements. HUD revises paragraph (b) to
provide specific instruction with regard to completion of units,
depending on whether the units are completed prior to HAP contract
execution, following HAP contract execution, or in order to be added to
the HAP contract. These changes to paragraph (b) accommodate changes to
Sec. Sec. 983.152 and 983.157, as discussed further in the description
of changes to those sections. In response to public comments, this
final rule adds a new paragraph (c) to provide that HAP contracts for
projects that are not subject to Sec. 983.157 may be executed in
stages, as units in a newly constructed or rehabilitated project are
completed. This final rule also adds paragraph (d) for consistency
throughout part 983, to separate PHA-owned units from other units.
Under new paragraph (d), this final rule requires that independent
entities inspect units and determine whether those units are HQS-
compliant.
Sec. 983.157 Rehabilitated Housing: Option for Development Activity
After HAP Contract Execution
In the proposed rule, HUD proposed to include provisions on
substantial improvements (previously termed ``development activity,''
as explained in the discussion of Sec. 983.3 above) to units under a
HAP contract in Sec. 983.157. However, HUD determines that such
provisions are inappropriate under subpart D of part 983 (Requirements
for Rehabilitated and Newly Constructed Units), as placing the
provision there produced confusion about the distinction between
development activity for newly constructed and rehabilitated projects
and work to improve units well after a HAP contract is in effect (which
could be performed in any type of project). Therefore, in this final
rule, the provisions proposed to be in Sec. 983.157 have been moved to
Sec. 983.212 and are discussed in that section below. Section Sec.
983.157, as codified in this final rule, instead is new
[[Page 38238]]
to this final rule and discussed further here.
This final rule adds the new provisions of Sec. 983.157 in
response to public comment. Commenters described situations in which
development activity would be undertaken in rehabilitated projects that
are already occupied and may meet HQS. HUD determined that occupants of
such projects, if they qualify for PBV assistance, would benefit from
receipt of assistance as soon as possible. Accordingly, and in addition
to the options already available to the PHA under current regulations
and in this final rule, Sec. 983.157 of this final rule provides that
the PHA may allow an owner of a rehabilitated housing project to
conduct some or all of the development activity during the term of the
HAP contract. Under this option, the PHA and owner place all proposed
PBV units under the HAP contract before the owner completes development
activity, subject to the limitations established in Sec. 983.157 of
this final rule. During the period of development activity, the PHA
makes assistance payments to the owner for the contract units that are
occupied and meet HQS. HUD determines this option is permissible in
accordance with section 106(a)(4) of HOTMA.
Section 983.157 of this final rule provides for the PHA to exercise
its discretion to use this option in accordance with the PHA's
Administrative Plan. It establishes conditions that must be met to use
this option and a contract framework, which applies a contract rider
during the development period. Section 983.157 of this final rule also
establishes requirements applicable to the occupancy of units during
the rehabilitation period, completing the rehabilitation, and PHA-owned
units. Under this option, the owner agrees to develop the contract
units to comply with HQS, and the PHA agrees that, upon timely
completion of such development activity in accordance with the terms of
the rider, the rider will terminate and the HAP contract will remain in
effect. HUD makes conforming changes throughout part 983 to accommodate
this option (discussed further in the review of general technical
changes below). The final rule clarifies that existing households be
given an absolute selection preference to return to the project when a
household needed to vacate for development activity. HUD notes that the
leasing of units in a PBV project must comply with federal fair housing
and related requirements, including ensuring that any designated
accessible units are occupied by households who need the accessibility
features, and that emergency transfers under VAWA are provided.
Sec. 983.202 Purpose of HAP Contract
In response to public comments, HUD revises paragraph (a) to better
clarify the existing flexibility that allows PHAs and owners to place
multiple projects that each consist of a single-family building under
one HAP contract.
Sec. 983.203 HAP Contract Information
HUD in this final rule revises Sec. 983.203(h) to require that the
HAP contract include units that are restricted to certain occupants via
the project cap or program cap. The purpose of the change is in hopes
of minimizing the possibility of PHAs losing track of what units must
be set aside by ensuring that the HAP contract clearly specifies units
that are restricted to certain occupants by virtue of the project cap
or program cap. The changes in this section are consistent with the
Fostering Stable Housing Opportunities (FSHO) notice,\13\ which notes
that the increased program cap applies only if a family eligible for
that 10 percent authority resides in the unit--this means PHAs need to
keep track of the units that are under the increased program cap that
must be set aside for occupancy by qualifying families (as was already
required for the project cap).
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\13\ See 87 FR 3570 (Jan. 24, 2022).
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Sec. 983.204 Execution of HAP Contract or PHA-Owned Certification
This final rule amends Sec. 983.204(b) and (c) to clarify that HAP
contracts must be promptly executed and effective as described. This
final rule also amends paragraph (c) to specify requirements applicable
to projects undergoing development activity after HAP contract
execution, as described further above in the discussion of changes to
Sec. 983.157. This final rule inserts a new paragraph (d) to clarify
that the effective date of a PBV HAP contract must be on or after the
execution date of the PBV HAP contract. HUD also amends and reorganizes
paragraph (e), which was paragraph (d) in the proposed rule, to align
with corresponding requirements in Sec. 982.451(c). Redesignated
paragraph (e)(1) now expressly states the requirement that the separate
legal entity must execute the HAP contract with the PHA, and HUD
deletes paragraph (d)(1)(ii) from the proposed rule. HUD has revised
paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this final rule to clarify that the PHA-owned
Certification obligates the PHA, as owner, to all of the requirements
of the HAP contract. This revision prevents ambiguity with other
regulations that reference HAP contracts but not the PHA
certifications.
Sec. 983.205 Term of HAP Contract
HUD amends the extension of term provision in Sec. 983.205(b) to
clarify the process for HAP contract term extensions and, while it
retained the maximum extension term of 20 years that was in the
proposed rule, provides a mechanism to execute multiple extensions
concurrently as supported by commenters. Also, HUD removes the proposed
paragraph (c) concerning independent entity oversight of the contract
term and extensions for PHA-owned units, in response to public
comments.
Sec. 983.206 Contract Termination or Expiration and Statutory Notice
Requirements
HUD makes changes in this final rule to clarify the process for
when a PHA manages the issuance of tenant-based vouchers to tenants at
PBV contract termination, and related issues. Specifically, for Sec.
983.206(a)(3), this final rule expands the definition of the term
``termination'' to include termination of the HAP contract by agreement
of PHA and owner. As a necessary precondition of the statutory right to
remain, in paragraph (b), this final rule also adds provisions
specifying that the right to remain in a unit depends on the unit
continuing to be used for rental housing and clarifies procedures for
voucher issuance. As suggested by public comments, HUD provides
additional clarification in paragraph (b) to specify that the PHA must
issue vouchers, provide a timeframe for issuance, and require units to
be removed from the contract if the family moves. HUD also moved the
language in proposed paragraphs (b)(4) and (b)(5) into paragraph (b) to
cover all families that are issued a voucher as the result of a PBV
contract termination or expiration. This final rule made this change
because the language in paragraphs (b)(4) and (b)(5) are applicable
regardless of whether the family uses the voucher in the same project
or in other housing.
After consideration of public comments, this final rule revises
paragraph (b)(4) (proposed paragraph (b)(6)) to expand upon the
exceptions in which an owner may refuse to initially lease and to limit
``other good cause'' to tenant misconduct and where the owner uses the
unit for a non-residential purpose or renovates the unit. However, HUD
provides a process by which families must be permitted to remain in
[[Page 38239]]
or return to the project, if possible, when a renovation occurs, to
best fulfill the PBV statutory requirement allowing the family to
remain, as provided by HOTMA section 106(a)(4). This final rule also
changes paragraph (c) to clarify that expiring funding increments,
which are a normal part of PHA operations, do not constitute
insufficient funding. Paragraph (c)(2) includes a change specifying the
respective section and paragraph that applies for HAP contract breaches
involving failure to comply with HQS and other contract breaches.
Lastly, this final rule adds paragraph (e), which provides the PHA and
owner the discretion to terminate and how the owner and PHA can
terminate their HAP contract.
Sec. 983.207 HAP Contract Amendments (To Add or Substitute Contract
Units)
This final rule clarifies in paragraph (a) that substituted units
may be vacant or, subject to paragraph (c), occupied. The final rule
also removes the phrase ``and subject to all PBV requirements'' from
paragraph (a) since the phrase is unnecessary and created confusion as
to what requirements were at issue. HUD notes that this textual change
is made for clarity only, and substitutions under paragraph (a) remain
subject to all PBV requirements. HUD also clarifies the HQS and
reasonable rent requirements to affirm that the unit must meet HQS and
the rent must be reasonable in order to substitute the unit. Finally,
the final rule includes in paragraph (a) a cross-reference to the
requirements regarding units undergoing repairs or renovation before
substitution (paragraph (d) in this final rule) and units that are
newly built (paragraph (e) in this final rule).
HUD adds a requirement in paragraph (b), which provides that prior
to adding a unit, the PHA must inspect the unit to determine that it
complies with HQS, and the PHA must determine the reasonable rent for
the unit. These additional requirements correspond to the same
requirements that apply when substituting a unit. This final rule
removes from paragraph (b)(1), which covers excluded and excepted units
to the program or project cap, the citation to Sec. 983.6, which
discusses the percentage limitation for PBV units and discusses the
types of units that will count toward the program cap.
HUD also revises paragraph (b)(3), moving the content of the
proposed paragraph (b)(3) to a new paragraph (d) and including in
paragraph (b)(3) only a cross-reference to paragraph (d). Paragraph (d)
also contains significantly different text than that which appeared in
proposed paragraph (b)(3). In accordance with the change to the
definition of ``development activity'' described above in the
discussion of changes to Sec. Sec. 983.3 and 983.152, HUD replaces
reference to ``development activity'' with reference to ``substantial
improvement.'' Because projects containing units needing substantial
improvement within the first two years must be categorized as
rehabilitated housing (per discussion of changes to Sec. 983.3 above),
this final rule establishes that units may not undergo substantial
improvement to be added to the project during this timeframe, barring
extraordinary circumstances. For units that will undergo substantial
improvement, HUD adds explanation of applicable requirements within
paragraph (d), rather than referencing Sec. 983.152 as proposed.
HUD similarly revises paragraph (b)(4) by moving the content of the
proposed paragraph (b)(4) to a new paragraph (e) and instead including
in paragraph (b)(4) only a cross-reference to paragraph (e). Paragraph
(e) of this final rule also contains additional criteria beyond those
that appeared in paragraph (b)(4) of the proposed rule. This final rule
adds, in paragraph (e)(2), an amendment to the proposed requirement to
address instances in which contract units are completed in stages.
Further, the rule adds, in paragraph (e)(3), that a unit can be added
to a HAP contract under certain situations in which part of the
building is reconfigured into additional units. This latter addition
expands the type of units that may be added to a HAP contract.
To clarify the requirements for adding units that are occupied,
this final rule adds paragraph (b)(5), which cross-references the
requirements regarding occupied units found in paragraph (c) of this
final rule. This final rule moves paragraph (c) of the proposed rule to
paragraph (g) and adds new paragraph (c) to address the requirements
for substituting or adding occupied units and provide PHAs with the
flexibility to place occupied units on the HAP contract.
In alignment with the requirements under Sec. 983.10, HUD adds
paragraph (f) requiring that PHAs describe in their Administrative Plan
under what circumstances they will add or substitute contract units.
Finally, this final rule adds a new paragraph (h) explaining that
HUD may establish procedures via Federal Register notice for a PHA and
owner to merge two or more HAP contracts or bifurcate a single HAP
contract. Allowing merger would facilitate administrative efficiency,
to avoid a PHA having to repeat the same administrative actions for
multiple contracts with the owner of a single project. It also follows
from the HOTMA provision allowing units to be added to a contract at
any time. Under the prior policy, HUD is aware that there may be
projects for which the PHA and owner were unable to add units to a HAP
contract due to the three-year limitation and therefore selected the
project again for a separate HAP contract. This change would enable the
contracts to be aligned going forward. Allowing bifurcation would
provide administrative relief in other scenarios, such as if there is
cause to establish separate ownership or management of two or more
portions of a project.
Sec. 983.208 Condition of Contract Units
HUD revises Sec. 983.208(a)(3) to require that the PHA specify
conditions under which it will require additional housing quality
requirements in its Administrative Plan consistent with Sec. 983.10.
To ensure that housing is decent, safe, and sanitary, this final rule
requires in paragraph (b)(1) that the PHA take enforcement action
against owners who fail to maintain a dwelling unit in accordance with
HQS. HUD revises paragraph (b)(2) to align with Sec. 982.404, and to
remove the unclear phrasing ``considered to be.'' This final rule also
specifies in paragraph (b)(2)(i) that ``other inspector'' is a person
who is authorized by the State or local government. The proposed rule
cross-referenced to Sec. Sec. 982.401(a)(5) and 982.401(o) to cover
the timeframes for units in noncompliance with HQS; however, in this
final rule HUD outlines the timeframes for noncompliant units in
paragraphs (b)(2)(iii)(A) and (B) in place of the cross-references. HUD
clarifies in paragraph (b)(3) that the HAP is not withheld or abated in
cases where the PHA waives the owner's responsibility for repairs, and
revises the paragraph to better align with HOTMA in terms of when the
waiver may be applied, namely for an HQS deficiency that the PHA
determines is caused by the tenant, any member of the household, or any
guest or other person under the tenant's control, other than damage
resulting from ordinary use. HUD adds paragraphs (b)(4) and (5) to
provide flexibility for PHAs to conduct substantial improvement in the
case of an HQS deficiency caused by an extraordinary circumstance or to
conduct development activity after HAP contract execution,
respectively, and requires that the PHA withhold or abate HAP and
remove or terminate HAP as long as the contract unit with deficiencies
is occupied by an assisted family.
[[Page 38240]]
HUD also inserts a new paragraph (c) addressing family obligation.
The addition of paragraph (c) reflects the contents of Sec. 982.404,
as Sec. 982.404 is no longer applicable to PBVs in accordance with
Sec. 983.2 of this final rule. The changes in paragraph (c) outline
how a family may be held responsible for a breach of the HQS, the
family's required actions to cure the deficiency if the HQS breach is
life-threatening, and the actions that the PHA must take in case of a
breach of the HQS.
In revised paragraph (d), proposed paragraph (c), HUD replaces the
use of the undefined term ``regular inspections'' with the specific
inspections referred to, consistent with changes throughout this final
rule. Consistent with Sec. 983.10, revised paragraph (d) also requires
that the PHA specify the conditions under which it will withhold HAP
and abate HAP or terminate the contract for units other than the unit
with HQS deficiencies in its Administrative Plan. Revised paragraph (d)
also outlines the PHA's remedies when HQS deficiencies are identified
in an inspection, excluding pre-selection, initial, or turnover
inspections. In accordance with the 1937 Act as amended by HOTMA, this
final rule revises paragraph (f) discussing the applicability of Sec.
983.208 to HAP contracts. Per the statute, HUD determines that
paragraph (f) applies to any dwelling unit for which a HAP contract is
entered into or renewed after the effective date of this final rule,
with ``renew'' under the statute meaning the earlier of agreement to
extend or effective date of extension in the case of PBV.
Sec. 983.210 Owner Certification
To clarify the meaning of the certification in paragraph (a), given
that compliance with HQS can include complying with requirements under
part 983 to take specific actions in certain circumstances in which
units do not fully meet HQS, HUD amends paragraph (a) to specify that
the owner's compliance with HQS is subject to the requirements of part
983. To prevent a possible conflict with Sec. Sec. 983.157 and
983.212, which allow the family to be temporarily housed while
development activity or substantial improvement occurs, this final rule
revises Sec. 983.210(d) to specifically provide Sec. Sec.
983.157(g)(6)(ii) and 983.212(a)(3)(ii) as an exception to the
requirement that the unit be the family's only residence.
Sec. 983.211 Removal of Unit From HAP Contract
HUD moves from Sec. 983.211(c) to paragraph (b) the requirement
that reinstatement or substitution must be permissible under Sec.
983.207. For clarification, HUD revises this requirement to reference
Sec. 983.207(a) and (b) specifically. This final rule also adds
clarifying changes to paragraph (c) to require that the anniversary and
expiration dates match all other units under the HAP contract. This
clarification prevents the PHA and owner from matching the dates on the
HAP contract for all other units with the dates for the reinstated or
substituted units.
Sec. 983.212 Substantial Improvement to Units Under a HAP Contract
In this final rule, HUD moves the proposed Sec. 983.157 to Sec.
983.212 (as discussed further in the description of changes to Sec.
983.157). HUD revises this section to address commenters' concerns over
the timing of substantial improvement under a HAP contract.
Specifically, HUD is breaking paragraph (a) into its components and
revises paragraph (a) to outline the conditions under which the PHA may
approve substantial improvement. The changes in paragraph (a)(1) set a
reasonable expectation that the condition of housing placed under a PBV
HAP contract should not need substantial improvement within the first
two years of the HAP contract, barring the extraordinary circumstances
subject to the exception in paragraph (a)(1)(i). To prevent tenants
from being permanently displaced, paragraph (a)(1)(i) allows the PHA to
approve the owner to undergo substantial improvement after a natural
disaster or other ``extraordinary circumstances'' on a previously
compliant unit and clarifies that ``extraordinary circumstances'' are
unforeseen events that are not the fault of the owner. In paragraph
(a)(1)(ii), HUD changes the relevant time period from five years to two
years in response to public comment. Under paragraph (a)(2), HUD
expands the description of the expected HQS deficiencies that must be
reported to include the items at Sec. 5.703(a)(2): components within
the primary and secondary means of egress, common areas, and systems
equipment. Further, HUD clarifies in paragraph (a)(2) the substantial
improvement at issue must not include demolition and new construction
of replacement units.
The changes in paragraph (a)(3) allow HUD to provide families with
greater protection against being moved from the unit or project
unnecessarily and against being required to remain in unsafe
conditions. For paragraph (a)(3), this final rule adds several
subsections to instruct the PHA and owner on what to do when families
occupy units that will not comply with HQS during the substantial
improvement. Paragraph (a)(3) also clarifies under what circumstances
the family has to entirely vacate a unit during substantial
improvement, which would only be when both in-place substantial
improvement and temporary relocation cannot be achieved. HUD, in this
final rule, explains whether families remain PBV participants or
tenants under lease during re-housing and provides sufficient
procedural information for a PHA and owner to carry out the moves.
Paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(A) adds a requirement that a family that must be
re-housed be offered an available vacant contract unit if there is one.
In the case that the PHA issues the family a tenant-based voucher,
paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(B) provides that the PHA must, either through
voucher issuance based on family eligibility and willingness to request
a voucher pursuant to Sec. 983.261 or through removal of the unit from
the HAP contract, issue the family its voucher to move. Finally,
paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(C) requires that families that vacate the project
be offered an opportunity to return. HUD notes that the leasing of
units in a PBV project must comply with federal fair housing and
related requirements, including ensuring that any designated accessible
units are occupied by households who need the accessibility features,
and that emergency transfers under VAWA are provided.
HUD clarifies that HAP and vacancy payments must be abated once the
unit has any HQS deficiency during substantial improvement under
paragraph (a)(4). This final rule adds paragraph (a)(5) to specify that
vacant units are the units that may be temporarily removed from the
contract and that failure to complete the substantial improvement as
approved is a cause for a breach subject to Sec. 983.206(c)(2).
Paragraph (a)(5) also requires that the contract specify the terms of
the PHA approval, to facilitate the PHA options for breach if the owner
fails to comply.
This final rule amends the proposed paragraphs (b) and does not
finalize the proposed paragraph (c) to conform to changes made across
part 983 to separately characterize ``development activity'' and
``substantial improvement'' and remove descriptions of requirements
applicable to substantial improvement from subpart D of part 983.
Accordingly, paragraph (b) describes requirements that apply to
substantial improvement. This final rule also adds a new paragraph (c)
to require that for PHA-owned units an independent entity must make the
[[Page 38241]]
determinations otherwise made by the PHA in this section, to avoid a
conflict.
Sec. 983.251 How Participants Are Selected
In this final rule, HUD clarifies in paragraph (a)(2) that the PHA
determination of eligibility for a particular family must use
information received and verified by the PHA. This is not a change to
existing requirements, but the addition is necessary to ensure there is
no confusion as a result of the explicit reference in Sec. 983.2 that
Sec. 982.201(e) is inapplicable to the PBV program. This final rule
also revises paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)(2) to clarify an existing
requirement that the family cannot be zero-HAP at admission to the
unit, and clarifies under paragraph (b)(1) that the eligibility of an
in-place family is determined prior to attaching assistance to the unit
(i.e., executing a HAP contract or amending a HAP contract by adding or
substituting units), not at the time the project or unit is initially
selected to receive PBV assistance. This final rule clarifies paragraph
(b)(3)(ii) regarding when an owner chooses to terminate or not to renew
the tenant-based lease to remove language that may have implied the
tenant-based voucher rules on termination or non-renewal function
differently in the case of a unit proposed to be project-based.
Consistent with Sec. 983.10, this final rule also made changes to
require that the PHA identify in the Administrative Plan details about
how it structures the waiting list for the PBV program throughout
paragraph (c). HUD also revises paragraph (c)(7)(x) for consistency and
comprehensiveness with respect to the Department's nondiscrimination
and equal opportunity regulations. Additionally, for organizational
reasons, HUD relocates the requirement for PHAs to have some mechanism
for referring to accessible PBV units a family that includes a person
with a mobility or sensory impairment from Sec. 983.252(c)(2) to Sec.
983.251(c)(9).
To prevent the tenant from being subject to an impermissible
requirement to accept services involuntarily, this final rule revises
paragraph (d)(2) to state that the PHA must not require families to
show they participate in their own equivalent services if they decline
voluntary services. Consistent with Sec. 983.10, in added paragraph
(e)(2)(iii), HUD requires the PHA define ``good cause'' in the
Administrative Plan, which, at a minimum, must include HQS
deficiencies; a unit that is inaccessible or otherwise does not meet
the disability-related needs of a household member with disabilities;
circumstances beyond the family's control; and health or safety risk
due to being a victim of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual
assault, or stalking covered by 24 CFR part 5, subpart L. To benefit
the tenants and based on public comments, HUD determines that PHAs
cannot remove families from the waiting list when they reject units for
any reason but must allow families to reject units for ``good cause''
without losing their place on the waiting list. This protects families
from being penalized when a unit is not truly available to the family
because the unit does not meet the family's needs.
Sec. 983.252 PHA Information for Accepted Family
HUD restructures proposed Sec. 983.252(a), and moves the
requirements previously at paragraph (c)(1) to paragraph (a)(2) so that
the requirements that PHAs take appropriate steps to ensure effective
communication in accordance with 24 CFR 8.6 and 28 CFR part 35, subpart
E, and provide information on the reasonable accommodation process,
applies for all families, and not only where the family head or spouse
is a person with a disability. HUD further revises proposed Sec.
983.252 to add the requirement that the PHA include in the family
information packet information about the family's right to move in a
new paragraph (b)(5). HUD has also moved the requirement at paragraph
(c)(2) regarding accessible PBV units to Sec. 983.251(c)(9), as
discussed in the previous section. HUD also adds a new paragraph (c) to
clarify the requirement that the PHA and family sign the statement of
family responsibility. In accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 and HUD's implementing regulation at 24 CFR part 1, this
final rule clarifies in redesignated paragraph (e) that it is a
requirement that PHAs take reasonable steps to ensure meaningful access
by persons with limited English proficiency. PHA's may reference HUD's
Final Guidance to Federal Financial Assistance Recipients Regarding
Title VI Prohibition Against National Origin Discrimination Affecting
Limited English Proficient Persons (72 FR 2732) for additional
information about how to ensure meaningful access to persons with
limited English proficiency.
Sec. 983.254 Vacancies
HUD aligns Sec. 983.254(a)(1) with the new requirements of Sec.
983.157, as described in the discussion of changes to that section. HUD
also makes minor changes to paragraphs (a)(1)(i) and (ii) of this
section to specify that PHAs should make every reasonable effort to
make eligibility determinations and refer sufficient numbers of
families to owners within thirty days.
Sec. 983.255 Tenant Screening
For consistency purposes and to align this section with Sec.
983.10, HUD revises Sec. 983.255(a)(2) and (c)(4) to require that the
PHA's tenant screening policies are in accordance with the policies in
the PHA's Administrative Plan.
Sec. 983.257 Owner Termination of Tenancy and Eviction
This final rule revises Sec. 983.257 to add that the owner may
terminate the tenancy in accordance with Sec. Sec. 983.157(g)(6)(iii)
and 983.212(a)(3)(iii).
Sec. 983.260 Overcrowded, Under-Occupied, and Accessible Units
After considering public comments, HUD creates additional
flexibilities as requested, while ensuring units do not continue to
remain overcrowded, underoccupied, or, in the case of accessible units,
occupied by families that do not require accessibility features.
Accordingly, in paragraph (a)(2)(ii), HUD provides PHAs with 60 days
(an additional 30 days) to make an offer of continued housing
assistance once a determination has been made that a family is
occupying a wrong-size unit, or a unit with accessibility features that
the family does not require and the unit is needed by a family that
requires the accessibility features. HUD also reorganizes paragraph (b)
and adds paragraphs (b)(2) to provide that the PHA must remove the
wrong-size or accessible unit from the HAP contract to make voucher
assistance available to issue the family a tenant-based voucher if
continued housing assistance under paragraph (b)(1) is unavailable. HUD
determined this policy change was necessary to ensure the family living
in a wrong-size or accessible unit would be able to obtain voucher
assistance when no options under paragraph (b)(1) were available.
HUD revises paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (ii) to clarify the
requirements when the PHA's offer of assistance is project-based. HUD
also adds paragraph (c)(2)(iii) to address the requirements when the
PHA's offer of assistance is other comparable tenant-based rental
assistance. In response to requests for additional flexibility, HUD
creates under (c)(2)(i) and (c)(2)(iii) an opportunity for a family to
request and a PHA to grant one extension not to exceed 90 days in
circumstances where a family either declines project-based assistance
or accepts or declines other
[[Page 38242]]
comparable tenant-based assistance in order to accommodate a family's
efforts to locate affordable, safe, and geographically proximate
replacement housing.
Finally, HUD adds paragraph (d) to state that if units are removed
under this section they can be reinstated later. This final rule also
revises paragraph (b)(1)(iv) to align with the revised definition for
the term ``comparable tenant-based rental assistance'' in Sec. 983.3.
Sec. 983.261 Family Right To Move
In response to public comments, HUD at this final rule reorganizes,
adds headings to, and revises Sec. 983.261. Paragraph (a) is revised
to clarify that the family may terminate its lease at any time after
one year of PBV assistance. To ensure PHAs properly manage voucher
turnover, paragraph (b) requires that if the search term of a family
that requested to move expires, the PHA must first issue a voucher to
the next eligible family before issuing another voucher to the family
that requested to move. This final rule moves the discussion in
paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of the rights of a family or a member of a
family who has been the victim of domestic violence, dating violence,
sexual assault, and stalking under the PBV program, to new paragraphs
(e) through (g), and expands on these provisions. Paragraph (d)
clarifies that if the family terminates its lease before one year of
PBV assistance, the family relinquishes the opportunity for continued
tenant-based assistance under this right to move section. Lastly,
consistent with Sec. 983.10, this final rule requires PHAs to have a
policy on the family's right to move in the Administrative Plan in
paragraph (b) and (c).
Sec. 983.262 Occupancy of Units Under the Increased Program Cap and
Project Cap Excepted Units
This final rule makes overall changes to Sec. 983.262, to align
the PBV rules with the Fostering Stable Housing Opportunities (FSHO)
notice,\14\ and to specify the occupancy requirements under the 10
percent cap. Additionally, for ease of reading, this final rule moves
and revises paragraph (f) to paragraph (b)(4) and distinguishes
paragraphs (c) and (d), the requirements for excepted units and units
under an increased program cap. This final rule makes clarifying
changes to paragraph (b) by explaining the requirements applicable to
both excepted units and units under an increased program cap. For
clarity, this final rule amends paragraph (b)(4)(ii) to provide PHAs
with discretion on whether to reinstate a unit from the PBV HAP
contract. The changes in paragraph (c) explain the requirements solely
for units under the increased program cap, which includes homeless
family, veteran family, supportive housing for persons with
disabilities or elderly persons, and units for Family Unification
Program (FUP) youth. This final rule requires at paragraph (c)(3)(ii)
that PHAs include policies on supportive housing for persons with
disabilities or elderly persons in their Administrative Plan
requirement in alignment with Sec. 983.10. Revised paragraph (d)
outlines the requirements solely for project cap excepted units.
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\14\ See 87 FR 3570 (Jan. 24, 2022).
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Paragraph (e) of this final rule specifically outlines the
requirements for units for FUP youth under the increased program cap
and project cap exceptions. This revision is made for better
readability and to distinguish FUP youth requirements from other
categories of excepted units and units under an increased program cap.
Sec. 983.301 Determining the Rent to Owner
This final rule revises paragraphs (b)(1) and (c)(2)(i) to align
with Sec. 983.10. This final rule changes (f)(3) to align with the
changes made to the exception payment standard regulation in Sec.
982.503. Paragraph (f)(3) is also amended to clarify the criteria for
whether an exception payment standard applies. Finally, HUD amends
paragraph (f)(3) to clarify the purpose for which an exception payment
standard applies to PBV projects, which is as a factor for determining
rent to owner under paragraph (a)(2) or a factor for determining if the
unit is a qualifying tax credit unit for purposes of setting the rent
to owner under paragraph (c), as applicable.
HUD revises paragraph (f)(4) to provide HUD with the flexibility to
develop a process to approve project-specific utility allowances. This
final rule also adds paragraph (f)(5) to state that the PHA must use
the applicable utility allowance schedule for the purpose of
determining rent to owner and does not use a higher utility allowance
from a reasonable accommodation for a person with a disability. This
clarifies the existing requirement that a higher utility allowance as a
reasonable accommodation is applied only to the particular family's
tenant rent (or utility reimbursement) (see 24 CFR 983.353), rather
than being used to determine the amount of the rent to owner per 24 CFR
983.301(b)(1) or (c)(2)(i). This final rule removes the proposed rule
requirement in paragraph (g) that independent entities determine
project-specific utility allowance, with the purpose that HUD will
ensure sufficient oversight through the Federal Register process to
approve project-specific utility allowances.
Sec. 983.302 Redetermination of Rent to Owner
This final rule revises paragraph (a)(2) to state that the PHA
Administrative Plan must specify any advance notice the owner must give
the PHA to request a redetermination of rent and the form of such
request. This final rule revises paragraph (b)(2) to remove the term
``maximum rent,'' which was undefined, and state specifically how to
calculate the maximum adjustment by OCAF. Further, this final rule
moves information that was in paragraph (b)(2) in the proposed rule to
new paragraphs (b)(3), (b)(4), and (b)(5) with simplified language for
readability. HUD amends paragraph (b)(6) to conform to applicable HQS
provisions of Sec. Sec. 983.157 and 983.212.
HUD also clarifies when the rent to owner must be decreased in the
case of adjustment by OCAF in revised paragraph (c)(1), to include when
there is a decrease in the fair market rent, tax credit rent, or
reasonable rent, as applicable, that requires a decrease to the rent to
owner. In response to public comments on the proposed changes to rent
floors, HUD determined that PHAs should have discretion whether to
elect at any time, within the HAP contract, to not reduce rents below
the initial rent to owner, as reflected in revised paragraph (c)(2).
This revision reflects HUD's opinion that PHAs are in the best position
to balance local considerations in making such a determination. To
accomplish this change, HUD removed from paragraph (c)(2) the
limitation on establishing a rent floor, to account for circumstances
where the rent floor may need to be established after rents have fallen
beneath the initial rent to owner.
Sec. 983.303 Reasonable Rent
HUD amends paragraph (b) to add two new situations in which rent
reasonableness must be redetermined, which are when a unit is added to
the contract and when development activity is completed and accepted
for a unit subject to the new option in Sec. 983.157 of this final
rule (described in greater detail in the discussion of Sec. 983.157
above). This final rule adds paragraph (c)(3) to explain how to
calculate rent reasonableness, which must be based on actual and
documentable conditions
[[Page 38243]]
and not prospective information. HUD also deletes in paragraph (f)(2)
the phrase ``where the project is located,'' as this language modified
``the HUD field office'' which has been removed.
Sec. 983.352 Vacancy Payment
This final rule aligns this section with Sec. 983.10 by clarifying
that the Administrative Plan must contain the PHA policy on the
conditions which it will provide for vacancy payments in a HAP
contract, the duration and amount of any vacancy payments it will make
to an owner, and the required form and manner of requests for vacancy
payments.
Sec. 983.353 Tenant Rent; Payment to Owner
This final rule revises paragraph (d)(2) to align it with Sec.
983.10, requiring that the PHA describe its policies on paying the
utility reimbursement in the Administrative Plan.
Sec. 985.3 Indicators, HUD Verification Methods and Ratings
This final rule revises paragraphs (i)(1), (i)(3)(i), and
(i)(3)(ii) to align them with Sec. 982.503. Further, this final rule
clarifies paragraph (l)(1) to state that the initial unit inspection
indicator includes both initial and turnover inspections for the PBV
program. The purpose of this revision is to capture every time a family
moves in and not just capture when a family moves in before the HAP
contract. This final rule also revises the citation in paragraph (m)(1)
from Sec. 982.405(a) to Sec. Sec. 982.405 and 983.103(e) to reflect
changes made to those sections in this final rule.
This final rule also revises paragraph (c)(3)(i)(A) to reflect
changes made to self-certification of assets under 88 FR 9600 (Feb. 14,
2023), which implemented HOTMA sections 102, 103, and 104. A revision
has been made to the introductory text of this regulation to reflect
that the Federal award expenditure threshold is established by 2 CFR
subpart F and has changed from $300,000 to $750,000. The revision
reflects the regulatory citation for audit thresholds to ensure that
Sec. 985.3 is always aligned with Federal audit requirements.
This final rule revises paragraph (p)(1) and (3)(i)(B) to reflect
the renumbering of Sec. 982.503(e) to (f).
General Technical Changes
Throughout parts 5, 50, 92, 93, 982 and 983, HUD moved, corrected,
and removed outdated citations and revised headers for clarity
purposes. This final rule also revises terminology throughout this
final rule, including replacing all references to ``biennial
inspection'' with ``periodic inspection;'' ``tenant selection plan''
with ``owner waiting list;'' and ``defects'' with ``deficiencies.''
This final rule also replaces references to ``tenant's rent'' with
``total tenant payment'' and replaces references to ``rent to owner''
with ``gross rent.'' This final rule removes all references to the
Project-based certification (PBC) program as it is no longer in
existence. HUD also redesignated paragraphs for readability in
Sec. Sec. 982.54, 982.406, 983.53, 983.54, 983.59, 983.153, 983.204,
983.207, 983.211, 983.252 and 983.260. In addition, HUD moved the
definition of the term ``Request for Release of Funds and
Certification'' from Sec. 983.3 to Sec. 983.56(d)(2). HUD also
amended Sec. Sec. 985.1 and 985.3 to incorporate the PBV program in
SEMAP and to align with regulatory changes in Sec. 982.503 which
permits additional flexibilities for PHAs inspections and the NSPIRE
final rule.
HUD also makes changes throughout this final rule to correspond
with the changes described above adding an option to complete
rehabilitation after HAP contract execution in Sec. 983.157, moving
proposed Sec. 983.157 to Sec. 983.212 of this final rule, and
changing the term ``development activity'' to ``substantial
improvement'' for a portion of the work described as ``development
activity'' in the proposed rule. HUD adds cross-references to Sec.
983.157 in this final rule, and brief descriptions of conforming
changes, in appropriate sections of part 983. Also, HUD removes
citations to Sec. 983.157 that appeared in the proposed rule or
changes them to instead reference Sec. 983.212 throughout this final
rule. HUD changes ``development activity'' to ``substantial
improvement'' where appropriate throughout this final rule. Finally,
HUD removes references to activities that constitute substantial
improvements from subpart D of part 983 of this final rule where
appropriate and, accordingly, removes references to provisions of
subpart D from Sec. Sec. 983.207 and 983.212 where appropriate.
HUD is also revising the definition of ``household'' at 24 CFR
5.100, consistent with HUD's rule implementing HOTMA at 88 FR 9600
(Feb. 14, 2023), to include foster children and foster adults. This is
a technical change consistent with the definitions of ``foster
children'' and ``foster adults'' present in 24 CFR 5.100. For more
information, see HUD's discussion of foster children and adults at 88
FR 9600, 9602 (Feb. 14, 2023).
Finally, some technical changes throughout the proposed rule were
either made by the NSPIRE final rule or rendered moot by the NSPIRE
final rule. For example, HUD proposed to amend Sec. 985.1 to update a
reference to ``project-based component (PBC).'' This change was made in
NSPIRE, and therefore not made here.
IV. Effective and Compliance Dates
Effective Dates
Almost all changes in this final rule are effective thirty days
after the publication of this rule. However, HUD is delaying the
effective date for Sec. Sec. 982.451(c), 983.154(h), 983,154(g),
983,157, and 983.204(e) while HUD completes and publishes the PHA-owned
certification form and HAP contract rider that are necessary for PHAs
to implement these changes. HUD will publish a subsequent publication
establishing an effective date for these changes, once the form and
rider are ready for use.
Compliance Dates
Compliance with this final rule is required once the rule becomes
effective, with some exceptions.
Many changes require updates to PHAs' Administrative Plans. HUD
recommends that PHAs update their Administrative Plans at their
earliest convenience. However, to aid in providing a smooth transition,
PHAs are not required to update their Administrative Plans in response
to this rule until 365 days after the effective date of this rule. HUD
notes that PHAs wishing to take advantage of many of the changes in
this rule are required to update their Administrative Plan to
incorporate those changes.
Other sections have delayed compliance dates to provide PHAs with
adequate time to update their forms, procedures, and any other written
materials that reflect new requirements in accordance with this rule,
and to provide HUD with time to provide additional resources advising
PHAs. Also of note, Sec. Sec. 983.57 and 983.155(b) will require some
PHAs to either amend their independent entity contracts or select a new
independent entity, and HUD is therefore giving PHAs one year from the
effective date to make those changes.
V. Public Comments
HUD received 44 public comments from a wide range of commenters:
individuals; PHAs; public housing and tenant interest groups; and legal
services organizations. The public comments and responses to the
substantive comments are found below.
[[Page 38244]]
1. Definitions (Sec. 982.4)
Definition of Request for Tenancy Approval (RFTA)
One commenter stated that the definition of RFTA seems to imply a
requirement that the RFTA be submitted by the voucher holder and
suggested the definition be amended to clarify that either the family,
or the owner on behalf of the family, may submit the form.
HUD Response: In this final rule, HUD has amended the definition of
RFTA to clarify that the form can be submitted by the family, or on
behalf of the family to the PHA.
Definition of Tenant-Paid Utility
A commenter suggested that HUD include the definition of
``utility'' currently found in guidance to the regulation because the
definition is a critical part of the program.
HUD Response: The definition of tenant-paid utility has been added
to the definitions section at Sec. 982.4 and this definition is now
also referenced in the project-based voucher definition of tenant-paid
utility at Sec. 983.3. The new definition in Sec. 982.4 clarifies
that tenant-paid utilities are those services and utilities that are
not included in the rent. HUD modified the definition from the proposed
rule to remove the definition of which utilities may be considered as
tenant-paid utilities since this is covered in Sec. 982.517.
Definition of PHA-Owned Units
Commenters supported the proposed definition of a PHA-owned unit,
which matches the statutory definition offered by HOTMA. These
commenters stated this was clear and did not need expansion and
supported tracking the statutory definition and conforming definitions
across HCV and PBV regulations, notices, and guidance.
A commenter recommended that for a unit to be PHA-owned that HUD
not rely on a bright-line, percentage of ownership test to determine
control when a PHA owns more than 50 percent of the managing member or
general partner, and HUD should not find a unit to be PHA-owned when a
PHA controls less than 50 percent of a managing member or general
partner interest. Another commenter supported excluding units in
buildings owned by entities in which either a PHA is in the ownership
structure, and/or the entity is subject to a ground lease by a PHA. A
commenter recommended the definition of ``owned by a public housing
agency'' should allow the statutory text to stand on its own, so that
only units located in a project ``owned by the PHA, by an entity wholly
controlled by the PHA, or by a limited liability company (``LLC'') or
limited partnership (``LP'') where the PHA holds a controlling
interest'' will be considered ``owned by a public housing agency.'' The
same commenter opined that should HUD wish to clarify the control and
other factors it will evaluate when determining whether a unit will be
considered PHA-owned, HUD can do so through notice or other non-binding
guidance. This commenter further stated that the definition of
``controlling interest'' conflates control and ownership contrary to
Congressional intent, explaining that percentage of ownership does not
guarantee control over the owner entity and that HUD should confirm
whether the PHA exercises functional day-to-day control over the owner
entity.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates there are many different preferences
regarding the level of ownership or control that rises to the level of
PHA-owned. In the interest of consistency, HUD agrees with the
commenters that supported a definition that follows the statutory
definition, and therefore declines to accept the suggestions that HUD
avoid a bright-line test or exclude units in buildings owned by
entities in which either a PHA is in the ownership structure, and/or
the entity is subject to a ground lease by a PHA. Additionally, HUD
believes that providing a distinction in the regulation of what
constitutes a controlling interest is important to clarify the nuances
in the statutory definition of PHA-owned units, and thus does not
accept the suggestion that any clarifications beyond the statute should
only be made through non-binding guidance. HUD disagrees that its
definition of the term controlling interest is contrary to
Congressional intent. The common definition of ``controlling interest''
recognizes a majority ownership interest that serves as the basis for
control; HUD's definition reflects the most basic and recognized
meaning of the term. Therefore, this final rule maintains the proposed
rule language without change.
Definition of Independent Entity
A commenter supported the modified definition of independent entity
in the proposed rule because it would provide relief to PHAs and
maintain a level of scrutiny and prevent the appearance of self-
dealing. Another commenter doubted whether there is any circumstance
under which a PHA and an independent entity should be connected
financially, in the interest of complete fairness and impartiality
under which an independent entity should be making decisions.
One commenter suggested that the proposed rule would increase the
shortage of vendors for PHAs, especially located in smaller areas, if
every vendor were disqualified based on prior contracts with the PHA
for services performed on non-PHA-owned units. The commenter viewed
HUD's current procedures in tandem with the PHAs' inability to exercise
control over the independent entity, as sufficient to ensure
independence.
The same commenter recommended that HUD revise the definition of
independent entity because it is unclear what it means for an
independent entity to ``be connected to'' a PHA, and the definition
would prohibit a PHA from using a company it already contracts with as
an independent entity. Another commenter stated the phrase ``or in any
other manner that could cause the PHA to improperly influence the
independent entity'' is vague and subjective, potentially leading to
confusion, disputes, and conflict, and should be deleted.
For clarity, a commenter suggested HUD revise the definition as
follows: ``HUD-approved independent entities and PHAs cannot have a
legal, financial (except regarding compensation for services performed
for the PHA), or other connection that could cause either party to be
improperly influenced by the other.'' The same commenter suggested that
this final rule specify the meaning of ``connected to'' because the
current meaning could prohibit a PHA from using an independent entity
it currently contracts with, even when these vendor contracts are
procured at arm's length.
Another commenter suggested HUD allow PHAs that may have an
allowable financial relationship with an independent entity to continue
to use that independent entity if there is no chance that the PHA will
``improperly influence'' the independent entity.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments related to the
challenges of identifying independent entities in rural areas, as well
as the need to ensure impartiality. HUD revises the proposed definition
in an attempt to balance these competing interests and ensure that HUD-
approved independent entities are impartial and autonomous. HUD
believes it is important to provide a regulatory definition of the term
independent entity, and thus declines the request that the definition
is consistent with current requirements, which provide that the PHA
cannot perform any function that would present a clear conflict (e.g.,
conducting inspections and rent setting) for units it owns. In this
final rule, HUD explains when the unit of general local
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government meets the definition of an independent entity without
requiring HUD approval. HUD believes keeping this option in this final
rule will reduce administrative burden and reporting requirements.
While HUD disagrees that there are financial connections where there is
no chance that the PHA will ``improperly influence'' the independent
entity, HUD further clarifies that for HUD-approved independent
entities, a financial connection would not include compensation for
services performed for PHA-owned units. HUD believes it is necessary to
maintain language regarding impartiality of HUD-approved independent
entities, which defines the types of relationships (e.g., financial
connections) that could interfere with the entity's exercise of
independent judgment in carrying out responsibilities with respect to
PHA-owned units.
2. Administrative Plan (Sec. 982.54)
Objections Generally
A commenter stated that HUD should not add items to the
Administrative Plan that are not necessary for the daily and core
operations of the PHA. Another comment stated that several of the
proposed additions would require frequent and burdensome changes for
otherwise insignificant policy changes.
HUD Response: HUD disagrees that the requirements should not be
added to the regulations. HOTMA offers significant flexibilities and
HUD proposes to offer additional flexibilities to PHAs to establish
discretionary policies through this rule. Therefore, it is critical
that discretionary policies be applied consistently and that such
policies are clearly and transparently published for the benefit of
participant families, owners, and the general public.
Inclusion of Tenant Selection Plan (TSP)
Another commenter suggested that the requirement that a TSP be
included in the Administrative Plan must be mentioned in Sec. 982.54.
HUD Response: In finalizing the rule, HUD replaced all references
of the ``tenant selection plan'' with ``owner waiting list policy.''
Question 2: Where could HUD provide greater discretion to PHAs to
support their efforts to operate their programs effectively?
A commenter stated that all PHAs should be allowed to be Moving to
Work (MTW) agencies to decrease regulatory burdens and provide
additional discretion for PHAs to control their local market. This
commenter also recommended that PHAs that have Affordable Housing
Accreditation Board (AHAB) accreditation and are high performing under
SEMAP and PHAS should be rewarded with more discretion because they
have shown their ability to properly operate their programs.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments requesting that PHAs
should be afforded additional discretion to reduce regulatory burdens
and notes that HOTMA and HUD, in its implementation, has made
significant modifications and clarifications intended to reduce the
burden on PHAs where possible. HUD does not have the statutory
authority to allow all PHAs to be MTW agencies as suggested by the
commenter.
3. Information When Family Is Selected (Sec. 982.301)
Disability-Related Obligations in the Oral Briefing
Commenters supported HUD's requirements wherein PHAs must provide
families that include an individual with a disability a list of
accessible units known to the PHA and assistance in locating an
accessible unit. PHAs are already required to provide this information
in the information packet, and as required in compliance with HUD's
Section 504 requirements. One commenter suggested that PHAs be required
to collaborate with local organizations that can provide housing search
assistance to tenants with specific accommodation needs. Another
commenter suggested that HUD require PHAs to keep track of whether
tenants currently in accessible units require the accessible design
features and use a lease addendum stating that the family may be
required to move if they do not require the accessible design features.
The same commenter suggested that HUD provide guidance to PHAs to
proactively identify ways to make units accessible, including through
new construction or other substantial rehabilitation.
HUD Response: The HCV program allows families to choose any
eligible unit in the rental market. In the tenant-based voucher
context, an HCV family leaving a rental unit due to not needing its
features does not mean that unit is then leased to another HCV family.
In other contexts, such as public housing and project-based voucher
housing, the owner or manager may require the applicant to agree to
move to a non-accessible unit and may incorporate this agreement into
the lease, in accordance with HUD's Section 504 regulations. HUD
appreciates the comments and recommendations to provide guidance to
PHAs on ways to proactively identify units that meet a household's
disability-related needs and ways to make units accessible and will
consider these ideas in future guidance.
Exception Payment Standards
A commenter stated that HUD should include written and oral
briefings on exception payment standards as a reasonable accommodation,
and not solely include subsidy standards as required by regulations.
The commenter suggested that PHAs be required to inform families of the
availability of an exception payment standard, and particularly for
when a more expensive new construction unit is needed as an
accommodation for a family member's disability. Alternatively, another
commenter suggested that the regulation should not detail that there is
a reasonable accommodation possible for subsidy standards because
reasonable accommodations are available for all PHA policies.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the commenters that PHAs must make
reasonable accommodations in rules, policies, practices, services, and
procedures to ensure persons with a disability have equal opportunity
to participate fully in all the PHA's programs, privileges, benefits,
and services. Therefore, the voucher briefing must include information
on the PHA's reasonable accommodation policies and procedures. In
addition, the PHA may not know or have reason to know if the family or
families attending the oral briefing includes a person with
disabilities. Similarly, a family member who is not disabled may
subsequently become disabled, so it is important that all families
receive information on the reasonable accommodation process.
Consequently, HUD is revising Sec. 982.301(a)(3) to require that
information on the reasonable accommodation process is provided at all
oral briefings and not limited only to briefings where the PHA knows
that a family in attendance includes a person with disabilities. While
HUD does not require in this final rule that the reasonable
accommodation exception payment standards must be covered in the oral
briefing, HUD is requiring that an explanation of reasonable
accommodation exception payment standards must be included in the
briefing packet. HUD believes providing written guidance in the
information packet will better address the commenter's concerns as the
family will have access to guidance on this subject throughout their
housing search.
[[Page 38246]]
Briefing Method
A commenter recommended that the regulation for the briefing packet
should outline the most critical information for families when they are
provided their initial voucher, because excessive amounts of
information can be overwhelming for families. The commenter also
recommended that PHAs should have the discretion to determine which
method of communication, including oral, print, and electronic
communications, is proper for the briefing packet, and the regulation
should explicitly state that the briefing can be provided in a manner
that is not oral, according to the PHA's discretion, while
acknowledging that accessibility and interaction between staff and
families are required.
Another commenter recommended referencing Sec. 982.301(a), the
right to meaningful language access for families whose members are
limited English proficient, and how to request and access meaningful
language assistance from the PHA. The commenter further stated that in
Sec. 982.301(b)(10), HUD should reference how tenants can request
language assistance, whether via written translation of documents or
oral interpretation, for the PHA; HUD should require that the PHA
identify staff members who will coordinate the PHA's language access
policies; and the tenant briefing should include translation and oral
interpretation for individuals who are limited English proficient in
Sec. 982.301(c).
HUD Response: HUD regulations require that the briefing packet
contain specific information that is important for families when they
are provided with their initial voucher. HUD does not agree that the
briefing packet should categorize which pieces of information are more
important than others, as all information is required and important for
voucher families. HUD does not agree that the regulation should allow
for other types of briefings and believes requiring an oral briefing
ensures that all families fully understand how the program works and
have the opportunity to ask questions and discuss information
presented. HUD notes that new paragraph (c) in Sec. 982.310 already
addresses providing information for persons with limited English
proficiency. HUD has also addressed access to translation in PIH Notice
2020-32 which provides for alternative briefing methods, as well as how
to ensure meaningful access for limited English proficient speakers and
believes no additional changes to Sec. 982.301 are warranted.
4. Approval of Assisted Tenancy (Sec. 982.305)
60-Day HAP Contract Execution in Sec. 982.305(c)(4)
A commenter disagreed with HUD's proposal to require a 60-day
period to execute a HAP contract and a lease term and noted that
requiring PHAs to get permission from HUD to execute a HAP contract in
cases exceeding the 60-day period is unnecessary because it is not in
the interest of the parties to unnecessarily delay the process. As an
alternative, the commenter suggested increasing the contract execution
time from 60 days to 90 days to eliminate the need for any additional
action from the PHA or HUD and require PHAs to notify HUD when the PHA
goes beyond the 60 days, so that HUD can track the prevalence of the
extensions requests and re-examine this policy in the future while
avoiding administratively burdening PHAs and landlords.
Another commenter did not support a maximum 60-day timeframe
between lease effective date and the date of HAP contract execution.
The commenter opined that many HCVs are lease-in-place vouchers in rent
stabilized units, so PHAs cannot request that the owner sign a new
lease at the start of the subsidy without violating local rent laws.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments and clarifies that the
requirement to execute a HAP contract no later than 60 days from the
beginning of a lease term is already a requirement under current
regulations at Sec. 982.305(c)(4) and not newly proposed. HUD also
understands the concerns of commenters around extenuating circumstances
and believes that the proposed change to allow a PHA to request an
extension of HUD sufficiently addresses those concerns. Therefore, HUD
will finalize Sec. 982.305(c)(4) as proposed.
5. Eligible Housing (Sec. 982.352)--Independent Entity Functions and
Compensation
Questions 5 and 6: Functions, Other Than Those Identified in the
Proposed Rule, That an Independent Entity Should Perform in the Case of
PHA-Owned Units
Functions of Independent Entities
Commenters opposed adding duties to independent entities. One
commenter stated the functions identified in the proposed rule are the
same as the current regulation, and that no other functions should be
authorized to an independent entity. Another commenter stated that HUD
should not require independent entities to perform other functions
beyond those proposed because doing so would increase the costs as well
as decrease funding availability for other program functions. One
commenter stated that the independent entity requirements should be re-
examined so that PHAs are not burdened by the oversight of such
entities, and that PHAs should be entrusted to carry out the
activities, such as ensuring compliance with selection process,
inspections and rent setting--just as PHAs are under the public housing
program. The commenter suggested having the PHAs carry out these duties
with proper documentation and subject to review through the required
annual independent audit.
Another commenter disapproved of HUD requiring an independent
entity to conduct duties that the PHA can do itself, such as approve
contract renewals, conduct inspections, and conduct rent reasonableness
tests. The commenter further emphasized the burden of using independent
entities for activities, such as performing inspections because there
is a shortage of vendors trained in UPCS-V protocol, and many PHAs
conduct rent reasonableness tests through third-party software, making
the need for independent entities obsolete. The commenter recommended
that HUD require an independent entity to conduct inspections only for
special inspections or compliance to lessen the PHA's burden. While
another commenter noted that HUD's proposed list of activities to be
performed by an independent entity is too long, suggesting HUD
reconsider the requirement that an independent entity receive evidence
that the PHA is following regulations during the development activity
or rehabilitation. This commenter noted that there are already several
layers of review at local and Federal levels, and that, in the case of
mixed-finance, HUD may have already reviewed the transaction.
A commenter further suggested that independent entities not be
required to review awards of Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) or
HOME Investment Partnership Program (HOME) funds, as well as PHA-owned
project selections and stated that HUD should defer to the PHA to
determine when revitalization of a former public housing site is
needed. Additionally, the commenter objected to the requirement that
independent entities (rather than PHAs) must determine any rent
adjustments by an OCAF as part of their rent calculation
responsibilities for any PHA-owned units.
[[Page 38247]]
HUD Response: HUD agrees that no additional duties need to be added
to the independent entity functions but for the addition of one
function under Sec. 983.57 requiring the independent entity to approve
substantial improvement on units under a HAP contract in accordance
with Sec. 983.212 (see the discussion of Sec. 983.57 later in this
preamble). HUD has consistently maintained that PHAs cannot
appropriately perform any function that would present a clear conflict
for units they own. 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(11) reflects this view by
requiring that the unit of general local government or a HUD-approved
independent entity perform inspections and rent determinations. In
addition, while the PHA is generally responsible for selecting PBV
projects in accordance with Sec. 983.51, including developing the
procedures for submission and selection of PBV proposals, HUD believes
that, to ensure fairness and impartiality, it is necessary for an
independent entity or the HUD field office to review the selection
process the PHA undertook and determine that the PHA-owned units were
appropriately selected based on the selection procedures specified in
the PHA Administrative Plan. Finally, as previously noted, PHAs are
statutorily prohibited from determining rents for PHA-owned units;
calculating the amount of the reasonable rent and any rent adjustments
by an OCAF are integral parts of the process. Accordingly, HUD
maintains the requirement that the independent entity must calculate
any rent adjustments by an OCAF for PHA-owned units.
Independent Entity Compensation
A commenter suggested that HUD expressly permit a PHA to seek
reimbursement of independent entity expenses from project owners as
operating costs.
HUD Response: Independent entity functions are not a project
owner's responsibility. Tasks performed by the independent entity are
administrative functions that the PHA would otherwise be performing if
the units did not meet the definition of PHA-owned. PHAs may therefore
compensate the independent entity from PHA administrative fees
(including fees credited to the administrative fee reserve).
Support for PHAs Keeping Documents
Commenters supported PHAs keeping rent reasonableness and
inspection documents and providing copies to the field office only upon
request. A commenter noted that this is not required for non-PHA-owned
units, and the field offices lack capacity to review these reports.
HUD Response: HUD retains the language proposed at Sec.
982.352(b)(1)(v)(A) requiring rent reasonableness and HQS information
be communicated to the family and PHA, but not submitted to HUD unless
upon request. HUD agrees that this framework balances HUD's interest in
proper oversight and PHAs' administrative burden.
6. Establishment of Life-Threatening Conditions (Sec. 982.401(o))
Some commenters approved of the list of Life-Threatening Conditions
(LTCs). Other commenters suggested that the list should include other
items such as mold, due to its harmful impact on individuals with
respiratory and immune deficiencies; non-functioning locks; roaches;
asbestos; radon; rat infestations; non-functioning heating or hot water
systems; properties determined uninhabitable by a city agency;
inability of heating system to maintain a minimum of 55 degrees
Fahrenheit during cold season; utilities not in service; an absence of
a functioning toilet; and missing exterior doors or windows. Another
commenter stated that a missing lightbulb should not be an LTC.
One commenter suggested condensing and summarizing the list, as a
high level of detail could lead to errors in inspections when multiple
criteria must be met to be considered an LTC. Another commenter
supported HOTMA's streamlining changes but stated that it is
unwarranted to find minor HQS violations as a safety hazard or a reason
to terminate HAP assistance. A separate commenter recommended that HUD
immediately update the HQS inspector checklists to accurately reflect
LTCs. Another commenter recommended that HUD only require the list for
initial inspection and not for regularly scheduled annual or biennial
inspections.
One commenter stated that HUD should clarify that a unit without a
carbon monoxide (CO) detector should not be considered an LTC if there
is no CO source in the unit. Another commenter urged HUD not to add CO
detectors to HQS through HOTMA and instead ensure consistency across
HUD programs by implementing statutory CO requirements through
standalone rulemaking. One commenter suggested that voucher applicants
and those moving with continued assistance should receive notice of
proximity to a Superfund site or contaminated sites on the National
Priorities List (NPL) at application, lease signing, and at
recertification. This commenter also recommended that HUD expand its
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the EPA, which is currently
limited to Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA) and public housing,
to all forms of HUD assistance, and suggested HUD and EPA map all
assisted projects and their proximity to sites on the NPL.
Commenters also suggested that PHAs should be allowed to add other
conditions into their Administrative Plan. A commenter suggested that
HUD allow PHAs to continue using their own pre-existing definitions as
a replacement for HUD's NLT definitions. A commenter urged HUD not to
require PHAs to adopt the NLT provisions as a prerequisite for adopting
alternate inspections. One commenter stated that HUD should only
require PHAs to outline deviations from the definition of ``life-
threatening conditions'' in the Administrative Plan instead of
repeating HUD's regulations. Another commenter suggested HUD waive the
on-site inspection requirement when PHAs use alternative procedures to
correct NLT deficiencies.
One commenter suggested that HUD undertake a thorough and public
examination with significant stakeholder outreach and participation
before changing to the proposed list of LTCs, which is based on UPCS-V
and imposes a higher standard than is currently required.
Commenters opposed the expansion and addition of new HQS fail items
being categorized as life-threatening because it would limit the PHAs'
ability to consider local conditions and hinder applicants from quickly
accessing their units.
HUD Response: HUD has decided not to finalize the revisions in the
proposed rule to Sec. 982.401 through the HOTMA final rule. All
comments made through this HOTMA rulemaking process were taken into
consideration in the drafting of the NSPIRE Standards Notice.
Commenters had another opportunity to provide feedback through that
notice, published to the Federal Register (87 FR 36426) on June 17,
2022. All current LTCs are defined in the final NSPIRE Standards Notice
(88 FR 40832) published June 22, 2023. All future updates to the LTC
list will also be subject to notice and comment in the Federal
Register.
7. Enforcement of HQS (Sec. Sec. 982.404, 983.208)
Usage Suggestions for Abated Funds
Commenters suggested various usages for abated funds, such as
security
[[Page 38248]]
deposits, portion of rent, costs for families moving due to the
termination, application fees, and other mandatory expenses.
A commenter suggested relocation assistance for affected tenants
should be mandatory, using funds from the abated PBV HAP or TPVs.
Commenters also stated that the proposed rule is unclear as to whether
the security deposits and moving costs are the only eligible expenses
or if the PHA can determine additional expenses and suggested that the
PHAs should determine what comprises eligible assistance expenses and
refer to the URA cost schedule for moving costs.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates these comments on the use of TPVs and
abated funds. With respect to TPVs, these vouchers are not provided in
connection with PBV contract terminations or abatement of assistance.
In addition, HUD cannot mandate the use of abated funds for relocation
assistance to families. The statute does not require the PHA to use
abated funds for relocation assistance; instead, it provides the PHA
with discretion to use funds for this purpose. Specifically, section
8(G)(vii)(III) of the 1937 Act states: ``The [PHA] may provide
assistance to the family in finding a new residence, including use of
up to two months of any assistance amounts withheld or abated . . . for
costs directly associated with relocation of the family to a new
residence, which shall include security deposits as necessary and may
include reimbursements for reasonable moving expenses incurred by the
household, as established by the Secretary.''
Consistent with the statutory language, and in response to the
comments regarding the eligible expenses that may be covered, HUD has
provided additional language regarding the permitted uses of abated
funds for relocating tenants. Specifically, HUD has added that PHAs may
assist families in finding a new unit, including using up to two months
of the withheld and abated assistance payments for costs directly
associated with relocating to a new unit, including security deposits,
temporary housing costs, or other reasonable moving costs as determined
by the PHA based on their locality. HUD has further clarified that if
the PHA is using withheld or abated assistance payments to assist with
the family's relocation costs, the PHA must provide security deposit
assistance as necessary, as required by the statute.
Protection of Tenants
Many commenters suggested going further to protect tenants from
evictions and subsidy terminations in the event their unit fails an HQS
inspection. Commenters warned that the proposed rule would allow PHAs
to abate and terminate an entire HAP contract if a single unit fails
HQS and tenants may face higher rent under HCV rules or face an owner
that evicts them despite the regulatory language.
Commenters stated that withholding HAP during the cure period for
HQS violations may create an incentive to evict tenants. Commenters
recommended HUD require that tenants cannot be held liable for amounts
of HAP withheld or abated, such abatement is not grounds for eviction,
and tenants cannot be held liable for their own portion of the rent
during abatement. A commenter noted that, in some cases, the PHA
withholds HAP for HQS violations that are not an immediate threat to
health and safety and do not warrant a tenant to withhold rent under
State law and HUD should clearly state that when the PHA is relieved of
paying back rent, the tenant is as well, despite any State law
discrepancies regardless of State law unless the State law provides
stronger tenant protections. A commenter further expressed that when
HAP is abated, the tenants should be notified.
Commenters recommended that HUD explicitly state that if a PHA
terminates a PBV HAP contract based on a breach of conditions
requirements, any of the units that continue to meet or have been
brought into compliance with HQS requirements should be allowed to
continue under the program. Another commenter recommended that HUD
should specify in Sec. 982.404(d)(2)(ii) that the family's assistance
may only be terminated in accordance with Sec. 982.555 if a family
fails to move within the allotted time. A commenter also suggested that
HUD clarify Sec. 982.404(e)(1) to include that a PHA may extend the 90
days for families as needed based on individual circumstances, without
HUD approval, and state that for relocation protections, public housing
includes properties either pre- or post-conversion under RAD, section
18, or other provision of law, not to include section 9 public housing.
One commenter requested further clarity on whether the requirement
for families to be provided at least 90 days to find a new unit after
the HAP contract is terminated, refers to 90 calendar days or 90
``tolled'' days of voucher time, which is required under the Family
Move regulations.
A commenter also stated that a PHA must provide a preference to
families who relocated due to HQS deficiencies. This commenter sought
clarification from HUD on whether the preference for the public housing
waiting list would take precedence over other existing public housing
preferences. Another commenter stated that HUD's proposed language in
Sec. 982.404(e)(2) does not consider that PHAs need to manage limited
vacancies to best serve the residents already within the public housing
program, or for the many applicants on that program's waiting list.
This commenter recommended that HUD modify the proposed language within
Sec. 982.404(e)(2) to clarify that HCV family participants transfer
into public housing units shall not take preference over the PHA's
needs for a Section 504, VAWA, or other emergency need.
One commenter stated that HUD providing a public housing preference
for families affected by HCV abatements unable to find a new voucher
unit would potentially lead to decreased mobility for HCV participants.
The commenter suggested that it would be advantageous to allow payments
up to 120 percent of fair market rents for such families, which would
enable them to access higher rental markets within the spectrum of ZIP
codes served by the PHA. This commenter agreed with the HOTMA language,
permitting the PHA to use up to two months of the assistance payments
that were withheld or abated under the family's terminated HAP contract
for cost directly associated with the relocation of the family because
these provisions would provide greater mobility to HCV families.
HUD Response: The language giving PHAs the option to withhold HAP
during the cure period is required under HOTMA. In response to the
comment regarding procedures under Sec. 982.555, HUD cannot override
State and local law regarding enforcement of the lease agreement. HUD
has further clarified that tenants relocated due to an HQS deficiency
must be given a selection preference by the PHA for public housing,
where applicable. HUD has clarified that the PHA must issue the family
a voucher to move at least 30 days prior to termination of the HAP
contract.
HUD has clarified that the requirement for families to be provided
at least 90 days to find a new unit after the HAP contract is
terminated, refers to 90 calendar days.
HUD appreciates the suggestion to allow payment standards up to 120
percent of FMR. This change is not necessary as PHAs may currently
apply for 120 percent fair market rents and/or SAFMRs under 982.503,
which provides for expanded access to rental markets
[[Page 38249]]
for all families. FMRs are established for entire geographies, and not
on a case-by-case basis, except in the case of a reasonable
accommodation exception payment standard (RA EPS) for people with
disabilities.
HUD appreciates the recommendation that HCV participant transfers
should not take preference over Section 504, VAWA, or other emergency
transfers. HUD agrees and finds that 24 CFR 982.404(e)(2) as drafted in
this final rule is sufficient and notes that Section 504 transfers must
occur under the requirements of 24 CFR part 8, including 8.28, and VAWA
emergency transfers must occur in accordance with HUD's VAWA
regulations at 24 CFR part 5, subpart L, and program regulations.
Withholding HAP Harms Landlords
A commenter warned that withholding HAP during the 30-day
correction period would hurt smaller landlords and potentially
discourage them from future participation.
HUD Response: This language cannot be changed because the option
for PHAs to withhold HAP during the cure period is required under
HOTMA.
Mandatory Termination
A commenter opposed requiring a mandatory termination after 180
days of abatement because it would be an administrative burden and
decrease availability of subsidized housing. Another commenter
suggested clarification on whether the plural ``HAP contracts'' at
Sec. 982.404(a)(2) reflects other contracts for units besides
noncompliant contracts would be terminated due to the HQS noncompliance
of one unit. Another commenter suggested that the 180-day proposed
timeline for termination is a reasonable balance of interests, as
required by statute.
HUD Response: HUD has maintained the language around mandatory
termination because HUD finds it necessary given the importance of
assisted families' housing meeting quality standards. The 180 days
maximum is consistent with Sec. 982.455.
HUD has updated Sec. 982.404(a)(2) to read that if the owner fails
to maintain the dwelling unit in accordance with HQS, the PHA must take
enforcement action in accordance with this section.
Include Renewed Contracts or HAP Contracts Entered Into After the Rule
Implementation
A commenter stated that HUD should expand this rule to include
renewed HAP contracts or HAP contracts that are entered into after the
rule's implementation.
HUD Response: This final rule applies to both new HAP contracts and
HAP contracts renewed after this rule is implemented.
90-Day Voucher Terms
One commenter supported the 90-day voucher terms for contracts
cancelled due to abatement.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the supportive comment.
PHA Discretion To Waive and Reimburse
A commenter also recommended clarifying in Sec. 982.404(a)(4) that
the PHA has discretion to waive the requirement making the owner
responsible for correcting deficiencies where the damage is not from
ordinary use, and that the waiver is not just the requirement to be
responsible for the deficiency, but the applicability of the entire
subparagraph including abatement and withholding provisions. This
commenter also urged HUD to clarify that PHAs have the discretionary
authority to reimburse the property owner either for a portion or all
HAP amounts withheld, which the commenter stated is clearly provided
within HOTMA.
HUD Response: HUD has clarified in this final rule that the PHA
must identify in its Administrative Plan both the conditions and
amounts for withholding HAP. This also includes the conditions and
amounts of payments made for the period HAP was withheld.
Monitoring
One commenter suggested that HUD monitor how many PHAs reimburse
funds and review their reimbursement policies.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates this suggestion and will consider
this outside of this rulemaking.
Tenant-Caused Damage
Commenters addressed whether the tenant or PHA should be
responsible for repairs to unit damages. One commenter suggested that
HUD provide an exception for Sec. 982.404(a)(4) to address damages
that have been caused by domestic abusers and obligate PHAs to require
the owner to make the repairs in instances of domestic abuse. This
commenter also suggested not using incidents of abuse as a means to
terminate a survivor's tenancy and to allow the PHA and owner to take
all legal action against the abuser for the damage.
Another commenter found the regulations to be confusing and
potentially in conflict with State laws and local practice because in
many states tenants are prohibited from carrying out their own repairs.
The commenter suggested that for HUD to shift responsibility to the
tenant to make the repairs, then HUD should place a higher burden on
the landlord. The commenter additionally recommended that, if the
landlord charges the tenants for repairs to tenant-caused damage, HUD
should require a reasonable repayment plan and that the PHA must
continue to pay the HAP during the term of the repayment agreement, so
long as the tenant continues to abide by the terms of the lease. This
commenter suggested the repayment plan allow landlords to charge an
initial fee, which must not exceed 40 percent of the tenant's income,
and then impose a reasonable period for the tenant to pay the remainder
to the landlord, with longer repayment periods for tenants facing
financial hardship. This commenter also recommended PHAs should
terminate a HAP contract due to tenant-caused damages only after
remedies, consistent with State landlord-tenant laws, have been
exhausted and HUD should encourage maintaining units as part of the
low-income housing stock.
Another commenter recommended that HUD revise Sec. 982.404(a)(4)
and (b)(2) as well as the procedure in the case of tenant-caused
damages, consistent with HOTMA section 101(a)(3). Another commenter
suggested waiving HQS deficiencies caused by tenants from the
landlord's responsibility.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments around tenant-caused
damage to the unit. HUD has revised Sec. 982.404(b)(2) and Sec.
983.208(c)(2) to clarify that in cases of tenant-caused deficiencies,
the tenant is not necessarily required to physically correct the
deficiencies themselves. Rather, the tenant is responsible for ensuring
that the deficiencies are corrected by taking all steps permissible
under the lease and State and local law, which might include paying the
owner for the costs of the necessary repairs. HUD has not gone further
to require a PHA to establish a specific repayment plan. HUD has
further revised Sec. 982.404 at paragraph (a)(4) and Sec. 983.208 at
paragraph (b)(3) to better align with HOTMA section 101(a)(3) in terms
of when the PHA may waive the landlord responsibility for HQS
deficiencies that have been determined to have been caused by the
tenant, any member of the household, or any guest or other person
[[Page 38250]]
under the tenant's control, other than damage resulting from ordinary
use.
HUD has chosen not to add specific language around tenant damages
caused by domestic abusers in this section. However, all VAWA housing
protections under 24 CFR part 5, subpart L apply. HUD appreciates the
commentor's suggestion but has not added a regulatory requirement for a
repayment plan for owner correction of tenant-caused deficiencies. HUD
is concerned that imposing additional restrictions on the owner in
terms of how and when the owner can recover amounts owed under the
lease will discourage owner participation in the HCV program. Nothing
in the final rule would prevent the owner from choosing to offer a
repayment plan to the family. However, the manner in which the owner
may collect amounts owed under the lease for tenant-caused damages
should continue to rest with the owner, subject to the terms of the
owner's lease.
Remote Visual Inspections
Another commenter stated that Remote Visual Inspections (RVI)
should not be used to verify a HQS deficiency correction where there is
a life-threatening condition on the property. The commenter suggested
HUD should require PHAs to conduct in-person inspections prior to a
family moving into a unit that failed HQS for health and safety
reasons. This commenter expressed that PHAs should be required to
independently check for lead hazards in any Housing Choice Voucher
(HCV) home and warned that the proxy to test for lead-based paint after
watching a short video is insufficient. This commenter recommended a
select use of RVI to reduce administrative burdens for PHAs and
increase the speed at which voucher tenants can lease-up, without
impacting the family's health.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates this comment but is not addressing
the use of RVI in this rule.
8. PHA Initial Unit Inspection (Sec. 982.405)
Question 4. Are HUD's proposed deadlines by which the PHA must both
inspect the unit and notify the owner if the reported deficiency is
confirmed reasonable?
Commenters found HUD's proposed deadline reasonable because the
adoption of the Non-Life-Threatening (NLT) process is optional. A
commenter suggested that HUD include additional time in case a resident
does not want to move and requests a ``final appeal,'' or courtesy
inspection to remain in the unit if the deficiency is now remedied.
Another commenter stated that HUD's proposal to allow flexibility in
the rule for inspections and notification of deficiencies is adequate,
and that the 30-day extension for inspections will permit adequate time
for PHAs and owners to schedule the inspection and discuss
deficiencies. One commenter stated that 24 hours for a PHA to notify
the owner of any life-threatening deficiency is reasonable, but the
commenter also suggested extending the timeline to inspect a unit and
notify the landlord for emergency items to two days.
Commenters supported HUD maintaining the current timelines for
inspections and repairs due to PHAs' discretion over whether to
undertake the LTC/NLT process. One commenter offered 15 days to repair,
and another commenter suggested PHAs have absolute discretion to
establish their own timelines. Another commenter opposed the 30-day
repair requirement because PHAs would be required to define what
constitutes ``receipt of written notice'' in their Administrative Plan,
which can present a challenge for PHAs that do not use email. A
commenter recommended modifying Sec. 983.103(c)(2) to specify that the
30-day inspection period applies if a PHA adopts the NLT exception to
inspections.
Another commenter stated that HUD should extend the timeline for
emergency inspections from 48 to 72 hours. This commenter further
suggested that PHAs should be required to adopt HUD's NLT definition
only if they implement the NLT inspection option. One commenter
suggested that HUD clarify that the 24-hour correction period for LTCs
should only apply when the family is in the unit, and that if the HAP
is not being paid while the family is waiting for the landlord to
correct a deficiency, the family is also not responsible for making the
HAP payment. Another commenter stated that HUD is unnecessarily
requiring NLT repairs to be made within 30 days of the owner receiving
written notice of the defects, and that it is unclear whether requiring
PHAs to proactively waive an owner's responsibility to correct defects
will be conducted on a policy level or whether it will be conducted on
a case-by-case basis, ultimately requiring notification.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the multiple comments about the
timeframes for unit inspections and believes the timeframes in the
proposed rule were reasonable. HUD notes that the requirements under
NLT are distinct from other inspection types and HUD believes that it
is reasonable for NLT repairs be made within 30 days, given that
application of the NLT provision is voluntary, and, under the NLT
provision, the unit has never been in compliance with HQS.
HUD has clarified that, in the case of tenant-caused deficiencies,
the owner is responsible until such time as it has been determined that
the tenant is responsible in a particular case.
9. Housing Assistance Payments Contract (Sec. Sec. 982.451, 983.204)
PHA-Owned Unit Certification Option
Commenters supported the proposal to not require the creation of a
separate legal entity, which commenters stated would add costs and
complexity and negatively impact PHAs participating in RAD and section
18 conversions. One commenter stated that HUD should not allow a PHA to
permit certifications instead of HAP contracts, explaining that such
permission would create ambiguity in other regulations that reference
HAP contracts but not certifications, hurting those that rely on those
regulations to enforce and protect the rights of tenants.
Another commenter suggested adding a statement that phasing groups
of contract units into the HAP contract is acceptable in Sec.
983.204(a). This commenter recommended adding, ``or phases thereof''
after ``HAP contract,'' for Sec. 983.204(c).
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the support to not require the
creation of a separate legal entity. Concerning PHA-owned
certifications, in order to eliminate ambiguity of cross-references in
other regulations, HUD has revised the language of Sec. Sec.
982.451(c)(2), 983.204(e)(2) to clarify that the PHA-owned
certification serves as the equivalent of the HAP contract as it
relates to the obligations of the PHA as owner and that, where the PHA
has elected to use the PHA-owned certification, all references to the
HAP contract throughout parts 982 and 983 shall be interpreted to be
references to the PHA-owned certification.
Further, HUD determined the explanation of how to implement staged
completion of contract units would be more appropriate in Sec.
983.156. Therefore, HUD has added a paragraph addressing the
commenter's concern to Sec. 983.156 and has cross-referenced Sec.
983.156 in Sec. 983.204(c).
PBV HAP Contract Effective Date
Another commenter stated that HUD should not establish a required
maximum 60-day timeframe between the lease effective date and the HAP
contract execution date, since complex
[[Page 38251]]
development and financing timetables may make the timeframe too short.
Instead, the commenter recommended a 120-day period before a HAP
contract is required to be prospective for PBV projects.
HUD Response: The commenter seems to conflate the rules between the
tenant-based and project-based voucher programs, as evidenced by
submitting the above comment under the heading of Sec. 982.305. The
long-standing requirement in the PBV program is that the effective date
of a PBV HAP contract must be on or after the execution date of the PBV
HAP contract, and the HAP contract must be effective before the
effective date of the first lease covering a contract unit occupied by
an assisted family. HUD has clarified this requirement at Sec.
983.204(d).
10.A. Payment Standard Schedules and Basic Range Amounts (Sec.
982.503(b) and (c))
One commenter suggested that HUD revise Sec. 982.503(c)(3) to
refer to 90 days instead of three months for consistency.
HUD Response: This is current regulatory language, and no change
was proposed in the rule. HUD, therefore, makes no changes in this
final rule.
10.B. Exception Payment Standards (Sec. 982.503(d))
Greater Flexibility To Reduce Administrative Burden (Question 7)
Several commenters stated that HUD should provide greater
flexibility to PHAs to establish exception payment standards without
HUD approval to reduce PHAs' administrative burden and allow more rapid
responses to changing rental markets. Another commenter stated that HUD
should grant PHAs this flexibility if the PHA has the budget authority
to support the increased payment standard as demonstrated by HUD's Two-
Year Tool, which calculates the PHA leasing potential considering
current Voucher Management System (VMS) data, HUD-held reserves (HHR),
and Budget Authority (BA). This commenter remarked that HUD's Payment
Standard Tool can also be used to establish exception payment
standards.
One commenter expressed that HUD should allow exception payment
standards for individual projects rather than require PHAs to apply
exception payment standards to every project in the same ZIP code.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments about the need for
greater flexibility in establishing exception payment standards. In
response to these comments, HUD will allow PHAs to go up to 120 percent
of the published fair market rent upon notification to HUD so long as
the PHA meets the required thresholds as set forth in 24 CFR
982.503(d)(3). HUD disagrees with the comment that PHAs should be
allowed to establish different payment standards for individual
projects rather than the same payment standard for the applicable
geographic area. 42 U.S.C. 1437(f)(o)(13)(H) requires that rents
established under PBV HAP contracts must not exceed 110 percent of the
applicable FMR, or any exception payment standard approved by the
Secretary for the HCV program. Accordingly, there is no statutory
authority to establish exception payment standards for individual PBV
projects. HUD will continue to require PHAs to adopt one payment
standard for an applicable geographic area.
Allow Higher Payment Standards
Commenters generally urged HUD to allow for higher payment
standards. Commenters stated that higher standards would allow PHAs to
expand geographic choices, allow families to stay in gentrifying
neighborhoods, and make the SAFMR exception payment tool more cost-
effective to expand housing opportunities in low-poverty areas. A
commenter reasoned that in cases where the PHA chooses not to seek HUD
approval, families would benefit from a higher SAFMR, which would
ensure the prudence of policy because rents would remain subject to
reasonableness.
Another commenter suggested that increased payment standards up to
120 percent of the SAFMR should apply for ZIP codes with SAFMRs that
exceed the regional FMR. One commenter stated that PHAs should have
discretion to set exception payment standards up to 150 percent of
SAFMR. Commenters also supported HUD's proposed policy at Sec.
982.503(d)(4) and (e)(1) allowing PHAs to choose to set payment
standards up to 110 percent of the SAFMR without HUD approval, and
asked HUD to clarify this allowance by explicitly stating it in Sec.
982.503(d)(2). The commenters stated many PHAs are unaware of the
flexibility the policy described in Sec. 982.503(d)(2) provides them.
Commenters stated that HUD's proposal in Sec. 982.503(d)(2) to
require the lowest SAFMR in an area with more than one FMR constrains
PHA authority and HUD should instead allow PHAs to utilize the highest
FMR. As an alternative, a commenter recommended that HUD implement a
threshold that is not dependent on the FMR and instead use a threshold
that is reflective of the risk of excessively high payment standards.
Another commenter stated that HUD should rely on its own ZIP code
grouping guidance, which allows PHAs to set payment standards for a
group of ZIP codes as long as the payment standard is 90 to 110 percent
of the SAFMR of each ZIP code in the group. This commenter also stated
that SAFMRs are burdensome and undesirable for PHAs to determine
payment standards, and as an alternative, PHAs should be allowed to
provide data to HUD and have the local field office approve the payment
standards based on actual current market data. The commenter noted that
there is no reason to change the ability of owners to request increases
below 110 percent of the FMR or the reasonable rent.
A commenter supported payment standard increases as providing
stability to families and landlords but urged HUD to ensure that rent
increases occur at a reasonable rate and not forced with an abrupt
increase.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the numerous public comments in
support of allowing higher payment standards. This final rule allows
PHAs to set payment standards up to 120 percent of the FMR upon
notification to HUD that the PHA meets certain criteria. Since the
publishing of the proposed rule, HUD has also seen the success of PIH
Notice 2022-09, and successor notices, which provided a streamlined
regulatory waiver process for PHAs to establish payment standards from
111 to 120 percent of the FMR. Given this, HUD decided that added
flexibility to set payment standards up to 120 percent of FMR is
sufficient and notes that there are other avenues for PHAs to request
to establish payment standards at higher levels.
HUD notes that Sec. 982.503(d)(2) does explicitly allow PHAs that
are not in designated SAFMR areas or have not opted voluntarily to
adopt SAFMRs to establish exception payment standards up to 110 percent
of SAFMR without HUD approval. Additionally, HUD will allow PHAs to
opt-in to the SAFMR by notification to HUD, rather than requiring HUD
approval by modifying Sec. 888.113(c)(3).
HUD does not agree that requiring the lowest SAFMR in an exception
area that crosses one or more FMR boundaries constrains PHA authority.
Each ZIP code, regardless of whether it crosses one or more FMR
boundaries has one established SAFMR amount. Therefore, a PHA adopting
ZIP code-based SAFMRs will only have one SAFMR to choose from, which is
how many PHAs establish exception payment standards
[[Page 38252]]
using the SAFMR under this provision. However, in some cases, PHAs
group ZIP code-based SAFMRs into one FMR area to reduce administrative
burden. In the case of grouping, the basic range of all of the selected
ZIP codes is still applicable. Therefore, in lieu of establishing a
unique payment standard for each ZIP code area, a PHA may use this
flexibility to establish payment standards for ``grouped'' ZIP code
areas, provided the payment standard in effect for each grouped ZIP
code area is within the basic range of the SAFMR for each ZIP code area
in the group. As a result, HUD finds that the policy is reasonable and
will continue with this final rule as proposed. HUD also notes that
Sec. 982.503(d)(4) allows PHAs the opportunity to provide rental
market data to HUD to support their request for exception payment
standards.
Consolidation of Exception Payment Standard Requirements
A commenter supported consolidating exceptions to payment standards
in a single location.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates this comment and in this final rule
HUD consolidates exception payment standard regulations in Sec.
982.503(d).
Rental Market Data
Several commenters opposed HUD requiring PHAs to submit rent
comparability studies or require certification of the rental market
data in exchange for higher payment standards. A commenter stated that
HUD does not indicate that PHAs are providing insufficient rental data
in requests for an exception payment standard. Commenters also noted
that HUD requiring data for exception payment standards to be prepared
through a market study or by a certified appraiser is administratively
and financially burdensome for PHAs. One commenter proposed that HUD
establish a procedure to extend payment standards in rapidly changing,
low-vacancy, and high-cost rental markets, seeing as there are existing
mechanisms to request exception payment standards within the HCV
program. Other commenters proposed that HUD accept data from various
sources including local market studies from the PHA or other local
entities that use data from a reputable or verifiable source, online
surveys of the local renter community, PHAs that use a third-party
vendor to conduct rent reasonableness for rental market data, rental
market studies prepared by institutions of higher education, industry
data, or the rent reasonableness evaluations.
A commenter proposed that HUD expand access to data on low-vacancy
areas by unit size and exclude public housing developments from
calculating FMR/SAFMR because a concentration of low rent units in
large public housing developments are in exception payment standard
areas. The commenter further stated that when there are differentials
with the ACS data, HUD should allow PHAs to provide local data if the
data is available.
Another commenter encouraged HUD to establish clear rental data
standards for the exception payment standards that require HUD's
approval to decrease the administrative burden so that PHAs can obtain
justified exceptions, while simultaneously providing reasonable
assurance that the higher standard is needed to cover market rents in
the area.
Another commenter stated that the exception payment standard
assessment HUD requires for a PHA should be easily accessible to under-
resourced PHAs and that HUD should provide funding grants to PHAs that
will conduct a study for purposes of applying for an EPS. The commenter
also stated that HUD should require PHAs to make their assessments of
rental market data and rent comparability data publicly available,
because this would improve advocates' and residents' understanding of
the PHA's assessment of the rental market, as well as create
transparency and an opportunity to challenge FMR policies that do not
further fair housing goals. One commenter recommended that HUD set the
data requirements by notice for easier adjustment based on lessons
learned and when new types of data become available.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments and intends to issue a
PIH notice with further clarification regarding data that must be
submitted in support of an exception payment standard request. However,
under this final rule at Sec. 982.503, PHAs no longer must submit
supporting data for exception payment standard requests between 110 and
120 percent of the FMR if they notify HUD that they meet certain
criteria. Additionally, data submitted for exception payment standards
greater than 120 percent usually relies on American Community Survey
and Census data, and therefore is available to the public already.
Responses to Question 8 (Maximum Cap)
Several commenters objected to HUD's maximum cap on exception
payment standard amounts due to differences in high-cost markets and
requested PHA flexibility. A commenter stated that limits on exception
payment standards should be data driven. Another commenter recommended
that HUD ensure that PHAs are setting payment standards to
affirmatively further fair housing and reduce voucher concentration in
high poverty communities, considering that some studies have shown that
most SAFMR PHAs set higher payment standards in low-opportunity
communities and lower payment standards in higher-opportunity
communities. The commenter further suggested that HUD require PHAs to
submit rent comparability studies and payment standard schedules to
HUD, so that HUD can easily review them and compile them in a national
database. According to the commenter, the database would easily allow
voucher holders to explore their options regarding portability moves
and would help HUD and advocates ensure that payment standards comply
with the applicable requirements.
A commenter stated an additional level of scrutiny is reasonable
for PBVs, because requiring approval for an exception payment standard
above 120 percent of FMR for project-basing vouchers could prevent
abuse and make development deals financially acceptable and profitable
for developers. A commenter stated that HUD should allow exception
payment standards, even if they are high, if there is data showing that
the higher standard is needed to cover typical market rents in an
exception area. The commenter expressed that instituting a cap
preventing PHAs from establishing exception payment standards would
risk excluding voucher holders from areas of the metropolitan area,
therefore reinforcing economic and racial segregation. In the
alternative, the commenter suggested that if HUD establishes a cap, it
should be set high enough to ensure that voucher holders have access to
a substantial variety of low-poverty and high-opportunity areas,
including areas where their own racial or ethnic group does not
predominate. This commenter also recommended that HUD adjust the
proposed rule to accommodate the use of SAFMRs for non-metropolitan ZIP
codes and publish SAFMRs for those ZIP codes whenever sufficient data
is available. The commenter stated that HUD should apply the same
standard to SAFMRs in non-metro areas as it does in metro areas as well
as establish SAFMRs in ZIP codes where there are sufficient data and
defaulting to a county-based FMR in ZIP codes where there are not. The
commenter added that HUD should
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explicitly state in Sec. 982.503(d)(4) that PHAs may not require
families to pay more than 30 percent of their income for rent as a
condition for receiving an exception payment standard for a reasonable
accommodation. The commenter further noted that the need for exception
payment standards could be reduced by ensuring that FMRs reflect actual
market rents, particularly in areas where rents are rapidly rising.
A commenter encouraged HUD to implement methods for PHAs to
increase payment standards where appropriate, such as requiring payment
standards in areas with significant disparity between voucher
concentration in impoverished neighborhoods and affordable unit
distribution or financial incentives. The commenter found upper limits
on exception payment standards as unnecessary and stated that PHAs
should have maximum flexibility to seek higher standards, as there are
already natural ``limits'' on requesting excessive rents. In
conclusion, the commenter objected to using the success rate payment
standards for metro areas with very low vacancy rates, while requiring
other metro areas to use the SAFMR flexibilities.
HUD Response: After considering these comments on HUD's questions
about instituting a maximum cap on exception payment standard amounts,
HUD will not institute a maximum cap. HUD recognizes the need to set
payment standards that are responsive to the rent conditions in
multiple areas. This final rule also allows voluntary use of SAFMRs in
non-metropolitan ZIP codes for which HUD publishes SAFMRs, in order to
provide PHA serving those area greater flexibility to set payment
standards that reflect local market conditions. While HUD appreciates
the comments on additional flexibilities, HUD is not making broader
changes to exception payment standards in this final rule, other than
those discussed above.
Reasonable Accommodation (Sec. 982.503(d)(4))
A commenter recommended that HUD clarify that ``FMR boundaries''
refers to the ZIP code boundary and not the metropolitan boundary. This
commenter further emphasized that HUD must revise the payment standard
regulations as well as revise or rescind inconsistent PIH notices, to
clearly state that tenants who request a reasonable accommodation for
an increase in the payment standard are not required to pay 40 percent
of their income in rent to see the benefits of the accommodation. The
commenter mentioned that the fair housing laws allow individuals with
disabilities to request higher payment standards as a reasonable
accommodation if there is a disability-related need for a particular
unit (for example, it has accessibility features or is located in
proximity to services/supports which will be lost if the client has to
relocate); however, the commenter noted that HUD should add to Sec.
982.503(d)(4) because HUD has not fully implemented the third sentence
of the HOTMA-revised section 8(o)(1)(D), which prohibits HUD from
establishing additional requirements regarding the amount of adjusted
income paid by a family receiving a reasonable accommodation.
HUD Response: Tenants who request exception payment standards as
reasonable accommodations are not required to pay 40 percent of their
income in order to benefit from the accommodation, so no change to this
rule is needed in order to achieve that result. HUD will issue guidance
clarifying this point.
10.C. Payment Standard Below the Basic Range (Sec. 982.503(e))
A commenter suggested proactive requirements, such as HUD
establishing limits for when PHAs can set payment standards below the
basic range (below 90 percent of the applicable FMR) because PHAs have
financial incentives to set lower payment standards, regardless of
adverse effects on families. The commenter also recommended that HUD
require PHAs seeking approval for payment standards below the basic
range to provide rent data showing that the requested standard would be
adequate to cover rents and utilities for at least 40 percent of units
in each ZIP code and show that no more than 40 percent of current
voucher holders would be required to pay more than 30 percent of their
income for rent. The commenter stated that HUD should eliminate the
success rate payment standard option because the SAFMR-based payment
standard flexibility could effectively accomplish more.
A commenter opposed HUD's changes to how it will assess requests
for payment standards below the basic range. The commenter expressed
that the proposed language threatens the affordability characteristic
of the voucher program because the proposed language sets low
assessment standards, does not require PHAs to meet rent burden or
market rents criteria, and removes the current prohibition on payment
standards below the basic range at agencies where more than 40 percent
of voucher families pay gross rents above 30 percent of their adjusted
income. The commenter encouraged HUD to require PHAs seeking approval
for a payment standard below the basic range to implement a policy that
holds families harmless where the reduction in payment standard causes
an increase in the family's rent. The commenter stated that requiring
PHAs to hold families harmless would allow PHAs to incentivize new or
moving voucher families to consider lower poverty communities, while
not penalizing families who decide to remain in their current home.
Another commenter objected to HUD's proposal to provide PHAs with
discretion to determine lower payment standards without HUD approval
because PHAs cut corners or costs which end up falling on the
participant. The commenter remarked that lower payment standards tend
to cause tenants to pay higher rents they cannot afford, and to prevent
this HUD should ensure tenants will be held harmless should the family
remain in the unit for a reasonable period until the family can
relocate to a new affordable unit.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments and will continue to
require the PHA to request approval to establish a payment standard
lower than the basic range. This final rule states that unless
necessary to prevent terminations, HUD will not approve payment
standards below the basic range if the payment standard would cause the
family share to exceed 30 percent of adjusted income for more that 40
percent of families with tenant-based vouchers.
Responses to Question 9 (Sec. 982.503(h))
a. Is 40 percent a reasonable ``significant percentage of families,''
or should the trigger be raised to a higher percentage of families (for
example, the HUD review would be triggered if 50 percent of families
pay more than 30 percent of AMI as the family share)?
Commenters stated that 40 percent is a reasonable ``significant
percentage of families.'' Some commenters stated that a higher
percentage would create a burden on families before an assessment is
completed. One commenter stated that HUD should not increase the
threshold for the share of families paying more than 30 percent of
their income, as there are already more than 40 percent of voucher
families paying more than 30 percent, and that HUD should lower the
threshold below 40 percent. Another commenter stated that available
data shows that HUD's monitoring has not lowered the cost-burden on
households below 40 percent, which the commenter stated is a high
definition of ``significant.'' This
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commenter proposed that HUD require PHAs to raise their payment
standard and reduce minimum rents when more than 40 percent of families
pay more than 30 percent of their adjusted income or when success rates
fall below a certain percentage, so that they must set payment
standards that avoid rent burdens and allow voucher families to lease-
up.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments and maintains the
current regulation measurement of 40 percent being a ``significant
percentage of families'' as reasonable.
Make Data Public
Commenters recommended that HUD make the data and evaluations used
to determine rent burdened percentages public with the opportunity for
public comment, which would allow voucher holders and other public
members to know how the PHA is doing.
HUD Response: Data on rent burden is already public in HUD's two-
year tool and the payment standard tool, which can be accessed at HUD's
HCV Utilization page at https://www.hud.gov/program_offices/public_indian_housing/programs/hcv/Tools.
Include Rent Burdens in SEMAP
Commenters suggested that HUD incorporate rent burdens into SEMAP.
A commenter recommended doing this by adding an indicator measuring
compliance with the 40 percent standard. Another commenter recommended
adding two new indicators measuring the portion of assisted families
that are rent burdened and the percentage of voucher families who are
not able to lease up within search periods.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments, but changes to SEMAP
are beyond of the scope of this rulemaking.
b. If HUD were to replace 40 percent with a higher percentage of
families, as described above, should HUD also establish an additional
threshold that would trigger a review even though the number of
families paying more than 30 percent of AMI had not reached the
significant percentage?
Commenters objected to HUD's proposal to establish an additional
threshold that would trigger a review, even though the number of
families paying more than 30 percent of AMI had not reached the
significant percentage. One commenter stated that HUD's proposed
standards are arbitrary because PHAs sufficiently conduct internal
tracking to monitor rent burden and suggested that if HUD implements a
rent burden standard, then PHAs should be exempt if they show that they
are trying to address the rent burden issue by using SAFMRs or high
opportunity payment standards or if they have an adequate success rate
for voucher holders. Another commenter noted that it is unnecessary for
HUD to add additional metrics for determining whether HUD should review
a PHA's payment standards. One commenter suggested that the trigger for
HUD's review should be when 50 percent of the families pay more than 30
percent AMI as the family share of the rent. The commenter explained
that families may stay in a unit and pay more than 30 percent of income
in tight rental markets where locating a new unit may be financially
and administratively burdensome. This commenter suggested consistently
defining ``significant percentage'' in all section 8 programs, defining
``significant percentage'' in regulation to prohibit PHAs from altering
the definition, and providing additional information on what a PHA must
do if the threshold is met.
HUD Response: As explained above, HUD appreciates the comments and
maintains the current regulation measurement of 40 percent being a
``significant percentage of families'' as reasonable. HUD received
multiple comments in opposition to changing the threshold of families
paying more than 30 percent of their income as a trigger for review of
a PHA's payment standard schedule. Therefore, HUD will continue its
current practice of reviewing a PHA's payment standard schedule when
HUD finds that 40 percent or more of families occupying units of a
particular size pay more than 30 percent of their adjusted monthly
income as the family share.
Responses to Question 10 Regarding Success Rate Payment Standards
(Sec. 982.503(f))
Many commenters supported retaining success rate payment standards.
One commenter objected to HUD tying additional payment standard
functions to SAFMRs due to the lack of adoption of SAFMRs. Another
commenter explained that the utility of the success rate payment
standard is essentially eliminated if PHAs are given the option of
setting exception payment standards at up to 120 percent of FMR without
HUD approval, and stated that moving to and from the 40th to 50th
percentile of rent has an almost identical impact on the resulting
payment standard. This commenter supported retaining the success rate
payment standard if HUD approval will still be required for exception
payment standards above 110 percent of FMR. One commenter opposed
retaining success rate payment standards. The commenter stated that the
standards, set at the 50th percentile of the metro FMR, were
ineffective at the stated goal of increasing housing opportunity for
voucher families. Additionally, the commenter noted that the SAFMR
final rule eliminated the regulations that governed the establishment
of FMRs using 50th percentile rents, and HUD is currently phasing out
its use of success rate payment standards. Another commenter stated
that HUD should eliminate the success rate payment standard option
because the SAFMR-based payment standard flexibility could effectively
accomplish more.
HUD Response: Because this final rule increases flexibility for
PHAs to set exception payment standards up to 120 percent of the FMR,
HUD has determined that it is unnecessary to also retain success rate
payment standards. This final rule eliminates the ability for PHAs to
receive new success rate payment standards but allows them to continue
to use previously approved success rate payment standard amounts.
11. How To Calculate Housing Assistance Payment (Sec. 982.505)
A commenter stated that HUD must ensure that participants are
provided due process and a reasonable opportunity to decide whether the
family can afford to remain in the subsidized unit if HUD increases
payment standards after the initial HAP contract. The commenter offered
the following suggestions if HUD increases payment standards: (1) allow
the tenant 60 days after the increase request to decide or request
moving papers; (2) phase in the rent increase over time or require that
the PHA make up the difference to the higher standard; or (3) mirror
the timeframe in Sec. 505(c)(3) for increases and decreases. The
commenter stated the proposed rule fails to adequately address arising
problems when PHAs create payment standards that trap residents in low-
opportunity, high poverty, and high crime areas, when families may need
higher exception rents to access better schools, employment, or other
resources for self-sufficiency. As a remedy, the commenter recommended
that HUD map where families can live within the PHA's payment
standards. One commenter recommended that HUD remove Sec.
982.505(c)(4)(iii) to streamline the rent change process and prevent
confusion among families that expect changes during the recertification
process and not outside of the recertification process.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments received on when to
apply
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increases in the payment standards to the family. This final rule, at
Sec. 982.505, requires PHAs to apply increases in payment standards no
later than the earliest of (1) the effective date of an increase in the
gross rent will result in an increase in the family's share, (2) the
family's first regular or interim reexamination, or (3) one year
following the effective date of the increase in the payment standard
amount. This approach provides participating families the benefit of
these increases more consistently and helps ensure that their portion
of the rent remains affordable. This final rule also allows PHAs to
adopt a policy, at their option, to apply an increase in the payment
standard before these events occur. HUD will not remove paragraph
(c)(4)(iii) because this provision eliminates the potential lag time
between an increase in the rent to owner brought about by an increase
in the payment standard and the increase in the assistance payment made
on behalf of the family as a result of the increase in the payment
standard.
Timeline
One commenter supported HUD's revisions on when to apply a
reduction in the payment standard because the changes will promote
fairness and consistency in the voucher program. Another commenter
opposed the two-year adjustment timeline as an administrative burden
for PHAs and believed it would provide no tangible benefit for families
over a shorter timeline. This commenter stated that the current
timeline of the second recertification already ensures adequate
preparation for families and is when all contact with the family is
planned from the PHA's perspective.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the range of comments. HUD in this
final rule will continue with requiring PHAs to give families two full
years from the date of the application of the payment standard decrease
to ensure all families have the same period of time to adjust to the
decrease in the payment standard.
Payment Standard Timeline
A commenter supported requiring application of payment standard
increases on the effective date of a gross rent increase instead of
waiting until the next annual recertification or one year after the
increase. The commenter recommended that HUD add a requirement to Sec.
982.505(c)(4) that PHAs immediately address payment standard increases
during the HAP contract term and before the effective date of the new
payment standard, to protect tenants in rapidly rising rent markets.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments and this final rule
creates additional required times for when a payment standard must be
increased in Sec. 982.505(c)(4). HUD finds that these additional
requirements sufficiently balance ensuring participants receive the
benefit of payment standards and PHA administrative burden in applying
increases in the payment standards.
Payment Standard Update Burden
A commenter opposed HUD's proposal at paragraph (c)(4) of Sec.
982.505 (How to calculate HAP), adding two new points at which the
family's payment standard may be increased, as unnecessarily burdensome
and expressed concern regarding whether the number of transactions that
would trigger the payment standard calculation to determine if an
``increase in the family share'' occurred will greatly outnumber the
times the higher payment standard would be applied under the rule and
expressed an appreciation for data supporting the proposed rule.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates these concerns. When paragraphs
(c)(4) and new paragraph (c)(5) are read in conjunction, HUD believes
the burden on PHAs of this change is relatively small and outweighed by
the benefit to the family.
Specifically, the requirement that this commenter is concerned
about, is as follows: when there is an increase in the payment
standard, and when there is an increase in the gross rent, and the
increase in gross rent would increase the family share, then the PHA
must apply the increased payment standard, to reduce the burden on the
family.
This requirement is limited to situations where the gross rent
increase would increase the family share is intended to decrease the
burden on the PHA, not increase it. If a PHA would prefer not to make
this calculation, the PHA may apply the new payment standard every time
there is a gross rent increase, or indeed as soon as they want to,
regardless of whether the gross rent increase changes the family share
calculation, per paragraph (c)(5).
12.A. Utility Allowance (UA) Schedule (Sec. 982.517)
Commenters suggested HUD allow PHAs to provide a UA for wireless
internet to expand opportunity. A commenter noted that there is no
statutory or regulatory prohibition on it and PHAs can use their own
budgetary judgement to decide if they can afford to provide a UA for
internet. Another commenter proposed that HUD consider broad ways to
support assisted households during and after the pandemic. One
commenter suggested that HCV UAs should include fees charged, as well
as reflect the actual rates charged by the major utilities serving the
units and the rate plans used by most tenants. This commenter also
recommended that HUD not consider low-income discounts, unless there is
universal access and verified tenant participation. To ensure
transparency, the commenter also stated that supporting documentation
for the calculation for the PHA's UA schedules for both HCV and PBV
programs should be available to tenants' rights advocates, without
resorting to cumbersome and vague FOIA and State public records acts.
The commenter recommended that HUD's review should be retained and
strengthened, to ensure compliance with the regulatory standards and
consistency among UAs in similar climatic regions and markets, rather
than ending the requirement for PHA submission of the schedule. Another
commenter suggested that HUD continue to require PHAs to submit their
UA schedules to HUD, which would provide a system of checks and
balances and much needed oversight.
HUD Response: HUD is currently reviewing ways to support internet
access for the families it serves in all assisted housing programs and
how to best complement subsidies provided through the Affordable
Connectivity Program (ACP) and Lifeline administered by the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC). HUD is working to raise awareness
among PHAs so they can help families enroll in the ACP and Lifeline
programs. In addition to supporting the FCC programs, HUD is reviewing
its assisted housing program policies across the department to align
policies and support broadband. At this time, HUD is not providing in
this final rule that PHAs may use UA schedules for internet; however,
HUD has removed the language that explicitly prohibits wireless
internet. In place of language prohibiting wireless internet, HUD added
language providing that HUD may add utilities required to pass HQS by
Federal Register notice allowing for public comment.
The language in Sec. 982.517(b)(1) states that ``the utility
allowance schedule must be determined based on the typical cost of
utilities and services paid by energy-conservative households that
occupy housing of similar size and type in the same locality.'' The
typical cost of utilities and services includes surcharges charged by
the utility company. Many PHAs separate the surcharge out on the UA
schedule. For
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example, a family may have natural gas for their heating, cooking, and
water heating and the natural gas company charges a monthly surcharge
for this utility. A rate-based utility allowance is provided on the
schedule for each of these utilities and the PHA also provides the
family with an allowance for the surcharge if they have one or more
natural gas-powered utilities in their home. While this is not a change
in policy and HUD believes this is already the common practice at PHAs,
HUD recognizes that it would be helpful for the regulation to be
clearer. HUD is adding ``applicable surcharges'' to the list of
utilities and services on the utility allowance schedule in Sec.
982.517(b)(2)(ii).
PHAs develop their area-wide utility allowance schedules, both the
regular schedule described in Sec. 982.517(b)(v)(2)(i) and the new
option for an energy-efficient schedule provided in Sec.
982.517(b)(v)(2)(ii), based on the cost of utilities and services paid
by energy-conservative households that occupy housing of similar size
and type in the same locality. Household income or discounts provided
to certain households are not a factor in the development of the
utility allowance schedule.
HUD understands the concerns expressed by commenters encouraging
HUD to continue collecting utility allowance schedules from PHAs. While
the proposed language would have allowed submission to HUD only upon
request for utility allowance schedules from PHAs, HUD agrees with
commenters that proactive submission of utility allowance schedules
will help with oversight. HUD has reverted Sec. 982.517(a)(2) in this
final rule to the existing codified language which requires submission
of these schedules to HUD.
12.B. Area-Wide Energy-Efficient Utility Allowance Schedule (Sec.
982.517(b)(2)(ii))
Commenters stated that HUD should authorize PHAs to use energy-
efficient utility allowance (EEUA) schedules. Another commenter stated
that PHAs should have the option to implement alternative utility
allowance schedules though they may be burdensome to implement. One
commenter suggested that HUD should not require entire buildings to
achieve energy saving design certifications for an individual unit to
qualify for an EEUA. Further, the commenter stated that due to the time
and cost, many property owners may elect to only install energy-
efficient appliances and other design standard upgrades, and if so,
property owners should not be penalized for their inability to achieve
energy savings design certifications for entire buildings especially
where the property owners can demonstrate that the EEUA schedule would
best encourage conservation and the efficient use of HAP funds based on
historic utility consumption data.
Other commenters stated that EEUA schedules should be voluntary
because they require annual updates and are costly, and, as a result,
they are better suited to PBV where the owner can be required to
commission an annual update to keep using the schedule, or PHAs could
make their decision based on their market areas and funding. Another
commenter stated that utility allowance options would present a high
possibility for error and could open PHAs up to charges of
discrimination because it would be hard to identify units where
alternate utility allowances could be used. A commenter suggested that
HUD use the HUD Utility Schedule Model (HUSM) for all project types to
minimize project-specific utility's administrative burden as well as
permit PHAs the ability to decide their HUSM approach to determine UAs
and be required to publish this in their Administrative Plan.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the many comments supporting the
option for PHAs to establish an EEUA. HUD believes that permitting EEUA
for units that are located in buildings that do not have a full-scale
energy savings design is premature. While HUD agrees that allowing PHAs
to use an EEUA on substantially retrofitted units in an older building
could encourage owners to make units more energy efficient, more
guidance is needed to ensure the EEUA is not applied too liberally
leaving many tenants with UAs that are too low. This final rule allows
PHAs to implement an EEUA for units in Energy Star or LEED certified
buildings; however, HUD will release more guidance before allowing
additional units to use the EEUA schedule. PHAs must be careful to
ensure that their EEUAs will work for most energy efficient properties.
It would not be appropriate to use LEED estimates for UA costs if
Energy Star certified units make up the majority of energy efficient
units in the area. In that case, a PHA may decide to only apply the
EEUA to LEED certified units or base the EEUA on Energy Star estimates.
The establishment of an EEUA schedule is voluntary. PHAs in areas that
have a large percentage of units that are energy efficient may wish to
have a separate schedule to ensure the utility allowances for these
units are not unnecessarily high. This may also reduce requests for
project-specific allowances in the PBV program that are often needed
due to energy efficient requirements, since the area-wide EEUA schedule
will also apply to PBV projects that meet energy efficient
requirements.
12.C. Utility Allowance Based on Flat Fees (Sec. 982.517(b)(2)(iii))
Several commenters offered suggestions for HUD's proposal to
provide PHAs the discretion to substitute flat fees charged for certain
utilities. One commenter recommended that HUD modify Sec.
982.517(b)(2)(iii)'s current language of ``only if the flat fee charged
by the owner is less than,'' to ``only if the flat fee charged by the
owner [is] no greater than,'' to account for the possibility that the
flat fee is equal. One commenter objected to HUD's flat fee proposal by
stating that flat fee UAs do not ensure that a tenant is exceeding
their maximum share of the rent, stating that UA should be based on
actual use.
HUD Response: HUD will adopt in Sec. 982.517(b)(2)(iii) the
suggested language changing ``less than'' to ``no greater than'' to
make flat fees easier for PHAs to administer. HUD would like to clarify
that flat fees are meant to be used only when the landlord charges a
set fee for certain utilities and the fee does not change based on
consumption or other criteria. If the landlord charges a variable fee
for a utility, then the PHA would not have the option of using the flat
fee to calculate the utility allowance. Instead, the PHA would use the
appropriate area-wide utility allowance based on the size and type of
unit. Applied correctly, tenants will not pay more than the flat fee
used to calculate the utility allowance.
13. Manufactured Home Space Rental (Sec. Sec. 982.620-982.623)
Commenters recommended that HUD amend Sec. 982.620 to require that
PHAs must provide the option for tenants to use voucher funds for the
costs of purchasing a manufactured home because without the
requirement, the HOTMA amendments will be undermined. A commenter also
noted that section 112 of HOTMA eliminated the option for a PHA to
offer only assistance under a voucher for the cost of leasing land on
which a manufactured home is sited (but not for the annual cost of
purchasing a home) and therefore recommended HUD amend Sec.
982.620(b)(2) to delete the phrase ``to a manufactured homeowner to
lease a manufactured home space'' and add in its place, the words
``under paragraph (a)(3) of this section.''
A commenter suggested the following modification for Sec.
982.620(a)(3): ``The
[[Page 38257]]
PHA may provide assistance for a family that owns a manufactured home
(including a family that has recurring expenses to amortize the cost of
purchasing a manufactured home) and leases only the space. The PHA
shall make this option available upon a bona fide request from any
party in the PHA's jurisdiction.'' The commenter also recommended
deleting the clause, ``to a manufactured homeowner to lease a
manufactured home space'' from Sec. 982.620(b)(2), since that type of
assistance is no longer authorized. The commenter requested
clarification behind why HUD proposed to require PHAs to make separate
payments to the landowner and to the family for debt costs, rather than
only making a single payment to the family. The commenter opposed HUD's
requirement that space owners sign a HAP contract with the PHA, if the
owner waives receiving a direct PHA payment. The commenter also
proposed that HUD delete the first sentence under Sec. 982.623(d)(2)
regarding the HAP contract and revise the second sentence to state that
the owner's acceptance of the family's rent payment is a certification
that the space complies with HQS as specified in Sec. 982.621(a) and
(b). Some commenters stated it is unnecessary to require the tenant pay
for the landowner's HAP contract of manufactured home space, because
regardless of the tenant timely paying rent, the landowners must go to
the PHA for payment, which has the contract. A commenter claimed that
incidental protections that a HAP contract with the landowner might
provide are not commensurate with the creation of an additional barrier
to using the voucher option.
HUD Response: HUD does not have the authority under the statute to
require that PHAs provide manufactured home space rental assistance. 42
U.S.C. 1437f(o)(12) states, ``A public housing agency may make
assistance payments in accordance with this subsection on behalf of a
family that utilizes a manufactured home as a principal place of
residence and rents the real property on which the manufactured home
owned by any such family is located'' (emphasis added). The use of the
word ``may'' in the statute unambiguously means provision of this
assistance is at the PHA's discretion. To be eligible for manufactured
home space rental assistance, the family must own the manufactured
home. The ownership does not need to be outright, and they may still be
making monthly payments to amortize the purchase of the manufactured
home. Both scenarios are considered ownership similar to how a person
who owns a home with a mortgage is still considered the homeowner. For
this reason, HUD is finalizing the language in the proposed rule for
adoption in this final rule. Owners of manufactured space rental will
still be required to sign a HAP contract even if the PHA does not pay
them rent directly. The HAP contract is more than a vehicle for
conveyance of rent payments. The HAP contract is essential to ensuring
compliance with HQS, including the appropriate utility hookups, and the
owner's agreement to comply with rent reasonableness, among other
requirements.
14. Homeownership Counseling (Sec. 982.630(e))
A commenter stated that homeownership counseling services should
only be provided by HUD-certified counselors working with a HUD-
approved housing counseling agency. Another commenter approved of HUD
requiring certified counseling for the homeownership program as well as
supported HUD excluding home equity as an asset and not decreasing the
payment standard of the homeownership program.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments and will be moving
forward with requiring any homeownership counseling to be conducted by
a HUD-certified housing counselor working for a HUD-approved housing
counseling agency. This requirement conforms with current Housing
Counseling requirements.
15. Amount and Distribution of HAP (Sec. 982.641(f))
A commenter supported maintaining utility amounts for homeownership
families based on housing size, instead of family size.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the supportive comment and will
continue with the proposed language at Sec. 982.641(f)(3) stating that
the use of a utility allowance schedule under Sec. 982.517(d) does not
apply to the homeownership option because the utility allowance is
always based on the size of the home bought by the family receiving
homeownership assistance.
16. PBV: When the Tenant-Based Voucher Rule Applies (Sec. 983.2)
A commenter supported HUD's policy to not require new verification
at briefing for the PBV program and making the 60-day timeframe
inapplicable under the PBV program because this approach improves PHAs'
ability to administer PBVs.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the support and agrees that the
standard at Sec. 982.201(e) is inapplicable to the PBV program, as
families are not issued vouchers in the PBV program, but notes that the
applicable timeframe for PBV is codified in Sec. 983.251(a)(2).
17. PBV Definitions (Sec. 983.3)
Definition of ``Development Activity''
A commenter expressed concern with HUD's definition of
``development activity,'' due to its potential harmful impact given its
lack of previous implementation for other HUD programs. Another
commenter stated that the definition is adequate because minor
renovations are not included in the definition of development work. A
commenter stated that the definition of ``development activity,'' was
unclear and broad and should be limited to new construction, adaptive
reuse, or substantial rehabilitation of existing housing in compliance
with HQS. Another commenter suggested that including replacement of
equipment and materials with items that are of improved quality in the
definition of ``development activity'' would deter project owners from
modernizing and completing other updates to properties, which neither
HUD's regulations nor form of HAP contract require a project owner to
report to a PHA. This commenter also recommended that the development
activity should be limited to instances of new construction or
substantive rehabilitation of housing that fails to substantially
comply with HQS. This commenter further expressed that development
requirements, such as subsidy layering review, should not continue to
apply to units once they are placed under HAP contract or when units
are being added to an existing HAP contract. A commenter warned that
HUD is exceeding its statutory authority by having a broad definition
of development activity, because HUD does not have the Congressional
authority to regulate a project owner's ability to engage in
development work following execution of a HAP contract, and HUD has not
historically regulated this type of development activity. This
commenter stated that the 1937 Act provides PHAs with discretion on
when to allow owners to engage in development work.
HUD Response: Upon review of comments regarding this definition and
other sections of the proposed rule, HUD determined using a single term
to refer to both rehabilitation and new construction done in order for
the project to receive PBV assistance and for other work occurring
later during the
[[Page 38258]]
term of the PBV HAP contract produced significant confusion. Similarly,
the corresponding regulatory structure resulting from the dual-purpose
definition, such as using the development requirements of subpart D
(Requirements for Rehabilitated and Newly Constructed Units) of part
983 to address certain requirements applicable to work occurring later
during the term of the PBV HAP contract, produced significant
confusion. As a result, HUD has removed work occurring later during the
term of the HAP contract from the proposed definition of ``development
activity,'' and instead covers this work under the new definition of
``substantial improvement.'' The regulatory structure also is revised
in this final rule to eliminate this confusion, as described throughout
this preamble. The public comments on the proposed definition regarded
the portion of the proposed rule definition of ``development activity''
that is instead covered in this final rule by the definition of
``substantial improvement.''
HUD disagrees with the commenter's characterization of previous
implementation, given HUD's prior use of a similar definition, as
provided in the former 24 CFR 983.210(j) (which is removed in this
final rule) and described in 80 FR 52511 (Mar. 9, 2015), which drew
from requirements of other programs. HUD appreciates the positive
comment. HUD does not adopt the proposal to define substantial
improvement as new construction, adaptive reuse, or substantial
rehabilitation, as HUD believes those terms are less clear than the
proposed definition. HUD does not believe that including in the
definition a substantial improvement in the quality or kind of
equipment and materials will deter owners from modernizing projects,
since this final rule implements a reasonable process for such activity
to occur. HUD does not adopt the proposal to define substantial
improvement as new construction or substantive rehabilitation of
existing housing that fails to substantially comply with HQS, as HUD
finds there is a compelling need to encompass additional activities
that may greatly impact occupants in the rules governing substantial
improvement. HUD also notes that it has a clear mandate under law to
ensure housing occupied by assisted families is decent, safe, and
sanitary, which includes establishing rules governing substantial
improvement that occurs following contract execution, as such activity
necessarily impacts occupants.
Definitions of ``Newly Constructed Housing'' and ``Rehabilitated
Housing''
Another commenter proposed that the definitions of ``newly
constructed housing'' and ``rehabilitated housing'' should incorporate
the concept of housing ``under construction'' that HOTMA inserted in
new section 8(o)(13)(F)(iii). This commenter suggested that HUD's
proposed rule failed to account for this provision's direction that HUD
allow PHAs to enter a HAP contract for ``any unit that does not qualify
as existing housing and is under construction[.]'' This commenter
suggested HUD make clear that projects which are under construction
qualify as newly constructed.
HUD Response: HUD disagrees that the wording of the definition of
newly constructed housing forecloses selection of a project that is
under construction. For example, projects for which development
activity occurred prior to PBV selection would nevertheless meet the
definition of newly constructed housing if any of the units in the
project ``do not exist on the proposal or project selection date and
are developed after the date of selection for use under the PBV
program.'' Likewise, projects may qualify as rehabilitated housing
despite any development activity that occurred prior to PBV selection
where the project will be developed for use under the PBV program and
meets the other components of the definition of ``rehabilitated
housing.'' Further, as previously provided in the regulations,
contracts for newly constructed and rehabilitated projects may be
executed in stages, even though the construction has not been
completed, which is not in conflict with the definitions. Neither
definition contains language barring projects for which some of the
development occurred earlier from being considered newly constructed or
rehabilitated; rather, the definitions affirm that there will be
development that occurs after the proposal or project selection date
for purposes of using the projects as PBV units. HUD recognizes that in
many cases projects may engage in development activity for legitimate
reasons unrelated to the plans to project-base a project prior to the
PHA selection of the project for PBVs. In order to effectuate the
applicable development requirements at Sec. 983.153 without
foreclosing selection of projects under construction, the regulation at
Sec. 983.154 requires that, in cases in which the PHA and owner use an
Agreement prior to development activity, development activity does not
commence from the date of proposal submission or board resolution, as
applicable, until the effective date of the Agreement, and that, in
cases of development without an Agreement or use of an Agreement after
construction or rehabilitation has commenced, all development occurring
after the date of proposal submission or board resolution, as
applicable, complies with Sec. 983.153. Further, while HUD does not
change the definitions for the purpose the commenter proposed, HUD has
provided an additional mechanism for execution of a HAP contract for a
rehabilitated housing project while it is under construction in this
final rule, as further explained in the summary of changes to Sec.
983.157 above. Taken together, HUD believes Sec. Sec. 983.3, 983.154,
and 983.157 provide an appropriate balance between effectuating the
development requirements and providing a mechanism to allow a PHA to
project-base projects under construction. HUD therefore declines to
expand the definition of newly constructed housing to provide an
explicit reference to housing under construction, as doing so would
change the definition from a statement of the meaning of the term to a
provision that could appear to conflict with the development
requirements in subpart D of part 983.
Definition of ``Project''
Commenters approved of HUD's proposal to keep its current
definition of ``project,'' which is statutory, and which a commenter
preferred for administrative consistency and clarity purposes. Another
commenter recommended that HUD delineate the definitions for each
program. Commenters suggested that HUD create a definition that allows
for buildings in scattered sites (i.e., non-contiguous sites), and
establish conditions for the scattered sites, such as requiring
buildings to have the same owner and containing a certain number of
subsidized units in each building. A commenter noted that this would be
consistent with HUD's position in the PBV, RAD, and ``Mod'' programs.
Another commenter noted that buildings that span multiple blocks in a
city grid and have historically been operated as part of one project
are classified as individual projects for purposes of PBV, which
creates an incongruous result. This commenter further expressed that
the statute appears to support limiting the definition of ``project''
to only assessing whether a project complies with the income-mixing
requirement.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that retaining the prior definition of
``project,'' consistent with the statutory
[[Page 38259]]
definition of ``project'' for purposes of the income-mixing requirement
(project cap), supports the goals of administrative consistency and
clarity. However, HUD found that the proposed rule as written appeared
to inadvertently remove the discretion PHAs previously had, through the
Administrative Plan, to further define ``project'' within the statutory
parameters. HUD finds that PHAs may need such discretion for optimal
program operation in certain cases. Given these considerations and
positive comments received, HUD restores and codifies in this final
rule the meaning of the term ``project'' as it was previously
understood. For programs other than the PBV program, the definition of
``project'' applicable to such programs can be found in those programs'
governing rules.
HUD declines to further define ``project'' to allow scattered sites
to constitute one project. Doing so would increase the complexity of
determining what constitutes a project, for purposes of the income-
mixing requirement and for other purposes, to a level unwarranted by a
relatively small administrative advantage in a small number of cases.
However, HUD will continue to allow multiple projects, each consisting
of a single-family building (defined in this Sec. 983.3(b) as no more
than four total dwelling units), to be under one HAP contract. HUD has
taken this opportunity to update the language in Sec. 983.202(a) to
more clearly state that placing multiple projects, each consisting of a
single-family building, under one HAP contract is allowable. HUD has
also updated Sec. 983.154(a) to clarify that it is allowable to place
under one Agreement multiple projects that each consist of a single-
family building and Sec. 983.51(a) to clarify that PBV proposals may
cover multiple projects where each consists of a single-family
building. HUD agrees that whenever a HAP contract covers multiple
projects all such projects must be owned by a single owner because, as
a general principle, an owner can only execute a HAP contract for units
the owner has authority to commit in a HAP contract (or a
certification, in the case of a PHA-owned project exercising the option
in Sec. 983.204(e)(2)). The number of subsidized units in each project
will continue to be governed by existing PBV requirements, particularly
the income-mixing requirement (see Sec. 983.54(a)).
Regarding the concern about buildings that span multiple blocks
being classified as individual projects for purposes of PBV, HUD
clarifies that the definition of ``project'' can include parcels
separated by a public way, so long as such parcels can reasonably be
considered contiguous (defined in this Sec. 983.3(b) for this purpose
to include ``adjacent to'' or ``touching along a boundary or a
point''). For simplicity, the definition describes in general terms the
buildings and parcels of land that qualify as ``projects'' in the vast
majority of cases. Where natural or engineered features make up a
boundary between buildings or parcels, PHAs are expected to reasonably
determine if the buildings or parcels make up a project. Considerations
include the extent and difficulty of access from one building to
another, public regard of the buildings as interrelated, and whether
the classification proposed would serve the statutory purpose of the
income-mixing requirement. HUD intends to publish further guidance on
this matter.
Definition of Request for Release of Funds and Certification
A commenter suggested HUD delete the definition of ``request for
release of funds and certification,'' which is not used in the
regulations and creates an unintended parallel process to the
environmental review and replace it with the definition of ``letter to
proceed,'' which is used in the regulations. This commenter suggested
in the alternative to change ``PHAs'' to ``responsible entities,''
because the responsible entity signs the request for release of funds
under 24 CFR part 58 for environmental reviews, and reorder the current
language under 24 CFR part 58 because it suggests that Authority to Use
Grant Funds (AUGF) would authorize a HAP, which is inaccurate.
HUD Response: HUD has considered this comment and determined that,
while ``request for release of funds and certification'' is in fact
used in Sec. 983.56 of the regulation and is not the same as a
``letter to proceed,'' which is issued by HUD, the lack of clarity the
commenter points out is best addressed by moving the content of the
definition of ``request for release of funds and certification'' from
Sec. 983.2 to the appropriate section of Sec. 983.56.
Definition of Comparable Rental Assistance
A commenter stated that the definition of comparable rental
assistance does not explicitly include the statutory requirement that
assistance must be tenant-based. This commenter suggested HUD specify
that comparable assistance cannot be time-limited or subject to
requirements that do not apply under section 8(o).
HUD Response: HUD agrees that the definition of comparable rental
assistance should include the statutory requirement that assistance
must be tenant-based. HUD therefore amends the definition, in this
final rule termed ``comparable tenant-based rental assistance'' at
Sec. 983.3(b) to be consistent with the statute. HUD notes that the
terminology used in Sec. 983.261(b)-(c) before publication of this
final rule was consistent with section 8(o)(13)(E) of the 1937 Act. HUD
therefore views this change only as a clarifying change to the
definition. HUD additionally specifies the essential elements of
comparable tenant-based rental assistance in this final rule. That is,
comparable tenant-based rental assistance enables a family to obtain
decent, safe, and sanitary housing in which: (1) a family's monthly
payment is not more than 40 percent of adjusted income; (2) the rental
assistance is not time-limited; (3) the rental assistance is not
conditioned on a work or supportive service requirement; and (4) the
rental assistance affords the family a portability option. HUD does not
in this final definition prohibit the assistance being subject to
requirements that do not apply under 8(o) because doing so would reduce
options available to PHAs and families, as many tenant-based rental
assistance programs across the country likely do not meet every HCV
program requirement. Such a requirement could increase wait times for
families wishing to move from PBV units with tenant-based assistance.
HUD in this final rule also takes this opportunity to clarify that
the ``gross rent'' calculation refers to the family's share of the
gross rent, and not the total gross rent. This is a clarifying change
consistent with how HUD already applies this definition. Additionally,
to consolidate definitional language, this final rule removes language
explaining the meaning of ``comparable tenant-based rental assistance''
at Sec. 983.260(b)(4) such that the complete definition is in this
final rule at Sec. 983.3(b).
Existing Housing
Support and Disagreement
A commenter supported the proposed definition of ``existing
housing'' in relation to how long it would take to make any repairs
needed to comply with applicable quality standards and stated that it
is a significant improvement over the use of a fixed and arbitrary cost
of repairs as HUD proposed previously.
Other commenters found the current existing housing definition more
flexible for PHAs. The commenters stated that the proposed definition
did not clarify the existing requirement and
[[Page 38260]]
could create different implementation across the country. One commenter
stated that PHAs should retain discretion to determine whether a
project constitutes existing housing and to define substantial
compliance with HQS in their Administrative Plans.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the supportive comment and proceeds
with a standard that does not include cost, as further discussed below.
HUD finds that including a definition of ``substantially comply'' in
this final rule will improve consistency and predictability in
implementation of the PBV program across the country.
Potential Regulatory Burdens
One commenter urged HUD to reconsider the definition change due to
the potential regulatory burden of narrowly defining ``existing
housing'' while simultaneously expanding the definition of
``development activity,'' which could have chilling implications on PBV
programs. Another commenter stated that treating some of the units as
``existing'' and some as ``rehabilitation'' would be confusing and
regulatory burdensome for PBV purposes.
HUD Response: HUD concludes that, given the strong use of
rehabilitated housing in the PBV program, clarification that a project
is rehabilitated housing when an owner is undertaking extensive or
lengthy work will not chill participation. However, HUD believes that
the new option at Sec. 983.157 for rehabilitated housing to complete
development activity after HAP contract execution will provide
additional flexibility needed to attract more PBV owners. In response
to comments, HUD has revised the definitions of existing housing, newly
constructed housing, and rehabilitated housing to clarify that the
classification of project type is on a project basis.
Potential Rent Cost Burdens
A commenter opposed shifting from building condition (e.g., current
HQS status) to building correction plan (e.g., ability to make repairs)
as too high a burden, especially as the standard correction period is
30 days. This commenter warned that the proposed definition would
likely result in additional rent burdens for tenants in units that
cannot qualify as existing housing and encouraged HUD to define
existing housing based on the percentage of units that pass HQS.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the commenter that it is appropriate
to incorporate into the definition of ``substantially comply with HQS''
the standard deficiency cure period applicable to the program, since
that period best represents an overall correction timeline that remains
compliant with HQS enforcement standards. This change is reflected in
this final rule's definition of ``existing housing'' at Sec. 983.3.
HUD considered the suggestion to use, instead of the proposed
definition, percentage of units passing HQS but determined such a
standard would inappropriately allow classification of units with
rehabilitation needs as existing housing. HUD appreciates the concern
for the rent burden of tenants while awaiting assistance but determines
that it is better addressed by adding the new option at Sec. 983.157
for rehabilitated housing to complete development activity after HAP
contract execution and maintaining the options at Sec. 983.103(c) for
initial execution before HQS compliance is determined via inspection.
In other words, amending the definition of existing housing to include
units immediately undergoing extensive work would have been an
inappropriate mechanism to address the concern.
General Comments About Existing Housing Restriction
One commenter supported HUD's putting restrictions on the
applicability of the definition of existing housing and noted it had
experience with projects seeking to circumvent executing an Agreement
for rehabilitation by requesting the project be defined as existing
housing based on the units being already occupied, even though the
owner was planning some level of rehabilitation.
Another commenter disagreed with the framing of the question
because it suggests that PHAs and project owners are ``circumventing''
rehabilitation program requirements when selecting existing housing
projects that comply with HUD's definition of existing housing.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates commenters' perspectives regarding
circumventing rehabilitation requirements and believes that PHAs and
owners will be better able to determine when rehabilitation rules apply
using this final rule's definitions.
Question 13. Is the 48-hour standard reasonable, particularly for
larger projects?
One commenter supported HUD's proposed definition of
``substantially complies with Housing Quality Standards (HQS).'' Other
commenters stated that the 48-hour timeframe is unreasonable,
especially for large projects with multiple units requiring minor
repairs or in housing markets where contractors are scarce because some
units require renovations that are impossible to complete in a 48-hour
timeframe.
HUD Response: Commenters' explanations of when a 48-hour standard
may be infeasible were persuasive, and HUD has changed the standard in
this final rule.
Alternative Timeframes
One commenter suggested that the 48-hour timeframe only apply to
individual units and not the entire building. Commenters also suggested
alternative timeframes to cure HQS deficiencies including 72 hours for
projects with more than 20 failed inspections, and a maximum of 5 or 10
business days to cure deficiencies.
A commenter expressed that the HOTMA alternatives to initial
inspections are unusable if HUD requires a PHA to conduct and a project
to pass an HQS inspection before making an existing housing
determination.
One commenter proposed allowing PHAs to integrate in their policies
a specific timeline for completion of the repairs based on local
conditions.
Another commenter recommended defining the timeframe based on the
time it takes to complete a repair, rather than the time it takes to
begin a repair.
HUD Response: In this final rule, HUD adopts a timeframe based upon
the standard deficiency cure period as part of a reasonable
representation of substantial compliance with HQS. Under this final
rule, PHAs must determine whether, taking into consideration the
totality of the deficiencies in the project, the owner will be able to
correct the deficiencies in a 30-day period. HUD does not impose
through this definition a requirement that correction occur at a
specific time; the standards at Sec. 983.103(c) dictate when the
corrections must occur, depending in large part on whether the PHA has
adopted the discretionary options for initial inspection. HUD believes
that this definition provides sufficient flexibility to account for
local conditions and differences in unit repair times while still
adequately distinguishing existing housing from housing properly
characterized as rehabilitated.
HUD's Previous Proposed Definition of Existing Housing ($1,000)
\15\
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\15\ See The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA):
Changes to the Section 8 Tenant-Based Voucher and Section 8 Project-
Based Voucher Programs, 77 FR 28741 (May 15, 2012).
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One commenter supported the prior proposed definition because it
was clear
[[Page 38261]]
and unambiguous. However, other commenters disagreed with the prior
proposed rule and suggested that existing housing projects should not
be permitted to make over $1,000 of improvements per unit within the
first year of their HAP contract or to make significant improvements
within the first 5 years, unless there are extenuating circumstances as
determined by the PHA.
Commenters suggested that the definition should include units where
planned rehab exceeds $1,000 over the next year per unit, as this
amount is too low in many high-cost areas. Another commenter stated
that the $1,000 limit previously proposed by HUD was not required by
HOTMA. A commenter suggested that HUD permit PHA discretion to create
alternative standards based on a reasonable cost for each unit,
considering that 48 hours for deficiency correction may be impractical
for large projects or in national emergency situations.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the benefit mentioned by commenters
of a clear dollar threshold or PHA discretionary amount but determines
not to adopt the suggestion because the differing impact of a dollar
threshold across markets with different local conditions will result in
an inconsistent meaning of ``existing housing'' nationwide. HUD
considered the suggestion to define ``existing housing'' based on cost
or extent of work occurring shortly after contract execution. In this
final rule, HUD adopts that suggestion in part. HUD defines ``existing
housing'' based on the condition of the units at the proposal or
project selection date and incorporates a requirement that the PHA
determine, and the owner certify, the units will not need or undergo
substantial improvement from the date of proposal submission or board
resolution, as applicable, to two years after the HAP contract. In
conjunction with this change, HUD codifies in this final rule complete
standards for correction of deficiencies (see discussion of Sec.
983.103 below) and substantial improvement (see discussion of Sec.
983.212 below) following contract execution.
Alternative Definitions of Existing Housing
Commenters suggested that the standard should be a percentage of
local rehabilitation or development costs or whether the apartment is
occupied or available for occupancy. Another commenter supported the
proposed definition of ``existing housing,'' but found the reliance on
proposal selection date as impractical compared to using the HAP
execution date because there can be a significant gap between selection
and HAP execution. One commenter opposed the imposition of a bright
line threshold that fails to account for PHA discretion and local
circumstances as well as thresholds based on time or money because the
test will affect project owners differently based on availability and
costs of materials and labor associated with routine maintenance.
Another commenter suggested that the standard for existing housing
should be ``housing that does not need to be rehabilitated,'' which
would require HUD to chart the cost threshold and number of PBV units
in a development, and developments that must spend above the threshold
to make PBV units HQS-compliant would not be considered ``existing
housing.''
HUD Response: HUD does not adopt the suggestion to use a percentage
of local costs in the definition out of concern that the approach may
make housing type classification unpredictable over time and may
require significant administrative burden to estimate costs in advance
of work. HUD declines to adopt a standard that defines ``existing
housing'' based on whether the unit is occupied or available for
occupancy; HUD finds the former does not afford sufficient protection
against assistance being provided to units that do not meet HQS and the
latter is not sufficiently clear to be applied uniformly. In addition,
HUD does not adopt the suggestion to use the contract execution date
rather than the proposal or project selection date, as the PHA must
establish the housing type well before the contract execution date to
follow the appropriate pre-contract program requirements.
HUD believes the linkage in this final rule to a standard cure
period addresses the concern regarding a bright line threshold. HUD
generally agrees that the nature of existing housing should be
``housing that does not need to be rehabilitated,'' but has implemented
this principle in a manner different from what the commenter suggests.
HUD has in this final rule defined ``substantially comply'' based on
the nature of the correction of HQS deficiencies--whether they require
only repairs to the unit's current components or replacement of
equipment and/or materials by items of substantially the same kind to
correct--in addition to the likelihood of compliance with HQS within
the standard cure period.
PHA Determination Whether a Project Will be Ready To Be Placed Under a
HAP Contract
Commenters stated that PHAs should have discretion to determine
whether a project is ready to be placed under a HAP contract with
``minimal delay'' because the PHA is best positioned to judge whether
the owner will quickly complete repairs and make the determination
consistent with PHAs' own policies regarding the time that may elapse
between the initial inspection and the HAP contract's execution.
HUD Response: Upon consideration of comments, HUD finds that the
timing of execution of the HAP contract is difficult to estimate based
on condition of units alone, given the many factors impacting
execution, and will not provide sufficient clarity to use the
definition consistently. Therefore, HUD removes the proposed ``minimal
delay'' element from the definition of ``existing housing'' in this
final rule at Sec. 983.3.
Definition of ``Building''
One commenter suggested that HUD define the word ``building'' under
Sec. 983.103(d), and specifically as it relates to conducting an
inspection of 20 percent of a building's units. The commenter stated
that while the definition of ``building'' may be obvious, the
definition is obscure, and the commenter suggested changing
``building'' to ``project.''
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the commenter that the term
``building'' may not always be clear. Therefore, HUD adopts in Sec.
982.4 the following definition: ``a structure with a roof and walls
that contains one or more dwelling units.'' Where the term ``building''
is used regarding periodic inspection of a sample of units (now located
in Sec. 983.103(e)), HUD intends that the requirement apply to
buildings, not projects. HUD believes that the sample should be drawn
on a building basis to get a good cross-section of the condition of the
units in a project. Further discussion of this matter is at 70 FR
59892, 59905 (Oct. 13, 2005).
Definition of ``Areas Where Vouchers Are Difficult To Use''
Give PHAs Discretion
Several commenters suggested HUD should allow PHAs to define areas
where vouchers are ``difficult to use'' because PHAs can consider local
and recent conditions and handle complex calculations.
HUD Response: HUD declines to give PHAs discretion to define areas
where vouchers are ``difficult to use'' because
[[Page 38262]]
such an approach could lead to highly inconsistent application of the
program and project caps across the country.
Opposition to Proposed Definition
A commenter warned that the proposed definition of ``difficult to
use'' may inaccurately reflect the current status of rental markets at
either end of the income spectrum and may insufficiently adjust if
rapid market changes occur.
HUD Response: HUD determined that the proposed measure is
appropriate given the targeted incomes that the voucher program is
intended to serve. HUD agrees that FMRs may take time to adjust to
market changes but determines the benefit of using FMR data, which is
held to a high standard of accuracy, outweighs this concern. HUD
continues its commitment to continually improving FMR calculations in
order capture the most current market conditions.
Base on Vacancy Rates
Commenters supported HUD's proposal to define areas where vouchers
are ``difficult to use'' based on vacancy rates. Some commenters stated
that HUD should use a three or four percent or lower target vacancy
percentage for metropolitan Fair Market Rent areas and use ZIP code
areas to analyze vacancy rates and allow exceptions in areas with
accurate data at lower levels, such as census tracts. A commenter noted
that it would be beneficial to examine vacancy rates separated by
bedroom size, since bedroom size may impact vacancy rates. One
commenter opposed HUD defining ``difficult to use'' based on vacancy
rates because of the challenges and inaccuracies behind identifying
vacancy rates based on ZIP code.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the commenters' support of HUD's
proposal to define areas where vouchers are ``difficult to use'' based
on vacancy rates. HUD considered a more restrictive target vacancy
percentage as some commenters proposed but determined the proposed four
percent threshold provides PHAs an appropriate level of discretion to
respond to local conditions and is consistent with other uses of a
vacancy threshold in HUD programs. HUD does not provide for additional
definition on the basis of areas smaller than ZIP code or of bedroom
size because such data are not consistently available. Determining
vacancy rates based on ZIP code is currently possible using reliable
and available data, so HUD maintains this change in this final rule.
Other Suggestions
A commenter suggested that HUD add three additional criteria to
define areas where it is ``difficult to use'' vouchers: (1) in areas
experiencing rapid rent appreciation as shown by increases in fair
market rent, (2) areas with low vacancy rates, and (3) areas undergoing
revitalization. The commenter pointed out that these additional
criteria would allow PHAs to preserve affordability in rapidly changing
areas as well as present residents with the ability to choose whether
to move or remain in areas of opportunity when they may otherwise be
priced out. Moreover, this commenter stated that HUD should consider
areas with defined exception payment standards as ``difficult to use,''
and ``difficult to develop,'' because it consolidates efforts to
improve fair housing opportunities. Another commenter recommended that
HUD identify areas where costs are high relative to metropolitan area
FMRs based on a median salary comparison to SAFMR because it would
identify areas where rent dramatically increases, but salaries remain
stagnant.
One commenter suggested that defining areas where vouchers are
``difficult to use'' should include a poverty threshold to avoid
voucher concentrations in high-poverty areas. This commenter also
stated that the Small Area FMR (SAFMR) standard is a good proxy for
areas of opportunity. Another commenter expressed that another means to
identify areas where vouchers are difficult to use is by comparing
actual costs to the area's FMR, since using other parameters may be
complex to calculate and labor-intensive.
HUD Response: This final rule incorporates into the definition of
``area where vouchers are difficult to use'' the proposed rule's
measure of low vacancy rates. HUD reviewed the suggestion to add areas
experiencing rapid rent appreciation and areas undergoing
revitalization but determined that data on such measures are not
available or updated frequently enough to be meaningful. HUD
appreciates the benefit of preserving affordability in rapidly changing
areas and allowing residents to remain in areas of opportunity but
determined that the data limitation will require that PHAs explore use
of the 20 percent program cap and other exceptions to the cap to meet
these objectives. HUD disagrees that areas with exception payment
standards in place should be incorporated into the definition, as
exception payment standard use can reflect conditions beyond the sole
criterion this definition is intended to reflect (whether vouchers are
difficult to use) and their use in the definition would result in broad
and inconsistent application of the program and project cap exceptions.
HUD appreciates the commenter's recommendation to incorporate high-
cost areas but retains the proposed rule's definition because the
criteria therein appear to provide adequate coverage of areas where
vouchers are difficult to use. HUD intends to monitor the impact of
this definition over time and consider this additional criterion for
future rulemaking if the definition proves insufficient. HUD also
declines to add a poverty threshold to this definition because the
standards regarding deconcentration of poverty when siting PBV projects
are adequately covered by existing requirements at Sec. 983.55. HUD
reviewed other methods to determine actual costs as recommended by
commenters but determined none are available and verifiable in a manner
adequate to be relied upon consistently on a national scale.
18. Description of PBV Program (Sec. 983.5)
Operating Without an Agreement
A commenter supported HUD's proposal to allow development without
an Agreement to increase flexibility and reduce burdens on PBV
developments. Other commenters suggested that HUD clearly state,
potentially in the definition of ``newly constructed,'' that a PHA may
enter an Agreement contract with prospective units of a property under
construction.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the positive comment and discusses
further comments on the topic of development without an Agreement in
the discussion of Sec. 983.154 later in this preamble. The comments
concerning the definition of ``newly constructed'' have been addressed
in the discussion of Sec. 983.3 earlier in this preamble.
19. Maximum Amount of PBV Assistance (Sec. 983.6)
Outline Calculation Situations
One commenter requested that HUD outline in the preamble the
situations in which a PHA would have to conduct a calculation.
HUD Response: In this final rule at Sec. 983.58, HUD clarifies
that the PHA must calculate the number of authorized voucher units that
it is permitted to project-base in accordance with Sec. 983.6. The
calculation must include a determination of the amount of budget
authority that it has available for
[[Page 38263]]
project-basing in accordance with Sec. 983.5(b). The PHA's
calculations must occur before it issues a request for proposal in
accordance with Sec. 983.51(b)(1), makes a selection based on a
previous competition in accordance with Sec. 983.51(b)(2), amends an
existing HAP contract to add units in accordance with Sec. 983.207(b),
or noncompetitively selects a project in accordance with Sec.
983.51(c). Further, PHAs must perform an analysis of the impact if
project-basing 50 percent or more of the units under the Consolidated
Annual Contributions Contract (ACC). The analysis should consider the
ability of the PHA to meet the needs of the community across its
tenant-based and project-based voucher portfolio, including the impact
on, among others, families on the waiting list and eligible PBV
families that wish to move under Sec. 983.261.
Reducing Units
A commenter recommended that a PHA should never be required to
reduce units under an Agreement or HAP contract but should only be
unable to enter new commitments, Agreements, or HAP contracts until
they are back below the cap. This commenter stated that owners and PHAs
need stability in the PBV program and should not be subject to
reduction after Agreements or HAP contracts are entered. Therefore,
this commenter recommended that HUD strike the first clause of Sec.
983.6(a)(3), limiting the paragraph to paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of the
same section.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed the comment and determined that this
final rule already affords relief when a PHA would otherwise be out of
compliance with the statutory program cap simply because of a change in
the number of authorized voucher units. In such cases, this final rule
maintains the proposed rule provision that states the PHA is not
required to reduce the number of units to which it has committed PBV
assistance under an Agreement or HAP contract. Notwithstanding, this
final rule prohibits the PHA from adding units to PBV HAP contracts or
entering into new Agreements or HAP contracts (except for HAP contracts
resulting from Agreements entered into before the reduction of
authorized units or April 18, 2017, as applicable). Further, the PHA
could add units if the unit meets one of the increased cap exceptions
and adding the unit does not place the PHA outside of the program cap
or increased program cap. The same principle applies where the
noncompliance is simply the result of the change in statute (from
budget authority to authorized units). Conversely, HUD has an
obligation to ensure that statutory requirements are met, and,
therefore, has no discretion to allow for the same policy where the
noncompliance with the statutory requirement is based on PHA error and
under this final rule, HUD will not strike the first clause of Sec.
983.6(a)(3). HUD takes this opportunity, however, to clarify that the
PHA may also add units in the instances described above, if the unit
does not count toward the program cap under the requirements of Sec.
983.59.
Technical Edit
A commenter recommended using ``authorized units'' instead of
``budget authority'' in Sec. 983.6(c).
HUD Response: HUD reviewed the comment and determined that the
reference is accurate and the PHA is responsible for determining the
amount of budget authority that is available for project-based vouchers
and for ensuring that the amount of assistance that is attached to
units is within the amounts available.
The Census Tract Data
A commenter stated that the use of census tract data ``as
determined by HUD'' in Sec. Sec. 983.6(d)(2)(iv) and 983.54(b)(1) is
unclear whether it is determined by census data or other metrics, as
the commenter believed it would be determined by census data, but the
text suggests HUD may seek to use other metrics.
HUD Response: This final rule maintains HUD discretion to determine
the most appropriate data source and metric to use in making this
determination. HUD will ensure that stakeholders are notified and fully
informed once such determinations are made. HUD notes that these
provisions have now moved to the definition of ``area where vouchers
are difficult to use'' in Sec. 983.3.
Definition of Veterans
Commenters objected to HUD excluding dishonorably discharged
veterans in its proposed definition of ``veterans'' and find it is
counter to both other HUD programs and Congressional intent, because
the proposed definition undermines local efforts to end veteran
homelessness by denying assistance to dishonorably discharged veterans,
who are likely to face barriers to stable housing. A commenter
suggested that HUD should allow PHAs to define ``families with
veterans.''
HUD Response: Under this final rule, HUD makes the change
commenters suggested in defining veteran, solely for purposes of
applying the additional 10 percent veteran exception to the PBV program
cap, to ``a person who served in the active military, naval, air, or
space service, and who was discharged or released therefrom.'' HUD
determines that the change from the proposed rule definition is likely
to better prevent and address homelessness and unstable housing among
those who served and their families by providing PHAs an option to
attach more PBV assistance to projects serving this population. HUD
does not make the change suggested by a commenter to give PHAs
discretion to establish the definition of ``veteran'' for this purpose.
HUD is concerned about the different treatment of applicants that would
result from divergent definitions around the country.
Supportive Services Limitation
One commenter disagreed with HUD's proposal to continue its
existing policy that allows PHAs to exceed the 20 percent limitation on
project-basing of authorized voucher units for ``units that provide
supportive housing to persons with disabilities or elderly persons''
only when ``the project makes supportive services available for all the
assisted families in the project.'' The commenter recommended that the
statutory requirement to offer services to ``all the assisted families
in the project'' be removed from this final rule.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the commenter's suggestion; however,
HUD is unable to implement such a change through regulation because it
would be in conflict with the current statutory language under section
106(a)(2) of HOTMA, which amends section 8(o)(13)(B) of the 1937 Act.
Under HOTMA, a PHA may project-base an additional 10 percent of its ACC
authorized units above the 20 percent program limit, provided the
additional units fall into one of the eligible exception categories,
one of which is providing supportive housing to persons with
disabilities or elderly persons. The use of the term ``supportive
housing'' in section 8(o)(13)(B) of the 1937 Act means that the project
must be making the supportive services available for all the assisted
families in the project, not just individual families.
Survivors of Domestic Violence
A commenter suggested including survivors of domestic violence,
sexual assault, and stalking to the list of circumstances under which
PBV units may exceed the cap.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the commenter's suggestion; however,
HUD is unable to implement such a change through regulation because it
would be
[[Page 38264]]
in conflict with the current statutory language.
20. PBV Provisions in the Administrative Plan (Sec. 983.10)
A commenter stated that Sec. 983.10(a) is unclear in its
requirements and recommended this paragraph be guidance instead of a
requirement. This commenter also suggested HUD clarify in Sec.
983.10(b)(7)(ii) that PHAs can use a combination of general, site-
based, and owner-maintained waiting lists, as determined by the PHA's
discretion. Finally, this commenter suggested that HUD create a section
similar to Sec. 983.10 for PHA Plan requirements or, if already
identified in part 903, create a cross-reference, because combining
requirements makes monitoring and compliance easier.
HUD Response: HUD's longstanding requirement has been that the
Administrative Plan must state PHA policy on matters for which the PHA
has discretion to establish local policies. As provided in Sec. 983.2,
the HCV program regulation governing Administrative Plans (Sec.
982.54) applies to the PBV program. Section 983.10, as amended in this
final rule, provides a list of additional Administrative Plan policies
that a PHA must also adopt, to the extent applicable, if it has
implemented or plans to implement a PBV program. HUD has reviewed the
language of Sec. 983.10(a) in response to this comment and edited it
to better explain these requirements.
HUD's position is that Sec. 983.251(c) is the appropriate location
to explain PHAs' options to use a combination of general, site-based,
and owner-maintained waiting lists. Section 983.10(b)(7) merely
requires the PHA to include in the Administrative Plan a description of
the waiting list policies the PHA has chosen to adopt; it does not
impose a limitation different from Sec. 983.251(c). To prevent any
potential confusion, HUD revised this section to limit the discussion
of each PHA policy in Sec. 983.10 to a short description only. PHAs
must look to the cross-referenced section for complete information
about the contents of and requirements for each PHA policy.
As provided in Sec. 983.2, the HCV program regulation explaining
the relationship between the Administrative Plan and PHA Plan (Sec.
982.54(b)) applies to the PBV program. PHA Plan requirements themselves
are contained in 24 CFR part 903 and HUD finds that repeating them in
part 983 would be duplicative. However, HUD has clarified in Sec.
983.3(b) that the definition of PHA Plan in Sec. 982.4(b), which
cross-references part 903, applies to the PBV program, to address the
commenter's concern.
21. Prohibition of Excess Public Assistance (Sec. 983.11)
Subsidy Layering, Standards, and Review
Several commenters opposed HUD's proposal to permit subsidy
layering review upon rehabilitation or development activity. Commenters
found the change administratively burdensome and recommended that
subsidy layering reviews be limited to additional Federal resources for
operating assistance or recommended that SLR only be applied at the
time of signing an Agreement. Another commenter objected to the
language in Sec. 983.12(d)(1) (Sec. 983.11(d)(1) in this final rule)
as harmfully broadening subsidy layering requirements, which is not
done in other programs and, historically in PBV and Project Based
Rental Assistance, has only been required when the PBVs are awarded,
not for any subsequent rehabilitation or assistance. The commenter
stated that this will be administratively burdensome for owners and
PHAs, especially given the ninety-day plus review periods.
A commenter suggested that HUD clarify that rehabilitation projects
which may be done without any additional funding, and which are
unlikely to result in a rent increase, are exempt from the subsidy
layering requirements. A commenter questioned whether HUD has the
capacity and expertise to conduct the additional subsidy layering
reviews that would be required by the proposed regulations. Another
commenter stated that HUD's Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) is silent
with respect to subsidy layering reviews.
HUD Response: HUD has considered the comments and agrees that it
would be unnecessarily administratively burdensome for a new SLR to be
performed every time any amount of additional related assistance is
added to a newly constructed or rehabilitated project after the HAP
contract is effective. As such, HUD has revised the rule to clarify
that the criteria for whether the addition of assistance requires a new
SLR will continue to be located in the PBV SLR Administrative
Guidelines published in the Federal Register. With regard to the
concern that Sec. 983.11(d)(1) broadens subsidy layering requirements,
HUD clarifies that it is and has long been a requirement in the PBV HAP
contract for newly constructed and rehabilitated housing that the owner
must disclose public assistance that is made available during the term
of the HAP contract. This requirement was reinforced and further
explained in 75 FR 39561 (Jul. 9, 2010), 79 FR 57955 (Sep. 26, 2014),
85 FR 12001 (Feb. 28, 2020), and the most recently applicable notice at
88 FR 15443 (Mar. 13, 2023).
Section 983.153(b)(1) clarifies that an SLR is required for
rehabilitated housing projects only when housing assistance payment
subsidy under the PBV program is combined with other governmental
housing assistance from Federal, State, or local agencies. HUD confirms
it has the capacity and expertise to conduct the required SLRs. HUD's
statement in the RIA was that changes that are merely codifications of
current HUD practice would not be analyzed. As discussed above, this
final rule aligns with the policy in effect in the most recently
applicable SLR Guidelines.
22. Proposal and Project Selection Procedures (Sec. 983.51)
Responses to Question 15 Regarding Additional Exemptions
Several commenters supported HUD exempting the placement of PBVs
that are used to replace previously federally assisted or rent-
restricted property from the competitive selection requirements.
One commenter stated that PHAs and project owners of affordable
housing units should not have to compete with private owners to
preserve existing units through on-site or off-site development. This
commenter expressed that PHAs and owners can use the voucher commitment
to obtain additional financing to rehabilitate and preserve the
affordable housing units, many of which have struggled due to
insufficient appropriations, below-market rents, and unfunded capital
needs. Another commenter stated that HUD should allow exceptions to the
competitive selection process in housing-emergency situations, such as
when the PHA is part of a local partnership to save Naturally Occurring
Affordable Housing (NOAH) or to relieve homeless encampments.
Other commenters suggested that HUD exempt tax credit properties
where the compliance period has come to an end to help protect the
affordability of the units. One commenter stated that HUD should add
Project-based Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing (VASH) vouchers on
the condition that the local Veteran Affairs Office supports doing so.
One commenter stated that HUD should remove the competitive selection
requirements when PBVs are submitted with an application for a LIHTC
credit, to ease the ability of entities to submit
[[Page 38265]]
LIHTC proposals. Another commenter stated that PBVs in income-
restricted developments create a mix of incomes while providing
financial stability for affordable developments.
HUD Response: HUD considered the comments and determined an
additional exemption category should be added at Sec. 983.51(c)(3) to
include PHA-owned units as defined under Sec. 982.4. The exemption
from the proposed rule requires for a PHA to be ``engaged in an
initiative to improve, develop, or replace a public housing property or
site,'' but in all cases HUD means housing assisted under section 9 of
the 1937 Act when referring to public housing. Adding PHA-owned units
to the exemption will streamline and support a PHA's ability to develop
long term affordable units in its community.
If a PHA has identified preserving affordable housing or serving
veterans and the homeless as a local priority, the PHA can incorporate
that goal into their RFP or strategically utilize other funding
competitions to select such projects. As a limited resource, PBV should
be used to address local needs and priorities using a method that is
intended to identify the best project.
Previous Competition Requirement
A commenter encouraged HUD to remove the requirement that projects
be selected solely based on previous competition, if the previous
competition did not involve consideration of the PBVs, because most tax
credit and other funding selections will require a provisional
commitment of PBV assistance. The commenter warned that this puts PHAs
and project owners in an untenable position, since they cannot compete
for vouchers without tax credits, and PHAs cannot compete for tax
credits without PBV assistance.
HUD Response: HUD understands the limitations presented by the
commentor because of the provision that prohibits a PHA from selecting
a housing assistance proposal that included any consideration that the
project would receive PBV assistance; however, this provision maintains
the integrity of a competitive selection method and will not be revised
in this final rule.
Language was added to Sec. 983.51(b)(1) clarifying that a PHA may
establish selection procedures that combine or are in conjunction with
other Federal, State, or local government housing assistance, community
development, or supportive services competitive selection processes,
and HUD intends to provide future guidance to support PHAs in using
these methods in combination with other funding sources.
Clarification Request
A commenter suggested removing ``regard to,'' from Sec.
983.51(c)(1) and (2) and modifying the statement, ``newly developed or
replacement housing,'' in Sec. 983.51(c)(1) to ``newly developed,
rehabilitated, or replacement housing.''
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the commenter and has removed the
language ``regard to'' and revised the language ``newly developed or
replacement housing.'' Additional language revisions were made to Sec.
983.51(c) for better readability.
23. Prohibition of Assistance for Ineligible Units (Sec. 983.52)
One commenter recommended deleting Sec. 983.52(d). In the
alternative, the commenter urged HUD to revise the requirement from
applying upon ``proposal submission'' to only be triggered following
``proposal selection.'' According to the commenter, if the owner
submits a proposal and that proposal is not successful (perhaps because
there are not enough PBVs at that time or it is simply not awarded),
this language will foreclose the owner's future participation in the
PBV program.
HUD Response: HUD has retained proposed Sec. 983.52(d) in this
final rule. The provision has not changed from the requirement in place
under the prior regulation, except with respect to units developed
without the use of an Agreement and rehabilitated projects developed
after HAP contract execution, and it continues to be necessary to
ensure critical development requirements are followed. HUD declines to
amend the language to require applicability only after proposal
selection, because doing so could result in development occurring prior
to completion of critical development requirements. HUD clarifies,
however, that if the PHA does not select the project for PBVs, the
project is not subject to program requirements and the provision does
not apply.
HUD also takes this opportunity to amend the prohibition on using
PBVs in manufactured homes. Under this final rule, PHAs may use PBVs in
manufactured homes so long as they are permanently affixed to a
permanent foundation and the owner owns the land on which the
manufactured home is located, as these are necessary preconditions for
compliance with the PBV program rules (all standard PBV rules continue
to apply). Using PBVs in manufactured homes also means that the
manufactured home can be made accessible in accordance with HUD's
accessibility requirements, including requirements under HUD's Section
504 requirements at 24 CFR part 8. HUD finds this change necessary
given the changes in industry practice since the rule was written.
24. Cap on Number of PBV Units in Each Project (Sec. 983.54)
Question 16: Whether the proposed rule sufficiently addressed the
project cap requirements in relation to a unit losing its excepted
status?
One commenter supported HUD's changes as beneficial for families
and PHAs. Other commenters suggested that HUD permit a continued
excepted status for families that lose their excepted status, whether
due to the death of an elderly family member or other reasons.
Commenters warned that removing the unit could have negative financial
implications especially when the project has been underwritten against
the number of subsidized units. A commenter stated that this would
align HUD with PIH Notice 2017-21, because this would allow units to
remain excepted until turnover if the family no longer qualifies for
the exception through no fault of its own.
One commenter proposed that HUD adopt a ``next available unit''
rule, which would allow a PHA and project owner to continue counting
units as excepted so long as the next available unit is subsequently
leased to an eligible family at turnover. In the alternative, this
commenter suggested a cure period of 90 days, in which the project
owner and PHA could avoid default under the HAP contract while
assessing options, ensuring compliance, amending the HAP contract, and
engaging in other related tasks. Another commenter suggested that PHAs
should enforce families' excepted status without HUD intervention and
that a de minimis standard should be set so a minimal number of units
can be out of excepted status without changes needed to the PBV
contract.
HUD Response: HUD reviewed the comment and determined that Sec.
983.262 of this final rule already affords discretion to PHAs to allow
the elderly exception to continue to apply to the unit where, through
circumstances beyond control of the family (e.g., death of the elderly
family member, long term or permanent hospitalization, or nursing
care), the elderly family member no longer resides in the unit.
Further, should HUD adopt a ``next available unit'' policy, such a
policy would be at odds with statutory requirements, as would be the
``de minimis'' standard suggested by another commenter.
[[Page 38266]]
Question 17: Whether other options not considered by the proposed rule
should be available to the PHA when a unit loses its excepted status?
Alternative Options
A commenter noted that no other options need to be considered.
Another commenter suggested unit substitution as an option to PHAs when
a unit loses its excepted status.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed the comment and has determined that
Sec. 983.262 of the proposed rule already offers unit substitution as
an option.
HCV Conversion
A commenter suggested PHAs have discretion, but not the obligation,
to provide families with an HCV because requiring PHAs to provide all
families in formerly excepted units with an HCV could create a loophole
where families who are initially eligible for the excepted unit move in
and promptly remove a household member from the lease to prematurely
access an HCV. One commenter expressed that the option to temporarily
convert to HCV seems burdensome to PHAs. Another commenter suggested
that for Sec. 983.262(f) (now moved to Sec. 983.262(b)(4) in this
final rule), HUD should require the owner to accept the tenant-based
voucher issued to the family if the family chooses to remain or is
unable to locate another suitable unit.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the perspective provided by
commenters concerning the option to temporarily remove the unit from
the PBV HAP contract and provide the family with a tenant-based voucher
when a unit loses its excepted status; however, under the proposed
rule, this was meant to be one of several options that a PHA could use
to manage the loss of the exception. Additionally, given the discretion
provided at Sec. 983.262(c)(3) and (d)(1)-(2), HUD expects a unit
losing its excepted status not to be a frequent occurrence.
Additionally, there is no reason to assume that families will start
removing members from the lease just to receive a tenant-based voucher.
Combining Exception Categories
One commenter encouraged HUD to retain references to combining
exception categories in a project and to permit the designation of
units as elderly or eligible for supportive services in projects that
are exempt from the income-mixing requirement. This commenter stated
that HUD is not statutorily required to prohibit PHAs from designating
units under the HAP contract once the income-mixing requirement does
not apply, due to reasons beyond income-mixing, such as complying with
various set asides and pointing allocations in LIHTC applications or
seeking to convert existing elderly designated public housing to PBV.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with commenters that reinstating Sec.
983.56(b)(3) in this final rule would be helpful. While the provision
was initially removed because the supportive services exception
requires that supportive services are made available to all PBV
families in the project, HUD agrees that this ``combining exception
categories'' provision is not at odds with that requirement and re-
inserting it makes clear that PHAs may designate units in the HAP
contract for specific exceptions. This final rule restores the
provision at Sec. 983.54(c)(1) with textual changes to clarify that
the provision allows that some units may be under different exception
or exclusion categories than others in a single project. HUD disagrees
with the comment that a unit may be excepted when it is already
excluded. Where a unit is excluded, the statute provides no basis for
an additional exception.
Supportive Services
One commenter supported HUD's emphasis that the use of supportive
services is voluntary. Another commenter thought that families
receiving drug and alcohol treatment as a condition of living in an
excepted unit should agree to supportive services, if needed, and to
comply with PBV regulations including following their supportive
service plan and timely paying their rent.
HUD Response: HUD does not make participation in supportive
services mandatory and the statute conveys that participation in such
supportive services is voluntary.
Question 18: Does the regulation clearly convey how the Family Self-
Sufficiency (FSS) program may be used in meeting the supportive
services exception?
Many commenters stated that the proposed rule is clear on how FSS
can be used in meeting supportive services. A commenter supported the
change that prohibits owners from terminating a family's lease for
failure to complete an FSS contract without good cause. In response to
question 18, one commenter found the proposed rule unclear on whether
``supportive services used in connection to the FSS program'' could be
the sole services offered to families to meet the exception. Another
commenter suggested putting the proposed rule on hold until HUD
finalizes the FSS proposed rule \16\ to avoid any potential conflict
between both rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ 85 FR 59234 (Sep. 21, 2020).
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HUD Response: While HUD appreciates the comments received
concerning the clarity of the FSS provisions, upon reflection, HUD has
determined that a PHA that administers an FSS program can choose to
solely use FSS in meeting the supportive services exception. This is
because PBV families are eligible to enroll in FSS (and, therefore,
eligible for the supportive services that are made available through
the FSS program) and enrollment in FSS is voluntary. However, if the
family fails to comply, without good cause, with the requirements of
the FSS contract of participation, the family may be terminated from
FSS. If the family's FSS contract of participation is terminated, the
PBV unit would lose its excepted status if the PHA solely uses FSS in
meeting the supportive services exception and the PHA policy in the FSS
Action Plan prohibits the re-enrollment of all members of a household
that enrolled in FSS but did not complete the program successfully
(were terminated from FSS or left the program voluntarily); as provided
in Sec. 983.262(d)(3)(iii) of this final rule, the unit loses its
excepted status only if the entire family becomes ineligible for all
supportive services for a reason other than that the family
successfully completed the services.
PHAs that choose to rely solely on FSS to meet the supportive
services exception must, therefore, plan carefully for such an
eventuality. The PHA may consider the following in making a
determination on whether to rely solely on FSS: (a) FSS graduation
rates, because if the PHA has low FSS graduation rates and a policy
prohibiting the re-enrollment of previous FSS participants, this could
potentially result in a high number of PBV units losing their excepted
status; and (b) availability of an FSS slot at the time of the PBV
family's request for enrollment since the supportive services must be
made available to the family within a reasonable time, as defined by
the PHA but not to exceed 120 calendar days from the family's request,
for the exception to apply. Further, the PHA could avoid the potential
loss of the PBV unit's excepted status by making the supportive
services used in connection with the FSS program available to non-FSS
PBV families at the project. Notwithstanding, PHAs cannot use the FSS
grant-funded coordinators to serve non-FSS PBV families but non-
[[Page 38267]]
FSS services can serve non-FSS PBV families.
With respect to the commenter's suggestion to put this proposed
rule on hold, the FSS rule was published on May 17, 2022, with an
effective date of June 16, 2022 (compliance with the FSS rule was
required no later than November 14, 2022). As a result, HUD can ensure
all HOTMA final rule provisions are aligned with the FSS rule to avoid
any potential conflict between both rules. HUD has also taken this
opportunity to clarify that, to meet the exception, the supportive
services must be made available to the family within a reasonable time,
as defined by the PHA but not to exceed 120 calendar days from the
family's request.
25. Site Selection Standards (Sec. 983.55)
Another commenter supported permitting PHAs to use project-based
vouchers in new construction developments in areas with poverty rates
greater than 20 percent, but suggested HUD does not require the PHA to
have gathered five years of information regarding poverty rates first.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the commenter's support pertaining to
permitting PHAs to use project-based vouchers in new construction
developments in areas with poverty rates greater than 20 percent. In
this final rule, HUD continues to require the PHA to have gathered five
years of information regarding poverty rates first, which must be
consistent with the PHA Plan under 24 CFR part 903 and the PHA
Administrative Plan, because HUD believes doing so will improve
compliance with the requirement at section 8(o)(13)(c)(ii) of the 1937
Act that the PBV HAP contract be consistent with the goal of
deconcentrating poverty and expanding housing and economic
opportunities.
26. Environmental Review (Sec. 983.56)
Support for the Proposed Rule
One commenter supported an environmental review exception for
existing housing that is formerly federally assisted property. Another
agreed with the proposed rule but suggested broadening the definition
of existing housing to encompass more properties.
HUD Response: HUD has not adopted this aspect of the proposed rule,
as further explained below in this discussion of comments regarding
Sec. 983.56.
Responses to Questions 19 and 20 Regarding Evidence of Past
Environmental Reviews
Commenters warned that requiring owners to demonstrate that an
environmental review was previously conducted would be an
administrative burden. A commenter stated that it is unreasonable to
require that new owners of older buildings provide environmental review
documentation. Commenters stated that an exemption should be allowed
even if documentation of prior review is unavailable. Commenters also
stated that HUD should infer that those previous federally assisted
projects must have conducted an environmental review and HUD should
assume that the review was properly conducted and met environmental
review requirements especially if the owner is in good standing with
HUD. A commenter suggested an owner should be allowed to self-certify
that the property was formerly federally assisted. Another commenter
expressed that Congress set a bright line standard to exempt all
existing housing from demonstrating that an environmental review was
previously conducted, and, as such, there should be a rebuttable
presumption that the existing housing received a proper environmental
review, unless HUD can show otherwise. A commenter stated that if the
PHA's environmental review records are unavailable, then a new review
should be conducted.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that requiring owners to demonstrate that
an environmental review was previously conducted would have presented
some administrative burden and has removed this requirement.
HUD Should Exempt All Existing Housing
Commenters expressed that HUD should exempt all existing housing
that only receives HAP Federal assistance. A commenter suggested this
exemption should not expire. Commenters stated that the statute clearly
provides an exemption broader than HUD's proposal and noted legislative
history shows that Congress intended such an exemption. A commenter
stated that HUD's citation of Church of the Holy Trinity v. United
States, 143 U.S. 457 (1892), as support for the proposed rule's
environmental review position is inapplicable because there is no
evidence that a plain reading of the text would be in contravention of
Congress's intent that site-based housing comply with environmental
review requirements. This commenter expressed that the HUD's Regulatory
Impact Assessment concedes that the Housing and Economic Recovery Act
(HERA) and HOTMA requirements contradict Congressional support for
environmental review.
One commenter stated that HUD should exempt existing housing to
prioritize environmental review for new construction and rehabilitation
projects because they pose the greatest environmental risk. Another
commenter stated that this requirement would do nothing to protect
tenants from adverse environmental conditions. Another commenter found
HUD's proposal legally questionable and unnecessary to protect
subsidized tenants from living in areas with adverse environmental
conditions. Commenters suggested that HUD allow exemption of existing
housing from environmental review if it meets the criteria for
environmental acceptability under Sec. 982.401(l)(2). Another
commenter also questioned HUD's statutory authority to impose an
environmental review requirement on project owners of existing
structures and suggested that HUD eliminate this requirement because it
is significantly burdensome on responsible entities, PHAs, and project
owners as the document retention policies adopted by responsible
entities are not uniform.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that requiring owners to submit past
reports of environmental reviews may result in a burden to the owner
without reducing the risk of unhealthy environmental conditions. Upon
consideration of this and other comments, HUD determines that revising
the rule to provide that environmental review is not required to be
undertaken before entering into a HAP contract for existing housing,
except where the review is required by law or regulation relating to
funding other than PBV housing assistance payments, best balances
HOTMA's textual change with Congress's continuing emphasis on the
importance of Federal assistance being used in an environmentally sound
manner. HUD agrees that existing housing projects pose lesser
environmental risk than newly constructed and rehabilitated projects
given that the existing housing structures at issue are not altered,
though HUD recognizes existing housing is not without risk. HUD agrees
with commenters that compliance with standards for environmental
acceptability as part of the review of site selection standards in
Sec. 983.55 (formerly under Sec. 982.401(l)(2)) can contribute to the
mitigation of environmental harm to and the risk of exposure to adverse
environmental conditions in existing housing.
[[Page 38268]]
Requirements Following Contract Effective Date
A commenter stated that adding units generally does not create an
environmental impact. The commenter encouraged HUD to provide technical
and financial assistance to responsible entities and PHAs if HUD
requires an environmental review for a project that seeks to add units
to an existing HAP contract that has already undergone review, to
ensure sufficient capacity and expertise. Another commenter suggested
that HUD should not require review at the five-year review period if
environmental conditions have not changed in the intervening years.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that adding units generally does not have
an environmental impact. PBV regulations do not require review every
five years nor was such a requirement proposed. HUD appreciates the
comment encouraging technical and financial assistance to responsible
entities and PHAs. HUD intends to provide additional technical
assistance regarding changes to the PBV program following publication
of this final rule. HUD will consider the need for financial assistance
in existing HUD programs and any relevant new funding opportunities
that become available.
Allow Alternatives
Commenters supported the current environmental review requirements,
and requested HUD allow acceptable alternatives, such as an abbreviated
review or other local environmental review reports.
HUD Response: HUD considered whether the regulation previously in
effect should be amended to allow for alternatives, but determined that
such an approach would not be appropriate for newly constructed or
rehabilitated housing, which are subject to environmental review under
law, and that requiring no environmental review before entering into a
HAP contract for existing housing is a better approach, given that the
housing remains as it was prior to receiving PBV assistance and
assisted families remain protected by HQS.
Require Environmental Review Near Documented Hazard Sites
One commenter recommended that existing housing projects be
required to undergo environmental review if the site is located near a
documented hazard site and suggested that HUD require PHAs to notify
tenants and update HQS inspection lists when a housing project is close
to a Superfund site or on the National Priorities List.
HUD Response: HUD finds that it would be impractical to require
environmental review when environmental issues are near the housing
because, in many cases, the issue would become known only through
environmental review and in the remaining cases, the PHA would be
prohibited from selecting any such site if it presented a hazard in
accordance with site selection standards.
Use HEROS To Track Environmental Reviews
One commenter encouraged HUD to continue tracking environmental
reviews via HUD's Environmental Review Online System (HEROS).
HUD Response: HUD intends to continue use of HEROS.
Technical Edit Suggestions
A commenter stated that Sec. 983.56 should refer to parts 50 and
58 instead of summarizing the requirements to prevent inconsistencies.
This commenter also stated that if there are differences between parts
50 and 58, the regulations should identify the deviations. This
commenter further suggested that HUD revise Sec. 983.56(d)(2) to read,
``The responsible entity has completed the environmental review
procedures required by 24 CFR part 58, and HUD has either issued
authority to use grant funds or Letter to Proceed.'' The commenter
recommended revising Sec. 983.56(e) to ensure consistent use of
terminology with part 58. The commenter additionally expressed that
Sec. 983.56(f) is inapplicable to HUD, because PHAs cannot direct
HUD's compliance with its own requirements. Another commenter suggested
HUD clarify that a transfer of ownership of a property should not
impact the definition of existing housing for environmental review
purposes.
HUD Response: In this final rule, HUD amended some of the language
of proposed Sec. 983.56 to ensure there were no inconsistencies with
parts 50 and 58. HUD amends paragraph (f) to better reflect part 50 and
58 requirements and paragraph (d)(2) to clarify the applicability of
the Letter to Proceed. HUD does not find clarification regarding
transfer of ownership to be necessary, as the definition of existing
housing is clear that the condition of the units, rather than the
ownership of the units, is the relevant criterion, and the
environmental review regulation clearly provides that no environmental
review is required before entering into a HAP contract for existing
housing.
Expand Definition To Match PIH Notice
A commenter suggested expanding the definition of existing housing
to include the entirety of the PIH Notice 2016-22 definition, which
``clarifies the applicability of environmental reviews under 24 CFR
parts 50 and 58 to all PHA activities at project site(s) assisted or to
be assisted by HUD.''
HUD Response: HUD has determined to change the requirements for
environmental review for the reasons explained above in this discussion
of comments regarding Sec. 983.56; upon the effective date of this
final rule, portions of PIH Notice 2016-22 relating to PBV will become
obsolete. HUD intends to issue guidance replacing PIH Notice 2016-22.
Change the Deadline for Submitting an Environmental Review
A commenter suggested that HUD allow two years to write an
environmental review.
HUD Response: HUD determined that procedural changes to the manner
in which HUD or a responsible entity conducts environmental reviews are
beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
Question 21: Time Limit for Accepting Previously Assisted Properties'
Environmental Reviews
Some commenters stated that there should be no time limit for when
prior environmental reviews must have been conducted to be accepted for
purposes of the exemption if no changes occurred during the intervening
years. Other commenters suggested time ranges. One commenter suggested
an environmental review for federally assisted property that has
undergone significant work or rehabilitation in the past ten years.
Another commenter objected to HUD establishing a time limit but
suggested a review if the property has changed use. A commenter
suggested every thirty years to remain coterminous with early PBV HAP
contracts. Another commenter recommended every five years consistent
with HUD's general recommendation. One commenter expressed that there
should be a ten-year limit for the exemption since neighborhoods often
change on a decadal scale, and another commenter stated that time
limits should be tied to past evolution of the rule, rather than an
arbitrary period.
HUD Response: HUD does not proceed with the proposed reliance on
prior environmental reviews in this final rule for the reasons
explained above in this discussion of comments regarding Sec. 983.56,
and therefore does not adopt any time limit for prior environmental
reviews.
[[Page 38269]]
Question 22: Alternative Approaches To Conducting NEPA Reviews
Commenters stated that no national standard would be an adequate
substitute for the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) (42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) review. One commenter expressed that most lending
institutions will require an American Society for Testing and Materials
(ASTM) Phase I site assessment but believed this would not be adequate
because most will not include review of historic building elements,
endangered species, noise, airport waste storage and groundwater flow.
Some commenters suggested that HUD allow projects to use local
requirements to conduct environmental reviews because most local
jurisdictions have rigorous environmental review requirements.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the examples of environmental
standards other than Federal environmental review provided by
commenters and the discussion of the limitations of those standards.
HUD finds that none of the examples provided are easily determined to
address the same criteria as Federal environmental review nor are they
uniformly applicable on a national basis. HUD appreciates that many
projects will be subject to these alternative standards and expects
PHAs will thoroughly consider the results of reviews undertaken in
response to lender or local requirements, including whether the results
impact the PHA's site selection determination.
27. PHA-Owned Units (Sec. 983.57)
A commenter stated that it is unclear the conflict HUD is
attempting to avoid by requiring independent entity oversight of
development activity. Another commenter suggested that the PHA plan
should contain details about the rights and obligations of the
independent entity with respect to both the PHA and the tenants, and
that HUD should require that applicants and tenants receive a written
disclosure explaining: (1) the relationship between the PHA and
independent entity; (2) contact information for the independent entity;
(3) what rights the tenants may have; and (4) what to do in the case of
a complaint. That same commenter stated that special care is needed to
achieve the intended quality results from PBV investments, suggesting
that HUD should ensure that PHA affiliate-owned PBV units receive
adequate independent oversight--including compliance with HQS and civil
rights obligations--by another public entity or HUD.
HUD Response: HUD maintains the position that the PHA cannot
perform any function that would present a clear conflict (ensuring
compliance with selection process, inspections and rent setting) for
units they own. 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(11) requires that the unit of
general local government or a HUD-approved independent entity perform
inspections and rent determinations for any PHA-owned units. When the
owner carries out development activity under Sec. 983.152 or
substantial improvement under Sec. Sec. 983.207(d) or 983.212, the
independent entity is required to review the evidence and work
completion certification submitted by the owner in accordance with
Sec. 983.155(b) and determine if the units are in complete accordance
with Sec. 983.156. This is an inspection function. To assist
independent entities in carrying out these inspection responsibilities
and avoid further conflicts, one function was added to Sec. 983.57,
requiring the independent entity to approve substantial improvement on
units under a HAP contract in accordance with Sec. 983.212 (which was
Sec. 983.157 in the proposed rule).
HUD does not believe it is necessary to add additional disclosures.
When a family is accepted into the PBV program, Sec. 983.252 requires
the PHA to conduct an oral briefing and provide a written information
packet. Although the topics listed in the comments are not explicitly
covered in the rule, HUD believes that many of these items would be
covered in meeting the requirements at Sec. 983.252, such as how the
program works and family and owner responsibilities. Additionally,
Sec. 982.352(b) sets conditions on assisted units that are PHA-owned,
including that the PHA must inform the family, both orally and in
writing, that the family has the right to select any eligible unit
available for lease; the PHA-owned unit must be freely selected by the
family, without PHA pressure or steering; and the PHA must obtain the
services of an independent entity.
28. Units Excepted From Program Cap and Project Cap (Sec. 983.59)
Question 23: Should PHAs that wish to PBV over a certain number
threshold be required to analyze the impact on the availability of
vouchers and demonstrate that they will still have sufficient tenant-
based vouchers available within a reasonable period of time for
eligible PBV families that wish to move?
Some commenters disagreed with a cap on the number of PBVs a PHA
can use based on the number of available HCVs. Commenters supported
PHAs allocating PBVs and tenant-based vouchers (TBVs) based on local
conditions, which some noted as Congressional intent for PHAs. One
commenter expressed that HUD lacks the statutory authority to restrict
a PHA's ability to project-base vouchers. This commenter stated that
HUD's concerns about unintended consequences of cap exceptions are
unfounded, given studies finding that Moving to Work (MTW) agencies
usually fall within statutory program caps, and PHAs already consider
the availability of vouchers due to families' right to move. The
commenter further criticized HUD's analysis requirement of available
vouchers for eligible PBV families as an unfunded mandate and
duplicative of existing efforts. This commenter also recommended that
the list of formerly assisted housing excluded from the portfolio cap
should include HOME, and that replacement units excluded from the
portfolio cap should include off-site replacement units, to enable
owners and PHAs to site replacement housing in high opportunity areas,
low vacancy areas, and areas outside of minority concentrations, which
are locations that HUD has prioritized as important fair housing goals
and has recognized as being better for the residents. The commenter
further suggested that, in the case of newly constructed units
developed to replace units that meet the criteria of Sec. 983.59(b),
units should be excluded even if the replacement units are built on a
different site and the requirement at proposed Sec. 983.59(d)(2)
should require that the identification of the housing as replacement
housing occur prior to PBV award rather than prior to demolition.
Commenters recommended that HUD establish an overall hard cap of 50
percent of vouchers, with exceptions to allow PHAs to project-base
vouchers if local conditions warrant. Another commenter preferred PBV
assistance over tenant-based assistance because it eliminates the
barriers to lease from a private landlord in the open rental market. A
commenter suggested the threshold at which the PHA or HUD should focus
on the impact of providing PBV families with a meaningful opportunity
should be when the waiting list is five years long.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates all the comments received regarding
this question. With respect to the comments that HUD establish a hard
cap of 50 percent of the number of vouchers the PHA may project-base
(with exceptions based on local services) or remove the limitation cap
entirely, the cap and the
[[Page 38270]]
exceptions to the cap are statutory requirements and consequently HUD
cannot alter or remove the cap through rulemaking. HUD further agrees
with the comments that the determination to choose to project-base
vouchers rests with the PHA, including the decision to project-base
vouchers in units that, as a result of the HOTMA amendments to 42
U.S.C. 1437f(o)(13)(B), do not count against the percentage limitation
on PBV units. However, nothing in the HOTMA provision that excludes
units previously subject to federally required rent restrictions or
that were receiving another type of long-term housing subsidy provided
by HUD from the percentage limitation relieves the PHA of its
responsibility to administer its PBV program in accordance with all
other program requirements. In cases where the percentage of units the
PHA is contemplating project-basing is over 50 percent of ACC units,
HUD is concerned about the potential impact on the PHA's ability to
fulfill its obligations under 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)(13)(E). Section
1437f(o)(13)(E) provides that families may move from the PBV unit at
any time after the family occupied the unit for 12 months, and that
upon such a move, the PHA shall provide the family with HCV tenant-
based assistance or other comparable tenant-based assistance, and
further provides that if such assistance is not immediately available,
this requirement may be met by providing the family priority to receive
the next voucher or comparable tenant-based rental assistance.
The use of PBV assistance can be an effective preservation tool and
HUD is supportive of the use of PBV to prevent the loss of affordable
housing units in their communities. However, in cases where a PHA is
selecting a project for PBV assistance that would result in a situation
where the PHA would be project-basing 50 percent or more of the PHA's
authorized units, HUD believes that it is critical that the PHA has
first fully considered the ramifications of that decision for its
program, including if and how the PHA will be able to fulfill its
statutory obligation to provide priority for tenant-based rental
assistance to PBV families that wish to move consistent with 42 U.S.C.
1437f(o)(13)(E). Furthermore, since available vouchers would need to be
prioritized for PBV families exercising their statutory right to move
with tenant-based assistance, PHAs should also want to take the
potential impact on families on the PHA's tenant-based waiting list
into consideration. Consequently, this final rule provides that PHAs
must perform an analysis of the impact prior to selecting a project for
PBV assistance if project-basing 50 percent or more of the PHA's
authorized voucher units, and the analysis should consider the PHA's
ability to fulfill its responsibilities to provide tenant-based
assistance to PBV families that wish to move and the impact on the
tenant-based waiting list in such cases.
Replacement Housing and Units
One commenter proposed that HUD exempt off-site public housing
replacement from caps to help deconcentrate poverty. Another commenter
recommended that HUD allow off-site public housing replacement to
maximize flexibility to use PBVs to replace public housing. Another
commenter expressed concern over Sec. 983.59, because replacement
units should reflect the number and size of units required by the
original residents to maximize their preference to return, reduce
displacement, and maximize the preservation of site-based units in the
community, according to the commenter. The commenter requested a civil
rights review if there is any loss of units or change in unit size. As
part of the redevelopment process, the commenter suggested that
developers be required to survey residents about their housing size
needs and only alter unit sizes if the survey demonstrates that the
original residents require fewer or different sized units. The
commenter further recommended the following: (1) that a reduction in
the total assisted replacement units should be prohibited, unless the
civil rights review makes no adverse finding; (2) the developer must
demonstrate that the unit is in a voucher friendly area as well as
located in a census tract where the poverty rate is greater than 20
percent; and (3) the resident notice and consultation reflect a desire
not to return to PBV units. Commenters additionally opposed HUD's
limitations that replacement units be on the same physical site as
improper on fair housing grounds and overly restrictive, which the
commenters stated was an unnecessary restriction and reinforced racial
segregation.
HUD Response: First, HUD clarifies that nothing in the proposed
rule prohibited off-site replacement. The provision at Sec. 983.59(d)
of the proposed rule served only to clarify which units are excluded,
by statute (section 106(a)(2) of HOTMA), from the percentage limitation
and income-mixing requirement. Under both the proposed rule and this
final rule, PHAs may project-base units to replace formerly assisted or
rent-restricted units off-site. However, a PHA's choice to replace
units off-site does not result in those units being excluded from the
percentage limitation or income-mixing requirement. Because the
exclusion in section 106(a)(2) of HOTMA provided only that ``units of
project-based assistance that are attached to units previously subject
to federally required rent restrictions or receiving another type of
long-term housing subsidy provided by the Secretary shall not count
toward the percentage limitation,'' units located on an entirely
different site from those replaced do not qualify for the statutory
exclusion from the percentage limitation. Similarly, such units do not
qualify for the statutory exclusion from the income-mixing requirement
at section 106(a)(3) of HOTMA, which excluded only ``units previously
subject to federally required rent restrictions or receiving other
project-based assistance provided by the Secretary.''
HUD recognizes Congress's intent to preserve public and other
affordable housing under the PBV program by (1) providing that on-site
replacement units do not count toward the PBV percentage limitation and
(2) giving HUD the authority to create additional exception categories.
HUD acknowledges that sometimes attaching PBVs at an off-site location
may better advance fair housing goals, including to racially integrate
communities and to provide replacement housing of adequate bedroom
size, which commenters cited as concerns. In many cases, the off-site
project would be eligible for the increased cap at Sec.
983.6(d)(1)(iv) (projects in areas where vouchers are difficult to
use). In addition, to more directly facilitate opportunities to replace
housing off-site, HUD is adding at Sec. 983.6(d)(v) of this final rule
an exception category specifically for off-site PBV replacement housing
under the PHA's increased cap authority (under which the PHA may
project-base an additional 10 percent of authorized voucher units). HUD
believes this additional category will address the concerns raised and
further notes that PHAs have other options beyond this new exception
authority to develop off-site replacement housing with PBV assistance.
Under the RAD PBV program, HUD waived section 8(o)(13)(B) of the 1937
Act so that covered projects, including those RAD PBV projects
developed at a new location, do not count against the PBV percentage at
all. Finally, PHAs can and should be making efforts to improve their
tenant-based voucher programs to better address the aforementioned fair
housing concerns.
[[Page 38271]]
Exclusion for LIHTC and 515 Loans
Commenters supported HUD's proposal to include units that
previously received LIHTC allocations or 515 loans as excepted units.
However, commenters stated HUD lacks statutory authority to limit this
exclusion to properties that have been subject to rent limitations or
received specified types of assistance within five years prior to PHA
commitment of PBVs. Commenters recommended removing this limitation or
incorporating an exception for replacement of old public housing
properties.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed the comments and has determined that
HUD has the statutory authority to limit this exclusion to properties
that have been subject to rent limitations or received specified types
of assistance within five years prior to PHA commitment of PBVs.
General Opposition
A commenter stated that requiring PHAs to analyze the impact on the
availability of vouchers and demonstrate that they will still have
sufficient tenant-based vouchers available within a reasonable period
of time for eligible PBV families that wish to move is costly and
burdensome to PHAs. One commenter opposed HUD requiring an analysis as
a pre-requisite for project-basing additional vouchers, due to a
concern that an analysis will remove the PHA's discretion to decide to
project-base, which would impact PHAs' broader plans to serve their
communities.
HUD Response: In this final rule, an analysis of impact in Sec.
983.58 appropriately addresses the risk of unintended or unanticipated
consequences that over-use of PHAs' broad and unlimited exception
authority to project-base formerly restricted or assisted units may
have without creating undue burden.
Opposition to Setting a Specific Threshold
A commenter opposed HUD setting additional thresholds based on the
percentage of vouchers and found the current turnover method for PBV
assistance sufficient. This commenter stated that high rates of
turnover at a property indicate the need for improvement and retention
of tenants. Another commenter recommended that HUD provide PHAs with
additional discretion in allowing PBV tenants to leave with their
voucher or extending the occupancy requirement in PBV to two years,
which is consistent with RAD, due to PBVs' higher turnover rate than
other developments, which increases HCV waitlists. Commenters also
recommended alternating the turnover voucher issuance between
households on the HCV list or other waiting list.
HUD Response: HUD is unable to modify families' option to move with
tenant-based assistance because it is required by statute.
Recommended Threshold Percentage of Vouchers
A commenter stated that the increase in a PBV household's
eligibility to request vouchers leads to a waitlist backlog and an
impact on occupancy in some locations, increased vacancy rates, and
higher turnover costs. This commenter recommended that PHAs have the
flexibility to administer a 25 percent cap on tenant-based attrition
vouchers to eligible requesting PBV households, so that 75 percent of
attrition vouchers go to HCV waitlist families. The commenter suggested
this approach as equitable to house unsubsidized families faster while
preserving PBV residents' rights to continued HCV assistance.
HUD Response: HUD reviewed the comment and has determined that HUD
is unable to modify PBV families' option to move with tenant-based
assistance because it is required by statute.
Alternative Suggestions
A commenter stated that the uncertain availability of tenant-based
vouchers due to attrition, being over-leased or under-leased, and
spending shortfalls, makes it difficult to set a threshold that would
ensure that PBV participants can be issued a tenant-based voucher
within a certain timeframe. This commenter stated that the PBV cap as a
percentage of a PHA's total allocation is a better predictor that
tenant-based vouchers will be anticipated to be available for program
transfers. The commenter also stated that PBV assistance is preferable
over tenant-based assistance because PBV property owners target certain
special needs population, eliminating the barriers experienced to lease
from a private landlord in the open rental market.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed the comment and determined that this
final rule will require an analysis of impact in Sec. 983.58, which is
required if project-basing 50 percent or more of units under the ACC.
Congressional Authority
Commenters stated that HUD does not have the statutory authority to
control a PHA's authority to project-base vouchers. One commenter
stated that if HUD decides to place more restrictions on PHAs, then it
should be Congressionally authorized. Another commenter recommended
that HUD increase the number of housing vouchers in general.
HUD Response: With regard to the comment that if HUD decides to
place more restrictions on PHAs in terms of the number of vouchers that
may be project-based, the restrictions should be Congressionally
authorized, HUD agrees that the determination to choose to project-base
vouchers rests with the PHA, including the decision to project-base
vouchers in units that do not count against the percentage limitation
on PBV units. The final rule does not place additional restriction on
the number or percentage of vouchers that the PHA may project-base.
However, nothing in the HOTMA provision that excludes units previously
subject to federally required rent restrictions or that were receiving
another type of long-term housing subsidy from the percentage
limitation relieves the PHA from its responsibility to administer its
PBV program in accordance with all other program requirements. HUD is
concerned about the PHA's ability to fulfill its obligations under 42
U.S.C. 1437f(o)(13)(E) in cases where most or all of the PHA's vouchers
are project-based. Section 1437f(o)(13)(E) provides that families may
move from the PBV unit at any time after the family occupied the unit
for 12 months, and that upon such a move, the PHA shall provide the
family with HCV tenant-based assistance or other comparable tenant-
based assistance, and further provides that if such assistance is not
immediately available, this requirement may be met by providing the
family priority to receive the next voucher or comparable tenant-based
rental assistance. The use of PBV assistance can be an effective
preservation tool and HUD is supportive of the use of PBV to prevent
the loss of affordable housing units in their communities. However,
when a PHA is considering project-basing a high percentage of its
authorized units, HUD believes that it is critical that the PHA should
take into account if and how the PHA will be able to fulfill its
statutory obligation to provide tenant-based rental assistance to PBV
families that wish to move. Further, since available vouchers would
need to be prioritized for PBV families exercising their statutory
right to move with tenant-based assistance, PHAs would also want to
take the potential ramifications for reaching families on the PHA's
tenant-based waiting list into
[[Page 38272]]
consideration. Consequently, this final rule provides that in cases
where a PHA is selecting a project for PBV assistance that would result
in a situation where the PHA would be project-basing 50 percent or more
of the PHA's authorized units, the PHA must perform an analysis of the
impact of its program.
With regard to the commenter recommendation that HUD increase the
number of housing vouchers in general, HUD cannot increase the number
of authorized vouchers through this final rule. New vouchers and the
funds to support them are provided by Congress through HUD's
appropriations acts.
HUD Report/Study
A commenter stated that families should not be forced to wait in
potentially unsafe housing while they wait for the PHA to process the
PBV-to-HCV transfer. Therefore, commenters suggested that HUD and PHAs
monitor and report from the next three to five years increases in wait
times for HCV assistance from PBV families where PHAs have increased
the availability of PBV assistance, due to HOTMA.
HUD Response: HUD's position has always been that families should
not be forced to wait in potentially unsafe housing while they wait for
the PHA to process a family's right to move.
29. Inspecting Units (Sec. 983.103)
Question 24: Non-Life-Threatening (NLT) Conditions for New Construction
and Rehabilitation Housing
One commenter stated that NLTs could effectively be used when newly
constructed developments have units ready for occupancy, but the public
space areas are still not fully developed, and the development can
obtain a temporary certificate of occupancy. A commenter proposed that
HUD continue to use the current definition for NLT conditions for new
construction and rehabilitation housing because it streamlines
standards and provides owners with the opportunity to address minor
issues that arise from construction or rehabilitation work.
A commenter stated that there is no reason for new construction or
rehabilitation to fail HQS when they have the final certificate of
occupancy, especially where new construction is built under strict
county and local requirements. Another commenter urged that new
construction or rehabilitated units should be subject to regular HQS
inspections, and not NLT or alternative inspections. However, this
commenter suggested that PHAs should have discretion in applying NLT or
alternative inspection options.
Another commenter expressed that while NLT conditions may occur in
new construction or rehabilitated properties, other units, including
PBVs, can use NLT/alternative inspections as well. A commenter stated
that NLT provisions could be helpful on rehabilitation or new
construction when minor defects fail HQS and NLT conditions are found.
This commenter expressed that for rehabilitation or new construction,
the NLT option could be helpful in expediting assistance approvals.
This commenter also recommended changing the allowable timeframe,
rather than eliminating the alternative inspection option, would be a
better solution to the problem of the alternative inspection occurring
prior to rehabilitation.
One commenter recommended that under Sec. 983.103(b), inspection
timing and procedures of new construction and rehabilitation projects
be consistent with the NLT option, and that under Sec. 983.103(f)
additional time should be permitted for inspections of units in which
the owner or family refuse access to the PHA, unless the regulation
states otherwise. This commenter also supported HUD revising the repair
time under Sec. 983.103(f) to 30 days after the PHA provides owner
notification of the deficiency.
One commenter supported HUD's proposal of alternative inspections,
by stating that alternative inspections can fulfill the obligation for
initial HQS inspection in unsafe circumstances for tenants and
inspectors to enter units that are occupied. Another commenter noted
the administrative burdens of alternative inspections such as tracking
the units, notifying the landlords and tenants, scheduling the
inspections, and obtaining results from the owner, or the agency doing
the inspection. This commenter stated that this may create delays in
assisting tenants, especially for units that must pass a PHA
inspection. This commenter recommended that HUD use alternative
verification methods of corrections to failed inspection items, which
will help administratively and with producing positive relationships
with landlords as well as assisting families quickly. This commenter
also noted that PHA-owned housing should not have a problem passing
HQS.
A commenter stated that PHAs should have the ability to utilize
alternative inspection and NLT options with respect to PBV new
construction and rehabilitation projects, because these projects must
meet local code standards to receive a certificate of occupancy, and,
therefore, they are unlikely to be uninhabitable. The commenter stated
that, while minor items may remain, these items do not threaten the
lives of renters, and they should not prevent a PHA from placing the
unit under a HAP contract.
Commenters expressed that PHAs should have discretion deciding
whether to implement NLT inspections for units because requiring NLT
inspections for certain units makes implementation overly complex.
Other commenters noted confusion and requested HUD clarify that PHAs
can decide whether to apply initial inspection flexibilities project-
by-project. Another commenter stated that another form of acceptable
alternative inspections could include a city inspection or a
certificate of occupancy. One commenter suggested that HUD incorporate
alternative requirements from PIH Notice 2020-33.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments both in favor of and
against extending the NLT provision to new construction and
rehabilitation PBV. HUD has chosen not to extend the NLT option to new
construction or rehabilitation at this time. Additionally, HUD is not
extending the alternative inspection option to new construction or
rehabilitation to ensure the PHA inspects the newly completed work. HUD
agrees with the comments stating that the NLT provision may be applied
to existing housing at the discretion of the PHA and this is reflected
in this final rule.
30. Nature of Development Activity (Sec. 983.152)
Previously Unassisted Units
A commenter stated that adding previously unassisted units to a HAP
contract should not be considered development activity, as it is often
due to availability of funding and/or eligibility of in-place families,
and, as such, no additional regulatory approvals should be necessary.
HUD Response: Section 983.152(b)(2) of the proposed rule did not
operate to include in the definition of ``development activity'' the
act of adding previously unassisted units to a HAP contract. Rather,
``development activity'' was defined in Sec. 983.3(b) and Sec.
983.152(b)(2) of the proposed rule addressed cases in which development
activity occurred to add previously unassisted units in the project to
the HAP contract. However, HUD determined that including such activity
under the definition of ``development activity'' and in subpart D of
part 983 led to significant confusion among commenters in interpreting
the rule as a whole. As a result, in this final rule HUD amends the
definition of
[[Page 38273]]
``development activity'' as described above in discussion of comments
pertaining to Sec. 983.3, such that ``substantial improvements''
undertaken in order to add units to a contract are clearly distinct.
Accordingly, HUD removes discussion of substantial improvements from
Sec. 983.152 of this final rule. Section 983.207 of this final rule
contains provisions applicable to adding units, including when
substantial improvement will occur in order to add the units.
Broadband
A commenter suggested that the broadband requirements referenced in
Sec. 983.152(b)(2) should not apply when adding previously unassisted
units to a HAP contract because the installation of broadband
infrastructure requires construction work and should be triggered only
if work is being done.
HUD Response: The proposed Sec. 983.152(b)(2), as restructured and
moved in this final rule to Sec. 983.207(d), applies only when
substantial improvement is undertaken to add previously unassisted
units in the project to the HAP contract, and the requirement to
install broadband infrastructure is further limited as provided
therein. As a result, this final rule does align with the commenter's
proposed limitation that the broadband infrastructure requirement
applies only when work is being done.
31. Development Requirements (Sec. 983.153)
Subsequent Rehabilitation or Development Activity
A commenter recommended that HUD continue to only require subsidy
layering review for initial awards of PBV assistance and not upon
subsequent rehabilitation or development activity because it will be
administratively burdensome for project owners and PHAs.
HUD Response: This comment is addressed in the discussion of Sec.
983.11 above.
Section 3 Compliance
This commenter also stated that HUD's section 3 compliance proposal
is neither authorized by statute nor consistent with regulations in
part 135, and, therefore, the commenter proposed that HUD delete
section 3 compliance as a development requirement, because section 3
does not apply to monthly rental assistance payments.
HUD Response: Pursuant to the section 3 final rule published at 85
FR 61524 (Sep. 29, 2020) and codified at 24 CFR 75.3, which eliminated
the applicability of section 3 to assistance under section 8 of the
1937 Act, HUD does not retain section 3 compliance as a development
requirement in this final rule. The section 3 rule does make clear that
residents of housing receiving section 8 assistance and who are
employed by a section 3 business concern are included in the definition
of section 3 worker. The PHA must report the number of hours worked by
section 3 workers.
Applicability of Davis-Bacon Requirements
Commenters stated that it would be unreasonable for HUD to require
a PHA to enforce owner compliance with labor standards, specifically
Davis-Bacon, in circumstances where there was no Agreement. A commenter
further added that where a project's development does not depend on the
provision of PBVs, as few obstacles as possible should be provided to
permit affordability, because these developments do not need PBV
assistance to be built and they are often the most desirable, best
located, and most advantageous developments. Another commenter
expressed that it is unclear how to reconcile the exemption of non-
Agreement projects from Davis-Bacon (Sec. 983.153(c)(1) of the
proposed rule) and the proposal that projects that do not enter
Agreements must comply with the development requirements of Sec.
983.153 (Sec. 983.154(e)(2) of the proposed rule, which has been moved
to Sec. 983.154(f)(2) of this final rule). Some commenters opposed
excluding rehabilitated and newly constructed projects from the Davis-
Bacon wage rate requirements. A commenter stated that PHAs do not have
flexibility under the statute to exclude rehabilitation or new
construction of PBV projects from Davis-Bacon coverage. A commenter
suggested giving PHAs discretion to exclude rehabilitation or new
construction from Davis-Bacon wage requirements.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments in support of the
exclusion of units developed without an Agreement from the labor
standards at Sec. 983.153(c)(1) of the proposed rule, but does not
adopt the proposed language in this final rule. While the impact of
paying prevailing wages on a project's development cost could be viewed
as an obstacle to development, HUD agrees with commenters who pointed
out that this cost must be balanced against the historical reasons for
the labor standards, including ensuring that federally assisted
projects do not depress local wage standards. HUD appreciates the
commenter's support of PHA discretion regarding use of Davis-Bacon wage
requirements, but has determined upon further reflection that the PHAs'
new option to decline to use an Agreement does not impact the
applicability of Davis-Bacon wage requirements. In the case of a newly
constructed or rehabilitated project, the owner is seeking a commitment
of PBVs in advance of development of the project, regardless of whether
the PHA and owner enter into an Agreement, and the PHA's pre-
construction offer and owner's acceptance of the PBV offer constitutes
the agreement triggering Davis-Bacon requirements in accordance with
section 12 of the 1937 Act. Therefore, HUD provides in this final rule
that a PHA decision to use no Agreement or to execute an Agreement
after construction or rehabilitation has commenced will not relieve an
owner's responsibility to pay Davis-Bacon prevailing wages, consistent
with the statutory intent of section 106(a)(4) of HOTMA and section 12
of the 1937 Act.
HUD appreciates the comment regarding the relationship between
Sec. 983.153(c) and Sec. 983.154(e) (now Sec. 983.154(f) in this
final rule). In response, HUD amends Sec. 983.154(f) to better clarify
that the owner need only comply with development requirements of Sec.
983.153 that are applicable to the particular project when the
development occurs without Agreement. For example, the Davis-Bacon
compliance requirement is applicable only if the HAP contract will
assist nine or more units.
Use of an Alternative Document
A commenter stated that HUD should not require Davis-Bacon coverage
through an alternate document. Another commenter suggested using an
alternate document or a document created by a PHA. One commenter urged
HUD to provide a clear and consistent policy regarding how to execute
alternate documents to avoid confusion.
HUD Response: HUD determines that, where the PHA will not use an
Agreement, the PHA's notice of selection of the project and the owner's
acceptance is the mechanism by which the owner agrees to compliance
with Davis-Bacon requirements. This final rule adds explanatory text
regarding the notice of selection in Sec. Sec. 983.51(f) and
983.153(c), in response to comment.
32. Development Agreement (Sec. 983.154)
Begin After Environmental Abatement
A commenter suggested that development activity for new
construction should exclude environmental abatement.
[[Page 38274]]
HUD Response: Environmental abatement may constitute a significant
or inseparable portion of work involved in new construction. Therefore,
in cases in which the nature of environmental abatement itself
constitutes commencement of development activity or in which
environmental abatement involves work that occurs following the
commencement of development activity, HUD determines it is appropriate
for such abatement to be subject to the standard rules governing
development activity in this part 983.
Consult With Interested Parties
A commenter recommended that HUD consult with industry groups and
interested parties and utilize nonbinding notice documents to define
and develop additional guidance on the term, ``rehabilitation
activity'' noted in Sec. 983.154(c)(2).
HUD Response: HUD appreciates this comment and will consider it
when developing guidance on the PBV program.
33. Term of HAP Contract (Sec. 983.205)
Question 27: Contract Extensions
Commenters urged HUD to allow HAP contract extensions beyond 40
years to permit sufficient time to secure recapitalization and
facilitate preservation. A commenter explained that HAP contracts do
not always align with other regulatory agreements and projects may need
to secure long-term financing during their regulatory agreement.
Another commenter suggested that HUD allow for extensions 60 months
prior to the contract expiration instead of the existing contract
extension beyond 40 years until 24 months prior to the HAP contract
expiration. Other commenters proposed that HUD allow PHAs to commit PBV
contract extensions where re-syndication extends the affordable term
tied to financing beyond the term of the PBVs and allow PHAs to
establish the terms of the PBV HAP contracts as provided by PIH Notice
2017-21.
A commenter stated that HUD should modify Sec. 983.205(b)(4) to
allow the PHA and the owner to agree in advance to additional
conditions applying to continuation, termination, or expiration of the
contracts; instead of keeping the existing language, which the
commenter stated requires that PHAs only use the contracts provided by
HUD. One commenter stated that independent entities are unsuitable to
determine the appropriateness of contract renewals, and that PHAs
should make this determination because PHAs can assess resources and
the local housing market demand to determine the best interests of the
PHA's portfolio and residents.
HUD Response: In review of comments received, it became apparent
that the language of Sec. 983.205(b) in the proposed rule was not
sufficiently clear that HUD does allow a HAP contract to be extended
beyond 40 years. Therefore, HUD has revised Sec. 983.205(b) in this
final rule to clarify this point.
In consideration of public comments, HUD also revises Sec.
983.205(b) in this final rule to provide that, at any given time before
a PBV HAP contract expires, the PHA may execute any number of
extensions (with terms up to 20 years each) such that there are up to
40 remaining years on the contract. HUD believes this will provide PHAs
sufficient flexibility to extend the HAP contract term as needed to
meet the needs of the local community and align with common
preservation efforts as described by commenters, while striking a
reasonable balance with the PHA's obligation to make its statutorily
required determination prior to extension. As such, the rule continues
to require the PHA to determine that each extension is appropriate to
continue providing affordable housing for low-income families or to
expand housing opportunities but recognizes PHAs are in the best
position to determine the appropriate time to consider an extension.
Additionally, this change streamlines and simplifies PBV processes.
With respect to comments that propose that HUD allow the PHA and
the owner to agree in advance to additional conditions applying to
continuation, termination, or expiration of the contracts, the statute
authorizes HUD (not the PHA) to impose such conditions. HUD has chosen
not to do so. Lastly, with respect to the comment concerning the role
of the independent entity in making determinations on HAP contract
extensions, HUD finds the commenter's explanation persuasive and,
further, determines that PHAs are best positioned to set the initial
term of the contract. Therefore, HUD removes the independent entity
function in agreeing to the initial term and extensions in this final
rule.
34. Contract Termination or Expiration and Statutory Notice
Requirements (Sec. 983.206)
Commenters suggested adding to Sec. 983.206(d) a requirement that
an owner's termination of the PBV contract because the PHA has lowered
the rent below the initial rent cannot be effective until the PHA has
(1) notified tenants of the upcoming change to HCVs; (2) executed the
required tenant-based voucher HAP contract between the owner and PHA;
and (3) provided tenant-based vouchers to the tenants. This commenter
recommended requiring PHAs to complete these tasks within a specified
timeframe (and PHAs can avoid this by agreeing in the initial contract
or extension not to reduce rents below the initial rent to the owner).
Some commenters supported prohibiting owners from terminating the
family's housing assistance due to the termination or expiration of a
PBV HAP contract. Another commenter supported HUD not requiring that
families be allowed to stay in their same units, and instead, allowing
a PHA and owner to make decisions about handling terminations locally.
This commenter claimed that HUD lacks the statutory authority to
mandate that families be allowed to stay in their own units, since the
statute explicitly mentions remaining in the same project.
Another commenter suggested modifying Sec. 983.206, to state that
tenants whose PBV units are re-developed should not be treated as
contract terminations. One commenter supported families remaining in
the same unit and not just the same project. In Sec. 983.206(b) and
(b)(6), regarding tenants' right to remain, a commenter recommended
that the ``other good cause'' reference to the HCV rule at Sec.
982.310 be limited to tenant misconduct; there should also include
conforming language inserted into the HUD PBV tenancy addendum. This
commenter also suggested that section 106 of the HOTMA statute extends
the tenant's right to remain to the project, and not just the unit, as
a guarantee for tenant housing stability upon subsidy expiration or
termination in circumstances where family size has changed, or the
current unit may need rehabilitation that requires extended absence.
Another commenter supported families with disabled individuals or
children remaining in the same unit due to hardships caused by moving
and recommended letting the extension expire when they voluntarily
leave or become ineligible for PBV.
A commenter recommended stating in Sec. 983.206(d) that under
situations of PBV HAP contract termination, that the PHA may not re-
screen for eligibility beyond income when providing HCVs to former PBV
tenants. The commenter suggested clearly stating tenants' right to
replacement assistance and housing stability, despite PHA or HUD
administrative delays in providing the required assistance. The
commenter also stated that under Sec. 983.206(d), the proposed
exception to the one-year notice requirement for an owner who
[[Page 38275]]
terminates a PBV HAP contract after the PHA reduces the contract rent
below the initial rent to owner is statutorily unauthorized. A
commenter suggested revising Sec. 983.206(a)(4) to clarify that the
tenant has the right to remain at prior rent until the owner has
provided legally required notice and that notice period has elapsed,
not just for the one-year period.
HUD Response: HUD has adopted commenters' recommendations in part.
Section 983.206 in this final rule provides a timeframe by which a PHA
must issue families a tenant-based voucher before planned contract
termination, except in limited circumstances specified by HUD, and
requires sufficient notice by the owner to the PHA to allow such
voucher issuance. HUD declines to adopt the recommendation that the PBV
HAP contract not be terminated until execution of a tenant-based
voucher HAP contract. The provision implemented in this final rule, at
Sec. 983.206(b), requires the PHA to issue families tenant-based
vouchers, not to assure that families locate units to lease with the
vouchers. The tenant-based voucher HAP contracts for tenants who stay
in place must not be effective prior to the date of termination (end
date) of the PBV HAP contract, and circumstances may arise in which the
actual end date must change from the planned end date. In this final
rule, Sec. 982.305 provides PHAs sufficient flexibility to execute the
tenant-based HAP contracts retroactively if all contracts cannot be
executed timely in relation to termination of the PBV HAP contract. In
cases in which families choose to use their tenant-based assistance
elsewhere, using target dates for execution of each tenant-based HAP
contract to determine the end date of the PBV HAP contract would be
unworkable.
HUD has considered the comments regarding whether a family should
have the ability to remain in the same unit and has determined to
retain the proposed rule language allowing a family instead to remain
in the same project. While HUD recognizes that moves may cause hardship
for families, HUD determines that PHAs are in the best position to
consider conditions and limitations surrounding specific contract
terminations and expirations and assist families to secure the best
possible housing for them given those considerations. Notwithstanding,
retaining the proposed language on allowing a family to remain in the
same project does not exempt a PHA from receiving, processing, or
granting a reasonable accommodation to remain in the unit. Regarding
the comments concerning redevelopment, HUD is not adopting the proposed
change. Section 983.212 in this final rule allows PHAs and owners to
engage in substantial improvement on units under HAP contract without
terminating the HAP contract, and where PHAs and owners agree to do so
they must follow the rules set forth in Sec. 983.212. Section 983.206,
by contrast, has the requirements in cases of contract termination.
With regard to good cause for termination, HUD adopts the
commenter's suggestion in part. HUD in this final rule allows for lease
terminations on the basis of certain grounds in Sec. 982.310, to
include family duties, which the family has failed to fulfill and other
family misconduct, as well as when the owner will use the unit for a
non-residential purpose or to renovate the unit. Nothing in this final
Sec. 983.206 is intended to preempt operation of State and local laws
that provide additional limitations regarding allowable causes for
lease termination. HUD intends to issue a tenancy addendum specific to
families who were residing in a PBV project at contract termination who
elected to remain in the project with tenant-based assistance, which
will also reflect the specific grounds on which the family's lease may
be terminated. HUD determines this final rule allows for meaningful
election by families to remain in the project while also providing
exceptions for situations under which the owner cannot reasonably be
expected to allow a family to remain.
HUD does not make changes in this final rule in response to the
comment on re-screening when families get tenant-based vouchers, as the
proposed Sec. 983.206(b)(4), retained in this final rule, adequately
explains that such families are not new admissions; rather, they are
and remain section 8 voucher participants, subject to the rules
relating to participants (as further explained in the definition of
``admission'' in Sec. 983.3). As discussed above, HUD has clarified
some of the provisions in Sec. 983.206 to better explain the
timeframes involved in provision of tenant-based assistance. Finally,
section 8(c)(8) of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937 defines the term
``termination'' for purposes of the owner notice requirement as ``the
expiration of the assistance contract or an owner's refusal to renew
the assistance contract. . . .'' HUD declines to further extend the
one-year notification requirement to an owner's termination of the
contract during its term due to a reduction below initial rent, to
preserve the existing authority of the owner to terminate timely, given
the owner's substantial interest in maintaining sufficient project
income. However, HUD has added a 90-day notice requirement, so as to
provide the PHA sufficient time for voucher issuance per Sec.
983.206(b). HUD has also taken this opportunity to clarify when mutual
termination of a PBV HAP contract during its term would be allowable
and to specify that in those cases the full notice period is required.
With regard to the comment on Sec. 983.206(a)(4), HUD does not
believe a change is necessary as the text is already clear that the
family may remain ``for the required notice period,'' which aligns with
the comment.
Insufficient Funding
A commenter stated that HUD's implementation of the insufficient
funding requirement (HOTMA section 106(a)(4), to be codified at 42
U.S.C. 1437f(o)(13)(F)(i)(I)), is critical to developers' ability to
finance PBVs with minimal transition reserves. Commenters also
recommended modifying language in Sec. 983.206(c)(1) to clarify that
sufficient funding is not necessary for a PHA to make PBV contract
payments for a full year, despite unpredictable timing of full-year
appropriations bills and the frequency of continuing resolutions.
A commenter stated that the legislative history indicates that
Congress intended PHAs to prioritize project-based HAP contracts and
provided neither HUD nor PHAs with the discretion contemplated by the
proposed regulations.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments regarding the nature of
sufficient funding and agrees that PHAs need not consider sufficient
funding as requiring a full year's PBV contract payments to be on hand.
HUD has amended Sec. 983.206(c)(1) accordingly.
Regarding the comment on prioritizing project-based HAP contracts,
HOTMA section 106(a)(4), to be codified at 42 U.S.C.
1437f(o)(13)(F)(i)(I), provides ``that in the event of insufficient
appropriated funds, payments due under contracts under this paragraph
shall take priority if other cost-saving measures that do not require
the termination of an existing contract are available to the agency . .
.'' (emphasis added). Per this language, PHAs retain discretion to
establish an Administrative Plan policy, as described in Sec.
983.206(c)(1), for actions it will take if no cost-saving measures
other than HCV or PBV contract termination are available.
[[Page 38276]]
35. HAP Contract Amendments (To Add or Substitute Contract Units)
(Sec. 983.207)
Cost of Reinstating Units
A commenter suggested that HUD should revise Sec. 983.207(b)(3) to
reinstate units under a HAP contract without being subject to
development requirements at Sec. 983.152(b) because without it, PHAs
would be subject to subsidy layering reviews and other burdens and it
would place a significant burden and cost upon project owners. This
commenter also urged that HUD does not apply the set of ``development
activity'' requirements to projects that undertake modifications to PBV
units which result in adjustments to pre-existing contracts because
PHAs may need to add units or substitute units after HAP signing, and
this would make that process very burdensome.
HUD Response: In all cases in which units are added to a PBV HAP
contract per Sec. 983.207(b), including where a unit is being
reinstated after having previously been removed, HUD determines it is
appropriate for certain requirements at Sec. 983.207(d) to apply when
the unit is undergoing substantial improvement. As discussed earlier in
this preamble, this final rule separately defines ``substantial
improvement'' and ``development activity,'' and applies appropriate
requirements to each. Substantial improvement undertaken during the
term of the HAP contract, as defined in Sec. 983.3(b), is significant
work and, as such, application of the specific requirements listed in
Sec. 983.207(d) represents a reasonable balance of the costs to
project owners and the interests of HUD in maintaining housing quality
and program integrity. As for the comment about ``development
activity'' requirements, HUD determined that the limited requirements
applicable to substantial improvement undertaken to add units to a
contract, including when the added unit is a substitution for a
contract unit, represent the minimum necessary requirements for such
relatively intensive activity. Therefore, HUD retains both requirements
in this final rule.
36. Owner Certification (Sec. 983.210)--Davis Bacon, Other Conforming
Changes
Commenters supported the proposed Davis-Bacon changes that would
remove the current owner certification under the HAP contract at Sec.
983.210(j) that repair work on a project selected as an existing
project may constitute development activity and, if determined to be
development activity, the repair work shall be in compliance with
Davis-Bacon requirements. One commenter supported HUD's Davis-Bacon
wage rate requirement proposal due to its potential reduction in
development costs; permittance of State independence to apply their own
wage requirements; and the reduction of administrative burden on
projects that have multiple funding sources. Another commenter
expressed that the Davis-Bacon changes would encourage owners and
operators of existing housing to incorporate PBVs while maintaining and
improving living conditions for residents.
Commenters supported the removal of ``existing housing'' from the
Davis-Bacon wage rate requirement. One commenter stated that excluding
existing housing provides clarity, because it aligns with the language
and spirit of the 1937 Act. Another commenter stated that applying the
wage requirement to existing housing significantly increases the cost
of developing affordable housing and reducing the number of households
that could be served by the PBV program. One commenter stated that
eliminating existing housing from the Davis-Bacon wage rate
requirements would allow owners to utilize more PBVs and potentially
erase operating deficits, reach more ELI and VLI residents, and reduce
reliance on gap financing when seeking to refinance.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the comments in support of removing
Sec. 983.210(j), and in this final rule proceeds with the removal as
proposed. As previously discussed in the preamble of the proposed rule,
HUD acknowledges that the broad, open-ended definition of ``existing
housing'' in place prior to this final rule has proven insufficient to
ensure that PHAs properly classify PBV housing types and contributed to
the Davis-Bacon issues that HUD attempted to address through the
addition of the owner certification in Sec. 983.210(j) in 79 FR 36146
(Jun. 25, 2014). In order to remedy this problem and other related
issues with respect to other Federal requirements such as subsidy
layering reviews, this final rule provides a much more specific and
tighter definition of ``existing housing,'' which is described in
detail elsewhere in this preamble.
37. Substantial Improvement to Units Under a HAP Contract (Sec.
983.212)
Support
Several commenters supported HUD's proposal to establish a five-
year timeframe, within which development work would not be permitted
except in extraordinary circumstances. A commenter stated that
permitting development work within the first five years is only
reasonable to prevent the circumvention of certain requirements that
would normally be stipulated in an Agreement.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the supportive comments, but reduces
the general five-year limitation proposed to two years in this final
rule (both the proposed and final rule contain exceptions to the
general limitation). HUD believes doing so continues to ensure housing
intended for immediate rehabilitation is subject to appropriate
requirements governing rehabilitation. However, HUD believes a two-year
period in which work will not occur is more reasonable to foresee.
Opposition
Other commenters opposed HUD's proposal to establish a five-year
timeframe because it is overly restrictive. Commenters stated that
requiring a burdensome permitting process would disincentivize owners
of older housing from making periodic substantial repairs and
renovations to maintain the housing in good condition. A commenter
expressed that it is challenging to anticipate all physical needs in a
five-year period. Another commenter stated that HUD's proposal would
have a significant impact on residents by discouraging owners from
conducting voluntary repairs and replacements that would improve the
quality of life for residents and may stall or prevent the start of a
HAP contract for units that would otherwise be eligible to receive
PBVs.
A commenter warned that the five-year period would impact projects
that may need work within five years of being built due to flawed work
by the original builder. A commenter stated that the HUD-prescribed
process to request development activity (called ``substantial
improvement'' in this final rule, per discussion of changes to Sec.
983.3 above) would create an additional administrative burden for PHAs
without the process and expertise to assess development requests and
determinations. A commenter warned that HUD's proposal would require
non-MTW PHAs to obtain a waiver or to adopt a MTW demonstration
activity to complete the unit rehabilitation and would require non-MTW
agencies attempting to pursue public housing repositioning to need
regulatory waivers. Another commenter stated that HUD's proposal may
present challenges to create affordable housing through the PBV program
because of the disincentive to perform capital work within five years
of HAP contract signing and would force owners to
[[Page 38277]]
conduct a heavier workload upfront, which may be unsupported through
existing financing tools.
HUD Response: HUD agrees that it would have been difficult for PHAs
and owners to anticipate all physical needs requiring a significant
improvement over a five-year period, and therefore changes the period
to two years in this final rule.
HUD disagrees that the rule discourages repairs, replacements, and
renovations. The owner is required to meet HQS and continues to be able
to replace equipment and materials rendered unsatisfactory because of
normal wear and tear by items of substantially the same kind (this is
not substantial improvement as defined in Sec. 983.3(b)), which should
enable the owner to maintain the housing in good condition. An owner
that instead has an immediate desire to undertake development activity
remains able to do so through the process of project-basing
rehabilitated housing, and HUD provides further flexibility at Sec.
983.157 of this final rule to better accommodate these situations. An
owner faced with an urgent, unanticipated need to engage in substantial
improvement during the first two years of the contract may be able to
receive PHA approval to do so under the exception for extraordinary
circumstances. Taken as a whole, HUD determines that this final rule
provides the greatest latitude possible to owners while still ensuring
appropriate projects are subject to pre-development requirements such
as subsidy layering review, Federal funds are used only in quality
housing, and PBV-assisted families are housed stably.
The PHA (or independent entity, in the case of PHA-owned units)
approval process codified in this final rule reflects minimum oversight
necessary to ensure compliance with PBV requirements and protection of
families. HUD incorporates into this final rule additional clarity for
PHAs regarding the basis upon which to approve or disapprove owner
requests. HUD does not anticipate that this final rule increases the
potential need for waiver, as the prior rule also contained divergent
processes to project-base rehabilitated housing versus existing
housing, including limitations on development activity that could occur
after HAP contract execution. This final rule improves the clarity and
safeguards of existing limitations.
HUD is aware that project-basing rehabilitated housing entails a
heavier workload upfront. Completing the development activity upfront
typically has the intended result that the housing is in good condition
longer and therefore is better positioned to serve as long-term housing
for families. HUD expects that PHAs select existing housing for PBVs
when the housing is in good enough condition to serve families for the
contract period, without immediate housing instability due to
substantial improvement. PBV funding supports rents to house assisted
families, which may cover a project's ongoing operating expenses; it is
not development funding.
Suggestions and Alternatives
Some commenters suggested HUD allow for exceptions in instances
where improvement or upgrading is needed for the substantial
improvement, such as energy efficiency efforts, security precautions,
and previously scheduled projects that are part of effective long-term
property maintenance plans. A commenter also stated that HUD should
include a catch-all provision to allow improvements to protect the
housing quality for assisted families or protect the viability of the
project. Another commenter suggested that HUD create a ``pass-through''
of rental assistance where construction improvements are to be made in
a property, similar to what is allowed in other project-based rental
assistance. Commenters also recommended that PHAs have the discretion
over permissibility, oversight, and monitoring of substantial
improvement that commences after the beginning of the HAP contract as a
means for PHAs to remain accountable to HUD for monitoring compliance
and development requirements. Another commenter suggested that HUD
adopt a three-year timeframe instead of a five-year timeframe.
HUD Response: HUD reviewed the examples commenters provided and
determines they are adequately addressed by this final rule. HUD does
not anticipate that projects that met HQS applicable to qualify for PBV
assistance will then require non-emergency substantial improvement soon
after contract execution to remain viable and compliant with HQS; usual
maintenance should suffice. HUD does not add a pass-through option
because doing so is not consistent with PBV program requirements. For
example, section 8(o)(13)(K)(i) of the 1937 Act allows payment for
vacant units only when vacancies are not the fault of the owner,
section 8(o)(10)(A) requires that rent for a unit receiving HAP be
reasonable at all times, and section 8(o)(8)(G) prescribes the required
PHA actions with respect to HAP for units that do not comply with HQS
and is incompatible with providing HAP for the purpose of housing a
family who is leasing a noncompliant unit and living elsewhere. This
final rule provides significant discretion to PHAs, balanced against
adequate safeguards for assisted families and reasonable limitations to
ensure the PBV program operates as intended. HUD adopts a two-year
timeframe in this final rule rather than the three-year timeframe
suggested by the commenter, because HUD believes the owner and PHA are
better able to anticipate the need for substantial improvement over a
two-year period.
Proposal Would Have No Effect
A commenter expressed that because project owners are often
required to utilize several funding sources to fund substantial
rehabilitation, it is likely that other funding sources used to finance
the substantial improvement may independently trigger many of the
cross-cutting requirements that HUD cites in question 25. Another
commenter further stated that PHAs have mechanisms in place to ensure
that projects comply with development requirements; adding an
additional mechanism to substantial improvement after HAP contract
signing would be burdensome.
HUD Response: HUD supports the additional oversight that other
funding sources and PHAs independently require but finds it necessary
to retain and clarify this section in this final rule to ensure PHAs
can easily reference and comply with the PBV-specific requirements
relevant to post-contract substantial improvement.
Rehousing During Rehabilitation
Commenters suggested that HUD add clarifying language stating that
owners are permitted to continue receiving HAP for the family's re-
housing during a fixed period of rehabilitation.
HUD Response: Housing assistance payments provide rental assistance
for participant families, and therefore must not be paid to owners for
units not occupied by participants. Under this final rule, the PHA may
pay HAP for occupied contract units that meet HQS, except when the unit
is temporarily vacant for a calendar month or less.
Emergency Site Work
A commenter asked HUD to provide detail regarding emergency site
work performed for health and safety, emergency rehabilitation work
conducted for health and safety, and fit-out of non-residential spaces
occurring under a different general contractor contract. The commenter
also expressed uncertainty pertaining to the applicability of these
types of activities under the definition of ``substantial
[[Page 38278]]
improvement'' (which was included in the definition of ``development
activity'' in the proposed rule) and the requirements pertaining to
substantial improvement because this work is done in a manner that is
either unanticipated in the project planning phase or falls outside a
typical PBV project planning scope.
HUD Response: This final rule clarifies the term ``extraordinary
circumstances'' in response to this comment. Emergencies generally
qualify as extraordinary circumstances under this rule, though
situations may arise in which an emergency instead constitutes a breach
of HAP contract or a matter falling under the provisions for
enforcement of HQS.
38. How Participants Are Selected (Sec. 983.251)
Site-Based Waiting Lists
One commenter suggested that HUD allow owners to maintain their own
site-based waiting lists to expedite the tenant selection process as
well as allow PHAs to establish compliance reviews to oversee owners.
Another commenter encouraged HUD to maintain provisions describing
roles and responsibilities of the owner and PHA in the guidance
documents. This commenter disagreed with HUD requiring PHAs to formally
incorporate site-specific tenant selection plans into their
Administrative Plans if the plan is on file with the PHA and available
to the public because incorporating the plans into the Administrative
Plan will be burdensome for PHAs, due to frequent minor updates. The
commenter also expressed concern regarding the statement in Sec.
983.251(c)(7)(x) that HUD may act against the owner, PHA, or both, and
suggested that if HUD intends to hold PHAs responsible for an owner's
project-based waiting list, the regulations need to state that the PHA
also has the right to take enforcement action directly against the
owner. The commenter stated that in cases where a PHA has commenced
enforcement actions against an owner, then HUD should not seek
additional enforcement against the PHA.
Another commenter suggested deleting Sec. 983.251(c)(7)(i). A
commenter objected to the proposed requirement that a tenant selection
plan (TSP) be included in the Administrative Plan for every owner. The
commenter stated that owners may make frequent adjustments to their
TSP, such as to respond to updates under the Violence Against Women Act
or updated screening standards, and therefore every small TSP change,
even if unrelated to waiting lists or preferences, would require an
Administrative Plan amendment, and the PHA's Administrative Plan would
have to be amended for every PBV project when the project is selected
and then again when the TSP is approved by the PHA. The commenter
suggested that selection plans should be on file with the PHA and
posted online with the Administrative Plan but should not be
specifically part of the Administrative Plan.
HUD Response: Under this final rule, HUD provides PHAs discretion
to allow owners to maintain their own site-based waiting lists to
expedite the tenant selection process. HUD requires PHAs that exercise
this discretion to establish oversight procedures, which may include
compliance reviews to oversee owners. HUD determined it is necessary
for the minimum requirements codified in this final rule describing the
roles and responsibilities of the owner and PHA to be located in the
regulation so as to be easily located and consistently enforced, rather
than only in guidance documents. As noted in this final rule, PHAs must
formally incorporate the site-specific owner waiting list policies into
their Administrative Plans. HUD does not believe incorporating the
owner waiting list policy into the Administrative Plan will be
cumbersome for PHAs because of frequent minor updates.
HUD maintains Sec. 983.251(c)(7)(x) to ensure that the owner, PHA,
or both, are held accountable and responsible for an owner's project-
based waiting list. The administrative policy that is incorporated in a
PHAs' Administrative Plan may state that the PHA also has the right to
take enforcement action directly against the owner. Although there may
be cases where a PHA has commenced enforcement actions against an
owner, depending on the nature of the enforcement actions, HUD may
still take additional enforcement actions against the PHA, if
applicable.
HUD does not delete the requirement, as suggested by a commenter,
at Sec. 983.251(c)(7)(i). This final rule, however, does revise both
Sec. Sec. 983.251 and 983.10 by replacing tenant selection plan with
owner waiting list policy. As a result of this change, the owner
waiting list policy, not tenant selection plan, must be incorporated in
the PHA's Administrative Plan.
Civil Rights
A commenter recommended that the proposed rule's preamble
discussion that projects using preferences for families eligible for
supportive services, including disability-specific services, must
comply with Section 504, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the
Home and Community-Based Settings requirements be placed in Sec.
983.251. Another commenter suggested Sec. 983.251 be revised to
require that tenant selection plans, criteria, and preferences must
comply with all applicable civil rights requirements, and that all
tenant selection criteria must be demonstrably related to the
applicant's ability to fulfill the obligations of a subsidized tenancy,
which would eliminate poor credit or eviction for nonpayment of
unassisted rent or most criminal history as grounds for denial of
tenancy. The commenter further stated that the rejection notice should
require specific content, such as sufficient facts and the legal basis
supporting the rejection as well as due process procedures to enable a
fair review, even absent a tenant's request for a hearing. The
commenter also suggested modifying Sec. 983.251(c)(6) to require that
applicants on the HCV waitlist receive a PHA offer to be placed on the
PBV waitlists.
One commenter approved of HUD's modification to Sec. 983.251 to
require eligible families to qualify for services as well as removing
restrictions that limit service preferences only to families with
severe disabilities for whom such services cannot be provided in non-
segregated housing. Another commenter urged HUD to revise Sec.
983.251, to prioritize housing survivors of violence who are in the PBV
program and require an emergency transfer under VAWA. Another commenter
opposed banning preferences for people within a category of disability
under Sec. 983.251(d)(1) and stated that this conflicts with the
Section 504 rules and is a violation of HOTMA, which permits
preferences based on the class of disability associated with a
project's supportive services. This commenter stated that a ban on
disability-specific preferences also interferes with procuring capital
resources for housing because non-PBV resources often target permanent
supportive housing for people within specific categories of disability.
The commenter suggested that HUD defer to the PHA's preference plan for
people who qualify for disability-specific services. The commenter also
explained that the waiver and remedial action process conflicts with
HOTMA, which delegates the decision to the PHA, and the process is
intrusive as well as costly. The commenter encouraged HUD to adopt a
similar process to RAD, where the PHA and project owner in consultation
with the partnering State and local officials, determine the scope of a
disability-specific preference.
[[Page 38279]]
This commenter also suggested that HUD adopt the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services Homes and Community-Based Services (CMS
HCBS) rules on what is the most integrated setting possible, found in
42 CFR 441.710(a), because projects meeting those standards do not
require additional waiver or remedial action approval. The commenter
recommended that HUD use flexible approaches to concentration, because
the existing rigid policies applied to projects with dwellings for
families receiving supportive services conflict with the exception to
PBV income-mixing standards, which permits owners to exceed the PBV
project cap for units providing supportive services. Therefore, the
commenter concluded that HUD should define, within the PBV rule,
integrated places that do not impose fixed limits on the concentration
of disabled individuals in a development and, ultimately, meet the
standards for a community-based setting.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the commenters' recommendations. A
PHA's preference for families who qualify for voluntary services,
including disability-specific services under Sec. 983.251(d), must not
conflict with Section 504 rules.\17\ Further, PHAs have a duty to
ensure that the PBV project is compliant with all applicable
nondiscrimination and equal opportunity requirements, including, but
not limited to, the requirement to administer services, programs, and
activities in a nondiscriminatory manner and meet the needs of
qualified individuals with a disability under Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act, Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act,
and the Fair Housing Act. See 24 CFR 5.105(a), 24 CFR part 8; 28 CFR
part 35; 24 CFR part 100. In addition, this language allowing a
preference to families who qualify for voluntary services, including
disability-specific services, must be implemented consistent with the
integration mandate under Section 504 and Title II of the ADA, wherein
entities are obligated to administer their programs and activities in
the most integrated setting appropriate to the needs of qualified
individuals with disabilities. 24 CFR 8.4(d) and 28 CFR 35.130(d)).\18\
Additionally, if a PBV project offers Medicaid-funded home and
community-based services as part of ``disability-specific services,''
the PHA must also fully comply with the Federal home and community-
based settings requirements found at 42 CFR 441.301(c)(4), (5) (``Home
and Community-Based Settings''). In addition, PHAs are obliged to
ensure that assisted units for persons with a disability are
distributed throughout a project (24 CFR 8.26) and to make housing
assistance available in the most integrated setting appropriate to the
needs of qualified individuals with disabilities--i.e., a setting that
enables individuals with disabilities to interact with nondisabled
persons to the fullest extent possible. (See the Statement of the
Department of Housing and Urban Development on the Role of Housing in
Accomplishing the Goals of Olmstead at https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/OLMSTEADGUIDNC060413.PDF).
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\17\ HUD notes that Sec. 983.251(d)(1) of this final rule
cross-references the prohibition against adopting a preference for
admission of persons with a specific disability at 24 CFR
982.207(b)(3). The prohibition at 24 CFR 982.207(b)(3) is not
intended to detract from PHAs' discretion to give preferences to
families who qualify for disability-specific services.''
\18\ See also The Statement of the Department of Housing and
Urban Development on the Role of Housing in Accomplishing the Goals
of Olmstead at https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/OLMSTEADGUIDNC060413.PDF.
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In response to the commenter that suggested revision of Sec.
983.251 to provide that tenant selection criteria be demonstrably
related to the applicant's ability to fulfill the obligations of a
subsidized tenancy and proposing that HUD prescribe the contents of the
rejection notice, HUD believes the commenter's concerns would not be
appropriately addressed in Sec. 983.251. Given the revision to Sec.
983.251 in this final rule (described above in this discussion of Sec.
983.251) to require the owner waiting list policy, not tenant selection
plan, to be incorporated in the PHA's Administrative Plan where there
will be an owner-maintained waiting list, Sec. 983.251 is not an
appropriate location for requirements relating to the owner's screening
and selection of tenants.\19\ The elements of the owner tenant
selection policies and procedures at issue are instead covered by
Sec. Sec. 983.253 and 983.255. Section 983.255(b) of the current PBV
regulations contains owner screening requirements and was not proposed
for revision in this rulemaking. HUD determines the changes to the
owner screening requirements the commenter proposes would require
separate rulemaking, with opportunity for public comment. HUD notes,
however, that the owner's practices under Sec. 983.255(b) remain
subject to Sec. 983.253(a)(2), which states: ``The owner is
responsible for adopting written tenant selection procedures that are
consistent with the purpose of improving housing opportunities for very
low-income families and reasonably related to program eligibility and
an applicant's ability to perform the lease obligations.'' HUD believes
these current requirements governing the owner's screening practices
adequately reflect the PBV program's purpose of serving low-income
families. The owner notice of grounds for rejection is currently
codified at Sec. 983.253(a)(3). HUD adds to that provision, in this
final rule, a requirement for the owner to provide a copy of the notice
to the PHA. If, upon receipt of the notice, the PHA finds that the
owner is noncompliant with program requirements, including Sec.
983.253(a)(2), the PHA may take action for breach of the HAP contract.
HUD intends to provide further guidance on the operation of Sec. Sec.
983.253 and 983.255.
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\19\ HUD notes that in the case of an owner-maintained waiting
list, the notice and hearing requirements when a family is denied
admission to the waiting list are at 24 CFR 982.554, which was not
proposed for change in this rulemaking, and, per Sec.
983.251(c)(7)(vii) of this final rule, the owner provides the notice
to the family.
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HUD notes that PHAs already have the authority to and are
encouraged to prioritize victims of domestic violence, dating violence,
sexual assault, or stalking who are in the PBV program and require an
emergency transfer under VAWA in its Administrative Plan. As stated
earlier, VAWA emergency transfers must occur in accordance with HUD's
VAWA regulations at 24 CFR part 5, subpart L, and program regulations.
HUD declines to modify Sec. 983.251(c)(6). If the PHA chooses
under its Administrative Plan to use a separate waiting list for
admission to PBV units, under paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (iii) of Sec.
983.251 as proposed the PHA already must offer to place applicants who
are listed on the waiting list for tenant-based assistance on the
waiting list for PBV assistance (including owner-maintained PBV waiting
lists).
Question 30. Should HUD establish additional or different criteria for
the removal of the family from the PBV waiting list when a family
rejects an offer, or the owner rejects the family?
One commenter recommended that HUD streamline the PBV waiting lists
process for easier oversight and efficient enforcement. Other
commenters stated that HUD should allow PHAs to develop their own
procedures to remove families from the PBV waiting list if the
procedures are outlined in the Administrative Plan. Another commenter
stated that PHAs should manage the removal of the family from
[[Page 38280]]
the PBV waiting list when a family rejects an offer as adopted within
their Administrative Plan. This commenter expressed that it should be
optional for PHAs to monitor owner-maintained waiting lists because HUD
would hold the PHA accountable for actions beyond the PHA's control.
Another commenter stated HUD should not establish additional criteria;
if a family rejects the unit, they should be removed from the list; and
if an owner rejects the family, they should be removed from the
project-based list.
One commenter stated that if a family meets the eligibility
criteria and fulfilled all its obligations, an owner's rejection should
not adversely affect the family's position on the PBV waiting list. One
commenter stated there is no additional administrative burden involved
in leaving a family on the general PBV list if the family rejects an
opportunity or an owner rejects the family.
Another commenter expressed that owner-managed waiting lists have a
history of discrimination, and that the proposed rule does not require
enforcement, only an undefined ``oversight.'' The commenter stated that
the authorities cited at Sec. 5.105(a) are solely a list of Federal
civil rights laws covering housing programs, and do not provide for
specific oversight. A commenter suggested that HUD should revise Sec.
983.251 to identify safety concerns for domestic violence survivors as
a good cause to reject a unit, to prevent the survivor from choosing
between housing and safety.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the commenters' recommendations. This
final rule provides PHAs with the procedural tools within their
Administrative Plans to effectively streamline their PBV waiting list
to create effective oversight and efficient enforcement as addressed in
Sec. 983.251. Further, this final rule allows PHAs to develop their
own procedures to remove families from the PBV waiting list as long as
the procedures are legally permissible and are outlined in their
Administrative Plans in the case of a central PBV waiting list. Under
this final rule, for an owner-maintained waiting list, the owner, not
the PHA, is responsible for managing the waiting list, including
processing changes in an applicant's information, contacting families
when their name is reached on the waiting list, removing applicant
names from the waiting list, and opening and closing the waiting list.
Although HUD appreciates the commenters' suggestions that HUD
should not establish additional criteria, there can be situations in
which the unit in question is not conducive to the needs of the family
and is rejected, but the family still needs suitable housing, and, as a
result, should not be removed from the project-based list. Therefore,
HUD requires in this final rule that if a family rejects the offer of
PBV assistance for good cause then the family cannot be removed from
the PBV waiting list. Moreover, separate from this process, a family
can always request a reasonable accommodation that may be necessary for
a household member with a disability to remain on the PBV waiting list,
including when the unit does not meet one's disability-related needs.
Further, PHAs and owners are subject to all applicable Federal fair
housing and civil rights requirements, including in their
administration of this process. Even if the circumstances do not rise
to the level of ``good cause'' as determined by the entity, a family
may request a reasonable accommodation in accordance with Federal civil
rights laws.
As for revising Sec. 983.251 to identify safety concerns for
domestic violence survivors, HUD already has protections for victims of
domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking in 24
CFR part 5, subpart L, and these protections apply to admission to the
project-based voucher program. Additionally, the provision added to
this final rule specifying that if a family that rejects the offer of
PBV assistance for good cause then the family cannot be removed from
the PBV waiting list applies to these families; the safety concerns
described in the comment constitute good cause.
Other Questions and Suggested Modifications
One commenter stated that HUD should revise Sec. 983.251(c)(7)(x)
to not take enforcement action against a PHA due to actions of an
owner. This commenter stated that HUD should have the ability to act
against the owner, and HUD should explicitly state it will not act
against the PHA, especially when the PHA is acting in good faith to
provide oversight. Another commenter recommended that HUD streamline
the process for PHAs, families, and owners, modifying Sec.
983.251(c)(7)(viii) to state that PHAs should provide the oral briefing
while the owner refers a family to the PHA for a final eligibility
determination to provide the family with the information needed to
determine whether to accept an owner's offer and eliminate the need to
submit income and other eligibility-related information to the PHA.
Commenters suggested that PHAs should be given the discretion to
manage their waiting lists, including how families reject the offer of
assistance or if the owner rejects the family. One commenter favored
HUD keeping the provisions under Sec. 983.251(c), regarding selection
from a waiting list, in nonbinding guidance. Another commenter stated
that PHAs should have discretion over owner-maintained waiting lists
because the PHA cannot control whether an owner would comply. Other
commenters suggested that HUD's rule should clearly state that PHAs may
permit owners to maintain their own lists, regardless of whether the
PHA itself maintains separate waiting lists for some or all its PBV
properties in Sec. 983.251(c)(2)(iii) and (c)(7)).
A commenter suggested that the rule should explicitly state that
owners and PHAs are subject to all civil rights and fair housing
requirements throughout Sec. 983.251(c)(7). Another commenter
suggested that HUD amend Sec. 983.251(e)(1) and (3) to allow PHAs
additional discretion in deciding how to handle the family's position
on the PHA waiting list if the family turns down PBV. This commenter
also supported PHAs having discretion over the number of offers a
family may reject. Another commenter recommended that HUD should not
permit PHAs to alter a family's place on a central PBV waiting list
based on an owner's rejection of a family because it would harmfully
impact a family's admission with respect to any other property with a
PBV contract and violate a pre-HOTMA sentence of section 8(o)(13)(J) of
the 1937 Act.
Commenters also recommended deleting the final sentence of Sec.
983.251(b)(2), because HCV participants are not subject to a denial of
assistance, and deleting the part explaining that the usual termination
grounds would apply, as well as signaling that rescreening by PHAs is
allowed.
HUD Response: HUD declines to revise Sec. 983.251(c)(7)(x).
Section 983.251(c)(7)(x) allows HUD to take enforcement actions for
non-compliance against the PHA and the owner. If the PHA is not acting
in good faith to provide oversight in accordance with Sec.
983.251(c)(7)(x), HUD has the authority to enforce HUD's requirements.
As for Sec. 983.251(c)(7)(viii), HUD maintains the process for
PHAs to determine eligibility for the program. This ensures that all
parties appropriately coordinate the placement of the family in the
unit and will ensure compliance by PHAs with their continued
responsibility for eligibility determinations. This final rule also
[[Page 38281]]
maintains the authority for PHAs, consistent with their Administrative
Plan, to determine whether to allow for owner-maintained waiting lists.
Further, HUD's final rule explicitly states that PHAs may permit owners
to maintain their own lists regardless of whether the PHA itself
maintains separate waiting lists for some or all its PBV properties in
Sec. 983.251(c)(2)(iii) and (c)(7). HUD will not amend Sec.
983.251(e)(1) and (3) to limit flexibility to the PHA and owner and HUD
maintains the proposed rule's option that the PHA may alter a family's
place on a central PBV waiting list based on an owner's rejection of a
family. HUD also declines to adopt the commenter's request to delete
the final sentence of Sec. 983.251(b)(2), because families remain
subject to standard requirements for denial or termination of
assistance. Lastly, HUD's final rule maintains the proposed rule
requirements that owners and PHAs must comply with all applicable
Federal, State, and local nondiscrimination and equal opportunity
requirements (see 24 CFR 983.251(c)(7)(x) of the final rule (below)).
39. PHA Information for Accepted Family (Sec. 983.252)
One commenter suggested that the briefing packet include written
information on the selected family's right to move with the next
available voucher, because the right is unavailable to the family until
after one year and so the family should be informed of the right in
writing. The commenter also suggested that HUD modify Sec. 983.252 to
apply to both families selected by the PHA from its waiting list and to
families selected from an owner-maintained list.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with the commenter about providing such
written information and has revised the requirement to include written
information on the selected family's right to move at Sec.
983.252(b)(5). HUD will not make a change to the language regarding
families selected off the waiting list but notes that the language in
the proposed rule and finalized in this rule does apply to any accepted
family, including participants selected from an owner-maintained list.
40. Leasing of Contract Units (Sec. 983.253)
A commenter recommended that HUD add the following language to
Sec. 983.253: ``PHAs are responsible for monitoring owner actions that
may indicate rejection of applicants for legally impermissible reasons,
as well as for informing applicants of other tenant-based and PBV
waiting list options, whether referred by the PHA or on an owner's
site-based waiting list.''
HUD Response: HUD declines to implement the commenter's suggested
change in this final rule. PHAs have a duty and responsibility to
monitor owner's actions that may indicate rejection of applicants for
impermissible reasons.
41. Vacancies (Sec. 983.254)
Question 32. What would be a reasonable timeframe for the PHA to
complete this final eligibility determination?
Commenters suggested a broad set of timeframes for the PHA to
complete its final eligibility determination. Some commenters agreed
that two weeks, 30 or 60 days is a reasonable timeframe for PHAs to
complete final eligibility determinations. Other commenters noted that
more time may be required on a case-by-case basis, to ensure proper
eligibility review. Some commenters also suggested a 15-day timeframe
to complete final eligibility determination for applicants on owner-
maintained waiting lists. A commenter suggested that PHAs determine the
timeframe for final eligibility determinations, because the PHAs may
face uncontrollable factors that require more time than 30 days.
One commenter encouraged HUD to include in this final rule a
reference to the authority granted to applicants by the last sentence
of section 8(o)(13)(K), the Vacancies statutory provision, to bring
legal actions to compel a PHA to reduce the number of PBV units
committed under the contract if a unit is vacant for more than 120 days
and use the funds for additional tenant-based assistance.
A commenter encouraged HUD to provide PHAs 30 calendar days to make
an eligibility determination, and another commenter proposed two weeks
for a PHA to make final eligibility determination. Another commenter
objected to HUD's requirement that owners notify PHAs of actual or
expected vacancies, and instead, the commenter proposed that owners
refer families on waiting lists to the PHA, in advance of an actual
vacancy, to reduce delay in filling the unit. This commenter stated
that there is no reason to require a notification because the PHA is
not responsible for referring applicants to the owner, rather than
referring the selected family to the PHA. The commenter added that
owners and PHAs should have a coordinated system to schedule PHA
appointments as quickly as possible for the PHA and the selected
family. This commenter recommended that PHAs be obligated to make
reasonable efforts to promptly make the final eligibility determination
and schedule the required oral briefing as well as eligibility. A
commenter expressed that HUD should not specify a timeframe for the PHA
to complete a final eligibility determination after receiving an
application from an owner because PHAs have an interest in making
determinations quickly, but frequent extenuating circumstances prolong
resolving issues in the interest of the family, owner, or PHA.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed the comments and has determined that
in this final rule a 30-day notification to applicants to determine
final eligibility determinations is reasonable. If PHAs face
uncontrollable factors that require more time than 30 days to complete
their final eligibility determinations, then the PHA remains compliant
with the regulation so long as PHAs make every reasonable effort to
complete the determination within the required timeframe. This final
rule also continues to require an owner to notify the PHA of actual or
expected vacancies.
42. Security Deposit: Amounts Owed by Tenant (Sec. 983.259)
A commenter supported HUD's proposed prohibition on charging a PBV-
assisted family a higher security deposit than an unassisted family
because it encourages and authorizes source of income discrimination.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the public comment supporting the
addition of Sec. 983.259(b) prohibiting a PHA from charging assisted
tenants security deposits in excess of private market practice, or in
excess of amounts charged by the owner to unassisted tenants and adopts
this language in this final rule.
43. Overcrowded, Under-Occupied, and Accessible Units (Sec. 983.260)
Question 33. Are these proposed timeframes reasonable?
Several commenters viewed the 30-day timeframe for the PHA to
provide notice to the family and owner to remain in a wrong-sized unit,
as well as the 90-day timeframe in which the family must move out, as
reasonable if PHAs are permitted to extend the timeframe when needed.
Other commenters opposed HUD's timeframes for a family to move from
wrong-sized or accessible units. One commenter stated that the
timeframes are overly strict for the PHA to notify a family and owner
that they are placed in either an overcrowded, under-
[[Page 38282]]
occupied, or accessible unit. This commenter stated that a longer
timeframe is reasonable because PHAs need time for processing, and the
family should be given adequate time to find a suitable home rather
than taking the first unit available. Some commenters suggested
increasing the maximum time for a family to move from 90 days to 180
days since this timeframe is for a scenario where the PHA offers
``another form of continued housing assistance (other than a tenant-
based voucher)'' which will be subject to the availability of other
units within the PBV portfolio which are outside of the family's
control. One commenter proposed 180 days to eliminate PHAs having to
decide between terminating families or skipping their continued
assistance policies. Another commenter suggested that the timeframe
should be 90 days or the next annual recertification, whichever is
longer, while another commenter found 90 days as a more appropriate
notification deadline and 180 days sufficient time to move. One
commenter disagreed with the 90-day timeframe because PHAs with a large
population in RAD units may lack sufficient turnover to support
families moving out of wrong-sized units, and the 90-day limit would
create an inconsistency and an unfair standard for PHAs in low-vacancy
areas which usually allow 120 days for use of vouchers. This commenter
supported PHAs having discretion to determine appropriate timeframes
for local conditions and specify those policies in the Administrative
Plan. Another commenter found the 90-day timeframe insufficient
considering the current housing crisis and the need for additional time
for families to locate alternative units.
One commenter requested that HUD clarify Sec. 983.260(c)(2) to
express that the timeframe begins once the PHA offers the family
assistance in another unit and not from the time that the PHA
determines the family is in the wrong-sized unit. Another commenter
stated that HUD's proposal is not required by HOTMA and does not
recognize the limits imposed by PBV turnover and right-sized unit
availability, whether with external partners or within a PHA's agency-
owned portfolio. Another commenter expressed that for families that
live in a wrong-sized PBV unit or a unit with unneeded accessible
features, the PHAs should offer the option to move with the next
available tenant-based voucher, and if the voucher is unavailable or is
not the family's preference, then the PHA should offer the family
alternative housing assistance. The commenter also disagreed with the
option of reducing the number of units under the PBV contract because a
PHA is unlikely to reduce the subsidy attached to the project to offer
the tenant a suitable alternative unit, unless the PHA has no tenant-
based voucher available within a reasonable time and does not own
public housing, and the owner has no turnover in a suitable unit. The
commenter further stated that the rule should require PHAs to help
families locate a new suitable unit with the tenant-based voucher they
receive to relinquish correct-sized and accessible units, which is
required under Sec. 982.403 and is consistent with HOTMA requirements
to assist families that need to move due to unrepaired unit defects.
One commenter stated that the proposed timeframes are overly
prescriptive and administratively burdensome for PHAs to follow.
HUD Response: This section outlines steps the PHA must take when
they have determined a family is occupying a wrong-sized unit
(according to the PHA subsidy standards), or a unit with accessibility
features that the family does not require, and the unit is needed for
another family that requires the unit's accessible features. Under
these circumstances, it is necessary that the family move and to
provide certainty regarding the amount of time a family may remain in
the unit. In response to concerns raised, in this final rule, HUD
lengthens the amount of time the PHA is afforded to offer a form of
continued assistance, in accordance with Sec. 983.260(b), to within 60
days of the PHA's determination.
The 90-day timeframe, related to the termination of the housing
assistance payments for the wrong-sized or accessible unit and removal
of the unit from the HAP contract, begins once the PHA offers a form of
continued assistance. The comments submitted to HUD are persuasive that
a more flexible timeframe would be more practical to suit the needs of
the family moving out, the unit owner, a prospective family moving in,
and the PHA. At the same time, for certainty, accountability, and to
encourage the owner to continue to make their unit with accessible
features available to the PHA's HCV program, some limits on the
timeframe need to be maintained. Therefore, HUD has included revisions
at Sec. 983.260(c)(2)(i) and (iii) to include additional flexibility
in the form of the option for a family to request and the PHA to grant
one extension not to exceed up to an additional 90 days to accommodate
the family's efforts to locate affordable, safe, and geographically
proximate replacement housing.
In accordance with Sec. 983.260(b)(1), the continued assistance
offered may be in the form of project-based voucher assistance in an
appropriate-size unit (in the same project or in another project);
other project-based housing assistance (e.g., by occupancy of a public
housing unit); tenant-based rental assistance under the voucher
program; or other comparable tenant-based assistance. Based on comments
received, a new section was added at Sec. 983.260(b)(2) that requires
the PHA to remove the wrong-size or accessible unit from the HAP
contract to make voucher assistance available to issue the family a
tenant-based voucher if no continued housing assistance under paragraph
(b)(1) is available. The unit can then be reinstated after the family
vacates the property under a new provision at Sec. 983.260(d). This
will support the availability of funding the PHA can use to assist the
family with continued assistance.
44. Family Right To Move (Sec. 983.261)
Question 40: Right To Move and Sec. 983.261
One commenter suggested that HUD clearly define the first year of
occupancy in Sec. 983.261(a). A commenter recommended that Sec.
983.261 clearly state the roles and responsibilities of domestic
violence survivors and PHAs, considering that some PHAs view their
obligation to provide continued assistance to a survivor as
discretionary. This commenter suggested clarifying that a ``PHA must
assure that the victim retains assistance'' and ``must'' offer
continued tenant-based assistance, subject to availability of funds.
One commenter suggested Sec. 983.261(d) have a VAWA exception, because
survivors should not be penalized and lose tenant-based assistance if
they must terminate their lease before the end of the one-year
requirement because of violence. This commenter offered the following
suggestions: (1) allowing a survivor to request another form of
assistance before the family issues a written notice to vacate, at the
time it issues the notice, or thereafter; (2) the PHA should also offer
a tenant-based voucher or comparable tenant-based rental assistance if
the notice to vacate is due to violence; and (3) if such assistance is
not available, then the survivor should receive priority for the next
tenant-based voucher and the PHA should be encouraged to reach out to
area PHAs (with survivor consent) about available units or vouchers. In
case the survivor
[[Page 38283]]
does not feel safe in the existing unit, the commenter recommended that
the PHA provide a safe unit in the interim while the survivor waits for
the tenant-based voucher or allow the survivor to transfer to another
PBV unit.
Another commenter stated that under Sec. 983.261, the PHA should
demonstrate the availability of tenant-based vouchers for eligible PBV
families that exercise their right to move based on tenant-based
voucher attrition rate. This commenter also recommended that HUD expand
the PHA's discretion to set timeframes, and not be limited to ``any
time after the first year of occupancy'' under Sec. 983.261(a)), if
the project provides housing assistance to families that require
intensive supportive services. Another commenter recommended that HUD
clarify Sec. 983.261 to include language on terminations, by stating
that a family living in a PBV-assisted unit for 12 months that has
requested an HCV need not stay in the PBV unit while waiting for the
transfer, as well as that a PHA may not terminate the tenants from the
PBV program. One commenter suggested that HUD expand the list of
reasons for transfer to include intimidated witnesses and crime victims
before the one-year transfer period. A commenter suggested HUD clarify
that the tenant is not automatically provided HCV assistance after 1
year of lease, and that the tenant may apply for the transfer list and
may receive assistance when a voucher is available.
One commenter recommended clarifying in the rule that PHAs should
periodically notify families of the right to move with continued
tenant-based rental assistance, which could be provided as part of the
regular income recertification process. This commenter suggested that
HUD clearly state the actions the PHA must take if neither a regular
voucher nor ``comparable tenant-based rental assistance'' is available
at the family's requests because basic due process requires that PHAs
maintain a written list of families that have requested a voucher to
move from a PBV property after 12 months of occupancy and have a right
to receive the next available voucher or comparable assistance.
Other commenters stated that Sec. 983.261 is clear, but suggested
splitting Sec. 983.261(c)(1) into additional sentences for clarity.
HUD Response: HUD has revised this section by adding titles and
reorganizing information so that the requirements are easier to follow.
HUD added language to Sec. Sec. 983.261(a) and 983.261(d) that
clarifies the family must have received PBV assistance for at least a
year to be eligible for continued assistance under Sec. 983.261(b).
The eligibility for continued assistance is based on the total length
of time a family has received PBV assistance and not the length of time
the family has resided in the PBV unit. Section 983.261(a) does not
prohibit a family from terminating their lease prior to a year, just
doing so would make them ineligible for continued assistance. At any
time, the family must give the owner advance written notice of intent
to vacate (with a copy to the PHA) in accordance with the lease, unless
the family meets the exclusion criteria at Sec. 983.261(e) related to
VAWA.
The new Sec. 983.261(f) further clarifies that PHAs must address
project-based vouchers in their Emergency Transfer Plan consistent with
the requirements in 24 CFR 5.2005(e), including when the victim has
received PBV assistance for less than one year and is not eligible for
continued assistance under Sec. 983.261(b). Under a PHA's existing
VAWA obligations, a family may still potentially receive tenant-based
rental assistance as an external emergency transfer, even if they have
not received PBV assistance for more than a year. The emergency
transfer requirements do not supersede any eligibility or occupancy
requirements that may apply under a covered housing program (Sec.
5.2005(e)(13)). This language was added to clarify the requirement of
planning for these situations, but HUD cannot supersede the eligibility
requirements of continued assistance. To assist the family's
understanding of their right to move and the PHA's implementation of
these policies, HUD has added language to Sec. Sec. 983.261(b) and
983.261(c) that outlines the right to move information that must be
included in the Administrative Plan, including their written policy on
whether the PHA will offer families continued assistance under the
voucher program or other comparable tenant-based rental assistance,
procedures for how the family must contact the PHA, and how the PHA
documents families waiting for continued tenant-based rental
assistance.
45. When Occupancy May Exceed the Project Cap (Sec. 983.262)
Question 34: Does the proposed rule sufficiently address the project
cap requirements in relation to a unit losing its excepted status?
A commenter stated that Sec. 983.262(f) (now moved to Sec.
983.262(b)(4) in this final rule) sufficiently addresses the project
cap requirements in relation to a unit losing its excepted status.
Another commenter suggested adding: ``or a family eligible for
supportive services, or a family that otherwise qualifies to reside in
an excepted unit under paragraphs (c) or (d) of this section'' to Sec.
983.262(b). The commenter encouraged HUD to clearly state in Sec.
983.262(c) (now moved to Sec. 983.262(d)(3) in this final rule) the
qualifications for the supportive services exception, including: (1) if
any member of the family is eligible for one or more of the available
services; (2) if a member of the family successfully completes a
service program and subsequently no other member of the household is
eligible for one of the offered services. The commenter also proposed
that HUD revise the third sentence of Sec. 983.262 to clearly state
that the exception applies even if the household member who
successfully completes a service program leaves the household.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the edits offered by commenters and
believes changes to this section provide additional clarity. The
proposed regulation conveyed that the unit retains its exception if any
member of the family resides in the unit (not just the member that
successfully completed the supportive services) and HUD, therefore,
does not believe an edit is required to provide that clarification.
46. Determining the Rent to Owner (Sec. 983.301)
Question 37: Streamlining HUD's Utility Allowance Policies Across the
RAD PBV, Traditional PBV, and HCV Programs
One commenter recommended providing PHAs with maximum flexibility
in setting utility allowances for RAD PBV, traditional PBV, and HCV,
noting that the statute is not very proscriptive. Another commenter
stated that HUD should allow all of these programs to use the same
utility allowance. A commenter stated that allowing project owners and
PHAs to utilize project-specific UAs at traditional PBV properties will
streamline policies between RAD PBV units and traditional PBV units and
will streamline UA requirements between traditional PBV units and HOME
program requirements which are incompatible and require regulatory
waiver.
HUD Response: PHAs have the ability to use the same UA for RAD PBV,
traditional PBV, and HCV by using the PHA's HCV UA schedule for all of
these programs. Through this final rule, PHAs will have the additional
flexibility of setting an area-wide EEUA that may also
[[Page 38284]]
be used for qualified energy-efficient RAD PBV and traditional PBV
properties. Project-specific UAs add complexity, but they are optional
for PHAs to implement. HUD may provide additional flexibility for
setting project-specific UAs, however, HUD must ensure the policy
results in accurate UAs that do not overly burden tenants. HUD
recognizes the need to consider the alignment of project-specific UAs
with other programs like HOME and will consider this in a notice
implementing project-specific UAs.
Question 38: Should HUD permit the use of a project-specific utility
allowance schedule for the HCV program?
Many commenters supported HUD allowing project-specific UAs. Some
commenters said PHAs should have maximum flexibility in setting
project-specific UAs, while others recommended HUD issue more
requirements to ensure project-specific UAs do not negatively impact
families. Commenters stated that project-specific UA schedules would
eliminate conflicts with other funding sources, including HOME. One
commenter recommended that PHAs have the discretion to allow project-
specific UAs on a case-by-case basis or throughout their HCV program to
ensure families neither experience an undue cost nor are discouraged
from conserving energy.
Commenters stated that any requirement to implement site-specific
UAs would be administratively burdensome for the PHA, stating that it
would not streamline requirements across programs and that PHAs' SEMAP
scores may be negatively impacted due to difficulties in applying the
correct UA schedule. Commenters stated that HUD's efforts to reduce
program expenditures and promote energy efficiency need to be
consistent with statutory tenant affordability protections. Another
commenter noted that HUD has not provided evidence that reduced UAs
will promote energy conservation and that the relationship between
reducing UAs and avoiding wasteful consumption is tenuous considering
the relative inelasticity of demand for energy among low-income
households.
Another commenter stated that while a project-specific UA is
appropriate in instances where another housing program has established
an alternative EEUA, the standard should be based on accuracy and not
whether allowances would create an undue cost on families or discourage
efficient use of HAP funds. A commenter recommended that HUD should
remove the requirement to have PHAs update UA schedules when there is a
rate change of 10 percent or more; streamlining would be achieved if
the local HUD field office performs the UA analysis for their
respective geographic areas. Another commenter proposed that HUD issue
UAs based on locality like FMRs.
Commenters recommended that HUD delay making this provision
effective until it can issue further guidance providing specific
standards and requirements for developing the project-specific UAs and
how to ensure tenants are not negatively impacted and allowing for
public comment. Commenters additionally expressed that using average
consumption of the dataset is unreasonable for low-income tenants
because it results in effectively 50 percent of the tenants receiving a
UA that is too low. Commenters also supported consideration of the
impact of time-of-use rate plans and tenants with special needs or
larger families, which require higher consumption for special equipment
or because tenants spend more time at home. Project-specific UAs that
are determined based on an engineering analysis need to be carefully
reviewed and subject to a periodic adjustment to ensure they reflect
actual costs in the project. This commenter recommended HUD apply the
same methodology for multifamily properties, which uses actual
consumption data. One commenter recommended that HUD's approval process
include adequate notice and comment for PBV tenants affected by any PHA
proposal submitted to HUD, as well as require that PBV tenants timely
complete supporting information, and receive adequate time for analysis
(at least 60 days), because the data complexity will usually require
additional expertise.
One commenter stated that there should be no need for a PHA to
engage another independent entity to approve proposed project-specific
UAs, as HUD's independent review and approval should be sufficient to
avoid a conflict of interest.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates commenters' support of project-
specific UAs. Project-specific UAs provide an opportunity for
streamlining and a more accurate UA based on project-specific
consumption data that will (1) allow projects to be viable where the
area-wide utility allowance is unnecessarily high, and (2) ensure
participants living in the same property are receiving the same UA
subsidy. Per Sec. 983.301(f)(4) PHAs that implement a project-specific
UA for a PBV property must use the same UA for tenant-based
participants residing in that project. To ensure this policy is clear,
HUD has added this requirement into this final rule in part 982 (Sec.
982.517(b)(2)(iv)). While project-specific allowances may cause some
burden to administer, they are completely optional. PHAs must consider
the costs and benefits to their specific program and the impact on
families before deciding to request a project-specific UA.
Many suggestions were made on how to protect participant families
from having a project-specific UA that is too low. HUD agrees that
further protections are needed to ensure that families are not
negatively impacted. HUD clarified under Sec. 983.301(f)(4) that Sec.
982.517(c) applies and an annual review of rates is required. HUD added
that PHAs must review project-specific UAs after one year if they were
not based on actual consumption data. Additional time is required to
develop a process that ensures PHAs and PBV property owners are
adequately considering the impact of project-specific UAs on families.
HUD will continue to process these requests as waivers at HUD
Headquarters until more guidance is issued via notice.
HUD appreciates the commenter's suggestion that PHAs should have
the flexibility to apply project-specific or case-specific UAs for any
HCV tenant, but this policy would be very difficult to manage and even
more difficult to provide effective oversight. UAs provide for some
adjustments through specific policies without creating a separate
utility allowance for every HCV participant. Families that have
additional utility allowance needs due to individual circumstances
related to a disability are always able to request a reasonable
accommodation (Sec. 982.517(e)). This applies to participants in the
project-based and tenant-based programs. HUD is amending this final
rule to clarify that reasonable accommodation UAs will not impact the
determination of the contract rent for project-based units. Instead,
the cap on contract rent will be determined using the appropriate area-
wide UA (Sec. 983.301(f)(5)).
HUD has removed the regulatory requirement in Sec. 983.301(g) that
PHAs have an independent entity determine the project-specific UA for
PHA-owned units. HUD will establish requirements for project-specific
UAs in PHA-owned units in a Federal Register notice.
Request for Clarification
A commenter suggested HUD clarify Sec. 983.301(b)(1) by including
that the rent to owner can differ from the PHA's payment standard for
the HCV program, as the statute specifies, since many
[[Page 38285]]
PHAs and other stakeholders have not understood this flexibility.
HUD Response: HUD believes that Sec. 983.301(b)(1) is sufficiently
clear that the rent to owner can differ from the PHA's payment standard
for the HCV program. However, HUD has taken this opportunity to clarify
the corresponding provision at Sec. 983.2(c)(6)(i) and the Sec.
983.301(b)(1) language regarding when the PHA may use an amount greater
than 110 percent of the applicable FMR in its calculations.
47. Redetermination of Rent to Owner (Sec. 983.302)
Question 39: Agreeing to Maximum OCAF Adjustments
Commenters supported implementing the HOTMA provisions allowing an
owner to request additional changes up to the statutory maximum if the
OCAF is insufficient because these changes would help make PBV projects
more competitive. A commenter suggested HUD consider this limit to be
duplicative, because rent reasonableness standards must still be met,
in effect keeping the rent amount in check. Another commenter stated
that owners subject to OCAF should have the benefit of having the full
OCAF percentage applied to better manage operations and improve on a
property's ability to cover existing debt, and that further reducing
the applicable percentage increase to properties puts additional
financial strain on owners.
HUD Response: HUD appreciate the comments; however, HUD does not
consider the PHA's rent limit to be duplicative rent reasonableness
standards because the PHA may have reason to set the limit below the
reasonable rent. Under this final rule, HUD retains the requirement
that the increases through OCAF may not exceed the maximum rent for the
PBV project, as determined by the PHA pursuant to Sec. 983.301 as
proposed.
Align OCAF Adjustments With Other Programs
Commenters recommended a ``lesser of'' test, like that used in the
Mod Rehab program, of OCAF or 110 percent of FMR. A commenter suggested
PHAs should have sole discretion to choose OCAF or 110 percent of FMR,
if HUD determines that the PBV rent increase amount should be
discretionary. A commenter recommended HUD treat OCAF adjustments in a
traditional PBV context the same as it would in a RAD PBV context and
as permitted elsewhere for properties with HUD section 8 contracts.
This commenter noted that OCAF adjustments applied elsewhere in the PBV
program should not be arbitrarily capped by the FMR and SAFMR
established by HUD. The commenter also encouraged HUD to explore ways
in which the FMRs and SAFMRs can be better aligned with rent
reasonableness assessments to ensure that FMRs and SAFMRs are able to
keep up with the OCAF adjustments that properties receive, which would
avoid this problem altogether.
HUD Response: HUD declines to adopt the commenter's recommendation
to use a ``lesser of'' test and retains the proposed rule policy, as
described earlier in this section of the preamble. HUD intends to
consider this rule's applicability to RAD, given HUD's waiver authority
with respect to RAD, following publication of this final rule. HUD
continues its commitment to ensuring FMRs and SAFMRs are accurate and
updated.
OCAF Adjustments to Units Not Otherwise Regulated by Local Rent
Increase Regulation Related Rules
A commenter suggested providing the option of OCAF adjustments to
those units that are not otherwise regulated by local rent increase
regulations or any other regulatory agreement.
HUD Response: HUD has reviewed the comment and has determined, as a
matter of equitable treatment, all OCAF adjustments will remain aligned
in accordance with the statutory provision in section (8)(o)(13)(H) of
the 1937 Act.
Automatic Adjustments
A commenter supported the inclusion of OCAF rent increases as a
discretionary option for PHAs. One commenter stated that PHAs would
risk funding shortfalls if they guaranteed annual rent adjustment, and
some owners may not request an increase every year, which benefits the
PHA because it allows for those funds to be used elsewhere and for
units in higher-cost areas.
HUD Response: HUD acknowledges commenters' support. HUD is
maintaining automatic adjustments pursuant to Sec. 983.302(b) which
states that a rent increase may occur through automatic adjustment by
an operating cost adjustment factor (OCAF) or as the result of an owner
request for such an increase. However, the OCAF option is optional and
PHAs concerned about shortfalls or anticipating a lower owner request
may decide not to use OCAFs.
Periodic Adjustment Frequency
One commenter recommended that HUD also clarify proposed Sec.
983.302(b)(2)(ii)(B) to state that periodic adjustments above the OCAF-
adjusted rent level may be less frequently than annually. This
commenter also suggested that the contract specify how frequently a PHA
must consider such requests if made by the owner, because allowing
increases annually, beyond the OCAF level, would undermine the time-
and cost-saving purpose of using an OCAF.
HUD Response: HUD appreciates the commenter's suggestion. HUD
decided to allow adjustments to occur during the term of the contract
and prohibit a rent adjustment by an OCAF from exceeding the maximum
rent (see Sec. 983.302(b)(2)(i)). HUD also declines to require that
the HAP contract specify how frequently a PHA must consider rent
increase requests. Instead, as noted in this final rule, an owner can
make a written request for a rent increase at any time during the term
of a HAP contract. Lastly, as a point of clarification, the proposed
Sec. 983.302(b)(2)(ii)(B) has been relocated in this final rule to
Sec. 983.302(b)(3)(i).
Rent Floor
One commenter supported HUD's proposal to allow PHAs to reduce PBV
rents below the initial rent to owner at any time during the HAP
contract. The commenter further urged HUD to provide PHAs the tools to
rectify unintended negative consequences stemming from an unestablished
floor for rents and PBV rents falling below their initial rents,
harming the initial underwriting.
HUD Response: HUD has considered the comment and determined that it
should remain within PHA discretion whether to reduce rents below the
initial rent to owner at any time during the HAP contract. HUD believes
that PHAs are in the best position to balance local considerations in
making such a determination. Therefore, in this final rule, HUD has
deleted the sentences of the proposed rule that said: ``If the rents
have already been reduced below the initial rent to owner, the PHA may
not make such an election as a way to increase the rents. If rents
increase (pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section) above the initial
rent to owner, then the PHA may once again make that choice.''
[[Page 38286]]
48. Additional Requests for Comment
Question 41. HUD Is Interested in Aligning PBV Program Requirements
With Housing Trust Fund (HTF) Program Requirements and Solicits Input
From Stakeholders Regarding Areas in Which Alignment Will Be
Particularly Beneficial
One commenter recommended modifying PBV affordability terms to 30-
year contracts to mirror HTF to address the incompatibility between
affordability requirements as well as remove the challenge in obtaining
financing.
Other commenters supported HTF requirements conforming to the HCV/
PBV requirements, rather than the opposite. A commenter encouraged HUD
to work with state HTF funding recipients to incorporate preferences
and/or additional points in the HTF Allocation Plans for applicants
that seek to couple the receipt of HTF funds with section 8 project-
based vouchers. This commenter also supported streamlining
environmental review requirements under Sec. 983.301(f) and
substantial rehab/new construction through parts 50 and 58, as well as
HUD allowing a single environmental review to satisfy the requirements
for both HTF and the PBV program. The commenter stated that the
proposed suggestion is needed because of HUD's increased flexibility
due to the absence of a HTF statutory environmental review requirement.
Furthermore, the commenter stated that the current requirements often
result in projects receiving HTF and PBV funding to undergo separate
and duplicative environmental reviews.
Another commenter suggested that additional vouchers be made
available to communities that offer resources for low-income
households, including access to public transportation and jobs, where
rents are prohibitive. This commenter also suggested using a voucher
pool to connect developments that have HTF investments to bring
development and operation funding to create more opportunities.
HUD Response: HOTMA section 106(a)(4) does not allow for the
contract to go beyond an initial term of 20 years; however, a PHA may
execute any number of extensions (for terms up to 20 years each) such
that there are up to 40 remaining years on the contract, further
explained above in this discussion of comments regarding Sec. 983.205.
Amendments to the HTF program requirements are beyond the scope of
this rulemaking. Nonetheless, where the State is selecting HTF
applications submitted by eligible recipients, HUD notes that the HTF
Allocation Plan requires HTF grantees to provide priority for funding
for projects with Federal project-based rental assistance. See 24 CFR
91.320(k)(5). The underlying PBV environmental review requirements
generally are statutory; HUD cannot unilaterally amend the
applicability of NEPA and other laws and executive orders. HUD notes
that the HTF environmental provisions are outcome-based and exclude
certain consultation procedures that are otherwise required for
environmental reviews under 24 CFR parts 50 and 58. HUD intends to
consider these comments for future collaborations with the HTF program.
HUD allocates funding that can be used for project-based vouchers
at the PHA's discretion. How PBV funding is allocated is an essential
program requirement and revising it is beyond the scope of this
rulemaking. See response below to Question 43 for additional
information on how PBV works and is funded.
RAD and Transfers of Assistance (Answers to Question 42)
Commenters suggested that HUD create a new regulatory provision
governing the transfer of assistance. One commenter suggested that HUD
should allow both partial and full transfer of PBV assistance from one
project to another. Other commenters suggested that the transfer be a
voluntary agreement modeled after the PBRA provision. Some commenters
stated that HUD should keep the transfer of assistance process as clear
and simple as possible, as it has progressively become overregulated,
with two of these commenters citing specifically the environmental
review process and the inspection process. One commenter stated that
the local PHAs can and should make the appropriate policy regarding
when PBV assistance, which they awarded and oversee, can be transferred
to another property.
A commenter stated that PHAs should continue to use their vouchers
awarded in connection with the Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD)
where appropriate and in compliance with the HAP contract. Another
commenter stated that additional regulatory provisions are not required
to govern transfers of HAP contracts because PHAs will not experience a
reduction in Annual Contributions Contract (ACC) authorized units when
terminating a PBV HAP contract; instead, HUD should address needs on a
case-by-case basis. This commenter also stated that HUD should
eliminate the 1-year notice of termination when PBV assistance is
relocated without a gap in subsidy, so long as any relocation is
conducted in accordance with applicable Federal requirements.
One commenter recommended defining a RAD project based on its
funding stream or ownership structure, rather than lots or sites. One
commenter also recommended that HUD allow PHAs flexibility to develop
new PBV or public housing units if it does not exceed its Faircloth
limit.
A commenter suggested that regulations governing RAD transfers of
assistance consider the following factors: (1) placing proposed
transfers of assistance in the PHA Annual or MTW Plan and ensuring
consistency with the Consolidated Plan as well as improving the
resident notification and consultation requirements triggered with a
transfer of assistance and having each transfer meet the notice and
comment requirements; (2) transfers of assistance must receive
certificates of compliance for fair housing and civil rights
requirements and undergo multiple reviews such as: HUD's civil rights
review, review for compliance with site selection standards under Sec.
983.55, 8(bb), poverty concentration standards, change in number of
units, availability of accessible units or units for families with
children, change in admission preferences, relocation, and change in
income eligibility; (3) explicitly prohibiting re-screening tenants for
factors such as criminal history and credit scores as well as not
applying new screening criteria to a family coming from public housing
and prohibiting unreasonable screening criteria in subsequent
recertifications; (4) prohibiting PHAs from changing unit type or size
without the written consent of the individual tenants; (5) refusing
involuntary permanent relocation, however explicitly stating the
voluntary relocation processes, including the option to select a public
housing unit of the PHA, and the PHA/owner must document compliance
with Uniform Relocation Act (URA) and RAD relocation rights and
publicize those records to HUD upon request; (6) HUD should closely
evaluate and promulgate specific rules for transfers of assistance far
from the current RAD site, and consider whether the distance would
impose a significant burden on residents' access to existing
employment, transportation options, schooling or other critical
services, and whether the transfer advances or impedes fair housing and
de-concentration goals; and (7) section 3 obligations once transfers
are combined with rehabilitation and new construction.
[[Page 38287]]
HUD Response: HUD has considered the comments and agrees that it is
unnecessary to create a new regulatory process by which PBV assistance
may be transferred from one property to another (though HUD has
expanded options for termination of PBV contracts at Sec. 983.206).
Under this final rule, a PBV contract may terminate, as provided in
Sec. 983.206, with no corresponding reduction in the PHA's ACC units
or HAP allocation. A PHA may, in conjunction with such termination,
engage in the selection process in Sec. 983.51 to select and place
under contract a different PBV project, subject to all requirements of
part 983. A PHA may give preference to families living in the former
PBV project who wish to move (voluntarily) to the new PBV project, so
long as such preference is consistent with the requirements of Sec.
982.207, and subject to the provisions regarding in-place families at
Sec. 983.251(b), accessible units at Sec. 983.251(c)(9), and excepted
units at Sec. 983.262(b)(2). This final rule therefore gives
sufficient flexibility to PHAs to end PBV assistance at one project and
begin PBV assistance at another.
HUD has reviewed the suggestions that transfer of assistance be
modeled on Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA) transfers and
determined that parallel conditions, namely with respect to HUD
oversight and funding authority, do not exist in the PBV program that
would enable use of the same process. Additionally, HUD does not have
the statutory authority to alter several provisions of part 983 to
facilitate a transfer of PBV assistance as other commenters suggested.
These provisions include environmental review, inspection, and the one-
year notice of contract termination. HUD notes that, aside from this
statutory limitation, these aspects of the PBV program are critical
elements to the purpose and functionality of the PBV program and to
ensuring PBV tenants reside in decent, safe, and sanitary housing.
HUD notes that the provisions for RAD transfer of assistance, and
other RAD requirements, continue to be located in the governing notices
for the RAD program and are not altered by this final rule. HUD finds
it inappropriate to codify in part 983 the alternative provisions
created pursuant to waiver authority specific to the Demonstration. HUD
encourages commenters wishing to revise the RAD requirements to respond
to requests for comment on RAD provisions in the Federal Register. HUD
further notes that PBV units are unrelated to PHAs' Faircloth authority
and HUD will not consider changes to Faircloth authority as it relates
to the public housing program as part of this rulemaking, given the
need for robust public comment on that topic.
Question 43: Executive Order 13878 and Affordable Housing
Commenters suggested that HUD condition its funding to localities
that reduce local barriers against expensive projects and provide
funding only if local governments provide local fee reductions for
affordable housing or adopt by-right zoning.
One commenter recommended that HUD increase the allocation of PBVs
that PHAs could apply for. This commenter also suggested making the
applications for the new PBVs available to jurisdictions that
demonstrate that they are reducing local regulatory burden such as
permitting streamlining, fee waivers, and caps on local developer fees,
to incentivize decreased development and production cost.
Another commenter suggested that HUD should not consider any
policies relating to PBVs designed to incentivize communities to reduce
local regulatory barriers to development and production of housing.
Instead, the commenter proposed that local housing authorities should
be allowed to implement PBVs based on their local conditions. This
commenter suggested that HUD use direct rewards and other programs
relating to those municipal jurisdictions as an incentive to change
local rules, instead of using the PHA as the middleman.
HUD Response: The PBV program is administered by a PHA that already
administers the tenant-based voucher program under an annual
contributions contract (ACC) with HUD (Sec. 983.5(a)(1)). If a PHA
decides to operate a PBV program, the PHA's PBV program is funded with
a portion of appropriated funding (budget authority) available under
the PHA's voucher ACC. This pool of funding is used to pay housing
assistance for both tenant-based and project-based voucher units and to
pay PHA administrative fees for administration of tenant-based and
project-based voucher assistance, and there is no special or additional
funding for project-based vouchers (Sec. 983.5(b)). Additionally, A
PHA has discretion whether to operate a PBV program (Sec. 983.5(c)).
These are essential program requirements HUD will not change and
implementing the recommendations would fundamentally alter how the PBV
program works and is funded.
Typographic Corrections
One commenter had the following typographical corrections:
corrected Sec. 983.5(3) to cite to Sec. 983.154(e) and not Sec.
983.155(e), which does not exist; corrected the reference in Sec.
983.52(d) to Sec. 983.155(e), which should be to Sec. 983.154(e);
suggested HUD use ``new'' instead of ``newly'' in Sec. 983.12(a) and
elsewhere for consistency; in Sec. 983.59(a), suggested HUD delete
``for exclusion'' to avoid redundancy; in Sec. 983.59(e), corrected
two references to ``program limitation'' that should be ``program
cap;'' and in Sec. 983.204(d)(2)(iii), this commenter suggested
replacing ``PHA functions in accordance'' with ``PHA functions
identified in.''
HUD Response: HUD thanks the commenter for these comments. HUD has
revised the reference to Sec. 983.155(e) in Sec. 983.5(a)(3) (the
reference is now to Sec. 983.154(f), due to this correction and
renumbering that occurred in this final rule) and has removed Sec.
983.52(d). The term ``newly'' must continue to be used in the context
of regulations concerning ``newly constructed housing'' as defined in
Sec. 983.3(b), to maintain consistency with that term and definition,
as well as to avoid confusion with the activity of new construction
applicable in other contexts within the PBV regulations. However, HUD
notes that ``rehabilitation'' as used in proposed Sec. 983.12(a) was
not consistent with the term ``rehabilitated housing'' at Sec.
983.3(b), so has amended that term accordingly. HUD disagrees with
removal of the term ``for exclusion'' in Sec. 983.59(a). However, HUD
notes that the two references to ``program limitation'' as used in
proposed Sec. 983.59(e) were not consistent with the term ``program
cap,'' so HUD has amended that term accordingly. HUD agrees with the
commentor's suggestion to replace the language ``PHA functions in
accordance'' with ``PHA functions identified in'' at Sec.
982.451(c)(2)(iii) and Sec. 983.204(f)(iii).
General Comment
One commenter suggested that HUD allow PHAs to convert public
housing to PBV without HCV to retain the PBVs, for ACC unit consistency
and to benefit PHAs going through the RAD process.
HUD Response: PHAs must have an ACC to administer a voucher
program, per Sec. 982.151. This is an essential requirement which HUD
will not change.
VI. Findings and Certifications
Regulatory Review--Executive Orders 12866, 13563, and 14094
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory
[[Page 38288]]
alternatives and, if regulation is necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits (including potential economic,
environmental, public health, and safety effects; distributive impacts;
and equity). Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing
rules, and of promoting flexibility.
Under Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review), a
determination must be made whether a regulatory action is significant
and, therefore, subject to review by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) in accordance with the requirements of the order.
Executive Order 14094 (Modernizing Regulatory Review) amends section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866, among other things.
This final rule would update HUD's regulations for the HCV and PBV
programs to conform to changes made by HOTMA. These changes include
alternatives to HUD's HQS inspection requirement, establishing a
statutory definition of PHA-owned housing, and other elements of both
programs, ranging from owner proposal selection procedures to how
participants are selected. In addition to implementing these HOTMA
provisions, HUD has included changes that are intended to reduce the
burden on public housing agencies, by either modifying requirements or
simplifying and clarifying existing regulatory language.
This final rule was determined to be a significant regulatory
action under section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 (although not an
economically significant regulatory action under the Order). HUD has
prepared a Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) that addresses the costs
and benefits of this final rule. HUD's RIA is part of the docket file
for this rule, which is available for public inspection at
www.regulations.gov.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
generally requires an agency to conduct a regulatory flexibility
analysis of any rule subject to notice and comment rulemaking
requirements, unless the agency certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
For purposes of this rule, HUD defines a small PHA as a PHA for
which the sum of the number of public housing dwelling units
administered by the agency and the number of vouchers is 550 or fewer.
There are approximately 2,700 such agencies; some are voucher-only,
some are combined, some are public housing-only. HUD includes all of
these agencies among the number that could be affected by the proposed
rule. For those that operate voucher programs, the potential to be
affected is evident. For public housing-only agencies, the potential
effect of this final rule depends on whether the agency removes its
public housing from the public housing program via one of the available
legal removal tools, then project-bases any tenant protection vouchers
awarded in connection with that removal.
This final rule revises HUD regulations to reduce the burden on or
provide flexibility for all PHAs, owners, and other responsible
entities, irrespective of whether they are small entities. For example,
this final rule leverages Small Area Fair Market Rents to provide PHAs
with greater autonomy in setting exception payment standard amounts. It
will implement HOTMA's exceptions to the program and project caps under
the PBV program, such as authorizing a PHA to project-base 100 percent
of the units in any project with 25 units or fewer. It extends from 15
to 20 years the permissible duration of a PBV HAP contract, resulting
in less frequent need for extensions, and eliminates the three-year
window during which units may be added to an existing contract without
a PHA issuing a new request for proposals (RFP). The rule will
eliminate extraneous requirements specific to the project-basing of
HUD-VASH and FUP vouchers, if project-basing is done consistent with
PBV program rules. It will provide PHAs with greater flexibility in the
establishment of utility allowance schedules. It will also implement
new discretionary authority for a PHA to enter into a PBV HAP contract
with an owner for housing that is newly constructed or recently
rehabilitated, as long as PBV program rules are followed, even if
construction or rehabilitation commenced prior to the PHA issuing an
RFP. HUD estimates that such changes have the potential to generate a
range of cost savings but is unable to estimate the number of small
entities that would experience cost savings as a result of changes
proposed by this rule, as such savings depend largely on actions that
PHAs will take (or not) at their own discretion.
For the reasons presented, the undersigned certifies that this rule
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities.
Information Collection Requirements
The information collection requirements contained in this final
rule have been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520) and
assigned OMB control number 2577-0226. In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is
not required to respond to, a collection of information, unless the
collection displays a currently valid OMB control number.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the effects of
their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal governments and
the private sector. This final rule will not impose any Federal
mandates on any State, local, or tribal governments or the private
sector within the meaning of UMRA.
Environmental Review
A Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) with respect to the
environment has been made in accordance with HUD regulations in 24 CFR
part 50 that implement section 102(2)(C) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332(2)(C)). The FONSI is available
online at www.regulations.gov.
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (entitled ``Federalism'') prohibits an agency
from publishing any rule that has federalism implications if the rule
either imposes substantial direct compliance costs on State and local
governments and is not required by statute, or the rule preempts State
law, unless the agency meets the consultation and funding requirements
of section 6 of the Executive Order. This final rule does not have
federalism implications and does not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local governments nor preempt State law
within the meaning of the Executive Order.
Lists of Subjects
24 CFR Part 5
Administrative practice and procedure, Aged, Claims, Crime,
Government contracts, Grant programs-housing and community development,
Individuals with disabilities, Intergovernmental relations, Loan
programs-housing and community development, Low and moderate income
housing, Mortgage insurance, Penalties, Pets, Public housing, Rent
subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Social security,
Unemployment compensation, Wages.
[[Page 38289]]
24 CFR Part 8
Administrative practice and procedure, Civil rights, Equal
employment opportunity, Grant programs-housing and community
development, Individuals with disabilities, Loan programs-housing and
community development, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 42
Administrative practice and procedure, Grant programs, Loan
programs, Manufactured homes, Rates and fares, Relocation assistance,
and Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 50
Environmental impact statements.
24 CFR Part 91
Aged, Grant programs-housing and community development, Homeless,
Individuals with disabilities, Low and moderate income housing, and
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 92
Administrative practice and procedure, Low and moderate income
housing, Manufactured homes, Rent subsidies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 93
Administrative practice and procedure, Grant programs-housing and
community development, Low and moderate income housing, Manufactured
homes, Rent subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 247
Grant programs-housing and community development, Loan programs-
housing and community development, Low and moderate income housing, and
Rent subsidies.
24 CFR Part 290
Loan programs-housing and community development, Low and moderate
income housing, Mortgage insurance, and Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 882
Grant programs-housing and community development, Homeless, Lead
poisoning, Manufactured homes, Rent subsidies, and Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 888
Grant programs-housing and community development, rent subsidies.
24 CFR Part 891
Aged, Grant programs-housing and community development, Individuals
with disabilities, Loan programs-housing and community development, Low
and moderate income housing, Public assistance programs, Rent
subsidies, and Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 903
Administrative practice and procedure, Public housing, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 908
Computer technology, Grant programs-housing and community
development, Rent subsidies, and Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 943
Public Housing and Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 945
Aged, Grant programs-housing and community development, Individuals
with disabilities, Public housing, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 960
Aged, Grant programs-housing and community development, Individuals
with disabilities, Pets, and Public housing.
24 CFR Part 972
Grant programs-housing and community development, Public housing,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 982
Grant programs-housing and community development, Grant programs-
Indians, Indians, Public housing, Rent subsidies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 983
Grant programs-housing and community development, Low and moderate
income housing, Rent subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
24 CFR Part 985
Grant programs-housing and community development, Public housing,
Rent subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
24 CFR Part 1000
Aged, Community development block grants, Grant programs-housing
and community development, Grant programs-Indians, Indians, Individuals
with disabilities, Public housing, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Accordingly, for the reasons stated in the preamble, HUD amends 24
CFR parts 5, 8, 42, 50, 91, 92, 93, 247, 290, 882, 888, 891, 903, 908,
943, 945, 972, 982, 983, 985, and 1000 as follows:
PART 5--GENERAL HUD PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS; WAIVERS
0
1. The authority for part 5 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701x; 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f,
1437n, 3535(d); 42 U.S.C. 2000bb et seq.; 34 U.S.C. 12471 et seq.;
Sec. 327, Pub. L. 109-115, 119 Stat. 2396; E.O. 13279, 67 FR 77141,
3 CFR, 2002 Comp., p. 258; E.O. 13559, 75 FR 71319, 3 CFR, 2010
Comp., p. 273; E.O. 14156, 86 FR 10007, 3 CFR, 2021 Comp., p. 517.
0
2. Amend Sec. 5.100 by revising the definitions of ``Household'' and
``Responsible entity'' to read as follows:
Sec. 5.100 Definitions.
* * * * *
Household, for purposes of 24 CFR part 5, subpart I, and parts 960,
966, 882, and 982 of this title, means the family, foster children and
adults, and PHA-approved live-in aide.
* * * * *
Responsible entity means the person or entity responsible for
administering the restrictions on providing assistance to noncitizens
with ineligible immigrations status. The entity responsible for
administering the restrictions on providing assistance to noncitizens
with ineligible immigration status under the various covered programs
is as follows:
(1) For the Section 235 Program, the mortgagee.
(2) For Public Housing, the Section 8 Rental Voucher, and the
Section 8 Moderate Rehabilitation programs, the PHA administering the
program under an ACC with HUD.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 5.504 by revising and republishing the definition of
``Responsible'' to read as follows:
Sec. 5.504 Definitions.
* * * * *
Responsible entity means the person or entity responsible for
administering the restrictions on providing assistance to noncitizens
with ineligible immigrations status. The entity responsible for
administering the restrictions on providing assistance to noncitizens
with ineligible immigration status under the various covered programs
is as follows:
[[Page 38290]]
(1) For the Section 235 Program, the mortgagee.
(2) For Public Housing, the Section 8 Rental Voucher, and the
Section 8 Moderate Rehabilitation programs, the PHA administering the
program under an ACC with HUD.
* * * * *
Sec. 5.514 [AMENDED]
0
4. Amend Sec. 5.514 by:
0
a. Adding to the end of paragraph (f)(2)(i)(A), the word ``and'';
0
b. Amending paragraph (f)(2)(i)(B) by removing ``; or'' and adding, in
its place, a period;
0
c. Removing paragraph (f)(2)(i)(C); and
0
d. In paragraphs (i)(1) introductory text and (i)(2), removing the
phrase ``Rental Certificate,''.
Sec. 5.630 [AMENDED]
0
5. Amend Sec. 5.630(a)(2) by removing the phrase ``, and
certificate''.
Sec. Sec. 5.632, 5.653, 5.655, 5.657, and 5.659 [AMENDED]
0
6. Remove the words ``certificate or'' in the following places:
0
a. Section 5.632(b)(2);
0
b. Section 5.653(a);
0
c. Section 5.655(a);
0
d. Section 5.657(a); and
0
e. Section 5.659(a).
Sec. 5.801 [AMENDED]
0
7. Amend Sec. 5.801 by:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(2)(ii) removing the word ``Certificate'' and
adding, in its place, the word ``Voucher;
0
b. In paragraph (a)(2)(iv) removing the words ``Certificate and'';
0
c. In paragraph (a)(3)(ii) removing the word ``Certificate'' and
adding, in its place, the word ``Voucher''.
Sec. Sec. 5.853, 5.902, and 5.903 [AMENDED]
0
8. Remove ``project-based certificate or'' in the following places:
0
a. In Sec. 5.853(b), in the definition of ``Responsible entity'';
0
b. In Sec. 5.902, in the definition of ``Responsible entity''; and
0
c. Section 5.903(e)(1)(i)(C).
PART 8--NONDISCRIMINATION BASED ON HANDICAP IN FEDERALLY ASSISTED
PROGRAMS AND ACTIVITIES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN
DEVELOPMENT
0
9. The authority for part 8 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 794; 42 U.S.C. 3535(d) and 5309.
0
10. Amend Sec. 8.28 by:
0
a. Revising the section heading;
0
b. Removing from paragraph (a) introductory text the words ``Existing
housing Certificate program or a'';
0
c. Removing ``Housing Certificate or'' from paragraph (a)(3);
0
d. Removing ``Housing Certificates or'' from paragraph (a)(4); and
0
e. Revising paragraph (a)(5).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 8.28 Housing voucher programs.
(a) * * *
(5) If necessary as a reasonable accommodation for a person with
disabilities, approve a family request for an exception payment
standard under Sec. 982.503(d)(5) for a regular tenancy under the
Section 8 voucher program so that the program is readily accessible to
and usable by persons with disabilities.
* * * * *
PART 42--DISPLACEMENT, RELOCATION ASSISTANCE, AND REAL PROPERTY
ACQUISITION FOR HUD AND HUD-ASSISTED PROGRAMS
0
11. The authority for part 42 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 4601, 5304, and 12705(b).
Sec. 42.350 [AMENDED]
0
12. Amend Sec. 42.350(e)(1) by removing, both times it appears, the
phrase ``certificate or''.
PART 50--PROTECTION AND ENHANCEMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
0
13. The authority for part 50 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d) and 4321-4335; and Executive Order
11991, 3 CFR, 1977 Comp., p. 123.
Sec. 50.17 [AMENDED]
0
14. Amend Sec. 50.17(e) by removing the word ``Certificate'' and
adding, in its place, the word ``Voucher''.
PART 91--CONSOLIDATED SUBMISSIONS FOR COMMUNITY PLANNING AND
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS
0
15. The authority for part 91 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 3601-3619, 5301-5315, 11331-11388,
12701-12711, 12741-12756, and 12901-12912.
Sec. 91.2 [AMENDED]
0
16. Amend Sec. 91.2(c) by removing the words ``Certificate and''.
PART 92--HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
0
17. The authority for part 92 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d) and 12701-12839, 12 U.S.C. 1701x.
Sec. 92.202 [AMENDED]
0
18. Amend Sec. 92.202(b) by removing the citation ``24 CFR
983.57(e)(2) and (3)'' and adding, in its place, the citation ``24 CFR
983.55(e)(2) and (3)''.
Sec. 92.253 [AMENDED]
0
19. Amend Sec. 92.253(d)(4) by removing the words ``certificate or'',
and by removing the phrase ``certificate, voucher,'' and adding, in its
place, the word ``voucher''.
Sec. 92.508 [AMENDED]
0
20. Amend Sec. 92.508(a)(3)(xiii) by removing the citation to ``24 CFR
983.57(e)(2) and (e)(3)'' and adding, in its place, the citation to
``24 CFR 983.55(e)(2) and (3)''.
PART 93--HOUSING TRUST FUND
0
21. The authority for part 93 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), 12 U.S.C. 4568.
Sec. 93.150 [AMENDED]
0
22. Amend Sec. 93.150(b) by removing the citation to ``24 CFR
983.57(e)(2)'' and adding, in its place, a citation to ``24 CFR
983.55(e)(2)''.
PART 247--EVICTIONS FROM CERTAIN SUBSIDIZED AND HUD-OWNED PROJECTS
0
23. The authority for part 247 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701q, 1701s, 1715b, 1715l, and 1715z-1; 42
U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f, and 3535(d).
Sec. 247.1 [AMENDED]
0
24. Amend Sec. 247.1(a) by removing the words ``Section 8 Existing
Housing Certificate or''.
PART 290--DISPOSITION OF MULTIFAMILY PROJECTS AND SALE OF HUD-HELD
MULTIFAMILY MORTGAGES
0
25. The authority for part 290 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701z-11, 1701z-12, 1713, 1715b, 1715z-1b,
1715z-11a; 42 U.S.C. 3535(d) and 3535(i).
Sec. 290.3 [AMENDED]
0
26. In Sec. 290.3, amend the definition of ``Sufficient, habitable,
affordable, rental
[[Page 38291]]
housing is available'' by removing the words ``certificates or'' from
paragraph (4).
Sec. 290.9 [AMENDED]
0
27. Amend Sec. 290.9 by:
0
a. In paragraph (b)(2), removing the words ``or rental certificate'';
0
b. In paragraph (b)(4):
0
i. Removing the words ``or rental certificate'' from the paragraph
heading; and
0
ii. Removing the words ``or certificates''.
0
28. Revise and republish Sec. 290.19 to read as follows:
Sec. 290.19 Restrictions concerning nondiscrimination against Section
8 voucher holders.
The purchaser of any multifamily housing project shall not refuse
unreasonably to lease a dwelling unit offered for rent, offer to sell
cooperative stock, or otherwise discriminate in the terms of tenancy or
cooperative purchase and sale because any tenant or purchaser is the
holder of a Voucher under Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of
1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f), or any successor legislation. The purchaser's
agreement to this condition must be contained in any contract of sale
and also may be contained in any regulatory agreement, use agreement,
or deed entered into in connection with the disposition.
Sec. 290.39 [AMENDED]
0
29. Amend Sec. 290.39(a) by removing the words ``certificate or''.
PART 882--SECTION 8 MODERATE REHABILITATION PROGRAMS
0
30. The authority for part 882 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
Sec. 882.514 [AMENDED]
0
31. Amend Sec. 882.514(e) by removing the words ``certificate or''
wherever they appear.
PART 888--SECTION 8 HOUSING ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM--FAIR
MARKET RENTS AND CONTRACT RENT ANNUAL ADJUSTMENT FACTORS
0
32. The authority for part 888 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535d.
0
33. Amend Sec. 888.113 by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (a) and (c)(3), and revising and republishing
paragraph (h);
0
b. In paragraph (i)(2), removing the citation ``24 CFR 982.503(f)'' and
adding, in its place, the citation ``24 CFR 982.503(g)''; and
0
c. Revising the first sentence of paragraph (i)(3).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 888.113 Fair market rents for existing housing: Methodology.
(a) Basis for setting fair market rents. Fair Market Rents (FMRs)
are estimates of rent plus the cost of utilities, except telephone.
FMRs are housing market-wide estimates of rents that provide
opportunities to rent standard quality housing throughout the
geographic area in which rental housing units are in competition. The
level at which FMRs are set is expressed as a percentile point within
the rent distribution of standard quality rental housing units in the
FMR area. FMRs are set at the 40th percentile rent, the dollar amount
below which the rent for 40 percent of standard quality rental housing
units fall within the FMR area. The 40th percentile rent is drawn from
the distribution of rents of all units within the FMR area that are
occupied by recent movers. Adjustments are made to exclude public
housing units and substandard units.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) If a metropolitan area meets the criteria of paragraph (c)(1)
of this section, Small Area FMRs will apply to the metropolitan area
and all PHAs administering HCV programs in that area will be required
to use Small Area FMRs. A PHA administering an HCV program in either a
metropolitan area not subject to the application of Small Area FMRs or
in a non-metropolitan area for which HUD publishes Small Area FMRs may
choose to use Small Area FMRs after notification to HUD. A PHA that
exercises this option in one metropolitan area or non-metropolitan
county is not required to exercise this option in other metropolitan
areas or non-metropolitan counties.
* * * * *
(h) Small Area FMRs and project-based vouchers. Unless one of the
following exceptions apply, Small Area FMRs do not apply to project-
based vouchers regardless of whether HUD designates the metropolitan
area or the PHA notifies HUD and implements the Small Area FMRs under
paragraph (c)(3) of this section. (See 24 CFR 983.301(f)(3) for
separate requirements regarding the applicability of exception payment
standards based on Small Area FMRs to PBV projects.)
(1) Where the proposal or project selection date under 24 CFR
983.51(g) was on or before the effective dates of either or both the
Small Area FMR designation/implementation and the PHA administrative
policy, the PHA and owner may mutually agree to apply the Small Area
FMR. The application of the Small Area FMRs must be prospective and
consistent with the PHA Administrative Plan. The owner and PHA may not
subsequently choose to revert back to the use of the metropolitan-wide
or county-wide FMRs for the PBV project. If the rent to owner will
increase as a result of the mutual agreement to apply the Small Area
FMRs to the PBV project, the rent increase shall not be effective until
the next annual anniversary of the HAP contract in accordance with 24
CFR 983.302(b).
(2) Where the proposal or project selection date under 24 CFR
983.51(g) was after the effective dates of both the Small Area FMR
designation/implementation and the PHA administrative policy, the Small
Area FMRs shall apply to the PBV project if the PHA Administrative Plan
provides that Small Area FMRs are used for all future PBV projects. If
the PHA chooses to implement this administrative policy, the Small Area
FMRs must apply to all future PBV projects located within the same
metropolitan area or non-metropolitan county where the Small Area FMRs
are in effect for the PHA's HCV program. An owner and the PHA may not
subsequently choose to apply the metropolitan area or county FMR to the
project, regardless of whether the PHA subsequently changes its
Administrative Plan to revert to the use of metropolitan-wide or
county-wide FMR for future PBV projects.
(3) For purposes of this section, the term ``effective date of the
Small Area FMR designation'' means:
(i) The date that HUD designated a metropolitan area as a Small
Area FMR area; or
(ii) The date that HUD approved a PHA request to voluntarily opt to
use Small Area FMRs for its HCV program, as applicable.
(4) For purposes of this section, the term ``effective date of the
PHA administrative policy'' means the date the administrative policy
was formally adopted as part of the PHA administrative plan by the PHA
Board of Commissioners or other authorized PHA officials in accordance
with Sec. 982.54(a).
(i) * * *
(3) HUD will calculate the 50th percentile rents for certain
metropolitan areas for this purpose. * * *
[[Page 38292]]
PART 891--SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR THE ELDERLY AND PERSONS WITH
DISABILITIES
0
34. The authority for part 891 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701q; 42 U.S.C. 1437f, 3535(d), and 8013.
Sec. 891.125 [AMENDED]
0
35. Amend Sec. 891.125(c)(3)(iii)(F) by removing the words
``Certificate and''.
PART 903--PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCY PLANS
0
36. The authority for part 903 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437c; 42 U.S.C. 1437c-1; Pub. L. 110-289;
42 U.S.C. 3535d.
Sec. 903.3 [AMENDED]
0
37. Amend Sec. 903.3(b)(2) by adding the words ``and project-based''
after the words ``tenant-based''.
0
38. Revise Sec. 903.4(a)(2)(i) to read as follows:
Sec. 903.4 What are the public housing agency plans?
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) Section 8 assistance (tenant-based assistance (24 CFR part 982)
and project-based assistance (24 CFR part 983) under Section 8(o) of
the U.S. Housing Act of 1937, 42 U.S.C. 1437f(o)); or
* * * * *
0
39. Amend Sec. 903.6 by adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 903.6 What information must a PHA provide in the 5-Year Plan?
* * * * *
(c) If a PHA intends to select one or more projects for project-
based assistance without competition in accordance with Sec.
983.51(c), the PHA must include a statement of this intent in its 5-
Year Plan (or an amendment to the 5-Year Plan) in order to notify the
public prior to making a noncompetitive selection.
0
40. Amend Sec. 903.7 by:
0
a. In the introductory text, removing the phrase ``both public housing
and tenant-based assistance'' and adding, in its place, the phrase
``public housing, tenant-based assistance, and project-based
assistance'';
0
b. Revising paragraph (a)(1) introductory text, and paragraphs (b)(3),
(c), (d), and (e)(4);
0
c. In paragraph (f), adding ``and project-based assistance'' after the
phrase ``tenant-based assistance'';
0
d. Revising paragraphs (l)(1)(iii) and (2); and
0
e. Redesignating paragraph (r) as paragraph (s) and adding new
paragraph (r).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 903.7 What information must a PHA provide in the Annual Plan?
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(1) This statement must address the housing needs of the low-income
and very low-income families who reside in the jurisdiction served by
the PHA, and other families who are on the public housing and Section 8
tenant-based and project-based assistance waiting lists, including:
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) Other admissions policies. The PHA's admission policies that
include any other PHA policies that govern eligibility, selection and
admissions for the public housing (see part 960 of this title) and
tenant-based assistance programs (see part 982, subpart E of this
title) and project-based assistance programs (see part 982, subpart E
of this title except as provided in Sec. 983.3, and subpart F of 983).
(The information requested on site-based waiting lists and
deconcentration is applicable only to public housing.)
(c) A statement of financial resources. This statement must address
the financial resources that are available to the PHA for the support
of Federal public housing, tenant-based assistance, and project-based
assistance programs administered by the PHA during the plan year. The
statement must include a listing, by general categories, of the PHA's
anticipated resources, such as PHA operating, capital and other
anticipated Federal resources available to the PHA, as well as tenant
rents and other income available to support public housing, tenant-
based assistance, and project-based assistance. The statement also
should include the non-Federal sources of funds supporting each Federal
program, and state the planned uses for the resources.
(d) A statement of the PHA's rent determination policies. This
statement must describe the PHA's basic discretionary policies that
govern rents charged for public housing units, applicable flat rents,
and the rental contributions of families receiving tenant-based
assistance and project-based assistance. For tenant-based assistance
and project-based assistance, this statement also shall cover any
discretionary minimum tenant rents and payment standard policies.
(e) * * *
(4) The information requested on a PHA's rules, standards and
policies regarding management and maintenance of housing applies only
to public housing. The information requested on PHA program management
and listing of administered programs applies to public housing, tenant-
based assistance, and project-based assistance.
* * * * *
(l) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) How the PHA will comply with the requirements of section
12(c) and (d) of the 1937 Act (42 U.S.C. 1437j(c) and (d)). These
statutory provisions relate to community service by public housing
residents and treatment of income changes in public housing, tenant-
based assistance, and project-based assistance recipients resulting
from welfare program requirements. PHAs must address any cooperation
agreements, as described in section 12(d)(7) of the 1937 Act (42 U.S.C.
1437j(d)(7)), that the PHA has entered into or plans to enter into.
(2) The information required by paragraph (l) of this section is
applicable to public housing, tenant-based assistance, and project-
based assistance, except that the information regarding the PHA's
compliance with the community service requirement applies only to
public housing.
* * * * *
(r) A statement of participation in the project-based assistance
program. If a PHA participates in the project-based assistance program,
the PHA's Annual Plan must include a statement of the projected number
of project-based units, the general location of the project-based
units, and how project-basing would be consistent with its Annual Plan.
* * * * *
Sec. 903.11 [AMENDED]
0
41. Amend Sec. 903.11 by:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(3), adding ``and/or project-based assistance''
after ``tenant-based assistance'';
0
b. In paragraph (c)(1), removing the reference ``Sec. 903.7(a), (b),
(c), (d), (g), (h), (k), (m), (n), (o), (p) and (r)'' and adding, in
its place, the reference ``903.7(a), (b), (c), (d), (g), (h), (k), (m),
(n), (o), (p), (r), and (s)'';
0
c. In paragraph (c)(3), adding ``and/or project-based assistance''
after ``tenant-based assistance'', and removing the reference
``903.7(a), (b), (c), (d), (g), (h), (k), (m), (n), (o), (p) and (r)''
and adding, in its place, the reference ``903.7(a), (b), (c), (d), (g),
(h), (k), (m), (n), (o), (p), (r), and (s)''.
0
42. Amend Sec. 903.12 by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (b) and (c)(1);
[[Page 38293]]
0
b. Removing paragraph (c)(2) and redesignating paragraph (c)(3) as
paragraph (c)(2); and
0
c. In redesignated paragraph (c)(2), removing the reference to ``and
(r)'' and adding. in its place, a reference to ``and (s)''.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 903.12 What are the streamlined Annual Plan requirements for
small PHAs?
* * * * *
(b) Streamlined Annual Plan requirements for fiscal years in which
its 5-Year Plan is also due. For the fiscal year in which its 5-Year
Plan is also due, the streamlined Annual Plan of the small PHA shall
consist of the information required by Sec. 903.7(a), (b), (c), (d),
(g), (h), (k), (o) (r), and (s). The information required by Sec.
903.7(a) must be included only to the extent it pertains to the housing
needs of families that are on the PHA's public housing and Section 8
tenant-based assistance and project-based assistance waiting lists. The
information required by Sec. 903.7(k) must be included only to the
extent that the PHA participates in homeownership programs under
Section 8(y) of the 1937 Act. The information required in Sec.
903.7(r) must be included only to the extent that the PHA participates
in the project-based assistance program.
(c) * * *
(1) The information required by Sec. 903.7(g) and (o) and, if
applicable, Sec. 903.7(b)(2) with respect to site-based waiting lists,
Sec. 903.7(k)(1)(i) with respect to homeownership programs under
Section 8(y) of the 1937 Act, and Sec. 903.7(r) with respect to
participation in the project-based assistance program;
* * * * *
Sec. 903.13 [AMENDED]
0
43. Amend Sec. 903.13(b)(1) and (3) by adding ``and/or project-based
assistance'' after ``tenant-based assistance'' every time it appears.
0
44. Amend Sec. 903.15 by revising paragraph (c) introductory text to
read as follows:
Sec. 903.15 What is the relationship of the public housing agency
plans to the Consolidated Plan and a PHA's Fair Housing Requirements?
* * * * *
(c) Fair housing requirements. A PHA is obligated to affirmatively
further fair housing in its operating policies, procedures, and capital
activities. All admission and occupancy policies for public housing and
Section 8 tenant-based and project-based housing programs must comply
with Fair Housing Act requirements and other civil rights laws and
regulations and with a PHA's plans to affirmatively further fair
housing. The PHA may not impose any specific income or racial quotas
for any development or developments.
* * * * *
PART 908--ELECTRONIC TRANSMISSION OF REQUIRED FAMILY DATA FOR
PUBLIC HOUSING, INDIAN HOUSING, AND THE SECTION 8 RENTAL VOUCHER,
AND MODERATE REHABILITATION PROGRAMS
0
45. The authority citation for part 908 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f, 3535(d), 3543, 3544, and 3608a.
0
46. Revise the part heading to read as set forth above.
Sec. 908.101 [AMENDED]
0
47. Amend Sec. 908.101 by removing the phrase ``Rental Certificate,''.
PART 943--PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCY CONSORTIA AND JOINT VENTURES
0
48. The authority for part 943 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437k and 3535(d).
Sec. 943.120 [AMENDED]
0
49. Amend Sec. 943.120(a)(2) by:
0
a. Removing the words ``and certificate'' and ``certificate and''; and
0
b. Removing the word ``programs'' and adding, in its place, the word
``program''.
PART 945--DESIGNATED HOUSING--PUBLIC HOUSING DESIGNATED FOR
OCCUPANCY BY DISABLED, ELDERLY, OR DISABLED AND ELDERLY FAMILIES
0
50. The authority for part 945 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1473e and 3535(d).
Sec. 945.103 [AMENDED]
0
51. Amend Sec. 945.103(b)(2) by removing the words ``certificates
and''.
PART 960--ADMISSION TO, AND OCCUPANCY OF, PUBLIC HOUSING
0
52. The authority citation for part 960 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437d, 1437n, 1437z-3, and
3535(d).
0
53. Amend Sec. 960.202 by redesignating (c) as paragraph (d) and
adding new paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 960.202 Tenant selection policies.
* * * * *
(c) Priority for tenant-based and project-based voucher families
displaced due to HQS non-compliance. The PHA must adopt a preference
for tenant-based and project-based families displaced due to HQS
noncompliance in accordance with Sec. 982.404(e)(2) and Sec.
983.208(d)(6)(ii).
* * * * *
PART 972--CONVERSION OF PUBLIC HOUSING TO TENANT-BASED ASSISTANCE
0
54. The authority citation for part 972 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437t, 1437z-5, and 3535(d).
Sec. 972.218 [AMENDED]
0
55. Amend Sec. 972.218(c)(2)(i) by removing the words ``certificates
or''.
PART 982--SECTION 8 TENANT-BASED ASSISTANCE: HOUSING CHOICE VOUCHER
PROGRAM
0
56. The authority citation for part 982 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
PART 982 [AMENDED]
0
57. Amend part 982 by revising all references to ``administrative
plan'' and ``Administrative plan'' to read ``Administrative Plan.''
0
58. Amend Sec. 982.4 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (a); and
0
b. In paragraph (b):
0
c. Adding in alphabetical order definitions for ``Abatement'',
``Authorized voucher units'', and ``Building'';
0
d. Revising the definition of ``Fair market rent (FMR)'';
0
e. Adding in alphabetical order definitions for ``Foster adult'',
``Foster child'';
0
f. Revising the definition of ``Housing quality standards (HQS)'';
0
g. Adding in alphabetical order definitions for ``Independent entity'',
``PHA-owned unit'', ``Request for Tenancy Approval (RFTA)'', ``Section
8 Management Assessment Program (SEMAP)'', ``Small Area Fair Market
Rents (SAFMRs)'', ``Tenant-paid utilities'', and ``Withholding''.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 982.4 Definitions.
(a) Definitions found elsewhere. (1) The following terms are
defined in 24 CFR part 5, subpart A: 1937 Act, Covered person, Drug,
Drug-related
[[Page 38294]]
criminal activity, federally assisted housing, Guest, Household, HUD,
MSA, Other person under the tenant's control, Public housing, Section
8, and Violent criminal activity.
(2) The following terms are defined in 24 CFR part 5, subpart D:
Disabled family, Elderly family, Near-elderly family, and Person with
disabilities.
(3) The following terms are defined in 24 CFR part 5, subpart F:
Adjusted income, Annual income, Extremely low income family, Total
tenant payment, Utility allowance, and Welfare assistance.
(b) * * *
Abatement. Stopping HAP payments to an owner with no potential for
retroactive payment.
* * * * *
Authorized voucher units. The number of units for which a PHA is
authorized to make assistance payments to owners under its annual
contributions contract.
* * * * *
Building. A structure with a roof and walls that contains one or
more dwelling units.
* * * * *
Fair market rent (FMR). The rent, including the cost of utilities
(except telephone), as established by HUD for units of varying sizes
(by number of bedrooms), that must be paid in the housing market area
to rent privately owned, existing, decent, safe and sanitary rental
housing of modest (non-luxury) nature with suitable amenities. In the
HCV program, the FMR may be established at the ZIP code level (see
definition of Small Area Fair Market Rents), metropolitan area level,
or non-metropolitan county level.
* * * * *
Foster adult. A member of the household who is 18 years of age or
older and meets the definition of a foster adult under State law. In
general, a foster adult is a person who is 18 years of age or older, is
unable to live independently due to a debilitating physical or mental
condition and is placed with the family by an authorized placement
agency or by judgment, decree, or other order of any court of competent
jurisdiction.
Foster child. A member of the household who meets the definition of
a foster child under State law. In general, a foster child is placed
with the family by an authorized placement agency (e.g., public child
welfare agency) or by judgment, decree, or other order of any court of
competent jurisdiction.
* * * * *
Housing quality standards (HQS). The minimum quality standards
developed by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR 5.703 for the HCV program,
including any variations approved by HUD for the PHA under 24 CFR
5.705(a)(3).
Independent entity. (i) The unit of general local government;
however, if the PHA itself is the unit of general local government or
an agency of such government, then only the next level of general local
government (or an agency of such government) or higher may serve as the
independent entity; or
(ii) A HUD-approved entity that is autonomous and recognized under
State law as a separate legal entity from the PHA. The entity must not
be connected financially (except regarding compensation for services
performed for PHA-owned units) or in any other manner that could result
in the PHA improperly influencing the entity.
* * * * *
PHA-owned unit. (i) A dwelling unit in a project that is:
(A) Owned by the PHA (including having a controlling interest in
the entity that owns the project);
(B) Owned by an entity wholly controlled by the PHA; or
(C) Owned by a limited liability company or limited partnership in
which the PHA (or an entity wholly controlled by the PHA) holds a
controlling interest in the managing member or general partner.
(ii) A controlling interest is:
(A) Holding more than 50 percent of the stock of any corporation;
(B) Having the power to appoint more than 50 percent of the members
of the board of directors of a non-stock corporation (such as a
nonprofit corporation);
(C) Where more than 50 percent of the members of the board of
directors of any corporation also serve as directors, officers, or
employees of the PHA;
(D) Holding more than 50 percent of all managing member interests
in an LLC;
(E) Holding more than 50 percent of all general partner interests
in a partnership; or
(F) Equivalent levels of control in other ownership structures.
* * * * *
Request for Tenancy Approval (RFTA). A form (form HUD-52517)
submitted by or on behalf of a family to a PHA once the family has
identified a unit that it wishes to rent using tenant-based voucher
assistance.
* * * * *
Section 8 Management Assessment Program (SEMAP). A system used by
HUD to measure PHA performance in key Section 8 program areas. See 24
CFR part 985.
* * * * *
Small Area Fair Market Rents (SAFMRs or Small Area FMRs). Small
Area FMRs are FMRs established for U.S. Postal Service ZIP code areas
and are calculated in accordance with 24 CFR 888.113(a) and (b).
* * * * *
Tenant-paid utilities. Utilities and services that are not included
in the rent to owner and are the responsibility of the assisted family,
regardless of whether the payment goes to the utility company or the
owner. The utilities and services are those necessary in the locality
to provide housing that complies with HQS. The utilities and services
may also include those required by HUD through a Federal Register
notice after providing opportunity for public comment.
* * * * *
Withholding. Stopping HAP payments to an owner while holding them
for potential retroactive disbursement.
0
59. Amend Sec. 982.54 by:
0
a. In paragraph (b), removing the term ``PHA plan'' and adding, in its
place, the term ``PHA Plan'';
0
b. Revising paragraph (d) introductory text and paragraph (d)(4)(iii);
0
c. Adding new paragraph (d)(4)(iv);
0
d. Revising paragraphs (d)(14), (18), (21), (22), and (23); and
0
e. Adding paragraphs (d)(24) through (26).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 982.54 Administrative Plan.
* * * * *
(d) The PHA Administrative Plan must cover all the PHA's local
policies for administration of the program, including the PHA's
policies on the following subjects (see 24 CFR 983.10 for a list of
subjects specific to the project-based voucher (PBV) program that also
must be included in the Administrative Plan of a PHA that operates a
PBV program):
(4) * * *
(iii) Standards for denying admission or terminating assistance
based on criminal activity or alcohol abuse in accordance with Sec.
982.553, or other factors in accordance with Sec. Sec. 982.552,
982.554, and 982.555; and
(iv) Policies concerning residency by a foster child, foster adult,
or live-in aide, including defining when PHA consent for occupancy by a
foster child, foster adult, or live-in aide must be given or may be
denied;
* * * * *
(14) Payment standard policies, including:
[[Page 38295]]
(i) The process for establishing and revising payment standards,
including whether the PHA has voluntarily adopted the use of Small Area
Fair Market Rents (SAFMRs);
(ii) A description of how the PHA will administer decreases in the
payment standard amount for a family continuing to reside in a unit for
which the family is receiving assistance (see Sec. 982.505(c)(3)); and
(iii) If the PHA establishes different payment standard amounts for
designated areas within its jurisdiction, including exception areas,
the criteria used to determine the designated areas and the payment
standard amounts for those designated areas. (See Sec. 982.503(a)(2)).
All such areas must be described in the PHA's Administrative Plan or
payment standard schedule;
* * * * *
(18) Policies concerning interim redeterminations of family income
and composition, the frequency of determinations of family income, and
income-determination practices, including whether the PHA will accept a
family declaration of assets;
* * * * *
(21) Procedural guidelines and performance standards for conducting
required HQS inspections, including:
(i) Any deficiency that the PHA has adopted as a life-threatening
deficiency that is not a HUD-required life-threatening deficiency.
(ii) For PHAs that adopt the initial inspection non-life-
threatening deficiency option:
(A) The PHA's policy on whether the provision will apply to all
initial inspections or a portion of initial inspections.
(B) The PHA's policy on whether the provision will be applied to
only some inspections and how the units will be selected.
(C) The PHA's policy on using withheld HAP funds to repay an owner
once the unit is in compliance with HQS.
(iii) For PHAs that adopt the alternative inspection provision:
(A) The PHA's policy on how it will apply the provision to initial
and periodic inspections.
(B) The specific alternative inspection method used by the PHA.
(C) The specific properties or types of properties where the
alternative inspection method will be employed.
(D) For initial inspections, the maximum amount of time the PHA
will withhold HAP if the owner does not correct the HQS deficiencies
within the cure period, and the period of time after which the PHA will
terminate the HAP contract for the owner's failure to correct the
deficiencies, which may not exceed 180 days from the effective date of
the HAP contract.
(iv) The PHA's policy on charging a reinspection fee to owners.
(22) The PHA's policy on withholding HAP for units that do not meet
HQS (see Sec. 982.404(d)(1));
(23) The PHA's policy on assisting families with relocating and
finding a new unit (see Sec. 982.404(e)(3));
(24) The PHA's policy on screening of applicants for family
behavior or suitability for tenancy;
(25) Whether the PHA will permit a family to submit more than one
Request for Tenancy Approval at a time (see Sec. 982.302(b)); and
(26) In the event of insufficient funding, taking into account any
cost-savings measures taken by the PHA, a description of the factors
the PHA will consider when determining which HAP contracts to terminate
first (e.g., prioritization of PBV HAP contracts over tenant-based HAP
contracts or prioritization of contracts that serve vulnerable families
or individuals).
0
60. Amend Sec. 982.301 by:
0
a. Revising and republishing paragraph (a)
0
b. Revising paragraphs (b)(8), (10), (12), (14) and (15);
0
c. Adding paragraph (c).
The revisions, addition, and republication read as follows:
Sec. 982.301 Information when family is selected.
(a) Oral briefing. When the PHA selects a family to participate in
a tenant-based program, the PHA must give the family an oral briefing.
(1) The briefing must include information on the following
subjects:
(i) A description of how the program works;
(ii) Family and owner responsibilities;
(iii) Where the family may lease a unit, including renting a
dwelling unit inside or outside the PHA jurisdiction, and any
information on selecting a unit that HUD provides;
(iv) An explanation of how portability works; and
(v) An explanation of the advantages of areas that do not have a
high concentration of low-income families.
(2) The PHA may not discourage the family from choosing to live
anywhere in the PHA jurisdiction, or outside the PHA jurisdiction under
portability procedures, unless otherwise expressly authorized by
statute, regulation, PIH Notice, or court order. The family must be
informed of how portability may affect the family's assistance through
screening, subsidy standards, payment standards, and any other elements
of the portability process which may affect the family's assistance.
(3) The PHA must take appropriate steps to ensure effective
communication in accordance with 24 CFR 8.6 and 28 CFR part 35, subpart
E, and must provide information on the reasonable accommodation
process.
(b) * * *
(8) PHA subsidy standards, including when the PHA will consider
granting exceptions to the standards as allowed by 24 CFR
982.402(b)(8), and when exceptions are required as a reasonable
accommodation for persons with disabilities under Section 504, the Fair
Housing Act, or the Americans with Disabilities Act;
* * * * *
(10) Information on Federal, State, and local equal opportunity
laws, the contact information for the Section 504 coordinator, a copy
of the housing discrimination complaint form, and information on how to
request a reasonable accommodation or modification (including
information on requesting exception payment standards as a reasonable
accommodation) under Section 504, the Fair Housing Act, and the
Americans with Disabilities Act;
* * * * *
(12) Notice that if the family includes a person with disabilities,
the PHA is subject to the requirement under 24 CFR 8.28(a)(3) to
provide a current listing of accessible units known to the PHA and, if
necessary, other assistance in locating an available accessible
dwelling unit;
* * * * *
(14) The advantages of areas that do not have a high concentration
of low-income families which may include, access to accessible and
high-quality housing, transit, employment opportunities, educational
opportunities, recreational facilities, public safety stations, retail
services, and health services; and
(15) A description of when the PHA is required to give a
participant family the opportunity for an informal hearing and how to
request a hearing.
(c) Providing information for persons with limited English
proficiency (LEP). The PHA must take reasonable steps to ensure
meaningful access by persons with limited English proficiency in
accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and HUD's
implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 1.
0
61. Amend Sec. 982.305 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (a) introductory text and paragraph (b)(1)
introductory text;
[[Page 38296]]
0
b. Adding paragraph (b)(2) introductory text;
0
c. Revising paragraph (b)(2)(ii);
0
d. Redesignating paragraph (b)(3) as paragraph (b)(4), and adding new
paragraph (b)(3);
0
e. Revising paragraph (c)(4); and
0
f. Adding paragraph (f).
The revision and additions read as follows:
Sec. 982.305 PHA approval of assisted tenancy.
(a) Program requirements. The PHA may not give approval for the
family of the assisted tenancy, or execute a HAP contract, until the
PHA has determined that:
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) The following must be completed before the beginning of the
initial term of the lease for a unit:
* * * * *
(2) The timeframes for inspection:
* * * * *
(ii) The 15-day clock (under paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section)
is suspended during any period when the unit is not available for
inspection.
(3) If the PHA has implemented, and the unit is covered by, the
alternative inspection option for initial inspections under Sec.
982.406(e), the PHA is not subject to paragraphs (a)(2), (b)(1)(i), and
(b)(2) of this section.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(4) Any HAP contract executed after the 60-day period is void, and
the PHA may not pay any housing assistance payment to the owner, unless
there are extenuating circumstances that prevent or prevented the PHA
from meeting the 60-day deadline, then the PHA may submit to the HUD
field office a request for an extension. The request, which must be
submitted no later than two weeks after the 60-day deadline, must
include an explanation of the extenuating circumstances and any
supporting documentation. HUD at its sole discretion will determine if
the extension request is approved.
* * * * *
(f) Initial HQS inspection requirements. (1) Unless the PHA has
implemented, and determined that the unit is covered by, either of the
two initial HQS inspection options in paragraphs (f)(2) and (3) of this
section, the unit must be inspected by the PHA and pass HQS before:
(i) The PHA may approve the assisted tenancy and execute the HAP
contract, and
(ii) The beginning of the initial lease term.
(2) If the PHA has implemented, and determines that the unit is
covered by, the non-life-threatening deficiencies option at Sec.
982.405(j), the unit must be inspected by the PHA and must have no
life-threatening deficiencies before:
(i) The PHA may approve the assisted tenancy and execute the HAP
contract; and
(ii) The beginning of the initial lease term.
(3) If the PHA has implemented and determines that the unit is
covered by the alternative inspection option at Sec. 982.406(e), then
the PHA must determine that the unit was inspected in the previous 24
months by an inspection that meets the requirements of Sec. 982.406
before:
(i) The PHA may approve the assisted tenancy and execute the HAP
contract; and
(ii) The beginning of the initial lease term.
(4) If the PHA has implemented and determines that the unit is
covered by both the no life-threatening deficiencies option and the
alternative inspection option, the unit is subject only to paragraph
(f)(3) of this section, not paragraph (f)(2) of this section.
0
62. Amend Sec. 982.352 by:
0
a. Adding ``or'' at the end of paragraph (a)(5); and
0
b. Revising paragraph (b).
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 982.352 Eligible housing.
* * * * *
(b) PHA-owned housing. (1) PHA-owned units, as defined in Sec.
982.4, may be assisted under the tenant-based program only if all the
following conditions are satisfied:
(i) The PHA must inform the family, both orally and in writing,
that the family has the right to select any eligible unit available for
lease.
(ii) A PHA-owned unit is freely selected by the family, without PHA
pressure or steering.
(iii) The unit selected by the family is not ineligible housing.
(iv) During assisted occupancy, the family may not benefit from any
form of housing subsidy that is prohibited under paragraph (c) of this
section.
(v)(A) The PHA must obtain the services of an independent entity,
as defined in Sec. 982.4, to perform the following PHA functions as
required under the program rule:
(1) To determine rent reasonableness in accordance with Sec.
982.507. The independent entity shall communicate the rent
reasonableness determination to the family and the PHA.
(2) To assist the family in negotiating the rent to owner in
accordance with Sec. 982.506.
(3) To inspect the unit for compliance with HQS in accordance with
Sec. Sec. 982.305(a) and 982.405. The independent entity shall
communicate the results of each such inspection to the family and the
PHA.
(B) The PHA may compensate the independent entity from PHA
administrative fees (including fees credited to the administrative fee
reserve) for the services performed by the independent entity. The PHA
may not use other program receipts to compensate the independent entity
for such services. The PHA and the independent entity may not charge
the family any fee or charge for the services provided by the
independent entity.
(2) [Reserved]
* * * * *
0
63. Revise Sec. 982.401 to read as follows:
Sec. 982.401 Housing quality standards.
As defined in Sec. 982.4, HQS refers to the minimum quality
standards developed by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR 5.703, including
any variations approved by HUD for the PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3).
Sec. 982.402 [Amended]
0
64. Amend Sec. 982.402(b)(2) by removing the words ``housing quality
standards (HQS)'' and adding, in their place, the term ``HQS''.
0
65. Revise and republish Sec. 982.404 to read as follows:
Sec. 982.404 Maintenance: Owner and family responsibility; PHA
remedies.
(a) Owner obligation. (1) The owner must maintain the unit in
accordance with HQS. A unit is not in compliance with HQS if the PHA or
other inspector authorized by the State or local government determines
that the unit has HQS deficiencies based upon an inspection, the agency
or inspector notifies the owner in writing of the HQS deficiencies, and
the deficiencies are not remedied within the appropriate timeframe.
(2) If the owner fails to maintain the dwelling unit in accordance
with HQS, the PHA must take enforcement action in accordance with this
section.
(3) If a deficiency is life-threatening, the owner must correct the
deficiency within 24 hours of notification. For other deficiencies, the
owner must correct the deficiency within 30 calendar days of
notification (or any reasonable PHA-approved extension).
(4) In the case of an HQS deficiency that the PHA determines is
caused by the tenant, any member of the household, or any guest or
other person under the tenant's control, other than
[[Page 38297]]
any damage resulting from ordinary use, the PHA may waive the owner's
responsibility to remedy the violation. The HAP to the owner may not be
withheld or abated if the owner responsibility has been waived.
However, the PHA may terminate assistance to a family because of an HQS
breach beyond damage resulting from ordinary use caused by any member
of the household or any guest or other person under the tenant's
control.
(b) Family obligation. (1) The family may be held responsible for a
breach of the HQS that is caused by any of the following:
(i) The family fails to pay for any utilities that the owner is not
required to pay for, but which are to be paid by the tenant;
(ii) The family fails to provide and maintain any appliances that
the owner is not required to provide, but which are to be provided by
the tenant; or
(iii) Any member of the household or guest damages the dwelling
unit or premises (damages beyond ordinary wear and tear)
(2) If the PHA has waived the owner's responsibility to remedy the
violation in accordance with paragraph (a)(4) of this section, the
following applies:
(i) If the HQS breach caused by the family is life-threatening, the
family must take all steps permissible under the lease and State and
local law to ensure the deficiency is corrected within 24 hours of
notification.
(ii) For other family-caused deficiencies, the family must take all
steps permissible under the lease and State and local law to ensure
that the deficiency is corrected within 30 calendar days of
notification (or any PHA-approved extension).
(3) If the family has caused a breach of the HQS, the PHA must take
prompt and vigorous action to enforce the family obligations. The PHA
may terminate assistance for the family in accordance with Sec.
982.552.
(c) Determination of noncompliance with HQS. The unit is in
noncompliance with HQS if:
(1) The PHA or authorized inspector determines the unit has HQS
deficiencies based upon an inspection;
(2) The PHA notified the owner in writing of the unit HQS
deficiencies; and
(3) The unit HQS deficiencies are not corrected in accordance with
the timeframes established in paragraph (a)(3) of this section.
(d) PHA remedies for HQS deficiencies identified during inspections
other than the initial inspection. This subsection covers PHA actions
when HQS deficiencies are identified as a result of an inspection other
than the initial inspection (see Sec. 982.405). For PHA HQS
enforcement actions for HQS deficiencies under the initial HQS
inspection NLT or alternative inspection options, see Sec. Sec.
982.405(j) and 982.406(e), respectively.
(1) A PHA may withhold assistance payments for units that have HQS
deficiencies once the PHA has notified the owner in writing of the
deficiencies. The PHA must identify in its Administrative Plan the
conditions under which it will withhold HAP. If the unit is brought
into compliance during the applicable cure period (within 24 hours of
notification for life-threatening deficiencies and within 30 days of
notification (or other reasonable period established by the PHA) for
non-life-threatening deficiencies), the PHA:
(i) Must resume assistance payments; and
(ii) Must provide assistance payments to cover the time period for
which the assistance payments were withheld.
(2)(i) The PHA must abate the HAP, including amounts that had been
withheld, if the owner fails to make the repairs within the applicable
cure period (within 24 hours of notification for life-threatening
deficiencies and within 30 days of notification (or other reasonable
period established by the PHA) for non-life-threatening deficiencies).
(ii) If a PHA abates the assistance payments under this paragraph,
the PHA must notify the family and the owner that it is abating
payments and that if the unit does not meet HQS within 60 days (or a
reasonable longer period established by the PHA) after the
determination of noncompliance in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section, the PHA will terminate the HAP contract for the unit, and the
family will have to move if the family wishes to receive continued
assistance. The PHA must issue the family its voucher to move at least
30 days prior to the termination of the HAP contract.
(3) An owner may not terminate the tenancy of any family due to the
withholding or abatement of assistance under paragraph (a) of this
section. During the period that assistance is abated, the family may
terminate the tenancy by notifying the owner and the PHA. If the family
chooses to terminate the tenancy, the HAP contract will automatically
terminate on the effective date of the tenancy termination or the date
the family vacates the unit, whichever is earlier. The PHA must
promptly issue the family its voucher to move.
(4) If the family did not terminate the tenancy and the owner makes
the repairs and the unit complies with HQS within 60 days (or a
reasonable longer period established by the PHA) of the notice of
abatement, the PHA must recommence payments to the owner. The PHA does
not make any payments to the owner for the period of time that the
payments were abated.
(5) If the owner fails to make the repairs within 60 days (or a
reasonable longer period established by the PHA) of the notice of
abatement, the PHA must terminate the HAP contract.
(e) Relocation due to HQS deficiencies. (1) The PHA must give any
family residing in a unit for which the HAP contract is terminated
under paragraph (d)(5) of this section due to a failure to correct HQS
deficiencies at least 90 days or a longer period as the PHA determines
is reasonably necessary following the termination of the HAP contract
to lease a new unit.
(2) If the family is unable to lease a new unit within the period
provided by the PHA under paragraph (e)(1) of this section and the PHA
owns or operates public housing, the PHA must offer, and, if accepted,
provide the family a selection preference for an appropriate-size
public housing unit that first becomes available for occupancy after
the time period expires.
(3) PHAs may assist families relocating under this paragraph (e) in
finding a new unit, including using up to 2 months of the withheld and
abated assistance payments for costs directly associated with
relocating to a new unit, including security deposits, temporary
housing costs, or other reasonable moving costs as determined by the
PHA based on their locality. If the PHA uses the withheld and abated
assistance payments to assist with the family's relocation costs, the
PHA must provide security deposit assistance to the family as
necessary. PHAs must assist families with disabilities in locating
available accessible units in accordance with 24 CFR 8.28(a)(3). If the
family receives security deposit assistance from the PHA for the new
unit, the PHA may require the family to remit the security deposit
returned by the owner of the new unit at such time that the lease is
terminated, up to the amount of the security deposit assistance
provided by the PHA for that unit. The PHA must include in its
Administrative Plan the policies it will implement for this provision.
(f) Applicability. This section is applicable to HAP contracts that
were either executed on or after or renewed after June 6, 2024. For
purposes of this paragraph, a HAP contract is renewed if
[[Page 38298]]
the HAP contract continues beyond the initial term of the lease. For
all other HAP contracts, Sec. 982.404 as in effect on June 6, 2024
remains applicable.
0
66. Revise Sec. 982.405 to read as follows:
Sec. 982.405 PHA unit inspection.
(a) Initial Inspections. The PHA must inspect the unit leased to a
family prior to the initial term of the lease to determine if the unit
meets the HQS. (See Sec. 982.305(b)(2) concerning timing of initial
inspection by the PHA.)
(b) Periodic Inspections. The PHA must inspect the unit at least
biennially during assisted occupancy to ensure that the unit continues
to meet the HQS, except that a small rural PHA, as defined in Sec.
902.101 of this title, must inspect a unit once every three years
during assisted occupancy to ensure that the unit continues to meet the
HQS.
(c) Supervisory Quality Control Inspections. The PHA must conduct
supervisory quality control HQS inspections.
(d) Interim Inspections. When a participant family or government
official notifies the PHA of a potential deficiency, the following
conditions apply:
(1) Life-Threatening. If the reported deficiency is life-
threatening, the PHA must, within 24 hours of notification, both
inspect the housing unit and notify the owner if the life-threatening
deficiency is confirmed. The owner must then make the repairs within 24
hours of PHA notification.
(2) Non-Life-Threatening. If the reported deficiency is non-life-
threatening, the PHA must, within 15 days of notification, both inspect
the unit and notify the owner if the deficiency is confirmed. The owner
must then make the repairs within 30 days of notification from the PHA
or within any PHA-approved extension.
(3) Extraordinary circumstances. In the event of extraordinary
circumstances, such as if a unit is within a presidentially declared
disaster area, HUD may approve an exception of the 24-hour or the 15-
day inspection requirement until such time as an inspection is
feasible.
(e) Scheduling inspections. In scheduling inspections, the PHA must
consider complaints and any other information brought to the attention
of the PHA.
(f) PHA notification of owner. The PHA must notify the owner of
deficiencies shown by the inspection.
(g) Charge to family for inspection. The PHA may not charge the
family for an initial inspection or reinspection of the unit.
(h) Charge to owner for inspection. The PHA may not charge the
owner for the inspection of the unit prior to the initial term of the
lease or for a first inspection during assisted occupancy of the unit.
The PHA may establish a reasonable fee to owners for a reinspection if
an owner notifies the PHA that a repair has been made or the allotted
time for repairs has elapsed and a reinspection reveals that any
deficiency cited in the previous inspection that the owner is
responsible for repairing, pursuant to Sec. 982.404(a), was not
corrected. The owner may not pass this fee along to the family. Fees
collected under this paragraph (h) will be included in a PHA's
administrative fee reserve and may be used only for activities related
to the provision of the HCV program.
(i) Verification methods. When a PHA must verify correction of a
deficiency, the PHA may use verification methods other than another on-
site inspection. The PHA may establish different verification methods
for initial and non-initial inspections or for different HQS
deficiencies. Upon either an inspection for initial occupancy or a
reinspection, the PHA may accept photographic evidence or other
reliable evidence from the owner to verify that a deficiency has been
corrected.
(j) Initial HQS inspection option: No life-threatening
deficiencies. (1) A PHA may elect to approve an assisted tenancy,
execute the HAP contract, and begin making assistance payments for a
unit that failed the initial HQS inspection, provided that the unit has
no life-threatening deficiencies. A PHA that implements this option
(NLT option) may apply the option to all the PHA's initial inspections
or may limit the use of the option to certain units. The PHA's
Administrative Plan must specify the circumstances under which the PHA
will exercise the NLT option. If the PHA has established, and the unit
is covered by, both the NLT option and the alternative inspections
option for the initial HQS inspection, see Sec. 982.406(f).
(2) The PHA must notify the owner and the family if the NLT option
is available for the unit selected by the family. After completing the
inspection and determining there are no life-threatening deficiencies,
the PHA provides both the owner and the family with a list of all the
non-life-threatening deficiencies identified by the initial HQS
inspection and, should the owner not complete the repairs within 30
days, the maximum amount of time the PHA will withhold HAP before
abating assistance. The PHA must also inform the family that if the
family accepts the unit and the owner fails to make the repairs within
the cure period, which may not exceed 180 days from the effective date
of the HAP contract, the PHA will terminate the HAP contract, and the
family will have to move to another unit in order to receive voucher
assistance. The family may choose to decline the unit based on the
deficiencies and continue its housing search.
(3) If the family decides to lease the unit, the PHA and the owner
execute the HAP contract, and the family enters into the assisted lease
with the owner. The PHA commences making assistance payments to the
owner.
(4) The owner must correct the deficiencies within 30 days from the
effective date of the HAP contract. If the owner fails to correct the
deficiencies within the 30-day cure period, the PHA must withhold the
housing assistance payments until the owner makes the repairs and the
PHA verifies the correction. Once the deficiencies are corrected, the
PHA may use the withheld housing assistance payments to make payments
for the period that payments were withheld.
(5) A PHA relying on the non-life-threatening inspection provision
must identify in the PHA Administrative Plan all the optional policies
identified in Sec. 982.54(d)(21)(i) and (ii).
(6) The PHA establishes in the Administrative Plan:
(i) The maximum amount of time it will withhold payments if the
owner fails to correct the deficiencies within the required cure period
before abating payments; and
(ii) The date by which the PHA will terminate the HAP contract for
the owner's failure to correct the deficiencies, which may not exceed
180 days from the effective date of the HAP contract.
0
67. Revise and republish Sec. 982.406 to read as follows:
Sec. 982.406 Use of alternative inspections.
(a) In general. A PHA may comply with the inspection requirements
in Sec. 982.405(a) and (b) by relying on an alternative inspection
(i.e., an inspection conducted for another housing program) only if the
PHA is able to obtain the results of the alternative inspection. The
PHA may implement the use of alternative inspections for both initial
and periodic inspections or may limit the use of alternative
inspections to either initial or periodic inspections. The PHA may
limit the use of alternative inspections to certain units, as provided
in the PHA's Administrative Plan.
[[Page 38299]]
(b) Administrative Plan. A PHA relying on an alternative inspection
must identify in the PHA Administrative Plan all the optional policies
identified in Sec. 982.54(d)(21)(iii).
(c) Eligible inspection methods. (1) A PHA may rely upon
inspections of housing assisted under the HOME Investment Partnerships
(HOME) program or housing financed using Low-Income Housing Tax Credits
(LIHTCs), or inspections performed by HUD.
(2) If a PHA wishes to rely on an inspection method other than a
method listed in paragraph (c)(1) of this section, then, prior to
amending its administrative plan, the PHA must submit to the Real
Estate Assessment Center (REAC) a copy of the inspection method it
wishes to use, along with its analysis of the inspection method that
shows that the method ``provides the same or greater protection to
occupants of dwelling units'' as would HQS.
(i) A PHA may rely upon such alternative inspection method only
upon receiving approval from REAC to do so.
(ii) A PHA that uses an alternative inspection method approved
under this paragraph must monitor changes to the standards and
requirements applicable to such method. If any change is made to the
alternative inspection method, then the PHA must submit to REAC a copy
of the revised standards and requirements, along with a revised
comparison to HQS. If the PHA or REAC determines that the revision
would cause the alternative inspection to no longer meet or exceed HQS,
then the PHA may no longer rely upon the alternative inspection method
to comply with the inspection requirement at Sec. 982.405(a) and (b).
(d) Use of alternative inspection. (1) If an alternative inspection
method employs sampling, then a PHA may rely on such alternative
inspection method for purposes of an initial or periodic inspection
only if units occupied by voucher program participants are included in
the population of units forming the basis of the sample.
(2) In order for a PHA to rely upon the results of an alternative
inspection for purposes of an initial or periodic inspection, a
property inspected pursuant to such method must meet the standards or
requirements regarding housing quality or safety applicable to
properties assisted under the program using the alternative inspection
method. To make the determination of whether such standards or
requirements are met, the PHA must adhere to the following procedures:
(i) If a property is inspected under an alternative inspection
method, and the property receives a ``pass'' score, then the PHA may
rely on that inspection.
(ii) If a property is inspected under an alternative inspection
method, and the property receives a ``fail'' score, then the PHA may
not rely on that inspection.
(iii) If a property is inspected under an alternative inspection
method that does not employ a pass/fail determination--for example, in
the case of a program where deficiencies are simply identified--then
the PHA must review the list of deficiencies to determine whether any
cited deficiency would have resulted in a ``fail'' score under HQS. If
no such deficiency exists, then the PHA may rely on the inspection. If
such a deficiency does exist, then the PHA may not rely on the
inspection.
(3) Under any circumstance described in paragraph (d)(2) of this
section in which a PHA is prohibited from relying on an alternative
inspection method for a property, the PHA must, within a reasonable
period of time, conduct an HQS inspection of any units in the property
occupied by voucher program participants and follow HQS procedures to
remedy any identified deficiencies.
(e) Initial inspections using the alternative inspection option.
(1) The PHA may approve the tenancy, allow the family to enter into the
lease agreement, and execute the HAP contract for a unit that has been
inspected in the previous 24 months where the alternative inspection
meets the requirements of this section. If the PHA has established and
the unit is covered by both the NLT option under Sec. 982.405(j) and
the alternative inspections option for the initial HQS inspection, see
paragraph (f) of this section.
(2) The PHA notifies the owner and the family that the unit
selected by the family is eligible for the alternative inspection
option. The PHA must provide the family with the PHA list of HQS
deficiencies that are considered life-threatening as part of this
notification. If the owner and family agree to the use of this option,
the PHA approves the assisted tenancy, allows the family to enter into
the lease agreement with the owner, and executes the HAP contract on
the basis of the alternative inspection.
(3) The PHA must conduct an HQS inspection within 30 days of
receiving the Request for Tenancy Approval. If the family reports a
deficiency to the PHA prior to the PHA's HQS inspection, the PHA must
inspect the unit within the time period required under Sec. 982.405(d)
or within 30 days of the effective date of the HAP contract, whichever
time period ends first.
(4) The PHA must enter into the HAP contract with the owner before
conducting the HQS inspection. The PHA may not make housing assistance
payments to the owner until the PHA has inspected the unit.
(5) The PHA may commence housing assistance payments to the owner
and make housing assistance payments retroactive to the effective date
of the HAP contract only after the unit passes the PHA's HQS
inspection. If the unit does not pass the HQS inspection, the PHA may
not make housing assistance payments to the owner until all the
deficiencies have been corrected. If a deficiency is life-threatening,
the owner must correct the deficiency within 24 hours of notification
from the PHA. For other deficiencies, the owner must correct the
deficiency within no more than 30 calendar days (or any PHA-approved
extension) of notification from the PHA. If the owner corrects the
deficiencies within the required cure period, the PHA makes the housing
assistance payments retroactive to the effective date of the HAP
contract.
(6) The PHA establishes in the Administrative Plan:
(i) The maximum amount of time it will withhold payments if the
owner does not correct the deficiencies within the required cure period
before abating payments; and
(ii) The date by which the PHA will terminate the HAP contract for
the owner's failure to correct the deficiencies, which may not exceed
180 days from the effective date of the HAP contract.
(f) Initial inspection: using the alternative inspection option in
combination with the non-life-threatening deficiencies option. (1) The
PHA notifies the owner and the family that both the alternative
inspection option and the NLT option are available for the unit
selected by the family. The PHA must provide the family the list of HQS
deficiencies that are considered life-threatening as part of this
notification. If the owner and family agree to the use of both options,
the PHA approves the assisted tenancy, allows the family to enter into
the lease agreement with the owner, and executes the HAP contract on
the basis of the alternative inspection.
(2) The PHA must conduct an HQS inspection within 30 days after the
family and owner submit a complete Request for Tenancy Approval. If the
family reports a deficiency to the PHA prior to the PHA's HQS
inspection, the PHA must inspect the unit within the time period
required under Sec. 982.405(d) or within 30 days of the effective date
[[Page 38300]]
of the HAP contract, whichever time period ends first.
(3) The PHA must enter into the HAP contract with the owner before
conducting the HQS inspection. The PHA may not make housing assistance
payments to the owner until the PHA has inspected the unit. If the unit
passes the HQS inspection, the PHA commences making housing assistance
payments to the owner and makes payments retroactive to the effective
date of the HAP contract.
(4) If the unit fails the PHA's HQS inspection but has no life-
threatening deficiencies, the PHA commences making housing assistance
payments, which are made retroactive to the effective date of the HAP
contract. The owner must correct the deficiencies within 30 days from
the effective date of the HAP contract. If the owner fails to correct
the deficiencies within the 30-day cure period, the PHA must withhold
the housing assistance payments until the owner makes the repairs and
the PHA verifies the correction. Once the unit is in compliance with
HQS, the PHA may use the withheld housing assistance payments to make
payments for the period that payments were withheld.
(5) If the unit does not pass the HQS inspection and has life-
threatening deficiencies, the PHA may not commence making housing
assistance payments to the owner until all the deficiencies have been
corrected. The owner must correct all life-threatening deficiencies
within 24 hours of notification from the PHA. For other deficiencies,
the owner must correct the deficiency within 30 days (or any PHA-
approved extension) of notification from the PHA. If the owner corrects
the deficiencies within the required cure period, the PHA makes the
housing assistance payments retroactive to the effective date of the
HAP contract.
(6) The PHA establishes in the Administrative Plan:
(i) The maximum amount of time it will withhold payments if the
owner fails to correct the deficiencies within the required cure period
before abating payments; and
(ii) The date by which the PHA will terminate the HAP contract for
the owner's failure to correct the deficiencies, which may not exceed
180 days from the effective date of the HAP contract.
(g) Records retention. As with all other inspection reports, and as
required by Sec. 982.158(f)(4), reports for inspections conducted
pursuant to an alternative inspection method must be obtained by the
PHA. Such reports must be available for HUD inspection for at least
three years from the date of the latest inspection.
0
68. Amend Sec. 982.451 by:
0
a. Adding paragraph headings to paragraphs (a) and (b);
0
b. Revising paragraph (b)(4)(i) introductory text;
0
c. In paragraph (b)(5)(iii) removing the phrase ``program; or'' and
adding in its place the phrase ``program or''.
The revision and additions read as follows:
Sec. 982.451 Housing assistance payments contract.
(a) Form and term.
* * * * *
(b) Housing assistance payment amount.
(4)(i) The part of the rent to owner that is paid by the tenant may
not be more than:
* * * * *
0
69. Delayed indefinitely, amend Sec. 982.451 by adding paragraph (c)
to read as follows:
Sec. 982.451 Housing assistance payments contract.
* * * * *
(c) PHA-owned units. For PHA-owned units that are not owned by a
separate legal entity from the PHA (e.g., an entity wholly controlled
by the PHA or a limited liability company or limited partnership owned
by the PHA), the PHA must choose one of the following options:
(1) Prior to execution of a HAP contract, the PHA must establish a
separate legal entity to serve as the owner. That separate legal entity
must execute the HAP contract with the PHA. The separate legal entity
must have the legal capacity to lease units and must be one of the
following:
(i) A non-profit affiliate or instrumentality of the PHA;
(ii) A limited liability corporation;
(iii) A limited partnership;
(iv) A corporation; or
(v) Any other legally acceptable entity recognized under State law.
(2) The PHA signs the HUD-prescribed PHA-owned certification
covering a PHA-owned unit instead of executing the HAP contract for the
PHA-owned unit. By signing the PHA-owned certification, the PHA
certifies that it will fulfill all the required program
responsibilities of the private owner under the HAP contract, and that
it will also fulfill all of the program responsibilities required of
the PHA for the PHA-owned unit.
(i) The PHA-owned certification serves as the equivalent of the HAP
contract, and subjects the PHA, as owner, to all of the requirements of
the HAP contract contained in part 982. Where the PHA has elected to
use the PHA-owned certification, all references to the HAP contract
throughout part 982 must be interpreted to be references to the PHA-
owned certification.
(ii) The PHA must obtain the services of an independent entity to
perform the required PHA functions identified in Sec.
982.352(b)(1)(v)(A) before signing the PHA-owned certification.
(iii) The PHA may not use the PHA-owned certification if the PHA-
owned unit is owned by a separate legal entity from the PHA (e.g., an
entity wholly controlled by the PHA or a limited liability corporation
or limited partnership controlled by the PHA).
0
70. Revise Sec. 982.503 to read as follows:
Sec. 982.503 Payment standard areas, schedule, and amounts.
(a) Payment standard areas. (1) Annually, HUD publishes fair market
rents (FMRs) for U.S. Postal Service ZIP code areas, metropolitan
areas, and nonmetropolitan counties (see 24 CFR 888.113). Within each
of these FMR areas, the applicable FMR is:
(i) The HUD-published Small Area FMR for:
(A) Any metropolitan area designated as a Small Area FMR area by
HUD in accordance with 24 CFR 888.113(c)(1).
(B) Any area where a PHA has notified HUD that the PHA will
voluntarily use SAFMRs in accordance with 24 CFR 888.113(c)(3).
(ii) The HUD-published metropolitan FMR for any other metropolitan
area.
(iii) The HUD-published FMR for any other non-metropolitan county.
(2) The PHA must adopt a payment standard schedule that establishes
voucher payment standard amounts for each FMR area in the PHA
jurisdiction. These payment standard amounts are used to calculate the
monthly housing assistance payment for a family (Sec. 982.505).
(3) The PHA may designate payment standard areas within each FMR
area. The PHA may establish different payment standard amounts for such
designated areas. If the PHA designates payment standard areas, then it
must include in its Administrative Plan the criteria used to determine
the designated areas and the payment standard amounts for those areas.
(i) The PHA may designate payment standard areas within which
payment standards will be established according to paragraph (c) (basic
range) or paragraph (d) (exception payment standard), of this section.
[[Page 38301]]
(ii) A PHA-designated payment standard area may be no smaller than
a census tract block group.
(b) Payment standard schedule. For each payment standard area, the
PHA must establish a payment standard amount for each unit size,
measured by number of bedrooms (zero-bedroom, one-bedroom, and so on).
These payment standard amounts comprise the PHA's payment standard
schedule.
(c) Basic range payment standard amounts. A basic range payment
standard amount is any dollar amount that is in the range from 90
percent up to 110 percent of the published FMR for a unit size.
(1) The PHA may establish a payment standard amount within the
basic range without HUD approval or prior notification to HUD.
(2) The PHA's basic range payment standard amount for each unit
size may be based on the same percentage of the published FMR (i.e.,
all payment standard amounts may be set at 100 percent of the FMR), or
the PHA may establish different payment standard amounts for different
unit sizes (for example, 90 percent for efficiencies, 100 percent for
1-bedroom units, 110 percent for larger units).
(3) The PHA must revise its payment standard amounts and schedule
no later than 3 months following the effective date of the published
FMR if revisions are necessary to stay within the basic range.
(d) Exception payment standard amounts. An exception payment
standard amount is a dollar amount that exceeds 110 percent of the
published FMR.
(1) The PHA may establish exception payment standard amounts for
all units, or for units of a particular size. The exception payment
standard may be established for a designated part of the FMR area
(called an ``exception area'') or for the entire FMR area. The
exception area must meet the minimum area requirement at Sec.
982.503(a)(3)(ii).
(2) A PHA that is not in a designated Small Area FMR area or has
not opted voluntarily to implement Small Area FMRs under 24 CFR
888.113(c)(3) may establish exception payment standards for a ZIP code
area that exceed the basic range for the metropolitan area or county
FMR as long as the amounts established by the PHA do not exceed 110
percent of the HUD published SAFMR for the applicable ZIP code. The
exception payment standard must apply to the entire ZIP code area. If
an exception area crosses one or more FMR boundaries, then the maximum
exception payment standard amount that a PHA may adopt for the
exception area without HUD approval is 110 percent of the ZIP code area
with the lowest SAFMR amount. If the PHA qualifies for an exception
payment standard above 110 percent of the applicable FMR under
paragraph (d)(3) or (4) of this section, it may establish exception
payment standards up to the same percentage of the SAFMR for the
applicable ZIP code.
(3) A PHA may establish exception payment standard amounts between
110 percent and 120 percent of the applicable FMR for such duration as
HUD specifies by notice upon notification to HUD that the PHA meets at
least one of the following criteria:
(i) Fewer than 75 percent of the families to whom the PHA issued
tenant-based rental vouchers during the most recent 12-month period for
which there is success rate data available have become participants in
the voucher program;
(ii) More than 40 percent of families with tenant-based rental
assistance administered by the agency pay more than 30 percent of
adjusted income as the family share; or
(iii) Such other criteria as the Secretary establishes by notice.
(4) Except as provided in paragraphs (d)(2), (3), and (5) of this
section, the PHA must request approval from HUD to establish an
exception payment standard amount that exceeds 110 percent of the
applicable FMR. In its request to HUD, the PHA must provide rental
market data demonstrating that the requested exception payment standard
amount is needed for families to access rental units. The rental market
data must include a rent estimate for the entire FMR area compared with
a rent estimate for the proposed exception area. To apply the exception
payment standard to the entire FMR area, the rental market data
provided by the PHA must also provide data that demonstrates that the
annual percentage of rent inflation in the FMR area is greater than the
rental inflation adjustment factor in the calculation of the published
FMR. Once HUD has approved the exception payment standard for the
requesting PHA, any other PHA with jurisdiction in the HUD approved
exception payment standard area may also use the exception payment
standard amount.
(5) If required as a reasonable accommodation in accordance with 24
CFR part 8 for a person with a disability, the PHA may establish,
without HUD approval or prior notification to HUD, an exception payment
standard amount for an individual family that does not exceed 120
percent of the applicable FMR. A PHA may establish a payment standard
greater than 120 percent of the applicable FMR as a reasonable
accommodation for a person with a disability in accordance with 24 CFR
part 8, after requesting and receiving HUD approval.
(e) Payment standard amount below 90 percent of the applicable FMR.
HUD may consider a PHA request for approval to establish a payment
standard amount that is lower than the basic range. At HUD's sole
discretion, HUD may approve PHA establishment of a payment standard
lower than the basic range. In determining whether to approve the PHA
request, HUD will consider appropriate factors, including rent burden
of families assisted under the program. Unless it is necessary to
prevent termination of program participants, HUD will not approve a
lower payment standard if the proposed payment standard would, if it
were used to calculate the housing assistance payments for current
participants in the PHA's voucher program using currently available
data, cause the family share for more than 40 percent of participants
with tenant-based rental assistance to exceed 30 percent of adjusted
monthly income.
(f) Phaseout of success rate payment standard amounts. HUD will no
longer approve success rate payment standards. However, a PHA that was
approved to establish a success rate payment standard amount under this
paragraph as in effect prior to June 6, 2024 shall not be required to
reduce such payment standard amount as a result of the discontinuance
of success rate payment standards.
(g) Payment standard protection for PHAs that meet deconcentration
objectives. This paragraph applies only to a PHA with jurisdiction in
an FMR area where the FMR had previously been set at the 50th
percentile rent to provide a broad range of housing opportunities
throughout a metropolitan area, pursuant to 24 CFR 888.113(i)(3), but
is now set at the 40th percentile rent.
(1) Such a PHA may obtain HUD Field Office approval of a payment
standard amount based on the 50th percentile rent if the PHA scored the
maximum number of points on the deconcentration bonus indicator in 24
CFR 985.3(h) in the prior year, or in two of the last three years.
(2) HUD approval of payment standard amounts based on the 50th
percentile rent shall be for all unit sizes in the FMR area that had
previously been set at the 50th percentile rent pursuant to 24 CFR
888.113(i)(3). A PHA may opt to establish a payment standard amount
based on the 50th
[[Page 38302]]
percentile rent for one or more unit sizes in all or a designated part
of the PHA jurisdiction within the FMR area.
(h) HUD review of PHA payment standard schedules. (1) HUD will
monitor rent burdens of families assisted with tenant-based rental
assistance in a PHA's voucher program. HUD will review the PHA's
payment standard for a particular unit size if HUD finds that 40
percent or more of such families occupying units of that unit size
currently pay more than 30 percent of adjusted monthly income as the
family share. Such determination may be based on the most recent
examinations of family income.
(2) After such review, HUD may, at its discretion, require the PHA
to modify payment standard amounts for any unit size on the PHA payment
standard schedule. HUD may require the PHA to establish an increased
payment standard amount within the basic range.
0
71. Amend Sec. 982.505 by revising and republishing paragraph (c) and
removing paragraph (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 982.505 How to calculate housing assistance payment.
* * * * *
(c) Payment standard for family--(1) Applying the payment standard.
The payment standard for the family is the lower of:
(i) The payment standard amount for the family unit size; or
(ii) The payment standard amount for the size of the dwelling unit
rented by the family.
(2) Separate payment standards. If the PHA has established a
separate payment standard amount for a designated part of an FMR area
in accordance with Sec. 982.503 (including an exception payment
standard amount as determined in accordance with Sec. 982.503(d)), and
the dwelling unit is located in such designated part, the PHA must use
the appropriate payment standard amount for such designated part to
calculate the payment standard for the family.
(3) Decrease in the payment standard amount during the HAP contract
term. The PHA may choose not to reduce the payment standard amount used
to calculate the subsidy for a family for as long as the family
continues to reside in the unit for which the family is receiving
assistance.
(i) If the PHA chooses to reduce the payment standard amount used
to calculate such a family's subsidy in accordance with its
Administrative Plan, then the initial reduction to the family's payment
standard amount may not be applied any earlier than two years following
the effective date of the decrease in the payment standard, and then
only if the family has received the notice required under paragraph
(c)(3)(iii) of this section.
(ii) The PHA may choose to reduce the payment standard amount for
the family to the current payment standard amount in effect on the PHA
voucher payment standard schedule, or it may reduce the payment
standard amount to an amount that is higher than the normally
applicable payment standard amount on the PHA voucher payment standard
schedule. After an initial reduction, the PHA may further reduce the
payment standard amount for the family during the time the family
resides in the unit, provided any subsequent reductions continue to
result in a payment standard amount that meets or exceeds the normally
applicable payment standard amount on the PHA voucher payment standard
schedule.
(iii) The PHA must provide the family with at least 12 months'
written notice of any reduction in the payment standard amount that
will affect the family if the family remains in place. In the written
notice, the PHA must state the new payment standard amount, explain
that the family's new payment standard amount will be the greater of
the amount listed in the current written notice or the new amount (if
any) on the PHA's payment standard schedule at the end of the 12-month
period, and make clear where the family will find the PHA's payment
standard schedule.
(iv) The PHA must administer decreases in the payment standard
amount for the family in accordance with the PHA policy as described in
the PHA Administrative Plan.
(4) Increase in the payment standard amount during the HAP contract
term. If the payment standard amount is increased during the term of
the HAP contract, the PHA must use the increased payment standard
amount to calculate the monthly housing assistance payment for the
family beginning no later than the earliest of:
(i) The effective date of an increase in the gross rent that would
result in an increase in the family share;
(ii) The family's first regular or interim reexamination; or
(iii) One year following the effective date of the increase in the
payment standard amount.
(5) PHA policy on payment standard increases. The PHA may adopt a
policy to apply a payment standard increase at any time earlier than
the date calculated according to paragraph (c)(4).
(6) Changes in family unit size during the HAP contract term.
Irrespective of any increase or decrease in the payment standard
amount, if the family unit size either increases or decreases during
the HAP contract term, the new family unit size may be used to
determine the payment standard amount for the family immediately but no
later than the family's first regular reexamination following the
change in family unit size.
0
72. Amend Sec. 982.517 by revising the first sentence of paragraph
(a)(2), and paragraphs (b) and (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 982.517 Utility allowance schedule.
(a) * * *
(2) The PHA must provide a copy of the utility allowance schedule
to HUD. * * *
(b) How allowances are determined. (1)(i) A PHA's utility allowance
schedule, and the utility allowance for an individual family, must
include the utilities and services that are necessary in the locality
to provide housing that complies with HQS. The PHA's utility allowance
schedule and utility allowance for families must also include any
utilities and services required by HUD after publication in the Federal
Register for public comment.
(ii) In the utility allowance schedule, the PHA must classify
utilities and other housing services according to the following general
categories: space heating; air conditioning; cooking; water heating;
water; sewer; trash collection (disposal of waste and refuse); other
electric; refrigerator (cost of tenant-supplied refrigerator); range
(cost of tenant-supplied range); applicable surcharges; and other
specified housing services.
(iii) The PHA must provide a utility allowance for tenant-paid air-
conditioning costs if the majority of housing units in the market
provide centrally air-conditioned units or there is appropriate wiring
for tenant-installed air conditioners.
(iv) The PHA may not provide any allowance for non-essential
utility costs, such as costs of cable or satellite television.
(2)(i) The PHA must maintain an area-wide utility allowance
schedule. The area-wide utility allowance schedule must be determined
based on the typical cost of utilities and services paid by energy-
conservative households that occupy housing of similar size and type in
the same locality. In developing the schedule, the PHA must use normal
patterns of consumption for the community as a whole and current
utility rates.
(ii) The PHA may maintain an area-wide, energy-efficient utility
allowance schedule to be used for units that are in a building that
meets Leadership in
[[Page 38303]]
Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) or Energy Star standards. HUD
may subsequently identify additional Energy Savings Design standards or
criteria for applying the allowance to retrofitted units in a building
that does not meet the standard, which will be modified or added
through a document published in the Federal Register for 30 days of
public comment, followed by a final document announcing the modified
standards and the date on which the modifications take effect. The
energy-efficient utility allowance (EEUA) schedule is to be maintained
in addition to, not in place of, the area-wide utility allowance
schedule described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, unless all
units within a PHA's jurisdiction meet one or more of the required
standards.
(iii) The PHA may base its utility allowance payments on actual
flat fees charged by an owner for utilities that are billed directly by
the owner, but only if the flat fee charged by the owner is no greater
than the PHA's applicable utility allowance for the utilities covered
by the fee. If an owner charges a flat fee for only some of the
utilities, then the PHA must pay a separate allowance for any tenant-
paid utilities that are not covered in the flat fee.
(iv) For tenant-based participants residing in units within a
project that has an approved project-specific utility allowance under
Sec. 983.301(f)(4), the PHA must use the project-specific utility
allowance schedule (see 24 CFR 983.301(f)(4)).
(v) The PHA must state its policy for utility allowance payments in
its Administrative Plan and apply it consistently to all similarly
situated households.
* * * * *
(e) Higher utility allowance as reasonable accommodation for a
person with disabilities. On request from a household that includes a
person with disabilities, the PHA must approve a utility allowance
which is higher than the applicable amount on the utility allowance
schedule if a higher utility allowance is needed as a reasonable
accommodation under 24 CFR part 8, the Fair Housing Act and 24 CFR part
100, or Titles II or III of the Americans with Disabilities Act and 28
CFR parts 35 and 36, to make the program accessible to and usable by
the household member with a disability.
Sec. 982.552 [AMENDED]
0
73. Amend Sec. 982.552 by removing paragraph (c)(1)(viii) and
redesignating paragraphs (c)(1)(ix) through (xi) as paragraphs
(c)(1)(viii) through (x) respectively.
0
74. Amend Sec. 982.605 by revising the first sentence of paragraph (a)
to read as follows:
Sec. 982.605 SRO: Housing quality standards.
(a) * * * As defined in Sec. 982.4, HQS refers to the minimum
quality standards developed by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR 5.703 for
housing assisted under the HCV program, including any variations
approved by HUD for the PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3). * * *
* * * * *
0
75. Amend Sec. 982.609 by revising the first sentence of paragraph (a)
to read as follows:
Sec. 982.609 Congregate housing: Housing quality standards.
(a) * * * As defined in Sec. 982.4, HQS refers to the minimum
quality standards developed by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR 5.703 for
housing assisted under the HCV program, including any variations
approved by HUD for the PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3). * * *
* * * * *
0
76. Amend Sec. 982.614 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 982.614 Group home: Housing quality standards.
(a) Compliance with HQS. The PHA may not give approval to reside in
a group home unless the unit, including the portion of the unit
available for use by the assisted person under the lease, meets HQS. As
defined in Sec. 982.4, HQS refers to the minimum quality standards
developed by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR 5.703 for housing assisted
under the HCV program, including any variations approved by HUD for the
PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3).
* * * * *
0
77. Amend Sec. 982.618 by revising paragraph (a) and the first
sentence of paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 982.618 Shared housing: Housing quality standards.
(a) Compliance with HQS. The PHA may not give approval to reside in
shared housing unless the entire unit, including the portion of the
unit available for use by the assisted family under its lease, meets
HQS.
(b) * * * As defined in Sec. 982.4, HQS refers to the minimum
quality standards developed by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR 5.703 for
housing assisted under the HCV program, including any variations
approved by HUD for the PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3). * * *
* * * * *
0
78. Amend Sec. 982.621 by revising the first sentence of the
introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 982.621 Manufactured home space rental: Housing quality
standards.
As defined in Sec. 982.4, HQS refers to the minimum quality
standards developed by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR 5.703 for housing
assisted under the HCV program, including any variations approved by
HUD for the PHA under 24 CFR 5.705(a)(3). * * *
* * * * *
0
79. Revise Sec. 982.623 to read as follows:
Sec. 982.623 Manufactured home space rental: Housing assistance
payment.
(a) Amount of monthly housing assistance payment. The monthly
housing assistance payment is calculated as the lower of:
(1) The PHA payment standard, determined in accordance with Sec.
982.503 minus the total tenant payment; or
(2) The family's eligible housing expenses minus the total tenant
payment.
(b) Eligible housing expenses. The family's eligible housing
expenses are the total of:
(1) The rent charged by the owner for the manufactured home space.
(2) Charges for the maintenance and management the space owner must
provide under the lease.
(3) The monthly payments made by the family to amortize the cost of
purchasing the manufactured home established at the time of application
to a lender for financing the purchase of the manufactured home if
monthly payments are still being made, including any required insurance
and property taxes included in the loan payment to the lender.
(i) Any increase in debt service or term due to refinancing after
purchase of the home may not be included in the amortization cost.
(ii) Debt service for installation charges incurred by a family may
be included in the monthly amortization payments. Installation charges
incurred before the family became an assisted family may be included in
the amortization cost if monthly payments are still being made to
amortize the charges.
(4) The applicable allowances for tenant-paid utilities, as
determined under Sec. Sec. 982.517 and 982.624.
(c) Distribution of housing assistance payment. In general, the
monthly housing assistance payment is distributed as follows:
(1) The PHA pays the owner of the space the lesser of the housing
assistance payment or the portion of the monthly rent due to the owner.
The
[[Page 38304]]
portion of the monthly rent due to the owner is the total of:
(i) The actual rent charged by the owner for the manufactured home
space; and
(ii) Charges for the maintenance and management the space owner
must provide under the lease.
(2) If the housing assistance payment exceeds the portion of the
monthly rent due to the owner, the PHA may pay the balance of the
housing assistance payment to the family. Alternatively, the PHA may
pay the balance to the lender or utility company, in an amount no
greater than the amount due for the month to each, respectively,
subject to the lender's or utility company's willingness to accept the
PHA's payment on behalf of the family. If the PHA elects to pay the
lender or the utility company directly, the PHA must notify the family
of the amount paid to the lender or the utility company and must pay
any remaining balance directly to the family.
(d) PHA option: Single housing assistance payment to the family.
(1) If the owner of the manufactured home space agrees, the PHA may
make the entire housing assistance payment to the family, and the
family shall be responsible for paying the owner directly for the full
amount of rent of the manufactured home space due to the owner,
including owner maintenance and management charges. If the PHA
exercises this option, the PHA may not make any payments directly to
the lender or utility company.
(2) The PHA and owner of the manufactured home space must still
execute the HAP contract, and the owner is still responsible for
fulfilling all of the owner obligations under the HAP contract,
including but not limited to complying with HQS and rent reasonableness
requirements. The owner's acceptance of the family's monthly rent
payment during the term of the HAP contract serves as the owner's
certification to the reasonableness of the rent charged for the space
in accordance with Sec. 982.622(b)(4).
(3) If the family and owner agree to the single housing assistance
payment, the owner is responsible for collecting the full amount of the
rent and other charges under the lease directly from the family. The
PHA is not responsible for any amounts owed by the family to the owner
and may not pay any claim by the owner against the family.
0
80. Amend Sec. 982.625 by adding headings to paragraphs (a), (b),
(c)(1), (f), and (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 982.625 Homeownership option: General.
(a) Applicability. * * *
(b) Family status. * * *
(c) * * *
(1) Allowable forms of homeownership assistance. * * *
* * * * *
(f) Live-in aide. * * *
(g) PHA capacity. * * *
* * * * *
0
81. Amend Sec. 982.628 by:
0
a. In paragraph (a)(1), removing ``, (a)(7)'' from the citation; and
0
b. Revising paragraphs (d) introductory text, (d)(3) introductory text,
and (e)(3).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 982.628 Homeownership option: Eligible units.
* * * * *
(d) PHA-owned units. A family may purchase a PHA-owned unit, as
defined in Sec. 982.4, with homeownership assistance only if the
following conditions are satisfied:
* * * * *
(3) The PHA must obtain the services of an independent entity, as
defined in Sec. 982.4 and in accordance with Sec.
982.352(b)(1)(v)(B), to perform the following PHA functions:
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(3) The unit has passed the required HQS inspection (see Sec.
982.631(a)) and independent inspection (see Sec. 982.631(b)).
0
82. Amend Sec. 982.630 by:
0
a. Adding headings to paragraphs (a), (b), (c), and (d); and
0
b. Revising paragraph (e).
The revision and additions read as follows:
Sec. 982.630 Homeownership option: Homeownership counseling.
(a) Pre-assistance counseling. * * *
(b) Counseling topics. * * *
(c) Local circumstances. * * *
(d) Additional counseling. * * *
(e) HUD-certified housing counselor. Any homeownership counseling
provided to families in connection with this section must be conducted
by a HUD certified housing counselor working for an agency approved to
participate in HUD's Housing Counseling Program.
0
83. Amend Sec. 982.635 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (b)(3); and
0
b. In paragraphs (c)(2)(vii) and (3)(vii), removing ``part 8 of this
title'' and adding, in its place, ``parts 8 and 100 of this title''.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 982.635 Homeownership option: Amount and distribution of monthly
homeownership assistance payment.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) The payment standard amount may not be lower than what the
payment standard amount was at commencement of homeownership
assistance.
* * * * *
0
84. Amend Sec. 982.641 by removing ``and'' from the end of paragraph
(d)(2), revising paragraph (d)(3), adding paragraph (d)(4), and
revising paragraph (f)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 982.641 Homeownership option: Applicability of other
requirements.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(3) Section 982.405 (PHA unit inspection); and
(4) Section 982.406 (Use of alternative inspections).
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(3) Section 982.517 (Utility allowance schedule), except that Sec.
982.517(d) does not apply because the utility allowance is always based
on the size of the home bought by the family with homeownership
assistance.
* * * * *
PART 983--PROJECT-BASED VOUCHER (PBV) PROGRAM
0
85. The authority for part 983 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
Subpart A--General
0
86. Amend Sec. 983.2 by revising and republishing paragraph (c) to
read as follows:
Sec. 983.2 When the tenant-based voucher rule (24 CFR part 982)
applies.
* * * * *
(c) Specific 24 CFR part 982 provisions that do not apply to PBV
assistance. The following specific provisions in 24 CFR part 982 do not
apply to PBV assistance under part 983:
(1) In subpart D of part 982: paragraph (e)(2) of 24 CFR 982.158;
(2) In subpart E of part 982: paragraph (e) of 24 CFR 982.201,
paragraph (b)(2) of 24 CFR 982.202, and paragraph (d) of 24 CFR
982.204;
(3) Subpart G of part 982 does not apply, with the following
exceptions:
(i) Section 982.310 (owner termination of tenancy) applies to the
PBV program, but to the extent that those provisions differ from Sec.
983.257, the provisions of Sec. 983.257 govern; and
[[Page 38305]]
(ii) Section 982.312 (absence from unit) applies to the PBV
Program, but to the extent that those provisions differ from Sec.
983.256(g), the provisions of Sec. 983.256(g) govern; and
(iii) Section 982.316 (live-in aide) applies to the PBV Program;
(4) Subpart H of part 982;
(5) In subpart I of part 982: 24 CFR 982.401; paragraphs (a)(3),
(c), and (d) of 24 CFR 982.402; 24 CFR 982.403; 24 CFR 982.404;
paragraphs (a), (b), (d), (i), and (j) of 24 CFR 982.405; paragraphs
(a), (e), and (f) of 24 CFR 982.406; and 24 CFR 982.407;
(6) In subpart J of part 982: paragraphs (a), (b)(3), (b)(4), and
(c) of Sec. 982.451; and Sec. 982.455;
(7) Subpart K of part 982: subpart K does not apply, except that
the following provisions apply to the PBV Program:
(i) In 24 CFR 982.503, paragraphs (a)(1) and (d)(1)-(4) do apply;
(ii) Section 982.516 (family income and composition; regular and
interim examinations);
(iii) Section 982.517 of this title (utility allowance schedule),
except that 24 CFR 982.517(d) does not apply.
(8) In subpart M of part 982:
(i) Sections 982.603, 982.607, 982.611, 982.613(c)(2), 982.619(a),
(b)(1), (b)(4), (c); and
(ii) Provisions concerning shared housing (Sec. 982.615 through
Sec. 982.618), manufactured home space rental (Sec. 982.622 through
Sec. 982.624), and the homeownership option (Sec. 982.625 through
Sec. 982.641).
0
87. Revise and republish Sec. 983.3 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.3 PBV definitions.
(a) General. This section defines PBV terms used in this part. For
administrative ease and convenience, those part 982 terms that are also
used in this part are identified in this section. In limited cases,
where there is a slight difference with the part 982 term, an
annotation is made in this section.
(b) Definitions. The following definitions apply to this part:
Abatement. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Administrative fee. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Administrative fee reserve. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Administrative Plan. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Admission. The point when the family becomes a participant in the
PHA's tenant-based or project-based voucher program. If the family is
not already a tenant-based voucher participant, the date of admission
for the project-based voucher program is the first day of the initial
lease term (the commencement of the assisted tenancy) in the PBV unit.
After admission, and so long as the family is continuously assisted
with tenant-based or project-based voucher assistance from the PHA, a
shift from tenant-based or project-based assistance to the other form
of voucher assistance is not a new admission.
Agreement to enter into HAP contract (Agreement). A written
contract between the PHA and the owner in the form prescribed by HUD.
The Agreement defines requirements for development activity undertaken
for units to be assisted under this section. When development is
completed by the owner in accordance with the Agreement, the PHA enters
into a HAP contract with the owner. The Agreement is not used for
existing housing assisted under this section.
Applicant. A family that has applied for admission to the PBV
program but is not yet a program participant.
Area where vouchers are difficult to use. An area where a voucher
is difficult to use is:
(i) A census tract with a poverty rate of 20 percent or less, as
determined by HUD;
(ii) A ZIP code area where the rental vacancy rate is less than 4
percent, as determined by HUD; or
(iii) A ZIP code area where 90 percent of the Small Area FMR is
more than 110 percent of the metropolitan area or county FMR.
Assisted living facility. A residence facility (including a
facility located in a larger multifamily property) that meets all the
following criteria:
(i) The facility is licensed and regulated as an assisted living
facility by the State, municipality, or other political subdivision;
(ii) The facility makes available supportive services to assist
residents in carrying out activities of daily living; and
(iii) The facility provides separate dwelling units for residents
and includes common rooms and other facilities appropriate and
available to provide supportive services for the residents.
Authorized voucher units. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Budget authority. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Building. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Comparable tenant-based rental assistance. A tenant-based subsidy
to enable a family to obtain decent, safe, and sanitary housing in the
PHA jurisdiction, which meets the following minimum requirements:
(i) The family's monthly payment is not more than 40 percent of the
family's adjusted monthly gross income;
(ii) The rental assistance contains no limitation as to the length
of time the family may receive the assistance;
(iii) The family is not required to be employed, to seek
employment, or to participate in supportive services in order to
receive the rental assistance; and
(iv) The family is able to use the rental assistance in one or more
other PHAs' jurisdictions.
Congregate housing. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Continuously assisted. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Contract units. The housing units covered by a HAP contract.
Cooperative. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Cooperative member. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Covered housing provider. For the PBV program, ``covered housing
provider,'' as such term is used in HUD's regulations in 24 CFR part 5,
subpart L (Protection for Victims of Domestic Violence, Dating
Violence, Sexual Assault, or Stalking) refers to the PHA or owner (as
defined in 24 CFR 982.4), as applicable given the responsibilities of
the covered housing provider as set forth in 24 CFR part 5, subpart L.
For example, the PHA is the covered housing provider responsible for
providing the notice of occupancy rights under VAWA and certification
form described at 24 CFR 5.2005(a). In addition, the owner is the
covered housing provider that may choose to bifurcate a lease as
described at 24 CFR 5.2009(a), while the PHA is the covered housing
provider responsible for complying with emergency transfer plan
provisions at 24 CFR 5.2005(e).
Development activity. New construction or rehabilitation work done
after the proposal or project selection date in order for a newly
constructed or rehabilitated housing project to be covered by a PBV HAP
contract, including work done pursuant to a rider to the HAP contract
in accordance with Sec. 983.157.
Excepted units. Units in a project not counted toward the project
cap because they exclusively serve or are made available to certain
families. See Sec. 983.54(c)(2).
Excluded units. Units in a project not counted toward the program
cap or project cap because they meet certain criteria. See Sec.
983.59.
Existing housing. A project that meets the following criteria:
(i) All the proposed contract units in the project either fully
comply or substantially comply with HQS on the proposal or project
selection date, as determined per Sec. 983.103(a). (The units must
fully comply with HQS at the time
[[Page 38306]]
required by Sec. 983.103(c)). The units substantially comply with HQS
if:
(A) The units only require repairs to current components or
replacement of equipment and/or materials by items of substantially the
same kind to correct deficiencies; and
(B) The PHA determines all deficiencies can reasonably be corrected
within a 30-day period, taking into consideration the totality of the
deficiencies in the project.
(ii) The PHA determines the project is not reasonably expected to
require substantial improvement and the owner certifies it has no plans
to undertake substantial improvement from the proposal submission date
(for projects subject to competitive selection) or the project
selection date (for projects excepted from competitive selection)
through the first two years of the HAP contract.
Family. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Family self-sufficiency program. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Gross rent. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Group home. See 24 CFR 982.4.
HAP contract. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Household. See 24 CFR 5.100.
Housing assistance payment. The monthly assistance payment for a
PBV unit by a PHA, which includes:
(i) A payment to the owner for rent to owner under the family's
lease minus the tenant rent; and
(ii) An additional payment to or on behalf of the family, if the
utility allowance exceeds the total tenant payment, in the amount of
such excess.
Housing credit agency. For purposes of performing subsidy layering
reviews for proposed PBV projects, a housing credit agency includes a
State housing finance agency, a State participating jurisdiction under
HUD's HOME program (see 24 CFR part 92), or other State housing
agencies that meet the definition of ``housing credit agency'' as
defined by Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
Housing quality standards (HQS). The minimum quality standards
developed by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR 5.703 for the PBV program,
including any variations approved by HUD for the PHA under 24 CFR
5.705(a)(3).
Independent entity. See 24 CFR 982.4, except that the independent
entity is subject to the requirements in Sec. 983.57 (instead of 24
CFR 982.352(b) and 24 CFR 982.628(d)) for the PBV program.
Initial rent to owner. See 24 CFR 982.4.
In-place family. A family residing in a proposed contract unit on
the proposal or project selection date.
Jurisdiction. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Lease. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Manufactured home. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Multifamily building. A building with five or more dwelling units
(assisted or unassisted).
Newly constructed housing. A project containing housing units that
do not exist on the proposal or project selection date and are
developed after the date of selection for use under the PBV program.
Owner. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Partially assisted project. A project in which there are fewer
contract units than residential units.
Participant. A family that has been admitted and is currently
assisted in the PBV (or HCV) program. If the family is not already a
tenant-based voucher participant, the family becomes a participant on
the effective date of the initial lease term (the commencement of the
assisted tenancy) in the PBV unit.
PHA Plan. See 24 CFR 982.4.
PHA-owned unit. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Premises. The project in which the contract unit is located,
including common areas and grounds.
Program. The voucher program under Section 8 of the 1937 Act,
including tenant-based or project-based assistance.
Program receipts. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Project. A project can be a single building, multiple contiguous
buildings, or multiple buildings on contiguous parcels of land.
``Contiguous'' in this definition includes ``adjacent to,'' as well as
touching along a boundary or a point. A PHA may, in its Administrative
Plan, establish the circumstances under which it will define a project
as only one of the following: a single building, multiple contiguous
buildings, or multiple buildings on contiguous parcels of land.
Proposal or project selection date. See Sec. 983.51(g).
Public housing agency (PHA). See 24 CFR 982.4.
Reasonable rent. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Rehabilitated housing. A project which is developed for use under
the PBV program, in which all proposed contract units exist on the
proposal or project selection date, but which does not qualify as
existing housing.
Rent to owner. The total monthly rent payable by the family and the
PHA to the owner under the lease for a contract unit. Rent to owner
includes payment for any housing services, maintenance, and utilities
to be provided by the owner in accordance with the lease. (Rent to
owner must not include charges for non-housing services including
payment for food, furniture, or supportive services provided in
accordance with the lease.)
Responsible entity (RE) (for environmental review). The unit of
general local government within which the project is located that
exercises land use responsibility or, if HUD determines this
infeasible, the county or, if HUD determines that infeasible, the
State.
Single-family building. A building with no more than four dwelling
units (assisted or unassisted).
Single room occupancy housing (SRO). See 24 CFR 982.4.
Site. The grounds where the contract units are located or will be
located after development.
Small Area Fair Market Rents (SAFMRs). See 24 CFR 982.4. (See also
24 CFR 888.113(c)(5).)
Special housing type. Subpart M of 24 CFR part 982 states the
special regulatory requirements for different special housing types.
Subpart M provisions on shared housing, manufactured home space rental,
and the homeownership option do not apply to PBV assistance under this
part.
Subsidy standards. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Substantial improvement. One of the following activities undertaken
at a time beginning from the proposal submission date (for projects
subject to competitive selection) or from the project selection date
(for projects excepted from competitive selection), or undertaken
during the term of the PBV HAP contract:
(i) Remodeling that alters the nature or type of housing units in a
project;
(ii) Reconstruction; or
(iii) A substantial improvement in the quality or kind of equipment
and materials. The replacement of equipment and/or materials rendered
unsatisfactory because of normal wear and tear by items of
substantially the same kind does not constitute substantial
improvement.
Tenant. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Tenant rent. The amount payable monthly by the family as rent to
the unit owner, as described in Sec. 983.353(b). (See also 24 CFR
5.520(c)(1)).
Tenant-paid utilities. See 24 CFR 982.4.
Total tenant payment. See 24 CFR 5.628.
Utility allowance. See 24 CFR 5.603.
Utility reimbursement. See 24 CFR 5.603.
Waiting list admission. An admission from the PHA- or owner-
maintained PBV waiting list in accordance with Sec. 983.251.
Wrong-size unit. A unit occupied by a family that does not conform
to the PHA's subsidy standard for family size, by being either too
large or too small compared to the standard.
Sec. 983.4 [Amended]
0
88. Amend Sec. 983.4 by removing the provision for ``Definitions.''.
[[Page 38307]]
0
89. Revise and republish Sec. 983.5 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.5 Description of the PBV program.
(a) How PBV works. (1) The PBV program is administered by a PHA
that already administers the tenant-based voucher program under the
consolidated annual contributions contract (ACC) in 24 CFR 982.151. In
the PBV program, the assistance is ``attached to the structure,'' which
may be a multifamily building or single-family building. (See
description of the difference between ``project-based'' and ``tenant-
based'' rental assistance at 24 CFR 982.1(b)).
(2) The PHA enters into a HAP contract with an owner for units in
existing housing or in newly constructed or rehabilitated housing.
(3) In the case of new construction or rehabilitation, the owner
may develop the housing pursuant to an Agreement (Sec. 983.154)
between the owner and the PHA. In the Agreement, the PHA agrees to
execute a HAP contract after the owner completes the construction or
rehabilitation of the units. Alternatively:
(i) The owner may develop the housing without an Agreement, before
execution of a HAP contract, in accordance with Sec. 983.154(f); or
(ii) In the case of rehabilitation, the owner may develop the
housing or complete development activity after execution of the HAP
contract, in accordance with Sec. 983.157.
(4) During the term of the HAP contract, the PHA makes housing
assistance payments to the owner for units leased and occupied by
eligible families.
(b) How PBV is funded. If a PHA decides to operate a PBV program,
the PHA's PBV program is funded with a portion of appropriated funding
(budget authority) available under the PHA's voucher ACC. This funding
is used to pay housing assistance for both tenant-based and project-
based voucher units. Likewise, the administrative fee funding made
available to a PHA is used for the administration of both tenant-based
and project-based voucher assistance.
(c) PHA discretion to operate PBV program. A PHA has discretion
whether to operate a PBV program. HUD approval is not required, except
that the PHA must notify HUD of its intent to project-base its vouchers
and when the PHA executes, amends, or extends a HAP contract. The PHA
must also state in its Administrative Plan that it will engage in
project-basing and must amend its Administrative Plan to include all
PBV-related matters over which the PHA is exercising its policymaking
discretion, including the subjects listed in Sec. 983.10, as
applicable.
0
90. Revise and republish Sec. 983.6 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.6 Maximum number of PBV units (percentage limitation).
(a) In general. Except as provided in paragraphs (d) and (e) of
this section, a PHA may commit project-based assistance to no more than
20 percent of its authorized voucher units, as adjusted as provided in
paragraph (e) of this section, at the time of commitment. An analysis
of impact must be conducted in accordance with Sec. 983.58, if a PHA
is project-basing 50 percent or more of the PHA's authorized voucher
units.
(1) A PHA is not required to reduce the number of units to which it
has committed PBV assistance under an Agreement or HAP contract if the
number of authorized voucher units is subsequently reduced and the
number of PBV units consequently exceeds the program limitation.
(2) A PHA that was within the program limit prior to April 18,
2017, and exceeded the program limit on that date due solely to the
change in how the program cap is calculated is not required to reduce
the number of PBV units under an Agreement or HAP contract.
(3) In the circumstances described in paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of
this section, the PHA may not add units to PBV HAP contracts, or enter
into new Agreements or HAP contracts (except for HAP contracts
resulting from Agreements entered into before the reduction of
authorized units or April 18, 2017, as applicable), unless such units
meet the conditions described in paragraph (d) or (e) of this section.
(b) Units subject to percentage limitation. All PBV units which the
PHA has selected (from the time of the proposal or project selection
date) or which are under an Agreement or HAP contract for PBV
assistance count toward the 20 percent maximum or increased cap, as
applicable, except as provided in paragraph (e).
(c) PHA determination. The PHA is responsible for determining the
amount of budget authority that is available for project-based vouchers
and for ensuring that the amount of assistance that is attached to
units is within the amounts available under the ACC.
(d) Increased cap. A PHA may project-base an additional 10 percent
of its authorized voucher units at the time of commitment, as adjusted
as provided in paragraph (e) of this section, provided the additional
units meet the conditions in paragraphs (d)(1) or (2) of this section:
(1) The units are part of a HAP contract executed on or after April
18, 2017, or are added on or after that date to any current HAP
contract, including a contract entered into prior to April 18, 2017,
and the units fall into at least one of the following categories:
(i) The units are specifically made available to house individuals
and families that meet the definition of homeless under Section 103 of
the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. 11302), included
in 24 CFR 578.3.
(ii) The units are specifically made available to house families
that are comprised of or include a veteran. For purposes of the
increased cap, a veteran means a person who served in the active
military, naval, air, or space service, and who was discharged or
released therefrom.
(iii) The units provide supportive housing to persons with
disabilities or to elderly persons, as defined in 24 CFR 5.403.
Supportive housing means that the project makes supportive services
available for all of the assisted families in the project and provides
a range of services tailored to the needs of the residents occupying
such housing. Such supportive services need not be provided by the
owner or on site but must be reasonably available to the families
receiving PBV assistance in the project. The PHA's Administrative Plan
must describe the type and availability of supportive services the PHA
will consider as qualifying for the 10 percent increased cap.
(iv) The units are located in an area where vouchers are difficult
to use as defined in Sec. 983.3.
(v) The units replace, on a different site, the units listed in
Sec. 983.59(b)(1) and (2) for which the PHA had authority under Sec.
983.59 to commit PBV assistance on the original site without the units
counting toward the program cap or project cap. The units are eligible
under this category only if the PHA has not committed and will not
commit PBV assistance to the original site pursuant to the normally
applicable exclusions of those units under Sec. 983.59. If the PHA
subsequently plans to commit PBV assistance to units on the original
site, those proposed units count toward and must comply with the 20
percent maximum or increased cap of this section, as applicable, and
the project cap requirements of Sec. 983.54.
(2) The units are part of a HAP contract executed on or after
December 27, 2020, or are added on or after that date to any current
HAP contract, including a contract entered into prior to December 27,
2020, and meet the following requirements:
[[Page 38308]]
(i) The units are exclusively made available to eligible youth as
described in Section 8(x)(2)(B) of the U.S. Housing Act; and
(ii) If the units exclusively made available to eligible youth use
Family Unification Program (FUP) assistance that is normally available
for eligible families and youth described in Section 8(x)(2) of the
U.S. Housing Act, the PHA determines and documents that the limitation
of the units to youth is consistent with the local housing needs of
both eligible FUP populations (families and youth) and amends its
Administrative Plan to specify that FUP PBV assistance is solely for
eligible youth.
(3) The PBV HAP contract must specify, and the owner must set
aside, the number of units meeting the conditions of paragraphs
(d)(1)(i), (ii), (iii) and (d)(2) of this section. To qualify for the
increased program cap for units meeting the conditions of paragraphs
(d)(1)(i), (ii), (iii) and (d)(2) of this section, the unit must be
occupied by the type of family specified in the applicable paragraph
consistent with the requirements of Sec. 983.262.
(e) Units previously subject to federally required rent
restrictions or that received long-term rental assistance from HUD.
Units that meet the requirements of Sec. 983.59 do not count toward
the program cap. Such units are removed from the number of authorized
voucher units for purposes of calculating the percentages under
paragraphs (a) and (d) of this section.
0
91. Revise Sec. 983.10 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.10 PBV provisions in the Administrative Plan.
(a) PHA policymaking discretion. If a PHA exercises its discretion
to operate a PBV program, the PHA's Administrative Plan as required by
24 CFR 982.54 of this title must include all the PHA's local policies
on PBV-related matters over which the PHA is exercising its
policymaking discretion.
(b) PHA policies. The PHA Administrative Plan must cover, at a
minimum, the following PHA policies, as applicable:
(1) The definition of ``project'' as consistent with this part
(Sec. 983.3(b));
(2) The program cap:
(i) A description of the types and availability of services that
will qualify units under the supportive services authority under the
program cap (Sec. 983.6(d)(1)(iii)); and
(ii) The PHA's policy limiting Family Unification Program
assistance normally available for eligible families and youth described
in Section 8(x)(2) of the U.S. Housing Act to youth (Sec.
983.6(d)(2)(ii));
(3) A description of the circumstances under which the PHA will use
the competitive and noncompetitive selection methods and the procedures
for submission and selection of PBV proposals (Sec. 983.51(a));
(3) A description of the circumstances under which the PHA will use
the competitive and noncompetitive selection methods and the procedures
for submission and selection of PBV proposals (Sec. 983.51(a));
(4) The project cap:
(i) The PHA's policy limiting Family Unification Program assistance
normally available for eligible families and youth described in Section
8(x)(2) of the U.S. Housing Act to youth (Sec. 983.54(c)(2)(ii)); and
(ii) A description of the types and availability of services that
will qualify units under the supportive services exception from the
project cap (Sec. 983.54(c)(2)(iii));
(5) The site selection standards:
(i) The PHA's standard for deconcentrating poverty and expanding
housing and economic opportunities (Sec. 983.55(b)(1)); and
(ii) The PHA's site selection policy (Sec. 983.55(c));
(6) PHA inspection policies:
(i) The timing of an initial inspection of existing housing (Sec.
983.103(c)(1));
(ii) Whether the PHA adopts for initial inspection of PBV existing
housing the non-life-threatening deficiencies option, the alternative
inspection option, or both, and whether the PHA adopts for periodic
inspection of PBV housing the alternative inspection option. If so,
state all policies as required by 24 CFR 982.54(d)(21)(ii) and (iii),
as they relate to the PHA's PBV program (Sec. 983.103(c)(2) through
(4) and (e)(3));
(iii) The frequency of periodic inspections (Sec. 983.103(e) and
(i)); and
(iv) Any verification methods other than on-site inspection for
different inspection types or for different HQS deficiencies (Sec.
983.103(h)).
(7) A description of the circumstances (if any) under which the PHA
will establish additional requirements for quality, architecture, or
design of PBV housing at the time of initial rehabilitation or new
construction (Sec. Sec. 983.154(e)(11), 983.157(e)(4));
(8) A description of the circumstances (if any) under which the PHA
will enter a PBV HAP contract for newly constructed and rehabilitated
housing without first entering into an Agreement or execute an
Agreement after construction or rehabilitation that complied with
applicable requirements of Sec. 983.153 has commenced (Sec.
983.154(f)(1));
(9) The PHA's policy on the form and manner in which the owner must
submit evidence and certify that work has been completed (Sec.
983.155);
(10) Rehabilitated housing developed after HAP contract execution:
(i) A description of the circumstances (if any) under which the PHA
will enter a PBV HAP contract for rehabilitated housing that allows for
development activity to occur after HAP contract execution (Sec.
983.157(a)(2));
(ii) The timing of the initial inspection (Sec. 983.157(c)(4));
(iii) The form and manner of owner notifications of changes in the
status of contract units (Sec. 983.157(e)(5)); and
(iv) The period for compliance (if any) for development activity
that has not been completed by the deadline (Sec. 983.157(h)(1));
(11) The PHA's policy on amending PBV HAP contracts to substitute
or add contract units (Sec. 983.207(f));
(12) PHA housing quality policies;
(i) A description of the circumstances (if any) under which the PHA
will establish additional requirements for continued compliance with
quality, architecture, or design of PBV housing during the term of the
HAP contract (Sec. 983.208(a)(3));
(ii) The PHA's policy on the conditions under which it will
withhold HAP and the conditions under which it will abate HAP or
terminate the contract for units other than the unit with HQS
deficiencies (Sec. 983.208(d)); and
(iii) The PHA's policy on assisting families with relocating and
finding a new unit (Sec. 983.208(d)(6)(iii));
(13) A description of the PHA's waiting list policies for admission
to PBV units, including any information on the owner waiting list
policy (Sec. 983.251(c) and (e));
(14) A description of the PHA's policy on whether to conduct tenant
screening and offer information to an owner (Sec. 983.255(a)(2) and
(c)(4));
(15) The PHA's policy on continued housing assistance for a family
that occupies a wrong-sized unit or a unit with accessibility features
that the family does not require (Sec. 983.260(b));
(16) The PHA's policy on a family's right to move:
(i) The form of tenant-based rental assistance that the PHA will
offer families (Sec. 983.261(b)); and
(ii) The procedures for tenants to request tenant-based rental
assistance to move (Sec. 983.261(c));
(17) The PHA's policy regarding which options it will take if a
unit is no longer qualified for excepted status or the increased
program cap (Sec. 983.262(b)(4));
(18) The PHA's policy regarding continued occupancy of a unit under
[[Page 38309]]
the increased program cap for supportive housing for persons with
disabilities or elderly persons and units excepted based on elderly or
disabled family status after a change in family composition removing
the elderly family member or family member with a disability (Sec.
983.262(c)(3)(ii), (d)(1), and (d)(2));
(19) The PHA's policy regarding the PHA-determined amount it will
use to calculate rent to owner (Sec. 983.301(b)(1) and (c)(2)(i));
(20) The PHA's policy on the required timing and form of owner
requests for a rent increase (Sec. 983.302(a)(1));
(21) The PHA's policy on providing vacancy payments, including the
required form and manner of requests for vacancy payments (Sec.
983.352(b)(1) and (4));
(22) The PHA's policy on utility reimbursements (Sec.
983.353(d)(2)); and
(23) The PHA's policy on applying SAFMRs to its PBV program per 24
CFR 888.113(h).
0
92. Add Sec. 983.11 to subpart A to read as follows:
Sec. 983.11 Prohibition of excess public assistance.
(a) PBV assistance for newly constructed and rehabilitated housing.
The PHA may provide PBV assistance for newly constructed and
rehabilitated housing only in accordance with HUD subsidy layering
regulations (24 CFR 4.13) and other requirements.
(b) PBV assistance for existing housing. The subsidy layering
requirements are not applicable to existing housing.
(c) Development activity before HAP contract. For the subsidy
layering requirements related to development activity to place newly
constructed or rehabilitated housing under a HAP contract, see Sec.
983.153(b).
(d) Additional assistance after HAP contract. (1) For newly
constructed or rehabilitated housing under a HAP contract, the owner
must disclose to the PHA, in accordance with HUD requirements,
information regarding any additional related assistance from the
Federal Government, a State, or a unit of general local government, or
any agency or instrumentality thereof. Such related assistance includes
but is not limited to any loan, grant, guarantee, insurance, payment,
rebate, subsidy, credit, tax benefit, or any other form of direct or
indirect assistance.
(2) If the additional related assistance in paragraph (d)(1) of
this section meets certain threshold and other requirements established
by HUD through publication in the Federal Register, a subsidy layering
review may be required to determine if it would result in excess public
assistance to the project.
(3) Housing assistance payments must not be more than is necessary,
as determined in accordance with HUD requirements, to provide
affordable housing after taking account of such related assistance. The
PHA must adjust, in accordance with HUD requirements, the amount of the
housing assistance payments to the owner to compensate in whole or in
part for such related assistance.
0
93. Add Sec. 983.12 to subpart A to read as follows:
Sec. 983.12 Project record retention.
(a) Records retained according to the contract term. For each PBV
project, the PHA must maintain the following records throughout the HAP
contract term and for three years thereafter:
(1) Records to document the basis for PHA selection of the
proposal, if selection is competitive, or project, if selection is
noncompetitive, including records of the PHA's site selection
determination (see Sec. 983.55) and records to document the completion
of the review of the selection process in the case of PHA-owned units
and copies of the written notice of proposal selection and response of
the appropriate party;
(2) The analysis of impact (see Sec. 983.58(b)), if applicable;
(3) The subsidy layering determination, if applicable;
(4) The environmental review record, if applicable;
(5) The Agreement to enter into HAP contract, if applicable;
(6) Evidence of completion (see Sec. 983.155), if applicable;
(7) The HAP contract and any rider and/or amendments, including
amendments to extend the term of the contract;
(8) Records to document the basis for PHA determination and
redetermination of rent to owner;
(9) Records to document HUD approval of the independent entity or
entities, in the case of PHA-owned units;
(10) Records of the accessibility features of the project and each
contract unit; and
(11) Other records as HUD may require.
(b) [RESERVED]
0
94. Revise subpart B to read as follows:
Subpart B--Selection of PBV Proposals and Projects
Sec.
983.51 Proposal and project selection procedures.
983.52 Prohibition of assistance for ineligible units.
983.53 Prohibition of assistance for units in subsidized housing.
983.54 Cap on number of PBV units in each project (income-mixing
requirement).
983.55 Site selection standards.
983.56 Environmental review.
983.57 PHA-owned units.
983.58 PHA determination prior to selection.
983.59 Units excepted from program cap and project cap.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
Sec. 983.51 Proposal and project selection procedures.
(a) General procedures for submission and selection. The PHA
Administrative Plan must describe the procedures for submission and
selection of PBV proposals under the methods of competitive selection
in paragraph (b) of this section and selection of projects under an
exception to competitive selection under paragraph (c) of this section.
The description must include under what circumstances the PHA will use
the selection methods described in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this
section. The PHA may allow for entities that have site control to
submit proposals provided the entity will be the owner prior to
entering into the Agreement or HAP contract. Before selecting a PBV
proposal or project, the PHA must determine that the PBV proposal or
project complies with HUD program regulations and requirements,
including a determination that the property is eligible housing
(Sec. Sec. 983.52 and 983.53), complies with the cap on the number of
PBV units per project (Sec. 983.54), and meets the site selection
standards (Sec. 983.55). An owner may submit, and a PHA may select, a
single proposal covering multiple projects where each project consists
of a single-family building, provided all projects are the same housing
type (existing, rehabilitated, or newly constructed).
(b) Methods of competitive selection. The PHA must select PBV
proposals in accordance with the selection procedures in the PHA
Administrative Plan. (See paragraph (f) of this section for information
about the selection of PHA-owned units.) The PHA must select PBV
proposals by either of the following two methods:
(1) The PHA may issue a request for proposals (RFP), selecting a
PBV proposal through a competition. The PHA's RFP may not limit
proposals to a single site or impose restrictions that explicitly or
practically preclude owner submission of proposals for PBV housing on
different sites. A PHA may establish selection procedures in the
Administrative Plan that combine or are
[[Page 38310]]
in conjunction with other Federal, State, or local government housing
assistance, community development, or supportive services competitive
selection processes. If the PHA selection process is combined and
administered in conjunction with another RFP process, the PHA remains
responsible for complying with Sec. 983.51. See Sec. 983.157(a)(2)
for additional requirements for an RFP for rehabilitated housing.
(2) The PHA may select, without issuing an RFP, a proposal for
housing assisted under a Federal, State, or local government housing
assistance, community development, or supportive services program that
required competitive selection of proposals, where the proposal has
been selected in accordance with such program's competitive selection
requirements within three years of the PBV proposal selection date. The
PHA may not select a housing assistance proposal using this method if
the competition involved any consideration that the project would
receive PBV assistance.
(c) Exceptions to competitive selection. Prior to selection under
this paragraph (c), the PHA must notify the public of its intent to
noncompetitively select one or more projects for PBV assistance through
its 5-Year Plan.
(1) A PHA engaged in an initiative to improve, develop, or replace
a public housing property or site may select for PBV assistance an
existing, newly constructed, or rehabilitated project in which the PHA
has an ownership interest or over which the PHA has control without
following a competitive process.
(i) With respect to replacement housing, the PHA does not have to
replace the housing on the same site as the original public housing,
but the number of contract units in the replacement project may not
exceed the number of units in the original public housing project by
more than a de minimis amount for this exception to apply.
(ii) The public housing properties or sites may be in the public
housing inventory at the time of project selection or they may have
been removed from the public housing inventory through any available
legal removal tool within five years of the project selection date.
(2) A PHA may select for future PBV assistance a project currently
under the public housing program, or a project that is replacing the
public housing project, in which a PHA has no ownership interest, or
which a PHA has no control over, without following a competitive
process, provided:
(i) The public housing project is either still in the public
housing inventory or had been removed from the public housing inventory
through any available legal removal tool within five years of the
project selection date;
(ii) The PHA that owned or owns the public housing project does not
administer the HCV program;
(iii) The project selected for PBV assistance was specifically
identified as replacement housing for the impacted public housing
residents as part of the public housing demolition/disposition
application, voluntary conversion application, or any other application
process submitted to and approved by HUD to remove the public housing
project from the public housing inventory; and
(iv) With respect to replacement housing, the PHA does not have to
replace the housing on the same site as the original public housing,
but the number of contract units in the replacement project may not
exceed the number of units in the original public housing project by
more than a de minimis amount for this exception to apply.
(3) A PHA may select for PBV assistance a project consisting of
PHA-owned units as defined at 24 CFR 982.4 without following a
competitive process.
(i) The project units must continue to meet the definition of PHA-
owned for the initial two years of the HAP contract unless there is a
transfer of ownership approved by HUD.
(ii) The PHA must meet any conditions with respect to selection for
PBV assistance of a project consisting of PHA-owned units without
following a competitive process as may be established by HUD through
publication in the Federal Register notice after providing opportunity
for public comment.
(4) A PHA may select for PBV assistance a project that underwent an
eligibility event within five years of the project selection date, in
which a family (or families) qualifies for enhanced voucher assistance
under Section 8(t) of the Act and provides informed consent to
relinquish its enhanced voucher for PBV assistance, without following a
competitive process.
(d) Public notice of PHA request for PBV proposals. If the PHA will
be selecting proposals under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, PHA
procedures for selecting PBV proposals must be designed and actually
operated to provide broad public notice of the opportunity to offer PBV
proposals for consideration by the PHA. The public notice procedures
may include publication of the public notice in a local newspaper of
general circulation and other means designed and actually operated to
provide broad public notice. The public notice of the PHA request for
PBV proposals must specify the submission deadline. Detailed
application and selection information must be provided at the request
of interested parties.
(e) Inspections required prior to proposal or project selection.
(1) The PHA must examine the proposed site before the proposal or
project selection date to determine whether the site complies with the
site selection standards in accordance with Sec. 983.55.
(2) The PHA may execute a HAP contract for existing housing if:
(i) All proposed contract units in the project fully or
substantially comply with the HQS on the proposal or project selection
date, which the PHA must determine via inspection;
(iii) The project meets the initial inspection requirements in
accordance with Sec. 983.103(c).
(iii) The project meets the initial inspection requirements in
accordance with Sec. 983.103(c).
(f) PHA written notice of proposal or project selection. (1) For
selection of proposals through competitive methods under paragraph (b)
of this section, the PHA must give prompt written notice of proposal
selection to the party that submitted a selected proposal and must also
give prompt public notice of such selection. The PHA's requirement to
provide public notice may be met via publication of the public notice
in a local newspaper of general circulation or other means designed and
actually operated to provide broad public notice. The written notice of
proposal selection must require the owner or party that submitted the
selected proposal to provide a written response to the PHA accepting
the terms and requirements stated in the notice.
(2) For selection of projects through exceptions to competition
under paragraph (c) of this section, the PHA must give prompt written
notice of project selection to the owner following the PHA board's
resolution approving the project-basing of assistance at the specific
project. The written notice of project selection must require the owner
of the project selected to provide a written response to the PHA
accepting the terms and requirements stated in the notice.
(3) Regardless of the method of selection, if the project contains
PHA-owned units that are not owned by a separate legal entity from the
PHA, the PHA must provide the written notice of proposal or project
selection to the
[[Page 38311]]
responsible PHA official, and that official must certify in writing
that the PHA accepts the terms and requirements stated in the notice.
(4) When an environmental review is required, if such a review has
not been conducted prior to the project or proposal selection date, the
PHA's written notice of project or proposal selection must state that
the selection is subject to completion of a favorable environmental
review and that the project or proposal may be rejected based on the
results of the environmental review in accordance with 983.56(c).
(5) See Sec. 983.153(c)(3) for additional notice requirements for
newly constructed housing and rehabilitated housing.
(g) Proposal or project selection date. (1) The proposal selection
date is the date on which the PHA provides written notice to the party
that submitted the selected proposal under either paragraph (b)(1) or
(2) of this section.
(2) For properties selected in accordance with Sec. 983.51(c), the
project selection date is the date of the PHA's board resolution
approving the project-basing of assistance at the specific project.
(h) PHA-owned units. A PHA-owned unit may be assisted under the PBV
program only if the HUD field office or the independent entity reviews
the project selection process the PHA undertook and determines that the
project was appropriately selected based on the selection procedures
specified in the PHA Administrative Plan. Under no circumstance may a
HAP contract be effective for any of the subsidized housing types set
forth in Sec. 983.53(a). With the exception of projects selected in
accordance with Sec. 983.51(c), the PHA's selection procedures must be
designed in a manner that does not effectively eliminate the submission
of proposals for non-PHA-owned units or give preferential treatment
(e.g., additional points) to PHA-owned units.
(i) Public review of PHA selection decision documentation. The PHA
must make documentation available for public inspection regarding the
basis for the PHA selection of a PBV proposal.
(j) Previous participation clearance. HUD approval of specific
projects or owners is not required. For example, owner proposal
selection does not require submission of form HUD-2530 (Previous
Participation Certification) or other HUD previous participation
clearance.
(k) Excluded from Federal procurement. A PHA may not commit
project-based assistance to a project if the owner or any principal or
interested party is debarred, suspended subject to a limited denial of
participation, or otherwise excluded under 2 CFR part 2424 or is listed
on the U.S. General Services Administration list of parties excluded
from Federal procurement or non-procurement programs.
Sec. 983.52 Prohibition of assistance for ineligible units.
(a) Ineligible unit. A HAP contract must not be effective and no
PBV assistance may be provided for any of the following:
(1) Shared housing;
(2) Units on the grounds of a penal, reformatory, medical, mental,
or similar public or private institution;
(3) Nursing homes or facilities providing continuous psychiatric,
medical, nursing services, board and care, or intermediate care.
However, the PHA may execute a HAP contract and provide PBV assistance
for a dwelling unit in an assisted living facility that provides home
health care services such as nursing and therapy for residents of the
housing;
(4) Units that are owned or controlled by an educational
institution or its affiliate and are designated for occupancy by
students of the institution;
(5) Manufactured homes are ineligible only if the manufactured home
is not permanently affixed to a permanent foundation or the owner does
not own fee title to the real property (land) on which the manufactured
home is located; and
(6) Transitional Housing.
(b) Prohibition against assistance for owner-occupied unit. A HAP
contract must not be effective and no PBV assistance may be provided
for a unit occupied by an owner of the housing. A member of a
cooperative who owns shares in the project assisted under the PBV
program shall not be considered an owner for purposes of participation
in the PBV program.
(c) Prohibition against selecting unit occupied by an ineligible
family. Before a PHA places a specific unit under a HAP contract, the
PHA must determine whether the unit is occupied and, if occupied,
whether the unit's occupants are eligible for assistance in accordance
with Sec. 982.201 of this title. Additionally, for a family to be
eligible for assistance in the specific unit, the unit must be
appropriate for the size of the family under the PHA's subsidy
standards and the total tenant payment for the family must be less than
the gross rent for the unit, such that the unit will be eligible for a
monthly HAP. The PHA must not enter into a HAP contract for a unit
occupied by a family ineligible for participation in the PBV program.
(d) Prohibition against assistance for units for which commencement
of construction or rehabilitation occurred in violation of program
requirements. Unless a PHA has exercised the discretion at Sec.
983.154(f), to undertake development activity without an Agreement or
to execute an Agreement after construction or rehabilitation that
complied with applicable requirements of Sec. 983.153 has commenced,
or at Sec. 983.157, to undertake development activity after execution
of the HAP contract, the PHA may not execute a HAP contract for units
on which construction or rehabilitation commenced after the date of
proposal submission (for housing subject to competitive selection) or
the date of the PHA's board resolution approving the project-basing of
assistance at the project (for housing excepted from competitive
selection) and prior to the effective date of an Agreement. At HUD's
sole discretion, HUD may approve a PHA's request for an exception to
this prohibition. In determining whether to approve the PHA request,
HUD will consider appropriate factors, including the nature and extent
of the construction or rehabilitation that has commenced.
(1) Units for which rehabilitation or new construction began after
proposal submission or the date of board resolution but prior to the
effective date of an Agreement (if applicable), as described in this
paragraph (d), do not subsequently qualify as existing housing.
(2) Units that were newly constructed or rehabilitated in violation
of program requirements do not qualify as existing housing.
Sec. 983.53 Prohibition of assistance for units in subsidized
housing.
(a) Types of subsidized housing prohibited from receiving PBV
assistance. A HAP contract must not be effective and no PBV assistance
may be provided for any of the following:
(1) A public housing dwelling unit;
(2) A unit subsidized with any other form of Section 8 assistance
(tenant-based or project-based);
(3) A unit subsidized with any governmental rent subsidy (a subsidy
that pays all or any part of the rent);
(4) A unit subsidized with any governmental subsidy that covers all
or any part of the operating costs of the housing;
(5) A unit subsidized with rental assistance payments under Section
521 of the Housing Act of 1949, 42 U.S.C. 1490a (a Rural Housing
Service
[[Page 38312]]
Program). However, the PHA may attach assistance for a unit subsidized
with Section 515 interest reduction payments (42 U.S.C. 1485);
(6) A Section 202 project for non-elderly persons with disabilities
(assistance under Section 162 of the Housing and Community Development
Act of 1987, 12 U.S.C. 1701q note);
(7) Section 811 project-based supportive housing for persons with
disabilities (42 U.S.C. 8013);
(8) Section 202 supportive housing for the elderly (12 U.S.C.
1701q);
(9) A unit subsidized with any form of tenant-based rental
assistance (as defined at 24 CFR 982.1(b)(2)) (e.g., a unit subsidized
with tenant-based rental assistance under the HOME program, 42 U.S.C.
12701 et seq.); or
(10) A unit with any other duplicative Federal, State, or local
housing subsidy, as determined by HUD or by the PHA in accordance with
HUD requirements. For this purpose, ``housing subsidy'' does not
include the housing component of a welfare payment; a social security
payment; or a Federal, State, or local tax concession (such as relief
from local real property taxes).
(b) [RESERVED]
Sec. 983.54 Cap on number of PBV units in each project (income-mixing
requirement).
(a) Project cap. Except as provided in paragraph (b) or (c) of this
section, a PHA may not select a proposal to provide PBV assistance or
enter into an Agreement or HAP contract if the number of assisted units
in a project is more than the greater of 25 percent of the number of
dwelling units (assisted and unassisted, as adjusted as provided in
paragraph (c)(3)) in the project or 25 units.
(b) Higher project cap. A PHA may provide PBV assistance to the
greater of 25 units or 40 percent of the number of dwelling units
(assisted and unassisted, as adjusted as provided in paragraph (c)(3)
of this section) in the project if the project is located in an area
where vouchers are difficult to use as defined in Sec. 983.3.
(c) Exceptions to the project cap. (1) A project is not limited to
a single exception category but may include excepted units from any of
the exception categories under paragraph (2) and excluded units under
paragraph (3) below.
(2) PBV units are not counted toward the project cap in the
following cases:
(i) Units exclusively serving elderly families, as defined in 24
CFR 5.403;
(ii) Units exclusively made available to eligible youth described
in Section 8(x)(2)(B) of the U.S. Housing Act. If the units exclusively
made available to eligible youth use Family Unification Program (FUP)
assistance that is normally available for eligible families and youth,
the PHA must determine that the limitation of the units to youth is
consistent with the local housing needs of both eligible FUP
populations (families and youth), maintain documentation to support
this determination, and amend its Administrative Plan to include the
limitation of these FUP PBV units to eligible youth; or
(iii) Units exclusively made available to households eligible for
supportive services available to the residents of the project assisted
with PBV assistance. The project must make supportive services
available to all PBV-assisted families in the project, but the family
may not be required to participate in the services as a condition of
living in the excepted unit. Such supportive services need not be
provided by the owner or on-site but must be reasonably available to
the families receiving PBV assistance in the project and designed to
help the families in the project achieve self-sufficiency or live in
the community as independently as possible. The supportive services
must be made available to the family within a reasonable time as
defined by the PHA, but not to exceed 120 calendar days from the
family's request. The PHA must include in its Administrative Plan the
types of services offered to families that will enable the units to
qualify under the exception and the extent to which such services will
be provided (e.g., length of time services will be provided to a
family, frequency of services, and depth of services), and the
reasonable time by which such services must be made available to the
family, not to exceed 120 calendar days. A PHA that manages an FSS
program may offer FSS to meet the exception. The PHA may also make the
supportive services used in connection with the FSS program available
to non-FSS PBV families at the project.
(3) Units that are excluded under Sec. 983.59 do not count toward
the project cap. Such units are removed from the number of dwelling
units for purposes of calculating the percentages under paragraphs (a)
and (b) of this section.
(4)(i) The PBV HAP contract must specify, and the owner must set
aside, the number of excepted units made available for occupancy by
families who qualify for the exception.
(ii) For a unit to be considered excepted it must be occupied by a
family who qualifies for the exception.
(d) HAP contracts already in effect. (1) In general, HAP contracts
in effect prior to April 18, 2017, when the exception at paragraph
(c)(2)(iii) of this section came into effect and a prior exception for
disabled families was removed, or prior to December 27, 2020, when the
exception at paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section came into effect, are
governed by those HAP contracts' terms concerning the number and type
of excepted units in a project. The owner must continue to designate
the same number of contract units and assist the same number and type
of excepted units as provided under the HAP contract during the
remaining term of the HAP contract and any extension.
(2) The owner and the PHA may mutually agree to change the
requirements for excepted units under the HAP contract to comply with
the excepted unit requirements in subsection (c) of this section.
However, any change to the HAP contract may only be made if the change
does not jeopardize an assisted family's eligibility for continued
assistance at the project.
(e) PHA determination. The PHA determines the number of units in
the project for which the PHA will provide project-based assistance,
including whether and how many units will be excepted, subject to the
provisions of this section. See Sec. 983.262 for occupancy
requirements of excepted units.
(f) HUD monitoring. HUD may establish additional monitoring and
oversight requirements for PBV projects in which more than 40 percent
of the dwelling units are assisted under a PBV HAP contract through a
Federal Register Notice, subject to public comment.
Sec. 983.55 Site selection standards.
(a) Applicability. The site selection requirements in paragraph (d)
of this section apply only to site selection for existing housing and
rehabilitated PBV housing. The site selection requirements in paragraph
(e) of this section apply only to site selection for newly constructed
PBV housing. Other provisions of this section apply to selection of a
site for any form of PBV housing, including existing housing, newly
constructed housing, and rehabilitated housing.
(b) Compliance with PBV goals, civil rights requirements, and site
and neighborhood standards. The PHA may not select a project or
proposal for existing, newly constructed, or rehabilitated PBV housing
on a site or enter into an Agreement or HAP contract for units on the
site, unless the PHA has determined that:
(1) Project-based assistance for housing at the selected site is
consistent
[[Page 38313]]
with the goal of deconcentrating poverty and expanding housing and
economic opportunities. The standard for deconcentrating poverty and
expanding housing and economic opportunities must be consistent with
the PHA Plan under 24 CFR part 903 and the PHA Administrative Plan. In
developing the standards to apply in determining whether a proposed PBV
development will be selected, a PHA must consider the following:
(i) Whether the census tract in which the proposed PBV development
will be located is in a HUD-designated Enterprise Zone, Economic
Community, or Renewal Community;
(ii) Whether a PBV development will be located in a census tract
where the concentration of assisted units will be or has decreased as a
result of public housing demolition;
(iii) Whether the census tract in which the proposed PBV
development will be located is undergoing significant revitalization;
(iv) Whether State, local, or Federal dollars have been invested in
the area that has assisted in the achievement of the statutory
requirement;
(v) Whether new market rate units are being developed in the same
census tract where the proposed PBV development will be located and the
likelihood that such market rate units will positively impact the
poverty rate in the area;
(vi) If the poverty rate in the area where the proposed PBV
development will be located is greater than 20 percent, the PHA must
consider whether in the past five years there has been an overall
decline in the poverty rate;
(vii) Whether there are meaningful opportunities for educational
and economic advancement in the census tract where the proposed PBV
development will be located.
(2) The site is suitable from the standpoint of facilitating and
furthering full compliance with the applicable provisions of Title VI
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d-2000d(4)) and HUD's
implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 1; Title VIII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1968 (42 U.S.C. 3601-3629) and HUD's implementing
regulations at 24 CFR parts 100 through 199; Executive Order 11063 (27
FR 11527; 3 CFR, 1959-1963 Comp., p. 652) and HUD's implementing
regulations at 24 CFR part 107. The site must also be suitable from the
standpoint of facilitating and furthering full compliance with the
applicable provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C.
12131-12134) and implementing regulations (28 CFR part 35), and Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and HUD's
implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 8, including meeting the
Section 504 site selection requirements described in 24 CFR 8.4(b)(5).
(3) The site and neighborhood is reasonably free from disturbing
noises and reverberations and other dangers to the health, safety, and
general welfare of the occupants. The site and neighborhood may not be
subject to serious adverse environmental conditions, natural or
manmade, that could affect the health or safety of the project
occupants, such as dangerous walks or steps; contamination;
instability; flooding, poor drainage, septic tank back-ups or sewage
hazards; mudslides; abnormal air pollution, smoke or dust; excessive
noise, vibration or vehicular traffic; excessive accumulations of
trash; vermin or rodent infestation; or fire hazards.
(c) PHA PBV site selection policy. (1) The PHA Administrative Plan
must establish the PHA's policy for selection of PBV sites in
accordance with this section.
(2) The site selection policy must explain how the PHA's site
selection procedures promote the PBV goals.
(3) The PHA must select PBV sites in accordance with the PHA's site
selection policy in the PHA Administrative Plan.
(d) Existing and rehabilitated housing site and neighborhood
standards. A site for existing or rehabilitated housing must meet the
following site and neighborhood standards. The site must:
(1) Be adequate in size, exposure, and contour to accommodate the
number and type of units proposed, and adequate utilities and streets
must be available to service the site. (The existence of a private
disposal system and private sanitary water supply for the site,
approved in accordance with law, may be considered adequate utilities.)
(2) Promote greater choice of housing opportunities and avoid undue
concentration of assisted persons in areas containing a high proportion
of low-income persons.
(3) Be accessible to social, recreational, educational, commercial,
and health facilities and services and other municipal facilities and
services that are at least equivalent to those typically found in
neighborhoods consisting largely of unassisted, standard housing of
similar market rents.
(4) Be so located that travel time and cost via public
transportation or private automobile from the neighborhood to places of
employment providing a range of jobs for lower-income workers is not
excessive. While it is important that housing for the elderly not be
totally isolated from employment opportunities, this requirement need
not be adhered to rigidly for such projects.
(e) New construction site and neighborhood standards. A site for
newly constructed housing must meet the following site and neighborhood
standards:
(1) The site must be adequate in size, exposure, and contour to
accommodate the number and type of units proposed, and adequate
utilities (water, sewer, gas, and electricity) and streets must be
available to service the site.
(2) The site must not be located in an area of minority
concentration, except as permitted under paragraph (e)(3) of this
section, and must not be located in a racially mixed area if the
project will cause a significant increase in the proportion of minority
to non-minority residents in the area.
(3) A project may be located in an area of minority concentration
only if:
(i) Sufficient, comparable opportunities exist for housing for
minority families in the income range to be served by the proposed
project outside areas of minority concentration (see paragraphs
(e)(3)(iii) through (v) of this section for further guidance on this
criterion); or
(ii) The project is necessary to meet overriding housing needs that
cannot be met in that housing market area (see paragraph (e)(3)(vi) of
this section for further guidance on this criterion).
(iii) As used in paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this section,
``sufficient'' does not require that in every locality there be an
equal number of assisted units within and outside of areas of minority
concentration. Rather, application of this standard should produce a
reasonable distribution of assisted units each year, that, over a
period of several years, will approach an appropriate balance of
housing choices within and outside areas of minority concentration. An
appropriate balance in any jurisdiction must be determined in light of
local conditions affecting the range of housing choices available for
low-income minority families and in relation to the racial mix of the
locality's population.
(iv) Units may be considered ``comparable opportunities,'' as used
in paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this section, if they have the same household
type (elderly, disabled, family, large family) and tenure type (owner/
renter); require approximately the same tenant contribution towards
rent; serve the same income group; are located in the
[[Page 38314]]
same housing market; and are in standard condition.
(v) Application of this sufficient, comparable opportunities
standard involves assessing the overall impact of HUD-assisted housing
on the availability of housing choices for low-income minority families
in and outside areas of minority concentration, and must take into
account the extent to which the following factors are present, along
with other factors relevant to housing choice:
(A) A significant number of assisted housing units are available
outside areas of minority concentration.
(B) There is significant integration of assisted housing projects
constructed or rehabilitated in the past 10 years, relative to the
racial mix of the eligible population.
(C) There are racially integrated neighborhoods in the locality.
(D) Programs are operated by the locality to assist minority
families that wish to find housing outside areas of minority
concentration.
(E) Minority families have benefited from local activities (e.g.,
acquisition and write-down of sites, tax relief programs for
homeowners, acquisitions of units for use as assisted housing units)
undertaken to expand choice for minority families outside of areas of
minority concentration.
(F) A significant proportion of minority households has been
successful in finding units in non-minority areas under the tenant-
based assistance programs.
(G) Comparable housing opportunities have been made available
outside areas of minority concentration through other programs.
(vi) Application of the ``overriding housing needs'' criterion, for
example, permits approval of sites that are an integral part of an
overall local strategy for the preservation or restoration of the
immediate neighborhood and of sites in a neighborhood experiencing
significant private investment that is demonstrably improving the
economic character of the area (a ``revitalizing area''). An
``overriding housing need,'' however, may not serve as the basis for
determining that a site is acceptable, if the only reason the need
cannot otherwise be feasibly met is that discrimination on the basis of
race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, familial status, or
disability renders sites outside areas of minority concentration
unavailable or if the use of this standard in recent years has had the
effect of circumventing the obligation to provide housing choice.
(4) The site must promote greater choice of housing opportunities
and avoid undue concentration of assisted persons in areas containing a
high proportion of low-income persons.
(5) The neighborhood must not be one that is seriously detrimental
to family life or in which substandard dwellings or other undesirable
conditions predominate, unless there is actively in progress a
concerted program to remedy the undesirable conditions.
(6) The housing must be accessible to social, recreational,
educational, commercial, and health facilities and services and other
municipal facilities and services that are at least equivalent to those
typically found in neighborhoods consisting largely of unassisted,
standard housing of similar market rents.
(7) Except for housing designed for elderly persons, travel time
and cost via public transportation or private automobile from the
neighborhood to places of employment providing a range of jobs for
lower-income workers, must not be excessive.
Sec. 983.56 Environmental review.
(a) HUD environmental regulations. (1) HUD environmental
regulations at 24 CFR parts 50 and 58 apply to activities under the PBV
program, except as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(2) For projects or proposals that were selected in accordance with
the site selection standards at Sec. 983.55 in effect on or after June
6, 2024, no environmental review is required to be undertaken before
entering into a HAP contract for existing housing, except to the extent
a Federal environmental review is required by law or regulation
relating to funding other than PBV housing assistance payments.
(b) Who performs the environmental review? Under 24 CFR part 58,
the unit of general local government within which the project is
located that exercises land use responsibility, the county, or the
State (the ``responsible entity'' or ``RE''), is responsible for the
Federal environmental review under the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and related applicable Federal
laws and authorities in accordance with 24 CFR 58.5 and 58.6. If a PHA
objects in writing to having the RE perform the Federal environmental
review, or if the RE declines to perform it, then HUD may perform the
review itself (24 CFR 58.11). 24 CFR part 50 governs HUD performance of
the review.
(c) Notice of applicability. When an environmental review is
required, if such a review has not been conducted prior to the proposal
or project selection date, then the PHA's written notice of proposal or
project selection must state that the selection is subject to
completion of a favorable environmental review and that the project may
be rejected based on the results of the environmental review.
(d) Environmental review limitations. When an environmental review
is required, a PHA may not execute an Agreement or HAP contract with an
owner, and the PHA, the owner, and its contractors may not acquire,
rehabilitate, convert, lease, repair, dispose of, demolish, or
construct real property or commit or expend program or local funds for
these activities, until one of the following occurs:
(1) The responsible entity has determined that the activities to be
undertaken are exempt under 24 CFR 58.34(a) or categorically excluded
and not subject to compliance with environmental laws under 24 CFR
58.35(b);
(2) The responsible entity has completed the environmental review
procedures required by 24 CFR part 58, and HUD has approved the PHA's
Request for Release of Funds and Certification (form HUD-7015.15). HUD
approves the Request for Release of Funds and Certification by issuing
a Letter to Proceed or form HUD-7015.16, thereby authorizing the PHA to
execute an Agreement or HAP contract, as applicable; or
(3) HUD has performed an environmental review under 24 CFR part 50
and has notified the PHA in writing of environmental clearance.
(e) Environmental review restrictions. HUD will not issue a Letter
to Proceed or form HUD-7015.16 to the PHA or provide environmental
clearance if the PHA, the owner, or its contractors have undertaken any
of the activities described in paragraph (d) of this section.
(f) Mitigating measures. The PHA must document any mitigating
measures or other conditions as provided in 24 CFR part 50 or 58, as
applicable, and must complete or require the owner to carry out such
measures and conditions.
(g) PHA duty to supply information. The PHA must supply all
available, relevant information necessary for the RE (or HUD, if
applicable) to perform the required environmental review.
Sec. 983.57 PHA-owned units.
(a) Selection of PHA-owned units. The selection of PHA-owned units
must be done in accordance with Sec. 983.51(h).
(b) Independent entity functions. In connection with PHA-owned
units:
(1) The independent entity must determine rent to owner, including
rent reasonableness and calculating any rent
[[Page 38315]]
adjustments by an OCAF (where applicable), in accordance with
Sec. Sec. 983.301 through 983.305.
(2) The independent entity must perform unit inspections in
accordance with Sec. 983.103(g).
(3) When the owner carries out development activity under Sec.
983.152 or substantial improvement under Sec. Sec. 983.207(d) or
983.212, the independent entity must review the evidence and work
completion certification submitted by the owner in accordance with
Sec. 983.155(b) and determine if the units are complete in accordance
with Sec. 983.156.
(4) The independent entity must determine whether to approve
substantial improvement to units under a HAP contract in accordance
with Sec. 983.212.
(c) Payment to independent entity. The PHA may compensate the
independent entity from PHA administrative fees (including fees
credited to the administrative fee reserve) for the services performed
by the independent entity. The PHA may not use other program receipts
to compensate the independent entity for such services. The PHA and the
independent entity may not charge the family any fee or charge for the
services provided by the independent entity.
Sec. 983.58 PHA determination prior to selection.
(a) Analysis of units and budget. A PHA must calculate the number
of authorized voucher units that it is permitted to project-base in
accordance with Sec. 983.6 and determine the amount of budget
authority that it has available for project-basing in accordance with
Sec. 983.5(b), before it issues a request for proposals in accordance
with Sec. 983.51(b)(1), makes a selection based on a previous
competition in accordance with Sec. 983.51(b)(2), amends an existing
HAP contract to add units in accordance with Sec. 983.207(b), or
noncompetitively selects a project in accordance with Sec. 983.51(c).
(b) Analysis of impact. Prior to selecting a project for PBV
assistance, a PHA must perform an analysis of the impact if project-
basing 50 percent or more of the PHA's authorized voucher units. The
analysis should consider the ability of the PHA to meet the needs of
the community across its tenant-based and project-based voucher
portfolio, including the impact on, among others: families on the
waiting list and eligible PBV families that wish to move under Sec.
983.261. The analysis performed by the PHA must be available as part of
the public record.
Sec. 983.59 Units excluded from program cap and project cap.
(a) General. For HAP contracts entered into on or after April 18,
2017, the PHA may commit project-based assistance to units that meet
the requirements for exclusion in paragraph (b) of this section. Such
units do not count toward the program cap or project cap described in
Sec. Sec. 983.6 and 983.54, respectively.
(b) Requirements for exclusion of existing or rehabilitated units.
Excluded units must, in the five years prior to the request for
proposals (RFP) or the proposal or project selection date in the case
of selection without RFP, fall into one of the following categories
provided that the units are removed from all categories prior to the
effective date of the HAP contract:
(1) The units have received one of the following forms of HUD
assistance:
(i) Public Housing Capital or Operating Funds (Section 9 of the
1937 Act);
(ii) Project-Based Rental Assistance (Section 8 of the 1937 Act).
Project-based rental assistance under Section 8 includes the Section 8
moderate rehabilitation program, including the single-room occupancy
(SRO) program;
(iii) Housing For the Elderly (Section 202 of the Housing Act of
1959);
(iv) Housing for Persons with Disabilities (Section 811 of the
Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act);
(v) Rental Assistance Program (RAP) (Section 236(f)(2) of the
National Housing Act); or
(vi) Flexible Subsidy Program (Section 201 of the Housing and
Community Development Amendments Act of 1978).
(2) The units have been subject to a federally required rent
restriction under one of the following programs:
(i) The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program (26 U.S.C. 42);
(ii) Section 515 Rural Rental Housing Loans (42 U.S.C. 1485); or
(iii) The following HUD programs:
(A) Section 236;
(B) Section 221(d)(3) Below Market Interest Rate;
(C) Housing For the Elderly (Section 202 of the Housing Act of
1959);
(D) Housing for Persons with Disabilities (Section 811 of the
Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act);
(E) Flexible Subsidy Program (Section 201 of the Housing and
Community Development Amendments Act of 1978); or
(iv) Any other program identified by HUD through Federal Register
notice subject to public comment.
(c) Replacement units. Newly constructed units developed under the
PBV program may be excluded from the program cap and project cap
provided the primary purpose of the newly constructed units is or was
to replace units that meet the criteria of paragraph (b)(1) or (2) of
this section. The newly constructed unit must be located on the same
site as the unit it is replacing; however, an expansion of or
modification to the prior project's site boundaries as a result of the
design of the newly constructed project is acceptable as long as a
majority of the replacement units are built back on the site of the
original project and any replacement units that are not located on the
existing site are part of a project that shares a common border with,
are across a public right of way from, or touch that site. In addition,
in order for the replacement units to be excluded from the program and
project caps, one of the following must be true:
(1) Former residents of the original project must be provided with
a selection preference that provides the residents with the right of
first occupancy at the PBV newly constructed project when it is ready
for occupancy.
(2) Prior to the demolition of the original project, the PBV newly
constructed project must have been identified as replacement housing
for that original project as part of a documented plan for the
redevelopment of the site.
(d) Unit size configuration and number of units for newly
constructed and rehabilitated projects. The unit size configuration of
the PBV newly constructed or rehabilitated project may differ from the
unit size configuration of the original project that the PBV units are
replacing. In addition, the total number of PBV-assisted units may
differ from the number of units in the original project. However, only
the total number of units in the original project are excluded from the
program cap and the project cap. Units that exceed the total number of
covered units in the original project are subject to the program cap
and the project cap.
(e) Inapplicability of other program and project cap exceptions.
The 10 percent exception under Sec. 983.6 and the project cap
exception under Sec. 983.54(c)(2) are inapplicable to excluded units
under this section.
Subpart C--Dwelling Units
0
95. Amend Sec. 983.101 by revising paragraphs (a) and (e) to read as
follows:
[[Page 38316]]
Sec. 983.101 Housing quality standards.
(a) HQS applicability. As defined in Sec. 983.3, HQS refers to the
minimum quality standards developed by HUD in accordance with 24 CFR
5.703 of this title for housing assisted under the PBV program,
including any variations approved by HUD for the PHA under 24 CFR
5.705(a)(3).
* * * * *
(e) Additional PHA quality and design requirements. This section
establishes the minimum federal housing quality standards for PBV
housing. However, the PHA may elect to establish additional
requirements for quality, architecture, or design of PBV housing.
0
96. Revise Sec. 983.103 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.103 Inspecting units.
(a) Pre-selection inspection. If the units to be assisted already
exist, the PHA must inspect all units before the proposal or project
selection date and must determine if the project meets the definition
of existing housing. If the project is existing housing, the PHA may
not execute the HAP contract until all units meet the initial
inspection requirements in accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(b) Initial inspection of newly constructed and rehabilitated
projects and units that underwent substantial improvement to be added
to a HAP contract. Following completion of work pursuant to Sec.
983.155, the PHA must complete the following inspection(s), as
applicable in accordance with Sec. 983.156:
(1) For rehabilitated housing that is developed prior to the HAP
contract term or newly constructed housing, the PHA must inspect each
proposed newly constructed and rehabilitated PBV unit before execution
of the HAP contract. Each proposed PBV unit must fully comply with HQS
prior to HAP contract execution.
(2) For rehabilitated housing that will undergo development
activity after HAP contract execution per Sec. 983.157, the PHA must
conduct unit inspections in accordance with the requirements of Sec.
983.157.
(3) Inspect each unit that underwent substantial improvement
pursuant to Sec. Sec. 983.207(d) or 983.212. Each PBV unit that
underwent substantial improvement must fully comply with HQS prior to
the PHA adding the unit to the HAP contract, returning the unit
temporarily removed to the HAP contract, allowing re-occupancy of the
unit, and resuming housing assistance payments, as applicable.
(c) Initial inspection requirements for existing housing--(1) In
general. In accordance with this paragraph, the PHA may adopt in its
Administrative Plan the non-life-threatening deficiencies option or the
alternative inspection option, or both, for initial inspections of
existing housing. If the PHA has not adopted the initial inspection
non-life-threatening deficiency option (NLT option) or the alternative
inspection option for the project, the PHA must inspect and determine
that all of the proposed PBV units fully comply with HQS before
entering the HAP contract. The PHA must establish in its Administrative
Plan the amount of time that may elapse between the initial inspection
of existing housing and execution of a HAP contract for that unit.
(2) Initial inspection--NLT option. (i) A PHA may execute the HAP
contract and begin making assistance payments for all of the assisted
units, including units that failed the initial HQS inspection, provided
that no units have life-threatening deficiencies and if the owner
agrees to the NLT option. If the PHA has established and the unit is
covered by both the NLT option and the alternative inspections option
under paragraph (c)(3) of this section for the initial HQS inspection,
see paragraph (c)(4) of this section.
(ii) After completing the inspections and determining there are no
life-threatening deficiencies, for any unit with non-life-threatening
deficiencies, the PHA must provide both the owner and the family (any
eligible in-place family (Sec. 983.251(d)) or any family referred from
the PBV waiting list being offered that unit) a list of the non-life-
threatening deficiencies identified by the initial HQS inspection and
an explanation of the maximum amount of time the PHA will withhold HAP
before abating assistance if the owner does not complete the repairs
within 30 days. The PHA must also inform the family that if the family
accepts the unit and the owner fails to make the repairs within the
cure period, which may not exceed 180 days from the effective date of
the HAP contract, the PHA will remove the unit from the HAP contract,
and the family will be issued a voucher to move to another unit in
order to receive voucher assistance. If the PHA's Administrative Plan
provides that the PHA will terminate the PBV HAP contract if the owner
fails to correct deficiencies in any unit in the project within the
cure period, the PHA must also provide the notice described above to
families referred to units without any deficiencies. The family
referred from the waiting list may choose to decline the unit and
remain on the waiting list. An eligible in-place family may decline the
unit, and the PHA must issue the family a tenant-based voucher to move
from the unit in that circumstance.
(iii) If the family decides to lease the unit, the family enters
into the assisted lease with the owner. The PHA commences making
assistance payments to the owner.
(iv) The owner must correct the deficiencies within 30 days from
the effective date of the HAP contract. If the owner fails to correct
the deficiencies within the 30-day cure period, the PHA must withhold
the housing assistance payments for the unit until the owner makes the
repairs and the PHA verifies the correction. Once the deficiencies are
corrected, the PHA must use the withheld housing assistance payments to
make payments for the period that payments were withheld.
(v) The PHA must state in its Administrative Plan the maximum
amount of time it will withhold payments before abating payments and
the number of days after which the PHA will either terminate the PBV
HAP contract or remove the unit from the HAP contract as a result of
the owner's failure to correct the deficiencies, which may not exceed
180 days from the effective date of the HAP contract. If the PHA
terminates the PBV HAP contract or removes the unit from the HAP
contract as a result of the owner's failure to correct the
deficiencies, the PHA must provide any affected family tenant-based
assistance as provided in Sec. 983.206(b).
(vi) The owner may not terminate the tenancy of a family because of
the withholding or abatement of assistance payments. During any period
the assistance is abated under the NLT option, the family may terminate
the tenancy by notifying the owner and the PHA, and the PHA must
provide the family tenant-based assistance. In the case of an in-place
family, the family may also choose to terminate the tenancy during the
withholding period following the 30-day cure period, and the PHA must
offer the family either another assisted unit in the PBV project that
fully complies with HQS or tenant-based assistance.
(3) Initial inspection--alternative inspection option. The PHA may
adopt the alternative inspection option for initial inspections of
existing housing, subject to the procedures and requirements specified
in 24 CFR 982.406(b), (c), (d), and (g).
(i) After the PHA determines the project meets the definition of
existing housing in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section, the
PHA may execute the HAP contract for the project if the project has
been inspected in the
[[Page 38317]]
previous 24 months using an alternative inspection that meets the
requirements of 24 CFR 982.406, as opposed to re-inspecting the project
to make sure all units fully comply with HQS before executing the HAP
contract, if the owner agrees to the use of the alternative inspection
option. If the PHA has established and the unit is covered by both the
NLT option under paragraph (c)(2) of this section and the alternative
inspection option for the initial HQS inspection, see paragraph (c)(4)
of this section.
(ii) The PHA notifies all families (any eligible in-place family
(Sec. 983.251(d)) or any family referred from the PBV waiting list
being offered a contract unit) that will occupy a contract unit before
the PHA conducts the HQS inspection that the alternative inspection
option is in effect for the project. The PHA must provide each family
with the PHA list of HQS deficiencies that are considered life-
threatening as part of this notification. A family on the waiting list
may decline to accept an offered unit due to unit conditions and retain
its place on the PBV waiting list.
(iii) The PHA must conduct an HQS inspection within 30 days of the
proposal or project selection date. If the family reports a deficiency
to the PHA prior to the PHA's inspection, the PHA must inspect the unit
within the time period required under paragraph (f) of this section or
within 30 days of the effective date of the HAP contract, whichever
time period ends first.
(iv) The PHA may not commence housing assistance payments to the
owner until the PHA has inspected all the units under the HAP contract
and determined they meet HQS.
(v) If the PHA inspection finds that any contract unit contains HQS
deficiencies, the PHA may not make housing assistance payments to the
owner until all the deficiencies have been corrected in all contract
units. If a deficiency is life-threatening, the owner must correct the
deficiency within 24 hours of notification from the PHA. For other
deficiencies, the owner must correct the deficiency within 30 calendar
days (or any PHA-approved extension) of notification from the PHA. If
the owner corrects the deficiencies within the required cure period,
the PHA makes the housing assistance payments retroactive to the
effective date of the HAP contract or the PBV lease effective dates,
whichever is later.
(vi) The PHA establishes in the Administrative Plan the maximum
amount of time it will withhold payments if the owner does not correct
the deficiencies within the required cure period before abating
payments and the date by which the PHA will either remove the unit from
the HAP contract or terminate the HAP contract for the owner's failure
to correct the deficiencies, which may not exceed 180 days from the
effective date of the HAP contract. If the PHA terminates the PBV HAP
contract or removes the unit from the HAP contract as a result of the
owner's failure to correct the deficiencies, the PHA must provide any
affected family tenant-based assistance as provided in Sec. 983.206(b)
of this title.
(vii) If the owner fails to make the repairs within the applicable
time periods, the PHA must abate the payments for the non-compliant
units, while continuing to withhold payments for the HQS compliant
units until all the units meet HQS or the unit removal or contract
termination occurs. If the deficiencies are corrected, the PHA must use
the withheld housing assistance payments to make payments for the
period that payments were withheld.
(viii) The owner may not terminate the tenancy of a family because
of the withholding or abatement of assistance payments. During the
abatement period, a family may terminate the tenancy by notifying the
owner, and the PHA must provide the family tenant-based assistance. If
the PHA terminates the PBV HAP contract or removes the unit from the
HAP contract as a result of the owner's failure to correct the
deficiencies, the PHA must provide any affected family tenant-based
assistance as provided in Sec. 983.206(b) of this title.
(4) Initial inspection--use of both the NLT and alternative
options. The PHA may adopt both the NLT option and the alternative
inspection option for initial inspections of existing housing, subject
to the procedures and requirements specified in 24 CFR 982.406(b), (c),
(d), and (g).
(i) If the owner agrees to both the NLT option and the alternative
inspection option, then the PHA notifies all families (any eligible in-
place family (Sec. 983.251(d)) or any family referred from the PBV
waiting list that will occupy the unit before the PHA conducts the HQS
inspection) that both the NLT option and the alternative inspection
option will be used for the family's unit. As part of this
notification, the PHA must provide the family with the PHA's list of
HQS deficiencies that are considered life-threatening. A family on the
waiting list may decline to move into a unit due to unit conditions and
retain its place on the PBV waiting list. Following inspection (see
paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section), the PHA must provide any family
referred from the PBV waiting list that will occupy a unit with non-
life-threatening deficiencies a list of the non-life-threatening
deficiencies identified by the initial HQS inspection and an
explanation of the maximum amount of time the PHA will withhold HAP
before abating assistance if the owner does not complete the repairs
within 30 days. The PHA must also inform the family that if the family
accepts the unit and the owner fails to make the repairs within the
cure period, which may not exceed 180 days from the effective date of
the HAP contract, the PHA will remove the unit from the HAP contract,
and the family will be issued a voucher to move to another unit in
order to receive voucher assistance. The family referred from the
waiting list may choose to decline the unit and remain on the PBV
waiting list.
(ii) The PHA executes the HAP contract with the owner on the basis
of the alternative inspection. The PHA must conduct an HQS inspection
within 30 days after the proposal or project selection date. If the
family reports a deficiency to the PHA during this interim period, the
PHA must inspect the unit within the time period required under
paragraph (f) of this section or within 30 days of the proposal or
project selection date, whichever time period ends first.
(iii) The PHA may not make housing assistance payments to the owner
until the PHA has inspected all the assisted units.
(iv) If none of the units have any life-threatening deficiencies,
the PHA commences payments and makes retroactive payments to the
effective date of the HAP contract or the PBV lease effective dates,
whichever is later, for all the assisted units. For any unit that
failed the PHA's HQS inspection but has no life-threatening
deficiencies, the owner must correct the deficiencies within no more
than 30 days from the effective date of the HAP contract. If the owner
fails to correct the deficiencies within the 30-day cure period, the
PHA must withhold the housing assistance payments for that unit until
the owner makes the repairs and the PHA verifies the correction. Once
the unit is in compliance with HQS, the PHA must use the withheld
housing assistance payments to make payments for the period that
payments were withheld.
(v) If any units have life-threatening deficiencies, the PHA may
not commence making housing assistance payments to the owner for any
units until all the HQS deficiencies (life-threatening and non-life-
threatening) have been corrected. The PHA must not refer families from
the PBV waiting list
[[Page 38318]]
to occupy units with life-threatening deficiencies. The owner must
correct all life-threatening deficiencies within no more than 24 hours.
For other deficiencies, the owner must correct the deficiency within no
more than 30 calendar days (or any PHA-approved extension). If the
owner corrects all of the deficiencies within the required cure period,
the PHA must make the housing assistance payments retroactive to the
effective date of the HAP contract or the PBV lease effective dates,
whichever is later. If the owner fails to make the repairs within the
applicable time periods, the PHA must abate the payments for the non-
compliant units, while continuing to withhold payments for the HQS
compliant units until all the units meet HQS or the unit removal or
contract termination occurs. If the deficiencies are corrected, the PHA
must use the withheld housing assistance payments to make payments for
the period that payments were withheld.
(vi) The owner may not terminate the tenancy of the family because
of the withholding or abatement of assistance payments. During the
period the assistance is abated, a family may terminate the tenancy by
notifying the owner, and the PHA must provide the family tenant-based
assistance. If the PHA terminates the PBV HAP contract or removes the
unit from the HAP contract as a result of the owner's failure to
correct the deficiencies, the PHA must provide any affected family with
tenant-based assistance as provided in Sec. 983.206(b) of this title.
The PHA must establish in its Administrative Plan:
(A) The maximum amount of time it will withhold payments if the
owner fails to correct the deficiencies within the required cure period
before abating payments; and
(B) The number of days after which the PHA will terminate the HAP
contract or remove the unit from the HAP contract for the owner's
failure to correct the deficiencies, which may not exceed 180 days from
the effective date of the HAP contract.
(d) Turnover inspections. Before providing assistance to a new
family in a contract unit, the PHA must inspect the unit. The PHA must
not provide assistance on behalf of a family for a unit that fails to
comply fully with HQS.
(e) Periodic inspections. (1) At least biennially during the term
of the HAP contract, the PHA must inspect a random sample, consisting
of at least 20 percent of the contract units in each building, to
determine if the contract units and the premises are maintained in
accordance with HQS. Turnover inspections pursuant to paragraph (d) of
this section are not counted toward meeting this inspection
requirement. Instead of biennially, a small rural PHA, as defined in
Sec. 902.101 of this title, must inspect the random sample of units in
accordance with this paragraph at least once every three years. The PHA
must establish in its Administrative Plan the frequency of periodic
inspections. This requirement applies in the case of a HAP contract
that is undergoing development activity after HAP contract execution
per Sec. 983.157; however, if the periodic inspection occurs during
the period of development activity covered by the rider and fewer than
20 percent of contract units in each building are designated in the
rider as available for occupancy, the PHA is only required to inspect
the units in that building that are designated as available for
occupancy.
(2) If more than 20 percent of the sample of inspected contract
units in a building fail the initial inspection, then the PHA must
reinspect 100 percent of the contract units in the building.
(3) A PHA may also use alternative inspections to meet the
requirements for periodic inspections in this paragraph (e), subject to
the procedures and requirements specified in 24 CFR 982.406(b), (c),
(d), and (g).
(f) Other inspections. (1) Interim inspections: When a participant
family or government official notifies the PHA of a potential
deficiency, the following conditions apply:
(i) Life-threatening. If the reported deficiency is life-
threatening, the PHA must, within 24 hours, both inspect the housing
unit and notify the owner if the life-threatening deficiency is
confirmed. The owner must then make the repairs within 24 hours of PHA
notification.
(ii) Non-life-threatening. If the reported deficiency is non-life-
threatening, the PHA must, within 15 days, both inspect the unit and
notify the owner if the deficiency is confirmed. The owner must then
make the repairs within 30 days of the notification from the PHA or
within any PHA-approved extension.
(iii) Extraordinary circumstances. In the event of extraordinary
circumstances, such as if a unit is within a presidentially declared
disaster area, HUD may approve an exception of the 24-hour or the 15-
day inspection requirement until such time as an inspection is
feasible.
(2) Follow-up inspections: The PHA must conduct follow-up
inspections needed to determine if the owner (or, if applicable, the
family) has corrected an HQS violation, except where the PHA is using a
verification method as described in paragraph (h) of this section, and
must conduct inspections to determine the basis for exercise of
contractual and other remedies for owner or family violation of the
HQS. (Family HQS obligations are specified in 24 CFR 982.404(b).)
(3) Supervisory quality control inspections: In conducting PHA
supervisory quality control HQS inspections, the PHA should include a
representative sample of both tenant-based and project-based units.
(g) Inspecting PHA-owned units. (1) In the case of PHA-owned units,
the inspections required under this section must be performed by an
independent entity designated in accordance with Sec. 983.57, rather
than by the PHA.
(2) The independent entity must furnish a copy of each inspection
report to the PHA.
(3) The PHA must take all necessary actions in response to
inspection reports from the independent entity, including exercise of
contractual remedies for violation of the HAP contract by the PHA
owner.
(h) Verification methods. When a PHA must verify correction of a
deficiency, the PHA may use verification methods other than another on-
site inspection. The PHA may establish different verification methods
for initial and subsequent inspections or for different HQS
deficiencies, which must be detailed in its Administrative Plan. Upon
either an inspection for initial occupancy or a reinspection, the PHA
may accept photographic evidence or other reliable evidence from the
owner to verify that a deficiency has been corrected.
(i) Projects with government financing. In the case of a PBV
project financed under a Federal, State, or local housing program that
is subject to an alternative inspection, the PHA may rely upon
inspections conducted at least triennially to demonstrate compliance
with the alternative inspection option under paragraph (c) of this
section or the periodic inspection requirement of paragraph (e) of this
section, in accordance with its policy established in the PHA
Administrative Plan.
0
97. In subpart D, revise Sec. 983.151 through Sec. 983.156 to read as
follows:
Subpart D--Requirements for Rehabilitated and Newly Constructed
Units
Sec.
983.151 Applicability.
983.152 Nature of development activity.
983.153 Development requirements.
983.154 Development agreement.
983.155 Completion of work.
983.156 PHA acceptance of completed units.
[[Page 38319]]
Sec. 983.151 Applicability.
This subpart applies to development activity, as defined in Sec.
983.3, under the PBV program.
Sec. 983.152 Nature of development activity.
(a) Purpose of development activity. An owner may undertake
development activity, as defined at Sec. 983.3, for the purpose of:
(1) Placing a newly constructed or rehabilitated project under a
HAP contract; or
(2) For a rehabilitated project that will undergo development
activity after HAP contract execution, completing the requirements of
the rider in accordance with Sec. 983.157.
(b) Development requirements. Development activity must comply with
the requirements of Sec. Sec. 983.153 through 983.157.
Sec. 983.153 Development requirements.
(a) Environmental review requirements. The development activity
must comply with any applicable environmental review requirements at
Sec. 983.56.
(b) Subsidy layering review. (1) The PHA may provide PBV assistance
only in accordance with the HUD subsidy layering regulations (24 CFR
4.13) and other requirements. A subsidy layering review is required
when an owner undertakes development activity and housing assistance
payment subsidy under the PBV program is combined with other
governmental housing assistance from Federal, State, or local agencies,
including assistance such as tax concessions or tax credits. The
subsidy layering review is intended to prevent excessive public
assistance for the housing by combining (layering) housing assistance
payment subsidy under the PBV program with other governmental housing
assistance from Federal, State, or local agencies, including assistance
such as tax concessions or tax credits.
(2) When a subsidy layering review is required, it must occur
before a PHA attaches assistance to a project. Specifically, the PHA
may not execute an Agreement or HAP contract with an owner until HUD or
a housing credit agency approved by HUD has conducted any required
subsidy layering review and determined that the PBV assistance is in
accordance with HUD subsidy layering requirements.
(3) A further subsidy layering review is not required if HUD's
designee has conducted a review in accordance with HUD's PBV subsidy
layering review guidelines and that review included a review of PBV
assistance.
(4) The owner must disclose to the PHA any change to the
information provided for purposes of the subsidy layering review,
including the amount of assistance or number of units to be developed,
that occurs after the subsidy layering review has been conducted and
before all contract units are placed under the HAP contract, in
accordance with HUD requirements. A subsidy layering review may be
required to determine if such a change would result in excess public
assistance to the project, as required by HUD through notification in
the Federal Register.
(5) The HAP contract must contain the owner's certification that
the project has not received and will not receive (before or during the
term of the HAP contract) any public assistance for acquisition,
development, or operation of the housing other than assistance
disclosed in the subsidy layering review in accordance with HUD
requirements, unless the owner discloses additional assistance in
accordance with HUD requirements. A subsidy layering review is required
for newly constructed or rehabilitated housing under a HAP contract
that receives additional assistance, as described in Sec. 983.11(d).
(6) Existing housing is exempt from subsidy layering requirements.
(c) Labor standards. (1) Labor standards as described in paragraphs
(c)(2) of this section apply to development activity. When the PHA
exercises its discretion at Sec. Sec. 983.154(f) or 983.157(a) to
allow the owner to conduct some or all development activity while the
proposed PBV units are not under an Agreement or HAP contract, the
applicable parties must comply with the labor standards in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section from the date of proposal submission (for
housing subject to competitive selection) or from the date of the PHA's
board resolution approving the project-basing of assistance at the
project (for housing excepted from competitive selection).
(2) In the case of development involving nine or more contract
units (whether or not completed in stages):
(i) The owner and the owner's contractors and subcontractors must
pay Davis-Bacon wages to laborers and mechanics employed in development
of the housing; and
(ii) The owner and the owner's contractors and subcontractors must
comply with the Contract Work Hours and Safety Standards Act,
Department of Labor regulations in 29 CFR part 5, and other applicable
Federal labor relations laws and regulations. The PHA must monitor
compliance with labor standards.
(3) For any project to which labor standards apply, the PHA's
written notice to the party that submitted the selected proposal or
board resolution approving project-basing of assistance at the specific
project, as applicable per Sec. 983.51(f), must state that any
construction contracts must incorporate a Davis-Bacon contract clause
and the current applicable prevailing wage determination.
(d) Equal employment opportunity. Development activity is subject
to the Federal equal employment opportunity requirements of Executive
Orders 11246 as amended (3 CFR, 1964-1965 Comp., p. 339), 11625 (3 CFR,
1971-1975 Comp., p. 616), 12432 (3 CFR, 1983 Comp., p. 198), and 12138
(3 CFR, 1977 Comp., p. 393).
(e) Accessibility. As applicable, the design and construction
requirements of the Fair Housing Act and implementing regulations at 24
CFR 100.205; the accessibility requirements of Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and implementing regulations
at 24 CFR part 8, including 8.22 and 8.23; and Title II of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. 12131-12134) and
implementing regulations at 28 CFR part 35, including Sec. Sec. 35.150
and 35.151, apply to development activity. A description of any
required work item resulting from these requirements must be included
in the Agreement (if applicable), as specified in Sec. 983.154(e)(6)
or HAP contract (if applicable), as specified in Sec. 983.157(e)(1).
(f) Broadband infrastructure. (1) Any development activity that
constitutes substantial rehabilitation as defined by 24 CFR 5.100 of a
building with more than four rental units and where the proposal or
project selection date or the start of the development activity while
under a HAP contract is after January 19, 2017, must include
installation of broadband infrastructure, as this term is defined in 24
CFR 5.100, except where the owner determines and documents the
determination that:
(i) The location of the new construction or substantial
rehabilitation makes installation of broadband infrastructure
infeasible;
(ii) The cost of installing broadband infrastructure would result
in a fundamental alteration in the nature of its program or activity or
in an undue financial burden; or
(iii) The structure of the housing to be substantially
rehabilitated makes installation of broadband infrastructure
infeasible.
(2) A description of any required work item resulting from this
requirement must be included in the Agreement (if
[[Page 38320]]
applicable), as specified in Sec. 983.154(e)(7) or HAP contract (if
applicable), as specified in Sec. 983.157(e)(2).
(g) Eligibility to participate in Federal programs and activities.
(1) An owner or project principal who is on the U.S. General Services
Administration list of parties excluded from Federal procurement and
non-procurement programs, or who is debarred, suspended subject to a
limited denial of participation, or otherwise excluded under 2 CFR part
2424, may not participate in development activity or the rehabilitation
of units subject to a HAP contract. Both the Agreement (if applicable)
and the HAP contract must include a certification by the owner that the
owner and other project principals (including the officers and
principal members, shareholders, investors, and other parties having a
substantial interest in the project) are not on such list and are not
debarred, suspended subject to a limited denial of participation, or
otherwise excluded under 2 CFR part 2424.
(2) An owner must disclose any possible conflict of interest that
would be a violation of the Agreement (if applicable), the HAP
contract, or HUD regulations, in accordance with Sec. 982.161 of this
title.
Sec. 983.154 Development agreement.
(a) Agreement to enter into HAP contract (Agreement). Except as
specified in paragraphs (f) and (g) of this section, the PHA and owner
must enter into an Agreement that will govern development activity. In
the Agreement, the owner agrees to develop the contract units to comply
with HQS, and the PHA agrees that, upon timely completion of such
development activity in accordance with the terms of the Agreement, the
PHA will enter into an initial HAP contract with the owner for the
contract units. The Agreement must cover a single project, except one
Agreement may cover multiple projects that each consist of a single-
family building.
(b) Timing of Agreement. The effective date of the Agreement must
be on or after the date the Agreement is executed. The Agreement must
be executed and effective prior to the commencement of development
activity as described in paragraph (d) of this section, except as
provided in paragraphs (f) and (g) of this section, and must be in the
form required by HUD (see 24 CFR 982.162(b)).
(c) Agreement amendment. The PHA and owner may agree to amend the
contents of the Agreement described in paragraph (e) of this section by
executing an addendum to the Agreement, so long as such amendments are
consistent with all requirements of this part 983. The PHA and owner
may only execute an addendum affecting a unit prior to the PHA
accepting the completed unit.
(d) Commencement of development activity. Development activity must
not commence after the date of proposal submission (for housing subject
to competitive selection) or the date of the PHA's board resolution
approving the project-basing of assistance at the project (for housing
excepted from competitive selection) and before the effective date of
the Agreement, except as provided in paragraphs (f) and (g) of this
section.
(1) In the case of new construction, development activity begins
with excavation or site preparation (including clearing of the land).
(2) In the case of rehabilitation, development activity begins with
the physical commencement of rehabilitation activity on the housing.
(e) Contents of Agreement. At a minimum, the Agreement must
describe the following features of the housing to be developed and
assisted under the PBV program and development activity to be
performed:
(1) The site;
(2) The location of contract units on site;
(3) The number of contract units by area (square footage) and
number of bedrooms and bathrooms;
(4) The services, maintenance, or equipment to be supplied by the
owner without charges in addition to the rent to owner;
(5) The utilities available to the contract units, including a
specification of utility services to be paid by the owner (without
charges in addition to rent) and utility services to be paid by the
tenant;
(6) A description of any required work item necessary to comply
with the accessibility requirements of Sec. 983.153(e);
(7) A description of any required work item if the requirement at
Sec. 983.153(f) to install broadband infrastructure applies;
(8) Estimated initial rents to owner for the contract units;
(9) A description of the work to be performed under the Agreement:
(i) For rehabilitation, the work description must include the
rehabilitation work write-up and, where determined necessary by the
PHA, specifications and plans (see paragraph (g) of this section for
additional requirements that apply under the option for development
activity after HAP contract at 983.157); and
(ii) For new construction, the work description must include the
working drawings and specifications;
(10) The deadline for completion of the work to be performed under
the Agreement; and
(11) Any requirements the PHA elects to establish in addition to
HQS for design, architecture, or quality. The PHA must specify the
conditions under which it will require additional housing quality
requirements in the Administrative Plan.
(f) PHA discretion. With respect to development activity, the PHA
may decide not to use an Agreement or may choose to execute an
Agreement after construction or rehabilitation that complied with
applicable requirements of Sec. 983.153 has commenced.
(1) In its Administrative Plan, the PHA must explain the
circumstances (if any) under which the PHA will enter a PBV HAP
contract for newly constructed or rehabilitated housing without first
entering into an Agreement and under which the PHA will enter into an
Agreement after construction or rehabilitation that complied with
applicable requirements of Sec. 983.153 has commenced.
(2) The following conditions apply:
(i) The owner of the project must be able to document its
compliance with all applicable requirements of Sec. 983.153 from the
date of proposal submission (for housing subject to competitive
selection) or from the date of the PHA's board resolution approving the
project-basing of assistance at the project (for housing excepted from
competitive selection);
(ii) For housing subject to competitive selection, the PHA must
confirm prior to the proposal selection date that the owner has
complied with all applicable requirements of Sec. 983.153 from the
date of proposal submission. For housing excepted from competitive
selection, the PHA must confirm prior to executing the Agreement (if
applicable) or HAP contract that the owner has complied with all
applicable requirements of Sec. 983.153 from the date of the PHA's
board resolution approving the project-basing of assistance at the
project; and
(iii) The PHA must comply with the notice requirement of Sec.
983.153(c)(3).
Sec. 983.155 Completion of work.
(a) General requirement. The owner must submit evidence and certify
to the PHA, in the form and manner required by the PHA's Administrative
Plan, that development activity under Sec. 983.152 or substantial
improvement under Sec. Sec. 983.207(d) or 983.212 has been completed,
and that all such work was completed in accordance with the
[[Page 38321]]
applicable requirements. The PHA must review the evidence to determine
whether the development activity or substantial improvement was
completed in accordance with the applicable requirements.
(b) PHA-owned units. In the case of PHA-owned units, the owner must
submit evidence and certify to the independent entity (see Sec.
983.57(b)(3)), in the form and manner required by the PHA's
Administrative Plan, that development activity under Sec. 983.152 or
substantial improvement under Sec. Sec. 983.207(d) or 983.212 has been
completed, and that all such work was completed in accordance with the
applicable requirements. The independent entity must review the
evidence to determine whether the development activity or substantial
improvement was completed in accordance with the applicable
requirements.
Sec. 983.156 PHA acceptance of completed units.
(a) Inspection of units. After the PHA has received all required
evidence of completion and the owner's certification that all work was
completed in accordance with the applicable requirements, the PHA must
inspect the completed units to determine whether they comply with HUD's
HQS (see Sec. 983.103(b)) and any additional design, architecture, or
quality requirements specified by the PHA.
(b) Execution or amendment of the HAP contract. If the PHA
determines that the development activity or substantial improvement was
completed in accordance with the applicable requirements at Sec.
983.155 and the completed units meet HUD's HQS and any additional
design, architecture, or quality requirements specified by the PHA per
paragraph (a) of this section, then the PHA must:
(1) For units developed pursuant to Sec. 983.152(a)(1) which will
not undergo development activity after HAP contract execution per Sec.
983.157, submit the HAP contract for execution by the owner and execute
the HAP contract;
(2) For rehabilitated housing projects for which development
activity has commenced prior to HAP contract execution, but which will
undergo development activity after HAP contract execution under Sec.
983.157(b), submit the HAP contract for execution by the owner and
execute the HAP contract;
(3) For development activity conducted after HAP contract
execution, amend the HAP contract rider to designate the completed
units as available for occupancy (Sec. 983.157(f)(1)(ii)) or, if the
owner has completed all development activity as provided in the rider,
amend the HAP contract to terminate the rider (Sec. 983.157(d)); or
(4) For units that underwent substantial improvement in order to be
added to the HAP contract, amend the HAP contract to add the units to
the HAP contract (Sec. 983.207(d)).
(c) Staged completion of contract units. Contract units developed
pursuant to Sec. 983.152(a)(1) which will not undergo development
activity after HAP contract execution per Sec. 983.157 may be placed
under the HAP contract in stages commencing on different dates. In such
a case, the PHA must determine separately for each stage whether the
development activity was completed in accordance with the applicable
requirements per Sec. 983.155 and that the units meet HUD's HQS and
any additional design, architecture, or quality requirements specified
by the PHA per paragraph (a) of this section. If the first stage is
determined compliant, then the PHA must submit the HAP contract for
execution by the owner and must execute the HAP contract for PBV
rehabilitated housing and newly constructed housing projects. As each
subsequent stage is determined compliant, the PHA and owner must amend
the HAP contract to add the units to the HAP contract (see Sec.
983.207(g)).
(d) PHA-owned units. The independent entity must perform the
inspection required in paragraph (a) of this section and make the
determination(s) required in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section in
the case of PHA-owned units (see Sec. 983.57(b)(3)).
0
98. Delayed indefinitely, amend Sec. 983.154 by adding paragraphs (g)
and (h) to read as follows:
Sec. 983.154 Development agreement.
* * * * *
(g) Rehabilitated housing option: development activity during HAP
contract term. The PHA may permit some or all development activity to
occur during the term of the HAP contract under the rehabilitated
housing option in Sec. 983.157. Under this option, the PHA may choose
to execute an Agreement for any development activity undertaken before
the HAP contract is effect. If the PHA will execute an Agreement for
development activity undertaken before the HAP contract is effective,
the work description required per paragraph (e)(9)(i) of this section
must specify the work activities that will be performed during the term
of the Agreement.
(h) PHA-owned units. For PBV projects containing PHA-owned units
that are not owned by a separate legal entity from the PHA (e.g., an
entity wholly controlled by the PHA or a limited liability company or
limited partnership owned by the PHA), the PHA must choose one of the
following options if it does not exercise its discretion at paragraphs
(f) or (g) of this section not to use an Agreement:
(1) Prior to execution of the Agreement, the PHA must establish a
separate legal entity to serve as the owner. That separate legal entity
must execute the Agreement with the PHA. The separate legal entity must
have the legal capacity to lease units and must be one of the
following:
(i) A non-profit affiliate or instrumentality of the PHA;
(ii) A limited liability corporation;
(iii) A limited partnership;
(iv) A corporation; or
(v) Any other legally acceptable entity recognized under State law.
(2) The PHA signs the HUD-prescribed PHA-owned agreement
certification covering a PHA-owned unit, instead of executing the
Agreement for the PHA-owned unit. By signing the PHA-owned agreement
certification, the PHA certifies that it will fulfill all the required
program responsibilities of the private owner under the Agreement, and
that it will also fulfill all of the program responsibilities required
of the PHA for the PHA-owned unit.
(i) The PHA-owned agreement certification serves as the equivalent
of the Agreement, and subjects the PHA, as owner, to all of the
requirements of the Agreement contained in parts 982 and 983. Where the
PHA has elected to use the PHA-owned agreement certification, all
references to the Agreement throughout parts 982 and 983 must be
interpreted to be references to the PHA-owned agreement certification.
(ii) The PHA may not use the PHA-owned agreement certification if
the PHA-owned PBV project is owned by a separate legal entity from the
PHA (e.g., an entity wholly controlled by the PHA or a limited
liability corporation or limited partnership controlled by the PHA).
0
99. Delayed indefinitely, add Sec. 983.157 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.157 Rehabilitated housing: option for development activity
after HAP contract execution.
(a) PHA discretion. (1) The PHA may allow an owner of a
rehabilitated housing project to conduct some or all of the development
activity during the term of the HAP contract, as provided in this
section. Under this option, the PHA and owner place all proposed PBV
units under the HAP contract at the time
[[Page 38322]]
provided in paragraph (c) of this section and before the owner
completes development activity. During the period of development
activity, the PHA makes assistance payments to the owner for the
contract units that are occupied and meet HQS.
(2) In its Administrative Plan, the PHA must explain the
circumstances (if any) under which the PHA will enter a PBV HAP
contract for rehabilitated housing that allows for development activity
on contract units. The Administrative Plan may provide for execution of
HAP contracts in accordance with this section prior to commencement of
development activity, following commencement of development activity,
or both. When the PHA uses the competitive selection method at Sec.
983.51(b)(1), the PHA's policy must be disclosed in the request for
proposals.
(b) Projects that have commenced rehabilitation. If the PHA allows
for execution of a HAP contract following commencement of development
activity, the following requirements apply to the development activity
that occurs before HAP contract execution:
(1) For rehabilitation undertaken under an Agreement, the
development activity must have complied with the Agreement executed
pursuant to Sec. 983.154, including completion of any work items and
completion and acceptance of any units which were to be completed under
the Agreement under Sec. Sec. 983.155 and 983.156; or
(2) For rehabilitation undertaken without an Agreement pursuant to
Sec. 983.154(f):
(i) The owner of the project must be able to document its
compliance with all applicable requirements of Sec. 983.153 from the
date of proposal submission (for housing subject to competitive
selection) or from the date of the PHA's board resolution approving the
project-basing of assistance at the project (for housing excepted from
competitive selection); and
(ii) For housing subject to competitive selection, the PHA must
confirm prior to the proposal selection date that the owner has
complied with all applicable requirements of Sec. 983.153 from the
date of proposal submission. For housing excepted from competitive
selection, the PHA must confirm prior to executing the HAP contract
that the owner has complied with all applicable requirements of Sec.
983.153 from the date of the PHA's board resolution approving the
project-basing of assistance at the project.
(c) Timing of HAP contract execution. The PHA may execute the HAP
contract for a project covered by this section after all of the
following have occurred:
(1) The applicable requirement of Sec. 983.56(d) (environmental
review) has been met;
(2) If applicable, the subsidy layering review has been completed,
in accordance with Sec. 983.153(b)(2);
(3) If applicable, the PHA has determined that development activity
that has commenced met the requirements of paragraph (b) of this
section;
(4) The PHA has conducted an inspection (see Sec. 983.103(b)(2))
of all units that the owner proposes to make available for occupancy by
an assisted family at the beginning of the HAP contract term and the
PHA has determined that at least one of those proposed contract units,
including items and components within the primary and secondary means
of egress, common features, and systems equipment as described by 24
CFR 5.703(a)(2), fully complies with HQS. The PHA may make the
determination of compliance with HQS regardless of whether the HQS-
compliant unit is expected to undergo rehabilitation. The owner may
make repairs to correct HQS deficiencies identified during the PHA
inspection as part of the development activity that occurs prior to HAP
contract execution (see paragraph (b) of this section) to make the unit
available for occupancy at the beginning of the HAP contract term. The
PHA must establish in its Administrative Plan the amount of time that
may elapse between the inspection and the execution of the HAP
contract; and
(5) Occupants (if any) of proposed PBV units that were not
inspected pursuant to paragraph (c)(4) of this section or that do not
fully comply with HQS have moved and such units are vacant. These units
must be identified as unavailable for occupancy in accordance with
paragraph (e)(5)(ii) of this section. Any inspected unit that does not
fully comply with HQS must undergo development activity, followed by
inspection under Sec. 983.156(a), prior to being designated for
occupancy under paragraph (f)(1)(ii) of this section.
(6) Occupants (if any) who do not accept PBV assistance have moved
and such units are vacant.
(7) The PHA may decline to place proposed PBV units that do not
meet the criteria in paragraphs (c)(5) or (6) of this section on the
HAP contract in order to execute the HAP contract before the units have
been vacated. The PHA may add the units to the HAP contract once the
units are vacant in accordance with Sec. 983.207, except that the
inspection requirement of Sec. 983.207 does not apply if the unit will
initially be categorized as unavailable for occupancy as provided in
paragraph (e)(5)(ii) of this section.
(d) HAP contract requirements. The PHA and owner must execute the
HAP contract (see Sec. 983.204(c)) with a rider to the HAP contract
that will govern development activity occurring during the term of the
HAP contract. The contents of the HAP contract apply and are
supplemented by the additional terms and conditions provided in the
rider during the period the rider is in effect. When executing the HAP
contract and rider, the PHA and owner complete the information in the
HAP contract as provided in Sec. 983.203 in addition to the
information in the rider as provided in paragraph (e) of this section.
The rider must be in the form required by HUD (see 24 CFR 982.162(b)).
In the rider, the owner agrees to develop the contract units to comply
with HQS, and the PHA agrees that, upon timely completion of such
development activity in accordance with the terms of the rider, the
rider will terminate and the HAP contract will remain in effect. The
PHA determination that development activity has been completed and the
rider may be terminated is made when all work has been completed in
accordance with the applicable requirements at Sec. 983.155 and all
contract units fully comply with HQS, as provided in Sec.
983.156(b)(3).
(e) Contents of HAP contract rider. At a minimum, the rider must
describe the following features of the housing to be rehabilitated and
assisted under the PBV program and development activity to be
performed:
(1) A description of any required work item necessary to comply
with the accessibility requirements of Sec. 983.153(e);
(2) A description of any required work item if the requirement at
Sec. 983.153(f) to install broadband infrastructure applies;
(3) A description of the work to be performed under the rider,
including the rehabilitation work write-up and, where determined
necessary by the PHA, specifications and plans;
(4) Any requirements the PHA elects to establish in addition to HQS
for design, architecture, or quality. The PHA must specify the
conditions under which it will require additional housing quality
requirements in the Administrative Plan.
(5) The development status of each specific contract unit.
Specifically:
(i) The rider must list each unit that is available for occupancy
by an assisted family at the time the unit is placed on the HAP
contract. Each contract unit that fully complies with HQS in accordance
with the PHA determination
[[Page 38323]]
under paragraph (c)(4) of this section and that the owner will make
available for occupancy by an assisted family must be initially
categorized as available for occupancy. For each unit that is available
for occupancy, the rider must specify whether the owner will undertake
development activity in the unit after it is occupied by an assisted
family. The owner may initiate the development activity in the unit
while it is occupied, subject to paragraph (g)(6) of this section, or
when it becomes vacant, which may change the status of the unit for
purposes of this paragraph. The owner must promptly notify the PHA of
any change in the status of each unit throughout the period of
development activity, in the form and manner required by the PHA's
Administrative Plan;
(ii) The rider must list each unit that is unavailable for
occupancy at the time the unit is placed on the HAP contract. Each
contract unit that has not been inspected in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4) of this section or that has been inspected and did not fully
comply with HQS must be initially categorized as unavailable for
occupancy. The owner must promptly notify the PHA of any change in the
status of each unit throughout the period of development activity, in
the form and manner required by the PHA's Administrative Plan; and
(6) The deadline for completion of the work to be performed under
the rider, which must be no more than five years from the date the HAP
contract is effective (the five-year maximum includes any extensions
granted by the PHA).
(f) Contract and rider amendment. In general, the PHA and owner may
agree to amend the contents of the rider described in paragraph (e) of
this section by executing an addendum to the rider, so long as such
amendments are consistent with all requirements of this part 983.
However, the following requirements apply:
(1) In the case of additions or substitutions of units, the
provisions of Sec. 983.207 apply, except:
(i) The PHA and owner must also amend the rider to update the
information described in paragraph (e)(5) of this section;
(ii) The units to be added must not undergo repairs or renovation
prior to amending the PBV HAP contract to add the unit; and
(iii) Addition of a unit is prohibited while the rider is in effect
if such addition will increase the number of contract units from eight
or fewer units to nine or more units.
(2) The PHA and owner may only execute an addendum amending the
items in paragraphs (e)(1)-(4) of this section affecting a unit prior
to the PHA accepting the completed unit.
(g) Occupancy of units during rehabilitation period. The following
requirements apply with respect to contract units that are available
for occupancy at the time that the HAP contract is executed and during
the period of development activity covered by the rider in accordance
with paragraph (d) of this section:
(1) The PHA must select families as provided in Sec. 983.251 for
PBV assistance in a contract unit that is available for occupancy. Upon
PHA acceptance of a completed unit (see Sec. 983.156(b)(3)) that is
vacant, the PHA may either select a family from the waiting list for
PBV assistance in the newly completed unit or offer to transfer a
family assisted in a different contract unit to the newly completed
unit as described in paragraph (g)(6)(iii) of this section.
(2) The PHA may refer a family for occupancy of a contract unit
only if the unit fully complies with HQS as determined by the PHA
inspection.
(3) The PHA must provide a notice to the family upon selection
explaining:
(i) The expected nature and duration of the development activity at
the project;
(ii) That if the family accepts the unit and the owner fails to
complete the development activity in accordance with applicable
requirements, the PHA may terminate the HAP contract, in which case the
family will be issued a tenant-based voucher and may be able to remain
in the project with tenant-based assistance (see Sec. 983.206(b));
(iii) If development activity is expected to occur in the family's
unit per paragraph (e)(5) of this section, that the family may be
required to vacate the unit temporarily or with continued voucher
assistance;
(iv) That the family may choose to decline the unit and remain on
the waiting list; and
(v) If applicable, in the case of an eligible in-place family, that
the family may choose not to accept PBV assistance in the unit.
(4) The PHA must conduct periodic and other inspections on occupied
contract units in accordance with the requirements of Sec. 983.103(e)
and (f) and must vigorously enforce the owner's obligation to maintain
contract units occupied by an assisted family in accordance with the
requirements of Sec. 983.208.
(5) The PHA makes payments to the owner for occupied units as
provided in Sec. 983.351.
(6) When an owner will undertake development activity in a unit
currently occupied by an assisted family as provided in paragraph
(e)(5) of this section, the requirements of this paragraph (g)(6)
govern where the family will live during the rehabilitation. For
purposes of this paragraph, all references to the HQS applicable to the
unit include items and components within the primary and secondary
means of egress, common features, and systems equipment as described by
24 CFR 5.703(a)(2).
(i) The owner must complete the development activity without the
family vacating the unit if the PHA reasonably expects that the owner
can complete the development activity in a manner that:
(A) Does not result in life-threatening deficiencies;
(B) Does not result in any other deficiencies under the HQS that
are not corrected within 30 days; and
(C) Is mutually agreeable to the owner and the family;
(ii) If the conditions for in-place development activity in
paragraph (g)(6)(i) of this section cannot be achieved, the owner must
temporarily relocate the family to complete the development activity
if:
(A) The PHA reasonably expects that the owner can complete the
relocation and development activity within a single calendar month
(beginning no sooner than the first day of a month and ending no later
than the last day of the same month); and
(B) The family can be relocated to a location and in a manner
mutually agreeable to the owner and the family; and
(iii) If the conditions for in-place development activity in
paragraph (g)(6)(i) of this section and temporary relocation in
paragraph (g)(6)(ii) of this section cannot be achieved, the following
protocol for lease termination and relocation applies:
(A) If there are contract units within the project that are
designated as available for occupancy and that are vacant or expected
to become vacant at the time of the planned lease termination, the PHA
must refer the family to the owner for occupancy of an appropriate-size
contract unit. If the family accepts the offered unit, the owner must
provide the family with a reasonable time to move to the offered unit,
must pay the family's reasonable moving expenses, must execute a lease
with the family for the offered unit to be effective at the time of the
family's move, and must terminate the lease for
[[Page 38324]]
the family's original unit at the time of the family's move. The owner
must terminate the family's lease if the family rejects the offered
unit; however, the PHA must first offer the family a different unit or
tenant-based assistance under paragraph (g)(6)(iii)(B) of this section
if needed as a reasonable accommodation under Section 504, the Fair
Housing Act, or the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), for a
household member who is a person with disabilities. The PHA must
consider other family requests for a different unit or tenant-based
assistance under paragraph (g)(6)(iii)(B) of this section;
(B) If no other contract unit within the project is available for
the family to lease during the period of development activity, the PHA
must issue the family a tenant-based voucher. However, the PHA is not
required to issue the family a voucher if the PHA has offered the
family an alternative housing option (e.g., an assisted unit in another
PBV project), and the family chooses to accept the alternative housing
option instead of the voucher. The PHA may also issue the family a
tenant-based voucher to accommodate the family's need or request as
provided in paragraph (g)(6)(iii)(A) of this section. The PHA must
issue the voucher no fewer than 90 calendar days prior to the planned
lease termination. If the family is eligible and willing to request a
voucher to move in accordance with Sec. 983.261, the PHA must issue
the family the voucher to move under that section. If the family is not
eligible or is unwilling to request a voucher to move under Sec.
983.261, the PHA must remove the family's unit from the PBV HAP
contract and issue the family its voucher to move with tenant-based
assistance and subsequently add a unit back to the PBV HAP contract at
the earlier of the time that the PHA has an authorized voucher unit
available or the time that the unit is ready for occupancy. The PHA
must extend the voucher term until the family either leases a unit with
the tenant-based voucher or accepts a contract unit, whichever occurs
first;
(C) If the family moves from the project in order for the owner to
undertake development activity in the family's unit, the PHA must offer
the family the option to return to the project with PBV assistance, if
the family is eligible for PBV assistance, following completion of
development activity at the project. The PHA, or owner in the case of
an owner-maintained waiting list, must place the family on the PBV
waiting list with an absolute selection preference for occupancy in the
project; and
(D) If the family moves from the project in order for the owner to
undertake development activity in the family's unit, the PHA must not
refer any family for occupancy of the unit until after rehabilitation
of the unit and PHA acceptance of the completed unit (see Sec.
983.156(b)(3)).
(h) Owner breach. The owner's failure to complete the development
activity as provided in the rider is a breach of the HAP contract and
may result in the termination of the HAP contract, in accordance with
the following requirements:
(1) If the owner has not completed the development activity by the
deadline specified in the rider, which includes any extensions granted
by the PHA, (see paragraph (e)(6) of this section), the PHA may grant
an additional period for compliance to allow the owner more time to
complete the development activity. The granting of any such period must
be consistent with the PHA's Administrative Plan and must not exceed
180 days. If the owner has not completed the development activity
following the period for compliance, the PHA must terminate the
contract. In addition to termination, the PHA may exercise any of its
other rights or remedies under the HAP contract. At HUD's sole
discretion, HUD may approve a PHA's request for an extension of the
period for compliance beyond 180 days. In determining whether to
approve the PHA request, HUD will consider appropriate factors,
including any extenuating circumstances that contributed to the delay.
(2) The owner's failure to comply with the development requirements
of Sec. 983.153 constitutes a breach of the HAP contract (see Sec.
983.206(c)(2)). In the event that the owner's failure constituted only
a de minimis error in the owner's compliance with the development
requirements of Sec. 983.153, the PHA may decide to take an action
other than termination of the HAP contract. In all other cases, the PHA
must terminate the HAP contract, in addition to any other rights and
remedies the PHA chooses to exercise under the HAP contract.
(i) PHA-owned units. For PHA-owned units, the independent entity
must perform the inspections required under paragraphs (b)(1) and (g)
of this section and make the determinations in paragraphs (g)(6)(i) and
(g)(6)(ii)(A) when the owner will undertake development activity in a
unit currently occupied by an assisted family, as applicable.
Subpart E--Housing Assistance Payments Contract
0
100. Amend Sec. 983.202 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 983.202 Purpose of HAP contract.
(a) Requirement. The PHA must enter into a HAP contract with the
owner. Except as provided in this paragraph, a HAP contract shall cover
a single project. If multiple projects exist, each project shall be
covered by a separate HAP contract. However, a PHA and owner may agree
to place multiple projects, each consisting of a single-family
building, under one HAP contract. The HAP contract must be in such form
as may be prescribed by HUD.
* * * * *
0
101. Amend Sec. 983.203 by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (f) and (h);
0
b. In paragraph (i), removing the period and adding, in its place,
adding ``; and''; and
0
b. Adding paragraph (j).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 983.203 HAP contract information.
* * * * *
(f) Features provided to comply with program accessibility
requirements of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29
U.S.C. 794) and implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 8, the Fair
Housing Act, and the Americans with Disabilities Act, as applicable;
* * * * *
(h) The number of contract units under the increased program cap
(as described in Sec. 983.6(d)) or excepted from the project cap (as
described in Sec. 983.54(c)) which will be set aside for occupancy by
families who qualify for such a unit;
* * * * *
(j) Whether the PHA has elected not to reduce rents below the
initial rent to owner in accordance with 24 CFR 983.302(c)(2).
0
102. Revise Sec. 983.204 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.204 Execution of HAP Contract or PHA-owned Certification.
(a) PHA inspection of housing. Before execution of the HAP
contract, the PHA must determine that applicable pre-HAP contract HQS
requirements have been met in accordance with Sec. 983.103(b) or (c)
as applicable. The PHA may not execute the HAP contract for any
contract unit that does not meet the pre-HAP contract HQS requirements,
except as provided in paragraph (c).
(b) Existing housing. For existing housing, the HAP contract must
be
[[Page 38325]]
executed and effective promptly after PHA selection of the owner
proposal and PHA determination that the applicable pre-HAP contract HQS
requirements have been met.
(c) Newly constructed or rehabilitated housing. For newly
constructed or rehabilitated housing developed pursuant to Sec.
983.152(a)(1) which will not undergo development activity after HAP
contract execution per Sec. 983.157, the HAP contract must be executed
and effective promptly after the PHA determines that the housing was
completed in accordance with the applicable requirements, HUD's HQS,
and any additional design, architecture, or quality requirements
specified by the PHA, in accordance with Sec. 983.156(b)(1) or (c).
For rehabilitated housing that will undergo development activity after
HAP contract execution per Sec. 983.157, the HAP contract must be
executed and effective promptly after the requirements of Sec.
983.157(c) are met (all proposed PBV units are added to the contract at
this time, including units that do not comply with HQS or that will
undergo development activity).
(d) Effective date of the PBV HAP contract. The effective date of
the HAP contract must be on or after the date the HAP contract is
executed. The HAP contract must be effective before the effective date
of the first lease covering a contract unit occupied by an assisted
family, and the PHA may not pay any housing assistance payment to the
owner until the HAP contract is effective.
0
103. Delayed indefinitely, amend Sec. 983.204 by adding paragraph (e)
to read as follows:
Sec. 983.204 Execution of HAP Contract or PHA-owned Certification.
* * * * *
(e) PHA-owned units. For PBV projects containing PHA-owned units
that are not owned by a separate legal entity from the PHA (e.g., an
entity wholly controlled by the PHA or a limited liability company or
limited partnership owned by the PHA), the PHA must choose one of the
following options:
(1) Prior to execution of the HAP contract, the PHA must establish
a separate legal entity to serve as the owner. That separate legal
entity must execute the HAP contract with the PHA. The separate legal
entity must have the legal capacity to lease units and must be one of
the following:
(i) A non-profit affiliate or instrumentality of the PHA;
(ii) A limited liability corporation;
(iii) A limited partnership;
(iv) A corporation; or
(v) Any other legally acceptable entity recognized under State law.
(2) The PHA signs the HUD-prescribed PHA-owned certification
covering a PHA-owned unit instead of executing the HAP contract for the
PHA-owned unit. By signing the PHA-owned certification, the PHA
certifies that it will fulfill all the required program
responsibilities of the private owner under the PBV HAP contract, and
that it will also fulfill all of the program responsibilities required
of the PHA for the PHA-owned unit.
(i) The PHA-owned certification serves as the equivalent of the HAP
contract, and subjects the PHA, as owner, to all of the requirements of
the HAP contract contained in parts 982 and 983. Where the PHA has
elected to use the PHA-owned certification, all references to the HAP
contract throughout parts 982 and 983 must be interpreted to be
references to the PHA-owned certification.
(ii) The PHA must obtain the services of an independent entity to
perform the required PHA functions identified in Sec. 983.57(b) before
signing the PHA-owned certification.
(iii) The PHA may not use the PHA-owned certification if the PHA-
owned PBV project is owned by a separate legal entity from the PHA
(e.g., an entity wholly controlled by the PHA or a limited liability
corporation or limited partnership controlled by the PHA).
0
104. Revise Sec. 983.205 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.205 Term of HAP contract.
(a) Initial term. The PHA may enter into a HAP contract with an
owner for an initial term of up to 20 years for each contract unit. The
length of the term of the HAP contract for any contract unit may not be
less than one year, nor more than 20 years.
(b) Extension of term. The PHA and owner may agree at any time
before expiration of the HAP contract to execute one or more extensions
of the HAP contract term. The following conditions apply:
(1) Each extension executed must have a term that does not exceed
20 years;
(2) At no time may the total remaining term of the HAP contract,
with extensions, exceed 40 years;
(3) Before agreeing to an extension, the PHA must determine that
the extension is appropriate to continue providing affordable housing
for low-income families or to expand housing opportunities; and
(4) Each extension must be on the form and subject to the
conditions prescribed by HUD at the time of the extension.
0
105. Revise Sec. 983.206 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.206 Contract termination or expiration and statutory notice
requirements.
(a) Nonextension by owner--notice requirements. (1) Notices
required in accordance with this section must be provided in the form
prescribed by HUD.
(2) Not less than one year before termination of a PBV HAP
contract, the owner must notify the PHA and assisted tenants of the
termination.
(3) The term ``termination'' for applicability of this notice
requirement means the expiration of the HAP contract, termination of
the HAP contract by agreement of PHA and owner per paragraph (e) of
this section, or an owner's refusal to renew the HAP contract.
(4) If an owner fails to provide the required notice, the owner
must permit the tenants in assisted units to remain in their units for
the required notice period with no increase in the tenant portion of
their rent, and with no eviction as a result of an owner's inability to
collect an increased tenant portion of rent.
(5) An owner and PHA may agree to extend the terminating contract
for a period of time sufficient to provide tenants with the required
notice, under such terms as HUD may require.
(b) Termination or expiration without extension--required provision
of tenant-based assistance. Unless a termination or expiration without
extension occurs due to a determination of insufficient funding
pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this section or other extraordinary
circumstances determined by HUD, the PHA shall issue each family
occupying a contract unit a tenant-based voucher based on the
termination or expiration of the contract no fewer than 60 calendar
days prior to the planned termination or expiration of the PBV HAP
contract. However, the PHA is not required to issue the family a
voucher if the PHA has offered the family an alternative housing option
(e.g., an assisted unit in another PBV project), and the family chooses
to accept the alternative housing option instead of the voucher. Such a
family is not a new admission to the tenant-based program and shall not
count toward the PHA's income-targeting requirements at 24 CFR
982.201(b)(2)(i). The voucher issued to the family is the voucher
attached to its unit under the expiring or terminating PBV contract.
Consequently, if the family vacates the
[[Page 38326]]
contract unit following the issuance of the tenant-based voucher and
prior to the contract termination or expiration date, the PHA must
remove the unit from the PBV HAP contract at the time the family
vacates the unit. The PBV HAP contract must provide that, if the units
continue to be used for rental housing upon termination or expiration
without extension of a PBV HAP contract, each assisted family may elect
to use its tenant-based assistance to remain in the same project,
subject to the following:
(1) The unit must comply with HUD's HQS;
(2) The PHA must determine or have determined that the rent for the
unit is reasonable;
(3) The family must pay its required share of the rent and the
amount, if any, by which the unit rent (including the amount allowed
for tenant-based utilities) exceeds the applicable payment standard
(the limitation at 24 CFR 982.508 regarding maximum family share at
initial occupancy shall not apply); and
(4) The owner may not refuse to initially lease a unit in the
project to a family that elects to use their tenant-based assistance to
remain in the same project, except where the owner will use the unit
for a purpose other than a residential rental unit. The owner may not
later terminate the tenancy of such a family, except for the following
grounds:
(i) The grounds in 24 CFR 982.310 of this title, except paragraphs
24 CFR 982.310(d)(1)(iii) and (iv);
(ii) The owner's desire to use the unit for a purpose other than a
residential rental unit; and
(iii) The owner's desire to renovate the unit, subject to the
following:
(A) The owner must consider whether a reasonable alternative to
terminating the lease exists. If a reasonable alternative exists, the
owner must not terminate the lease. The owner must consider the
following alternatives:
(1) Completing renovations without the family vacating the unit, if
the renovations can be completed in a manner that does not result in
life-threatening conditions, does not result in deficiencies under HQS
that are not corrected within 30 days, and is mutually agreeable to the
owner and the family; and
(2) Temporarily relocating the family to complete the renovations,
if the relocation and renovations can be completed within a single
calendar month (beginning no sooner than the first day of a month and
ending no later than the last day of the same month) and the family can
be relocated to a location and in a manner mutually agreeable to the
owner and the family;
(B) If the owner terminates the lease for renovation, the owner
must make every reasonable effort to make available and lease the
family another unit within the project that meets the tenant-based
voucher program requirements; and
(C) If no other unit within the project is available for the family
to lease during the renovation period or the family chooses to move
from the project during the renovation period, the owner must make
every reasonable effort to make available and lease the family a unit
within the project upon completion of renovations.
(c) Termination by PHA. (1) The HAP contract must provide that the
PHA may terminate the contract for insufficient funding, subject to HUD
requirements.
(i) Consistent with the policies in the PHA's Administrative Plan,
the PHA has the option of terminating a PBV HAP contract based on
``insufficient funding'' only if:
(A) The PHA determines in accordance with HUD requirements that it
lacks sufficient HAP funding (including HAP reserves) to continue to
make housing assistance payments for all voucher units currently under
a HAP contract;
(B) The PHA has taken cost-saving measures specified by HUD;
(C) The PHA notifies HUD of its determination and provides the
information required by HUD; and
(D) HUD determines that the PHA lacks sufficient funding and
notifies the PHA it may terminate HAP contracts as a result.
(2) If the PHA determines that the owner has breached the HAP
contract, the PHA may exercise any of its rights or remedies under the
HAP contract, including but not limited to contract termination. The
provisions of Sec. 983.208 apply for HAP contract breaches involving
failure to comply with HQS. For any other contract termination due to
breach, paragraph (b) of this section on provision of tenant-based
assistance applies.
(d) Termination by owner--reduction below initial rent. If the
amount of the rent to owner for any contract unit, as adjusted in
accordance with Sec. 983.302, is reduced below the amount of the
initial rent to owner, the owner may terminate the HAP contract, upon
notice to the PHA no fewer than 90 calendar days prior to the planned
termination, and families must be provided tenant-based assistance and
may elect to remain in the project in accordance with paragraph (b) of
this section. The owner is not required to provide the one-year notice
of the termination of the HAP contract to the family and the PHA, as
described in paragraph (a) of this section, when terminating the HAP
contract due to rent reduction below the initial rent to owner.
(e) Termination by agreement of PHA and owner. The PHA and owner
may agree to terminate the HAP contract prior to the end of the term.
The owner's notice in paragraph (a) of this section is required prior
to termination, and the families must be provided tenant-based
assistance and may elect to remain in the project in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section.
0
106. Revise Sec. 983.207 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.207 HAP contract amendments (to add or substitute contract
units).
(a) Amendment to substitute contract units. At the discretion of
the PHA, the PHA and owner may execute an amendment to the HAP contract
to substitute a different unit with the same number of bedrooms in the
same project for a previously covered contract unit. Prior to such
substitution, the PHA must inspect the proposed substitute unit (the
unit must comply with HQS to be substituted) and must determine the
reasonable rent for such unit (the rent to owner must be reasonable for
the unit to be substituted). The proposed substituted unit may be
vacant or, subject to the requirements of paragraph (c) of this
section, it may be occupied. The proposed substituted unit may undergo
repairs or renovation prior to amending the PBV HAP contract to
substitute the unit, as provided in paragraph (d) of this section. The
proposed substituted unit must have existed at the time described in
paragraph (e) of this section.
(b) Amendment to add contract units. At the discretion of the PHA,
and provided that the total number of units in a project that will
receive PBV assistance will not exceed the limitations in Sec. 983.6
or Sec. 983.54, the PHA and owner may execute an amendment to the HAP
contract to add PBV units in the same project to the contract, without
a new proposal selection. Prior to such addition, the PHA must inspect
the proposed added unit (the unit must comply with HQS to be added) and
must determine the reasonable rent for such unit (the rent to owner
must be reasonable for the unit to be added).
(1) Added units that qualify for an exclusion from the program cap
(as described in Sec. 983.59) or an exception to or exclusion from the
project cap (as described in Sec. 983.54(c) and Sec. 983.59,
respectively) will not count toward such cap(s).
[[Page 38327]]
(2) The anniversary and expiration dates of the HAP contract for
the additional units must be the same as the anniversary and expiration
dates of the HAP contract term for the PBV units originally placed
under HAP contract.
(3) The added unit may be vacant or, subject to the requirements of
paragraph (c) of this section, it may be occupied.
(4) The unit may undergo repairs or renovation prior to amending
the PBV HAP contract to add the unit, as provided in paragraph (d) of
this section.
(5) The added unit must have existed at the time described in
paragraph (e) of this section.
(c) Substituting or adding occupied units. The PHA may place
occupied units on the HAP contract under paragraphs (a) or (b) of this
section, subject to the following:
(1) The family occupying the unit must be eligible for assistance
per Sec. Sec. 983.53(a)(3) and 983.251(a);
(2) The unit must be appropriate for the size of the family
occupying the unit under the PHA's subsidy standards;
(3) The family must be selected from the waiting list in accordance
with the applicable selection policies; and
(4) The unit may be occupied by a family who was assisted with a
tenant-based voucher immediately prior to the unit being placed on the
PBV HAP contract. The tenant-based HAP contract for the unit must
terminate before the unit may be placed under the PBV HAP contract. The
family occupying the unit is not a new admission to the voucher
program. The option described in this paragraph (c)(4) is subject to
the following conditions:
(i) If the family is in the initial term of the tenant-based lease,
the family agreed to mutually terminate the tenant-based lease with the
owner and enter into a PBV lease.
(ii) If the initial term of the tenant-based lease has passed or
the end of that term coincides with the time at which the unit will be
placed on the PBV HAP contract, upon the owner's decision not to renew
the tenant-based lease or to terminate the tenant-based lease in
accordance with 24 CFR 982.308 or 982.310, respectively, the family
agreed to relinquish the tenant-based voucher and enter into a PBV
lease.
(d) Substituting or adding units that underwent repairs or
renovation. A unit that is not under a HAP contract but is in a project
with other units that are under a HAP contract may undergo repairs or
renovation prior to amending the PBV HAP contract to add or substitute
the unit, except in the case of a contract subject to a rider under the
rehabilitated housing option for development activity after HAP
contract execution in accordance with Sec. 983.157. If such repairs or
renovation constitute substantial improvement as defined in Sec.
983.3, then:
(1) The substantial improvement must not proceed prior to the first
two years of the effective date of the HAP contract, except in
extraordinary circumstances (e.g., the units were damaged by fire,
natural disaster, etc.).
(2) The substantial improvement is subject to the Federal equal
employment opportunity requirements of Executive Orders 11246 as
amended (3 CFR, 1964-1965 Comp., p. 339), 11625 (3 CFR, 1971-1975
Comp., p. 616), 12432 (3 CFR, 1983 Comp., p. 198), and 12138 (3 CFR,
1977 Comp., p. 393).
(3) As applicable, the design and construction requirements of the
Fair Housing Act and implementing regulations at 24 CFR 100.205; the
accessibility requirements of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 8,
including 8.22 and 8.23; and Title II of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. 12131-12134) and implementing regulations
at 28 CFR part 35, including Sec. Sec. 35.150 and 35.151, apply to
substantial improvement.
(4) Any substantial improvement that constitutes substantial
rehabilitation as defined by 24 CFR 5.100 of a building with more than
four rental units and where the proposal or project selection date or
the start of the substantial improvement while under a HAP contract is
after January 19, 2017, must include installation of broadband
infrastructure, as this term is defined in 24 CFR 5.100, except where
the owner determines and documents the determination that:
(i) The location of the substantial rehabilitation makes
installation of broadband infrastructure infeasible;
(ii) The cost of installing broadband infrastructure would result
in a fundamental alteration in the nature of its program or activity or
in an undue financial burden; or
(iii) The structure of the housing to be substantially
rehabilitated makes installation of broadband infrastructure
infeasible.
(5) An owner or project principal who is on the U.S. General
Services Administration list of parties excluded from Federal
procurement and non-procurement programs, or who is debarred, suspended
subject to a limited denial of participation, or otherwise excluded
under 2 CFR part 2424, may not participate in substantial improvement.
The HAP contract must include a certification by the owner that the
owner and other project principals (including the officers and
principal members, shareholders, investors, and other parties having a
substantial interest in the project) are not on such list and are not
debarred, suspended subject to a limited denial of participation, or
otherwise excluded under 2 CFR part 2424.
(6) An owner must disclose any possible conflict of interest that
would be a violation of the HAP contract or HUD regulations, in
accordance with Sec. 982.161 of this title.
(7) The requirements for additional assistance after HAP contract
at Sec. 983.11(d) apply.
(8) Section 983.155, Completion of work, applies.
(9) Paragraphs (a), (b)(4), and (d) of Sec. 983.156, PHA
acceptance of completed units, apply.
(e) Restriction on substituting or adding newly built units. Units
may only be added to the HAP contract or substituted for a previously
covered contract unit if one of the following conditions applies:
(1) The units to be added or substituted existed at the time of HAP
contract execution;
(2) In the case of a project completed in stages, the units to be
added or substituted existed at the time of PHA acceptance of the last
completed unit(s) per Sec. 983.156(c); or
(3) A unit, office space, or common area within the interior of a
building containing contract units existed at the time described in
paragraph (e)(1) or (2) of this section, as applicable, and is
reconfigured without impacting the building envelope, subject to
paragraph (d) of this section, into one or more units to be added or
substituted.
(f) Administrative Plan requirement. The PHA must describe in the
Administrative Plan the circumstances under which it will add or
substitute contract units, and how those circumstances support the
goals of the PBV program.
(g) Staged completion of contract units. Even if contract units are
placed under the HAP contract in stages commencing on different dates,
there is a single annual anniversary for all contract units under the
HAP contract. The annual anniversary for all contract units is the
annual anniversary date for the first contract units placed under the
HAP contract. The expiration of the HAP contract for all the contract
units completed in stages must be concurrent with the end of the HAP
contract term for the units originally placed under HAP contract.
(h) Amendment to merge or bifurcate HAP contracts. HUD may
establish a
[[Page 38328]]
process allowing the PHA and owner to agree to merge two or more HAP
contracts for PBV assistance on the same project, or to bifurcate a HAP
contract, by Federal Register notice subject to public comment.
0
107. Revise and republish Sec. 983.208 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.208 Condition of contract units.
(a) Owner maintenance and operation. (1) The owner must maintain
and operate the contract units and premises in accordance with the HQS,
including performance of ordinary and extraordinary maintenance.
(2) The owner must provide all the services, maintenance,
equipment, and utilities specified in the HAP contract with the PHA and
in the lease with each assisted family.
(3) At the discretion of the PHA, the HAP contract may also require
continuing owner compliance during the HAP contract term with
additional housing quality requirements specified by the PHA (in
addition to, but not in place of, compliance with HUD's HQS). Such
additional requirements may be designed to assure continued compliance
with any design, architecture, or quality requirement specified by the
PHA (Sec. 983.204(c)). The PHA must specify the conditions under which
it will require additional housing quality requirements in the
Administrative Plan.
(b) Enforcement of HQS. (1) The PHA must vigorously enforce the
owner's obligation to maintain contract units in accordance with HUD's
HQS. If the owner fails to maintain the dwelling unit in accordance
with HQS, the PHA must take enforcement action in accordance with this
section.
(2) The unit is in noncompliance with HQS if:
(i) The PHA or other inspector authorized by the State or local
government determines the unit has HQS deficiencies based upon an
inspection;
(ii) The agency or inspector notifies the owner in writing of the
unit HQS deficiencies; and
(iii) The unit HQS deficiencies are not remedied within the
following timeframes:
(A) For life-threatening deficiencies, the owner must correct the
deficiency within 24 hours of notification.
(B) For other deficiencies, the owner must correct the deficiency
within 30 calendar days of notification (or any reasonable PHA-approved
extension).
(3) In the case of an HQS deficiency that the PHA determines is
caused by the tenant, any member of the household, or any guest or
other person under the tenant's control, other than any damage
resulting from ordinary use, the PHA may waive the owner's
responsibility to remedy the violation. Housing assistance payments to
the owner may not be withheld or abated if the owner responsibility has
been waived. However, the PHA may terminate assistance to a family
because of an HQS breach beyond damage resulting from ordinary use
caused by any member of the household or any guest or other person
under the tenant's control, which may result in removing the unit from
the HAP contract.
(4) In the case of an HQS deficiency that is caused by fire,
natural disaster, or similar extraordinary circumstances, the PHA may
permit the owner to undertake substantial improvement in accordance
with Sec. 983.212. However, so long as the contract unit with
deficiencies is occupied, the PHA must withhold or abate housing
assistance payments and remove units from or terminate the HAP contract
as described in this section.
(5) In the case of a project that is undergoing development
activity after HAP contract execution per Sec. 983.157, the remedies
of paragraph (d) of this section do not apply to units designated as
unavailable for occupancy during the period of development activity in
accordance with the rider. However, in the case of any contract unit
with deficiencies that is occupied, the PHA must withhold or abate
housing assistance payments and remove units from or terminate the HAP
contract as described in this section.
(c) Family obligation. (1) The family may be held responsible for a
breach of the HQS that is caused by any of the following:
(i) The family fails to pay for any utilities that the owner is not
required to pay for, but which are to be paid by the tenant;
(ii) The family fails to provide and maintain any appliances that
the owner is not required to provide, but which are to be provided by
the tenant; or
(iii) Any member of the household or guest damages the dwelling
unit or premises (damages beyond ordinary wear and tear).
(2) If the PHA has waived the owner's responsibility to remedy the
violation in accordance with paragraph (b)(3) of this section, the
following applies:
(i) If the HQS breach caused by the family is life-threatening, the
family must take all steps permissible under the lease and State and
local law to ensure the deficiency is corrected within 24 hours of
notification.
(ii) For other family-caused deficiencies, the family must take all
steps permissible under the lease and State and local law to ensure the
deficiency is corrected within 30 calendar days of notification (or any
PHA-approved extension).
(3) If the family has caused a breach of the HQS, the PHA must take
prompt and vigorous action to enforce the family obligations. The PHA
may terminate assistance for the family in accordance with 24 CFR
982.552.
(d) PHA remedies. These remedies apply when HQS deficiencies are
identified as the result of an inspection other than a pre-selection,
initial, or turnover inspection. (See Sec. 983.103 generally, and see
Sec. 983.103(c) in particular for PHA enforcement actions related to
the initial HQS inspection for existing housing). The PHA must identify
in its Administrative Plan the conditions under which it will withhold
HAP and the conditions under which it will abate HAP or terminate the
HAP contract for units other than the unit with HQS deficiencies.
(1) A PHA may withhold HAP for an individual unit that has HQS
deficiencies once the PHA has notified the owner in writing of the
deficiencies. If the unit is brought into compliance during the
applicable cure period (within 24 hours from notification for life-
threatening deficiencies and within 30 days from notification (or other
reasonable period established by the PHA for non-life-threatening
deficiencies), the PHA:
(i) Must resume assistance payments; and
(ii) Must provide assistance payments to cover the time period for
which the assistance payments were withheld.
(2)(i) The PHA must abate the HAP, including amounts that had been
withheld, for the PBV unit with deficiencies if the owner fails to make
the repairs within the applicable cure period (within 24 hours from
notification for life-threatening deficiencies and within 30 days from
notification (or other reasonable period established by the PHA) for
non-life-threatening deficiencies).
(ii) The PHA may choose to abate payments for all units covered by
the HAP contract due to a contract unit's noncompliance with the HQS,
even if some of the contract units continue to meet HQS.
(iii) If a PHA abates the HAP for a unit, the PHA must notify the
family and the owner that it is abating payments and that if the unit
with deficiencies does not meet HQS within 60 days after the
determination of noncompliance (or a reasonable longer period
established by the PHA), the PHA will either terminate the HAP
[[Page 38329]]
contract or remove the unit with deficiencies from the HAP contract,
and any family residing in a unit that does not comply with HQS will
have to move if the family wishes to receive continued assistance.
(3) An owner may not terminate the tenancy of any family due to the
withholding or abatement of assistance. During the period that
assistance is abated, the family may terminate the tenancy by notifying
the owner. The PHA must promptly issue the family a tenant-based
voucher to move.
(4) If the owner makes the repairs and the unit complies with HQS
within 60 days (or a reasonable longer period established by the PHA)
of the notice of abatement, the PHA must recommence payments to the
owner if the unit is still occupied by an assisted family. The PHA does
not make any payments for the unit to the owner for the period of time
that the payments were abated.
(5) If the owner fails to make the repairs within 60 days (or a
reasonable longer period established by the PHA) of the notice of
abatement, the PHA must either remove the unit from the HAP contract or
terminate the HAP contract in its entirety. The PHA must issue the
family whose unit will be removed or all families residing in contract
units, if the PHA is terminating the HAP contract, a tenant-based
voucher to move at least 30 days prior to the removal of the unit from
the HAP contract or termination of the HAP contract. A family may elect
to remain in the project in accordance with Sec. 983.206(b) if the
project contains a unit that meets the requirements of that section,
with priority given to families who will remain in the same unit if
there are insufficient units available to accommodate all families that
wish to remain.
(6)(i) The PHA must give any family residing in a unit that is
either removed from the HAP contract or for which the HAP contract is
terminated under this paragraph (d) due to a failure to correct HQS
deficiencies at least 90 days or a longer period as the PHA determines
is reasonably necessary following the termination of the HAP contract
or removal of the unit from the HAP contract to lease a unit with
tenant-based assistance.
(ii) If the family is unable to lease a new unit within the period
provided by the PHA under paragraph (d)(6)(i) of this section and the
PHA owns or operates public housing, the PHA must offer, and, if
accepted, provide the family a selection preference for an appropriate-
size public housing unit that first becomes available for occupancy
after the time period expires.
(iii) PHAs may assist families relocating under this paragraph (d)
in finding a new unit, including using up to 2 months of the withheld
and abated assistance payments for costs directly associated with
relocating to a new unit, including security deposits, temporary
housing costs, or other reasonable moving costs as determined by the
PHA based on their locality. PHAs must assist families with
disabilities in locating available accessible units in accordance with
24 CFR 8.28(a)(3). If the PHA uses the withheld and abated assistance
payments to assist with the family's relocation costs, the PHA must
provide security deposit assistance to the family as necessary. If the
family receives security deposit assistance from the PHA for the new
unit, the PHA may require the family to remit the security deposit
returned by the owner of the new unit at such time that the lease is
terminated, up to the amount of the security deposit assistance
provided by the PHA for that unit. The PHA must include in its
Administrative Plan the policies it will implement for this provision.
(e) Maintenance and replacement--Owner's standard practice.
Maintenance and replacement (including redecoration) must be in
accordance with the standard practice for the building concerned as
established by the owner.
(f) Applicability. This section is applicable to HAP contracts
executed on or after or extended on or after June 6, 2024. For purposes
of this paragraph, a HAP contract is extended the earlier of the
effective date of the next extension period or the date the PHA and
owner agree to the next extension. For all other HAP contracts, Sec.
983.208 as in effect on June 5, 2024 remains applicable. However, the
PHA and owner may agree to apply this section to a HAP contract
executed before June 6, 2024 prior to extension.
0
108. Amend Sec. 983.210 by revising paragraphs (a), (c), (d) and (e),
and removing paragraph (j), to read as follows:
Sec. 983.210 Owner certification.
* * * * *
(a) The owner is maintaining the premises and all contract units in
accordance with HUD's HQS under the requirements of this part 983.
* * * * *
(c) Each contract unit for which the owner is receiving housing
assistance payments is leased to an eligible family referred by the PHA
or selected from the owner-maintained waiting list in accordance with
Sec. 983.251, and the lease is in accordance with the HAP contract and
HUD requirements.
(d) To the best of the owner's knowledge, the members of the family
reside in each contract unit for which the owner is receiving housing
assistance payments, and the unit is the family's only residence,
except as provided in Sec. Sec. 983.157(g)(6)(ii) and
983.212(a)(3)(ii).
(e) The owner (including a principal or other interested party) is
not the spouse, parent, child, grandparent, grandchild, sister, or
brother of any member of a family residing in a contract unit unless
needed as a reasonable accommodation under Section 504, the Fair
Housing Act, or the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), for a
household member who is a person with disabilities.
* * * * *
0
109. Revise Sec. 983.211 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.211 Removal of unit from HAP contract based on a family's
increased income.
(a) Removal of a unit based on a family's increased income. Units
occupied by families whose income has increased during their tenancy
resulting in the total tenant payment equaling the gross rent shall be
removed from the HAP contract 180 days following the last housing
assistance payment on behalf of the family.
(b) Reinstatement or substitution of HAP contracts. If the project
is fully assisted, a PHA may reinstate the unit removed under paragraph
(a) of this section to the HAP contract after the ineligible family
vacates the property. If the project is partially assisted, a PHA may
substitute a different unit for the unit removed under paragraph (a) of
this section to the HAP contract when the first eligible substitute
becomes available. A reinstatement or substitution of units under the
HAP contract, in accordance with this paragraph, must be permissible
under Sec. 983.207(b) or (a), respectively.
(c) Additional requirements. The anniversary and expirations dates
of the reinstated or substituted unit must be the same as all other
units under the HAP contract (i.e., the annual anniversary and
expiration dates for the first contract units placed under the HAP
contract). Families must be selected in accordance with program
requirements under Sec. 983.251 of this part.
0
110. Add Sec. 983.212 to subpart E to read as follows:
[[Page 38330]]
Sec. 983.212 Substantial improvement to units under a HAP contract.
(a) Substantial improvement to units under a HAP contract. The
owner may undertake substantial improvement on a unit currently under a
HAP contract, except a contract subject to a rider under the
rehabilitated housing option for development activity after HAP
contract execution in accordance with Sec. 983.157, if approved to do
so by the PHA. The owner may request PHA approval no earlier than the
effective date of the HAP contract. The following conditions apply:
(1) The PHA may approve the substantial improvement only if one of
the following conditions apply:
(i) The unit has been damaged by fire or natural disaster, or other
extraordinary circumstances exist which require a unit previously
compliant with HQS to urgently undergo substantial improvement. For
this purpose, ``extraordinary circumstances'' are unforeseen events
that are not the fault of the owner. The PHA may provide approval for
substantial improvement resulting from the damage or extraordinary
circumstances described in this paragraph (a)(1)(i) after the owner
submits the request.
(ii) The owner requests to engage in substantial improvement that
will commence following the first two years of the effective date of
the HAP contract. The PHA may provide approval for substantial
improvement occurring as described in this paragraph (a)(1)(ii) after
the owner submits the request, but no earlier than twenty-one months
after the effective date of the HAP contract.
(2) The owner's request must include a description of the
substantial improvement proposed to be undertaken and the length of
time, if any, the owner anticipates that the unit, including items and
components within the primary and secondary means of egress, common
features, and systems equipment as described by 24 CFR 5.703(a)(2),
will not meet HQS. The PHA must not approve as substantial improvement,
under this section, an owner's request to demolish a building
containing contract units and newly construct replacement units (see
requirements for contract termination at Sec. 983.206 and requirements
for newly constructed housing in this part 983).
(3) If the unit is occupied and will not meet HQS during any part
of the period of the substantial improvement, the owner's request must
include a description of the owner's plan to house the family during
the period the unit will not meet HQS. The PHA must not approve the
substantial improvement unless the owner's plan complies with one of
the following requirements:
(i) The owner must complete the substantial improvement without the
family vacating the unit if the PHA reasonably expects that the owner
can complete the substantial improvement in a manner that:
(A) Does not result in life-threatening deficiencies;
(B) Does not result in any other deficiencies under the HQS that
are not corrected within 30 days; and
(C) Is mutually agreeable to the owner and the family;
(ii) If the conditions for in-place substantial improvement in
paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this section cannot be achieved, the owner must
temporarily relocate the family to complete the substantial improvement
if:
(A) The PHA reasonably expects that the owner can complete the
relocation and substantial improvement within a single calendar month
(beginning no sooner than the first day of a month and ending no later
than the last day of the same month); and
(B) The family can be relocated to a location and in a manner
mutually agreeable to the owner and the family; and
(iii) If the conditions for in-place substantial improvement in
paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this section and temporary relocation in
paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of this section cannot be achieved, the following
protocol for lease termination and relocation applies:
(A) If there are contract units within the project will meet HQS
during the period of substantial improvement and that are vacant or
expected to become vacant at the time of the planned lease termination,
the PHA must refer the family to the owner for occupancy of an
appropriate-size contract unit. If the family accepts the offered unit,
the owner must provide the family with a reasonable time to move to the
offered unit, must pay the family's reasonable moving expenses, must
execute a lease with the family for the offered unit to be effective at
the time of the family's move, and must terminate the lease for the
family's original unit at the time of the family's move. The owner must
terminate the family's lease if the family rejects the offered unit;
however, the PHA must first offer the family a different unit or
tenant-based assistance under paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(B) of this section
if needed as a reasonable accommodation under Section 504, the Fair
Housing Act, or the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), for a
household member who is a person with disabilities. The PHA must
consider other family requests for a different unit or tenant-based
assistance under paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(B) of this section;
(B) If no other contract unit within the project is available for
the family to lease during the period of substantial improvement, the
PHA must issue the family a tenant-based voucher. However, the PHA is
not required to issue the family a voucher if the PHA has offered the
family an alternative housing option (e.g., an assisted unit in another
PBV project), and the family chooses to accept the alternative housing
option instead of the voucher. The PHA may also issue the family a
tenant-based voucher to accommodate the family's need or request as
provided in paragraph (a)(3)(iii)(A) of this section. The PHA must
issue the voucher no fewer than 90 calendar days prior to the planned
lease termination in the case of substantial improvement pursuant to
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section. The PHA must issue the voucher as
soon as practicable in the case of substantial improvement pursuant to
paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section. If the family is eligible and
willing to request a voucher to move in accordance with Sec. 983.261,
the PHA must issue the family the voucher to move under that section.
If the family is not eligible or is unwilling to request a voucher to
move under Sec. 983.261, the PHA must remove the family's unit from
the PBV HAP contract and issue the family its voucher to move with
tenant-based assistance and subsequently add a unit back to the PBV HAP
contract at such time that the unit is ready for occupancy. The PHA
must extend the voucher term until the family either leases a unit with
the tenant-based voucher or accepts a contract unit, whichever occurs
first; and
(C) If the family moves from the project during the period of
substantial improvement, the PHA must offer the family the option to
return to the project with PBV assistance, if the family is eligible
for PBV assistance, following completion of substantial improvement at
the project. The PHA, or owner in the case of an absolute selection
preference for occupancy in the project.
(4) The PHA must abate housing assistance payments for a unit
beginning at the time the unit has any deficiency under HUD's HQS
during the period of substantial improvement. The timing for the PHA to
begin withholding and abatement specified in Sec. 983.208(d) does not
apply to deficiencies occurring during the period of substantial
improvement. When all deficiencies in the unit are corrected, the PHA
must recommence payments to the owner if the unit is still occupied by
an assisted family, subject to paragraphs (a)(5) and
[[Page 38331]]
(b)(1) of this section. Additionally, the PHA must not pay vacancy
payments during the period of substantial improvement.
(5) The terms of the PHA approval must be recorded in an addendum
to the HAP contract. The PHA may choose to temporarily remove vacant
units from the PBV HAP contract during the time the units will not meet
HQS during the substantial improvement. If the PHA temporarily removes
a unit, the PHA reinstates the unit in accordance with Sec.
983.207(b). Owner failure to complete the substantial improvement as
approved shall be a breach of the HAP contract and the PHA may exercise
any of its rights or remedies under the HAP contract, including but not
limited to contract termination pursuant to Sec. 983.206(c)(2).
(b) Applicable requirements. (1) Substantial improvement undertaken
on units that are currently under a HAP contract is subject to the
Federal equal employment opportunity requirements of Executive Orders
11246 as amended (3 CFR, 1964-1965 Comp., p. 339), 11625 (3 CFR, 1971-
1975 Comp., p. 616), 12432 (3 CFR, 1983 Comp., p. 198), and 12138 (3
CFR, 1977 Comp., p. 393).
(2) As applicable, the design and construction requirements of the
Fair Housing Act and implementing regulations at 24 CFR 100.205; the
accessibility requirements of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of
1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 8,
including 8.22 and 8.23; and Title II of the Americans with
Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. 12131-12134) and implementing regulations
at 28 CFR part 35, including Sec. Sec. 35.150 and 35.151, apply to
substantial improvement undertaken on units that are currently under a
HAP contract.
(3) Any substantial improvement undertaken on units that are
currently under a HAP contract that constitutes substantial
rehabilitation as defined by 24 CFR 5.100 of a building with more than
four rental units and where the proposal or project selection date or
the start of the substantial improvement while under a HAP contract is
after January 19, 2017, must include installation of broadband
infrastructure, as this term is defined in 24 CFR 5.100, except where
the owner determines and documents the determination that:
(i) The location of the substantial rehabilitation makes
installation of broadband infrastructure infeasible;
(ii) The cost of installing broadband infrastructure would result
in a fundamental alteration in the nature of its program or activity or
in an undue financial burden; or
(iii) The structure of the housing to be substantially
rehabilitated makes installation of broadband infrastructure
infeasible.
(4) An owner or project principal who is on the U.S. General
Services Administration list of parties excluded from Federal
procurement and non-procurement programs, or who is debarred, suspended
subject to a limited denial of participation, or otherwise excluded
under 2 CFR part 2424, may not participate in substantial improvement
undertaken on units subject to a HAP contract. The HAP contract must
include a certification by the owner that the owner and other project
principals (including the officers and principal members, shareholders,
investors, and other parties having a substantial interest in the
project) are not on such list and are not debarred, suspended subject
to a limited denial of participation, or otherwise excluded under 2 CFR
part 2424.
(5) An owner must disclose any possible conflict of interest that
would be a violation of the HAP contract or HUD regulations, in
accordance with Sec. 982.161 of this title.
(6) The requirements for additional assistance after HAP contract
at Sec. 983.11(d) apply to substantial improvement undertaken on units
that are currently under a HAP contract.
(7) Section 983.155, Completion of work, applies to substantial
improvement undertaken on units that are currently under a HAP
contract.
(8) Section 983.156(a), Inspection of units, and (d), PHA-owned
units, apply to substantial improvement undertaken on units that are
currently under a HAP contract.
(c) PHA-owned units. For PHA-owned units, the independent entity
must determine whether to approve the PHA proposal to undertake
substantial improvement as provided in paragraph (a) of this section,
including making the determinations in paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and
(a)(3)(ii)(A) when the owner will undertake substantial improvement in
a unit currently occupied by an assisted family, as applicable (see
Sec. 983.57(b)(4)). The independent entity must approve the proposal
if:
(1) The proposed substantial improvement meets one of the
conditions of paragraph (a)(1) of this section;
(2) The description of the substantial improvement does not include
plans to demolish a building containing contract units and newly
construct replacement units; and
(3) The plan to house each family during the period that family's
unit will not meet HQS complies with the requirements of paragraph
(a)(3).
Subpart F--Occupancy
0
111. Revise and republish Sec. 983.251 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.251 How participants are selected.
(a) Who may receive PBV assistance? (1) The PHA may select families
who are participants in the PHA's tenant-based voucher program and
families who have applied for admission to the voucher program.
(2) Except for voucher participants (determined eligible at
original admission to the voucher program), the PHA may only select
families determined eligible for admission at commencement of PBV
assistance, using information received and verified by the PHA within a
period of 60 days before commencement of PBV assistance. For all
families, the PHA must determine the total tenant payment for the
family is less than the gross rent, such that the unit will be eligible
for a monthly HAP.
(3) The protections for victims of domestic violence, dating
violence, sexual assault, or stalking in 24 CFR part 5, subpart L,
apply to admission to the project-based program.
(4) A PHA may not approve a tenancy if the owner (including a
principal or other interested party) of a unit is the parent, child,
grandparent, grandchild, sister, or brother of any member of the
family, unless the PHA determines that approving the unit would provide
reasonable accommodation under Section 504, the Fair Housing Act, or
the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), for a household member who
is a person with disabilities.
(b) Protection of in-place families. (1) To minimize displacement
of in-place families, if an in-place family is determined to be
eligible prior to placement of the family's unit on the HAP contract,
the in-place family must be placed on the PBV waiting list (if the
family is not already on the list) and given an absolute selection
preference. If the PHA's waiting list for PBV assistance is not a
project-specific waiting list, the PHA must refer the family to the
applicable project owner for an appropriate-size PBV unit in the
specific project.
(2) If the in-place family is a tenant-based voucher participant,
program eligibility is not re-determined. However, the PHA must
determine that the total tenant payment for the family is less than the
gross rent for the unit, such that the unit will be eligible for a
[[Page 38332]]
monthly HAP, and the PHA may deny or terminate assistance for the
grounds specified in 24 CFR 982.552 and 982.553.
(3)(i) During the initial term of the lease under the tenant-based
tenancy, an in-place tenant-based voucher family may agree, but is not
required, to mutually terminate the lease with the owner and enter into
a lease and tenancy under the PBV program. If the family chooses to
continue the tenant-based assisted tenancy, the unit may not be added
to the PBV HAP contract. The owner may not terminate the lease for
other good cause during the initial term unless the owner is
terminating the tenancy because of something the family did or failed
to do in accordance with 24 CFR 982.310(d)(2). The owner is expressly
prohibited from terminating the tenancy during the initial term of the
lease based on the family's failure to accept the offer of a new lease
or revision, or for a business or economic reason.
(ii) If, after the initial term, the owner chooses not to renew the
lease or terminates the lease for other good cause (as defined in 24
CFR 982.310(d)) to end the tenant-based assisted tenancy, the family
would be required to move with continued tenant-based assistance or
relinquish the tenant-based voucher and enter into a new lease to
receive PBV assistance in order to remain in the unit.
(4) Admission of in-place families is not subject to income-
targeting under 24 CFR 982.201(b)(2)(i).
(c) Selection from waiting list. (1) Applicants who will occupy PBV
units must be selected from the waiting list for the PBV program.
(2) The PHA must identify in the Administrative Plan which of the
following options it will use to structure the waiting list for the PBV
program:
(i) The PHA may use a separate, central, waiting list comprised of
more than one, or all, PBV projects;
(ii) The PHA may use the same waiting list for both tenant-based
assistance and some or all PBV projects; or
(iii) The PHA may use separate waiting lists for PBV units in
individual projects or buildings (or for sets of such units). This
option may be used in combination with the option in paragraph
(c)(2)(i) or (ii) of this section. The PHA must specify the name of the
PBV project in the Administrative Plan. The PHA may permit the owner to
maintain such waiting lists (see paragraph (c)(7) of this section for
more information).
(3) For any of the options under paragraph (c)(2) of this section,
the PHA may establish in its Administrative Plan any preferences for
occupancy of particular units including the name of the project(s) and
the specific preferences that are to be used by project. Criteria for
occupancy of units (e.g., elderly families) may also be established;
however, selection of families must be done through an admissions
preference.
(4) The PHA may merge the waiting list for PBV assistance with the
PHA waiting list for admission to another assisted housing program.
(5) Where applicable, the PHA may place families referred by the
PBV owner on its PBV waiting list.
(6) If the PHA chooses to use a separate waiting list for admission
to PBV units under paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (iii) of this section, the
PHA must offer to place applicants who are listed on the waiting list
for tenant-based assistance on the waiting list for PBV assistance
(including owner-maintained PBV waiting lists).
(7) PHAs using separate waiting lists for individual projects or
buildings, as described in paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section, may
establish in their Administrative Plan that owners will maintain such
waiting lists. PHAs may choose to use owner-maintained PBV waiting
lists for specific owners or projects. PHAs may permit an owner to
maintain a single waiting list across multiple projects owned by the
owner. Under an owner-maintained waiting list, the owner is responsible
for carrying out responsibilities including, but not limited to,
processing changes in applicant information, removing an applicant's
name from the waiting list, opening and closing the waiting list. PHAs
must identify in their Administrative Plans the name of the project(s),
the oversight procedures the PHA will use to ensure owner-maintained
waiting lists are administered properly and in accordance with program
requirements, and the approval process of an owner's waiting list
policy (including any preferences). Where a PHA allows for owner-
maintained waiting lists, all the following apply:
(i) The owner must develop and submit a written owner waiting list
policy to the PHA for approval. The owner waiting list policy must
include policies and procedures concerning waiting list management and
selection of applicants from the project's waiting list, including any
admission preferences, procedures for removing applicant names from the
waiting list, and procedures for closing and reopening the waiting
list. The owner must receive approval from the PHA of its owner waiting
list policy in accordance with the process established in the PHA's
Administrative Plan. The owner's waiting list policy must be
incorporated in the PHA's Administrative Plan.
(ii) The owner must receive approval from the PHA for any
preferences that will be applicable to the project. The PHA will
approve such preferences as part of its approval of the owner's waiting
list policy. Each project may have a different set of preferences.
Preferences must be consistent with the PHA Plan and listed in the
owner's waiting list policy.
(iii) The owner is responsible for opening and closing the waiting
list, including providing public notice when the owner opens the
waiting list in accordance with 24 CFR 982.206. If the owner-maintained
waiting list is open and additional applicants are needed to fill
vacant units, the owner must give public notice in accordance with the
requirements of 24 CFR 982.206 and the owner waiting list policy.
(iv) The applicant may apply directly at the project, or the
applicant may request that the PHA refer the applicant to the owner for
placement on the project's waiting list. The PHA must disclose to the
applicant all the PBV projects available to the applicant, including
the projects' contact information and other basic information about the
project.
(v) Applicants already on the PHA's waiting list must be permitted
to place their names on the project's waiting lists.
(vi) At the discretion of the PHA, the owner may make preliminary
eligibility determinations for purposes of placing the family on the
waiting list, and preference eligibility determinations. The PHA may
choose to make this determination rather than delegating it to the
owner.
(vii) If the PHA delegated the preliminary eligibility and
preference determinations to the owner, the owner is responsible for
notifying the family of the owner's determination not to place the
applicant on the waiting list and a determination that the family is
not eligible for a preference. In such a case, the owner is responsible
to provide the notice at 24 CFR 982.554(a) of this title. The PHA is
then responsible for conducting the informal review.
(viii) Once an owner selects the family from the waiting list, the
owner refers the family to the PHA who then determines the family's
final program eligibility. The owner may not offer a unit to the family
until the PHA determines that the family is eligible for the program.
[[Page 38333]]
(ix) All HCV waiting list administration requirements that apply to
the PBV program (24 CFR part 982, subpart E, other than 24 CFR
982.201(e), 982.202(b)(2), and 982.204(d)) apply to owner-maintained
waiting lists.
(x) The PHA is responsible for oversight of owner-maintained
waiting lists to ensure that they are administered properly and in
accordance with program requirements, including but not limited to
nondiscrimination and equal opportunity requirements under the
authorities cited at 24 CFR 5.105(a). The owner is responsible for
maintaining complete and accurate records as described in 24 CFR
982.158. The owner must give the PHA, HUD, and the Comptroller General
full and free access to its offices and records concerning waiting list
management, as described in 24 CFR 982.158(c). HUD may undertake
investigation to determine whether the PHA or owner is in violation of
authorities and, if unable to reach a voluntary resolution to correct
the violation, take an enforcement action against either the owner or
the PHA, or both.
(8) Not less than 75 percent of the families admitted to a PHA's
tenant-based and project-based voucher programs during the PHA fiscal
year from the PHA waiting list shall be extremely low-income families.
The income-targeting requirements at 24 CFR 982.201(b)(2) apply to the
total of admissions to the PHA's project-based voucher program and
tenant-based voucher program during the PHA fiscal year from the PHA
waiting list (including owner-maintained PBV waiting lists) for such
programs.
(9) Families who require particular accessibility features for
persons with disabilities must be selected first to occupy PBV units
with such accessibility features (see 24 CFR 8.26, 8.27, and 100.202).
Also see Sec. 983.260. The PHA shall have some mechanism for referring
to accessible PBV units a family that includes a person with a mobility
or sensory impairment.
(d) Preference for services offered. In selecting families, PHAs
(or owners in the case of owner-maintained waiting lists) may give
preference to families who qualify for voluntary services, including
disability-specific services, offered at a particular project,
consistent with the PHA Plan and Administrative Plan.
(1) The prohibition on granting preferences to persons with a
specific disability at 24 CFR 982.207(b)(3) continues to apply.
(2) Families must not be required to accept the particular services
offered at the project nor shall families be required to provide their
own equivalent services if they decline the project's services.
(3) In advertising the project, the owner may advertise the project
as offering services for a particular type of disability; however, the
preference must be provided to all applicants who qualify for the
voluntary services offered in conjunction with the assisted units.
(e) Offer of PBV assistance or owner's rejection. (1) If a family
refuses the PHA's offer of PBV assistance or the owner rejects a family
for admission to the owner's PBV units, the family's position on the
PHA waiting list for tenant-based assistance is not affected regardless
of the type of PBV waiting list used by the PHA.
(2) The impact (of a family's rejection of the offer or the owner's
rejection of the family) on a family's position on the PBV waiting list
will be determined as follows:
(i) If a central PBV waiting list is used, the PHA's Administrative
Plan must address the number of offers a family may reject without good
cause before the family is removed from the PBV waiting list and
whether the owner's rejection will impact the family's place on the PBV
waiting list.
(ii) If a project-specific PBV waiting list is used, the family's
name is removed from the project's waiting list connected to the
family's rejection of the offer without good cause or the owner's
rejection of the family. The family's position on any other project-
specific PBV waiting list is not affected.
(iii) The PHA must define ``good cause'' for purposes of paragraphs
(e)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section in its Administrative Plan. The
PHA's definition of good cause must include, at minimum, that:
(A) The family determines the unit is not accessible to a household
member with a disability or otherwise does not meet the member's
disability-related needs;
(B) The unit has HQS deficiencies;
(C) The family is unable to accept the offer due to circumstances
beyond the family's control (such as hospitalization, temporary
economic hardship, or natural disaster); and
(D) The family determines the unit presents a health or safety risk
to a household member who is or has been a victim of domestic violence,
dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking, as provided in part 5,
subpart L of this title.
(3) None of the following actions may be taken against an applicant
solely because the applicant has applied for, received, or refused an
offer of PBV assistance:
(i) Refuse to list the applicant on the PHA waiting list for
tenant-based assistance or any other available PBV waiting list.
However, the PHA (or owner in the case of owner-maintained waiting
lists) is not required to open a closed waiting list to place the
family on that waiting list.
(ii) Deny any admission preference for which the applicant is
currently qualified.
(iii) Change the applicant's place on the waiting list based on
preference, date, and time of application, or other factors affecting
selection from the waiting list.
(iv) Remove the applicant from the waiting list for tenant-based
voucher assistance.
0
112. Revise and republish Sec. 983.252 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.252 PHA information for accepted family.
(a) Oral briefing. When a family accepts an offer of PBV
assistance, the PHA must give the family an oral briefing.
(1) The briefing must include information on the following
subjects:
(i) A description of how the program works;
(ii) Family and owner responsibilities; and
(iii) Family right to move.
(2) The PHA must take appropriate steps to ensure effective
communication in accordance with 24 CFR 8.6 and 28 CFR part 35, subpart
E, and must provide information on the reasonable accommodation
process.
(b) Information packet. The PHA must give the family a packet that
includes information on the following subjects:
(1) How the PHA determines the total tenant payment for a family;
(2) Family obligations under the program; and
(3) Information on Federal, State, and local equal opportunity
laws, the contact information for the Section 504 coordinator, a copy
of the housing discrimination complaint form, and information on how to
request a reasonable accommodation or modification under Section 504,
the Fair Housing Act, and the Americans with Disabilities Act;
(4) PHA subsidy standards, including when the PHA will consider
granting exceptions to the standards as allowed by 24 CFR
982.402(b)(8), and when exceptions are required as a reasonable
accommodation for a person with disabilities under Section 504, the
Fair Housing Act, or the Americans with Disabilities Act; and
(5) Family right to move.
[[Page 38334]]
(c) Statement of family responsibility. The PHA and family must
sign the statement of family responsibility.
(d) Providing information for persons with limited English
proficiency. The PHA must take reasonable steps to ensure meaningful
access by persons with limited English proficiency in accordance with
obligations and procedures contained in Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964, and HUD's implementing regulation at 24 CFR part 1.,
Executive Order 13166, and HUD's Final Guidance to Federal Financial
Assistance Recipients Regarding Title VI Prohibition Against National
Origin Discrimination Affecting Limited English Proficient Persons (72
FR 2732) or successor authority.
0
113. Amend Sec. 983.253 by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (3) to read
as follows:
Sec. 983.253 Leasing of contract units.
(a) * * *
(1) During the term of the HAP contract, the owner must lease
contract units only to eligible families selected from the waiting list
for the PBV program in accordance with Sec. 983.251 of this part.
* * * * *
(3) An owner must promptly notify in writing any rejected applicant
of the grounds for any rejection. The owner must provide a copy of such
rejection notice to the PHA.
* * * * *
0
114. Revise Sec. 983.254 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.254 Vacancies.
(a) Filling vacant units. (1) The PHA and the owner must make
reasonable good-faith efforts to minimize the likelihood and length of
any vacancy in a contract unit. However, contract units in a
rehabilitated housing project undergoing development activity after HAP
contract execution that are not available for occupancy in accordance
with Sec. 983.157(e)(5) are not subject to this requirement.
(i) If an owner-maintained waiting list is used, in accordance with
Sec. 983.251, the owner must promptly notify the PHA of any vacancy or
expected vacancy in a contract unit and refer the family to the PHA for
final eligibility determination. The PHA must make every reasonable
effort to make such final eligibility determination within 30 calendar
days.
(ii) If a PHA-maintained waiting list is used, in accordance with
Sec. 983.251, the owner must promptly notify the PHA of any vacancy or
expected vacancy in a contract unit, and the PHA must, after receiving
the owner notice, make every reasonable effort to promptly refer a
sufficient number of families for the owner to fill such vacancies
within 30 calendar days.
(2) The owner must lease vacant contract units only to families
determined eligible by the PHA.
(b) Reducing number of contract units. If any contract units have
been vacant for a period of 120 days or more since owner notice of
vacancy, as required in paragraph (a) of this section, and
notwithstanding the reasonable good-faith efforts of the PHA and the
owner to fill such vacancies, the PHA may give notice to the owner
amending the HAP contract to reduce the number of contract units by
subtracting the number of contract units (by number of bedrooms) that
have been vacant for such period.
0
115. Amend Sec. 983.255 by revising paragraphs (a)(2) and (c)(4) to
read as follows:
Sec. 983.255 Tenant screening.
(a) * * *
(2) The PHA must conduct tenant screening of applicants in
accordance with policies stated in the PHA Administrative Plan.
(c) * * *
(4) The PHA policy must be stated in the Administrative Plan and
provide that the PHA will give the same types of information to all
owners.
* * * * *
0
116. Revise Sec. 983.257 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.257 Owner termination of tenancy and eviction.
24 CFR 982.310 of this title applies with the exception that 24 CFR
982.310(d)(1)(iii) and (iv) does not apply to the PBV program. (In the
PBV program, ``good cause'' does not include a business or economic
reason or desire to use the unit for an individual, family, or non-
residential rental purpose.) In addition, the owner may terminate the
tenancy in accordance with the requirements related to lease
terminations for development activity on units under a HAP contract as
provided in Sec. 983.157(g)(6)(iii) and for substantial improvement to
units under a HAP contract as provided in Sec. 983.212(a)(3)(iii). 24
CFR 5.858 through 5.861 on eviction for drug and alcohol abuse and 24
CFR part 5, subpart L (Protection for Victims of Domestic Violence,
Dating Violence, Sexual Assault, or Stalking) apply to the PBV program.
0
117. Amend Sec. 983.259 by:
0
a. Adding a heading to paragraph (a);
0
b. Revising paragraph (b); and
0
c. Adding headings to paragraphs (c) through (e).
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 983.259 Security deposit: Amounts owed by tenant.
(a) Security deposit permitted. * * *
(b) Amount of security deposit. The PHA must prohibit the owner
from charging assisted tenants security deposits in excess of private
market practice, or in excess of amounts charged by the owner to
unassisted tenants.
(c) Use of security deposit. * * *
(d) Security deposit reimbursement to owner. * * *
(e) Insufficiency of security deposit. * * *
0
118. Revise Sec. 983.260 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.260 Overcrowded, under-occupied, and accessible units.
(a) Family occupancy of wrong-size or accessible unit. (1) The PHA
subsidy standards determine the appropriate unit size for the family
size and composition.
(2) If the PHA determines that a family is occupying a wrong-size
unit, or a unit with accessibility features that the family does not
require and the unit is needed by a family that requires the
accessibility features (see 24 CFR 8.27), the PHA must:
(i) Within 30 days from the PHA's determination, notify the family
and the owner of this determination; and
(ii) Within 60 days from the PHA's determination, offer the family
continued housing assistance, pursuant to paragraph (b) of this
section.
(b) PHA offer of continued assistance. (1) The PHA policy on
continued housing assistance must be stated in the Administrative Plan
and may be in the form of:
(i) PBV assistance in an appropriate-size unit (in the same project
or in another project);
(ii) Other project-based housing assistance (e.g., by occupancy of
a public housing unit);
(iii) Tenant-based rental assistance under the voucher program; or
(iv) Other comparable tenant-based rental assistance.
(2) If no continued housing assistance as described in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section is available, the PHA must remove the wrong-size
or accessible unit from the HAP contract to make voucher assistance
available to issue the family a tenant-based voucher. Section
983.206(b) does not apply to families issued a tenant-based voucher
under the
[[Page 38335]]
circumstance described in this paragraph (b)(2).
(c) PHA termination of housing assistance payments. (1) If the PHA
offers the family the opportunity to receive tenant-based rental
assistance under the voucher program:
(i) The PHA must terminate the housing assistance payments for a
wrong-sized or accessible unit at the earlier of the expiration of the
term of the family's voucher (including any extension granted by the
PHA) or the date upon which the family vacates the unit.
(ii) If the family does not move out of the wrong-sized unit or
accessible unit by the expiration date of the term of the family's
voucher, the PHA must remove the unit from the HAP contract.
(2) If the PHA offers the family another form of continued housing
assistance (other than tenant-based rental assistance under the voucher
program), in accordance with paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the PHA
must terminate the housing assistance payments for the wrong-sized or
accessible unit and remove the unit from the HAP contract when:
(i) In the case of an offer by the PHA of PBV assistance or other
project-based housing assistance in an appropriate-size unit, the
family does not accept the offer and does not move out of the PBV unit
within a reasonable time as determined by the PHA, not to exceed 90
days. The family may request and the PHA may grant one extension not to
exceed up to an additional 90 days to accommodate the family's efforts
to locate affordable, safe, and geographically proximate replacement
housing.
(ii) In the case of an offer by the PHA of PBV assistance or other
project-based housing assistance in an appropriate size unit, the
family accepts the offer but does not move out of the PBV unit within a
reasonable time as determined by the PHA, not to exceed 90 days.
(iii) In the case of an offer by the PHA of other comparable
tenant-based rental assistance, the family either accepts or does not
accept the offer but does not move out of the PBV unit within a
reasonable time as determined by the PHA, not to exceed 90 days. The
family may request and the PHA may grant one extension not to exceed up
to an additional 90 days to accommodate the family's efforts to locate,
affordable, safe, and geographically proximate replacement housing.
(d) Reinstatement. The PHA may reinstate a unit removed under
paragraph (b)(2), (c)(1)(ii), or (c)(2) of this section to the HAP
contract after the family vacates the property, in accordance with
Sec. 983.207(b).
0
119. Revise Sec. 983.261 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.261 Family right to move.
(a) Termination of assisted lease after one year. The family may
terminate the assisted lease at any time after one year of PBV
assistance. The family must give the owner advance written notice of
intent to vacate (with a copy to the PHA) in accordance with the lease.
(b) Continued assistance. If the family has elected to terminate
the lease in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section, the PHA
must offer the family the opportunity for continued tenant-based rental
assistance. The PHA must specify in the Administrative Plan whether it
will offer families assistance under the voucher program or other
comparable tenant-based rental assistance. If voucher assistance is
offered to the family and the search term expires, the PHA must issue
the voucher to the next eligible family.
(c) Contacting the PHA. Before providing notice to terminate the
lease under paragraph (a) of this section, a family must contact the
PHA to request a voucher or comparable tenant-based rental assistance
if the family wishes to move with continued assistance. If a voucher or
other comparable tenant-based rental assistance is not immediately
available to the family upon the family's request to the PHA, the PHA
must give the family priority to receive the next available opportunity
for continued tenant-based rental assistance. The PHA must describe in
its Administrative Plan its policies and procedures for how the family
must contact the PHA and how the PHA documents families waiting for
continued tenant-based rental assistance.
(d) Termination of assisted lease before one year. If the family
terminates the assisted lease before one year of PBV assistance, the
family relinquishes the opportunity for continued tenant-based
assistance under this section.
(e) Notice exclusion. When the family or a member of the family is
or has been the victim of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual
assault, or stalking, as provided in 24 CFR part 5, subpart L, and the
move is needed to protect the health or safety of the family or family
member, the family is not required to give the owner advance written
notice or contact the PHA under paragraph (a) and (c), respectively, of
this section before moving from the unit. Additionally, when any family
member has been the victim of a sexual assault that occurred on the
premises during the 90-calendar-day period preceding the family's
request to move, the family is not required to give the owner advance
written notice or contact the PHA under paragraph (a) and (c),
respectively, of this section before moving from the unit. A PHA may
not terminate the assistance of a family due to a move occurring under
the circumstances in this paragraph (e) and must offer the family the
opportunity for continued tenant-based assistance if the family had
received at least one year of PBV assistance prior to moving.
(f) Emergency Transfer Plans. In the case of a move due to domestic
violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or stalking, as provided in
24 CFR part 5, subpart L, PHAs must describe policies for facilitating
emergency transfers for families with PBV assistance in their Emergency
Transfer Plan, consistent with the requirements in 24 CFR 5.2005(e),
including when the victim has received PBV assistance for less than one
year and is not eligible for continued assistance under Sec.
983.261(b).
(g) Family break-up. If a family break-up results from an
occurrence of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, or
stalking as provided in 24 CFR part 5, subpart L (Protection for
Victims of Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault, or
Stalking), the PHA must ensure that the victim retains assistance in
accordance with 24 CFR 982.315(a)(2).
0
120. Revise Sec. 983.262 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.262 Occupancy of units under the increased program cap and
project cap excepted units.
(a) General. Pursuant to Sec. 983.6(a), a PHA may commit project-
based assistance to no more than 20 percent of its authorized voucher
units at the time of commitment. There are certain units eligible for
an increased program cap as described in Sec. 983.6(d). Pursuant to
Sec. 983.54(a), the PHA may not select a proposal to provide PBV
assistance or place units under an Agreement or a HAP contract in
excess of the project cap. There are certain exceptions to the project
cap as described in Sec. 983.54(c). This section provides more detail
on the occupancy requirements of both the excepted units from the
project cap under Sec. 983.54(c)(2) and units under the increased
program cap under Sec. 983.6(d).
(b) Requirements applicable to both excepted units and units under
an increased program cap. (1) The unit must be occupied by a family who
meets the applicable exception.
(2) The family must be selected from the waiting list for the PBV
program
[[Page 38336]]
through an admissions preference (see Sec. 983.251).
(3) Once the family vacates the unit, the unit must be made
available to and occupied by a family that meets the applicable
exception.
(4) The PHA must specify in its Administrative Plan which of the
options below the PHA will take if a unit is no longer qualified for
its excepted status or the increased program cap:
(i) Substitute the unit for another unit if it is possible to do so
in accordance with Sec. 983.207(a), so that the overall number of
excepted units or units under the increased program cap in the project
is not reduced. A PHA may, in conjunction with such substitution, add
the original unit to the HAP contract if it is possible to do so in
accordance with Sec. 983.207(b), including that such addition does not
cause the PHA to exceed the program cap or become non-compliant with
the project cap.
(ii) Remove the unit from the PBV HAP contract. In conjunction with
the removal, the PHA may provide the family with tenant-based
assistance, if the family is eligible for tenant-based assistance. The
family and the owner may agree to use the tenant-based voucher in the
unit; otherwise, the family must move from the unit with the tenant-
based voucher. If the family later vacates the unit, the PHA may add
the unit to the PBV HAP contract in accordance with Sec. 983.207.
(iii) Change the unit's status under the project cap or program
cap, as applicable, provided that the change does not cause the PHA to
exceed the program cap or become non-compliant with the project cap.
(c) Requirements for units under the increased program cap--(1)
Homeless family. A unit qualifies under the increased program cap at
Sec. 983.6(d)(1)(i) if the family meets the definition of homeless
under Section 103 of the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (42
U.S.C. 11302), included in 24 CFR 578.3, at the time the family first
occupies the unit.
(2) Veteran family. A unit qualifies under the increased program
cap at Sec. 983.6(d)(1)(ii) if the family is comprised of or includes
a veteran (a person who served in the active military, naval, air, or
space service, and who was discharged or released therefrom) at the
time the family first occupies the unit.
(3) Supportive housing for persons with disabilities or elderly
persons. The following applies to the increased program cap category at
Sec. 983.6(d)(1)(iii):
(i) A disabled or elderly member of the family must be eligible for
one or more of the supportive services at the time the family first
occupies the unit. The member of the family may choose not to
participate in the services.
(ii) The PHA must state in its Administrative Plan whether it will
allow a family that initially qualified for supportive housing for
persons with disabilities or elderly persons to continue to reside in a
unit, where through circumstances beyond the control of the family
(e.g., death of the elderly family member or family member with a
disability or long term or permanent hospitalization or nursing care),
the elderly family member or family member with a disability no longer
resides in the unit. In this case, the unit may continue to count under
the increased program cap category for as long as the family resides in
that unit. However, the requirements of Sec. 983.260, concerning
wrong-sized units, apply. If the PHA chooses not to exercise this
discretion, the unit no longer counts under the increased program cap
category and, if the family is not required to move from the unit as a
result of Sec. 983.260, the PHA may use one of the options described
in paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(4) Units for Family Unification Program (FUP) youth. See paragraph
(e) of this section for requirements relating to the increased program
cap category at Sec. 983.6(d)(2).
(d) Requirements for project cap excepted units--(1) Elderly
family. A unit under the project cap exception category at Sec.
983.54(c)(2)(i) must be occupied by an elderly family, as defined in 24
CFR 5.403. The PHA must state in its Administrative Plan whether it
will allow a family that initially qualified for occupancy of an
excepted unit based on elderly family status to continue to reside in a
unit, where through circumstances beyond the control of the family
(e.g., death of the elderly family member or long term or permanent
hospitalization or nursing care), the elderly family member no longer
resides in the unit. In this case, the unit may continue to count as an
excepted unit for as long as the family resides in that unit. However,
the requirements of Sec. 983.260, concerning wrong-sized units, apply.
If the PHA chooses not to exercise this discretion, the unit is no
longer considered excepted and, if the family is not required to move
from the unit as a result of Sec. 983.260, the PHA may use one of the
options described in paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(2) Disabled family. The same provisions of paragraph (d)(1) of
this section apply to units previously excepted based on disabled
family status under a HAP contract in effect prior to April 18, 2017.
(3) Supportive services. The following applies under the project
cap exception category at Sec. 983.54(c)(2)(iii):
(i) A unit is excepted if any member of the family is eligible for
one or more of the supportive services even if the family chooses not
to participate in the services.
(ii) If any member of the family chooses to participate and
successfully completes the supportive services, the unit continues to
be excepted for as long as any member of the family resides in the
unit, even if the members that continue to reside in the unit are
ineligible during tenancy for all available supportive services.
(iii) The unit loses its excepted status only if the entire family
becomes ineligible during the tenancy for all supportive services
available to the family. This provision does not apply where any member
of the family has successfully completed the supportive services under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(iv) A family cannot be terminated from the program or evicted from
the unit because they become ineligible for all supportive services
during the tenancy.
(4) Units for FUP youth. See paragraph (e) of this section for
requirements relating to the increased project cap exception category
at Sec. 983.54(c)(2)(ii).
(e) Requirements for units for FUP youth under the increased
program cap and project cap exception. The following applies under the
project cap exception category at Sec. 983.54(c)(2)(ii) and the
increased program cap category at Sec. 983.6(d)(2):
(1) A unit is excepted from the project cap or qualifies under the
increased program cap, as applicable, if the unit is occupied by an
eligible youth receiving FUP assistance.
(2) The youth must vacate the unit once the FUP assistance has
expired. The unit loses its excepted status or no longer qualifies
under the increased program cap, as applicable, if the youth does not
move from the unit upon the expiration of the FUP assistance.
Subpart G--Rent to Owner
0
121. Amend Sec. 983.301 by revising paragraphs (b)(1), (c)(2)(i), (f),
and (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 983.301 Determining the rent to owner.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
[[Page 38337]]
(1) An amount determined by the PHA in accordance with the
Administrative Plan not to exceed 110 percent of the applicable fair
market rent (or the amount of any applicable exception payment
standard) for the unit bedroom size minus any utility allowance;
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(i) An amount determined by the PHA in accordance with the
Administrative Plan, not to exceed the tax credit rent minus any
utility allowance;
* * * * *
(f) Use of FMRs and utility allowance schedule in determining the
amount of rent to owner. (1) When determining the initial rent to
owner, the PHA shall use the most recently published FMR in effect and
the utility allowance schedule in effect at execution of the HAP
contract. At its discretion, the PHA may use the amounts in effect at
any time during the 30-day period immediately before the beginning date
of the HAP contract.
(2) When redetermining the rent to owner, the PHA shall use the
most recently published FMR and the PHA utility allowance schedule in
effect at the time of redetermination. At its discretion, the PHA may
use the amounts in effect at any time during the 30-day period
immediately before the redetermination date.
(3)(i) For PBV projects that are not located in a designated SAFMR
area under 24 CFR 888.113(c)(1), or for PBV projects not located in a
ZIP code where the PHA has opted in under 24 CFR 888.113(c)(3), any
exception payment standard amount approved under 24 CFR 982.503(d)(2)-
(4) applies for purposes of paragraphs (b)(1) and (c)(1)(iv) of this
section. HUD will not approve a different payment standard amount for
use in the PBV program.
(ii) For PBV projects that are located in a designated SAFMR area
under 24 CFR 888.113(c)(1), or for PBV projects located in a ZIP code
where the PHA has opted in under 24 CFR 888.113(c)(3), an exception
payment standard amount approved under 24 CFR 982.503(d)(3)-(4) will
apply for purposes of paragraphs (b)(1) and (c)(1)(iv) of this section
only if the PHA has adopted a policy applying SAFMRs to its PBV program
and met all other requirements in accordance with 24 CFR 888.113(h).
(4) HUD may establish a process allowing PHAs to adopt project-
specific utility allowances by notification in the Federal Register
subject to public comment. Absent the establishment of such a project-
specific utility allowance, the PHA's utility allowance schedule as
determined under 24 CFR 982.517(b)(2)(i) or (ii) applies to both the
tenant-based and PBV programs.
(5) The PHA must continue to use the applicable utility allowance
schedule for the purpose of determining the initial rent to owner and
redetermining the rent to owner for contract units, as outlined in this
24 CFR 983.301, regardless of whether the PHA approves a higher utility
allowance as a reasonable accommodation for a person with disabilities
living in a contract unit (see 24 CFR 982.517(e)).
(g) PHA-owned units. For PHA-owned PBV units, the initial rent to
owner and the annual redetermination of rent at the annual anniversary
of the HAP contract must be determined by the independent entity
approved by HUD in accordance with Sec. 983.57. The PHA must use the
rent to owner established by the independent entity.
0
122. Revise Sec. 983.302 to read as follows:
Sec. 983.302 Redetermination of rent to owner.
(a) Requirement to redetermine the rent to owner. The PHA must
redetermine the rent to owner:
(1) When there is a 10 percent decrease in the published FMR;
(2) Upon the owner's request consistent with requirements
established in the PHA's Administrative Plan. The Administrative Plan
must specify any advance notice the owner must give the PHA and the
form the request must take; or
(3) At the time of the automatic adjustment by an operating cost
adjustment factor (OCAF) in accordance with paragraph (b)(3).
(b) Rent increase. (1) An owner may receive an increase in the rent
to owner during the term of a HAP contract. Any such increase will go
into effect at the annual anniversary of the HAP contract. (Provisions
for special adjustments of contract rent pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
1437f(c)(2)(B) do not apply to the voucher program.)
(2) A rent increase may occur through automatic adjustment by an
operating cost adjustment factor (OCAF) or as the result of an owner
request for such an increase. A rent increase as the result of an owner
request must be determined by the PHA pursuant to Sec. 983.301(b) or
(c), as applicable. A rent increase through an adjustment by an OCAF is
likewise subject to Sec. 983.301(b) or (c), as applicable, except
there is no rent request by the owner to take into account since the
PHA redetermines the rent automatically under that option.
(3) By agreement of the parties, the HAP contract may provide for
rent adjustments using an operating cost adjustment factor (OCAF)
established by the Secretary pursuant to Section 524(c) of the
Multifamily Assisted Housing Reform and Affordability Act of 1997 at
each annual anniversary of the HAP contract. OCAFs are established by
the Secretary and published annually in the Federal Register. The
provisions in the following paragraphs apply to a contract that
provides for rent adjustments using an OCAF:
(i) The contract may require an additional increase up to an amount
determined by the PHA pursuant to Sec. 983.301(b) or (c), as
applicable, if requested by the owner in writing, periodically during
the term of the contract.
(ii) The contract shall require an additional increase up to an
amount determined by the PHA pursuant to Sec. 983.301(b) or (c), as
applicable, at the point of contract extension, if requested by the
owner in writing.
(4) If the HAP contract does not provide for automatic adjustment
by an OCAF, then an owner who wishes to receive an increase in the rent
to owner must request such an increase at the annual anniversary of the
HAP contract by written notice to the PHA.
(5) The PHA must establish the length of the required notice period
for any rent increase that requires a written request from the owner.
The written request must be submitted as required by the PHA (e.g., to
a particular mailing address or email address).
(6) The PHA may not approve and the owner may not receive any
increase of rent to owner until and unless the owner has complied with
all requirements of the HAP contract, including compliance with the HQS
(except that HQS compliance is not required for purposes of this
provision for units undergoing development activity that complies with
Sec. 983.157 or substantial improvement that complies with Sec.
983.212). The owner may not receive any retroactive increase of rent
for any period of noncompliance.
(c) Rent decrease. (1) If the HAP contract provides for rent
adjustments by an OCAF and there is a decrease in the fair market rent,
tax credit rent, or reasonable rent that requires a decrease to the
rent to owner (see paragraph (b)(2)), the rent to owner must be
decreased. If the HAP contract does not provide for adjustment by an
OCAF and there is a decrease in the rent to owner, as established in
accordance with Sec. 983.301, the rent to owner must be decreased,
regardless of whether the owner requests a rent adjustment.
[[Page 38338]]
(2) At any time during the term of the HAP contract, the PHA may
elect within the HAP contract to not reduce rents below the initial
rent to owner. Where a PHA makes such an election, the rent to owner
shall not be reduced below the initial rent to owner, except:
(i) To correct errors in calculations in accordance with HUD
requirements;
(ii) If additional housing assistance has been combined with PBV
assistance after the execution of the initial HAP contract and a rent
decrease is required pursuant to Sec. 983.153(b); or
(iii) If a decrease in rent to owner is required based on changes
in the allocation of responsibility for utilities between the owner and
the tenant.
(d) Notice of change in rent to owner. Whenever there is a change
in rent to owner, the PHA must provide written notice to the owner
specifying the amount of the new rent to owner (as determined in
accordance with Sec. Sec. 983.301 and 983.302). The PHA notice of the
rent change in rent to owner constitutes an amendment of the rent to
owner specified in the HAP contract.
(e) Contract year and annual anniversary of the HAP contract. (1)
The contract year is the period of 12 calendar months preceding each
annual anniversary of the HAP contract during the HAP contract term.
The initial contract year is calculated from the first day of the first
calendar month of the HAP contract term.
(2) The annual anniversary of the HAP contract is the first day of
the first calendar month after the end of the preceding contract year.
The adjusted rent to owner amount applies for the period of 12 calendar
months from the annual anniversary of the HAP contract.
(3) The annual anniversary of the HAP contract for contract units
completed in stages must follow Sec. 983.207(g).
0
123. Amend Sec. 983.303 by:
0
a. Removing from paragraph (a) the citation to ``Sec. 983.302(e)(2)''
and adding, in its place, a citation to ``Sec. 983.302(c)(2)'';
0
b. Revising paragraph (b)(3);
0
c. Redesignating paragraph (b)(4) as paragraph (b)(5) and adding a new
paragraph (b)(4);
0
d. Adding paragraph (c)(3); and
0
e. Revising paragraph (f).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 983.303 Reasonable rent.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) Whenever the HAP contract is amended to add a contract unit or
substitute a different contract unit in the same building or project;
(4) Whenever the PHA accepts a completed unit after development
activity that is conducted after HAP contract execution (see Sec.
983.156(b)(3)); and
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) The reasonable rent determination must be based on the
condition of the assisted unit at the time of the determination and not
on anticipated future unit conditions.
* * * * *
(f) Determining reasonable rent for PHA-owned units. (1) For PHA-
owned units, the amount of the reasonable rent must be determined by an
independent entity in accordance with Sec. 983.57, rather than by the
PHA. The reasonable rent must be determined in accordance with this
section.
(2) The independent entity must furnish a copy of the independent
entity determination of reasonable rent for PHA-owned units to the PHA.
Subpart H--Payment to Owner
0
124. Amend Sec. 983.352 by adding a sentence to the end of paragraph
(b)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 983.352 Vacancy payment.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * * The PHA must include in its Administrative Plan the PHA's
policy on the conditions under which it will allow vacancy payments in
a HAP contract, the duration of the payments, amount of vacancy
payments it will make to an owner, and the required form and manner of
requests for vacancy payments, in accordance with paragraph (b)(4) of
this section.
* * * * *
0
125. Amend Sec. 983.353 by revising paragraph (d)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 983.353 Tenant rent; payment to owner.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(2) The PHA must describe in its Administrative Plan its policies
on paying the utility reimbursement directly to the family or directly
to the utility supplier.
* * * * *
PART 985--SECTION 8 MANAGEMENT ASSESSMENT PROGRAM (SEMAP)
0
126. The authority for part 985 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437f and 3535(d).
0
127. Amend Sec. 985.3 by:
0
a. Revising the second paragraph of the undesignated introductory text
and the parenthetical at the end of paragraph (b)(1);
0
b. In paragraph (b)(3)(i)(B), removing the reference to ``Sec. 982.507
of this chapter'' and adding, in its place, a reference to ``Sec. Sec.
982.507 and 983.303 of this chapter, as applicable'';
0
c. Revising paragraph (c)(3)(i)(A);
0
d. In paragraph (e)(3)(i), removing the citation to ``Sec. 983.2'' and
adding, in its place, a citation to ``Sec. 985.2''; and
0
e. Revising paragraphs (i)(1), (i)(3), (k)(1), (k)(2), and (l), the
heading of paragraph (m), and paragraphs (m)(1), (m)(3), (p)(1), and
(p)(3)(i)(B).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 985.3 Indicators, HUD verification methods and ratings.
* * * * *
A PHA that expends less than its Federal award expenditure
threshold in 2 CFR Subpart F, and whose Section 8 programs are not
audited by an independent auditor (IA), will not be rated under the
SEMAP indicators in paragraphs (a) through (g) of this section for
which the annual IA audit report is a HUD verification method.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * * (24 CFR 982.4, 24 CFR 982.54(d)(15), 982.158(f)(7),
982.507, and 983.303)
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(A) The PHA obtains third party verification, as appropriate, of
reported family annual income, the value of assets, expenses related to
deductions from annual income, and other factors that affect the
determination of adjusted income, and uses the verified information in
determining adjusted income, and/or documents tenant files to show why
third party verification was not available;
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(1) This indicator shows whether the PHA has adopted payment
standard schedule(s) in accordance with Sec. 982.503.
* * * * *
(3) Rating:
(i) The PHA's voucher program payment standard schedule contains
payment standards set in accordance with 24 CFR 982.503. 5 points.
(ii) The PHA's voucher program payment standard schedule contains
payment standards that were not set in accordance with Sec. 982.503. 0
points.
* * * * *
(k) * * *
(1) This indicator shows whether the PHA correctly calculates the
family's
[[Page 38339]]
share of the rent to owner in the rental voucher program. (24 CFR part
982, subpart K).
(2) HUD verification method: MTCS report--Shows percent of tenant
rent and family's share of the rent to owner calculations that are
incorrect based on data sent to HUD by the PHA on Forms HUD-50058. The
MTCS data used for verification cover only voucher program tenancies,
and do not include rent calculation discrepancies for manufactured home
owner rentals of manufactured home spaces for proration of assistance
under the noncitizen rule.
* * * * *
(l) Initial unit inspections. (1) This indicator shows whether
newly leased units pass HQS inspection within the time period required.
This includes both initial and turnover inspections for the PBV
program. (24 CFR 982.305 and 983.103(b) through (d)).
(2) HUD verification method: MTCS report--Shows percent of newly
leased units where the beginning date of the assistance contract is
before the date the unit passed the initial unit inspection or, if the
PHA employed the PHA initial inspection option for non-life-
threatening deficiencies or alternative inspections, the timing
requirements for the applicable PHA initial inspection option.
(3) Rating:
(i) 98 to 100 percent of newly leased units passed HQS inspection
within the time period required. 5 points.
(ii) Fewer than 98 percent of newly leased units passed HQS
inspection within the time period required. 0 points.
(m) Periodic HQS inspections. (1) This indicator shows whether the
PHA has met its periodic inspection requirement for its units under
contract (24 CFR 982.405 and 983.103(e)).
* * * * *
(3) Rating:
(i) Fewer than 5 percent of periodic HQS inspections of units under
contract are more than 2 months overdue. 10 points.
(ii) 5 to 10 percent of all periodic HQS inspections of units under
contract are more than 2 months overdue. 5 points.
(iii) More than 10 percent of all periodic HQS inspections of units
under contract are more than 2 months overdue. 0 points.
* * * * *
(p) * * *
(1) This indicator shows whether voucher holders were successful in
leasing units with voucher assistance. This indicator applies only to
PHAs that established success rate payment standard amounts in
accordance with Sec. 982.503(f) prior to June 6, 2024.
* * * * *
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(B) The proportion of families issued rental vouchers that became
participants in the program during the six month period utilized to
determine eligibility for success rate payment standards under Sec.
982.503(f) plus 5 percentage points; and
* * * * *
PART 1000--NATIVE AMERICAN HOUSING ACTIVITIES
0
128. The authority for part 985 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 25 U.S.C. 4101 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 3535(d).
Sec. 1000.302 [AMENDED]
0
129. In Sec. 1000.302, amend the definition of ``Section 8 unit'' by
removing the words ``certificates, vouchers,'' and adding, in their
place, the word ``vouchers''.
Damon Smith,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2024-08601 Filed 5-6-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P