New Jersey Administrative Code
Title 5 - COMMUNITY AFFAIRS
Chapter 43 - NEIGHBORHOOD PRESERVATION BALANCED HOUSING PROGRAM
Subchapter 3 - FUNDING CRITERIA
Section 5:43-3.9 - Neighborhood rehabilitation projects
Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a) The Balanced Housing Program may provide assistance to distressed urban municipalities to identify and moderately rehabilitate substandard units in one-to-four-family owner occupied structures within a target neighborhood.
(b) The maximum Balanced Housing grant to a municipality under a Neighborhood Rehabilitation Agreement shall be $ 500,000.
(c) Rehabilitation activity shall average at least $ 10,000 per unit over the contract period. The municipality may use the lesser of 16 percent of the grant or $ 2,000 per unit to administer the program.
(d) Applicants shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Division the existence of an active, systematic code enforcement program or a commitment to establish one within 90 days of the start date of a Balanced Housing contract.
(e) The following shall apply to municipalities administering a Neighborhood Rehabilitation Project:
(f) In cases where a two-to-four unit structure is rehabilitated with Balanced Housing funds and one or more of the units are not assisted with Balanced Housing or required matching funds, a percentage of the cost of common area and system wide improvements equal to the percentage of unassisted units shall be paid by the owner. If the structure is owner-occupied and the owner can demonstrate extreme financial hardship, the Division may modify or waive this requirement.
(g) The maximum Balanced Housing Program assistance to any one unit may not exceed the following:
(h) Eligible units shall be certified as substandard prior to the expenditure of funds.
(i) Any structure repaired in whole or in part with Balanced Housing funds must, upon completion to be certified as standard.
(j) Balanced Housing funds may be used only for work and repairs required to make a unit standard and any other work or repairs (including finishing and painting) that is directly related to the required activities. Improvements which are exclusively cosmetic and the purchase of free-standing appliances (not including refrigerators or stoves) are prohibited.