95-19834. Fair Market Rents for Section 8 Existing Housing; Amendments to Method of Calculating  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 157 (Tuesday, August 15, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 42222-42227]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-19834]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 42221]]
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    Office of the Secretary
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    24 CFR Part 888
    
    
    
    Fair Market Rents for Section 8 Existing Housing; Amendments to Method 
    of Calculating; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 157 / Tuesday, August 15, 1995 / 
    Rules and Regulations 
    
    [[Page 42222]]
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    Office of the Secretary
    
    24 CFR Part 888
    
    [Docket No. FR-3694-F-02]
    RIN 2501-AB76
    
    
    Fair Market Rents for Section 8 Existing Housing; Amendments to 
    Method of Calculating
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: This final rule amends the Department's regulations at 24 CFR 
    part 888 governing the method of calculating Fair Market Rents (FMRs) 
    for Section 8 Existing housing programs including the Section 8 Rental 
    Certificate program (including space rentals by owners of manufactured 
    homes under that program); the Moderate Rehabilitation Single Room 
    Occupancy program; the Loan Management and Property Disposition 
    programs; payment standards for the Rental Voucher program; and any 
    other programs which use the Section 8 FMRs.
        HUD is changing the definition from the 45th percentile of the 
    rental distribution of standard quality rental housing units to the 
    40th percentile as a cost saving measure. On average, FMRs will be 3.3 
    percent less than if they were set at the 45th percentile level. This 
    change will not significantly affect September 8 program operations. 
    Families will continue to have an adequate choice of good housing and 
    neighborhoods at the 40th percentile FMR.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: September 14, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gerald J. Benoit, Rental Assistance 
    Division, Office of Public and Indian Housing; telephone (202) 708-0477 
    or (202) 708-0850 (TDD for speech- or hearing-impaired), for questions 
    relating to the Section 8 Rental Certificate, Rental Voucher, and 
    Moderate Rehabilitation programs;
        Barbara Hunter, Program Planning Division, Office of Multifamily 
    Housing Management; telephone (202) 708-3944 or (202) 708-4594 (TDD for 
    speech- or hearing-impaired), for questions relating to all other 
    Section 8 programs.
        David Pollack, Office of Community Planning and Development; 
    telephone (202) 708-1234 or (202) 708-2565 (TDD for speech- or hearing-
    impaired), for questions relating to Moderate Rehabilitation, Single 
    Room Occupancy (SRO).
        Michael Allard, Office of Policy Development and Research, (202) 
    708-0577 or 708-1455 (TDD for speech- or hearing-impaired), for 
    questions relating to measurement of rent levels.
        Mailing address for above persons: Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development, 451 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20410. (Telephone 
    numbers are not toll-free.)
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        Section 8 of the U. S. Housing Act of 1937 (the Act) (42 U.S.C. 
    1437f) authorizes housing assistance to aid low-income families in 
    renting decent, safe, and sanitary housing. Assistance payments are 
    limited by Fair Market Rents (FMRs) established by HUD, or by payment 
    standards based on the FMRs established by public housing agencies for 
    the Rental Voucher program. In general, the FMR for an area is the 
    amount that would be needed to pay the gross rent (shelter rent plus 
    utilities) of privately-owned, decent, safe, and sanitary rental 
    housing of a modest (non-luxury) nature with suitable amenities.
        Under section 8(c) of the Act, the Secretary of HUD is directed to 
    establish FMRs periodically, but not less frequently than annually. HUD 
    publishes proposed FMRs each year, and after a period of public 
    comment, publishes the final FMRs. The method used to calculate FMRs is 
    described in 24 CFR part 888, subpart A. This rule amends the 
    regulations:
        (1) To change the FMR rent standard from the 45th to 40th 
    percentile rent of the rent distribution of rental housing units;
        (2) To authorize the Secretary to establish FMR areas that differ 
    from the OMB definitions of metropolitan areas where the OMB 
    definitions are determined by HUD to be larger than housing market 
    areas;
        (3) To identify Random Digit Dialing (RDD) telephone surveys as a 
    data source used to establish FMRs for selected individual areas and to 
    develop rent-change factors for updating FMRs;
        (4) To state the requirement that, in order to be considered as a 
    basis for revising the FMRs, public comments on proposed FMRs must 
    contain statistically valid rental housing survey data justifying the 
    requested changes; and
        (5) To provide that the FMR for a manufactured home space in the 
    tenant-based certificate program is 30 percent of the FMR for a two-
    bedroom housing unit.
        The amendments to the method of calculating FMRs in this final rule 
    apply to the following Section 8 Housing Assistance Payments programs: 
    the Rental Certificate program, including space rentals by owners of 
    manufactured homes; the Moderate Rehabilitation SRO Program; the loan 
    management program for projects with HUD-insured or HUD-held mortgages, 
    as well as the Property Disposition program; and any other HUD programs 
    which use these FMRs (e.g., programs to assist the homeless). In 
    addition, the rule amends the regulations to reflect use of FMRs to 
    establish payment standards for the Rental Voucher program. The rule 
    applies to public housing agencies (PHAs) and Indian Housing 
    Authorities (IHAs), which are collectively referred to as housing 
    authorities (HAs).
    
    II. Public Comments on Proposed Rule
    
        On March 2, 1995 (60 FR 11626), HUD published its proposed rule 
    that would amend the Department's regulations at 24 CFR part 888 
    governing the method of calculating FMRs for the Section 8 Rental 
    Certificate Programs discussed above. The Department received 628 
    comments on the proposed regulation.
        The following presents the major issues raised in the public 
    comments and HUD's responses to these issues.
        1. Comment: Many commenters contended that the reduction to the 
    40th percentile rent standard would result in a shortage of units 
    available to the Section 8 program and that participants would be 
    limited in their housing choices and, therefore, trapped in poor 
    neighborhoods where units are of marginal quality. Some HAs are 
    claiming that the reduction will kill the program in rural areas.
        Response: The proposed rule would have HUD set the FMR standard at 
    the 40th percentile rent level of the distribution of standard quality 
    rental housing units occupied by recent movers. Because the rents of 
    recent movers are almost always higher than the rents of stayers, more 
    than 40 percent of the standard quality rental housing units in each 
    FMR area have rents that would make them available to program 
    participants.
        A HUD analysis of Census data shows that, contrary to the 
    perception of most of the commenters, rent-eligible units are actually 
    widely dispersed throughout FMR areas. An analysis of a representative 
    sample of 13 metropolitan areas revealed that, on average, 85 percent 
    of census tract neighborhoods with 10 or more two-bedroom rental units 
    had at least 30 percent of the two-bedroom units below the FMRs. The 
    variation among these areas was not great. All areas had high 
    
    [[Page 42223]]
    percentages of neighborhoods with rent eligible units, ranging from 71 
    to 95 percent of the census tracts with 30 percent or more of the units 
    below the FMR. This is strongly suggestive that families will continue 
    to have an adequate choice of good housing and neighborhoods at the 
    40th percentile FMR.
        A similar analysis was conducted and similar results found for a 
    number of nonmetropolitan counties, supporting the conclusion that 
    rural areas also will have an ample proportion of rental housing that 
    families with housing certificates can afford at the 40th percentile 
    FMR standard.
        2. Comment: Many commenters were concerned that lower FMRs would 
    result in landlords dropping out of the Section 8 Existing program.
        Response: Lowering the standard from the 45th to the 40th 
    percentile rent will reduce FMRs by a small amount, 3.3 percent on 
    average. While some participating landlords with units renting very 
    close to the current FMRs may choose to drop out of the program, the 
    vast majority of units now in the program will continue to be eligible 
    under the new 40th percentile standard. In addition, HUD will be able 
    to use the FMR exception authority available for submarkets of FMR 
    areas to mitigate this situation.
        3. Comment: The proposed rule was viewed by commenters as an 
    attempt by OMB and HUD to reduce budgets at the expense of low-income 
    Americans.
        Response: The reduction in the FMR standard is a cost savings 
    measure. The streamlined Section 8 program will save taxpayers money 
    while still assuring that low-income families participating in the 
    program will be able to improve their housing situations. HUD is 
    confident that providing Section 8 families access to 40 percent of the 
    standard quality rental housing stock in a housing market offers them 
    the opportunity to afford decent, safe, and sanitary housing. Further, 
    a lower FMR standard permits assistance for more families with 
    available funding.
        4. Comment: Commenters thought that lower FMRs would result in more 
    program vacancies and therefore lower administrative fees to HAs 
    increasing their financial burden and impacting their ability to 
    operate the program.
        Response: The fact that FMRs are lower does not mean there will be 
    a lower lease-up rate in the program. Lower FMRs are an issue only for 
    new families entering the program or for families that move. Families 
    in need of housing will find units that rent below the lower FMR rather 
    than give up their rental assistance. Current program participants 
    desiring to move will be less likely to move if they have difficulty 
    finding a unit.
        HUD is in the process of decoupling the HA ongoing administrative 
    fees from the current FMR to the extent allowed by law. Under the 
    notice on administrative fees for the Section 8 Rental Voucher and 
    Rental Certificate Programs that was published in the Federal Register 
    on January 24, 1995 (59 FR 32492), the HA ongoing administrative fees 
    for the rental vouchers and certificates funded from pre-FY 1989 
    appropriations, representing more than one-half of the program units, 
    were decoupled from the current FMRs. HUD is seeking legislation to 
    decouple fees from the FMRs for rental vouchers and certificates funded 
    from FY 1989 and subsequent appropriations. Changes in the monthly per 
    unit fee amount would be based on changes in wage data or other 
    objectively measurable data, as determined by HUD, that reflect the 
    costs of administering the program.
        5. Comment: Commenters objected that the proposed rule encourages 
    HAs to conduct RDD surveys which are too costly and are not as reliable 
    as local surveys of real estate agents, renters, and visual inspections 
    of rental units. RDD surveys do not account for substandard housing, 
    and households with telephones are not necessarily standard quality 
    units, especially in rural areas. HUD requires HAs to use statistically 
    valid surveys, implying the required use of the RDD approach. HUD 
    should allow a common sense, inexpensive approach to rental housing 
    surveys.
        Response: HUD encourages HAs that believe their FMRs are too low to 
    conduct statistically valid surveys to test these numbers. HUD 
    recommends the use of RDD-type surveys, but these surveys are not 
    mandatory. Both the RDD and the traditional methods that HUD recommends 
    emphasize the need to obtain a complete list of the rental universe and 
    conduct the survey in an unbiased way. Very small samples, if carefully 
    drawn and surveyed, are more accurate than large samples drawn from 
    biased sources or surveyed in a biased manner. Regardless of how the 
    survey itself is conducted, the universe list must reflect the entire 
    rent distribution of the FMR area. HAs may continue to submit 
    traditional rental housing surveys and HUD will continue to evaluate 
    them in terms of their sample validity.
        HUD provides extensive step-by-step guidance on how to conduct 
    statistically valid surveys, including sample selection (using either 
    the RDD or traditional method), questionnaire wording, follow-ups of 
    nonrespondents, and data processing. HUD is also willing to help HAs 
    that want to conduct their own surveys.
        HUD's past analysis indicates that RDD surveys appropriately 
    reflect the rent levels of the standard quality housing stock. The 
    impact of substandard housing is offset by the use of samples of rental 
    housing units with telephones. The upward rent bias from surveying only 
    units with telephones is offset by the high proportion of non-telephone 
    units that would not meet quality standards.
        HUD has always required the use of statistically valid housing 
    surveys in FMR comments and has stated the requirements for such 
    surveys in the preambles to the notices of proposed FMRs. In recent 
    years, HUD has also publicized the availability of its rental housing 
    survey guides and has conducted an outreach program to help HAs conduct 
    statistically valid surveys. These surveys need not be conducted by 
    professionals, and are cheap enough that most HAs can afford to conduct 
    them. Even very small HAs have been able to use these surveys by 
    joining their resources and conducting combined surveys.
        6. Comment: The proposed change was particularly perplexing to 
    several commenters in view of the Section 8 NOFA selection criteria--
    Efforts of HA to Provide Area-Wide Housing Opportunities for Families.
        Response: Prior to issuing the proposed regulation, HUD considered 
    the impact of this change on efforts to encourage families to move from 
    high poverty neighborhoods. As discussed in the response to the first 
    comment, HUD is confident that rental housing units meeting the program 
    standards are available throughout FMR areas, and will favorably 
    consider requests for submarket exception rents in order to maintain 
    opportunities for families to rent units in non-poverty neighborhoods.
        7. Comment: The reduction in the FMR standard would make it more 
    difficult to administer a program that mandates Family Self-Sufficiency 
    (FSS).
        Response: HUD provided special funding in FY 1994 for HAs to hire a 
    service coordinator under the FSS program. The Notice of Funding 
    Availability for FY 1995 provides additional funding for HAs to hire 
    FSS service coordinators.
        8. Comment: Several commenters stated that reduced FMRs were 
    insufficient to support new construction programs like the Low Income 
    Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) or HOME program.
    
    [[Page 42224]]
    
        Response: The FMRs, set at the 40th percentile level of standard 
    quality recent mover rental units, would include approximately the 
    bottom half of an area's standard quality rental stock. It is not HUD's 
    intention to set the FMRs at a level high enough to support new 
    construction and only in very unusual situations would this occur. Over 
    the years, some production programs, such as the HOME and LIHTC 
    programs, have had program rents tied to the FMRs to ensure that the 
    end result was affordable housing. HOME participants can use the grant 
    money in a variety of ways ranging from leveraging production costs to 
    directly paying for them. Many of the HOME and LIHTC participants have 
    used other sources of funds to write down rents on these projects.
        9. Comment: Commenters objected to the 30-day comment period as 
    being too short a time period to comment on the proposed changes.
        As stated in the preamble to the proposed rule and repeated here, 
    HUD's position in providing a 30-day comment period, rather than 60 
    days, is that the public had already had ample notice that HUD was 
    considering this change. On June 23, 1994 (59 FR 32492), HUD published 
    a notice in the Federal Register containing two separate sets of FMRs--
    one based on the 45th percentile rent levels and the other based on the 
    40th percentile rent levels. The notice explained that HUD was 
    considering a 40th percentile FMR standard. A reduction in the FMR 
    standard was also announced as a proposed cost savings measure in HUD's 
    FY 1995 budget presentation. The June 23, 1994 notice requested public 
    comment on the proposed FMRs at both the 40th and 45th percentiles. 
    Since the public had already had the opportunity to consider the 
    proposed change in the FMR standard and to comment on the actual 
    proposed FMRs at the 40th percentile level, HUD believes that a 60-day 
    comment period was unnecessary since the abbreviated comment period did 
    not adversely impact the public's ability to participate in this rule 
    making. In fact, HUD received and evaluated all comments received after 
    the 30-day comment period had ended.
        10. Comment: Commenters contended that HUD's proposal to provide 
    for a 30-day comment period for the annual notice of proposed FMRs is 
    not enough time for HAs to do rental housing surveys. Some commenters 
    requested a comment period longer than the 60 days currently allowed.
        Response: The regulation requires the Department to provide a 
    comment period of at least 30 days to identify areas where the FMRs are 
    believed to be too high or too low. HUD's practice has been, and will 
    continue to be, to allow interested parties 60 days to prepare their 
    comments. The 60-day comment period was adopted in recognition that the 
    additional time was needed for HAs to conduct rental housing surveys. 
    HUD reserves the right, however, to abbreviate the comment period in 
    the event that special circumstances should warrant such an action.
        HUD cannot provide for a comment period longer than 60 days and 
    still be able to publish final FMRs on October 1 of each year. Because 
    of the time required to obtain the year-end data used to update and 
    process the FMR schedules each year, the earliest these estimates can 
    be published is in mid-April. The 60-day comment period, therefore, 
    ends in mid-June, and the remainder of that month is required to 
    process and distribute the comments to the respective HUD Field 
    offices. HUD reviews the comments for the next month and a half, 
    through mid-August. The remainder of the time is spent preparing the 
    revised FMRs for publication, clearing the publication, and submitting 
    them to the Federal Register.
        11. Comment: Commenters objected to the proposal to give the 
    Secretary the discretion to make modifications to the FMR area 
    definitions of large metropolitan areas.
        Response: HUD generally uses the OMB definitions of metropolitan 
    areas as FMR definitions because they are good approximations of 
    housing market area definitions--the criterion that HUD uses to define 
    FMR areas. OMB in its publication establishing these definitions (OMB 
    Bulletin NO. 93-17), however, directs agencies who use the definitions 
    for nonstatistical purposes to ensure that they are appropriate for the 
    specific program use. OMB recommends that the agency in such a 
    circumstance seek public comment on their appropriateness. The OMB 
    bulletin further states that an agency may deviate from the 
    definitions, but should identify the deviations and specify the program 
    for which they will apply. In establishing the FMR area definitions, 
    HUD followed the OMB procedures. First, HUD conducted an evaluation of 
    the revised OMB metropolitan area definitions and determined there were 
    seven metropolitan areas for which the OMB definitions were too large 
    to represent housing market area definitions. HUD then invited public 
    comment in the notice of proposed FMRs published on May 6, 1993 (58 FR 
    27062). HUD received only one public comment on this issue. After 
    reviewing the comment, HUD decided to make the modified definitions 
    effective, which it did in the October 1, 1993, Federal Register 
    publication of final FMRs (58 FR 51410). This rule merely codifies 
    HUD's existing policy of making exceptions to FMR definitions, as 
    warranted, in accordance with OMB's instructions.
        12. Comment: Several commenters objected to HUD's rule to set 
    manufactured home space rents at the 30 percent of the FMRs for a two-
    bedroom unit.
        Response: HUD first announced in the May 6, 1993, notice of 
    proposed FMRs that it was considering other alternatives for 
    establishing manufactured home space FMRs. It was explained in the 
    notice that the data base used to estimate the FMRs for manufactured 
    home space rents was quite old, from a 1978 survey, and that no new 
    data sources were available. HUD did not consider the existing data 
    sufficiently accurate to continue using these estimates. Because there 
    is very limited use of the manufactured home space rents in the tenant-
    based rental assistance programs, the expected cost of obtaining new 
    survey data was not justified.
        HUD did not receive any comments on this proposal and, therefore, 
    on June 23, 1994, proposed that the manufactured home space FMR would 
    be 30 percent of the Section 8 two-bedroom FMR. The 30-percent ratio 
    was selected on the basis of an analysis which showed that the vast 
    majority of the manufactured home space FMRs were within a 20 to 30 
    percent range of the regular two-bedroom FMR. Recognizing that there 
    would be valid exceptions to this relationship, HUD informed the public 
    that it would accept local surveys of space rentals in manufactured 
    home parks as a basis for modifying the FMRs where the proposed new 
    standard was not adequate to operate the program. HUD also announced 
    that it was retaining all local surveys that had been accepted since 
    1990 as the basis for modifying the manufactured home space FMRs. On 
    September 28, 1994 (59 FR 49494), HUD published separately in Schedule 
    D, the manufactured home space FMRs for 13 areas that had recent local 
    surveys and established the FMRs for all other areas at 30 percent of 
    the two-bedroom FMR.
        13. Comment: A commenter requested that HUD publish a contract rent 
    and a utility amount rather than a gross rent FMR estimate. The basis 
    for this request is the concern that the amount HUD is using for the 
    utility component is less than what is used at the local level. 
    
    [[Page 42225]]
    
        Response: HUD FMRs are gross rent estimates, which means that they 
    include the cost of all utilities. HUD prefers using gross rent as a 
    basis because it accounts for the total costs to tenants and it 
    provides a consistent basis for comparison. There is no one contract 
    rent for an FMR area. Contract arrangements vary with regard to the 
    types of utilities paid by the landlord and those paid by the tenant. 
    HUD actually uses two methods to develop gross rent estimates. For the 
    base-year estimates of FMR areas using the 1990 Census and post-1990 
    American Housing Surveys, a series of detailed questions are asked to 
    determine what utilities the tenants pay and how much they pay. The 
    contract rent and tenant paid utilities are then combined on an 
    individual unit basis to derive the gross rent of each unit. For those 
    areas based on RDD surveys, the gross rents are determined by asking 
    the tenant to identify the utilities they pay themselves. HUD then uses 
    the approved HA utility allowances to determine the appropriate amount 
    of tenant paid utilities, which are added to the contract rent amount 
    to determine a gross rent. HUD has found no evidence to suggest there 
    is a downward bias introduced into the estimates using either method. 
    The RDD procedure uses the most current HA estimates of utilities, 
    while the Census surveys use tenant estimates of utilities. If 
    anything, the latter source may be somewhat overstated.
        14. Comment: A commenter stated that HUD should not implement this 
    change without specific Congressional approval. They also stated that 
    Congressional opposition last year should have convinced HUD not to 
    take this action unless Congress specifically directs it to do so.
        Response: The law does not specify the percentile standard used to 
    establish the FMRs and permits HUD to change the FMR standard from the 
    45th to the 40th percentile standard. Accordingly, HUD has the 
    authority to implement this change.
        15. Comment: A commenter claimed that HUD's FMR calculations are 
    flawed because they do not include newly constructed units which would 
    allow for greater choice of locations and increase the number of units 
    passing HQS.
        Response: HUD is authorized to provide assistance for existing 
    housing units and to determine FMRs for such units. Newly constructed 
    units--units built within the past 2 years--are excluded from the FMR 
    calculations. An objective of the Section 8 Housing Assistance Payments 
    program is to serve as many low-income families as possible by making 
    available standard quality rental housing units of modest (nonluxury) 
    quality. Newly constructed units generally have much higher initial 
    rent levels than other units. HUD, therefore, considers that such units 
    should be deleted from the data base used to calculate the Existing 
    Housing FMRs. Deletion of new units from the data base does not 
    significantly affect the number of units that would pass HQS. HUD also 
    calculates the FMRs by deleting substandard units from the Census 
    distributions of rental housing and making an additional adjustment to 
    factor out the affects of substandard housing on rents using the more 
    refined housing quality data available in the American Housing Survey 
    distributions.
        16. Comment: A commenter, concerned that FMRs in nonmetropolitan 
    areas were too low, suggested HUD consider establishing minimum FMRs 
    based on State averages.
        Response: HUD's use of the 1990 Census to re-benchmark the FMRs 
    significantly improved the accuracy of these estimates in 
    nonmetropolitan counties. For the first time, rent data were available 
    for all counties individually rather than for county groups as had been 
    the situation with previous Censuses. To protect against 
    unrealistically low FMRs being set as the result of insufficient sample 
    sizes, exceptions were made to the use of county level FMRs. The 
    exceptions involved the use of State-wide minimum rent estimates that 
    were applied to all FMR areas with fewer than 100 two-bedroom rental 
    unit cases in the Census and with FMRs below the State minimum 
    comparable rent of areas with 100 or more such cases. The base year FMR 
    estimates for these counties were set at the lower of the State-wide 
    minimum or the upper end of the confidence interval of the Census-based 
    rent. HUD is concerned about the continued number of inquiries on this 
    issue, however, and is currently reviewing its exception procedure to 
    determine if a further adjustment may be warranted for nonmetropolitan 
    counties with extremely low rents.
        17. Comment: A commenter objected that comments should not be 
    restricted in any way. Requiring smaller housing authorities to submit 
    exhaustive statistics (from rental housing surveys) violated the 
    spirit, if not the letter of the law. The comment stated that nearly 
    all HAs have complete data for rental properties to establish rent 
    reasonableness and comparability and that the results of RDD surveys 
    pale to insignificance when compared to the actual day to day 
    experience of a local housing authority.
        Response: As explained in the response to comment number 5, HUD 
    does not mandate the use of RDD surveys and continues to accept the 
    traditional type rental housing surveys as a basis for revising the 
    FMRs as long as the survey samples are not biased and are 
    representative of the rental housing stock of the entire FMR area. HUD 
    disagrees with the contention that local rent reasonableness data are a 
    better, or even an acceptable alternative, to an RDD survey or a 
    traditional survey conducted in accordance with HUD survey guidelines. 
    The rent reasonableness data base is a restricted source of information 
    that is collected for specific units being considered for participation 
    in the program, for limited parts of FMR areas, and at various points 
    in time. As such, the data are not likely to constitute a 
    representative sample. For many areas these data were collected for 
    units that entered the program prior to the re-benchmarking of the FMRs 
    and, therefore, include concentrations of units above the current FMRs.
        18. Comment: Commenters suggested that if HUD insists on going to 
    the 40th percentile rent level, it should allow Certificate holders the 
    same flexibility to exceed the FMR as Voucher Holders.
        Response: HUD is preparing the last part of the final rule to 
    implement the provisions of the National Affordable Housing Act of 
    1990, that would allow certificate holders to pay more than 30 percent 
    of their income toward rent. Under the provisions of law, up to 10 
    percent of the families renting units with assistance under the rental 
    certificate program could pay more than 30 percent of their income 
    toward rent. Similarly, under HUD's proposed Housing Certificate Fund, 
    90 percent of the participants would be allowed to pay up to 35 percent 
    of their income toward rent and 10 percent of the families could pay 
    more than 35 percent of their income for rent.
        19. Comment: A commenter disputed the General Counsel's findings on 
    executive orders 12606, Family and 12611, Federalism.
        Response: This rule will not restrict families to spatial 
    concentrations of poverty. HUD is still committed to providing 
    affordable housing to as many families as possible in today's market. 
    The establishment of FMRs at the 40th percentile level does not have 
    any substantial direct impact on States, on the relationship between 
    the Federal government and the States, or on the distribution of power 
    and responsibility among the various levels of government. 
    
    [[Page 42226]]
    
        20. Comment: One commenter stated that the change from the 45th to 
    the 40th percentile FMR standard will cause still more families to be 
    unsuccessful in finding decent, safe, and sanitary housing. The comment 
    cited the nationwide success rate of 81 percent as evidence supporting 
    this claim.
        Response: A recent HUD study found just the opposite situation. The 
    study, completed in 1994, found 80 percent of recipients in large 
    cities were successful in finding housing that qualified for the 
    program. Excluding New York City from the sample, the nationwide 
    success rate was even higher, 87 percent. The success rates in the 
    Section 8 program have been increasing over time, rising from about 50 
    percent in the late-1970's, to 65 percent in the mid-1980's, to the 
    current 80 percent rate. As pointed out in the response to comment 
    number 1, there is a more than adequate supply of housing in good 
    condition and in good neighborhoods available to program participants. 
    The Census data for the 13 selected metropolitan areas show that at the 
    40th percentile standard at least 40 percent of the two-bedroom rental 
    housing stock had rents at or below the FMRs. Five of these areas had 
    more than half of all two-bedroom units at or below the FMR, and most 
    of the other areas had from 45 to 50 percent of the two-bedroom units 
    at or below the FMR.
    
    III. Other Matters
    
    Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review
    
        This final rule was reviewed and approved by the Office of 
    Management and Budget as a significant rule, as that term is defined in 
    Executive Order 12866, which was signed by the President on September 
    30, 1993. Any changes to the final rule as a result of that review are 
    contained in the public file of the rule in the office of the 
    Department's Rules Docket Clerk.
    
    Environmental Assessment
    
        A Finding of No Significant Impact with respect to the environment 
    required by the National Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C. 4321-4374) 
    is unnecessary, since the establishment and review of fair market rents 
    is categorically excluded from the Department's regulations 
    implementing the National Environmental Policy Act at 24 CFR 50.20(l).
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Secretary, in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 
    U.S.C. 605(b)), has reviewed this document before publication and by 
    approving it certifies that the proposed rule would not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, 
    because FMRs reflect the rents for similar quality units in the area. 
    Therefore, FMRs do not change the rent from that which would be charged 
    if the unit were not in the Section 8 program.
    
    Executive Order 12606, The Family
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Official under Executive 
    Order 12606, The Family, has determined that this proposed rule would 
    not have a significant impact on family formation, maintenance, or 
    well-being. The proposed rule would amend the method for calculating 
    Fair Market Rent for various Section 8 assisted housing programs, and 
    would not affect the amount of rent a family receiving rental 
    assistance pays, which is based on a percentage of the family's income.
    
    Executive Order 12611, Federalism
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Official under section 6(a) 
    of Executive Order 12611, Federalism, has determined that this proposal 
    would not involve the preemption of State law by Federal statute or 
    regulation and would not have Federalism implications. The 
    establishment of FMRs does not have any substantial direct impact on 
    States, on the relationship between the Federal government and the 
    States, or on the distribution of power and responsibility among the 
    various levels of government.
    
    Semiannual Regulatory Agenda
    
        This rule was listed as sequence number 1727 in the Department's 
    Semiannual Regulatory Agenda published on May 8, 1995 (60 FR 23368, 
    23377) under Executive Order 12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
    
    Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
    
        The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance program number is 
    14.156, Lower-Income Housing Assistance Program (Section 8).
    
    List of Subjects in 24 CFR Part 888
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Rent subsidies.
        Accordingly, part 888 of title 24 of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations would be amended as follows:
    PART 888--SECTION 8 HOUSING ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM--FAIR 
    MARKET RENTS AND CONTRACT RENT ANNUAL ADJUSTMENT FACTORS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 888 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437c, 1437f, and 3535(d).
    
        2. Sections 888.101 and 888.105 are removed and Sec. 888.111 is 
    revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 888.111   Fair market rents for existing housing: Applicability.
    
        The Fair Market Rents (FMRs) for existing housing (see definition 
    in Sec. 882.102 of this chapter) are determined by the Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and apply to the Section 8 
    Certificate Program, including space rentals by owners of manufactured 
    homes under the Section 8 Certificate Program, the Section 8 Moderate 
    Rehabilitation Program, Section 8 existing housing project-based 
    assistance, and Section 8 existing housing assisted under part 886 of 
    this chapter. FMRs are also used to determine payment standard 
    schedules in the Rental Voucher program.
        3. Section 888.113 is revised to 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. 
    They 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 40 percent of standard quality rental housing units rent. 
    The 40th percentile rent is drawn from the distribution of rents of all 
    units that are occupied by recent movers. Adjustments are made to 
    exclude public housing units, newly built units and substandard units.
        (b) FMR Areas. FMR areas are metropolitan areas and nonmetropolitan 
    counties (nonmetropolitan parts of counties in the New England States). 
    With several exceptions, the most current Office of Management and 
    Budget (OMB) metropolitan area definitions of Metropolitan Statistical 
    Areas (MSAs) and Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas (PMSAs) are 
    used because of their generally close correspondence with housing 
    market area definitions. HUD may make exceptions to OMB definitions if 
    the MSAs or PMSAs encompass areas that are larger than housing market 
    areas. The counties deleted from the HUD-defined FMR areas in those 
    cases are established as separate metropolitan county FMR areas. FMRs 
    are established for all areas in the United States, the 
    
    [[Page 42227]]
    District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and the Pacific 
    Islands.
        (c) Data sources. (1) HUD uses the most accurate and current data 
    available to develop the FMR estimates and may add other data sources 
    as they are discovered and determined to be statistically valid. The 
    following sources of survey data are used to develop the base-year FMR 
    estimates:
        (i) The most recent decennial Census, which provides statistically 
    reliable rent data.
        (ii) The American Housing Survey (AHS) data, conducted by the 
    Bureau of the Census for HUD. AHS's have comparable accuracy to the 
    decennial Census, and are used to develop between-census revisions for 
    the largest metropolitan areas on a four-year revolving schedule.
        (iii) Random Digit Dialing (RDD) telephone survey data, based on a 
    sampling procedure that uses computers to select statistically random 
    samples of rental housing.
        (iv) Statistically valid information, as determined by HUD, 
    presented to HUD during the public comment and review period.
        (2) Base-year FMRs are updated and trended to the midpoint of the 
    program year they are to be effective using Consumer Price Index (CPI) 
    data for rents and for utilities or using rent-change factors obtained 
    from the RDD regional surveys. The RDD rent-change factors are 
    developed annually for the metropolitan and nonmetropolitan parts of 
    the HUD-specified geographic regions not covered by CPI surveys, and 
    are used to update the base-year FMR estimates within these regions.
        (d) Bedroom size adjustments. (1) For most areas the ratios 
    developed from the most recent decennial Census are applied to the two-
    bedroom FMR estimates to derive FMRs for other bedroom sizes. 
    Exceptions to this procedure may be made for areas with local bedroom 
    intervals below an acceptable range. To help the largest most difficult 
    to house families find units, higher ratios than the actual market 
    ratios may be used for three-bedroom and larger-size units.
        (2) The FMR for single room occupancy housing is 75 percent of the 
    FMR for a zero bedroom unit.
        (e) Manufactured home space. The FMR for a manufactured home space 
    is 30 percent of the FMR for a two-bedroom unit, or, where approved by 
    HUD on the basis of survey data submitted in public comments, the 40th 
    percentile of the rental distribution of manufactured home spaces for 
    the FMR area. HUD accepts public comments requesting revision of the 
    proposed manufactured home space FMRs for areas where space rentals are 
    thought to differ from the 30 percent standard. To be considered for 
    approval, the comments must contain statistically-valid survey data 
    that show the 40th percentile manufactured home space rent (excluding 
    the cost of utilities) for the FMR area. Once approved, the revised 
    manufactured home space FMRs establish new base-year estimates that 
    will be updated annually using the same data used to update the Rental 
    Certificate program FMRs.
        4. Section 888.115 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 888.115   Fair market rents for existing housing: Manner of 
    publication.
    
        FMRs will be published at least annually in the Federal Register. 
    The Department will propose FMRs and provide a comment period of at 
    least 30 days for the purpose of identifying areas where the FMRs are 
    believed to be too high or too low. To be considered for FMR revisions, 
    public comments must include statistically valid rental housing survey 
    data that justify the requested changes. After the comments have been 
    considered, the Department will publish a final notice announcing FMRs 
    to be effective on October 1 each year.
    
        Dated: August 4, 1995.
    Henry G. Cisneros,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-19834 Filed 8-14-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4210-32-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
9/14/1995
Published:
08/15/1995
Department:
Housing and Urban Development Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-19834
Dates:
September 14, 1995.
Pages:
42222-42227 (6 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. FR-3694-F-02
RINs:
2501-AB76
PDF File:
95-19834.pdf
CFR: (3)
24 CFR 888.111
24 CFR 888.113
24 CFR 888.115