[Federal Register Volume 61, Number 56 (Thursday, March 21, 1996)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 11684-11703]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 96-6791]
[[Page 11683]]
_______________________________________________________________________
Part II
Department of Housing and Urban Development
_______________________________________________________________________
24 CFR Parts 290 and 886
Disposition of Multifamily Projects and Sale of HUD-Held Multifamily
Mortgages; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 61, No. 56 / Thursday, March 21, 1996 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 11684]]
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Parts 290 and 886
[Docket No. FR-3715-F-02]
RIN 2502-AG30
Office of Assistant Secretary for Housing--Federal Housing
Commissioner; Disposition of Multifamily Projects and Sale of HUD-Held
Multifamily Mortgages
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Housing--Federal Housing
Commissioner, HUD.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: This final rule implements at 24 CFR part 290 the regulatory
requirements under the Multifamily Housing Property Disposition Reform
Act of 1994 that affect the management and disposition of HUD-owned
properties and properties with HUD-held mortgages, and the sale of HUD-
held multifamily mortgages. Conforming changes are made to part 886.
EFFECTIVE DATE: April 22, 1996.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Barbara D. Hunter, Director, Program
Management Division, Office of Multifamily Asset Management and
Disposition, Department of Housing and Urban Development, Room 6182,
451 7th Street SW, Washington, DC 20410. Telephone (202) 708-3944; TDD
(202) 708-4594. (These are not toll-free numbers.)
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
The information collection requirements contained in Sec. 290.9 of
this rule have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget in
accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-
3520), and assigned OMB control number 2502-0204. 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 valid
control number.
I. Statutory and Regulatory Background
On August 17, 1993 (58 FR 43708), the Department published a final
rule amending its requirements for the management and disposition of
HUD-owned multifamily housing projects. The regulation, at 24 CFR part
290, implemented HUD's statutory authority, contained in section 207
(k) and (l) of the National Housing Act and in section 203 of the
Housing and Community Development Amendments of 1978, to handle and
dispose of such real property.
Section 203 was amended by section 181 of the Housing and Community
Development Act of 1987 (1987 Act), section 1010 of the Stewart B.
McKinney Homeless Assistance Amendments Act of 1988 (1988 Act), and
section 579 of the National Affordable Housing Act of 1990 (NAHA). A
final rule published on August 17, 1993 implemented the NAHA
amendments. Generally, the statutory amendments specified the type of
assistance to be provided when the Department determines to preserve
units as affordable low- and very low-income housing, and included
certain projects with HUD-held mortgages within the scope of section
203.
In the Multifamily Housing Property Disposition Reform Act of 1994
(MHPDRA) (Pub. L. 102-233, approved April 11, 1994), section 203 was
completely revised. An interim rule amending 24 CFR part 290 to reflect
the new statutory amendments was published on March 2, 1995 (60 FR
11844) with a 60 day public comment period. The Department received no
comments on the interim rule.
II. Changes Made by the Final Rule--Regulatory Reinvention
Consistent with Executive Order 12866 and President Clinton's
memorandum of March 4, 1995 to all Federal Departments and Agencies on
regulatory reinvention, HUD has reviewed all its regulations to
determine whether certain regulations can be eliminated, streamlined,
or consolidated with other regulations. In keeping with the President's
mandate to reinvent and reform regulations, the Department is taking
advantage of the publication of this final rule to streamline part 290.
The entire part has been re-drafted to eliminate text that only repeats
the statutory language, or provisions that are only advisory (rather
than binding) or non-exclusive. Instead of consisting of nine subparts,
A through I, as did the interim rule, this final rule has only two
subparts: subpart A--Disposition of Multifamily Projects, and subpart
B--Sale of HUD-Held Multifamily Mortgages.
One goal of reinventing regulations is to remove rule text that
only repeats statutory language. To achieve this goal, rules will only
contain legally binding requirements that are in addition to those
contained in a statute. This will streamline regulations, avoid
redundancy, and remove the problems that result when a rule that echoes
the language of a statute becomes inconsistent with new statutory
amendments. The period before a rule is amended to conform to new
statutory language is often one of confusion and uncertainty as to
which law applies. The final rule promulgated here does not, therefore,
repeat any statutory language; it contains only those provisions that
clarify the statutory procedures, or provisions that address those
areas that give the Secretary discretion to act.
The remaining regulatory text is further pruned to eliminate
provisions that are only advisory (rather than binding) or non-
exclusive. An example of such a provision is the listing in
Sec. 290.42(d)(3) of the interim rule of persons included in the
definition of ``displaced person.'' This listing is prefaced by the
phrase, ``This includes, but is not limited to:'', which indicates that
it only provides examples, and is not exclusive or complete. Such lists
of examples are more appropriate for inclusion in guidance materials
(such as the appendix which follows this rule) than in rules.
The consolidated statutory and regulatory procedures for the
disposition of multifamily properties, which were contained in the
interim rule, have been placed in an appendix to this final rule. The
final rule will be codified in the Code of Federal Regulations; the
appendix will not be codified. However, the appendix is available to
the public as a single document which provides a unified overview of
the disposition process. The user-friendly features of the interim
rule, its tables and question-and-answer format, are retained as
features of the appendix.
A number of consolidating and clarifying adjustments are also made
to the regulatory language that remains in part 290. The requirements
for the timing of any disposition-related notifications (i.e., pre-
foreclosure notification to tenants and units of general local
government; pre-disposition community and tenant input notification;
state and local government right of first refusal notification) are
combined into a single provision, at Sec. 290.11, which states that
notifications will be made, as appropriate, (1) 60 or more days before
HUD forecloses on a project, or (2) before, or not more than 30 days
after, HUD acquires a project. By making it clear that notifications
that may be made up to 30 days after acquisition may also be made
before acquisition, the rule confirms that the notification provisions
are meant to complement, rather than impede, the disposition process.
For instance, in the case of a negotiated sale to a State or local
government (including public
[[Page 11685]]
agencies), waiting until after acquisition to provide the statutorily
required state and local government right of first refusal notification
could delay a disposition for 90 days. Providing this notification
earlier in the process allows for a more expeditious disposition.
A correction is made in the table entitled ``Pre-Disposition
Notification Requirements,'' which now appears in the appendix. In the
interim rule, the timing for providing notice to tenants and the
community was listed as 60 days in the table, and 30 days in the rule
text. The time period in the table is here conformed to 30 days.
This rule also includes two provisions, at Secs. 290.37 and 290.39,
added to the Sale of HUD-Held Multifamily Mortgages subpart by an
interim rule published on February 6, 1996 (61 FR 4580). These
provisions are included in this rule to present the complete part 290
in its current form. However, after considering comments submitted on
these provisions, they will be republished separately as a final rule.
As an additional matter, the Department is taking advantage of the
publication of this rule to provide notice of section 401 of Pub. L.
104-99 (110 Stat. 26, approved January 26, 1996), which provides that,
``During fiscal year 1996, the Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development may manage and dispose of multifamily properties owned by
the Secretary, including the provision of the grants from the General
Insurance Fund (12 U.S.C. 1735c) for the necessary costs of
rehabilitation and other related development costs and multifamily
mortgages held by the Secretary without regard to any other provision
of law.''
III. Other Matters
Any assistance made available to a purchaser under this rule,
whether rental or other financial assistance, will be subject to
scrutiny under section 102(d) of the HUD Reform Act, insofar as that
statutory provision has been implemented by guidelines issued by the
Office of Housing under 24 CFR part 12, subpart D (see, e.g., a Federal
Register Notice published April 9, 1991 (56 FR 14436) entitled
``Administrative Guidelines; Limitations on Combining Other Government
Assistance with HUD Housing Assistance'').
Environmental Impact
A Finding of No Significant Impact with respect to the environment
has been made in accordance with HUD regulations at 24 CFR Part 50,
which implement section 102(2)(C) of the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969. The Finding is available for public inspection between
7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. weekdays in the Office of the Rules Docket
Clerk, Office of the General Counsel, Department of Housing and Urban
Development, Room 10276, 451 Seventh Street SW, Washington, DC 20410.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Secretary, in accordance with provisions of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605(b)), has reviewed this rule before
publication and by approving it certifies that it will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
These requirements governing the management and disposition of HUD-
owned multifamily housing projects should not affect the ability of
small entities, relative to larger entities, to bid for and acquire
projects that HUD determines to sell.
Executive Order 12612, Federalism
HUD has determined, in accordance with Executive Order 12612,
Federalism, that this rule will not have a substantial, direct effect
on the States or on the relationship between the Federal government and
the States, or on the distribution of power or responsibilities among
the various levels of government. While the rule would impose terms and
conditions on States that acquire projects under this rule, that is
clearly the intent of the authorizing legislation, and therefore no
further review is necessary or appropriate.
Executive Order 12606, the Family
HUD has determined that this rule will not have a significant
impact on family formation, maintenance, and general well-being within
the meaning of Executive Order 12606, The Family, because it does not
affect the eligibility of families for admission into multifamily
housing projects that are subject to this rulemaking.
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program number and title
are 14.156, Lower Income Housing Assistance Program (Section 8).
List of Subjects
24 CFR Part 290
Low and moderate income housing, Mortgage insurance.
24 CFR Part 886
Grant programs--housing and community development, Lead poisoning,
Rent subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Accordingly, under the authority of 42 U.S.C. 3535(d), for the
reasons stated in the preamble, title 24 of the Code of Federal
Regulations is amended by adopting the amendments to part 886 of the
interim rule published in the Federal Register of March 2, 1995 (60 FR
11844) as final without change, and by revising part 290, to read as
follows:
PART 290--DISPOSITION OF MULTIFAMILY PROJECTS AND SALE OF HUD-HELD
MULTIFAMILY MORTGAGES
Subpart A--Disposition of Multifamily Projects
Sec.
290.1 Applicability.
290.3 Definitions.
290.7 Occupancy requirements.
290.9 Setting rental rates.
290.11 Notification requirements.
290.13 Negotiated sales.
290.15 Disposition plan.
290.17 Displacement of tenants and relocation assistance.
290.19 Restrictions concerning nondiscrimination against Section 8
certificate holders and voucher holders.
290.21 Computing annual number of units eligible for substitution
of tenant-based assistance or alternative uses.
290.23 Rebuilding.
290.25 Determination not to preserve a project or a part of a
project.
Subpart B--Sale of HUD-Held Multifamily Mortgages
290.30 General.
290.31 Sale of current mortgages securing subsidized projects.
290.33 Sale of delinquent mortgages securing subsidized projects.
290.35 Sale of HUD-held mortgages securing unsubsidized projects.
290.37 Requirements for continuing federal rental subsidy
contracts.
290.39 Nondiscrimination in admitting certificate and voucher
holders.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701z-11, 1701z-12, 1713, 1715b, 1715z-1b;
42 U.S.C. 3535(d).
Subpart A--Disposition of Multifamily Projects
Sec. 290.1 Applicability.
The requirements of this part supplement the requirements of 12
U.S.C. 1701z-11 for the management and disposition of multifamily
housing projects and the sale of HUD-held multifamily mortgages. The
goals and objectives of this part are the same as the goals and
objectives of 12 U.S.C. 1701z-11, which shall be referred to in this
part as ``the Statute.''
Sec. 290.3 Definitions.
The terms Department and URA are defined in 24 CFR part 5. The
following definitions apply to this part:
Cooperative means a nonprofit, limited equity, or consumer
cooperative as defined under 24 CFR part 213. It
[[Page 11686]]
may include mutual housing associations.
HUD-owned project means a multifamily project that has been
acquired by HUD.
Market area means the area from which a multifamily housing project
may reasonably be expected to draw a substantial number of its tenants,
as determined by HUD, taking into consideration the knowledge of the
HUD office with jurisdiction over the project of the local real estate
market and HUD's project underwriting experience. Submarkets may be
used in large, complex metropolitan areas.
Multifamily housing project means a multifamily project that is or
was insured under sections 207, 213, 220, 221(d)(3), 221(d)(4), 223(f),
231, 236, or 608 of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1713, 1715e,
1715k, 1715l, 1715n, 1715v, 1715z-1, or 1742-1746); or is or was
subject to a loan under section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959 (12
U.S.C. 1701q); or was a Real Estate Owned (REO) multifamily project
transferred by the Government National Mortgage Association to the
Department. Multifamily housing project does not include projects
consisting of one to eleven units insured under section 220(d)(3)(A) of
the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1715l); or mobile home parks under
section 207(m) of that Act (12 U.S.C. 1713); or vacant land; or
property covered by a homeownership program approved under the
Homeownership and Opportunity for People Everywhere (``HOPE'') program.
Multifamily project means a project consisting of five or more
units that has or had a mortgage (even if subordinate to other
mortgages) insured under the National Housing Act or is or was subject
to a loan under section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959, or a hospital,
intermediate care facility, nursing home, group practice facility, or
board and care facility that has or had a mortgage insured, or is or
was subject to a loan under, these authorities. Multifamily project
does not include projects consisting of one to eleven units insured
under section 220(d)(3)(A) of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C.
1715k), which are classified as single family homes.
Nonprofit organization means a corporation or association organized
for purposes other than making a profit or gain for itself.
Stockholders or trustees do not share in profits or losses. Profits are
used to accomplish the charitable, humanitarian, or educational
purposes of the corporation.
Preexisting tenant means a family that resides in a unit in a
multifamily housing project immediately before the project is acquired
under this part by a purchaser other than the Department.
Subsidized project means a multifamily housing project that is
receiving, or immediately before its mortgage was foreclosed by HUD or
the project was acquired by HUD, pursuant to this regulation, was
receiving any of the following types of assistance:
(1) Below market interest rate mortgage insurance under the proviso
of section 221(d)(5) of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1715l)
(hereinafter, a BMIR project);
(2) Interest reduction payments made in connection with mortgages
insured under section 236 of the National Housing Act (hereinafter, a
236 project);
(3) Direct loans made under section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959
(hereinafter, a 202 project);
(4) Assistance, to more than 50 percent of the units in the
project, in the form of:
(i) Rent supplement payments under section 101 of the Housing and
Urban Development Act of 1965 (12 U.S.C. 1701s) (hereinafter, Rent
Supp);
(ii) Additional assistance payments under section 236(f)(2) of the
National Housing Act (hereinafter, RAP);
(iii) Housing assistance payments under section 23 of the United
States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437 note) (as in effect before
January 1, 1975) (hereinafter, Sec. 23); or
(iv) Housing assistance payments under Section 8 of the United
States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f) (excluding payments of
tenant-based Section 8 assistance) (hereinafter, project-based Section
8 assistance).
Sufficient habitable, affordable, rental housing is available means
that the HUD office with jurisdiction determines that there is an
adequate supply of habitable, affordable housing for low- and very low-
income families available in the market area. Submarkets, consisting of
portions of units of general local government, may be used in large,
complex metropolitan areas. Local housing markets having an adequate
supply of standard-quality rental housing would include housing markets
in which the supply of rental housing available and in production is
adequate to meet the anticipated demand (e.g., the housing market is
balanced), as well as those in which there is an excess supply of
rental housing (e.g., the housing market is soft). Rental markets that
do not have an adequate supply (e.g., tight markets) are characterized
by low rental vacancy rates, low levels of production and turnover of
rental housing, and, usually, by high levels of rent inflation. HUD
will make the determination of whether sufficient habitable,
affordable, rental housing is available using established market
analysis techniques, and will consider information that demonstrates:
(1) The rental housing vacancy rate is at a low level relative to
the rate required for a balanced market, typically a four percent
vacancy rate; except that a rate lower than four percent may be
considered in unusual circumstances if it can be demonstrated that
there is an adequate supply of affordable housing for low-income
families;
(2) The number of rental housing units being produced on an annual
basis is not large enough to satisfy demand arising from the increase
in households, or, in markets where there is little or no growth,
evidence that the number of additional rental units being supplied is
not sufficient to meet the demand arising from net losses to the
available inventory and the inadequate supply of rental housing has
inhibited growth;
(3) The shortage of housing is resulting in rent increases that
exceed normal increases commensurate with the costs of operating rental
housing;
(4) A significant number, or proportion, of the households holding
Section 8 certificates or rental vouchers are unable to find adequate
housing because of the shortage of rental housing, including PHA data
showing a lower than average percentage of units under lease and a
longer than average time required to find units.
Unsubsidized project means a multifamily housing project that is
not a subsidized project.
Useful life means, generally, twenty years, but it may be more or
less, as determined by the Department.
Sec. 290.7 Occupancy requirements.
(a) Multifamily housing project that is HUD-owned or for which HUD
is mortgagee-in-possession. Occupancy in a multifamily housing project
that is HUD-owned or for which HUD is mortgagee-in-possession shall be
available on a basis that is comparable to the occupancy requirements
that applied to the project immediately before HUD acquired the project
or became mortgagee-in-possession, except that preference shall be
given to tenants of other HUD-owned multifamily housing projects who
are eligible for assistance in accordance with the displacement and
relocation provisions at Sec. 290.17.
(b) Evictions. Eviction from a HUD-owned multifamily housing
project is governed by 24 CFR part 247, subpart B.
(c) Threat to health and safety. Whenever HUD determines that there
is an immediate threat to the health and
[[Page 11687]]
safety of the tenants, HUD may require the tenants to vacate the
premises and shall provide temporary relocation benefits as provided in
Sec. 290.17 to tenants required to vacate the premises.
Sec. 290.9 Setting rental rates.
Because of the subsidies involved in making multifamily housing
projects affordable, the setting of rents involves two steps: first,
establishing the rent on a unit that will be paid to the owner, and
second, determining the rent that the tenant pays (with the difference
made up by a subsidy), using a number of procedures to obtain income
verification and notify tenants of changes in rent. These procedures
for a property owned by HUD or where HUD is mortgagee-in-possession are
explained below.
(a) Setting unit rents. Except as modified by this section, for a
property where HUD is mortgagee-in-possession (MIP), HUD will set unit
rents in accordance with the rent setting requirements of the project's
mortgage insurance or direct loan program; or for a property owned by
HUD, rents will be set in accordance with the rent setting requirements
of the project's mortgage insurance or direct loan program in effect
immediately before HUD became the owner of the project.
(b) Setting rents payable by tenants. (1) Tenant rent. The rent the
tenant pays will be based on the income certification and the rent
payment requirements of the project's mortgage insurance or direct loan
program in effect while HUD is MIP or immediately before HUD became the
owner of the project, as affected by any of the factors in paragraphs
(b)(2) through (b)(4) of this section. However, if a tenant does not
certify income as required by this section, the tenant must pay the
unit rent as determined under the rent setting requirements in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) Utility allowance. For a tenant whose rent is based on a
percentage of adjusted income (except for rental voucher or rental
certificate holders), if the cost of utilities (except telephone) and
other housing services for the unit is the responsibility of the tenant
to pay directly to the provider of the utility or service, HUD will
deduct from the rent to be paid by the tenant to HUD a utility
allowance, which is an amount equal to HUD's estimate of the monthly
costs of a reasonable consumption of the utilities and other services
for the unit for an energy-conservative household of modest
circumstances consistent with the requirement of a safe, sanitary, and
healthful living environment. If the utility allowance exceeds the
percentage of the tenant's adjusted income payable as rent, HUD will
pay the difference between the amount payable as rent and the utility
allowance to the tenant or, with the consent of the tenant and the
utility company, either jointly to the tenant and the utility company
or directly to the utility company.
(3) Rent adjustments for project viability. For a HUD-owned
project, HUD may adjust the rent provided for in paragraphs (b)(1) or
(b)(2) of this section if necessary or desirable to maintain the
existing economic mix in the project, prevent undesirable turnover, or
increase occupancy.
(4) Tenants who are rental voucher or rental certificate holders.
Tenants assisted with rental vouchers or certificates certify their
income to the public housing agency (PHA) administering the assistance,
and pay rent pursuant to the policies and procedures governing such
assistance.
(c) Income verification and rent notification procedures. (1)
Income certification by tenants. (i) In subsidized projects. (A) For
families residing in subsidized projects, when HUD becomes MIP or
owner, HUD will request an income certification from each family as
soon as practicable after HUD initially assumes management, unless the
family's income has been examined by the owner or by HUD not more than
four months before HUD's assumption of management.
(B) For each family applying for admission to subsidized projects,
HUD will request an income certification to determine the family's
eligibility for a subsidized rent, and (if the rent is based on a
percentage of adjusted income) the family's subsidized rent, in
accordance with part 813 of this title.
(ii) In unsubsidized projects. (A) For tenants in occupancy when
HUD becomes mortgagee-in-possession or owner of an unsubsidized
project, HUD may request an income certification from families who are
not paying a subsidized rent.
(B) For families applying for admission to such projects, HUD will
request sufficient information for income verification to determine the
family's ability to pay the unit rent.
(2) Notice of increases in the amount of rent payable. Whenever HUD
proposes an increase in rents in a HUD-owned multifamily project or a
project where HUD is mortgagee-in-possession, HUD will provide tenants
30 days notice of the proposed changes and an opportunity to review and
comment on the new rent and supporting documentation. After HUD
considers the tenants' comments and has made a decision with respect to
its proposed rent change, HUD shall notify the tenants of its decision,
with the reasons for the decision. A tenant in occupancy before the
effective date of any revised rental rate must be given 30 days notice
of the revised rate, and any change in the tenant's rent is subject to
the terms of an existing lease. Notices to each tenant must be
personally delivered or sent by first class mail. General notices of
rent increases to all tenants must be posted in the project office and
in appropriate conspicuous and accessible locations around the project.
(3) Disclosure and verification of Social Security numbers. Any
certifications or reexaminations of the income of tenants or
prospective tenants in connection with tenancy under this section are
subject to the requirements for the disclosure and verification of
Social Security Numbers, as provided by part 200, subpart T, of this
title.
(4) Signing of consent forms for income verification. Any
certifications or reexaminations of the income of tenants or
prospective tenants in connection with tenancy under this section are
subject to the requirements for the signing and submitting of consent
forms for the obtaining of wage and claim information from State Wage
Information Collection Agencies, as provided by part 200, subpart V, of
this title.
(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number
2502-0204.)
Sec. 290.11 Notification requirements.
(a) In general. HUD may combine two or more of the required
notifications, as appropriate, to simplify the disposition process.
(b) Timing of notifications. Disposition-related notifications
(i.e., pre-foreclosure notification to tenants and units of general
local government; pre-disposition community and tenant input
notification; state and local government right of first refusal
notification) will be made, as appropriate:
(1) 60 or more days before HUD forecloses on a project; or
(2) Before, or not more than 30 days after, HUD acquires a project.
(c) Methods of notification. (1) To tenants. Pre-disposition
notification will be delivered to each unit in the project, or sent to
each unit by first class mail. Where HUD is mortgagee-in-possession or
owner of a project, the notice will also be posted in the project
office and in appropriate conspicuous and accessible locations around
the project.
(2) To units of general local government. Pre-disposition
notification to a unit of general local government
[[Page 11688]]
will be sent to the chief executive officer of the unit of general
local government by first class mail. For purposes of receiving or
sending any notices or information under this part, the unit of general
local government is its chief executive officer, or the person
designated by the chief executive officer to receive or send the notice
or information.
(3) To the community or any other party. HUD will consult with
tenants and their organizations, officials of units of general local
government, and other entities as HUD determines to be appropriate, to
identify community recipients of any required notification. Any notice
required to be made to any party other than a tenant or a unit of
general local government will be sent by first class mail.
(d) Content of notifications. Notifications will, as appropriate,
identify the project acquired or to be foreclosed by HUD; provide the
general terms and conditions concerning the sale, future use, and
operation of the project as proposed by HUD; indicate the time by which
any offers must be made or any comments must be submitted; and state
that the full disposition recommendation and analysis and other
supporting information will be available for inspection and copying at
the HUD Field Office.
Sec. 290.13 Negotiated sales.
When HUD conducts a negotiated sale involving the disposition of a
project to a person or entity without a public offering, the following
provisions apply:
(a) HUD may negotiate the sale of any project to an agency of the
federal, State, or local government.
(b) When HUD determines that a purchaser can demonstrate the
capacity to own and operate a project in accordance with standards set
by HUD, and/or a competitive offering will not generate offers of equal
merit from qualified purchasers, HUD may approve a negotiated sale of a
subsidized project to:
(1) A resident organization wishing to convert the project to a
nonprofit or limited equity cooperative;
(2) A cooperative (e.g., nonprofit limited equity, consumer
cooperative, mutual housing organization) with demonstrated experience
in the operation of nonprofit (and preferably low-income) housing;
(3) A nonprofit entity that will continue to operate the project as
low-income housing and whose governing board is composed of project
residents;
(4) A State or local governmental entity with the demonstrated
capacity to acquire, manage, and maintain the project as housing
available to and affordable by low-income residents;
(5) A State or local governmental or nonprofit entity with the
demonstrated capacity to acquire, manage, and maintain the project as a
shelter for the homeless or other public purpose, generally when the
project is vacant or has minimal occupancy and is not needed in the
area for continued use as rental housing for the elderly or families;
or
(6) Other nonprofit organizations.
Sec. 290.15 Disposition plan.
(a) In general. Before disposing of a HUD-owned multifamily housing
project, HUD will develop an initial and a final disposition plan for
the project that specifies the minimum terms and conditions for the
disposition of the project, the sales price that is acceptable to HUD,
and the assistance that HUD plans to make available to a prospective
purchaser.
(b) Environmental requirements. HUD will perform, and include in
the final disposition plan, the environmental reviews required by 24
CFR part 50.
Sec. 290.17 Displacement of tenants and relocation assistance.
(a) Scope of section. This section applies to all HUD-owned
multifamily housing projects and all multifamily housing projects
subject to HUD-held mortgages. When HUD is not the mortgagee-in-
possession or owner, the owner of the project shall comply with this
section, if HUD has authorized the demolition of, repairs to, or
conversion of the use of the multifamily housing project.
(b) Minimizing displacement. Consistent with the other goals and
objectives of this part, all reasonable steps shall be taken to
minimize the displacement of persons (families, individuals,
businesses, and nonprofit organizations) from a project covered by this
part. If displacement or temporary relocation will occur in connection
with the disposition of a project, HUD may require the purchaser of the
project to provide assistance in accordance with this section.
(c) Relocation assistance at non-URA levels. Whenever the
displacement of a residential tenant (family or individual) occurs in
connection with the management or disposition of a multifamily housing
project, but is not subject to paragraph (d) of this section (e.g.,
occurs as a direct result of HUD repair or demolition of all or a part
of a HUD-owned multifamily housing project or as a direct result of the
foreclosure of a HUD-held mortgage on a multifamily housing project or
sale of a HUD-owned project without federal financial assistance), the
displaced tenant shall be eligible for the following relocation
assistance:
(1) Advance written notice of the expected displacement shall be
provided at least 60 days before displacement, describe the assistance
and the procedures for obtaining the assistance, and contain the name,
address and phone number of an official responsible for providing the
assistance;
(2) Other advisory services, as appropriate, including counseling,
referrals to suitable (and where appropriate, accessible), decent,
safe, and sanitary replacement housing, and fair housing-related
advisory services;
(3) Payment for actual reasonable moving expenses, as determined by
HUD; and
(4) Such other federal, State or local assistance as may be
available.
(d) Relocation assistance at URA levels. (1) General. The
requirements of this paragraph apply to any displacement that results
whenever assistance under 24 CFR part 886, subpart C, (or other federal
financial assistance, as defined in 49 CFR 24.2(j)) is provided in
connection with the purchase, demolition, or rehabilitation of a
multifamily property by a third party. A displaced person (defined in
paragraph (d)(3) of this section) must be provided relocation
assistance at the levels described in, and in accordance with the
requirements of, the URA, implementing regulations at 49 CFR part 24,
and this section.
(2) Definition of ``initiation of negotiations''. Under the URA,
for purposes of determining the method for computing the replacement
housing assistance to be provided to a residential tenant displaced as
a direct result of privately undertaken rehabilitation, demolition, or
acquisition of the real property, the term ``initiation of
negotiations'' means the transfer of title to the purchaser.
(3) Definition of displaced person. The term ``displaced person''
means any person (family, individual, business, or nonprofit
organization) that moves from the real property, or moves personal
property from the real property, permanently, as a direct result of
acquisition, rehabilitation or demolition for a federally assisted
project. However, a person does not qualify as a ``displaced person''
if:
(i) The person is excluded under 49 CFR 24.2(g)(2);
(ii) The person has been evicted for a serious or repeated
violation of the terms and conditions of the lease or occupancy
agreement, violation of
[[Page 11689]]
applicable federal, State, or local law, or other good cause, and HUD
determines that the eviction was not undertaken for the purpose of
evading the obligation to provide relocation assistance;
(iii) The person moves into the property after transfer of title to
the purchaser; or
(iv) HUD determines that the person was not displaced as a direct
result of acquisition, rehabilitation, or demolition for an assisted
project.
(e) Temporary relocation (URA and non-URA relocation assistance).
Residential tenants, who will not be required to move permanently, but
who must relocate temporarily (e.g., to permit property repairs), shall
be provided:
(1) Reimbursement for all reasonable out-of-pocket expenses
incurred in connection with the temporary relocation, including the
cost of moving to and from the temporary housing and any increase in
monthly rent or utility costs. The party responsible for this
requirement may, at its option, perform the services involved in
temporarily relocating the tenants or pay for such services directly;
and
(2) Appropriate advisory services, including reasonable advance
written notice of the date and approximate duration of the temporary
relocation; the suitable (and where appropriate, accessible), decent,
safe, and sanitary housing to be made available for the temporary
period; the terms and conditions under which the tenant may lease and
occupy a suitable, decent, safe, and sanitary dwelling in the building/
complex following completion of the repairs; and the right to financial
assistance provided under paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(f) Appeals. If a person disagrees with the purchaser's
determination concerning the person's eligibility for relocation
assistance or the amount of the assistance for which the person is
eligible, the person may file a written appeal of that determination
with the owner or purchaser. A person who is dissatisfied with the
purchaser's determination on his or her appeal may submit a written
request for review of that decision to the HUD Field Office responsible
for administering the URA in the area.
Sec. 290.19 Restrictions concerning nondiscrimination against Section
8 certificate holders and 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 Certificate of Family Participation or a Voucher under
Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f),
or any successor legislation. This provision is limited in its
application, for tenants or applicants with Section 8 Certificates or
their equivalent (other than Vouchers), to those units which rent for
an amount not greater than the Section 8 Fair Market Rent, as
determined by HUD. 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. 290.21 Computing annual number of units eligible for substitution
of tenant-based assistance or alternative uses.
(a) Substitution of tenant-based Section 8 assistance to low-income
families instead of project-based assistance to units. The number of
units eligible, as permitted by the Statute, for this form of
substitution within the 10 percent limit will be estimated at the
beginning of each fiscal year, taking into consideration the aggregate
number of subsidized project units disposed of by HUD in the
immediately preceding fiscal year and the disposition activity planned
for the current fiscal year.
(b) Alternate uses. The number of units eligible for alternate uses
in any fiscal year, as permitted by the Statute, will be determined at
the beginning of the fiscal year as the applicable percentages (i.e.,
either 10 percent or 5 percent) of the estimated total number of units
to be disposed of in the fiscal year, taking into consideration the
total number of units in multifamily housing projects disposed of by
the Department in the immediately preceding fiscal year, and the extent
of the disposition activity planned in the current fiscal year.
Sec. 290.23 Rebuilding.
HUD may provide project-based assistance to support the rebuilding
of a HUD-owned multifamily housing project only. The required
determination that rebuilding the project would be less expensive than
substantial rehabilitation means that the costs to HUD for rebuilding
are such that the monthly debt service needed to amortize the cost of
relocating tenants, demolition, site preparation, rebuilding, operating
expenses, and a reasonable return to the purchaser cannot be provided
with rents that are within 120 percent of the most recently published
Section 8 Fair Market Rents for Existing Housing (24 CFR part 888,
subpart A), and would be less expensive than rehabilitation.
Sec. 290.25 Determination not to preserve a project or a part of a
project.
HUD may determine to demolish, or otherwise dispose of, a HUD-owned
multifamily housing project, or any portion of such a project, or to
foreclose a HUD-held mortgage on a multifamily housing project, without
ensuring its continued availability as affordable rental or cooperative
housing for low- and very low-income families under appropriate
circumstances which may include one or more those listed in paragraphs
(a) through (g) of this section. If HUD decides not to preserve an
occupied multifamily housing project at a foreclosure sale or sale of a
HUD-owned project, tenants must be provided relocation assistance as
described in Sec. 290.17.
(a) The costs to HUD of rehabilitation are such that the monthly
debt service needed to amortize the cost of rehabilitation, operating
expenses, and a reasonable return to the purchaser cannot be provided
with rents that are, for subsidized and formerly subsidized projects,
within 120 percent of the most recently published Section 8 Fair Market
Rents for Existing Housing (24 CFR part 888, subpart A) or, for
unsubsidized and formerly unsubsidized projects, within rents
obtainable in the market.
(b) Construction is substantially incomplete.
(c) Preservation is not feasible because of environmental factors
that cannot be mitigated by HUD or the purchaser. For example, when the
project is located on a site that cannot be made to comply with the
Section 8 Site and Neighborhood standards in 24 CFR 886.307(k) because
of factors that adversely affect the health, safety and general welfare
of residents such as air pollution; smoke; mud slides; fire or
explosion hazards. Preservation may also be infeasible because of
significantly deteriorated surrounding neighborhood conditions with
inadequate police or fire protection; high crime rates; drug
infestation; or lack of public community services needed to support a
safe and healthy living environment for residents.
(d) HUD determines the project is unfit for rehabilitation.
(e) Rehabilitation would cost more than constructing comparable new
housing.
(f) A reduction in the number of units in the project will enhance
long-term project viability, for example, demolition of a building to
provide
[[Page 11690]]
space for a playground, open space, or combining one-bedroom units to
create larger units for families.
(g) Continued preservation of the project as rental or cooperative
housing is not compatible with State or local land use plans for the
area in which the project is located.
Subpart B--Sale of HUD-Held Multifamily Mortgages
Sec. 290.30 General.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in Sec. 290.32(a)(2), HUD will
sell HUD-held multifamily mortgages on a competitive basis. HUD retains
full discretion to offer any qualifying mortgage for sale and to
withhold or withdraw any offered mortgage from sale. However, when a
qualifying mortgage is offered for sale, the procedures set out in this
subpart will govern the sale.
(b) References in subpart B of this part to mortgages securing
subsidized projects include HUD-held purchase money mortgages on
subsidized projects.
Sec. 290.31 Sale of current mortgages securing subsidized projects.
HUD will sell current mortgages securing subsidized projects, as
follows:
(a) Current mortgages with FHA mortgage insurance will be sold
either:
(1) On a competitive basis to FHA-approved mortgagees; or
(2) On a negotiated basis, to State or local governments, or to a
group of investors that includes an agency of a State or local
government if, in addition to meeting the requirements of the Statute,
the sales price is the best price that HUD can obtain from an agency of
a State or local government while maintaining occupancy for the tenant
group originally intended to be served by the subsidized housing
program.
(b) Current mortgages without FHA mortgage insurance will be sold
if HUD can offer protections equivalent to those listed for an insured
sale in paragraph (a) of this section.
Sec. 290.33 Sale of delinquent mortgages securing subsidized projects.
Delinquent mortgages securing subsidized projects will be sold only
if, as part of the sales transaction:
(a) The mortgages are restructured; and
(b) Either FHA mortgage insurance or equivalent protections are
provided.
Sec. 290.35 Sale of HUD-held mortgages securing unsubsidized projects.
HUD's policy for selling HUD-held mortgages securing unsubsidized
projects is as follows:
(a) Current mortgages may be sold with or without FHA mortgage
insurance.
(b) Delinquent mortgages may be sold without FHA mortgage
insurance. However, delinquent mortgages will not be sold if:
(1) HUD believes that foreclosure is unavoidable; and
(2) The project securing the mortgage is occupied by very low-
income tenants who are not receiving housing assistance and would be
likely to pay rent in excess of 30 percent of their adjusted monthly
income if HUD sold the mortgage.
Sec. 290.37 Requirements for continuing federal rental subsidy
contracts.
For any mortgage that, at the time HUD offers the mortgage for sale
without FHA mortgage insurance, is delinquent and secures a subsidized
project or unsubsidized project that receives any of the forms of
assistance enumerated in paragraphs (4)(i) to (4)(iv) of the
``subsidized project'' definition in Sec. 290.3:
(a) The mortgage purchaser and its successors and assigns shall
require the mortgagor to record a covenant running with the land as
part of any loan restructuring or of a final compromise of the mortgage
debt and shall include a covenant in any foreclosure deed executed in
connection with the mortgage. The covenant shall continue in effect
until the last federal project-based rental assistance contract expires
by its own terms. The covenant shall provide that, except where
otherwise approved by HUD, a project purchaser shall agree to assume
the obligations of any outstanding:
(1) Project-based federal rental subsidy contract; and
(2) Tenant-based Section 8 housing assistance payments contract
with a public housing agency and the related lease.
(b) In the event of foreclosure of the mortgage sold by HUD, the
mortgage purchaser and its successors and assigns shall not foreclose
in a manner that interferes with any lease related to federal project-
based assistance or any lease related to tenant-based, Section 8
housing assistance payments.
Sec. 290.39 Nondiscrimination in admitting certificate and voucher
holders.
(a) Nondiscrimination requirement. For any mortgage described in
paragraphs (c) or (d) of this section that HUD sells without FHA
mortgage insurance, the project owner shall not unreasonably refuse 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 a certificate or
voucher holder under 24 CFR part 982.
(b) Inapplicability to current mortgages securing unsubsidized
projects that receive no project based-assistance. The
nondiscrimination requirements of this section do not apply to any
mortgage that is current under the terms of the mortgage at the time
HUD offers it for sale, if the mortgage secures an unsubsidized project
that does not receive any of the forms of project-based assistance
enumerated in paragraphs (4)(i) to (4)(iv) of the ``subsidized
project'' definition in Sec. 290.3.
(c) Applicability to mortgages securing unsubsidized projects
receiving project-based assistance (partially-assisted projects) or
securing subsidized projects. (1) The nondiscrimination requirement in
paragraph (a) of this section applies to the project owner upon the
sale of a mortgage without FHA mortgage insurance if, at the time HUD
offers it for sale, the mortgage secures:
(i) An unsubsidized project that receives any of the forms of
assistance enumerated in paragraphs (4)(i) to (4)(iv) of the
``subsidized project'' definition in Sec. 290.5; or
(ii) A subsidized project, as defined in Sec. 290.3.
(2) This requirement shall continue in effect until the mortgage is
paid in full, including by a mortgage prepayment, except as provided in
paragraph (d) of this section.
(2) A subsidized project, as defined in Sec. 290.3.
This requirement shall continue in effect until the mortgage is paid in
full, including by a mortgage prepayment, except as provided in
paragraph (d) of this section.
(d) Covenant requirement for all delinquent mortgages sold without
FHA mortgage insurance. This paragraph (d) applies to the sale of any
mortgage that is delinquent at the time HUD offers it for sale without
FHA mortgage insurance, without regard to the subsidy status of the
project. The mortgage purchaser and its successors and assigns shall
require the mortgagor to record a covenant running with the land as
part of any loan restructuring or final compromise of the mortgage debt
and shall include a covenant in any foreclosure deed executed in
connection with the mortgage. The covenant shall set forth the
nondiscrimination requirement in paragraph (a) of this section. The
covenant shall continue in
[[Page 11691]]
effect until a date that is the same as the maturity date of the
mortgage sold by HUD.
Dated: March 7, 1996.
Nicolas P. Retsinas,
Assistant Secretary for Housing--Federal Housing Commissioner.
[Note: The following guide to part 290 will not be codified in
title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations.]
GUIDE
Disposition of Multifamily Projects and Sale of HUD-Held Multifamily
Mortgages--Guide
General Provisions
1. What subjects does this guide cover?
2. What are HUD's management and disposition goals?
3. What definitions apply in this guide?
4. What provisions may be waived?
Management and Maintenance Provisions
5. What maintenance and management standards apply to multifamily
housing projects?
6. How may HUD contract for management services, or require the
owner of a multifamily project to contract for management services?
7. What occupancy requirements apply to multifamily housing
projects?
8. How will rental rates be set when HUD is mortgagee-in-possession
(MIP) or owner of a multifamily housing project?
Notification Requirements
9. How will HUD provide required notifications?
10. What notification must be given before foreclosure?
11. Who has a right of first refusal for properties that HUD is
selling, and what kind of notice must HUD provide?
12. What kind of notice must HUD provide to tenants and the
community when HUD is selling a project?
Disposition Procedures
13. What are the different methods that may be used for the
disposition of a multifamily housing project?
14. What qualities does HUD look for in a purchaser?
15. What kind of disposition plan will HUD prepare before selling a
project?
Required Actions For All Multifamily Housing Projects
16. What actions must be taken in the disposition of all
multifamily housing projects?
17. What actions must be taken concerning tenants who are displaced
by the disposition of a multifamily housing project?
18. What actions must be taken concerning very low-income tenants
in the disposition of a multifamily housing project?
19. What restrictions concerning nondiscrimination against Section
8 certificate holders and voucher holders apply in the disposition of a
multifamily housing project?
Subsidized Projects--Basic and Alternative Actions to Facilitate
Disposition
20. What are the basic actions that may be taken in the disposition
of a subsidized project?
21. What alternatives to the basic actions are available in the
disposition of subsidized projects?
Unsubsidized Projects--Basic and Alternative Actions to Facilitate
Disposition
22. What are the basic actions that may be taken in the disposition
of an unsubsidized project?
23. What alternatives to the basic actions are available in the
disposition of an unsubsidized project?
All Multifamily Housing Projects--Additional Actions to Facilitate
Disposition
24. What guidelines will HUD apply in determining which additional
actions to take in the disposition of a multifamily housing project?
25. May HUD reduce the sales price for a project?
26. May HUD require additional use and rent restrictions?
27. May HUD provide short-term loans to facilitate the sale of a
project?
28. Under what conditions may HUD provide up-front grants?
29. What additional tenant-based assistance may HUD offer?
30. How may HUD provide for alternative uses of units in the
disposition of a multifamily housing project?
31. What disposition assistance may be available to rebuild a
multifamily housing project?
32. What emergency assistance funds may be provided to tenants?
33. Under what circumstances may HUD make a determination not to
preserve a project or a part of a project?
General Provisions
1. What subjects does this guide cover?
This guide sets out, in a single document, the combined statutory
(section 101 of the Multifamily Housing Property Disposition Reform Act
of 1994, hereinafter, ``the Statute,'' codified at 12 U.S.C. 1701z-11)
and regulatory (24 CFR part 290) requirements for the management and
disposition of multifamily projects. Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this section, the requirements described in this guide apply to
the sale of multifamily projects which are or were, before being
acquired by the Department, assisted or had a mortgage insured under
the National Housing Act, or which were subject to a loan or a capital
advance under Section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959.
(b) The requirements described in this guide do not apply to
multifamily projects being foreclosed by HUD for which the decision to
foreclose has been made before March 2, 1995, the effective date of the
interim rule which implemented the Multifamily Housing Property
Disposition Reform Act of 1994 at 24 CFR part 290, nor to HUD-owned
projects where the initial disposition program has been approved before
March 2, 1995. For such projects, the procedures in the regulations at
24 CFR 290 in effect immediately prior to March 2, 1995 apply, unless
HUD determines, on a case-by-case basis, to apply the new requirements.
2. What are HUD's management and disposition goals?
(a) HUD's goals are to carry out the management and disposition of
HUD-owned multifamily projects and multifamily projects subject to HUD-
held mortgages in a manner that:
(1) Is consistent with the National Housing Act, section 203 of the
Housing and Community Development Amendments of 1978, and other
relevant statutes;
(2) Will protect the financial interests of the Federal Government;
and
(3) Will, in the least costly fashion among reasonable available
alternatives, address the goals of:
(i) Preserving certain housing so that it can remain available to
and affordable by low-income persons;
(ii) Preserving and revitalizing residential neighborhoods;
(iii) Maintaining the existing housing stock in a decent, safe, and
sanitary condition;
(iv) Minimizing the involuntary displacement of tenants;
(v) Maintaining housing for the purpose of providing rental
housing, cooperative housing, and homeownership opportunities for low-
income persons;
(vi) Minimizing the need to demolish multifamily housing projects;
(vii) Adhering to fair housing requirements; and
[[Page 11692]]
(viii) Disposing of such projects in a manner consistent with local
housing market conditions.
(b) Competing goals. In determining the manner in which a project
is to be managed and disposed of, HUD may balance competing goals
relating to individual projects in a manner that will further the
purposes of the Statute.
3. What definitions apply in this guide?
The following definitions apply in this guide:
Affordable means, with respect to a unit of a multifamily housing
project:
(1) For a unit occupied by a very-low income family, the unit rent
does not exceed 30 percent of 50 percent of the area median income (not
the income of the family), as determined by the Department, with
adjustments for smaller and larger families; or
(2) For a unit occupied by a low-income family other than a very
low-income family, the unit rent does not exceed 30 percent of 80
percent of the area median income (not the income of the family), as
determined by the Department, with adjustments for smaller and larger
families; or
(3) The unit, or the family residing in the unit, is receiving
assistance under Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937.
Cooperative means a nonprofit, limited equity, or consumer
cooperative as defined under 24 CFR part 213. It may include mutual
housing associations.
Department means the United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development, or HUD.
HUD-owned project means a multifamily project that has been
acquired by HUD.
Low-income family means a low-income family as defined at 24 CFR
part 813.
Market area means the area from which a multifamily housing project
may reasonably be expected to draw a substantial number of its tenants,
as determined by HUD, taking into consideration the knowledge of the
HUD office with jurisdiction over the project of the local real estate
market and HUD's project underwriting experience. Submarkets may be
used in large, complex metropolitan areas.
Multifamily housing project means a multifamily project that is or
was insured under sections 207, 213, 220, 221(d)(3), 221(d)(4), 223(f),
231, 236, or 608 of the National Housing Act; or is or was subject to a
loan under section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959; or was a Real Estate
Owned (REO) multifamily project transferred by the Government National
Mortgage Association to the Department. Multifamily housing project
does not include projects consisting of one to eleven units insured
under section 220(d)(3)(A) of the National Housing Act; or mobile home
parks under section 207(m) of that Act; or vacant land; or property
covered by a homeownership program approved under the Homeownership and
Opportunity for People Everywhere (``HOPE'') program.
Multifamily project means a project consisting of five or more
units that has or had a mortgage (even if subordinate to other
mortgages) insured under the National Housing Act or is or was subject
to a loan under section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959, or a hospital,
intermediate care facility, nursing home, group practice facility, or
board and care facility that has or had a mortgage insured, or is or
was subject to a loan under, these authorities. Multifamily project
does not include projects consisting of one to eleven units insured
under section 220(d)(3)(A) of the National Housing Act, which are
classified as single family homes.
Nonprofit organization means a corporation or association organized
for purposes other than making a profit or gain for itself.
Stockholders or trustees do not share in profits or losses. Profits are
used to accomplish the charitable, humanitarian, or educational
purposes of the corporation.
Preexisting tenant means a family that resides in a unit in a
multifamily housing project immediately before the project is acquired
under this part by a purchaser other than the Department.
Project-based assistance means assistance that is attached to a
structure.
Subsidized project means a multifamily housing project that is
receiving, or immediately before its mortgage was foreclosed by HUD or
the project was acquired by HUD, pursuant to the Statute, was receiving
any of the following types of assistance:
(1) Below market interest rate mortgage insurance under the proviso
of section 221(d)(5) of the National Housing Act (hereinafter, a BMIR
project);
(2) Interest reduction payments made in connection with mortgages
insured under section 236 of the National Housing Act (hereinafter, a
236 project);
(3) Direct loans made under section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959
(hereinafter, a 202 project);
(4) Assistance, to more than 50 percent of the units in the
project, in the form of:
(i) Rent supplement payments under section 101 of the Housing and
Urban Development Act of 1965 (hereinafter, Rent Supp);
(ii) Additional assistance payments under section 236(f)(2) of the
National Housing Act (hereinafter, RAP);
(iii) Housing assistance payments under section 23 of the United
States Housing Act of 1937 (as in effect before January 1, 1975)
(hereinafter, Sec. 23); or
(iv) Housing assistance payments under Section 8 of the United
States Housing Act of 1937 (excluding payments of tenant-based Section
8 assistance) (hereinafter, project-based Section 8 assistance).
Sufficient habitable, affordable, rental housing is available means
that the HUD office with jurisdiction determines that there is an
adequate supply of habitable, affordable housing for low- and very low-
income families available in the market area. Submarkets, consisting of
portions of units of general local government, may be used in large,
complex metropolitan areas. Local housing markets having an adequate
supply of standard-quality rental housing would include housing markets
in which the supply of rental housing available and in production is
adequate to meet the anticipated demand (e.g., the housing market is
balanced), as well as those in which there is an excess supply of
rental housing (e.g., the housing market is soft). Rental markets that
do not have an adequate supply (e.g., tight markets) are characterized
by low rental vacancy rates, low levels of production and turnover of
rental housing, and, usually, by high levels of rent inflation. HUD
will make the determination of whether sufficient habitable,
affordable, rental housing is available using established market
analysis techniques, and will consider information that demonstrates:
(1) The rental housing vacancy rate is at a low level relative to
the rate required for a balanced market, typically a four percent
vacancy rate; except that a rate lower than four percent may be
considered in unusual circumstances if it can be demonstrated that
there is an adequate supply of affordable housing for low-income
families;
(2) The number of rental housing units being produced on an annual
basis is not large enough to satisfy demand arising from the increase
in households, or, in markets where there is little or no growth,
evidence that the number of additional rental units being supplied is
not sufficient to meet the demand arising from net losses to the
available inventory and the inadequate supply of rental housing has
inhibited growth;
(3) The shortage of housing is resulting in rent increases that
exceed normal increases commensurate with the costs of operating rental
housing;
[[Page 11693]]
(4) A significant number, or proportion, of the households holding
Section 8 certificates or rental vouchers are unable to find adequate
housing because of the shortage of rental housing, including PHA data
showing a lower than average percentage of units under lease and a
longer than average time required to find units.
Tenant-based assistance means rental assistance that is not
attached to a structure.
Unit of general local government means a city, town, township,
county, parish, village, or other general purpose political subdivision
of a State.
Unsubsidized project means a multifamily housing project that is
not a subsidized project.
URA means the Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property
Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 (42 U.S.C. 4601-4655).
Useful life means, generally, twenty years, but it may be more or
less, as determined by the Department.
Very low-income family means a very low-income family as defined at
24 CFR part 813.
4. What provisions may be waived?
The Assistant Secretary for Housing may waive any regulatory
provision issued under the statute. Each waiver must be in writing, and
must be supported by documentation of the facts and reasons which
formed the basis for the waiver. HUD will publish a Federal Register
notice informing the public of all waivers granted under this section
in accordance with the HUD Reform Act of 1989 and HUD policies
regarding publication of waivers.
Management and Maintenance Provisions
5. What maintenance and management standards apply to multifamily
housing projects?
(a) Scope. The provisions of this section apply to any multifamily
housing project:
(1) That is HUD-owned;
(2) For which HUD is mortgagee-in-possession; or
(3) That is subject to a mortgage held by HUD.
(b) Maintenance and Management standards. With respect to projects
within the scope of this section, HUD or the owner, as appropriate,
shall:
(1) To the greatest extent possible, maintain all occupied projects
in a decent, safe, and sanitary condition, and in compliance with any
standards established by the Department and under applicable State or
local laws, rules, ordinances, or regulations relating to the
accessibility and physical condition of the housing;
(2) Maintain full occupancy;
(3) Maintain projects for purposes of providing rental or
cooperative housing; and
(4) Manage projects in accordance with the requirements of the Fair
Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 3601-19) and implementing regulations at 24 CFR
parts 100 et al, which prohibit discrimination in the sale or rental of
housing and in related transactions on the basis of race, color,
religion, sex, national origin, handicap, or familial status; section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and implementing
regulations at 24 CFR part 8 that prohibit discrimination against
disabled individuals in Federally-assisted activities, and 24 CFR part
9, which prohibit discrimination against disabled individuals in
Federally-conducted activities; Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of
1964 and implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 1, which prohibit
discrimination based on race, color, or national origin in programs
receiving Federal financial assistance; the Age Discrimination Act of
1975 and implementing regulations at 24 CFR part 146, which prohibit
discrimination based on age in programs receiving Federal financial
assistance; and Executive Order 11063, as amended by Executive Order
12259 (Equal Opportunity in Housing) and implementing regulations at 24
CFR part 107.
6. How may HUD contract for management services, or require the
owner of a multifamily project to contract for management services?
(a) Scope. The provisions of this section apply to any multifamily
housing project:
(1) That is HUD-owned;
(2) For which HUD is mortgagee-in-possession; or
(3) That is subject to a mortgage held by HUD.
(b) Contracting for management services. (1) With respect to
projects within the scope of this section, HUD may, or may require the
owner to, contract for management services for the project with for-
profit and nonprofit entities and public agencies, including public
housing agencies, on a negotiated, competitive bid, or other basis, at
a price determined by HUD to be reasonable, with a manager determined
by HUD to be capable of:
(i) Implementing a sound financial and physical management program
that is designed to enable the project to meet anticipated operating
and maintenance expenses to ensure that the project will remain in a
decent, safe, and sanitary condition, and in compliance with any
standards under applicable State or local laws, rules, ordinances, or
regulations relating to the accessibility and physical condition of the
housing, and any such standards established by HUD;
(ii) Responding to the needs of tenants and working cooperatively
with tenant organizations;
(iii) Providing adequate organizational, staff, and financial
resources to the project; and
(iv) Meeting such other requirements as HUD may determine to be
necessary or appropriate.
(2) HUD will conduct outreach efforts to minority-owned and female-
owned businesses to become managers of the HUD-owned projects covered
by this section, in accordance with Executive Order 11625, as amended
by Executive Order 12007 (Minority Business Enterprises), Executive
Order 12432 (Minority Business Enterprise Development), and Executive
Order 12138 (National Women's Business Enterprise Policy).
7. What occupancy requirements apply to multifamily housing
projects?
(a) Multifamily housing project that is HUD-owned or for which HUD
is mortgagee-in-possession. Occupancy in a multifamily housing project
that is HUD-owned or for which HUD is mortgagee-in-possession shall be
available on a basis that is comparable to the occupancy requirements
that applied to the project immediately before HUD acquired the project
or became mortgagee-in-possession, except that preference shall be
given to tenants of other HUD-owned multifamily housing projects who
are eligible for assistance in accordance with the displacement and
relocation provisions at section 17 of this guide.
(b) Evictions. Eviction from a HUD-owned multifamily housing
project is governed by 24 CFR part 247, subpart B.
(c) Threat to health and safety. Whenever HUD determines that there
is an immediate threat to the health and safety of the tenants, HUD may
require the tenants to vacate the premises and shall provide temporary
relocation benefits as provided in section 17 of this guide to tenants
required to vacate the premises.
[[Page 11694]]
Project Rents While HUD is Mip or Owner
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unit rents............................. Unit rents in accordance with the rent setting requirements of the
project's mortgage insurance or direct loan program while HUD is
mortgagee-in-possession (MIP), or in accordance with the rent setting
requirements of the project's mortgage insurance or direct loan
program in effect immediately before HUD became the owner of the
project (section 8(a) of this guide).
Rents payable by tenants............... 1. Tenant rent. Rent the tenant pays will be based on the income
certification and the rent payment requirements of the project's
mortgage insurance or direct loan program in effect while HUD is MIP
or immediately before HUD became the owner of the project (section
8(b)(1) of this guide).
2. Rent when tenant does not certify income. If a tenant does not
certify income, the tenant must pay the unit rent (section 8(b)(1) of
this guide).
3. Utility allowance. For a tenant whose rent is based on a percentage
of adjusted income, HUD will use a utility allowance to reduce the
rent (section 8(b)(2) of this guide).
4. Project viability. HUD may adjust the rent to promote project
viability (section 8(b)(3) of this guide).
5. Tenants with rental vouchers or certificates. Tenant pays rent in
accordance with policies and procedures governing such assistance
(section 8(b)(4) of this guide).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. How will rental rates be set when HUD is mortgagee-in-possession
(MIP) or owner of a multifamily housing project?
Because of the subsidies involved in making multifamily housing
projects affordable, the setting of rents involves two steps: first,
establishing the rent on a unit that will be paid to the owner, and
second, determining the rent that the tenant pays (with the difference
made up by a subsidy), using a number of procedures to obtain income
verification and notify tenants of changes in rent. These procedures
are explained below.
(a) Setting unit rents. Except as modified by this section, for a
property where HUD is mortgagee-in-possession (MIP), HUD will set unit
rents in accordance with the rent setting requirements of the project's
mortgage insurance or direct loan program; or for a property owned by
HUD, rents will be set in accordance with the rent setting requirements
of the project's mortgage insurance or direct loan program in effect
immediately before HUD became the owner of the project.
(b) Setting rents payable by tenants. (1) Tenant rent. The rent the
tenant pays will be based on the income certification and the rent
payment requirements of the project's mortgage insurance or direct loan
program in effect while HUD is MIP or immediately before HUD became the
owner of the project, as affected by any of the factors in paragraphs
(b)(2) through (b)(4) of this section. However, if a tenant does not
certify income as required by this section, the tenant must pay the
unit rent as determined under the rent setting requirements in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(2) Utility allowance. For a tenant whose rent is based on a
percentage of adjusted income (except for rental voucher or rental
certificate holders), if the cost of utilities (except telephone) and
other housing services for the unit is the responsibility of the tenant
to pay directly to the provider of the utility or service, HUD will
deduct from the rent to be paid by the tenant to HUD a utility
allowance, which is an amount equal to HUD's estimate of the monthly
costs of a reasonable consumption of the utilities and other services
for the unit for an energy-conservative household of modest
circumstances consistent with the requirement of a safe, sanitary, and
healthful living environment. If the utility allowance exceeds the
percentage of the tenant's adjusted income payable as rent, HUD will
pay the difference between the amount payable as rent and the utility
allowance to the tenant or, with the consent of the tenant and the
utility company, either jointly to the tenant and the utility company
or directly to the utility company.
(3) Rent adjustments for project viability. For a HUD-owned
project, HUD may adjust the rent provided for in paragraphs (b)(1) or
(b)(2) of this section if necessary or desirable to maintain the
existing economic mix in the project, prevent undesirable turnover, or
increase occupancy.
(4) Tenants who are rental voucher or rental certificate holders.
Tenants assisted with rental vouchers or certificates certify their
income to the public housing agency (PHA) administering the assistance,
and pay rent pursuant to the policies and procedures governing such
assistance.
(c) Income verification and rent notification procedures.
(1) Income certification by tenants. (i) In subsidized projects.
(A) For families residing in subsidized projects, when HUD becomes MIP
or owner, HUD will request an income certification from each family as
soon as practicable after HUD initially assumes management, unless the
family's income has been examined by the owner or by HUD not more than
four months before HUD's assumption of management.
(B) For each family applying for admission to subsidized projects,
HUD will request an income certification to determine the family's
eligibility for a subsidized rent, and (if the rent is based on a
percentage of adjusted income) the family's subsidized rent, in
accordance with 24 CFR part 813.
(ii) In unsubsidized projects. (A) For tenants in occupancy when
HUD becomes mortgagee-in-possession or owner of an unsubsidized
project, HUD may request an income certification from families who are
not paying a subsidized rent.
(B) For families applying for admission to such projects, HUD will
request sufficient information for income verification to determine the
family's ability to pay the unit rent.
(2) Notice of increases in the amount of rent payable. Whenever HUD
proposes an increase in rents in a HUD-owned multifamily project or a
project where HUD is mortgagee-in-possession, HUD will provide tenants
30 days notice of the proposed changes and an opportunity to review and
comment on the new rent and supporting documentation. After HUD
considers the tenants' comments and has made a decision with respect to
its proposed rent change, HUD shall notify the tenants of its decision,
with the reasons for the decision. A tenant in occupancy before the
effective date of any revised rental rate must be given 30 days notice
of the revised rate, and any change in the tenant's rent is subject to
the terms of an existing lease. Notices to each tenant must be
personally delivered or sent by first class mail. General notices of
rent increases to all tenants must be posted in the project office and
in appropriate conspicuous and accessible locations around the project.
(3) Disclosure and verification of Social Security numbers. Any
certifications or reexaminations of the income of tenants or
prospective tenants in connection with tenancy under this section are
subject to the requirements for the disclosure and verification of
[[Page 11695]]
Social Security Numbers, as provided by part 200, subpart T, of this
title.
(4) Signing of consent forms for income verification. Any
certifications or reexaminations of the income of tenants or
prospective tenants in connection with tenancy under this section are
subject to the requirements for the signing and submitting of consent
forms for the obtaining of wage and claim information from State Wage
Information Collection Agencies, as provided by 24 CFR part 200.
Pre-Disposition Notification Requirements
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pre-foreclosure (section 10 of this 1. Timing. Not later than 60 days before foreclosure on any mortgage.
guide).
2. Recipients.
(i) Tenants of the project, and
(ii) The unit of general local government in which the project is
located.
3. Contents.
(i) General terms and conditions concerning the sale, future use, and
operation of the project that HUD proposes to impose; and,
(ii) Whether temporary or permanent relocation is anticipated, and, if
so, available displacement and relocation assistance.
Right of first refusal (section 11 of 1. Timing. Before, or not more than 30 days after, HUD acquires title
this guide). to a multifamily housing project.
2. Recipients.
(i) The appropriate unit of general local government;
(ii) Public housing agencies in the project's market area;
(iii) The State agency or agencies designated to receive such notice by
the chief executive officer of the State in which the project is
located.
3. Contents.
(i) Description of the project;
(ii) Invitation to recipients to make bona fide offers to purchase the
project;
(iii) Offer of right of first refusal for period of up to 90 days;
(iv) Method by which the recipient may respond to HUD.
Notice to tenants and the community 1. Timing. Before, or not more than 30 days after, HUD acquires title
(section 12 of this guide). to a multifamily housing project.
2. Recipients.
(i) To the tenants of the project;
(ii) To the unit of general local government in which the project is
located; and
(iii) To the community in which the project is located.
3. Contents.
(i) Description of the project;
(ii) Proposed general terms and conditions concerning the sale, future
use, and operation of the project;
(iii) Invitation for tenants and their organizations, units of general
local government, and other public or nonprofit entities to submit
comments on the disposition plan, and/or proposals for disposition
which will be considered by HUD in making its property disposition
determination.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notification Requirements
9. How will HUD provide required notifications?
(a) In general. HUD may combine two or more of the notifications
required by the Statute, as appropriate, to simplify the disposition
process. Disposition-related notifications (i.e., pre-foreclosure
notification to tenants and units of general local government; pre-
disposition community and tenant input notification; state and local
government right of first refusal notification) will be made, as
appropriate:
(1) 60 or more days before HUD forecloses on a project, or
(2) Before, or not more than 30 days after, HUD acquires a project.
(b) Methods of notification. (1) To tenants. The notices required
to be made to tenants under the Statute will be delivered to each unit
in the project, or sent to each unit by first class mail. Where HUD is
mortgagee-in-possession or owner of a project, the notice will also be
posted in the project office and in appropriate conspicuous and
accessible locations around the project.
(2) To the unit of general local government. The notice required to
be made to a unit of general local government under the statute will be
sent to the chief executive officer of the unit of general local
government by first class mail. For purposes of receiving or sending
any notices or information under the statute, the unit of general local
government is its chief executive officer, or the person designated by
the chief executive officer to receive or send the notice or
information.
(3) To the community or any other party. HUD will consult with
tenants and their organizations, officials of units of general local
government, and other entities as HUD determines to be appropriate, to
identify community recipients of any notification required by the
statute. Any notice required to be made to any party other than a
tenant or a unit of general local government will be sent by first
class mail.
10. What notification must be given before foreclosure?
(a) Timing and recipients of notice. Not later than 60 days before
foreclosing on any mortgage held by the Department on any multifamily
housing project, HUD will provide notice of the proposed foreclosure
sale to the tenants of the project and to the unit of general local
government in which the project is located.
(b) Contents of notice. The notice will describe the general terms
and conditions concerning the sale, future use, and operation of the
project that HUD proposes to impose on a purchaser other than HUD
through the foreclosure. The notice will also state whether temporary
or permanent relocation is anticipated as a result of repairs or the
proposed disposition, including any anticipated conversion of use, and,
if so, the levels of displacement and relocation assistance available
as described in section 17 of this guide.
11. Who has a right of first refusal for properties that HUD is
selling, and what kind of notice must HUD provide?
(a) Timing and recipients of notice. Before, or not more than 30
days after,
[[Page 11696]]
HUD acquires title to a multifamily housing project, HUD will provide
notice of the right of first refusal to the appropriate unit of general
local government, as well as public housing agencies in the project's
market area, and the State agency or agencies designated to receive
such notice by the chief executive officer of the State in which the
project is located.
(b) Content of notice. The notice will describe the project
acquired by HUD, and contain an invitation to recipients to make bona
fide offers to purchase the project. The notice will state:
(1) That for a period specified in the notice, not to exceed 90
days from the time the notification is made, HUD will not sell or offer
to sell the project other than to a recipient of the notice, unless the
recipients notify HUD sooner that they will not make an offer to
purchase the project;
(2) That if a recipient expresses interest within the specified
period in acquiring the project, HUD will consult with the interested
parties in the preparation of the disposition plan and the terms and
conditions of the sale of the project. HUD will accept a bona fide
offer to purchase the project if the offer complies with the terms and
conditions of the disposition plan for the project, or is otherwise
acceptable to HUD;
(3) The method by which the recipient may respond to HUD with an
expression of interest or a bona fide offer, or by which the recipient
may notify HUD that an offer will not be made.
12. What kind of notice must HUD provide to tenants and the
community when HUD is selling a project?
(a) Timing and recipients of notice. Before, or not more than 30
days after, HUD acquires title to a multifamily housing project, HUD
will provide notice of HUD's acquisition and proposed disposition of
the project to the tenants of the project, to the unit of general local
government, and to the community in which the project is located.
(b) Content of notice. The notice will describe the project
acquired by HUD, and the general terms and conditions concerning the
sale, future use, and operation of the project as proposed by HUD. The
notice will, as appropriate, state:
(1) HUD has acquired the project.
(2) During HUD's ownership, HUD will, to the extent feasible,
assure that the project is maintained in a decent, safe, and sanitary
condition.
(3) HUD is developing a final disposition plan for the project.
(4) HUD normally seeks to sell HUD-owned projects as rapidly as
possible.
(5) HUD's interest in learning of tenant, community, and local
government plans and capacity for the acquisition of the project for
use as rental or cooperative housing.
(6) HUD's final determination of the terms and conditions to be
imposed on the disposition of the project will not be made until after
HUD considers the comments received from tenants, the community, and
the unit of general local government within the specified comment
period.
(7) A brief description of a proposed manner of disposition of the
project.
(8) A description of the pending notice of the right of first
refusal to purchase the project as described in section 11 of this
guide.
(9) That alternative uses of units in the project may be part of
the project's disposition, and that:
(i) Some of the units in the project may be made available for uses
other than rental or cooperative uses, including low-income
homeownership opportunities, or community space, office space for
tenant or housing-related service providers or security programs, or
small business uses, if such uses benefit the tenants of the project;
(ii) Some of the units in the project may be used in any manner, if
the Department and the unit of general local government or area-wide
governing body determine that such use will further fair housing,
community development, or neighborhood revitalization goals;
(iii) Such alternative uses of units may only take place if:
(A) Tenant-based Section 8 rental assistance is made available to
each eligible family residing in the project that is displaced as a
result of such actions; and
(B) The Department determines that sufficient habitable, affordable
rental housing is available in the market area in which the project is
located to ensure use of such assistance.
(10) That for any very low-income family who is a preexisting
tenant of the project who upon disposition of the project would be
required to pay rent in an amount in excess of 30 percent of the
adjusted income of the family:
(i) For a period of 2 years beginning upon the date of the
acquisition of the project under the disposition, the rent for the unit
occupied by the family may not be increased above the rent charged
immediately before the acquisition; and
(ii) The family shall be considered displaced for purposes of the
preferences for assistance under sections 6(c)(4)(A)(i), 8(d)(1)(A)(i),
and 8(o)(3)(B) of the United States Housing Act of 1937.
(11) Whether temporary or permanent relocation is anticipated as a
result of repairs or the proposed disposition, including any
anticipated conversion of use, and, if so, the levels of relocation
assistance available as described in section 17 of this guide.
(12) That tenants and their organizations, units of general local
government, and other public or nonprofit entities are invited to
submit comments on the disposition plan, and/or proposals (e.g.,
expressions of interest to convert the project to a cooperative or
other form of resident-controlled ownership, or other resident
initiative), which will be considered by HUD in making its property
disposition determination.
(13) That comments must be submitted to HUD within 30 days of
receipt of the notice.
(14) That the full disposition recommendation and analysis and
other supporting information will be available for inspection and
copying at the HUD field office.
Methods of Disposition
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Foreclosure sales. (section 13(a) of HUD may dispose of a project at a foreclosure sale:
this guide).
1. In accordance with the Multifamily Mortgage Foreclosure Act, or
2. In accordance with other Federal or State foreclosure law.
Sale of HUD-owned projects. (section HUD may sell a HUD-owned project using any of the following procedures:
13(b) of this guide).
1. Competitive bid;
2. Auction;
3. Request for proposals;
4. Negotiated sale, as described in section 13(b)(1) and (2); or
5. Any other method, on such terms as HUD considers appropriate.
[[Page 11697]]
Transfer for use under other HUD HUD, under an agreement, may transfer a multifamily housing project:
programs. (section 13(c) of this
guide).
1. To a public housing agency (PHA) for use of the project as public
housing; or
2. To an entity eligible to own or operate 202 or 811 supportive
housing.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disposition Procedures
13. What are the different methods that may be used for the
disposition of a multifamily housing project?
HUD may use any of the following methods, as appropriate, for the
disposition of a multifamily housing project:
(a) Foreclosure sales. Foreclosure sales will be conducted, at
HUD's discretion, in accordance with the Multifamily Mortgage
Foreclosure Act, or other Federal or State foreclosure law, on such
terms as HUD considers appropriate to further the goals and purposes
stated in section 2 of this guide.
(b) Sale of HUD-owned projects. HUD may dispose of a HUD-owned
multifamily project by competitive bid, auction, request for proposals,
or other method, on such terms as HUD considers appropriate to further
the goals and purposes stated in section 2 of this guide. When HUD
conducts a negotiated sale involving the disposition of a project to a
person or entity without a public offering, the following provisions
apply:
(1) HUD may negotiate the sale of any project to an agency of the
Federal, State, or local government.
(2) When HUD determines that a purchaser can demonstrate the
capacity to own and operate a project in accordance with standards set
by HUD, and/or a competitive offering will not generate offers of equal
merit from qualified purchasers, HUD may approve a negotiated sale of a
subsidized project to:
(i) A resident organization wishing to convert the project to a
nonprofit or limited equity cooperative;
(ii) A cooperative (e.g., nonprofit limited equity, consumer
cooperative, mutual housing organization) with demonstrated experience
in the operation of nonprofit (and preferably low-income) housing;
(iii) A nonprofit entity that will continue to operate the project
as low-income housing and whose governing board is composed of project
residents;
(iv) A State or local governmental entity with the demonstrated
capacity to acquire, manage, and maintain the project as housing
available to and affordable by low-income residents;
(v) A State or local governmental or nonprofit entity with the
demonstrated capacity to acquire, manage, and maintain the project as a
shelter for the homeless or other public purpose, generally when the
project is vacant or has minimal occupancy and is not needed in the
area for continued use as rental housing for the elderly or families;
or
(vi) Other nonprofit organizations.
(c) Transfer for use under other HUD programs.
(1) In general. Subject only to the requirements of an agreement
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section, HUD may transfer a multifamily
housing project:
(i) To a public housing agency (PHA) for use of the project as
public housing; or
(ii) To an entity eligible to own or operate housing assisted under
section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959 or under section 811 of the
Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act for use as supportive
housing under either of those sections.
(2) Transfer agreement. An agreement providing for the transfer of
a project as described in paragraph (c)(1) of this section must:
(i) Contain such terms, conditions, and limitations as HUD
determines to be appropriate, including requirements to ensure use of
the project as public housing, supportive housing under section 202 of
the Housing Act of 1959, or supportive housing under section 811 of the
Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act, as applicable; and
(ii) Ensure that no tenant of the project will be displaced as a
result of the transfer.
14. What qualities does HUD look for in a purchaser?
(a) Foreclosure sales. HUD will dispose of a multifamily housing
project through a foreclosure sale only to a purchaser that the
Department determines is capable of implementing a sound financial and
physical management program that is designed to enable the project to
meet anticipated operating and repair expenses to ensure that the
project will remain in decent, safe, and sanitary condition and in
compliance with any standards under applicable State or local laws,
rules, ordinances, or regulations relating to the physical condition of
the housing and any such standards established by the Department.
(b) HUD-owned multifamily housing projects. Sales of HUD-owned
multifamily housing projects may be made only to a purchaser determined
by the Department to be capable of:
(1) Satisfying the conditions of the disposition plan, as described
in section 15 of this guide, for the project;
(2) Implementing a sound financial and physical management program
that is designed to enable the project to meet anticipated operating
and repair expenses to ensure that the project will remain in decent,
safe, and sanitary condition and in compliance with any standards under
applicable State or local laws, rules, ordinances, or regulations
relating to the physical condition of the housing and any such
standards established by the Department;
(3) Responding to the needs of the tenants and working
cooperatively with tenant organizations;
(4) Providing adequate organizational, staff, and financial
resources to the project; and
(5) Meeting such other requirements as HUD may determine to be
appropriate for the particular project.
15. What kind of disposition plan will HUD prepare before selling a
project?
(a) In general. Before disposing of a HUD-owned multifamily housing
project, HUD will develop an initial and a final disposition plan for
the project that specifies the minimum terms and conditions for the
disposition of the project, the sales price that is acceptable to HUD,
and the assistance that HUD plans to make available to a prospective
purchaser.
(b) Market-wide plans. In developing the disposition plan under
this section for a HUD-owned multifamily housing project located in a
market area in which at least 1 other HUD-owned multifamily housing
project is located, HUD may coordinate the disposition of HUD-owned
multifamily housing projects located within the same market area to the
extent and in such a manner as the Department determines appropriate to
carry out the goals and
[[Page 11698]]
purposes stated in section 2 of this guide.
(c) Sales price. The sales price in the disposition plan will be
reasonably related to the intended use of the project after the sale,
any rehabilitation requirements for the project, the rents for units in
the project that can be supported by the market, the amount of rental
assistance available for the project under Section 8 of the United
States Housing Act of 1937, the occupancy profile of the project
(including family size and income levels for tenant families), and any
other factors that HUD considers appropriate.
(d) Community and tenant input. In developing the initial and final
disposition plans, HUD will consider any timely input from officials of
the unit of general local government affected, the community in which
the project is situated, and the tenants of the project, including the
comments received in response to the notice described in section 12 of
this guide. To obtain this input, HUD may provide technical assistance,
directly or indirectly, and may use amounts available for technical
assistance under the Emergency Low Income Housing Preservation Act of
1987, subtitle C of the Low-Income Housing Preservation and Resident
Homeownership Act of 1990, subtitle B of title IV of the Cranston-
Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act, or the Statute, for the
provision of such technical assistance. Recipients of technical
assistance funding under the provisions referred to in this
subparagraph may provide technical assistance to the extent of such
funding, notwithstanding the source of the funding.
(e) Environmental requirements. HUD will perform, and include in
the final disposition plan, the environmental reviews required by 24
CFR part 50.
Table of Actions to Facilitate Disposition
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Multifamily Housing Projects....... Required Actions
1. Displacement requirements (section 17 of this guide).
2. Very-low income preexisting tenant--2 year rent freeze if rent after
disposition more than 30 percent of adjusted income (section 18 of
this guide).
3. Nondiscrimination against Section 8 certificate holders and voucher
holders (section 19 of this guide).
Subsidized Projects.................... Basic Actions
1. Provide project-based Section 8 assistance to at least all units
that, before acquisition or foreclosure, received: Rent Supp, RAP,
Sec. 23, project-based Section 8 (section 20(a) of this guide).
2. Vacancy in any assisted unit must be filled by a family that is
eligible for the assistance (section 20(b) of this guide).
3. Rent and use restrictions on BMIR, 236, or 202 subsidized project
units that were not covered before acquisition or foreclosure by Rent
Supp, RAP, Sec. 23, or project-based Section 8 (section 20(c) of this
guide).
Alternatives to Basic Actions
1. Assistance to, or restrictions on, units in unsubsidized projects
instead of assistance to units in subsidized projects (section 21(a)
of this guide).
2. Substitution of tenant-based Section 8 assistance to low-income
families instead of project-based assistance to units (section 21(b)
of this guide).
3. Use of the additional assistance and restrictions permitted by the
Statute (section 21(b) of this guide).
Unsubsidized Projects.................. Basic Actions
1. Provide project-based Section 8 assistance for all units that,
before acquisition or foreclosure, received assistance under:
(i) The new construction and substantial rehabilitation program under
section 8(b)(2) of the United States Housing Act of 1937 (as in effect
before October 1, 1983);
(ii) The property disposition program under section 8(b) of such Act;
(iii) The project-based certificate program under section 8 of such
Act;
(iv) The moderate rehabilitation program under section 8(e)(2) of such
Act;
(v) Section 23 of such Act (as in effect before January 1, 1975);
(vi) The rent supplement program under section 101 of the Housing and
Urban Development Act of 1965; or
(vii) Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937, following
conversion from assistance under section 101 of the Housing and Urban
Development Act of 1965 (section 22(a) of this guide).
2. Provide tenant-based Section 8 assistance to preexisting tenants of
LMSA-assisted units (section 22(b) of this guide).
Alternatives to Basic Actions
1. Substitution of tenant-based Section 8 assistance to low-income
families instead of project-based assistance to units (section 23(a)
of this guide).
2. Use of the additional assistance and restrictions permitted by the
Statute (section 23(b) of this guide).
All Multifamily Housing Projects....... Additional Actions
1. Discounted sales price (section 25 of this guide).
2. Additional use and rent restrictions (section 26 of this guide).
3. Short-term loans (section 27 of this guide).
4. Up-front grants (section 28 of this guide).
5. Additional tenant-based assistance (section 29 of this guide).
6. Alternative uses (section 30 of this guide).
6. Rebuilding (section 31 of this guide).
7. Emergency assistance funds (section 32 of this guide).
8. Determination not to preserve (section 33 of this guide).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 11699]]
All Multifamily Housing Projects--Required Actions
16. What actions must be taken in the disposition of all
multifamily housing projects?
The requirements regarding tenants who are displaced (section 17 of
this guide), unassisted very low-income tenants (section 18 of this
guide), and nondiscrimination against Section 8 certificate holders and
voucher holders (section 19 of this guide), apply in the disposition of
all multifamily housing projects.
17. What actions must be taken concerning tenants who are displaced
by the disposition of a multifamily housing project?
(a) Scope of section. This section applies to all HUD-owned
multifamily housing projects and all multifamily housing projects
subject to HUD-held mortgages. When HUD is not the mortgagee-in-
possession or owner, this section applies to the owner of the project,
if HUD has authorized the demolition of, repairs to, or conversion of
the use of the multifamily housing project.
(b) Minimizing displacement. Consistent with the other goals and
objectives of the Statute, all reasonable steps shall be taken to
minimize the displacement of persons (families, individuals,
businesses, and nonprofit organizations) from a project covered by this
part. If displacement or temporary relocation will occur in connection
with the disposition of a project, HUD may require the purchaser of the
project to provide assistance in accordance with this section.
(c) Relocation assistance at non-URA levels. Whenever the
displacement of a residential tenant (family or individual) occurs in
connection with the management or disposition of a multifamily housing
project, but is not subject to paragraph (d) of this section (e.g.,
occurs as a direct result of HUD repair or demolition of all or a part
of a HUD-owned multifamily housing project or as a direct result of the
foreclosure of a HUD-held mortgage on a multifamily housing project or
sale of a HUD-owned multifamily housing project without federal
financial assistance), the displaced tenant is to be eligible for the
following relocation assistance:
(1) Advance written notice of the expected displacement. The notice
shall be provided at least 60 days before displacement, describe the
assistance and the procedures for obtaining the assistance, and contain
the name, address and phone number of an official responsible for
providing the assistance;
(2) Other advisory services, as appropriate, including counseling,
referrals to suitable (and where appropriate, accessible), decent,
safe, and sanitary replacement housing, and fair housing-related
advisory services;
(3) Payment for actual reasonable moving expenses, as determined by
HUD;
(4) For displaced eligible families and individuals--
(i) The opportunity to relocate to a suitable (and where
appropriate, accessible), decent, safe, and sanitary dwelling unit in a
HUD-owned multifamily housing project, in a public housing project, or
in another HUD subsidized multifamily housing project,
(ii) Assistance under the Section 8 Certificate program (see 24 CFR
882.209(a)(4)(ii)(B)) or the Housing Voucher program (see 24 CFR
887.155(c)), if the assistance is available; or
(iii) The right to return, whenever possible, to a repaired or
rebuilt unit.
(5) Such other federal, State or local assistance as may be
available.
(d) Relocation assistance at URA levels. (1) General. Whenever
assistance under 24 CFR part 886, subpart C (or other federal financial
assistance, as defined in 49 CFR 24.2(j)) is provided in connection
with the purchase, demolition, or rehabilitation of a multifamily
housing project by a third party, any resulting displacement is subject
to this paragraph. A displaced person (defined in paragraph (d)(3) of
this section) must be provided relocation assistance at the levels
described in, and in accordance with the requirements of, the URA,
implementing regulations at 49 CFR part 24, and this section.
(2) Definition of ``initiation of negotiations''. Under the URA,
for purposes of determining the method for computing the replacement
housing assistance to be provided to a residential tenant displaced as
a direct result of privately undertaken rehabilitation, demolition, or
acquisition of the real property, the term ``initiation of
negotiations'' means the transfer of title to the purchaser.
(3) Definition of displaced person. (i) The term ``displaced
person'' means any person (family, individual, business, or nonprofit
organization) that moves from the real property, or moves personal
property from the real property, permanently, as a direct result of
acquisition, rehabilitation or demolition for a federally assisted
project. This includes, but is not limited to:
(A) A person that moves permanently from the real property after
receiving notice requiring such move, if the move occurs on or after
the date of the transfer of title to the purchaser.
(B) Any person that HUD determines was displaced as a direct result
of acquisition, rehabilitation or demolition for an assisted project.
(C) A tenant-occupant of a dwelling unit who moves from the
building/complex, permanently, after the transfer of title to the
purchaser, if the move occurs before the tenant is provided notice
offering him or her the opportunity to lease and occupy a suitable,
decent, safe, sanitary, and where appropriate, accessible dwelling in
the same building/complex, under reasonable terms and conditions, upon
completion of the project. Such reasonable terms and conditions shall
include a monthly rent, including estimated average monthly utility
costs, that does not exceed the greater of the tenant's monthly rent
before transfer of title to the purchaser and estimated average monthly
utility costs, or that is affordable, as defined in this part.
(D) A tenant-occupant of a dwelling unit who is required to
relocate temporarily for the project, but does not return to the
building/complex, if either the tenant is not offered payment for all
reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with the
temporary relocation, or other conditions of the temporary relocation
are not reasonable.
(E) A tenant-occupant who moves from the building/complex
permanently after he or she has been required to move to another unit
in the same building/complex for the project, if either the tenant is
not offered reimbursement for all reasonable out-of-pocket expenses
incurred in connection with the move, or other conditions of the move
are not reasonable.
(ii) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this
section, a person does not qualify as a ``displaced person'' if:
(A) The person is excluded under 49 CFR 24.2(g)(2).
(B) The person has been evicted for a serious or repeated violation
of the terms and conditions of the lease or occupancy agreement,
violation of applicable Federal, State, or local law, or other good
cause, and HUD determines that the eviction was not undertaken for the
purpose of evading the obligation to provide relocation assistance.
(C) The person moves into the property after transfer of title to
the purchaser.
(D) HUD determines that the person was not displaced as a direct
result of acquisition, rehabilitation, or demolition for an assisted
project.
[[Page 11700]]
(e) Temporary relocation (URA and non-URA relocation assistance).
Residential tenants, who will not be required to move permanently, but
who must relocate temporarily (e.g., to permit property repairs), shall
be provided:
(1) Reimbursement for all reasonable out-of-pocket expenses
incurred in connection with the temporary relocation, including the
cost of moving to and from the temporary housing and any increase in
monthly rent or utility costs. The party responsible for this
requirement may, at its option, perform the services involved in
temporarily relocating the tenants or pay for such services directly;
and
(2) Appropriate advisory services, including reasonable advance
written notice of the date and approximate duration of the temporary
relocation; the suitable (and where appropriate, accessible), decent,
safe, and sanitary housing to be made available for the temporary
period; the terms and conditions under which the tenant may lease and
occupy a suitable, decent, safe, and sanitary dwelling in the building/
complex following completion of the repairs; and the right to financial
assistance provided under paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(f) Appeals. If a person disagrees with the purchaser's
determination concerning the person's eligibility for relocation
assistance or the amount of the assistance for which the person is
eligible, the person may file a written appeal of that determination
with the owner or purchaser. A person who is dissatisfied with the
purchaser's determination on his or her appeal may submit a written
request for review of that decision to the HUD Field Office responsible
for administering the URA in the area.
18. What actions must be taken concerning very low-income tenants
in the disposition of a multifamily housing project?
HUD will require that for a period of 2 years, beginning upon the
date of disposition of a multifamily housing project, the rent for any
unit occupied by a very low-income family, that is a preexisting tenant
and that would be required to pay a rent that is more than 30 percent
of the adjusted income (as defined in part 813) of the family, may not
be increased above the rent charged immediately before the acquisition.
Such a family will also be considered displaced for purposes of the
preferences for assistance under sections 6(c)(4)(A)(i), 8(d)(1)(A)(i),
and 8(o)(3)(B) of the United States Housing Act of 1937.
19. What restrictions concerning nondiscrimination against Section
8 certificate holders and voucher holders apply in the disposition of a
multifamily housing project?
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 Certificate of Family Participation or a Voucher under
Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437f),
or any successor legislation. This provision is limited in its
application, for tenants or applicants with Section 8 Certificates or
their equivalent (other than Vouchers), to those units which rent for
an amount not greater than the Section 8 Fair Market Rent, as
determined by HUD. 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.
Subsidized Projects--Basic and Alternative Actions to Facilitate
Disposition
20. What are the basic actions that may be taken in the disposition
of a subsidized project?
The basic assistance that HUD will provide and the basic
restrictions HUD will require in the disposition of a subsidized
project depend upon the profile of the project's units and tenants, as
follows:
(a) Assisted units--provision of project-based Section 8
assistance. Except as noted in section 21 of this guide, and to the
extent budget authority is available, HUD will provide project-based
Section 8 assistance to assist at least all of a subsidized project's
units that were covered, before acquisition or foreclosure, by the rent
subsidies (Rent Supp, RAP, Sec. 23, project-based Section 8) included
in the definition of a subsidized project.
(b) Assisted units--tenant eligibility restrictions. The contract
for project-based Section 8 assistance in accordance with paragraph
(a), above, will provide that when a vacancy occurs in any unit that
requires such assistance, but which was occupied by a family ineligible
for such assistance, the owner will lease the available unit to a
family that is eligible for the assistance.
(c) Unassisted units--use and rent restrictions. HUD will require
use or rent restrictions on BMIR, 236, or 202 subsidized projects to
ensure that units that were not covered before acquisition or
foreclosure by Rent Supp, RAP, Sec. 23, or project-based Section 8 rent
subsidies remain available and affordable for the remaining useful life
of the project.
21. What alternatives to the basic actions are available in the
disposition of subsidized projects?
In the disposition of a subsidized project, HUD may take the
following alternative actions instead of the basic actions listed in
section 20 of this guide:
(a) Unit substitution: assistance to, or restrictions on, units in
unsubsidized projects instead of assistance to units in subsidized
projects. Instead of providing project-based Section 8 assistance as
described in section 20(a) of this guide, HUD may, in unsubsidized
projects located in the same market area, provide project-based Section
8 assistance to units to be occupied by very low-income persons, or
impose use and rent restrictions to assure that units remain available
to and affordable by very low-income families for the remaining useful
life of the project. When this unit substitution procedure is used, the
total number of unsubsidized project units provided with assistance
and/or placed under use and rent restrictions must be at least equal to
the number of subsidized project units that would have received
project-based Section 8 in the absence of unit substitution. In
addition, HUD will make tenant-based Section 8 assistance available to
low-income families residing in the subsidized project's units that
would have received project-based Section 8 assistance if this unit
substitution alternative had not been used.
(b) Substitution of tenant-based Section 8 assistance to low-income
families instead of project-based assistance to units. Instead of
providing project-based Section 8 assistance as described in section
20(a) of this guide, HUD may enter into annual contribution contracts
with public housing agencies to provide tenant-based Section 8
assistance to all low-income families who reside, on the date that the
project is acquired by a purchaser other than HUD, in units that would
have been eligible for the project-based Section 8 assistance as
described in section 20 of this guide. Tenant-based Section 8
assistance may be used in this way as a substitute for project-based
Section 8 assistance in not more than 10 percent of the aggregate
number of subsidized project units disposed of by HUD in any fiscal
year, and only if HUD determines that there is available in the market
area in which the project is located an adequate supply of habitable,
affordable
[[Page 11701]]
housing for very low-income families and other low-income families
using tenant-based assistance. The number of units eligible for this
form of substitution within the 10 percent limit will be estimated at
the beginning of each fiscal year, taking into consideration the
aggregate number of subsidized project units disposed of by HUD in the
immediately preceding fiscal year and the disposition activity planned
for the current fiscal year.
(c) Additional actions. Instead of, or in addition to, providing
project-based Section 8 assistance in the disposition of a subsidized
project as described in section 20(a) of this guide, HUD may make use
of the additional actions to facilitate the disposition of multifamily
housing projects as described in sections 24 through 33 of this guide.
Unsubsidized Projects--Basic and Alternative Actions to Facilitate
Disposition
22. What are the basic actions that may be taken in the disposition
of an unsubsidized project?
The basic assistance that HUD will provide and the basic
restrictions HUD will require in the disposition of an unsubsidized
project depend upon the profile of the project's units and tenants, as
follows:
(a) Assisted units--provision of project-based Section 8
assistance. Except as noted in section 23 of this guide, and to the
extent budget authority is available, HUD will provide project-based
Section 8 assistance for all of an unsubsidized project's units that
were covered, before acquisition or foreclosure, by an assistance
contract under:
(1) The new construction and substantial rehabilitation program
under section 8(b)(2) of the United States Housing Act of 1937 (the
1937 Act) (as in effect before October 1, 1983);
(2) The property disposition program under section 8(b) of the 1937
Act;
(3) The project-based certificate program under section 8 of the
1937 Act;
(4) The moderate rehabilitation program under section 8(e)(2) of
the 1937 Act;
(5) Section 23 of the 1937 Act (as in effect before January 1,
1975);
(6) The rent supplement program under section 101 of the Housing
and Urban Development Act of 1965; or
(7) Section 8 of the 1937 Act, following conversion from assistance
under section 101 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965.
(b) LMSA-assisted units--provision of tenant-based section 8
assistance. HUD will provide tenant-based Section 8 assistance for
families that are preexisting tenants of unsubsidized projects in units
that, immediately before foreclosure or acquisition of the project by
HUD, were covered by an assistance contract under the loan management
set-aside program under section 8(b) of the United States Housing Act
of 1937.
23. What alternatives to the basic actions are available in the
disposition of unsubsidized projects?
In disposing of an unsubsidized project, HUD may take the following
alternative actions instead of the basic actions listed in section 22
of this guide:
(a) Substitution of tenant-based Section 8 assistance to low-income
families instead of project-based assistance to units. Instead of
providing project-based Section 8 assistance as described in section 22
of this guide, HUD may enter into annual contribution contracts with
public housing agencies to provide tenant-based Section 8 assistance to
all low-income families who reside, on the date that the project is
acquired by a purchaser other than HUD, in units eligible for the
project-based Section 8 assistance as described in section 22 of this
guide. Tenant-based Section 8 assistance may be used in this way as a
substitute for project-based Section 8 assistance only if HUD
determines that there is available in the market area in which the
project is located an adequate supply of habitable, affordable housing
for very low-income families and other low-income families using
tenant-based assistance.
(b) Additional actions. Instead of, or in addition to, providing
project-based Section 8 assistance in the disposition of an
unsubsidized project as described in section 22 of this guide, HUD may
make use of the additional assistance and restrictions for the
disposition of multifamily housing projects as described in sections 24
through 33 of this guide.
All Multifamily Housing Projects--Additional Actions to Facilitate
Disposition
24. What guidelines will HUD apply in determining which additional
actions to take in the disposition of a multifamily housing project?
The additional actions to facilitate disposition available under
this subpart are intended to replace, supplement or make more cost
effective the Section 8 assistance that would otherwise be required,
and are to be provided in a manner consistent with the goals and
purposes stated in section 2 of this guide and, unless otherwise noted:
(a) On terms that will ensure that at least the units in the
project otherwise required to receive project-based Section 8
assistance as described in section 20(a) of this guide (for a
subsidized project) and in section 22(a) of this guide (for an
unsubsidized project) are available to and affordable by low-income
persons for the remaining useful life of the project, with use or rent
restrictions as HUD may prescribe; and
(b) With tenant-based Section 8 assistance to any very low-income
families who would have received project-based assistance under Section
8 as described in section 20(a) of this guide (for a subsidized
project) and in section 22(a) of this guide (for an unsubsidized
project), but because of action taken as described in sections 24
through 33 of this guide, did not receive such assistance, and are left
residing in units of the project with rents that exceed the amount
payable as rent under section 3(a) of the United States Housing Act of
1937 for very low-income families.
25. May HUD reduce the sales price for a project?
HUD may reduce the selling price of a project. The sales price for
a project will be reasonably related to the intended use of the
property as affordable housing for very low-income tenants after sale,
any rehabilitation requirements for the project, the rents for units in
the project that can be supported by the market, the amount of project-
based Section 8 assistance being made available by HUD in the
disposition of the project, the occupancy profile of the project
(including family size and income levels for tenant families), and any
other factors that the Department considers appropriate.
26. May HUD require additional use and rent restrictions?
HUD may require units in a project to be subject to use or rent
restrictions to provide that the units will be available to and
affordable by low- and very low-income persons for the remaining useful
life of the project.
27. May HUD provide short-term loans to facilitate the sale of a
project? HUD may provide short-term loans to facilitate the sale of a
multifamily housing project if:
(a) Authority for such loans is provided in advance in an
appropriation Act;
(b) The loan has a term of not more than 5 years;
(c) HUD determines, based upon documentation provided by the
purchaser, that the purchaser has obtained a commitment of permanent
financing to replace the short-term loan
[[Page 11702]]
from a lender who meets standards established by the Department; and
(d) The terms of the loan are consistent with prevailing practices
in the marketplace or the provision of the loan results in no cost to
the Government, as defined in section 502 of the Congressional Budget
Act of 1974.
28. Under what conditions may HUD provide up-front grants?
HUD may utilize the budget authority provided for contracts issued
under this part for project-based Section 8 assistance to (in addition
to providing project-based Section 8 rental assistance) provide up-
front grants for the necessary cost of rehabilitation and other HUD-
approved related development costs to reduce the level of Section 8
contract rents if HUD determines that action under this section is more
cost-effective than providing project-based Section 8 assistance as
described in section 20(a) of this guide (for a subsidized project) and
in section 22(a) of this guide (for an unsubsidized project).
29. What additional tenant-based assistance may HUD offer?
To facilitate the sale of a multifamily housing project, HUD may
make tenant-based Section 8 assistance available to families residing
in a multifamily housing project who are eligible to receive tenant-
based assistance but who do not qualify for project-based assistance.
30. How may HUD provide for alternative uses of units in the
disposition of a multifamily housing project?
(a) In general. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, after
providing notice to and an opportunity for comment by preexisting
tenants, HUD may allow up to:
(1) 10 percent of the total number of rental housing units in
multifamily housing projects that are disposed of by the Department
during any fiscal year to be made available for uses other than rental
or cooperative uses, such as, low-income homeownership opportunities,
or in any particular project, community space, office space for tenant
or housing-related service providers or security programs, or small
business uses, if such uses benefit the tenants of the project; and
(2) 5 percent of the total number of rental housing units in
multifamily housing projects that are disposed of by the Department
during any fiscal year to be used in any manner, if HUD and the unit of
general local government or area-wide governing body determine that
such use will further fair housing, community development, or
neighborhood revitalization goals.
(b) Computation of number of eligible units. The number of units
eligible for alternate uses in any fiscal year will be determined at
the beginning of the fiscal year as the applicable percentages in
paragraphs (a)(1) or (2) of this section (i.e., either 10 percent or 5
percent) of the estimated total number of units to be disposed of in
the fiscal year, taking into consideration the total number of units in
multifamily housing projects disposed of by the Department in the
immediately preceding fiscal year, and the extent of the disposition
activity planned in the current fiscal year.
(c) Displacement protection. HUD may take actions under paragraph
(a) of this section only if:
(1) Tenant-based Section 8 assistance is made available to each
family eligible for such assistance residing in the project that is
displaced as a result of such actions; and
(2) HUD determines that sufficient habitable, affordable rental
housing is available in the market area in which the project is located
to ensure use of such assistance.
31. What disposition assistance may be available to rebuild a
multifamily housing project?
(a) Notwithstanding any provision of section 8 of the United States
Housing Act of 1937, HUD may provide project-based assistance as
described in section 20(a) of this guide (for a subsidized project) and
in section 22(a) of this guide (for an unsubsidized project) to support
the rebuilding of a HUD-owned multifamily housing project rebuilt or to
be rebuilt (in whole or in part and on-site, off-site, or in a
combination of both) in connection with a disposition under this part,
if HUD determines all of the following:
(1) The project is not being maintained in a decent, safe, and
sanitary condition;
(2) The costs to HUD for rebuilding are such that the monthly debt
service needed to amortize the cost of relocating tenants, demolition,
site preparation, rebuilding, operating expenses, and a reasonable
return to the purchaser cannot be provided with rents that are within
120 percent of the most recently published Section 8 Fair Market Rents
for Existing Housing (24 CFR part 888, subpart A), and would be less
expensive than rehabilitation;
(3) The unit of general local government in which the project is
located approves the rebuilding and makes a financial contribution or
other commitment to the project determined by HUD to be satisfactory;
(4) The rebuilding is a part of a local neighborhood revitalization
plan approved by the unit of general local government.
(b) The provisions described in section 17 of this guide apply to
any tenants of the project who are displaced through an action taken
under paragraph (a) of this section.
32. What emergency assistance funds may be provided to tenants?
HUD may make arrangements with State agencies and units of general
local government of States receiving emergency assistance under part A
of title IV of the Social Security Act for the provision of assistance
under that Act on behalf of eligible families who would reside in any
multifamily housing projects.
33. Under what circumstances may HUD make a determination not to
preserve a project or a part of a project?
HUD may determine to demolish, or otherwise dispose of, a HUD-owned
multifamily housing project, or any portion of such a project, or to
foreclose a HUD-held mortgage on a multifamily housing project, without
ensuring its continued availability as affordable rental or cooperative
housing for low- and very low-income families under appropriate
circumstances which may include one or more of those listed in
paragraphs (a) through (g) of this section, below. If HUD decides not
to preserve an occupied multifamily housing project at a foreclosure
sale or sale of a HUD-owned project, tenants must be provided
relocation assistance as described in section 17 of this guide.
(a) The costs to HUD of rehabilitation are such that the monthly
debt service needed to amortize the cost of rehabilitation, operating
expenses, and a reasonable return to the purchaser cannot be provided
with rents that are, for subsidized and formerly subsidized projects,
within 120 percent of the most recently published Section 8 Fair Market
Rents for Existing Housing (24 CFR part 888, subpart A) or, for
unsubsidized and formerly unsubsidized projects, within rents
obtainable in the market.
(b) Construction is substantially incomplete.
(c) Preservation is not feasible because of environmental factors
that cannot be mitigated by HUD or the purchaser. For example, when the
project is located on a site that cannot be made to comply with the
Section 8 Site and Neighborhood standards in 24 CFR 886.307(k) because
of factors that adversely affect the health, safety and general welfare
of residents such as air pollution; smoke; mud slides; fire or
explosion hazards. Preservation may also be infeasible because of
significantly deteriorated surrounding
[[Page 11703]]
neighborhood conditions with inadequate police or fire protection; high
crime rates; drug infestation; or lack of public community services
needed to support a safe and healthy living environment for residents.
(d) HUD determines the project is unfit for rehabilitation.
(e) Rehabilitation would cost more than constructing comparable new
housing.
(f) A reduction in the number of units in the project will enhance
long-term project viability, for example, demolition of a building to
provide space for a playground, open space, or combining one-bedroom
units to create larger units for families.
(g) Continued preservation of the project as rental or cooperative
housing is not compatible with State or local land use plans for the
area in which the project is located.
[FR Doc. 96-6791 Filed 3-20-96; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-27-P