95-10087. Treatment of Holocaust Reparation Payments in Assisted Housing Programs: Notification of Affected Individuals  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 79 (Tuesday, April 25, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 20356-20358]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-10087]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 20355]]
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part VI
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    24 CFR Part 215, et al.
    
    
    
    Treatment of Holocaust Reparation Payments in Assisted Housing; Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 79 / Tuesday, April 25, 1995 / Rules 
    and Regulations 
    [[Page 20356]] 
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    Office of the Secretary
    
    24 CFR Parts 215, 235, 236, 280, 813, 913, and 950
    
    [Docket No. N-95-3900; FR-3856-N-01]
    
    
    Treatment of Holocaust Reparation Payments in Assisted Housing 
    Programs: Notification of Affected Individuals
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Notification of policy.
    
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    SUMMARY: Before April 23, 1993, the Department of Housing and Urban 
    Development counted Holocaust reparation payments made by foreign 
    governments as income in its means-tested rental housing assistance 
    programs. This policy may have caused some applicants to be denied 
    admission to assisted housing, and some residents of the housing to pay 
    a higher contribution to rent, because these payments were included in 
    their income.
        This document announces that the Department will attempt to provide 
    relief to individuals adversely affected by this policy. As described 
    more fully below, the Department will attempt to inform those who were 
    denied eligibility of their potential current eligibility for rental 
    assistance. For those whose rents were increased, the Department will 
    attempt to find an administrative way to recompense them for the 
    increased rent they paid.
        The policy announced in this document applies to all initial and 
    continuing income determinations that were conducted before April 23, 
    1993. The policy also applies to the Section 235 Homeownership Program. 
    Members of the public who believe they may qualify for relief are 
    encouraged to contact the appropriate Departmental official listed 
    below for more information. It should be noted that in some cases, 
    recompense may not be possible without further congressional action.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For Public and Indian Housing 
    programs: Contact Sherone Ivey, Acting Director, Office of Assisted 
    Housing, Room 4206, telephone (202) 708-0744 (voice), (202) 708-9300 
    (TDD).
        For the Rent Supplement Program; the Section 236 Program (including 
    RAP); Section 8 Programs (including New Construction, Substantial 
    Rehabilitation, State Agency Set-Aside, and Loan Management Set-Aside); 
    the Section 515/8 Farmers Home Set-Aside Program, and the Nehemiah 
    Housing Opportunity Grants Program: Contact Barbara Hunter, Acting 
    Division Director, Planning and Procedures Division, Office of 
    Multifamily Housing Management, Room 6180, telephone (202) 708-3944 
    (voice), (202) 708-4594 (TDD).
        For the Section 202 and Section 202/8 Housing for the Elderly and 
    Handicapped Programs; the Section 202 Supportive Housing for the 
    Elderly Program; the Section 811 Supportive Housing for Persons with 
    Disabilities Program; and the HOPE 2 Program: Contact Margaret Milner, 
    Acting Director, Office of Elderly and Assisted Housing, Room 6130, 
    telephone (202) 708-4542 (voice), (202) 708-4594 (TDD).
        For the Section 235 Homeownership Program: Contact Joseph Bates, 
    Director, Single Family Servicing Division, Room 9178, telephone (202) 
    708-1672 (voice), (202) 708-4594 (TDD).
        For the HOPE 3 Program: Contact Clifford Taffet, Program Policy 
    Division, Office of Community Planning and Development, Room 7168, 
    telephone (202) 708-3226 (voice), (202) 708-2565 (TDD).
        The address for all the above-listed persons is: Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 
    20410. The telephone numbers listed above are not toll-free.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
    
        The information collection requirements in this notice have been 
    submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review. 
    These information collection requirements are not effective until such 
    time that OMB grants its approval. The approval numbers will be 
    published in the Federal Register through separate notice.
    
    Background
    
        The Department provides means-tested housing assistance to eligible 
    low-income families under a variety of programs. Rental assistance 
    programs include the following: Rent Supplement,1 Section 
    236,2 Section 8 and Public and Indian Housing,3 and 
    Supportive Housing for Elderly4 and Disabled Persons.5 
    Programs using Section 8 assistance include Section 8 new construction, 
    substantial rehabilitation, certificate/voucher, State Housing Agency, 
    Farmers Home Administration, moderate rehabilitation, loan management, 
    property disposition, and Section 202/Section 8. The Department also 
    provides means-tested subsidies in the Section 235 Homeownership 
    Program.6 
    
        \1\Section 101 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965.
        \2\Section 236 of the National Housing Act.
        \3\The United States Housing Act of 1937.
        \4\Section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959, as amended by section 
    801 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act.
        \5\Section 811 of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable 
    Housing Act.
        \6\Section 235 of the National Housing Act. New business under 
    this program was terminated effective October 1, 1989, by section 
    401(d) of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1987.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In these programs, the Department takes family income into account 
    in determining initial program eligibility, and uses periodic income 
    reexaminations to determine the level of benefits to be provided 
    eligible families. The Department also uses family income to determine 
    eligibility for the HOPE Programs (1, 2, and 3),7 the Nehemiah 
    Housing Opportunity Grants program,8 and the Section 23 Housing 
    Assistance Payments Program.9
    
        \7\Title IV of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing 
    Act.
        \8\Title VI of the Housing and Community Development Act of 
    1987, repealed by section 289(b) of the Cranston-Gonzalez National 
    Affordable Housing Act.
        \9\Section 23 of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937, repealed by 
    section 201(a) of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In establishing criteria for calculating family income, the 
    Department historically counted the full amount of periodic payments 
    received by program applicants and participants.10 Since 
    reparation payments made by foreign governments in connection with the 
    Holocaust are made periodically (normally on a monthly basis), they 
    were traditionally included in family income.
    
        \10\See the following regulations, as they existed before April 
    23, 1993: Rent Supplement--24 CFR 21 5.21(b)(7); Section 236--24 CFR 
    236.3(b)(4); Section 8--24 CFR 813.106(b)(4); and Public Housing--24 
    CFR 913.106(b)(4).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Almost two years ago, the Department reversed this position. On 
    March 24, 1993, the Department published a final rule in the Federal 
    Register11 that excluded reparation payments, paid by a foreign 
    government pursuant to claims filed under the laws of that government 
    by persons who were persecuted during the Nazi era, from family income 
    under the rental assistance programs described above.12
    
        \11\58 FR 15773, effective April 23, 1993.
        \12\This final rule did not include amendments to the Section 
    235 regulations. The Department intends to implement the exclusion 
    of reparation payments from income in this program through 
    administrative instructions. Anyone who believes his or her 
    reparation payments were included in income on or after April 23, 
    1993 should contact the person identified above for this program. 
    [[Page 20357]] 
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        The Department took this action voluntarily, under its general 
    authority to define ``income'' for the programs involved. As indicated 
    in the preamble to the final rule, the Department believes that the 
    Holocaust--in both its scope and severity--represents a unique 
    situation, and that payments by foreign governments intended to atone 
    for atrocities committed during the Nazi era should not be taken into 
    account with respect to the housing assistance programs involved.
        The final rule was prospective only. It applied to all initial and 
    continuing income determinations conducted on or after its effective 
    date--April 23, 1993. It also made clear that any assisted housing 
    residents who had been asked to repay assistance because of their 
    failure to include past reparation payments in income would be excused 
    from further repayment beginning on April 23, 1993.
        The rule did not, however, provide retroactive relief to those for 
    whom reparation payments were included in income pursuant to initial 
    and continuing income determinations conducted before April 23, 1993. 
    The preamble to the rule indicated that the Department was reviewing 
    the feasibility, practicality, and desirability of making the new 
    policy retroactive, and would advise the public of its conclusions in a 
    later Federal Register publication.
        This notice announces that as a result of this review, the 
    Department will take steps to provide appropriate retroactive relief 
    where possible under current law. This notice is part of an outreach 
    effort to identify individuals who may be eligible for this relief. 
    This outreach will include, among other efforts, contacting Survivors' 
    groups. The relief has two aspects.
        1. Those who were denied eligibility in the Department's assisted 
    rental housing programs as a result of including reparation payments in 
    family income.
        Section 1(d) of Pub. L. 103-286 (approved August 1, 1994) (42 
    U.S.C. 1437a note) requires any Federal agency that denied individuals 
    eligibility for means-tested programs by reason of counting reparation 
    payments as income to make a good faith effort to notify them of their 
    potential eligibility under the programs. This notice, and the outreach 
    effort described above, constitute the Department's good faith effort 
    to identify potential affected individuals.
        The Department encourages anyone who believes that he or she was 
    found to be income-ineligible for any of the above rental assistance 
    programs by reason of counting reparation payments in income, to notify 
    the person listed above in the For Further Information Contact section 
    of this notice for the program involved. Consistent with section 1(d) 
    of the above statute, the Department will determine the individual's 
    current potential eligibility for rental housing assistance.
        2. Those whose rents under the Department's assisted rental housing 
    programs were increased as a result of including reparation payments in 
    family income.
        The Department will, on a voluntary basis, attempt to repay the 
    amount of any such rent increases and any repayments made by 
    individuals to the extent permissible. Since there is no specific 
    appropriation for these purposes, the critical question in determining 
    whether the Department can provide this relief is the availability of 
    the necessary funding under the particular program involved.
        a. Budget-based Section 202/8 projects. Based on the circumstances 
    of one claimant, the Department has determined that there are funds to 
    recompense residents of Section 202/Section 8 elderly projects that 
    receive rent adjustments on the basis of project budgets, rather than 
    through Annual Adjustment Factors. To be eligible, the individual:
    
    --must be a current resident of the project, and
    --must have resided in a Section 202/8 project during the period in 
    which the reparation payments were counted as income.
    
        For any eligible residents of these projects, the Department will 
    attempt to repay, or offset against any increased future tenant rental 
    payments, the full amount of any increased rental payments stemming 
    from the inclusion of reparation payments in income. The Department 
    will also attempt to repay the full amount of any repayments of 
    assistance paid by tenants because of their failure to include past 
    reparation payments in income. The Department encourages residents of 
    these projects who believe they may qualify for recompense to contact 
    the individual listed under Section 8 project-based programs in the For 
    Further Information Contact section of this notice.
        b. Other projects. Similarly, the Department encourages current 
    residents of other assisted projects who resided in the project during 
    the period in which the reparation payments were counted as income to 
    contact the persons listed in the For Further Information Contact 
    section of this notice for the appropriate program. Public housing 
    authorities (PHAs) with locally-owned projects receiving operating 
    subsidies under the Performance Funding System may, after HUD review of 
    the calculations, utilize the regulatory provision at Sec. 990.110(g) 
    to recalculate operating subsidy eligibility, and request current year 
    funds to cover the payment of retroactive payments to eligible 
    recipients. For other programs, the Department will determine the 
    eligibility of the individual, as well as the availability of funds to 
    provide the recompense administratively without the need for further 
    congressional action. Since the Department's assisted rental housing 
    programs use a variety of funding techniques, the ability to provide 
    the necessary relief administratively, without the need for further 
    congressional appropriation action, depends on the program involved.
        It should be noted that section 1(e) of Pub. L. 103-286 also 
    purports to provide retroactive relief for those whose rents were 
    increased by reason of counting reparation payments. The relief is 
    limited, however, to rental payments from February 1, 1993 through 
    April 30, 1993. In addition, the authority to make any recompense under 
    Pub. L. 103-286 is conditioned on approval in an appropriation Act. 
    Since no such approval was provided, Pub. L. 103-286 may NOT be used as 
    a source of recompensing eligible individuals.
        In contrast, the Department's voluntary action announced in this 
    notice is designed to provide full compensation not just for a three-
    month period, but for the entire time in which reparation payments were 
    taken into account. It also provides a mechanism for recompensing at 
    least some eligible claimants, without the necessity of further 
    appropriation action. Any recompense that cannot be provided pursuant 
    to the provisions set forth in this notice requires further 
    congressional action.
        3. Those who were denied eligibility, or whose level of subsidy was 
    determined, as a result of including reparation payments in family 
    income in the Section 235 Homeownership Program.
        Although the Department did not include the Section 235 
    Homeownership Program in its March 24, 1993 final rule (58 FR 15773), 
    the Department is including in its outreach [[Page 20358]] effort those 
    individuals who may have been affected in this program. Any such 
    individuals should notify the person listed above in the For Further 
    Information Contact section for this program.
    
    Other Matters
    
    National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
    
        This action is categorically excluded from the NEPA requirements at 
    24 CFR part 50 in accordance with 24 CFR 50.20(k), because it relates 
    to an internal administrative procedure, the content of which does not 
    constitute a development decision nor affect the physical condition of 
    project areas or building sites.
    
    Executive Order 12612, Federalism
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Official under section 6(a) 
    of the Executive Order 12612, Federalism, has determined that the 
    policies contained in this notice would not have substantial direct 
    effects on States or their political subdivisions, or the relationship 
    between the Federal government and the States, or on the distribution 
    of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government. 
    The notice simply announces the Department's intent to provide relief 
    to those whose eligibility or rental payments under HUD's assisted 
    rental housing programs were adversely affected by counting reparation 
    payments as family income.
    
    Executive Order 12606, The Family
    
        The General Counsel, as the Designated Officer under Executive 
    Order 12606, The Family, has determined that this notice does not have 
    potential for significant impact on family formation, maintenance, and 
    general well-being, and thus is not subject to review under the Order. 
    The notice simply announces the Department's intent to provide relief 
    to those whose eligibility or rental payments under HUD's assisted 
    rental housing programs were adversely affected by counting reparation 
    payments as family income.
    
        Dated: March 30, 1995.
    Henry G. Cisneros,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-10087 Filed 4-24-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4210-32-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
04/25/1995
Department:
Housing and Urban Development Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Notification of policy.
Document Number:
95-10087
Pages:
20356-20358 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. N-95-3900, FR-3856-N-01
PDF File:
95-10087.pdf
CFR: (8)
24 CFR None
24 CFR 215
24 CFR 235
24 CFR 236
24 CFR 280
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