95-6358. Restrictions on Assistance to Noncitizens  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 53 (Monday, March 20, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 14816-14861]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-6358]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 14815]]
    
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    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Housing and Urban Development
    
    
    
    
    
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    Office of the Secretary
    
    
    
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    24 CFR Part 200 et al.
    
    
    
    Restrictions on Assistance to Noncitizens; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 53 / Monday, March 20, 1995 / Rules 
    and Regulations 
    [[Page 14816]] 
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
    
    Office of the Secretary
    
    24 CFR Parts 200, 215, 235, 236, 247, 812, 850, 880, 881, 882, 883, 
    884, 886, 887, 900, 904, 905, 912 and 960
    
    [Docket No. R-95-1409; FR-2383-F-05]
    RIN 2501-AA63
    
    
    Restrictions on Assistance to Noncitizens
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, HUD.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final rule implements Section 214 of the Housing and 
    Community Development Act of 1980, as amended. Section 214 prohibits 
    the Secretary of HUD from making financial assistance available to 
    persons other than United States citizens, nationals, or certain 
    categories of eligible noncitizens in HUD's Public Housing and Indian 
    Housing programs (including homeownership), the Section 8 housing 
    assistance payments programs, the Housing Development Grants program, 
    the Section 236 interest reduction and rental assistance programs, the 
    Rent Supplement program, and the Section 235 homeownership program. 
    This final rule follows a proposed rule published on August 25, 1994, 
    and takes into consideration the public comment received on the August 
    25, 1994 proposed rule.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: June 19, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    For the covered programs, the following persons should be contacted:
        (1) For Public Housing, Section 8 Certificate, Rental Voucher, and 
    Moderate Rehabilitation (except Single Room Occupancy--``SRO'') 
    programs--Edward Whipple, Rental and Occupancy Branch, Office of Public 
    Housing, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh 
    Street, SW., Washington, DC 20410-5000, telephone (202) 708-0744;
        (2) For Indian Housing programs--Dominic Nessi, Director, Office of 
    Native American Programs, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 
    451 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20410-5000, telephone (202) 
    708-1015;
        (3) For the Section 8 Moderate Rehabilitation SRO program--Maggie 
    H. Taylor, Director, Office of Special Needs Assistance Programs, 
    Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW., 
    Washington, DC 20410-7000, telephone (202) 708-4300;
        (4) For the other Section 8 programs, the Section 236 programs, 
    Housing Development Grants and Rent Supplement--Barbara Hunter, Program 
    Planning Division, Office of Multifamily Management, Department of 
    Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 
    20410-8000, telephone (202) 708-3944; and
        (5) For the Section 235 homeownership program--William Heyman, 
    Office of Lender Activities and Land Sales Registration, Office of 
    Single Family Housing, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 
    Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC 20410-8000, telephone (202) 708-
    1824.
        For persons with hearing impairment, the TDD number is (202) 472-
    6725. None of the foregoing telephone numbers are toll-free.
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
    
        The information collection requirements contained in this rule have 
    been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980, and when approved and assigned OMB 
    control number(s), the control numbers will be published by separate 
    notice in the Federal Register.
    
    II. Procedural Matters
    
    A. Implementation of Section 214
    
        HUD reiterates the statement made in the August 25, 1994 proposed 
    rule that the restrictions on the use of assisted housing by 
    noncitizens with ineligible immigration status (see 59 FR 43900-43901) 
    takes effect when this final rule takes effect, which is 90 days from 
    the date of publication in the Federal Register. Accordingly, until 
    that time, covered entities (i.e., housing authorities, managers of 
    HUD-assisted housing, and mortgagees in the Section 235 FHA insurance 
    program) are not authorized to take any action based on the eligible 
    immigration status of applicants and tenants.
    
    B. Using the ``Effective Date of the Final Rule'' as the Pivotal Date, 
    Rather Than ``Date of Enactment''
    
        HUD also reiterates its statement in the August 25, 1994 proposed 
    rule concerning the use of the effective date of the final rule as the 
    pivotal date rather than the date of enactment of the statute (see 59 
    FR 43901). Paragraph (c)(1) of Section 214 was added by the Housing and 
    Community Development Act of 1987 (the 1987 Act) and confers discretion 
    on the Secretary of HUD to continue assistance or defer termination of 
    assistance on behalf of an individual for whom assistance would 
    otherwise be terminated if that person was ``receiving such assistance 
    on the date of enactment of the Housing and Community Development Act 
    of 1987.''
        The term ``date of enactment'' is also found in Section 214(d) in 
    the description of the elderly persons who need not provide 
    documentation of their immigration status. The statute exempts from 
    such documentation any individual who is ``62 years of age or older, 
    and is receiving financial assistance on the date of the enactment of 
    the Housing and Community Development Act of 1987.''
        HUD has determined that the provisions of Section 214 are to 
    complex to be determined self-implementing as of the date of enactment 
    of the 1987 Act (February 5, 1988). Thus, the restrictions of Section 
    214 will not be felt until this final rule is published and effective.
    
    C. Nondiscrimination in Implementation of Section 214
    
        Several commenters stated that implementation of Section 214 could 
    promote discrimination against certain minority and ethnic groups. 
    Section 214 is constructed in a way that allows little discretionary 
    action in its implementation. This was discussed to some extent in the 
    preamble to the proposed rule (59 FR 43900). As noted in the preamble 
    to the August 25, 1994 proposed rule, Section 214 is specific 
    concerning those noncitizens who are eligible for HUD housing 
    assistance. Section 214 also specifies the type of documentation that 
    must be submitted, the type of verification to be undertaken, and the 
    type of due process procedures available to individuals and families. 
    Therefore, a housing authority or project owner does not have the 
    discretion to accept or deny admission to certain categories of 
    noncitizens, but not others, because the statute specifies the eligible 
    categories. Further, the housing authority or project owner does not 
    have the discretion to request certain immigration documentation from 
    certain noncitizens, but not others, because the statute specifies the 
    acceptable documentation as does this rule. The housing authority or 
    project owner does not have the discretion to request documentation of 
    citizenship status because the statute, as does this rule, provides 
    that citizens only need execute a declaration of citizenship status, 
    signed under penalty of perjury. HUD is aware of the sensitive nature 
    of verifying eligible immigration status for HUD public housing and 
    assisted housing, and has included a separate section in the 
    implementing regulations setting forth applicable nondiscrimination 
    requirements. In [[Page 14817]] setting forth the applicable 
    nondiscrimination requirements, however, the final rule does not (nor 
    did the proposed rule) summarize the content of each nondiscrimination 
    statute or regulation (e.g., such as title VI of the Civil Rights Act 
    of 1964 or the Fair Housing Act). These nondiscrimination statutes and 
    regulations which are longstanding and applicable to almost all HUD 
    programs are familiar to housing authorities and project owners.
    
    III. Statutory and Regulatory Background
    
        The restrictions on providing housing assistance to noncitizens 
    with ineligible immigration status have been embodied in statute since 
    1980. Section 214 of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1980 
    (94 Stat. 1637) (Section 214) was the original basis for restrictions 
    on providing assistance to noncitizens with ineligible immigration 
    status in the assisted housing programs. Section 214 was amended by 
    section 329(a) of the Housing and Community Development Amendments of 
    1981 (94 Stat. 408), by section 121(a)(2) of the Immigration Reform and 
    Control Act of 1986 (``IRCA'', 100 Stat. 3384), and by section 164 of 
    the Housing and Community Development Act of 1987 (101 Stat. 1860). 
    (Section 214, as amended by these statutory sections, is codified at 42 
    U.S.C. 1436a.)
        There have been several previous attempts by HUD to implement 
    Section 214 by regulation. Rules, both proposed and final, were 
    published in 1982 (47 FR 18914, and 47 FR 43674), 1986 (51 FR 15611), 
    and 1988 (53 FR 842, and 53 FR 41038). Despite the publication of final 
    rules during the period between 1982 and 1988, the statutory 
    restrictions of Section 214 have not been made effective.\1\
    
        \1\A detailed history of the regulatory efforts to implement 
    Section 214 (including why the final rules were not made effective) 
    can be found in the rule published on January 13, 1988 (53 FR 842).
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        This final rule, which takes effect on June 19, 1995, follows 
    publication of a proposed rule published on August 25, 1994 (59 FR 
    43900) and takes into consideration public comment received on this 
    proposed rule. The discussion of public comments on the August 25, 1994 
    proposed rule is set forth in Section V of this preamble.
    
    IV. Differences Between the Proposed Rule and the Final Rule
    
        As will be discussed in more detail in Section V of this preamble, 
    very few changes were made to the Section 214 proposed regulations at 
    the final rule stage because of the prescriptive nature of Section 214. 
    Section 214 specifies the HUD programs that are covered by the statute, 
    the categories of noncitizens that are eligible to receive HUD 
    financial assistance, the procedures to be used to verify immigration 
    status, the type of documentation that must be submitted, and who must 
    submit this documentation, the appeal procedures to be provided to 
    persons initially determined to have ineligible status, and the special 
    assistance to be provided to certain families with members who have 
    eligible status and those who have ineligible status. Accordingly, with 
    the exception of clarifying changes, and editorial corrections, the 
    principal changes made at the final rule stage are as follows:
        1. Removing housing authorities (HAs) and project owners as the 
    ``conduits'' in the INS appeals process. In response to public comment 
    (from both representatives of housing authorities and project owners 
    and representatives of resident groups), the final rule has been 
    revised to allow applicants and tenants to directly appeal to INS, and 
    INS to directly reply to applicants and tenants (i.e., without having 
    to go through housing authorities and project owners as intermediaries 
    in the INS appeal process).
        2. Clarifying that proration of assistance is not discretionary on 
    the part of project owners and housing authorities. The proposed rule 
    was not clear on whether proration of assistance must be provided to 
    eligible mixed families, or whether the project owner or housing 
    authority had the discretion to offer proration of assistance. While 
    the majority of commenters appeared to understand that proration of 
    assistance must be offered to eligible mixed families, the final rule 
    clarifies that this is the case.
        3. Strengthening the confidentiality and privacy of information 
    concerning immigration status. The final rule clarifies that HAs, 
    landlords and HUD officials cannot use the information in their 
    possession for any purpose other than determining an individual's 
    eligibility for housing assistance.
    
    V. Discussion of Public Comments
    
        This section presents the significant issues raised by the public 
    commenters on the August 25, 1994 proposed rule. Several commenters 
    offered editorial suggestions to certain of the regulatory suggestions, 
    or revised regulatory text. Each of these suggestions is not discussed 
    in this section. To the extent that the suggestion or revision helped 
    clarify the meaning of the regulatory text, the suggestion was adopted. 
    In several cases the editorial comment did not convey the appropriate 
    meaning of the regulatory text.
    
    Application of Rule
    
        Comment. Several commenters requested that the final rule 
    grandfather-in all current residents and apply the rule only to 
    applicants.
        HUD Response. The language of Section 214, which provides for 
    preservation of assistance for those mixed families (those families who 
    contain eligible and ineligible members) currently residing in HUD 
    public housing and assisted housing, indicates that the Congress 
    contemplated that the restrictions on housing assistance imposed by 
    Section 214 would apply not only to applicants, but to tenants as well. 
    (See Section 214(c)).
        Comment. Another commenter requested that the rule not require the 
    head of household or adult members to have legal immigration status, 
    and thus permit children who have such status to enter into lease 
    agreements and contracts on behalf of the adult members.
        HUD Response. Section 214 restricts HUD from adopting the 
    suggestion of the commenter. Section 214(d) provides for adult member 
    to execute documents on behalf of children. Section 214(c) which 
    addresses continued assistance is the statutory provision which 
    requires the head of household or spouse to be a U.S. citizen or 
    national, or to have the eligible immigration status listed in Section 
    214. In the case of a mixed family with eligible children and two 
    ineligible adults (the adults are neither U.S. citizens or meet one of 
    the six specified categories of eligible immigration status) may be 
    eligible for prorated assistance, as provided in the August 25, 1994 
    proposed rule, and this final rule.
        Comment. Another commenter requested that the rule clarify the 
    application of Section 214 vis a vis local/Federal preferences.
        HUD Response. Preferences and eligibility for public housing and 
    HUD-assisted housing are two different matters. Families must first 
    meet the eligibility requirements for public housing and HUD-assisted 
    housing, and then local/Federal preferences are applied to eligible 
    families.
    
    Delay Effective Date of Final Rule
    
        Comment. Several commenters requested that HUD delay the effective 
    date of the final rule for six months because of the preparation and 
    staff training that will be needed by housing authorities in connection 
    with implementation of Section 214. [[Page 14818]] 
        HUD Response. HUD believes that the delay of 90 days is sufficient 
    time for housing authorities and HUD to prepare for implementation of 
    Section 214.
    
    Guidance to Supplement Final Rule
    
        Comment. Another commenter urged HUD to publish comprehensive 
    guidance in connection with the publication of the final rule.
        HUD Response. HUD has every intention of issuing guidance to assist 
    HAs and project owners with implementation of Section 214.
    
    Liability of Ineligible Tenants for Reimbursement of Benefits
    
        Commenter. One commenter stated that an owner cannot be held 
    responsible for pursuit of recapture of payment of subsidies to 
    ineligible tenants.
        HUD Response. The rule does not hold owners responsible for pursuit 
    of repayments of subsidies to ineligible tenants, but rather when it is 
    determined that HUD assistance was paid to an ineligible tenant, ``the 
    project owner is encouraged to refer to the case to the HUD Inspector 
    General's office for further investigation.'' (Emphasis added; see, 
    e.g., 24 CFR 200.192).
    
    Recordkeeping
    
        Comment. One commenter, referring to Sec. 200.186(h) (Retention of 
    documents), stated that the rule was not clear on which documents must 
    be retained for a period of five years--documents for all families or 
    just those families requesting an INS appeal.
        HUD Response. Section 200.186(h) and the parallel provisions in 
    Secs. 812.9(h), 905.310(q), and 912.9(h) provide that the project owner 
    or housing authority ``shall retain for a minimum of five years the 
    following documents that may have been submitted to the project owner 
    by the family or provided to the project owner as part of the INS 
    appeal or the informal hearing process.'' (Emphasis added.)
    
    Terminology
    
        Comment. Five commenters stated that in lieu of the terms 
    ``citizen'' and ``noncitizens,'' HUD should refer to the persons 
    eligible to apply for HUD housing as ``authorized persons.''
        HUD Response. In using the term ``noncitizen,'' HUD's intention is 
    to convey the design of Section 214. Section 214 imposes no 
    restrictions on HUD housing assistance for citizens, including U.S. 
    nationals, but rather, imposes restrictions on the provision of housing 
    assistance to those who are not citizens, by limiting housing 
    assistance to certain categories of legally admitted noncitizens. All 
    categories of noncitizens who are authorized to reside in the United 
    States are not necessarily authorized to receive HUD housing assistance 
    (for example, student noncitizens).
    
    Eligibility for HUD Financial Assistance
    
        Comment. One commuter stated that the rule does not address the 
    status of ``Section 203'' preference class applicants, which, according 
    to the commenter, are categorized by the Department of State as 
    ``spouses and children of legalization beneficiaries.''
        HUD Response. Section 214 lists those categories of noncitizens 
    that are eligible for HUD housing assistance, and these categories are 
    repeated in the rule with elaboration, based on information provided by 
    INS. (See Section 214(a)). Section 200.182 and comparable sections 
    (Secs. 812.5, 905.310(a) and 912.5) provide that an eligible noncitizen 
    includes one who is lawfully present in the United States ``as a result 
    of being granted conditional entry under section 203(a)(7) of the 
    INA.''
        Comment. Another commenter stated that the rule does not take into 
    account the transborder treaty agreements concerning Native Americans. 
    The commenter noted that under these treaty agreements, many Native 
    Americans have the right to cross freely into the United States and 
    have the legal right to reside and work in the United States.
        HUD Response. Neither Section 214 nor these regulations interfere 
    with transborder treaty agreements concerning Native Americans.
    Evidence of Eligible Status
    
        Comment. Eight commenters stated that HUD exceeds its authority in 
    implementing regulations that require documentation and verification 
    from applicants. These commenters stated that the statute only imposes 
    documentation requirements on noncitizens who were residing in assisted 
    housing when the statute was enacted to document their ineligible 
    status.
        HUD Response. HUD disagrees with the interpretation proposed by the 
    commenters. The statute refers to documentation requirements ``at the 
    time of application'' (see Section 214(d)(4)), and speaks in terms of 
    ``denying'' assistance, not just ``terminating'' assistance (see 
    Section 214(d)(4)), which therefore indicate that the statute intended 
    to encompass applicants, and not just those families residing in HUD 
    public housing and assisted housing at the time of enactment of the 
    statute.
        Comment. Eight commenters requested that the final rule require 
    U.S. citizens to provide documentation of eligibility, and that 
    citizenship status should be verified. Other commenters stated that a 
    declaration signed under penalty of perjury, as required by the August 
    25, 1994 proposed rule of U.S. citizens, is inadequate and is not a 
    realistic deterrent against fraud. Another commenter stated that the 
    declaration, to be signed by U.S. citizens, should require the 
    individual signing the declaration to identify his or her place of 
    birth, city, county and State. Another commenter requested that the 
    final rule require U.S. citizens to submit the same type of 
    documentation that is currently required of U.S. citizens under 
    employer verification requirements. Another commenter requested that 
    persons 62 years of age or older should be subject to same 
    documentation requirements as everyone else.
        HUD Response. The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA) 
    (Pub. L. 99-603, approved November 6, 1986) amended Section 214 by 
    providing a procedure for the submission and verification of evidence 
    of citizenship or eligible immigration status. The amendment 
    specifically provides that U.S. citizens and nationals only need submit 
    a declaration in writing, signed under penalty of perjury (Section 
    214(d)). For individuals 62 years of age or older Section 214 requires 
    documentation if ``such an individual is not a citizen or national of 
    the United States, is not 62 years of age or older'' (Section 
    214(d)(2)). Accordingly, HUD interprets this language to provide that 
    individuals 62 years of age or older and receiving assistance on the 
    effective date of the final rule, like citizens or nationals, need only 
    submit a declaration in writing, and proof of age.
        Comment. Two commenters stated HUD should disseminate standard and 
    model documents, such as a standard declaration form, and acceptable 
    INS forms.
        HUD Response. In its guidance to be issued in connection with 
    implementation of the final rule, HUD intends to provide as much 
    information as possible to housing authorities and project owners, 
    including, where appropriate, model documents, and samples of standard 
    INS forms.
    
    Documents in Languages Other Than English
    
        Comment. Fifteen commenters stated that there is a substantial cost 
    involved with the requirement imposed on housing authorities and 
    project owners to provide documents in languages [[Page 14819]] other 
    than English to the extent ``feasible.'' Twelve commenters stated that 
    there will be disputes over ``what is feasible.'' Six commenters stated 
    that HUD should provide model notices in languages other than English. 
    Another commenter stated the issue providing notification in languages 
    other than English is not simply making documents available in other 
    languages, but in having interpreters to interview applicants, and ask 
    follow-up questions. Seven commenters stated that the translation of 
    documents into other languages should be a firm requirement and not 
    left to the owner's discretion.
        HUD Response. The ``feasibility'' language in the rule is to assist 
    housing authorities to maintain the flexibility that they currently 
    have with respect to translating documents into languages other than 
    English, and to exercise judgment with respect to translating documents 
    into languages of a population group which they serve, of a substantial 
    number, and which speaks a language other than English. Many housing 
    authorities and project owners currently, without any requirement 
    imposed, translate documents into languages other than English. 
    Additionally, housing authorities and project owners may have staff in 
    their employ which speak languages other than English, and can assist 
    residents in understanding documents. Apart from the notices, 
    certifications, and documentation required by this rule, applying for 
    HUD public housing or HUD assisted housing involves reviewing and 
    completing documents which make reference to certain rights and 
    responsibilities; for example, the application form, the lease (which 
    will specify the rights of the tenant, as well as sanctions that may be 
    imposed against the tenant for violation of the lease) and other 
    documents which support the individual or family's eligibility for 
    assisted housing (i.e., documentation of income). It is HUD's 
    understanding that housing authorities and project owners currently 
    make efforts to assist residents with completion of these documents, if 
    not by providing translated documents, by allowing individuals the 
    opportunity and time to find a family member or friend who can assist 
    them with understanding and completing these documents, or in some 
    cases (as mentioned above), the housing authority may have in its 
    employ an individual who can provide such assistance.
        As noted in discussion of other aspects of applying for and 
    residing in HUD public housing or assisted housing, HUD would like 
    housing authorities and project owners to utilize procedures already in 
    place with respect to implementation of this rule, to the extent 
    possible. For example, the rule provides for housing authorities and 
    project owners to verify immigration status at the same time other 
    aspects of eligibility are verified. Similarly, HUD would like housing 
    authorities and project owners to handle the documents required by this 
    rule, which are important, in the same manner that they handle other 
    important documents (again, the application, the lease, eviction 
    notices, etc.) that specify the rights and responsibilities of the 
    applicant or tenant. The ``feasibility'' language is to encourage 
    housing authorities and project owners to continue procedures already 
    in place to assist families whose first language is not English. 
    Accordingly, HUD declines to make the translation of documents into a 
    requirement, as suggested by some commenters.
    When To Submit Evidence of Eligible Immigration Status
    
        Comment. One commenter stated that submission of evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status should occur at each annual 
    recertification, and not simply one time during continuously assisted 
    occupancy, as the proposed rule provided. The commenter stated that INS 
    forms are by their very nature ``temporary'' in every case, and noted 
    that the proposed rule calls for only an initial proffer of documents 
    versus a yearly demonstration of eligibility.
        HUD Response. The statute does not speak in terms of annual 
    verification, but only in terms of an initial documentation and 
    verification of tenants and applicants. Accordingly, HUD declines to 
    revise the proposed rule to impose an annual demonstration of 
    eligibility.
        Comment. Two commenters stated that the final rule must clarify 
    when evidence is to be submitted by applicants. The commenters noted 
    that the August 25, 1994 proposed rule stated that evidence of eligible 
    status is submitted not later than the date the project owner 
    anticipates or has knowledge that verification or other aspects of 
    eligibility for assistance will occur.
        HUD Response. The responsibility of housing authorities and project 
    owners is simply to ensure that this evidence is submitted by or within 
    a reasonable time within which verification of eligibility will take 
    place.
    
    Extension of Time To Submit Evidence
    
        Comment. Five commenters stated that the mandatory extensions of 
    time imposed by the rule will create an administrative burden for 
    authorities, owners, and managers.
        HUD Response. The mandatory extensions of time are imposed by 
    statute. Section 214(d)(A) requires the Secretary of HUD to provide a 
    reasonable opportunity to submit evidence of eligible status if such 
    evidence is not submitted at the time of application or recertification 
    for financial assistance. Section 214(d) provides that ``for purposes 
    of this subsection, the term `Secretary' means the Secretary of Housing 
    and Urban Development, a public housing agency, or another entity that 
    determines the eligibility of an individual for financial assistance.''
        Comment. Two commenters stated that the final rule should define 
    what is meant by a ``reasonable period of time.'' The commenters stated 
    that ``while we accept that the statute requires extensions of a 
    `reasonable period of time,' we are very concerned that without further 
    definition in the rule, there will be countless disputes over whether 
    the extension was sufficient.'' Two commenters stated that the rule 
    should require more than a self-certification that documentation is 
    temporarily unavailable. Three commenters stated that extensions of 
    time to submit evidence must be the exception, and not the norm.
        HUD Response. HUD believes that extensions of time will be the 
    exception and not the norm, and that for those extensions requested, 
    the extensions, generally, will not exceed 30 days in duration. 
    However, HUD declines to establish by regulation what constitutes a 
    reasonable period of time, and prefers to allow housing authorities and 
    project owners the flexibility to determine what is reasonable given 
    the circumstances of the particular case for extension before them.
    
    Limiting Acceptable Immigration Evidence to INS Documents
    
        Comment. Four commenters stated that HUD's list of acceptable 
    documents is unnecessarily narrow and will cause hardship and 
    inconvenience to eligible persons. The commenters stated that the seven 
    categories listed in the statute can be documented through many more 
    INS-issued and non-INS-issued documents than are listed in the rule. 
    Four commenters stated that requiring two documents from those 
    individuals with certain I-94s is both unfair and unjustified. Four 
    commenters also stated that requiring that eligibility for the 
    replacement of the document be verified before the receipt can even be 
    submitted defeats the whole purpose of the rule's protections against 
    delay or [[Page 14820]] denial pending INS verification. Other 
    commenters provided suggestions of other types of evidence that HUD and 
    INS should determine as acceptable evidence of immigration status.
        HUD Response. With respect to acceptable evidence of immigration 
    status, HUD follows the guidance and requirements issued by INS. 
    However, the final rule provides, as did the proposed rule, that other 
    acceptable documents as announced by INS will be announced by notice 
    published in the Federal Register.
        Comment. One commenter stated that the list of documents of 
    eligible immigration status did not reflect a proper understanding of 
    INS procedures and of the Immigration Court's authority.
        HUD Response. This list was prepared in consultation with the INS. 
    Again, as noted in the response to the preceding comment, any 
    additional acceptable evidence or any changes to the evidence listed in 
    this rule will be announced by notice in the Federal Register, and HUD 
    will make any conforming amendments, as may be necessary, at the 
    earliest possible opportunity.
    
    Verification of Eligible Immigration Status
    
        Comment. Several commenters objected to HUD's proposed use of the 
    SAVE system. The commenters stated that the SAVE system is ineffective, 
    inaccurate, and costly. The commenters suggested that HUD should not 
    use SAVE until it has been further tested. Other commenters encouraged 
    the Secretary of HUD to waive the verification requirements of IRCA. 
    Other commenters encouraged HUD to use, in lieu of SAVE, a verification 
    system modeled on the current employer verification system.
        HUD Response. HUD declines to adopt the suggestions of the 
    commenters, and will proceed to use the SAVE system, as provided by 
    Section 214. HUD believes that since its implementation SAVE has 
    significantly improved, and is more effective and accurate than at the 
    time of its start-up.
    
    When Verification Is To Occur
    
        Comment. Two commenters requested that the final rule provide that 
    verification of immigration status occur at the time of application.
        HUD Response. HUD declines to adopt the suggestion of the 
    commenters, and the final rule provides, as did the proposed rule, that 
    verification of immigration status should occur at the time that 
    verification of other aspects of eligibility for assistance occur.
    
    No Delay, Denial or Termination of Assistance Pending Verification or 
    Appeals Process
    
        Comment. Several commenters stated that applicants should not be 
    admitted to housing until final eligibility is determined.
        HUD Response. The statute is very clear that ``pending verification 
    or appeal, the Secretary may not delay, deny, reduce or terminate the 
    individual's eligibility for financial assistance on the basis of the 
    individual's immigration status.'' (See Section 214(d)(4)).
        Comment. Thirteen commenters stated that the final rule should make 
    clear that applicants who reach the top of the waiting list before INS 
    completes its verification must be offered housing even though eligible 
    status has not been established.
        HUD Response. HUD believes that the final rule is clear on this 
    issue, and no additional language need be added to the rule.
    
    Appeal to INS of Adverse Determination Concerning Immigration Status
    
        Comment. Twenty commenters, representing individuals, housing 
    authorities and project owners, stated that the housing authority and 
    the project owner should be removed from the INS appeal process; that 
    this should be exclusively between the applicant/tenant and INS.
        HUD Response. As noted earlier in this preamble, the final rule 
    provides for direct applicant/tenant participation in the INS appeal 
    process, and removes the housing authority or project owner as the 
    intermediary. The final rule, however, provides for the housing 
    authority and project owner to be copied on correspondence between INS 
    and the applicant/tenant.
        Comment. One commenter stated that the proposed rule misinterpreted 
    the nature of immigration hearings and the authority of immigration 
    judges to bind the INS. The commenter stated that any decision by the 
    immigration court is final unless reversed on appeal by the Board of 
    Immigration Appeals. Another commenter stated that the rule needs to 
    clearly establish what an INS appeal is because the INS has no 
    regulations or procedures in place regarding appeal from secondary 
    verification.
        HUD Response. In developing the proposed rule, and in developing 
    this final rule, HUD solicited and received the assistance of the INS, 
    and the rule reflects the input of INS. Although the INS regulations 
    found in title 8 of the Code of Federal Regulations do not specifically 
    reference appeal procedures applicable to the SAVE system, the INS 
    regulations have procedures in place to provide for further 
    determination of the accuracy of their records on noncitizens. (See 8 
    CFR part 103; see generally Secs. 103.20-103.36.
    
    Informal Fair Hearing Process
    
        Comment. Several commenters requested that the final rule eliminate 
    the hearing process to be provided by the housing authority or project 
    owner. The commenters questioned the purpose of the hearing. The 
    commenters stated that the project owner is not qualified to second 
    guess the entire INS process and determine that an otherwise ineligible 
    person or family is ineligible. Other commenters stated that HUD should 
    not adopt a procedure which carves out special rights for a particular 
    category of ineligible applicant.
        HUD Response. The informal hearing process is mandated by statute. 
    Section 214 provides that ``if the Secretary determines, after 
    complying with the requirements of paragraph (4) (which addresses the 
    INS appeal process), that such an individual is not in a satisfactory 
    immigration status * * * the applicable fair hearing process shall be 
    made available with respect to the individual.'' (See Section 
    214(d)(4).)
        Comment. Three commenters stated that with respect to the fair 
    hearing provided by the housing authority or the owner, the right to 
    discovery should be limited to those documents in the HA's possession.
        HUD Response. In the matter of discovery, the HA or project owner 
    only would be required to produce documents in its possession.
        Comment. Three commenters stated that the rule should require the 
    housing authority or project owner to incur the costs of any 
    interpretive services.
        HUD Response. HUD declines to adopt the suggestion of the 
    commenter. HUD prefers to maintain the flexibility provided in the 
    proposed rule, which allows for the parties to agree on the arrangement 
    of interpretive services. HUD believes that in many cases, the 
    applicant or tenant will rely upon a family member, relative, or friend 
    to serve as the interpreter.
    
    Preservation of Family (Mixed Family) Provisions
    
    Mixed Families
        Comment. A few commenters urged HUD to drop the ``preservation of 
    family'' provisions in the rule. The commenters stated that ineligible 
    persons should not be allowed to reside in an assisted unit.
        HUD Response. The ``preservation of family'' provisions flow 
    directly from [[Page 14821]] the statute. Section 214(c) provides for 
    continued assistance and temporary deferral of termination of 
    assistance for mixed families.
        Comment. Four commenters asked whether a mixed family may choose 
    temporary deferral of termination of assistance, and then select 
    prorated assistance at the end of the deferral period.
        HUD Response. A family that receives temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance bears a responsibility to make a good faith 
    effort to obtain other affordable housing, and the family's efforts are 
    monitored by the housing authority or project owner. If the family 
    makes such good faith efforts but is unsuccessful in obtaining other 
    affordable housing, the family shall be provided prorated assistance.
    
    Continued Assistance
    
        Comment. Several commenters objected to the restrictive definition 
    of ``family'' which determines eligibility for continued assistance. 
    The commenters stated that this definition unfairly penalizes a wide 
    range of families, and further stated that the requirement that the 
    head of household or spouse be a U.S. citizen is discriminatory.
        HUD Response. The definition of ``family'' which determines 
    eligibility for continued assistance is taken directly from the 
    statute. Section 214(c)(1)(A), which addresses continued assistance, 
    provides that HUD may permit the continued provision of financial 
    assistance, if necessary to avoid the division of family in which: 
    ``the head of household or spouse is a citizen of the United States, a 
    national of the United States, or an alien resident of the United 
    States described in any paragraphs (1) through (6) of subsection (a). 
    For purposes of this paragraph, the term `family' means a head of 
    household, any spouse, any parents of the head of household, any 
    parents of the spouse, and any children of the head of household or 
    spouse.''
        Comment. Four commenters stated that the rule should make clear 
    that housing authorities are not permitted to establish conditions for 
    continued assistance that are more burdensome than permitted by 
    statute. The commenters stated that this rule must set out in mandatory 
    language the circumstances under which continued assistance must be 
    granted.
        HUD Response. The statute permits housing authorities the 
    discretion to grant continued assistance. This issue was discussed in 
    detail in the preamble to the proposed rule (see 59 FR 43913-43914). 
    The final rule provides (as did the proposed rule) the conditions under 
    which continued assistance may be granted by housing authorities (see 
    Secs. 812.11(c) and 912.11(c)).
        Comment. One commenter requested that Sec. 200.187 be revised to 
    make clear that the requirements of this section, which address 
    continued assistance, are not tied to the date on which the regulations 
    become effective but rather continued assistance shall be determined as 
    of the date following completion of the applicable hearing process.
        HUD Response. HUD believes that the commenter misunderstands the 
    reference to the ``effective date of the rule'' in this provision. This 
    section provides that a family that is eligible for continued 
    assistance must have been receiving assistance under a covered HUD 
    program as of the effective date of the rule. In other words, continued 
    assistance is not available to applicant families.
    
    Deferral of Termination of Assistance
    
        Comment. Five commenters requested that HUD remove the provision 
    concerning temporary deferral of termination of assistance on the basis 
    that this provision subjects owners and managers to legal liability. 
    The commenters stated that this provision requires owners and managers 
    to make a number of judgments (e.g., whether there is other affordable 
    housing in the market) that would subject them to legal liability. 
    Another commenter stated that this provision was discriminatory to 
    other categories of residents; that no other category of resident who 
    becomes ineligible for housing is protected from dislocation solely 
    because the resident has not located other affordable housing. Seven 
    commenters stated that the three year deferral period provided in the 
    rule is too long, and that the period should be limited to six months 
    or one year, at a maximum. The commenters stated that the three year 
    period would adversely impact eligible families on the waiting list. 
    Another commenter stated that the notification requirement imposed in 
    connection with deferral of termination of assistance is burdensome.
        HUD Response. In allowing for a period of up to three years to 
    defer termination of assistance, HUD is adopting the language of 
    Section 214, which provides for an aggregate period of three years (see 
    Section 214(c)(1)(B)). Additionally, Section 214 requires that: ``At 
    the beginning of each deferral period, the public housing agency or 
    other entity involved shall inform the individual and family members of 
    their ineligibility for financial assistance and offer them other 
    assistance in finding other affordable housing.'' (See Section 
    214(c)(1)(B)). HUD believes that these ``preservation of family'' 
    provisions reflect the concern of the Congress about displacement, or 
    immediate displacement of families, who but for their immigration 
    status, were eligible to reside in public housing or assisted housing, 
    and had not otherwise presented cause for eviction or termination of 
    assistance.
        Comment. Fifteen commenters stated that the August 25, 1994 
    proposed rule imposes three conditions which must be met in order for a 
    family to be eligible for temporary deferral of termination of 
    assistance, and that families only should be required to meet one 
    standard.
        HUD Response. For project owners, Sec. 200.187(c) of the final rule 
    requires, as did the proposed rule, that temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance shall be granted to a mixed family if ``one 
    of the following conditions is met.'' This language is not adopted in 
    Secs. 812.10(c)(1), 905.310(r)(3) or 912.10(c)(1). Again, as discussed 
    in detail in the preamble to the proposed rule, the statute gives 
    directly to housing authorities the discretion to determine the 
    appropriateness of providing continued assistance or temporary deferral 
    of termination of assistance. Since this discretion is given directly 
    to housing authorities, HUD cannot preempt this discretion and impose 
    requirements on housing authorities. Accordingly, the ``temporary 
    deferral of termination'' provisions for housing authorities more 
    closely mirrors the language of the statute.
        Comment. Two commenters stated that the final rule should impose 
    specific conditions on housing authorities for the granting temporary 
    deferral of termination of assistance, as it did for project owners.
        HUD Response. As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule (59 
    FR 43914), Section 214 permits HUD (in the case of project owners) or 
    the HA to defer termination of assistance in certain circumstances. For 
    project owners, the rule requires project owners to grant this type of 
    relief if a family meets certain qualifying conditions for HAs, the 
    rule permits HAs to determine whether this type of relief will be 
    provided, but requires the HA, in establishing its standards, to be 
    guided by the standards set forth in this rule implementing Section 
    214.
    
    Proration of Assistance
    
        Comment. A number of commenters voiced their objection to proration 
    of assistance on the basis that this process [[Page 14822]] would be an 
    administrative nightmare. Several of these commenters advocated that in 
    order to eliminate this burden, full assistance should be provided to a 
    family when one or more members of the family have citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status One commenter stated that proration of 
    assistance was not supported by the language of Section 214. Another 
    commenter stated that despite limiting assistance to only eligible 
    family members, ineligible family members benefit from proration of 
    assistance. Three other commenters suggested that only ineligible 
    extended members of the family (and not core family members who have 
    ineligible extended members of the family (and not core family members 
    who have ineligible status) be counted as ineligible in determining 
    prorated assistance. Other commenters made suggestions concerning 
    alternative proration formulas, and one of these commenters suggested 
    that HUD accept each housing authority's calculation of the rent level 
    that would permit the housing authority to ``break even without the 
    benefit of Federal subsidies.''
        HUD Response. HUD carefully considered all of the suggestions and 
    recommendations made by the commenters on the proration of assistance 
    provisions, and declines to make changes to the August 25, 1994 
    proposed rule at the final rule stage. Proration of assistance is 
    consistent with the preservation of Families provisions of Section 214, 
    which provide for continued assistance and temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance. HUD believes that the proration formulas set 
    forth in the rule are workable, and HUD will make every effort to 
    assist housing authorities and project owners in making these formulas 
    more easily workable.
        Comment. Another commenter requested clarification whether 
    providing proration of assistance is discretionary on the part of the 
    housing authorities.
        HUD Response. The final rule clarifies that for both housing 
    authorities and project owners, proration of assistance must be offered 
    to eligible mixed families.
        Comment. Four commenters asked for guidance for action to be taken 
    if the family is unable to pay prorated subsidy.
        HUD Response. Housing authorities and project owners should utilize 
    the procedures currently in place when a family is unable to pay its 
    share of rent.
        Comment. One commenter state that the prohibition against extension 
    of assistance to noncitizen students should not be extended to the 
    citizen children of the noncitizen student and noncitizen spouse.
        HUD Response. The final rule provides, as did the proposed rule, 
    that the prohibition on providing assistance to a noncitizen student 
    does not extend to the citizen spouse of the noncitizen student and the 
    children of the citizen spouse and noncitizen student. Section 214 
    provides that nonimmigrant student are not eligible for financial 
    assistance under the programs covered by Section 214. If the 
    nonimmigrant student and the noncitizen spouse of the student have 
    children born in the U.S., the citizenship status of the children would 
    not be sufficient in and of itself to make the family eligible for 
    prorated assistance because the fact remains that the family is in the 
    United States for the purpose of the education of the nonimmigrant 
    student, and not for the purpose of immigrating to the U.S. In other 
    words, Section 213 covered financial assistance is not available to 
    noncitizens who have not expressed an intention of immigrating to the 
    United States.
    Protection of Individual's Privacy
    
        Comment. Ten commenters stated that the proposed rule failed to 
    provide effective guards against the misuse of immigration status 
    information submitted by applicants and tenants, and that the final 
    rule should clarify that HAs, landlords and HUD officials cannot use 
    the information in their possession for any purpose other than 
    determining an individual's eligibility for housing assistance.
        HUD Response. HUD agrees with the commenters and the final rule 
    clarifies that immigration status information provided to HAs, 
    landlords and HUD officials only may be used for purposes of 
    determining an individual's eligibility for housing assistance.
    
    Nondiscrimination Provisions
    
        Comment. One commenter requested that the final rule contain a 
    blanket hold-harmless provision to owners in the implementation of 
    Section 214.
        HUD Response. HUD declines to adopt this recommendation.
        Comment. Ten commenters stated that HUD must establish explicit 
    policies which prohibit and punish foreseeable discriminatory 
    applications of the noncitizens restrictions. The commenters stated 
    that the proposed rule merely recites general anti-discrimination laws 
    from related statutes. The commenters stated that housing authorities 
    should not be able to require different evidence of citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status based on foreign accents or non-English 
    sounding surnames.
        HUD Response. HUD believes that the anti-discrimination statutes 
    and regulations currently in place are sufficient to address 
    discriminatory actions that may result in connection with 
    implementation of Section 214, and establishment of additional policies 
    and sanctions is not necessary. There is no need for HUD to impose 
    sanctions and penalties in addition to, or similar to those imposed by 
    the Fair Housing Act and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. As discussed 
    at the beginning of this preamble, Section 214 is constructed in a way 
    that allows little discretionary action in its implementation. For 
    example, Section 214 is very specific with respect to documentation 
    requirements. Accordingly, if an individual signs a declaration under 
    penalty of perjury that he or she is a citizen, that is all the 
    documentation that is required under the statute and these regulations.
    
    Administrative Burden/Unfunded Mandate
    
        Comment. Although commenters acknowledged HUD's statement in the 
    August 25, 1994 proposed rule that the costs of automated verification 
    of immigration status through the SAVE system would be billed directly 
    to HUD, the majority of the commenters stated that implementation of 
    Section 214 imposes a substantial administrative burden, and HUD fails 
    to address reimbursement of all of the costs associated with 
    implementation of this statute, such as the various notification 
    requirements, document collection, hearings, record retention, and the 
    time and expense of training new staff in the new procedure for 
    verifying noncitizen status.
        HUD Response. HUD acknowledges that there are additional 
    administrative responsibilities imposed by Section 214, and HUD has 
    made every effort to minimize the administrative burden through this 
    regulation. HUD will continue to make efforts to assist housing 
    authorities and project owners to carry out their responsibilities 
    through the guidance to be issued in connection with this final rule.
    
    VI. Other Matters
    
        Executive Order 12866. This final rule was reviewed by the Office 
    of Management and Budget under Executive Order 12866 as a significant 
    regulatory action. Any changes made in this rule as a result of that 
    review are clearly identified in the docket file for this proposed 
    rule, which is available for public inspection in the Office of 
    [[Page 14823]] HUD's Rules Docket Clerk, Room 10276, 451 Seventh 
    Street, SW, Washington, DC. 20410-0500.
        Environmental Review. A Finding of No Significant Impact with 
    respect to the environment was made in accordance with HUD regulations 
    in 24 CFR part 50 that implement section 102(2)(C) of the National 
    Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4332) at the time of 
    development of the August 25, 1994 proposed rule. That Finding remains 
    applicable to this final rule, and is available for public inspection 
    between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. weekdays in the Office of the Rules 
    Docket Clerk at the above address.
        Regulatory Flexibility Act. The Secretary, in accordance with the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605(b)), has reviewed this final 
    rule before publication, and by approving it, certifies that this rule 
    does not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
    small entities. HUD believes that the rule, when implemented, will have 
    only a minimal impact on small housing project owners, small mortgagees 
    and small housing agencies, since the procedures specified to implement 
    the restrictions are to require owners and HAs to use an easily 
    accessible (by telephone) automated system for verifying immigration 
    status. HUD has arranged for the cost of the automated verification 
    system, established by the Immigration and Naturalization Service, to 
    be billed directly to HUD. The only other significant element of cost 
    or delay in administration of HUD programs that may be encountered by 
    small entities as a result of this rule is the requirement for a fair 
    hearing, on request, for any applicant or tenant found to be 
    ineligible. This procedure is specifically required by 42 U.S.C. 1436a. 
    However, HUD does not believe that the cost or delay related to this 
    statutory requirement will be significant because HUD anticipates that 
    small housing agencies, project owners and mortgagees will find that 
    the majority of applicants or tenants are eligible to receive HUD 
    assistance, and therefore fair hearing to determine eligibility on the 
    basis of immigration status will be minimal. Accordingly, HUD concludes 
    that this rule will not have a significant economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities, an that to the extent possible, 
    HUD has minimized the economic impact on all entities, consistent with 
    the Secretary's responsibilities under section 143a.
        Executive Order on Federalism. The General Counsel, as the 
    Designated Official under section 6(a) of Executive Order 12612, 
    Federalism, has determined that the policies contained in this final 
    rule will 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. This rule 
    addresses immigration, a topic exclusively the province of the Federal 
    government, and the effect is the direct result of the status that 
    imposes the restriction against assistance to noncitizens, rather than 
    a result of HUD's exercise of discretion in promulgating a rule to 
    implement the statute.
        Executive Order on the Family. The General Counsel, as the 
    Designated Official under Executive Order 12606, The Family, has 
    determined that the provisions of this final rule, while affecting the 
    composition and well-being of families, are strictly the result of the 
    statute that imposes the restriction. The only families upon whom the 
    stature and the rule have an impact are those containing individuals 
    with ineligible immigration status who are not receiving the benefit of 
    assisted housing, or whose continued receipt of assisted housing is not 
    necessary in order to avoid the division of the family. However, even 
    for families that contain members with ineligible status, the rule 
    strives to maintain the unity of the family under the regulatory 
    provisions concerning special assistance to mixed families.
        Regulatory Agenda. This final rule was listed as sequence number 
    1741 in the Department's Semiannual Agenda of Regulations published on 
    November 14, 1994 (59 FR 57632, 57644), under Executive Order 12866 and 
    the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    24 CFR Part 200
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Claims, Equal employment 
    opportunity, Fair housing, Home improvement, Housing standards, 
    Incorporation by reference, Lead poisoning, Loan programs--housing and 
    community development, Minimum property standards, Mortgage insurance, 
    Organization and functions (Government agencies), Penalties, Reporting 
    and recordkeeping requirements, Social security, Unemployment 
    compensation, Wages.
    
    24 CFR Part 215
    
        Grant Programs--housing and community development, Rent subsidies, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    24 CFR Part 235
    
        Condominiums, Cooperatives, Grant programs--housing and community 
    development, Low and moderate income housing, Mortgage insurance, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 236
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Low and moderate 
    income housing, Mortgage insurance, Rent subsidies, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 247
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Loan programs--
    housing and community development, Low and moderate income housing, 
    Rent subsidies.
    
    24 CFR Part 812
    
        Low and moderate income housing, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 850
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Low and moderate 
    income housing, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 880
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Rent subsidies, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 881
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Rent subsidies, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 882
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Homeless, Lead 
    poisoning, Manufactured homes, Rent subsidies, Reporting and 
    recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 883
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Rent subsidies, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 884
    
        Grant programs-housing and community development, Rent subsidies, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rural areas.
    
    24 CFR Part 886
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Lead 
    [[Page 14824]] poisoning, Rent subsidies, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 887
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Rent subsidies, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 900
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Rent subsidies.
    
    24 CFR Part 904
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Loan programs--
    housing and community development, Public housing.
    
    24 CFR Part 905
    
        Aged, Energy conservation, Grant programs--housing and community 
    development, Grant programs--Indians, Homeownership, Indians, 
    Individuals with disabilities, Lead poisoning, Loan programs--housing 
    and community development, Loan programs--Indians, Low and moderate 
    income housing, Public housing, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 912
    
        Grant programs--housing and community development, Public housing, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    24 CFR Part 960
    
        Aged, Grant programs--housing and community development, 
    Individuals with disabilities, Public housing.
    
        Accordingly, title 24 of the Code of Federal Regulations, parts 
    200, 215, 235, 236, 247, 812, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 886, 887, 900, 
    904, 905, 912 and 960 are amended as follows.
    
    PART 200--INTRODUCTION
    
        1. The authority citation for part 200 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        .Authority: 12 W.S.C. 1701-1715z-18; 42 U.S.C. 1436a and 
    3535(d).
    
        2. A new subpart G, consisting of Secs. 200.180 through 200.192, is 
    added to read as follows:.
    
    Subpart G--Restrictions on Assistance to Noncitizens
    
    Sec.
    200.180  Applicability.
    200.180a  Requirements concerning documents.
    200.181  Definitions.
    200.182  General provisions.
    200.183  Submission of evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status.
    200.184  Documents of eligible immigration status.
    200.185  Verification of eligible immigration status.
    200.186  Delay, denial, reduction or termination of assistance.
    200.187  Preservation of mixed families and other families.
    200.188  Proration of assistance.
    200.189  Prohibition of assistance to noncitizen students.
    200.190  Compliance with nondiscrimination requirements.
    200.191  Protection from liability for project owners, State and 
    local government agencies and officials.
    200.192  Liability of ineligible tenants for reimbursement of 
    benefits.
    
    Subpart G--Restrictions on Assistance to Noncitizens
    
    
    Sec. 200.180  Applicability.
    
        (a) Covered programs/assistance. This subpart implements the 
    statutory restrictions on providing financial assistance to benefit 
    individuals who are not in eligible status with respect to citizenship 
    or noncitizen immigration status. This subpart is applicable to 
    financial assistance provided under:
        (1) Section 235 Program assistance. Section 235 of the National 
    Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1715z) (the Section 235 Program), and for which 
    the implementing regulations are codified in 24 CFR part 235;
        (2) Section 236 Program assistance (below market rent only). 
    Section 236 of the National Housing Act (12 W.S.C. 1715z-1) (tenants 
    paying below market rent only) (the Second 236 Program), and for which 
    the implementing regulations are codified in 24 CFR part 236, subpart 
    D; or
        (3) Rent Supplement Program assistance. Section 101 of the Housing 
    and Urban Development Act of 1965 (12 U.S.C. 1701s) (the Rent 
    Supplement Program), and for which the implementing regulations are 
    codified in 24 CFR part 215.
        (b) When financial assistance is considered paid. Covered financial 
    assistance is considered to be provide (or paid), and the restrictions 
    on providing covered financial assistance to noncitizens with 
    ineligible immigration status are applicable as follows:
        (1) Payment under Section 235 Program. Financial assistance is 
    considered to be paid under the Section 235 program on behalf of a 
    mortgagor when:
        (i) The dwelling unit is subject to a mortgage insured under 
    section 235 of the National Housing Act (and part 235 of this chapter); 
    and
        (ii) Assistance payments are made to the mortgagee on behalf of the 
    mortgagor under a contract between the mortgagee and the Secretary in 
    accordance with section 235(b) of the National Housing Act, unless 
    those assistance payments are pro-rated in accordance with 
    Sec. 200.188.
        (2) Payment under Section 236 Program. Financial assistance is 
    considered to be paid under the Section 236 program on behalf of a 
    tenant or cooperative unit purchaser when:
        (i) The project is subject to a mortgage insured or the project is 
    assisted under section 236 of the National Housing Act (and part 236 of 
    this chapter) for which interest reduction payments are paid under a 
    contract between the mortgagee and the Secretary; and
        (ii) The monthly rental charge paid to the owner for the dwelling 
    unit is less than the HUD-approved market rent, whether or not rental 
    assistance payments are also paid under a contract in accordance with 
    section 236(f)(2) and part 236, subpart D, of this chapter, unless 
    those assistance payments are prorated in accordance with Sec. 200.188.
        (3) Payment under Rent Supplement Program. Financial assistance is 
    considered to be paid under the Rent Supplement program administered 
    under section 101 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 when 
    rent supplement payments are paid under a contract between the project 
    owner and the Secretary in accordance with that section and part 215 of 
    this chapter, unless those assistance payments are prorated in 
    accordance with Sec. 200.188.
        (c) Covered individuals and entities.--(1) Covered individuals/
    persons and families. The provisions of this subpart apply to both 
    applicants for assistance and persons already receiving assistance 
    covered under this subpart (i.e., tenants, homebuyers, cooperative 
    members; see definition of ``tenant'' in Sec. 200.181). Unless the 
    context clearly indicates otherwise, the terms ``individual,'' 
    ``person'' or ``family,'' or the plural of these terms, as used in this 
    subpart apply to both an applicant and a tenant, or an applicant family 
    or a tenant family.
        (2) Covered entities. The provisions of this subpart apply to both 
    project owners (as defined in Sec. 200.181) and mortgagees under the 
    Section 235 homeownership program. Unless the context clearly indicates 
    otherwise, the term ``project owner'' as used in this subpart includes 
    mortgagee.
        (d) Administration of restrictions on providing assistance. Project 
    owners shall administer the restrictions on providing assistance to 
    noncitizens with ineligible immigration status in accordance with the 
    requirements of this subpart. [[Page 14825]] 
    
    
    Sec. 200.180a  Requirements concerning documents.
    
        For any notice or document (decision, declaration, consent form, 
    etc.) that this subpart requires the project owner to provide to an 
    individual, or requires the project owner to obtain the signature of an 
    individual, the project owner, where feasible, must arrange for the 
    notice or document to be provided to the individual in a language that 
    is understood by the individual if the individual is not proficient in 
    English. (See 24 CFR 8.6 of HUD's regulations for requirements 
    concerning communications with persons with disabilities.)
    
    
    Sec. 200.181  Definitions.
    
        Assisted dwelling unit means a dwelling unit for which financial 
    assistance is considered to be paid, as determined in accordance with 
    Sec. 200.180.
        Child means a member of the family, other than the family head or 
    spouse, who is under 18 years of age.
        Citizen means a citizen or national of the United States.
        Evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status means the 
    documents which must be submitted to evidence citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status. (See Sec. 200.186(b).)
        Family. Except as may be otherwise specified in this subpart, the 
    term ``family'' for purposes of this subpart shall have the same 
    meaning as provided in the definition section of the regulations for 
    each of the following programs: the Section 235 Program, Section 236 
    Program, and the Rent Supplement Program). (See, respectively, 24 CFR 
    235.5, 24 CFR 236.2, 24 CFR 215.1).
        Financial assistance or covered financial assistance. See 
    Sec. 200.180.
        Head of household means the adult member of the family who is the 
    head of the household for purposes of determining income eligibility 
    and rent.
        HUD means the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
        INS means the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.
        Mixed family means a family whose members include those with 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, and those without 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status.
        National means a person who owes permanent allegiance to the United 
    States, for example, as a result of birth in a United States territory 
    or possession.
        Noncitizen means a person who is neither a citizen nor nation of 
    the United States.
        Project owner means the person or entity that owns the housing 
    project containing the assisted dwelling unit. For purposes of this 
    subpart, this term includes the mortgagee, in the case of a Section 235 
    mortgage.
        Section 214 means Section 214 of the Housing and Community 
    Development Act of 1980, as amended (42 U.S.C. 1436a). Section 214 
    restricts HUD from making financial assistance available for 
    noncitizens unless they meet one of the categories of eligible 
    immigration status specified in Section 214.
        Tenant means for the Rent Supplement program and the Section 236 
    program, an individual or a family renting an assisted dwelling unit or 
    occupying such a dwelling unit as a cooperative member. For purposes of 
    simplifying the language in this subpart to include the Section 235 
    homeownership program, the term tenant will also be used to include a 
    homebuyer, where appropriate.
    
    
    Sec. 200.182  General provisions.
    
        (a) Restrictions on assistance. Financial assistance under the 
    programs covered by this subpart is restricted to:
        (1) Citizens; or
        (2) Noncitizens who have eligible immigration status in one of the 
    following categories:
        (i) A noncitizen lawfully admitted for permanent residence, as 
    defined by section 101(a)(20) of the Immigration and Nationality Act 
    (INA), as an immigrant, as defined by section 101(a)(15) of the INA (8 
    U.S.C. 1101(a)(20) and 1101(a)(15), respectively) (immigrants). (This 
    category includes a noncitizen admitted under section 210 or 210A of 
    the INA (8 U.S.C. 1160 or 1161), (special agricultural worker), who has 
    been granted lawful temporary resident status);
        (ii) A noncitizen who entered the United States before January 1, 
    1972, or such later date as enacted by law, and has continuously 
    maintained residence in the United States since then, and who is not 
    ineligible for citizenship, but who is deemed to be lawfully admitted 
    for permanent residence as a result of an exercise of discretion by the 
    Attorney General under section 249 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1259);
        (iii) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States 
    pursuant to an admission under section 207 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1157) 
    (refugee status); pursuant to the grant of asylum (which has not been 
    terminated) under section 208 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1158) (asylum 
    status); or as a result of being granted conditional entry under 
    section 203(a)(7) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1153(a)(7)) before April 1, 
    1980, because of persecution or fear of persecution on account of race, 
    religion, or political opinion or because of being uprooted by 
    catastrophic national calamity;
        (iv) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States as a 
    result of an exercise of discretion by the Attorney General for 
    emergent reasons or reasons deemed strictly in the public interest 
    under section 212(d)(5) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)) (parole 
    status);
        (v) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States as a 
    result of the Attorney General's withholding deportation under section 
    243(h) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1253(h)) (threat to life or freedom); or
        (vi) A noncitizen lawfully admitted for temporary or permanent 
    residence under section 245A of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1255a) (amnesty 
    granted under INA 245A).
        (b) Family eligibility for assistance. (1) A family shall not be 
    eligible for assistance unless every member of the family residing in 
    the unit is determined to have eligible status, as described in 
    paragraph (a) of this section;
        (2) Despite the ineligibility of one or more family members, a 
    mixed family may be eligible for one of three types of assistance 
    provided in Sec. 200.187. A family without any eligible members and 
    receiving assistance on June 19, 1995 may be eligible for temporary 
    deferral of termination of assistance as provided in Sec. 200.187.
    
    
    Sec. 200.183  Submission of evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status.
    
        (a) General. Eligibility for assistance or continued assistance 
    under a program covered by this subpart is contingent upon a family's 
    submission to the project owner of the documents described in paragraph 
    (b) of this section for each family member. If one or more family 
    members do not have citizenship or eligible immigration status, the 
    family members may exercise the election not to content to have 
    eligible immigration status as provided in paragraph (e) of this 
    section, and the provisions of Sec. 200.187 shall apply.
        (b) Evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status. Each 
    family member, regardless of age, must submit the following evidence to 
    the project owner.
        (1) For citizens, the evidence consists of a signed declaration of 
    U.S. citizenship;
        (2) For noncitizens who are 62 years of age or older or who will be 
    62 years of age or older and receiving assistance under a covered 
    program on June 19, 1995 the evidence consists of:
        (i) A signed declaration of eligible immigration status; and
        (ii) Proof of age document. [[Page 14826]] 
        (3) For all other noncitizens, the evidence consists of:
        (i) A signed declaration of eligible immigration status;
        (ii) The INS documents listed in Sec. 200.184; and
        (iii) A signed verification form.
        (c) Declaration. (1) For each family member who contends that he or 
    she is a U.S. citizen or a noncitizen with eligible immigration status, 
    the family must submit to the project owner a written declaration, 
    signed under penalty of perjury, by which the family member declares 
    whether he or she is a U.S. citizen or a noncitizen with eligible 
    immigration status.
        (i) For each adult, the declaration must be signed by the adult.
        (ii) For each child, the declaration must be signed by an adult 
    residing in the assisted dwelling unit who is responsible for the 
    child.
        (2) The written declaration may be incorporated as part of the 
    application for housing assistance or may constitute a separate 
    document.
        (d) Verification consent form--(1) Who signs. Each noncitizen who 
    declares eligible immigration status must sign a verification consent 
    form as follows.
        (i) For each adult, the form must be signed by the adult.
        (ii) For each child, the form must be signed by an adult residing 
    in the assisted dwelling unit who is responsible for the child.
        (2) Notice of release of evidence by project owner. The 
    verification consent form shall provide that evidence of eligible 
    immigration status may be released by the project owner without 
    responsibility for the further use or transmission of the evidence by 
    the entity receiving it, to:
        (i) HUD, as required by HUD; and
        (ii) The INS for purposes of verification of the immigration status 
    of the individual.
        (3) Notice of release of evidence by HUD. The verification consent 
    form also shall notify the individual of the possible release of 
    evidence of eligible immigration status by HUD. Evidence of eligible 
    immigration status shall only be released to the INS for purposes of 
    establishing eligibility for financial assistance and not for any other 
    purpose. HUD is not responsible for the future use or transmission of 
    the evidence or other information by the INS.
        (e) Individuals who do not contend that they have eligible status. 
    If one or more members of a family elect not to contend that they have 
    eligible immigration status, and other members of the family establish 
    their citizenship or eligible immigration status, the family may be 
    eligible for assistance under Secs. 200.187 or 200.188, despite the 
    fact that no declaration or documentation of eligible status is 
    submitted for one or more members of the family. The family, however, 
    must identify to the project owner, the family member (or members) who 
    will elect not to contend that he or she has eligible immigration 
    status.
        (f) Notification of requirements of Section 214--(1) When notice is 
    to be issued. Notification of the requirement to submit evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, as required by this 
    section, or to elect not to contend that one has eligible status as 
    provided by paragraph (e) of this section, shall be given by the 
    project owner as follows:
        (i) Applicant's notice. The notification described in paragraph 
    (f)(1) of this section be given to each applicant at the time of 
    application for assistance. Applicants whose applications are pending 
    on June 19, 1995 shall be notified of the requirement to submit 
    evidence of eligible status as soon as possible after June 19, 1995.
        (ii) Tenant's notice. The notification described in paragraph 
    (f)(1) of this section shall be given to each tenant at the time of, 
    and together with, the project owner's notice of regular reexamination 
    of tenant income, but not later than one year following June 19, 1995.
        (iii) Timing of mortgagor's notice. A mortgagor receiving Section 
    235 assistance must be provided the notification described in paragraph 
    (f)(1) of this section in accordance with Sec. 235.13(b)(2) of this 
    chapter.
        (2) Form and content of notice. The notice shall:
        (i) State that financial assistance is contingent upon the 
    submission and verification, as appropriate, of evidence of citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status as required by paragraph (a) of this 
    section;
        (ii) Describe the type of evidence that must be submitted, and 
    state the time period in which that evidence must be submitted (see 
    paragraph (g) of this section concerning when evidence must be 
    submitted); and
        (iii) State that assistance will be prorated, denied or terminated, 
    as appropriate, upon a final determination of ineligibility after all 
    appeals have been exhausted (see Sec. 200.186 concerning INS appeal, 
    and informal hearing process by the project owner) or, if appeals are 
    not pursued, at a time to be specified in accordance with HUD 
    requirements. Tenants also shall be informed of how to obtain 
    assistance under the preservation of families provisions of 
    Sec. 200.187.
        (g) When evidence of eligible status is required to be submitted. 
    The project owner shall require evidence of eligible status to be 
    submitted at the times specified in paragraph (g) of this section, 
    subject to any extension granted in accordance with paragraph (h) of 
    this section.
        (1) Applicants. For applicants, project owners must ensure that 
    evidence of eligible status is submitted not later than the date the 
    project owner anticipates or has knowledge that verification of other 
    aspects of eligibility for assistance will occur (see Sec. 200.185(a)).
        (2) Tenants. For tenants (i.e., persons already receiving the 
    benefit of assistance in a covered program on June 19, 1995, evidence 
    of eligible status is required to be submitted as follows:
        (i) For financial assistance in the form of rent supplement 
    payments or Section 236 basic rent tenancy or rental assistance 
    payments, the tenant shall, in accordance with the provisions of 
    Secs. 215.55(a) and 236.80(a) of this chapter, submit the required 
    evidence at the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995.
        (ii) For financial assistance in the form of Section 235 assistance 
    payments, the mortgagor shall submit the required evidence in 
    accordance with Sec. 235.13(c) of this chapter.
        (3) New occupants of assisted units. For any new occupant of an 
    assisted unit (e.g., a new family member comes to reside in the 
    assisted unit), the required evidence shall be submitted at the first 
    interim or regular reexamination following the person's occupancy.
        (4) Changing participation in a HUD program. Whenever a family 
    applies for admission to a program covered by this subpart, evidence of 
    eligible status is required to be submitted in accordance with the 
    requirements of this subpart unless the family already has submitted 
    the evidence to the project owner for a covered program.
        (5) One-time evidence requirement for continuous occupancy. For 
    each family member, the family is required to submit evidence of 
    eligible status only one time during continuously assisted occupancy 
    under any covered program.
        (h) Extensions of time to submit evidence of eligible status.
        (1) When extension must be granted. The project owner shall extend 
    the time, provided in paragraph (g) of this section, to submit evidence 
    of eligible immigration status if the family member: [[Page 14827]] 
        (i) Submits the declaration required under Sec. 200.183(a) 
    certifying that any person for whom required evidence has not been 
    submitted is a noncitizen with eligible immigration status; and
        (ii) Certifies that the evidence needed to support a claim of 
    eligible immigration status is temporarily unavailable, additional time 
    is needed to obtain and submit the evidence; and prompt and diligent 
    effort will be undertaken to obtain the evidence.
        (2) Prohibition on indefinite extension period. Any extension of 
    time, if granted, shall be for a specific period of time. The 
    additional time provided should be sufficient to allow the individual 
    the time to obtain the evidence needed. The project owner's 
    determination of the length of the extension needed shall be based on 
    the circumstances of the individual case.
        (3) Grant or denial of extension to be in writing. The project 
    owner's decision to grant or deny an extension as provided in paragraph 
    (h)(1) of this section shall be issued to the family by written notice. 
    If the extension is granted, the notice shall specify the extension 
    period granted. If the extension is denied, the notice shall explain 
    the reasons for denial of the extension.
        (i) Failure to submit evidence or to establish eligible status. If 
    the family fails to submit required evidence of eligible immigration 
    status within the time period specified in the notice, or any extension 
    granted in accordance with paragraph (h) of this section, or if the 
    evidence is timely submitted but fails to establish eligible 
    immigration status, the project owner shall proceed to deny, prorate or 
    terminate assistance, or provide continued assistance or temporary 
    deferral of termination of assistance, as appropriate, in accordance 
    with the provisions of Secs. 200.186 and 200.187.
    
    
    Sec. 200.184  Documents of eligible immigration status.
    
        (a) General. A project owner shall request and review original 
    documents of eligible immigration status. The project owner shall 
    retain photocopies of the documents for its own records and return the 
    original documents to the family.
        (b) Acceptable evidence of eligible immigration status. The 
    original of one of the following documents is acceptable evidence of 
    eligible immigration status, subject to verification in accordance with 
    Sec. 200.185.
        (1) Form I-551, Alien Registration Receipt Card (for permanent 
    resident aliens);
        (2) Form I-94, Arrival-Departure Record, with one of the following 
    annotations:
        (i) ``Admitted as Refugee Pursuant to Section 207'';
        (ii) ``Section 208'' or ``Asylum'';
        (iii) ``Section 243(h)'' or ``Deportation stayed by Attorney 
    General'';
        (iv) ``Paroled Pursuant to Sec. 212(d)(5) of the INA'';
        (3) If Form I-94, Arrival-Departure Record, is not annotated, then 
    accompanied by one of the following documents:
        (i) A final court decision granting asylum (but only if no appeal 
    is taken);
        (ii) A letter from an INS asylum officer granting asylum (if 
    application is filed on or after October 1, 1990) or from an INS 
    district director granting asylum (if application filed before October 
    1, 1990);
        (iii) A court decision granting withholding or deportation; or
        (iv) A letter from an INS asylum officer granting withholding of 
    deportation (if application filed on or after October 1, 1990).
        (4) Form I-688, Temporary Resident Card, which must be annotated 
    ``Section 245A'' or ``Section 210'';
        (5) Form I-688B, Employment Authorization Card, which must be 
    annotated ``Provision of Law 274a.12(11)'' or ``Provision of Law 
    274a.12'';
        (6) A receipt issued by the INS indicating that an application for 
    issuance of a replacement document in one of the above-listed 
    categories has been made and the applicant's entitlement to the 
    document has been verified; or
        (c) Other acceptable evidence. If other documents are determined by 
    the INS to constitute acceptable evidence of eligible immigration 
    status, they will be announced by notice published in the Federal 
    Register.
    
    
    Sec. 200.185  Verification of eligible immigration status.
    
        (a) When verification is to occur. Verification of eligible 
    immigration status shall be conducted by the project owner 
    simultaneously with verification of other aspects of eligibility for 
    assistance or continued eligibility for assistance under a covered 
    program. The project owner shall verify eligible immigration status in 
    accordance with the INS procedures described in this section.
        (b) Primary verification.--(1) Automated verification system. 
    Primary verification of the immigration status of the person is 
    conducted by the project owner through the INS automated system (INS 
    Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE)). The INS SAVE 
    system provides access to names, file numbers and admission numbers of 
    noncitizens.
        (2) Failure of primary verification to confirm eligible immigration 
    status. If the INS SAVE system does not verify eligible immigration 
    status, secondary verification must be performed.
        (c) Secondary verification.--(1) Manual search of INS records. 
    Secondary verification is a manual search by the INS of its records to 
    determine an individual's immigration status. The project owner must 
    request secondary verification, within 10 days of receiving the results 
    of the primary verification, if the primary verification system does 
    not confirm eligible immigration status, or if the primary verification 
    system verifies immigration status that is ineligible for assistance 
    covered by this subpart.
        (2) Secondary verification initiated by project owner. Secondary 
    verification is initiated by the project owner forwarding photocopies 
    of the original INS documents listed in Sec. 200.184 (front and back), 
    attached to the INS document verification request form G-845S (Document 
    Verification Request), or such other form specified by the INS to a 
    designated INS office for review. (Form G-845S is available from the 
    local INS Office.)
        (3) Failure of secondary verification to confirm eligible 
    immigration status. If the secondary verification does not confirm 
    eligible immigration status, the project owner shall issue to the 
    family the notice described in Sec. 200.186(d), which includes 
    notification of appeal to the INS of the INS finding on immigration 
    status (see Sec. 200.186(d)(4)).
        (d)  Exemption from liability for INS verification. The project 
    owner shall not be liable for any action, delay, or failure of the INS 
    in conducting the automated or manual verification.
    
    
    Sec. 200.186  Delay, denial, reduction or termination of assistance.
    
        (a) General. Assistance to a family may not be delayed, denied, 
    reduced or terminated because of the immigration status of a family 
    except as provided in this section.
        (b) Restrictions on delay, denial, reduction or termination of 
    assistance.--(1) Restrictions on reduction, denial or termination of 
    assistance. Assistance to an applicant shall not be reduced or denied, 
    and assistance to a tenant shall not be delayed, denied, reduced, or 
    terminated, on the basis of ineligible immigration status of a family 
    member if:
        (i) The primary and secondary verification of any immigration 
    [[Page 14828]] documents that were timely submitted has not been 
    completed;
        (ii) The family member for whom required evidence has not been 
    submitted has moved from the assisted dwelling unit;
        (iii) The family member who is determined not to be in an eligible 
    immigration status following INS verification has moved from the 
    assisted dwelling unit;
        (iv) The INS appeals process under Sec. 200.186(e) has not been 
    concluded; or
        (v) For a tenant, the informal hearing process under 
    Sec. 200.186(f) has not been concluded.
        (2) Restrictions on denial or termination. Assistance to an 
    applicant shall not be denied, and assistance to a tenant shall not be 
    terminated, on the basis of ineligible immigration status of a family 
    member if:
        (i) Assistance is prorated in accordance with Sec. 200.188;
        (ii) Assistance for a mixed family is continued in accordance with 
    Sec. 200.187; or
        (iii) Deferral of termination of assistance is granted in 
    accordance with Sec. 200.187.
        (3) When delay of assistance to an applicant is permissible. 
    Assistance to an applicant may be delayed after the conclusion of the 
    INS appeal process, but not denied until the conclusion of the informal 
    hearing process, if an informal hearing is requested by the family.
        (c) Events causing denial or termination of assistance.--(1) 
    General. Assistance to an applicant shall be denied, and a tenant's 
    assistance shall be terminated, in accordance with the procedures of 
    this section, upon the occurrence of any of the following events:
        (i) Evidence of citizenship (i.e., the declaration) and eligible 
    immigration status is not submitted by the date specified in 
    Sec. 200.183(g) or by the expiration of any extension granted in 
    accordance with Sec. 200.183(h); or
        (ii) Evidence of citizenship and eligible immigration status is 
    timely submitted, but INS primary and second verification does not 
    verify eligible immigration status of a family member; and
        (A) The family does not pursue INS appeal or informal hearing 
    rights as provided in this section; or
        (B) INS appeal and informal hearing rights are pursued, but the 
    final appeal or hearing decisions are decided against the family 
    member.
        (2) Termination of assisted occupancy. For termination of assisted 
    occupancy, see paragraph (i) of this section.
        (d) Notice of denial or termination of assistance. The notice of 
    denial or termination of assistance shall advise the family:
        (1) That financial assistance will be denied or terminated, and 
    provide a brief explanation of the reasons for the proposed denial or 
    termination of assistance;
        (2) That the family may be eligible for proration of assistance as 
    provided under Sec. 200.188;
        (3) In the case of a tenant, the criteria and procedures for 
    obtaining relief under the preservation of families provision in 
    Sec. 200.187;
        (4) That the family has a right to request an appeal to the INS of 
    the results of secondary verification of immigration status and to 
    submit additional documentation or a written explanation in support of 
    the appeal in accordance with the procedures of paragraph (e) of this 
    section;
        (5) That the family has a right to request an informal hearing with 
    the project owner either upon completion of the INS appeal or in lieu 
    of the INS appeal as provided in paragraph (f) of this section;
        (6) For applicants, the notice shall advise that assistance may not 
    be delayed until the conclusion of the INS appeal process, but 
    assistance may be delayed during the pendency of the informal hearing 
    process.
        (e) Appeal by applicant to the INS.--(1) Submission of request for 
    appeal. Upon receipt of notification by the project owner that INS 
    secondary verification failed to confirm eligible immigration status, 
    the project owner shall notify the family of the results of the INS 
    verification, and the family shall have 30 days from the date of the 
    project owner's notification, to request an appeal of the INS results. 
    The request for appeal shall be made by the family communicating that 
    request in writing directly to the INS. The family must provide the 
    project owner with a copy of the written request for appeal and proof 
    of mailing. For good cause shown, the project owner shall grant the 
    family an extension of the time within which to request an appeal.
        (2) Documentation to be submitted as part of appeal to INS. The 
    family shall forward to the designated INS office any additional 
    documentation or written explanation in support of the appeal. This 
    material must include a copy of the INS document verification request 
    form G-845S (used to process the secondary verification request) or 
    such other form specified by the INS, and a cover letter indicating 
    that the family is request an appeal of the INS immigration status 
    verification results. (Form G-845S is available from the local INS 
    Office.)
        (3) Decision by INS.--(i) When decision will be issued. The INS 
    will issue to the family, with a copy to the project owner, a decision 
    within 30 days of its receipt of documentation concerning the family's 
    appeal of the verification of immigration status. If, for any reason, 
    the INS is unable to issue a decision within the 30 day time period, 
    the INS will inform the family and project owner of the reasons for the 
    delay.
        (ii) Notification of INS decision and of informal hearing 
    procedures. When the project owner receives a copy of the INS decision, 
    the project owner shall notify the family of its right to request an 
    informal hearing on the PHA's ineligibility determination in accordance 
    with the procedures of paragraph (f) of this section.
        (4) No delay, denial, reduction, or termination of assistance until 
    completion of INS appeal process; direct appeal to INS. Pending the 
    completion of the INS appeal under this section, assistance may not be 
    delayed, denied, reduced or terminated on the basis of immigration 
    status.
        (f) Informal hearing--(1) When request for hearing is to be made. 
    After notification of the INS decision on appeal, or in lieu of request 
    of appeal to the INS, the family may request that the project owner 
    provide a hearing. This request must be made either within 14 days of 
    the date the project owner mails or delivers the notice under paragraph 
    (d) of this section, or within 14 days of the mailing of the INS appeal 
    decision issued in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section 
    (established by the date of postmark).
        (2) Extension of time to request hearing. The project owner shall 
    extend the period of time for requesting a hearing (for a specified 
    period) upon good cause shown.
        (3) Informal hearing procedures. A family who submits a timely 
    request for a hearing with the project owner shall have an opportunity 
    for:
        (i) Hearing before an impartial individual. The family shall be 
    provided a hearing before any person(s) designated by the project owner 
    (including an officer or employee of the project owner), other than a 
    person who made or approved the decision under review, and other than a 
    person who is a subordinate of the person who made or approved the 
    decision;
        (ii) Examination of evidence. The family shall be provided the 
    opportunity to examine and copy at the individual's expense, at a 
    reasonable time in advance of the hearing, any [[Page 14829]] documents 
    in the possession of the project owner pertaining to the family's 
    eligibility status, or in the possession of the INS (as permitted by 
    INS requirements), including any records and regulations that may be 
    relevant to the hearing;
        (iii) Presentation of evidence and arguments in support of eligible 
    status. The family shall be provided the opportunity to present 
    evidence and arguments in support of eligible status. Evidence may be 
    considered without regard to admissibility under the rules of evidence 
    applicable to judicial proceedings;
        (iv) Controverting evidence of the project owner. The family shall 
    be provided the opportunity to controvert evidence relied upon by the 
    project owner and to confront and cross-examine all witnesses on whose 
    testimony or information the project owner relies;
        (v) Representation. The family shall be entitled to be represented 
    by an attorney, or other designee, at the family's expense, and to have 
    such person make statements on the family's behalf;
        (vi) Interpretive services. The family shall be entitled to arrange 
    for an interpreter to attend the hearing, at the expense of the family 
    or project owner, as may be agreed upon by both parties; and
        (vii) Hearing to be recorded. The family shall be entitled to have 
    the hearing recorded by audiotape (a transcript of the hearing may, but 
    is not required to, be provided by the project owner).
        (4) Hearing decision. The project owner shall provide the family 
    with a written final decision, based solely on the facts presented at 
    the hearing, within 14 days of the date of the informal hearing. The 
    decision shall state the basis for the decision.
        (g) Judicial relief. A decision against a family member, issued in 
    accordance with paragraph (e) or (f) of this section, does not preclude 
    the family from exercising the right, that may otherwise be available, 
    to seek redress directly through judicial procedures.
        (h) Retention of documents. The project owner shall retain for a 
    minimum of 5 years the following documents that may have been submitted 
    to the project owner by the family, or provided to the project owner as 
    part of the INS appeal or the informal hearing process:
        (1) The application for financial assistance;
        (2) The form completed by the family for income re-examination;
        (3) Photocopies of any original documents (front and back), 
    including original INS documents;
        (4) The signed verification consent form;
        (5) The INS verification results;
        (6) The request for an INS appeal;
        (7) The final INS determination;
        (8) The request for an informal hearing; and
        (9) The final hearing decision.
        (i) Termination of assisted occupancy. Assisted occupancy is 
    terminated by:
        (1) If permitted under the lease, the project owner notifying the 
    tenant that because of the termination of assisted occupancy the tenant 
    is required to pay the HUD-approved market rent for the dwelling unit.
        (2) The project owner and tenant entering into a new lease without 
    financial assistance.
        (3) The project owner evicting the tenant. An owner may continue to 
    receive assistance payments if action to terminate the tenancy under an 
    assisted lease is promptly initiated and diligently pursued, in 
    accordance with the terms of the lease, and if eviction of the tenant 
    is undertaken by judicial action pursuant to State and local law. 
    Action by the owner to terminate the tenancy and to evict the tenant 
    must be in accordance with 24 CFR part 247 and other HUD requirements. 
    For any jurisdiction, HUD may prescribe a maximum period during which 
    assistance payments may be continued during eviction proceedings and 
    may prescribe other standards of reasonable diligence for the 
    prosecution of eviction proceedings.
    
    
    Sec. 200.187  Preservation of mixed families and other families.
    
        (a) Assistance available for mixed families.--(1) Assistance 
    available for tenant mixed families. For a mixed family assisted under 
    a program by this subpart on June 19, 1995, and following completion of 
    the appeals and informal hearing procedures provided in Sec. 200.186 if 
    utilized by the family, one of the following three types of assistance 
    is available to the family depending upon the family's eligibility for 
    such assistance:
        (i) Continued assistance (see paragraph (b) of this section);
        (ii) Temporary deferral of termination of assistance (see paragraph 
    (c) of this section); or
        (iii) Prorated assistance (see Sec. 200.188; a mixed family must be 
    provided prorated assistance if the family so requests).
        (2) Assistance available for applicant mixed families. Prorated 
    assistance is also available for mixed families applying for assistance 
    as provided in Sec. 200.188.
        (3) Assistance available to other families in occupancy. For 
    families receiving assistance under a program covered by this subpart 
    on June 19, 1995 and who have no members with eligible immigration 
    status, temporary deferral of termination of assistance is available to 
    families without any eligible members in accordance with paragraph (c) 
    of this section.
        (b) Continued assistance. A mixed family shall receive continued 
    housing assistance if all of the following conditions are met:
        (1) The family was receiving assistance under a program covered by 
    this subpart on June 19, 1995;
        (2) The family's head of household or spouse has eligible 
    immigration status as described in Sec. 200.182; and
        (3) The family does not include any person (who does not have 
    eligible immigration status) other than the head of household, any 
    spouse of the head of household, any parents of the head of household, 
    any parents of the spouse, or any children of the head of household or 
    spouse.
        (c) Temporary deferral of termination of assistance.--(1) 
    Eligibility for this type of assistance. If a mixed family qualifies 
    for prorated assistance (and does not qualify for continued 
    assistance), but decides not to accept prorated assistance, or if a 
    family has no members with eligible immigration status, the family 
    shall be eligible for temporary deferral of termination of assistance 
    if necessary to permit the family additional time for the orderly 
    transition of those family members with ineligible status, and any 
    other family members involved, to other affordable housing. Other 
    affordable housing is used in the context of transition of an 
    ineligible family from a rent level that reflects HUD assistance to a 
    rent level that is unassisted; the term refers to housing that is not 
    substandard, that is of appropriate size for the family and that can be 
    rented for an amount not exceeding the amount that the family pays for 
    rent, including utilities, plus 25 percent.
        (2) Conditions for granting temporary deferral of termination of 
    assistance. The project owners shall grant a temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance to a mixed family if one of the following 
    conditions is met:
        (i) The family demonstrates that reasonable efforts to find other 
    affordable housing of appropriate size have been unsuccessful (for 
    purposes of this section, reasonable efforts include seeking 
    information from, and pursuing leads obtained from the State housing 
    [[Page 14830]] agency, the city government, local newspapers, rental 
    agencies and the owner);
        (ii) The vacancy rate for affordable housing of appropriate size is 
    below five percent in the housing market for the area in which the 
    project is located; or
        (iii) The consolidated plan, as described in 24 CFR part 91 and if 
    applicable to the covered program, indicates that the local 
    jurisdiction's housing market lacks sufficient affordable housing 
    opportunities for households having a size and income similar to the 
    family seeking the deferral.
        (3) Time limit on deferral period. If temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance is granted, the deferral period shall be for 
    an initial period not to exceed six months. The initial period may be 
    renewed for additional periods of six months, but the aggregate 
    deferral period shall not exceed a period of three years.
        (4) Notification requirements for beginning of each deferral 
    period. At the beginning of each deferral period, the project owner 
    must inform the family of its ineligibility for financial assistance 
    and offer the family information concerning, and referrals to assist in 
    finding, other affordable housing.
        (5) Determination of availability of affordable housing at end of 
    each deferral period. Before the end of each deferral period, the 
    project owner must:
        (i) Make a determination that one of the three conditions specified 
    in paragraph (c)(2) of this section continues to be met (note: 
    affordable housing will be determined to be available if the vacancy 
    rate is five percent or greater, or if the consolidated plan (If 
    applicable), the owner's knowledge and the tenant's evidence indicate 
    that other affordable housing is available). and
        (ii) Notify the tenant family in writing, at least 60 days in 
    advance of the expiration of the deferral period, that termination will 
    be deferred again (provided that the granting of another deferral will 
    not result in aggregate deferral periods that exceed three years), and 
    a determination was made that other affordable housing is not 
    available; or
        (iii) Notify the tenant family in writing, at least 60 days in 
    advance of the expiration of the deferral period, that termination of 
    financial assistance will not be deferred because either granting 
    another deferral will result in aggregate deferral periods that exceed 
    three years, or a determination has been made that other affordable 
    housing is available.
        (d) Option to select proration of assistance at end of deferral 
    period. A family who is eligible for, and receives temporary deferral 
    of termination of assistance, may request, and the project owner shall 
    provide proration of assistance at the end of the deferral period if 
    the family has made a good faith effort during the deferral period to 
    locate other affordable housing.
        (e) Notification of decision on family preservation assistance. A 
    project owner shall notify the family of its decision concerning the 
    family's qualification for assistance under this section. If the family 
    is ineligible for assistance under this section, the notification shall 
    state the reasons, which must be based on relevant factors. For tenant 
    families, the notice also shall inform the family of any applicable 
    appeal rights.
    Sec. 200.188  Proration of assistance.
    
        (a) Applicability. This section applies to a mixed family other 
    than a family receiving continued assistance under Sec. 200.187(b), or 
    other than a family who is eligible for and requests and receives 
    temporary deferral of termination of assistance under Sec. 200.187(c).
        (b) Method for prorating assistance. For each of the three types of 
    assistance covered by this subpart, the project owner shall prorate the 
    family's assistance as follows:
        (1) Proration under Rent Supplement Program. If the household 
    participates in the Rent Supplement Program, the rent supplement paid 
    on the household's behalf shall be the rent supplement the household 
    would otherwise be entitled to, multiplied by a fraction, the 
    denominator of which is the number of people in the household and the 
    numerator of which is the number of eligible persons in the household;
        (2) Proration under Section 235 Program. If the household 
    participates in the Section 235 Program, the interest reduction 
    payments paid on the household's behalf shall be the payments the 
    household would otherwise be entitled to, multiplied by a fraction the 
    denominator of which is the number of people in the household and the 
    numerator of which is the number of eligible persons in the household;
        (3) Proration under Section 236 Program without the benefit of 
    additional assistance. If the household participates in the Section 236 
    Program without the benefit of any additional assistance, the 
    household's rent shall be increased above the rent the household would 
    otherwise pay by an amount equal to the difference between the market 
    rate rent for the unit and the rent the household would otherwise pay 
    multiplied by a fraction the denominator of which is the number of 
    people in the household and the numerator of which is the number of 
    ineligible persons in the household;
        (4) Proration under Section 236 Program with the benefit of 
    additional assistance. If the household participates in the Section 236 
    Program with the benefit of additional assistance under the rent 
    supplement, rental assistance payment or Section 8 programs, the 
    household's rent shall be increased above the rent the household would 
    otherwise pay by:
        (i) An amount equal to the difference between the market rate rent 
    for the unit and the basic rent for the unit multiplied by a fraction, 
    the denominator of which is the number of people in the household, and 
    the numerator of which is the number of ineligible persons in the 
    household, plus;
        (ii) An amount equal to the rent supplement, housing assistance 
    payment or rental assistance payment the household would otherwise be 
    entitled to multiplied by a fraction, the denominator of which is the 
    number of people in the household and the numerator of which is the 
    number of ineligible persons in the household.
    
    
    Sec. 200.189  Prohibition of assistance to noncitizen students.
    
        (a) General. The provisions of Secs. 200.187 and 200.188, 
    permitting continued assistance, prorated assistance or temporary 
    deferral of termination of assistance for certain families, do not 
    apply to any person who is determined to be a noncitizen student, as 
    defined in paragraph (b) of this section, or the family of the 
    noncitizen student, as described in paragraph (c) of this section.
        (b) Noncitizen student. For purposes of this part, a noncitizen 
    student is defined as a noncitizen who:
        (1) Has a residence in a foreign country that the person has no 
    intention of abandoning;
        (2) Is a bona fide student qualified to pursue a full course of 
    study; and
        (3) Is admitted to the United States temporarily and solely for 
    purposes of pursuing such a course of study at an established 
    institution of learning or other recognized place of study in the 
    United States, particularly designated by such person and approved by 
    the Attorney General after consultation with the Department of 
    Education of the United States, which institution or place of study 
    shall have agreed to report to the Attorney General the termination of 
    attendance of each nonimmigrant [[Page 14831]] student (and if any such 
    institution of learning or place of study fails to make such reports 
    promptly the approval shall be withdrawn).
        (c) Family of noncitizen student. The prohibition on providing 
    assistance to a noncitizen student as described in paragraph (a) of 
    this section also extends to the noncitizen spouse of the noncitizen 
    student and minor children of any noncitizen student if the spouse or 
    children are accompanying the student or following to join such 
    student. The prohibition on providing assistance to a noncitizen 
    student does not extend to the citizen spouse of the noncitizen student 
    and the children of the citizen spouse and noncitizen student.
    
    
    Sec. 200.190  Compliance with nondiscrimination requirements.
    
        The project owner shall administer the restrictions on use of 
    assisted housing by noncitizens with ineligible immigration status 
    imposed by this part in conformity with the nondiscrimination 
    requirements of, including, but not limited to, title VI of the Civil 
    Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d-2000d-5) and the implementing 
    regulations in 24 CFR part 1, section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 
    1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and the implementing regulations in 24 CFR part 8, 
    the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 3601-3619) and the implementing 
    regulations in 24 CFR part 100, and other civil rights statutes cited 
    in the applicable program regulations. These statutes prohibit, among 
    other things, discriminatory practices on the basis of race, color, 
    national origin, sex, religion, age, disability and familial status in 
    the provision of housing.
    
    
    Sec. 200.191  Protection from liability for project owners, State and 
    local government agencies and officials.
    
        (a) Protection from liability for project owners. HUD will not take 
    any compliance, disallowance, penalty, or other regulatory action 
    against a project owner with respect to any error in its determination 
    of eligibility for financial assistance based on citizenship or 
    immigration status:
        (1) If the project owner established eligibility based upon 
    verification of eligible immigration status through the verification 
    system described in Sec. 200.185.
        (2) Because the project owner was required to provide an 
    opportunity for the family to submit evidence in accordance with 
    Sec. 200.183;
        (3) Because the project owner was required to wait for completion 
    of INS verification of immigration status in accordance with 
    Sec. 200.185;
        (4) Because the project owner was required to wait for completion 
    of the INS appeal process provided in accordance with Sec. 200.186(e); 
    or
        (5) Because the project owner was required to provide an informal 
    hearing in accordance with Sec. 200.186(f).
        (b) Protection from liability for State and local government 
    agencies and officials. State and local government agencies and 
    officials shall not be liable for the design or implementation of the 
    verification system described in Sec. 200.185 and the informal hearings 
    provided under Sec. 200.186, as long as the implementation by the State 
    and local government agency or official is in accordance with 
    prescribed HUD rule and requirements.
    
    
    Sec. 200.192  Liability of ineligible tenants for reimbursement of 
    benefits.
    
        Where a tenant has received the benefit of HUD financial assistance 
    to which the tenant was not entitled because the tenant intentionally 
    misrepresented ``eligible status'' (as defined in Sec. 200.182), the 
    ineligible tenant is responsible for reimbursing HUD for the assistance 
    improperly paid. If the amount of the assistance is substantial, the 
    project owner is encouraged to refer the case to the HUD Regional 
    Inspector General's office for further investigation. Possible criminal 
    prosecution may follow based on the False Statements Act (18 U.S.C. 
    1001 and 1010).
    
    PART 215--RENT SUPPLEMENT PAYMENTS
    
        3. The authority citation for part 215 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701s; 42 U.S.C. 3535(d).
    
        4. In Sec. 215.20, paragraph (b)(2) is amended by adding a new 
    sentence at the end to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 215.20  Qualified tenant.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) * * * For restrictions on financial assistance to noncitizens 
    with ineligible immigration status, see part 200, subpart G, of this 
    chapter.
    * * * * *
        5. In Sec. 215.25, paragraph (a)(1) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 215.25  Determination of eligibility.
    
        (a)(1) The housing owner shall determine eligibility following 
    procedures prescribed by the Commissioner when processing applications 
    for admission and tenant applications for assistance. The requirements 
    of part 200, subpart G, of this chapter govern the submission and 
    verification of citizenship information and eligible immigration status 
    for applicants, and the procedures for denial or proration of 
    assistance based upon a failure to establish eligible immigration 
    status.
    * * * * *
        6. A new Sec. 215.26 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 215.26  Determination of eligible immigration status of applicants 
    and tenants; protection from liability.
    
        (a) Housing owner's obligation to make determination. A housing 
    owner shall obtain and verify information regarding the citizenship or 
    immigration status of applicants and tenants in accordance with the 
    procedures of part 200, subpart G, this chapter.
        (b) Protection from liability. HUD will not take any compliance, 
    disallowance, penalty or other regulatory action against a housing 
    owner with respect to any error in its determination that an individual 
    is eligible for financial assistance based upon citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status, as provided in Sec. 200.189 of this chapter.
        7. Section 215.55 is amended by adding two sentences at the end of 
    paragraph (a), by adding one sentence at the end of paragraph (b), and 
    by adding two sentences at the end of paragraph (c), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 215.55  Reexamination of family income and composition.
    
        (a) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the owner shall follow the requirements of part 200, subpart G, of this 
    chapter concerning obtaining and processing information on the 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status of all family members. 
    Thereafter, at each regular reexamination, the owner shall follow the 
    requirements of part 200, subpart G, of this chapter, concerning 
    obtaining and processing information on the citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of any new family member.
        (b) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when a 
    new family member has been added, the owner shall follow the 
    requirements of part 200, subpart G, of this chapter, concerning 
    obtaining and processing information on the citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of the new family member.
        (c) * * * Assistance also may be terminated in accordance with any 
    requirements of the lease or with HUD requirements. The procedures of 
    part 200, subpart G, of this chapter, apply when termination is based 
    upon a determination that the tenant does not have eligible immigration 
    status. [[Page 14832]] 
    
    PART 235--MORTGAGE INSURANCE AND ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS FOR HOME 
    OWNERSHIP AND PROJECT REHABILITATION
    
        8. The authority citation for part 235 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1715b and 1715z; 42 U.S.C. 3535(d).
    
        9. Section 235.2 is amended by adding a new paragraph (f) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 235.2  Basic program outline.
    
    * * * * *
        (f) Evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status shall be 
    submitted by the applicant or mortgagor and verified in accordance with 
    part 200, subpart G of this chapter and Sec. 235.13.
        10. Section 235.10 is amended by adding a new paragraph (c)(2)(iii) 
    and by adding a sentence at the end of paragraph (e), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 235.10  Eligible mortgagors.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (2) * **
        (iii) A new member is added to the family in which case evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status also shall be submitted, in 
    accordance with part 200, subpart G, of this chapter.
    * * * * *
        (e) * * * Eligibility for assistance under this subpart also 
    requires citizenship or eligible immigration status, as determined in 
    accordance with part 200, subpart G, of this chapter, except that 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status shall not be required of a 
    mortgagor whose assistance contract was executed before June 19, 1995 
    and remains unchanged after that date. (See Sec. 235.13(c).)
    * * * * *
        11. A new Sec. 235.13 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 235.13  Special requirements concerning citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status.
    
        (a) General. Except as may be supplemented by the provisions of 
    this section, the requirements of 24 CFR part 200, subpart G, 
    concerning restrictions on the use of assisted housing by noncitizens 
    with ineligible immigration status are applicable to mortgagees and 
    mortgagors covered by the Section 235 Program with the exception of 
    mortgagors:
        (1) Whose assistance contracts were executed before June 19, 1995 
    and remain unchanged after that date; or
        (2) Who refinance their Section 235 mortgages, which were executed 
    before June 19, 1995 and whose assistance contracts were unchanged 
    after that date, with mortgages insured under section 235(r) of the 
    National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1715z).
        (b) Notification of requirements to submit evidence of eligible 
    status--(1) Notice to applicants. A mortgagee shall notify applicants, 
    including applicants whose names are on a waiting list on June 19, 
    1995, that financial assistance is contingent upon the submission and 
    verification, as appropriate, of evidence of eligible citizenship and 
    immigration status as required under 24 CFR part 200, subpart G.
        (2) Notice to mortgagors. A mortgagee also shall notify mortgagors 
    (except Section 235(r) mortgagors) whose contracts are executed after 
    June 19, 1995 that continued financial assistance is contingent upon 
    the submission and verification, as appropriate, of the evidence of 
    eligible status required in 24 CFR part 200, subpart G. This notice 
    requirement also shall apply to mortgagors whose contracts are revised, 
    at the request of the mortgagor, after June 19, 1995.
        (c) Submission of evidence of eligible status--(1) When evidence of 
    eligible immigration status is to be submitted. A mortgagee shall 
    obtain evidence concerning an applicant or mortgagor's citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status, as required by 24 CFR part 200, subpart G, 
    at the following times:
        (i) Application for assistance; and
        (ii) The first recertification of family income and composition 
    conducted after June 19, 1995, in accordance with Sec. 235.10 or 
    Sec. 235.350. The requirements of this section are not applicable to 
    mortgagors whose assistance contracts were executed before June 19, 
    1995 and remain unchanged after that date, or to mortgagors who 
    refinance their section 235 mortgages, which were executed before June 
    19, 1995 and whose assistance contracts remain unchanged after such 
    date, with mortgages insured under section 235(r) of the National 
    Housing Act.
        (2) Extensions of time to submit evidence of eligible status. The 
    provisions of Sec. 200.183(e) of this chapter, concerning extension of 
    time within which to submit evidence of eligible status are applicable.
        (d) Certification by mortgagee--(1) General. The mortgagee shall 
    verify the evidence submitted in the case of an applicant or mortgagor 
    declaring eligible immigration status, in accordance with the 
    requirements of part 200, subpart G, of this chapter, and certify to 
    the Secretary that the required information concerning citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status has been submitted and verified (if 
    applicable) for all persons for whom the evidence is required. If the 
    applicant or mortgagor's citizenship or eligible immigration status is 
    not established as a result of the process required under 24 CFR part 
    200, subpart G, the mortgagee shall notify the applicant or mortgagor 
    in accordance with the requirements of 24 CFR part 200, subpart G 
    concerning notification of the possibility of denial or termination of 
    assistance, and, if applicable, of additional assistance that may be 
    available to the applicant or mortgagor.
        (2) Invalid certification. (i) If the mortgagee has certified to 
    the Secretary in accordance with paragraph (d)(1) of this section that 
    the required information concerning citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status has been submitted and verified (if applicable), and the 
    Secretary subsequently determines that the procedures required by this 
    section and 24 CFR part 200, subpart G, were not followed, the 
    following actions will be taken:
        (A) The mortgagee will be required to repay to the Secretary the 
    full amount of assistance payments made on behalf of the mortgagor 
    under this part; and
        (B) No additional assistance payments may be made on behalf of the 
    mortgagor.
        (ii) The Secretary may permit the resumption of assistance payments 
    if all persons residing in the dwelling whose status was not determined 
    to be eligible have moved from the dwelling unit, or their status has 
    been determined to be eligible, in accordance with 24 CFR part 200, 
    subpart G.
        (iii) If the mortgagee has certified to the Secretary in accordance 
    with paragraph (c)(1) of this section that the required information 
    concerning citizenship or eligible immigration status has been 
    submitted and verified (if applicable), and the Secretary subsequently 
    determines that the mortgagor's eligible status determination was based 
    on fraudulent documents, or was otherwise defective, although the 
    determination was made in accordance with required procedures, the 
    following actions will be taken:
        (A) The mortgagor will be required to repay to the Secretary the 
    full amount of assistance payments made on behalf of the mortgagor 
    under this part; and
        (B) No additional assistance payments may be made on behalf of the 
    mortgagor.
        (iv) The Secretary's right to repayment from the mortgagor under 
    paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section shall not affect or limit the 
    Secretary's right to refund of overpaid assistance payments from the 
    mortgagee as provided in Sec. 235.361(b).
        (e) Mortgage insurance commitments. Commitments to insure mortgages 
    under this part will not be issued or extended [[Page 14833]] unless 
    the mortgagee has made the certification required under paragraph (d) 
    of this section.
        (f) Other related provisions. See Sec. 235.10 for eligibility 
    requirements, specifically citizenship and eligible immigration status; 
    Sec. 235.350 for the mortgagor's required recertification, including 
    provision of information concerning eligible immigration status; and 
    generally part 200, subpart G, of this chapter, for the provisions on 
    restrictions to providing assistance to noncitizens with ineligible 
    immigration status.
        12. In Sec. 235,325, a new paragraph (c) is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 235.325  Qualified cooperative members.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Eligibility as a cooperative member under this subpart also 
    requires eligible status with respect to citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status determined in accordance with 24 CFR part 200, 
    subpart G. (See Sec. 235,13.)
        13. Section 235.350 is amended by adding a new paragraph 
    (a)(2)(iii) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 235.350  Mortgagor's required recertification.
    
        (a) * * *
        (2) * * *
        (iii) A new member is added to the family who is not born in the 
    United States (except for a mortgagor described in 235.13(a) (1) or 
    (2)).
    * * * * *
        14. In Sec. 235.375, a new paragraph (b)(6) is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 235.375  Termination, suspension, or reinstatement of the 
    assistance payments contract.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (6) Failure to provide evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status in accordance with 24 CFR part 200, subpart G:
        (i) For a new member of the family, other than a child born in the 
    United States, except with respect to a mortgagor described under 
    Sec. 235.13(a) (1) and (2);
        (ii) At the first recertification of an assistance contract, except 
    with respect to a mortgagor described in Sec. 235.13(a)(1) and (2); or
        (iii) Upon modification of an existing assistance contract
    * * * * *
    
    PART 236--MORTGAGE INSURANCE AND INTEREST REDUCTION PAYMENTS FOR 
    RENTAL PROJECTS
    
        15. The authority citation for part 236 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1715b and 1715z-1; 42 U.S.C. 3535(d).
    
        16. Section 236.2 is amended by:
        1. Amending the definition of ``Adjusted income'' by redesignating 
    paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (d) introductory text, (d)(1), (d)(2), 
    (d)(3), and (e), as paragraphs (1), (2), (3), (4) introductory text, 
    (4)(i), (4)(ii), (4)(iii), and (5), respectively, and by removing the 
    cross-reference in newly designated paragraph (4)(ii) that reads 
    ``paragraph (c) of this section'' and adding in its place ``paragraph 
    (3) of this definition'';
        2. Amending the definition of ``Handicapped Person'' by 
    redesignating paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) to read paragraphs (1), (2), 
    and (3), respectively;
        3. Amending the definition of ``Live-in aide'' by redesignating 
    paragraphs (a), (b), and (c), to read paragraphs (1), (2), and (3), 
    respectively; and
        4. Amending the definition of ``Qualified Tenant'' by redesignating 
    paragraphs (a) and (b) as paragraphs (1) and (2) respectively, and by 
    adding a new paragraph (3), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 236.2  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
    
    Qualified Tenant
    
    * * * * *
        (3) For restrictions on financial assistance to noncitizens with 
    ineligible immigration status, see 24 CFR part 200, subpart G.
    * * * * *
        17. In Sec. 236.70, paragraph (a)(1) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 236.70  Occupancy requirements.
    
        (a)(1) The housing owner shall determine eligibility following 
    procedures prescribed by the Commissioner when processing applications 
    for admission. The requirements of 24 CFR part 200, subpart G, govern 
    the submission and verification of information related to citizenship 
    and eligible immigration status for those applicants who seek admission 
    at a below market rent.
    * * * * *
        18. Section 236.80 is amended by adding two sentences at the end of 
    paragraph (a), by adding one sentence at the end of paragraph (b), and 
    by adding three sentences at the end of paragraph (c), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 236.80  Reexamination of income.
    
        (a) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 200, subpart G, 
    concerning obtaining and processing information on the citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each 
    regular reexamination, the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 
    CFR part 200, subpart G, concerning obtaining and processing 
    information on the citizenship or eligible immigration status of any 
    new family member.
        (b) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when 
    there is a new family member, the owner shall follow the requirements 
    of 24 CFR part 200, subpart G, concerning obtaining and processing 
    information on the citizenship or eligible immigration status of any 
    new family member.
        (c) * * * Assistance also may be terminated in accordance with any 
    requirements of the lease with HUD requirements. When termination is 
    based upon a determination that the tenant does not have eligible 
    immigration status, the procedures of 24 CFR part 200, subpart G, 
    apply. The procedures include the provision of assistance to certain 
    mixed families (families whose members include those with eligible 
    immigration status, and those without eligible immigration status) in 
    lieu of termination.
        19. Section 236.710 is amended by adding a new sentence at the end 
    of this section to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 236.710  Qualified tenant.
    
        * * * For restrictions on financial assistance to noncitizens with 
    ineligible immigration status, see 24 CFR part 200, subpart G.
        20. In Sec. 236.715, paragraph (a) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 236.715  Determination of eligibility.
    
        (a) The housing owner shall determine eligibility following 
    procedures prescribed by the Commissioner when processing applications 
    for admission and tenant applications for assistance. The requirements 
    of 24 CFR part 200, subpart G, govern the submission and verification 
    of information related to citizenship and eligible immigration status 
    for applicants, and the procedures for denial of assistance based upon 
    a failure to establish eligible immigration status.
    * * * * *
        21. A new Sec. 236.765 is added to subpart D to read as follows:
    Sec. 236.765  Determination of eligible immigration status of 
    applicants and tenants; protection from liability.
    
        (a) Housing owner's obligation to make determination. A housing 
    owner shall obtain and verify information regarding the citizenship or 
    immigration status of applicants and tenants in accordance with the 
    procedures of 24 CFR part 200, subpart G. [[Page 14834]] 
        (b) Protection from liability. HUD will not take any compliance, 
    disallowance, penalty or other regulatory action against a housing 
    owner with respect to any error in its determination to make an 
    individual eligible for financial assistance based upon citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status, as provided in 24 CFR part 200, subpart G.
    
    PART 247--EVICTIONS FROM CERTAIN SUBSIDIZED AND HUD-OWNED PROJECTS
    
        22. The authority citation for part 247 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1701q, 1701s, 1715b, 1715l, and 1715z-1; 42 
    U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f, and 3535(d).
    
        23. In Sec. 247.3, paragraph (c)(3) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 247.3  Entitlement of tenants to occupancy.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (3) Failure of the tenant to supply on time all required 
    information on the income and composition, or eligibility factors, of 
    the tenant household (including, but not limited to, failure to submit 
    required evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status, in 
    accordance with 24 CFR part 200, subpart G, failure to meet the 
    disclosure and verification requirements for Social Security Numbers, 
    as provided by 24 CFR part 200, subpart T, or 24 CFR part 750 ( as 
    appropriate), or failure to sign and submit consent forms for the 
    obtaining of wage and claim information from State Wage Information 
    Collection Agencies, as provided by 24 CFR part 200, subpart V, or 24 
    CFR part 760 (as appropriate), or to knowingly provide incomplete or 
    inaccurate information; and
    * * * * *
    
    PART 812--DEFINITION OF FAMILY AND OTHER RELATED TERMS; OCCUPANCY 
    BY SINGLE PERSONS
    
        24. The authority citation for part 812 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1436a, 1437a, and 3535(d).
    
        25. In Sec. 812.1, paragraph (a) is amended by removing the word 
    ``and'' following the semicolon in paragraph (a)(1); by removing the 
    period at the end of paragraph (a)(2) and replacing with ``and''; and 
    by adding a new paragraph (a)(3), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 812.1  Purpose and applicability.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) Implements the statutory prohibition against making assistance 
    under the United States Housing Act of 1937 (``Act'') (42 U.S.C. 1437) 
    available for the benefit of noncitizens with ineligible immigration 
    status.
    * * * * *
        26. Section 812.2 is amended by adding definitions in alphabetical 
    order for the terms ``Child,'' ``Citizen,'' ``Evidence of citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status,'' ``HA,'' ``Head of household,'' 
    ``HUD,'' ``INS,'' ``Mixed family,'' ``National,'' ``Noncitizen,'' and 
    ``Responsible entity,'' ``Section 214'' and ``Section 214 covered 
    programs'' to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 812.2  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Child. A member of the family, other than the family head or 
    spouse, who is under 18 years of age.
        Citizen. A citizen or national of the United States.
    * * * * *
        Evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status. The 
    documents which must be submitted to evidence citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status. (See Sec. 812.6(b).)
    * * * * *
        HA. A housing authority--either a public housing agency or an 
    Indian housing authority, or both.
    * * * * *
        Head of household. The adult member of the family who is the head 
    of the household for purposes of determining income eligibility and 
    rent.
        HUD. The Department of Housing and Urban Development.
        INS. The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.
    * * * * *
        Mixed family. A family whose members include those with citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status, and those without citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status.
        National. A person who owes permanent allegiance to the United 
    States, for example, as a result of birth in a United States territory 
    or possession.
        Noncitizen. A person who is neither a citizen nor national of the 
    United States.
        Responsible entity. The person or entity responsible for 
    administering the restrictions on providing assistance to noncitizens 
    with ineligible immigration status:
        (1) For the Section 8 Certificate, the Section 8 Housing Voucher, 
    and the Section 8 Moderate Rehabilitation programs, the housing 
    authority (HA) administering the program under an ACC with HUD.
        (2) For all other Section 8 programs, the owner.
        Section 214. Section 214 of the Housing and Community Development 
    Act of 1980, as amended (42 U.S.C. 1436a). Section 214 restricts HUD 
    from making financial assistance available for noncitizens unless they 
    meet one of the categories of eligible immigration status specified in 
    Section 214.
        Section 214 covered programs. Programs to which the restrictions 
    imposed by Section 214 apply are programs that make available financial 
    assistance pursuant to the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 
    1437-1440), Section 235 or Section 236 of the National Housing Act (12 
    U.S.C. 1715z and 1715z-1) and Section 101 of the Housing and Urban 
    Development Act of 1965 (12 U.S.C. 1701s).
    * * * * *
        27. Part 812 is amended by redesignating Secs. 812.1 through 812.4 
    as subpart A, and by adding the subpart heading to read, ``Subpart A--
    General,'' and by adding a new subpart B, consisting of Secs. 812.5 
    through 812.15, to read as follows:
    
    Subpart B--Restrictions on Assistance to Noncitizens
    
    Sec.
    812.5  General.
    812.5a  Requirements concerning documents.
    812.6  Submission of evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status.
    812.7  Documents of eligible immigration status.
    812.8  Verification of eligible immigration status.
    812.9  Delay, denial or termination of assistance.
    812.10  Preservation of mixed families and other families.
    812.11  Proration of assistance.
    812.12  Prohibition of assistance to noncitizen students.
    812.13  Compliance with nondiscrimination requirements.
    812.14  Protection from liability for responsible entities, State, 
    local, and tribal government agencies and officials.
    812.15  Liability of ineligible families for reimbursement of 
    benefits.
    
    Subpart B--Restrictions on Assistance to Noncitizens
    
    
    Sec. 812.5  General.
    
        (a) Restrictions on assistance. Assistance provided under a Section 
    214 covered program is restricted to:
        (1) Citizens; or
        (2) Noncitizens who have eligible immigration status in one of the 
    following categories:
        (i) A noncitizen lawfully admitted for permanent residence, as 
    defined by section 101(a)(20) of the Immigration and Nationality Act 
    (INA), as an immigrant, as defined by section 101(a)(15) of the INA (8 
    U.S.C. [[Page 14835]] 1101(a)(20) and 1101(a)(15), respectively 
    (immigrants). (This category includes a noncitizen admitted under 
    section 210 or 210A of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1160 or 1161), (special 
    agricultural worker), who has been granted lawful temporary resident 
    status);
        (ii) A noncitizen who entered the United States before January 1, 
    1972, or such later date as enacted by law, and has continuously 
    maintained residence in the United States since then, and who is not 
    ineligible for citizenship, but who is deemed to be lawfully admitted 
    for permanent residence as a result of an exercise of discretion by the 
    Attorney General under section 249 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1259);
        (iii) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States 
    pursuant to an admission under section 207 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1157) 
    (refugee status); pursuant to the granting of asylum (which has not 
    been terminated) under section 208 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1158) (asylum 
    status); or as a result of being granted conditional entry under 
    section 203(a)(7) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1153(a)(7)) before April 1, 
    1980, because of persecution or fear of persecution on account of race, 
    religion, or political opinion or because of being uprooted by 
    catastrophic national calamity;
        (iv) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States as a 
    result of an exercise of discretion by the Attorney General for 
    emergent reasons or reasons deemed strictly in the public interest 
    under section 212(d)(5) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)) (parole 
    status);
        (v) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States as a 
    result of the Attorney General's withholding deportation under section 
    243(h) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1253(h)) (threat to life or freedom); or
        (vi) A noncitizen lawfully admitted for temporary or permanent 
    residence under section 245A of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1255a) (amnesty 
    granted under INA 245A).
        (b) Family eligibility for assistance. (1) A family shall not be 
    eligible for assistance unless every member of the family residing in 
    the unit is determined to have eligible status, as described in 
    paragraph (a) of this section;
        (2) Despite the ineligibility of one or more family members, a 
    mixed family may be eligible for one of the three types of assistance 
    provided in Sec. 812.10. A family without any eligible members and 
    receiving assistance on June 19, 1995 may be eligible for temporary 
    deferral of termination of assistance as provided in Sec. 812.10.
    
    
    Sec. 812.5a. Requirements concerning documents.
    
        For any notice or document (decision, declaration, consent form, 
    etc.) that Secs. 812.5 through 812.15 require a responsible entity to 
    provide to an individual, or require that the responsible entity obtain 
    the signature of the individual, the responsible entity, where 
    feasible, must arrange for the notice or document to be provided to the 
    individual in a language that is understood by the individual if the 
    individual is not proficient in English. (See 24 CFR 8.6 of HUD's 
    regulations for requirements concerning communications with persons 
    with disabilities.)
    
    
    Sec. 812.6  Submission of evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status.
    
        (a) General. Eligibility for assistance or continued assistance 
    under a Section 214 covered program is contingent upon a family's 
    submission to the responsible entity of the documents described in 
    paragraph (b) of this section for each family member. If one or more 
    family members do not have citizenship or eligible immigration status, 
    the family members may exercise the election not to contend to have 
    eligible immigration status as provided in paragraph (e) of this 
    section, and the provisions of Sec. 812.10 shall apply.
        (b) Evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status. Each 
    family member, regardless of age, must submit the following evidence to 
    the responsible entity:
        (1) For citizens, the evidence consists of a signed declaration of 
    U.S. citizenship;
        (2) For noncitizens who are 62 years of age or older or who will be 
    62 years of age or older and receiving assistance under a Section 214 
    covered program on June 19, 1995, the evidence consists of:
        (i) A signed declaration of eligible immigration status; and
        (ii) Proof of age document.
        (3) For all other noncitizens, the evidence consists of:
        (i) A signed declaration of eligible immigration status;
        (ii) The INS documents listed in Sec. 812.7; and
        (iii) A signed verification consent form.
        (c) Declaration. For each family member who contends that he or she 
    is a U.S. citizen or a noncitizen with eligible immigration status, the 
    family must submit to the responsible entity a written declaration, 
    signed under penalty of perjury, by which the family member declares 
    whether he or she is a U.S. citizen or a noncitizen with eligible 
    immigration status.
        (1) For each adult, the declaration must be signed by the adult.
        (2) For each child, the declaration must be signed by an adult 
    residing in the assisted dwelling unit who is responsible for the 
    child.
        (d) Verification consent form--(1) Who signs. Each noncitizen who 
    declares eligible immigration status, must sign a verification consent 
    form as follows:
        (i) For each adult, the form must be signed by the adult.
        (ii) For each child, the form must be signed by an adult member of 
    the family residing in the assisted dwelling unit who is responsible 
    for the child.
        (2) Notice of release of evidence by responsible entity. The 
    verification consent form shall provide that evidence of eligible 
    immigration status may be released by the responsible entity, without 
    responsibility for the further use or transmission of the evidence by 
    the entity receiving it, to:
        (i) HUD as required by HUD; and
        (ii) The INS for purposes of verification of the immigration status 
    of the individual.
        (3) Notice of release of evidence by HUD. The verification consent 
    form also shall notify the individual of the possible release of 
    evidence of eligible immigration status by HUD. Evidence of eligible 
    immigration status shall only be released to the INS for purposes of 
    establishing eligibility for financial assistance and not for any other 
    purpose. HUD is not responsible for the further use or transmission of 
    the evidence or other information by the INS.
        (e) Individuals who do not contend to have eligible immigration 
    status.--If one or more members of a family elect not to contend that 
    they have eligible immigration status and the other members of the 
    family establish their citizenship or eligible immigration status, the 
    family may be considered for assistance under Secs. 812.10 or 812.11 
    despite the fact that no declaration or documentation of eligible 
    status is submitted by one or more members of the family. The family, 
    however, must identify to the responsible entity, the family member (or 
    members) who will elect not to contend that he or she has eligible 
    immigration status.
        (f) Notification of requirements of Section 214--(1) When notice is 
    to be issued. Notification of the requirement to submit evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, as required by this 
    section, or to elect not to contend that one has eligible immigration 
    status as provided by paragraph (e) of this section, shall be 
    [[Page 14836]] given by the responsible entity as follows:
        (i) Applicant's notice. The notification described in paragraph 
    (f)(1) of this section shall be given to each applicant at the time of 
    application for financial assistance. Families whose applications are 
    pending on June 19, 1995, shall be notified of the requirements to 
    submit evidence of eligible status as soon as possible after June 19, 
    1995.
        (ii) Notice to families already receiving assistance. For a family 
    in occupancy on June 19, 1995, the notification described in paragraph 
    (f)(1) of this section shall be given to each at the time of, and 
    together with, the responsible entity's notice of the first regular 
    reexamination after that date, but not later than one year following 
    June 19, 1995.
        (2) Form and content of notice. The notice shall:
        (i) State that financial assistance is contingent upon the 
    submission and verification, as appropriate, of the evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, as required by this 
    section;
        (ii) Describe the type of evidence that must be submitted and state 
    the time period in which that evidence must be submitted (see paragraph 
    (g) of this section concerning when evidence must be submitted); and
        (iii) State that assistance will be prorated, denied or terminated, 
    as appropriate, upon a final determination of ineligibility after all 
    appeals have been exhausted (see Sec. 812.9 concerning INS appeal, and 
    informal hearing process) or, if appeals are not pursued, at a time to 
    be specified in accordance with HUD requirements. Families already 
    receiving assistance also shall be informed of how to obtain assistance 
    under the preservation of families provisions of Sec. 812.10.
        (g) When evidence of eligible status is required to be submitted.--
    The responsible entity shall require evidence of eligible status to be 
    submitted at the times specified in paragraph (g) of this section, 
    subject to any extension granted in accordance with paragraph (h) of 
    this section.
        (1) Applicants. For applicants, the responsible entity must ensure 
    that evidence of eligible status is submitted not later than the date 
    the responsible entity anticipates or has knowledge that verification 
    of other aspects of eligibility for assistance will occur (see 
    Sec. 812.8(a)).
        (2) Families already receiving assistance. For a family already 
    receiving the benefit of assistance in a covered program on June 19, 
    1995, the required evidence shall be submitted at the first regular 
    reexamination after June 19, 1995, in accordance with program 
    requirements. (See Secs. 850.151, 880.603, 881.603, 882.212, 882.515, 
    883.704, 884.124, 886.124, 886.324, or 887.357 of this chapter.)
        (3) New occupants of assisted units. For any new family members, 
    the required evidence shall be submitted at the first interim or 
    regular reexamination following the person's occupancy.
        (4) Changing participation in a HUD program. Whenever a family 
    applies for admission to a Section 214 covered program, evidence of 
    eligible status is required to be submitted in accordance with the 
    requirements of this part unless the family already has submitted the 
    evidence to the responsible entity for a covered program.
        (5) One-time evidence requirement for continuous occupancy. For 
    each family member, the family is required to submit evidence of 
    eligible status only one time during continuously assisted occupancy 
    under any covered program.
        (h) Extensions of time to submit evidence of eligible status--(1) 
    When extension must be granted. The responsible entity shall extend the 
    time provided in paragraph (g) of this section, to submit evidence of 
    eligible immigration status if the family member:
        (i) Submits the declaration required under Sec. 812.6(b) certifying 
    that any person for whom required evidence has not been submitted is a 
    noncitizen when eligible immigration status; and
        (ii) Certifies that the evidence needed to support a claim of 
    eligible immigration status is temporarily unavailable, additional time 
    is needed to obtain and submit the evidence, and prompt and diligent 
    efforts will be undertaken to obtain the evidence.
        (2) Prohibition on indefinite extension period. Any extension of 
    time, if granted, shall be for a specific period of time. The 
    additional time provided should be sufficient to allow the family the 
    time to obtain the evidence needed. The responsible entity's 
    determination of the length of the extension needed shall be based on 
    the circumstances of the individual case.
        (3) Grant or denial of extension to be in writing. The responsible 
    entity's decision to grant or deny an extension as provided in 
    paragraph (h)(1) of this section shall be issued to the family by 
    written notice. If the extension is granted, the notice shall specify 
    the extension period granted. If the extension is denied, the notice 
    shall explain the reasons for denial of the extension.
        (i) Failure to submit evidence or establish eligible immigration 
    status. If the family fails to submit required evidence of eligible 
    immigration status within the time period specified in the notice, or 
    any extension granted in accordance with paragraph (h) of this section, 
    or if the evidence is timely submitted but fails to establish eligible 
    immigration status, the responsible entity shall proceed to deny, 
    prorate or terminate assistance, or provide continued assistance or 
    temporary deferral of termination of assistance, as appropriate, in 
    accordance with the provisions of Secs. 812.9 and 812.10 respectively. 
    For all Section 8 programs, denial or termination of assistance shall 
    be in accordance with the procedures of Sec. 812.9.
    
    
    Sec. 812.7  Documents of eligible immigration status.
    
        (a) General. A responsible entity shall request and review original 
    documents of eligible immigration status. The responsible entity shall 
    retain photocopies of the documents for its own records and return the 
    original documents to the family.
        (b) Acceptance evidence of eligible immigration status. The 
    original of one of the following documents is acceptable evidence of 
    eligible immigration status, subject to verification in accordance with 
    Sec. 812.8.
        (1) Form I-551, Alien Registration Receipt Card (for permanent 
    resident aliens);
        (2) Form I-94, Arrival-Departure Record, with one of the following 
    annotations:
        (i) ``Admitted as Refugee Pursuant to Section 207'';
        (ii) ``Section 208'' or ``Asylum'';
        (iii) ``Section 243(h)'' or ``Deportation stayed by Attorney 
    General'';
        (iv) ``Paroled Pursuant to Sec. 212(d)(5) of the INA'';
        (3) If Form I-94, Arrival-Departure Record, is not annotated, then 
    accompanied by one of the following documents:
        (i) A final court decision granting asylum (but only if no appeal 
    is taken);
        (ii) A letter from an INS asylum officer granting asylum (if 
    application is filed on or after October 1, 1990) or from an INS 
    district director granting asylum (if application filed before October 
    1, 1990);
        (iii) A court decision granting withholding or deportation; or
        (iv) A letter from an asylum officer granting withholding of 
    deportation (if application filed on or after October 1, 1990).
        (4) Form I-688, Temporary Resident Card, which must be annotated 
    ``Section 245A'' or ``Section 210'';
        (5) Form I-688B, Employment Authorization Card, which must be 
    [[Page 14837]] annotated ``Provision of Law 274a.12(11)'' or 
    ``Provision of Law 274a.12'';
        (6) A receipt issued by the INS indicating that an application for 
    issuance of a replacement document in one of the above-listed 
    categories has been made and the applicant's entitlement to the 
    document has been verified; or
        (c) Other acceptable evidence. If other documents are determined by 
    the INS to constitute acceptable evidence of eligible immigration 
    status, they will be announced by notice published in the Federal 
    Register.
    
    
    Sec. 812.8  Verification of eligible immigration status.
    
        (a) When verification is to occur. Verification of eligible 
    immigration status shall be conducted by the responsible entity 
    simultaneously with verification of other aspects of eligibility for 
    assistance under a 214 covered program. (See Sec. 812.6(g).) The 
    responsible entity shall verify eligible immigration status in 
    accordance with the INS procedures described in this section.
        (b) Primary verification--(1) Automated verification system. 
    Primary verification of the immigration status of the person is 
    conducted by the responsible entity through the INS automated system 
    (INS Systematic for Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE)). The 
    INS SAVE system provides access to names, file numbers and admission 
    numbers of noncitizens.
        (2) Failure of primary verification to confirm eligible immigration 
    status. If the INS SAVE system does not verify eligible immigration 
    status, secondary verification must be performed.
        (c) Secondary verification--(1) Manual search of INS records. 
    Secondary verification is a manual search by the INS of its records to 
    determine an individual's immigration status. The responsible entity 
    must request secondary verification, within 10 days of receiving the 
    results of the primary verification, if the primary verification system 
    does not confirm eligible immigration status, or if the primary 
    verification system verifies immigration status that is ineligible for 
    assistance under a covered Section 214 covered program.
        (2) Secondary verification initiated by responsible entity. 
    Secondary verification is initiated by the responsible entity 
    forwarding photocopies of the original INS documents listed in 
    Sec. 812.7 (front and back), attached to the INS document verification 
    request form G-845S (Document Verification Request), or such other form 
    specified by the INS, to a designated INS office for review. (Form G-
    845S is available from the local INS Office.)
        (3) Failure of secondary verification to confirm eligible 
    immigration status. If the secondary verification does not confirm 
    eligible immigration status, the responsible entity shall issue to the 
    family the notice described in Sec. 812.9(d), which includes 
    notification of appeal to the INS of the INS finding on immigration 
    status (see Sec. 812.9(d)(4)).
        (d) Exemption from liability for INS verification. The responsible 
    entity shall not be liable for any action, delay, or failure of the INS 
    in conducting the automated or manual verification.
    
    
    Sec. 812.9  Delay, denial, or termination of assistance.
    
        (a) General. Assistance to a family may not be delayed, denied, or 
    terminated because of the immigration status of a family member except 
    as provided in this section.
        (b) Restriction on delay, denial, or termination of assistance--(1) 
    General. Assistance to an applicant shall not be delayed or denied, and 
    assistance to a tenant shall not be delayed, denied, or terminated, on 
    the basis of ineligible immigration status of a family member if:
        (i) The primary and secondary verification of any immigration 
    documents that were timely submitted has not been completed;
        (ii) The family member for whom required evidence has not been 
    submitted has moved from the tenant's dwelling unit;
        (iii) The family member who is determined not to be in an eligible 
    immigration status following INS verification has moved from the 
    tenant's dwelling unit;
        (iv) The INS appeals process under Sec. 812.9(e) has not been 
    concluded;
        (v) For a tenant, the informal hearing process under Sec. 812.9(f) 
    has not been concluded;
        (vi) Assistance is prorated in accordance with Sec. 812.11;
        (vii) Assistance for a mixed family is continued in accordance with 
    Sec. 812.10; or
        (viii) Deferral of termination of assistance is granted in 
    accordance with Sec. 812.10.
        (2) When delay in assistance to an applicant is permissible. 
    Assistance to an applicant may be delayed after the conclusion of the 
    INS appeal process, but not denied until the conclusion of the 
    responsible entity informal hearing process, if an informal hearing is 
    requested by the family.
        (c) Events causing denial or termination of assistance--Assistance 
    to an applicant shall be denied, and a tenant's assistance shall be 
    terminated, in accordance with the procedures of this section, upon the 
    occurrence of any of the following events:
        (1) Evidence of citizenship (i.e., the declaration) and eligible 
    immigration status is not submitted by the date specified in 
    Sec. 812.6(g) or by the expiration of any extension granted in 
    accordance with Sec. 812.6(h); or
        (2) Evidence of citizenship and eligible immigration status is 
    timely submitted, but INS primary and second verification does not 
    verify eligible immigration status of a family member; and
        (i) The family does not pursue INS appeal or informal hearing 
    rights as provided in this section; or
        (ii) INS appeal and informal hearing rights are pursued, but the 
    final appeal or hearing decisions are decided against the family 
    member.
        (d) Notice of denial or termination of assistance--The notice of 
    denial or termination of assistance shall advise the family:
        (1) That financial assistance will be denied or terminated, and 
    provide a brief explanation of the reasons for the proposed denial or 
    termination of assistance;
        (2) That the family may be eligible for proration of assistance as 
    provided under Sec. 812.11;
        (3) In the case of a tenant, the criteria and procedures for 
    obtaining relief under the preservation of families provision in 
    Sec. 812.10;
        (4) That the family has a right to request an appeal to the INS of 
    the results of secondary verification of immigration status and to 
    submit additional documentation or a written explanation in support of 
    the appeal in accordance with the procedures of paragraph (e) of this 
    section;
        (5) That the family has a right to request an informal hearing with 
    the responsible entity either upon completion of the INS appeal or in 
    lieu of the INS appeal as provided in paragraph (f) of this section;
        (6) For applicants, the notice shall advise that assistance may not 
    be delayed until the conclusion of the INS appeal process, but 
    assistance may be delayed during the pendency of the responsible entity 
    informal hearing process.
        (e) Appeal to the INS--(1) Submission of request for appeal. Upon 
    receipt of notification by the responsible entity that INS secondary 
    verification failed to confirm eligible immigration status, the 
    responsible entity shall notify the family [[Page 14838]] of the 
    results of the INS verification, and the family shall have 30 days from 
    the date of the responsible entity's notification to request an appeal 
    of the INS results. The request for appeal shall be made by the family 
    communicating that request in writing directly to the INS. The family 
    must provide the responsible entity with a copy of the written request 
    for appeal and proof of mailing. For good cause shown, the responsible 
    entity shall grant the family an extension of the time within which to 
    request an appeal.
        (2) Documentation to be submitted as part of the appeal to INS. The 
    family shall forward to the designated INS office any additional 
    documentation or written explanation in support of the appeal. This 
    material must include a copy of the INS document verification request 
    form G-845S (used to process the secondary verification request) or 
    such other form specified by the INS, and a cover letter indicating 
    that the family is requesting an appeal of the INS immigration status 
    verification results. (Form G-845S is available from the local INS 
    office.)
        (3) Decision by INS (i) When decision will be issued. The INS will 
    issue to the family, with a copy to the responsible entity, a decision 
    within 30 days of its receipt of documentation concerning the family's 
    appeal of the verification of immigration status. If, for any reason, 
    the INS is unable to issue a decision within the 30 day time period, 
    the INS will inform the family and the responsible entity of the 
    reasons for the delay.
        (ii) Notification of INS decision and of informal hearing 
    procedures. When the responsible entity receives a copy of the INS 
    decision, the responsible entity shall notify the family of its right 
    to request an informal hearing on the responsible entity's 
    ineligibility determination in accordance with the procedures of 
    paragraph (f) of this section.
        (4) No delay, denial or termination of assistance until completion 
    of INS appeal process; direct appeal to INS. Pending the completion of 
    the INS appeal under this section, assistance may not be delayed, 
    denied or terminated on the basis of immigration status.
        (f) Informal hearing--(1) When request for hearing is to be made. 
    After notification of the INS decision on appeal, or in lieu of request 
    of appeal to the INS, the family may request that the responsible 
    entity provide a hearing. This request must be made either within 14 
    days of the date the responsible entity mails or delivers the notice 
    under paragraph (d) of this section, or within 14 days of the mailing 
    of the INS appeal decision issued in accordance with paragraph (e) of 
    this section (established by the date of postmark).
        (2) Extension of time to request hearing. The responsible entity 
    shall extend the period of time for requesting a hearing (for a 
    specified period) upon good cause shown.
        (3) Informal hearing procedures. (i) For tenants, the procedures 
    for the hearing before the responsible entity are set forth in 24 CFR 
    part 966.
        (ii) For applicants, the procedures for the informal hearing before 
    the responsible entity are as follows:
        (A) Hearing before an impartial individual. The applicant shall be 
    provided a hearing before any person(s) designated by the responsible 
    entity (including an officer or employee of the responsible entity), 
    other than a person who made or approved the decision under review, and 
    other than a person who is a subordinate of the person who made or 
    approved the decision;
        (B) Examination of evidence. The applicant shall be provided the 
    opportunity to examine and copy, at the applicant's expense and at a 
    reasonable time in advance of the hearing, any documents in the 
    possession of the responsible entity pertaining to the applicant's 
    eligibility status, or in the possession of the INS (as permitted by 
    INS requirements), including any records and regulations that may be 
    relevant to the hearing;
        (C) Presentation of evidence and arguments in support of eligible 
    status. The applicant shall be provided the opportunity to present 
    evidence and arguments in support of eligible status. Evidence may be 
    considered without regard to admissibility under the rules of evidence 
    applicable to judicial proceedings;
        (D) Controverting evidence of the project owner. The applicant 
    shall be provided the opportunity to controvert evidence relied upon by 
    the responsible entity and to confront and cross-examine all witnesses 
    on whose testimony or information the responsible entity relies;
        (E) Representation. The applicant shall be entitled to be 
    represented by an attorney, or other designee, at the applicant's 
    expense, and to have such person make statements on the applicant's 
    behalf;
        (F) Interpretive services. The applicant shall be entitled to 
    arrange for an interpreter to attend the hearing, at the expense of the 
    applicant or responsible entity, as may be agreed upon by both parties;
        (G) Hearing to be recorded. The applicant shall be entitled to have 
    the hearing recorded by audiotape (a transcript of the hearing may, but 
    is not required, to be provided by the responsible entity); and
        (H) Hearing decision. The responsible entity shall provide the 
    family with a written final decision, based solely on the facts, 
    presented at the hearing within 14 days of the date of the informal 
    hearing. The decision shall state the basis for the decision.
        (g) Judicial relief. A decision against a family member, issued in 
    accordance with paragraph (e) or (f) of this section, does not preclude 
    the family from exercising the right, that may otherwise be available, 
    to seek redress directly through judicial procedures.
        (h) Retention of documents. The responsible entity shall retain for 
    a minimum of 5 years the following documents that may have been 
    submitted to the responsible entity by the family, or provided to the 
    responsible entity as part of the INS appeal or the informal hearing 
    process:
        (1) The application for financial assistance;
        (2) The form completed by the family for income re-examination;
        (3) Photocopies of any original documents (front and back), 
    including original INS documents;
        (4) The signed verification consent form;
        (5) The INS verification results;
        (6) The request for an INS appeal;
        (7) The final INS determination;
        (8) The request for an informal hearing; and
        (9) The final informal hearing decision.
        (i) Termination of assisted occupancy. (1) In the Section 8 
    programs other than Section 8 Certificate, Housing Voucher, and 
    Moderate Rehabilitation programs, assisted occupancy is terminated by:
        (i) If permitted under the lease, the project owner notifying the 
    family that because of the termination of assisted occupancy, the 
    family is required to pay the HUD-approved market rent for the dwelling 
    unit.
        (ii) The project owner and family entering into a new lease with 
    Section 8 assistance.
        (iii) The project owner evicting the family. While the family 
    continues in occupancy of the unit, the project owner may continue 
    assistance payments in accordance with the Housing Assistance Payments 
    contract if judicial action to terminate the tenancy and evict the 
    family is promptly initiated and diligently pursued by the project 
    owner in accordance with the terms of the lease. Action by the project 
    owner to terminate the tenancy and to evict the family shall be in 
    accordance with HUD [[Page 14839]] regulations and other HUD 
    requirements. For any jurisdiction, HUD may prescribe a maximum period 
    during which assistance payments may be continued during eviction 
    proceedings and may prescribe other standards of reasonable diligence 
    for the prosecution of eviction proceedings.
        (2) In the Section 8 Certificate, Housing Voucher, and Moderate 
    Rehabilitation programs, assisted occupancy is terminated by 
    terminating assistance payments. (See provisions of this section 
    concerning termination of assistance.) The HA shall not make any 
    additional assistance payments to the project owner after the required 
    procedures specified in this section have been completed. In addition, 
    the HA shall not approve a lease, enter into an assistance contract, or 
    process a portability move for the family after those procedures have 
    been completed.
    
    
    Sec. 812.10  Preservation of mixed families and other families.
    
        (a) Assistance available for mixed families--(1) Assistance 
    available for tenant mixed families. For a mixed family assisted under 
    a Section 214 covered program on June 19, 1995, and following 
    completion of the appeals and informal hearing procedures provided in 
    Sec. 812.9 if utilized by the family, one of the following three types 
    of assistance may be available to the family:
        (i) Continued assistance (see paragraph (c) of this section);
        (ii) Temporary deferral of termination of assistance (see paragraph 
    (d) of this section); or
        (iii) Prorated assistance (see Sec. 812.11; a mixed family must be 
    provided prorated assistance if the family so requests).
        (2) Assistance available for applicant mixed families. Prorated 
    assistance is also available for mixed families applying for assistance 
    as provided in Sec. 812.11.
        (3) Assistance available to other families in occupancy. For 
    families receiving assistance under a Section 214 covered program on 
    June 19, 1995 and who have no members with eligible immigration status, 
    the responsible entity may grant the family temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance.
        (b) Discretion afforded to provide certain family preservation 
    assistance--(1) Project owners. With respect to assistance administered 
    by a project owner, HUD has the discretion to determine under what 
    circumstances families are to be provided one of the two statutory 
    forms of assistance for preservation of the family (continued 
    assistance or temporary deferral of termination of assistance). HUD is 
    exercising its discretion by specifying the standards in this section 
    under which a project owner must provide one of these two types of 
    assistance described in paragraph (a) of this section to a family. 
    However, project owners and housing authorities must offer prorated 
    assistance to eligible mixed families.
        (2) HAs. With respect to an HA acting as a contract administrator 
    of a certificate (including project-based certificate), housing 
    voucher, or Moderate Rehabilitation program (as opposed to an HA 
    owner), the HA, rather than HUD, has the discretion to determine the 
    circumstances under which a family will be offered one of the two 
    statutory forms of assistance (continued assistance or temporary 
    deferral of termination of assistance). The HA must establish its own 
    policy and criteria to follow in making its decision. In establishing 
    the criteria for granting continued assistance or temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance, the HA must incorporate the statutory 
    criteria, which are set forth in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this 
    section. However, the housing authority must offer prorated assistance 
    to eligible mixed families.
        (c) Continued assistance. A mixed family may receive continued 
    housing assistance if all of the following conditions are met:
        (1) The family was receiving assistance under a Section 214 covered 
    program on June 19, 1995;
        (2) The family's head of household or spouse has eligible 
    immigration status as described in Sec. 812.5; and
        (3) The family does not include any person (who does not have 
    eligible immigration status) other than the head of household, any 
    spouse of the head of household, any parents of the head of household, 
    any parents of the spouse, or any children of the head of household or 
    spouse.
        (d) Temporary deferral of termination of assistance--(1) 
    Eligibility for this type of assistance. If a mixed family qualifies 
    for prorated assistance (and does not qualify for continued 
    assistance), but decides not to accept prorated assistance, or if a 
    family has no members with eligible immigration status, the family may 
    be eligible for temporary deferral of termination of assistance if 
    necessary to permit the family additional time for the orderly 
    transition of those family members with ineligible status, and any 
    other family members involved, to other affordable housing. Other 
    affordable housing is used in the context of transition of an 
    ineligible family from a rent level that reflects HUD assistance to a 
    rent level that is unassisted; the term refers to housing that is not 
    substandard, that is of appropriate size for the family and that can be 
    rented for an amount not exceeding the amount that the family pays for 
    rent, including utilities, plus 25 percent.
        (2) Time limit on deferral period. If temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance is granted, the deferral period shall be for 
    an initial period not to exceed six months. The initial period may be 
    renewed for additional periods of six months, but the aggregate 
    deferral period shall not exceed a period of three years.
        (3) Notification requirements for beginning of each deferral 
    period. At the beginning of each deferral period, the responsible 
    entity must inform the family of its ineligibility for financial 
    assistance and offer the family information concerning, and referrals 
    to assist in finding, other affordable housing.
        (4) Determination of availability of affordable housing at end of 
    each deferral period. Before the end of each deferral period, the 
    responsible entity must:
        (i) Make a determination of the availability of affordable housing 
    of appropriate size based on evidence of conditions which when taken 
    together will demonstrate an inadequate supply of affordable housing 
    for the area in which the project is located, the consolidated plan (if 
    applicable, as described in 24 CFR part 91), the responsible entity's 
    own knowledge of the availability of affordable housing, and on 
    evidence of the tenant family's efforts to locate such housing; and
        (ii) Notify the tenant family in writing, at least 60 days in 
    advance of the expiration of the deferral period, that termination will 
    be deferred again (provided that the granting of another deferral will 
    not result in aggregate deferral periods that exceed three years), and 
    a determination was made that other affordable housing is not 
    available; or
        (iii) Notify the tenant family in writing, at least 60 days in 
    advance of the expiration of the deferral period, that termination of 
    financial assistance will not be deferred because either granting 
    another deferral will result in aggregate deferral periods that exceed 
    three years, or a determination has been made that other affordable 
    housing is available.
        (e) Option to select proration of assistance at end of deferral 
    period. A family who is eligible for and who receives temporary 
    deferral of termination of assistance, may request, and the project 
    owner or housing [[Page 14840]] authority shall provide proration of 
    assistance at the end of the deferral period if the family has made a 
    good faith effort during the deferral period to locate other affordable 
    housing.
        (f) Notification of decision on family preservation assistance. A 
    responsible entity shall notify the family of its decision concerning 
    the family's qualification for assistance under this section. If the 
    family is ineligible for assistance under this section, the 
    notification shall state the reasons, which must be based on relevant 
    factors. For tenant families, the notice also shall inform the family 
    of any applicable appeal rights. (For HAs administering Certificate or 
    Housing Voucher Programs, see Secs. 882.216 or 887.405 of this 
    chapter).
    
    
    Sec. 812.11  Proration of assistance.
    
        (a) Applicability. This section applies to a mixed family other 
    than a family receiving continued assistance under Sec. 812.10(c), or 
    other than a family for which termination of assistance is temporarily 
    deferred under Sec. 812.10(d).
        (b) Method or prorating assistance--(1) Section 8 assistance other 
    than Section 8 voucher assistance. For Section 8 assistance other than 
    assistance provided under the Section 8 Voucher Program, the HA shall 
    prorate the family's assistance as follows:
        (i) Step 1. Determine gross rent for the unit. (Gross rent is 
    contract rent plus any allowance for tenant paid utilities).
        (ii) Step 2. Determine total tenant payment in accordance with 24 
    CFR 813.107(a). (Annual income includes income of all family members, 
    including any family member who has not established eligible 
    immigration status).
        (iii) Step 3. Subtract amount determined in Step 2 from amount 
    determined in Step 1.
        (iv) Step 4. Multiply the amount determined in Step 3 by a fraction 
    for which:
        (A) The numerator is the number of family members who have 
    established eligible immigration status; and
        (B) The denominator is the total number of family members.
        (v) Prorated housing assistance. The amount determined in Step 4 is 
    the prorated housing assistance payment for a mixed family.
        (vi) No effect on contract rent. Proration of the housing 
    assistance payment does not affect contract rent to the owner. The 
    family must pay as rent the portion of contract rent not covered by the 
    prorated housing assistance payment.
        (2) Section 8 Voucher assistance. For assistance under the Section 
    8 Voucher Program, the HA shall prorate the family's assistance as 
    follows:
        (i) Step 1. Determine the amount of the pre-proration voucher 
    housing assistance payment in accordance with 24 CFR 887.353. (Annual 
    income includes income of all family members, including any family 
    member who has not established eligible immigration status.)
        (ii) Step 2. Multiply the amount determined in step 1 by a fraction 
    for which:
        (A) The numerator is the number of family members who have 
    established eligible immigration status; and
        (B) The denominator is the total number of family members.
        (iii) Prorated housing assistance. The amount determined in Step 2 
    is the prorated housing assistance payment for a mixed family.
        (iv) No effect on rent to owner. Proration of the voucher housing 
    assistance payment does not affect rent to the owner. The family must 
    pay as rent the portion of rent not covered by the prorated housing 
    assistance payment.
    
    
    Sec. 812.12  Prohibition of assistance to noncitizen students.
    
        (a) General. The provisions of Secs. 812.10 and 812.11, permitting 
    continued assistance, prorated assistance or temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance for certain families, do not apply to any 
    person who is determined to be a noncitizen student, as defined in 
    paragraph (b) of this section, or the family of the noncitizen student, 
    as described in paragraph (c) of this section.
        (b) Noncitizen student. For purposes of this part, a noncitizen 
    student is defined as a noncitizen who:
        (1) Has a residence in a foreign country that the person has no 
    intention of abandoning;
        (2) Is a bona fide student qualified to pursue a full course of 
    study; and
        (3) Is admitted to the United States temporarily and solely for 
    purposes of pursuing such a course of study at an established 
    institution of learning or other recognized place of study in the 
    United States, particularly designated by such person and approved by 
    the Attorney General after consultation with the Department of 
    Education of the United States, which institution or place of study 
    shall have agreed to report to the Attorney General the termination of 
    attendance of each nonimmigrant student (and if any such institution of 
    learning or place of study fails to make such reports promptly the 
    approval shall be withdrawn).
        (c) Family of noncitizen student. The prohibition on providing 
    assistance to a noncitizen student as described in paragraph (a) of 
    this section also extends to the noncitizen spouse of the noncitizen 
    student and minor children of any noncitizen student if the spouse or 
    children are accompanying the student or following to join such 
    student. The prohibition on providing assistance to a noncitizen 
    student does not extent to the citizen spouse of the noncitizen student 
    and the children of the citizen spouse and noncitizen student.
    
    
    Sec. 812.13  Compliance with nondiscrimination requirements.
    
        The responsible entity shall administer the restrictions on use of 
    assisted housing by noncitizens with ineligible immigration status 
    imposed by this part in conformity with the nondiscrimination 
    requirements of, including, but not limited to, title VI of the Civil 
    Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d-2000d-5) and the implementing 
    regulations in 24 CFR part 1, section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 
    1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) and the implementing regulations in 24 CFR part 8, 
    the Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 3601-3619) and the implementing 
    regulations in 24 CFR part 100, and other civil rights statutes cited 
    in the applicable program regulations. These statutes prohibit, among 
    other things, discriminatory practices on the basis of race, color, 
    national origin, sex, religion, age, disability and familial status in 
    the provision of housing.
    
    
    Sec. 812.14  Protection from liability for responsible entities, State, 
    local, and tribal government agencies and officials.
    
        (a) Protection from liability for responsible entities. HUD will 
    not take any compliance, disallowance, penalty, or other regulatory 
    action against a responsible entity with respect to any error in its 
    determination of eligibility for financial assistance based on 
    citizenship or immigration status:
        (1) If the responsible entity established eligibility based upon 
    verification of eligible immigration status through the verification 
    system described in Sec. 812.8;
        (2) Because the responsible entity was required to provide an 
    opportunity for the family to submit evidence in accordance with 
    Sec. 812.6;
        (3) Because the responsible entity was required to wait for 
    completion of INS verification of immigration status in accordance with 
    Sec. 812.8;
        (4) Because the responsible entity was required to wait for 
    completion of the INS appeal process provided in accordance with 
    Sec. 812.9(e); or [[Page 14841]] 
        (5) Because the responsible entity was required to provide an 
    informal hearing in accordance with Sec. 812.9(f).
        (b) Protection from liability for State, local and tribal 
    government agencies and officials. State, local and tribal government 
    agencies and officials shall not be liable for the design or 
    implementation of the verification system described in Sec. 812.8, and 
    the informal hearings provided under Sec. 812.9(f), as long as the 
    implementation by the State, local or tribal government agency or 
    official is in accordance with prescribed HUD rules and requirements.
    Sec. 812.15  Liability of ineligible families for reimbursement of 
    benefits.
    
        Where a family has received the benefit of HUD financial assistance 
    to which it was not entitled because the family intentionally 
    misrepresented eligible status, the ineligible family is responsible 
    for reimbursing HUD for the assistance improperly paid. If the amount 
    of the assistance is substantial, the responsible entity is encouraged 
    to refer the case to the HUD Regional Inspector General's office for 
    further investigation. Possible criminal prosecution may follow based 
    on the False Statements Act (18 U.S.C. 1001 and 1010).
    
    PART 850--HOUSING DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
    
        28, The authority citation for part 850 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437o and 3535(d).
    
        29. Section 850.151 is amended by adding one sentence at the 
    beginning of paragraph (c), by adding two sentences at the end of 
    paragraph (f)(1), and by adding a new paragraph (f)(3), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 850.151  Project restrictions.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Tenant selection. The owner shall determine the eligibility of 
    applicants for lower income units in accordance with the requirements 
    of 24 CFR parts 812 and 813, including the provisions of these parts 
    concerning citizenship or eligible immigration status and income 
    limits, and certain assistance to mixed families (families whose 
    members include those with eligible immigration status, and those 
    without eligible immigration status.). * * *
    * * * * *
        (f) * * *
        (1) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995 
    the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 
    812 concerning verification of the immigration status of any new family 
    member.
    * * * * *
        (3) For provisions related to termination of assistance for failure 
    to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, see 24 CFR 
    812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions related to certain 
    assistance to mixed families (families whose members include those with 
    eligible immigration status, and those without eligible immigration 
    status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and for provisions 
    related to deferral of termination of assistance.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 880--SECTION 8 HOUSING ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM FOR NEW 
    CONSTRUCTION
    
        30. The authority citation for part 880 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f, 3535(d), 12701, and 
    13611-13619.
    
        31. In Sec. 880.504, a new paragraph (e) is added, to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 880.504  Leasing to eligible families.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Termination of assistance for failure to submit evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status. If an owner who is subject 
    to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section is required to terminate 
    housing assistance payments for the family in accordance with 24 CFR 
    812.9 because the owner determines that the entire family does not have 
    U.S. citizenship or eligible immigration status, the owner may allow 
    continued occupancy of the family without Section 8 assistance 
    following the termination of assistance, or if the family constitutes a 
    mixed family, as defined in 24 CFR 812.10, the owner shall simply with 
    the provisions of 24 CFR 812.10 concerning assistance to mixed 
    families, and deferral of termination of assistance.
        32. In Sec. 880.601, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 880.601  Responsibilities of owner.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Management and maintenance. The owner is responsible for all 
    management functions, including determining eligibility of applicants 
    in accordance with 24 CFR parts 812 and 813, provision of Federal 
    selection preferences in accordance with Sec. 880.613, selection of 
    tenants, obtaining and verifying Social Security Numbers submitted by 
    families (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), obtaining signed consent 
    forms from families for the obtaining of wage and claim information 
    from State Wage Information Collection Agencies (as provided by 24 CFR 
    part 760), reexamination of family income, evictions and other 
    terminations of tenancy, and collection of rents, and all repair and 
    maintenance functions (including ordinary and extraordinary maintenance 
    and replacement of capital items). All these functions shall be 
    performed in compliance with applicable Equal Opportunity requirements.
    * * * * *
        33. Section 880.603 is amended by revising the introductory text in 
    paragraph (b), by adding a sentence at the end of paragraph (b)(2), by 
    adding a sentence at the end of paragraph (c)(1), and by adding one 
    sentence at the end of paragraph (c)(2) and paragraph (c)(3), to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 880.603  Selection and admission of assisted tenants.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Determination of eligibility and selection of tenants. The 
    owner is responsible for obtaining and verifying information related to 
    income in accordance with 24 CFR part 813, and evidence related to 
    citizenship and eligible immigration status in accordance with 24 CFR 
    part 812, to determine whether the applicant is eligible for assistance 
    in accordance with the requirements of 24 CFR parts 812 and 813, and to 
    select families for admission to the program, which includes giving 
    selection preferences in accordance with Secs. 880.613 through 880.617.
    * * * * *
        (2) * * * For the informal hearing provisions related to denial of 
    assistance based upon failure to establish citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status, see 24 CFR 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for 
    provisions related to certain assistance for mixed families (families 
    whose members include those with eligible immigration status, and those 
    without eligible immigration status) in lieu of denial of assistance.
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (1) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 
    [[Page 14842]] 812 and verify the immigration status of any new family 
    member.
        (2) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when a 
    new family member has been added, the owner shall follow the 
    requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing 
    evidence of the citizenship or eligible immigration status of any new 
    family member.
        (3) * * * For provisions requiring termination of assistance for 
    failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, see 24 
    CFR 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and for 
    provisions concerning deferral of termination of assistance.
    * * * * *
        34. Section 880.607 is amended by redesignating the first sentence 
    following the paragraph heading in the introductory text of paragraph 
    (b)(3) as paragraph (b)(3)(i); by redesignating the existing paragraphs 
    (b)(3)(i) and (b)(3)(ii) as (b)(3)(i)(A) and (b)(3)(i)(B), 
    respectively; by redesignating and revising the undesignated paragraph 
    in (b)(3) as (b)(3)(ii) and by adding a new paragraph (c)(4) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 880.607  Termination of tenancy and modification of lease.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (3) * * *
        (ii) Failure of the family to timely submit all required 
    information on family income and composition, including failure to 
    submit required evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status 
    (as provided by 24 CFR part 812), failure to disclose and verify Social 
    Security Numbers (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), failure to sign and 
    submit consent forms (as provided by 24 CFR part 760), or knowingly 
    providing incomplete or inaccurate information, shall constitute a 
    substantial violation of the lease.
        (c) * * *
        (4) For provisions related to termination of assistance because of 
    failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, 
    including informal hearing procedures, see 24 CFR part 812.9, and also 
    24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain assistance for mixed 
    families (families whose members include those with eligible 
    immigration status, and those without eligible immigration status) in 
    lieu of termination of assistance, and for provisions concerning 
    deferral of termination of assistance.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 881--SECTION 8 HOUSING ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM FOR 
    SUBSTANTIAL REHABILITATION
    
        35. The authority citation for part 881 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f, 3535(d), 12701, and 
    13611-13619.
    
        36. In Sec. 881.504, a new paragraph (e) is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 881.504  Leasing to eligible families.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Termination of assistance for failure to submit evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status. If an owner who is subject 
    to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section is required to terminate 
    financial assistance in accordance with 24 CFR 812.9 because the owner 
    determines that the entire family does not have U.S. citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status, the owner may allow continued occupancy of 
    the unit by the family without Section 8 assistance following the 
    termination of assistance, or if the family constitutes a mixed family, 
    as defined in 24 CFR 812.10, the owner shall comply with the provisions 
    of 24 CFR 812.10 concerning certain assistance to mixed families, and 
    deferral of termination of assistance.
        37. In Sec. 881.601, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 881.601  Responsibilities of owner.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Management and maintenance. The owner is responsible for all 
    management functions (including determining eligibility of applicants 
    in accordance with 24 CFR parts 812 and 813, provision of Federal 
    selection preferences in accordance with 24 CFR 880.613, selection of 
    tenants, obtaining and verifying Social Security Numbers submitted by 
    families (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), obtaining signed consent 
    forms from families for the obtaining of wage and claim information 
    from State Wage Information Collection Agencies (as provided by 24 CFR 
    part 760), reexamination of family income, evictions and other 
    terminations of tenancy, and collection of rents) and all repair and 
    maintenance functions (including ordinary and extraordinary maintenance 
    and replacement of capital items). All these functions shall be 
    performed in compliance with applicable Equal Opportunity requirements.
    * * * * *
        38. Section 881.603 is amended by revising the introductory text of 
    paragraph (b), by adding one sentence at the end of paragraph (b)(3), 
    by adding two sentences at the end of paragraph (c)(1), and by adding 
    one sentence at the end of paragraphs (c)(2) and (c)(3), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 881.603  Selection and admission of assisted tenants.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Determination of eligibility and selection of tenants. The 
    owner is responsible for obtaining and verifying information related to 
    income in accordance with 24 CFR part 813, and evidence related to 
    citizenship and eligible immigration status in accordance with 24 CFR 
    part 812 to determine whether the applicant is eligible for assistance 
    in accordance with the requirements of 24 CFR parts 812 and 813 and 
    parts 750 and 760 of chapter VII, and to select families for admission 
    to the program, which includes giving selection preferences in 
    accordance with Secs. 881.613 through 881.617.
    * * * * *
        (3) * * * For the informal hearing provisions related to denial of 
    assistance based upon failure to establish citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status, see 24 CFR part 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for 
    provisions concerning certain assistance for mixed families (families 
    whose members include those with eligible immigration status, and those 
    without eligible immigration status) in lieu of denial of assistance.
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (1) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 
    812 concerning verification of the immigration status of any new family 
    member.
        (2) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when a 
    new family member has been added, the owner shall follow the 
    requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing 
    evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new 
    family member.
        (3) * * * For provisions requiring termination of assistance for 
    failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, see 24 
    CFR 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members 
    [[Page 14843]] include those with eligible immigration status, and 
    those without eligible immigration status) in lieu of termination of 
    assistance, and for provisions concerning deferral of termination of 
    assistance.
    * * * * *
        39. In Sec. 881.607, the second sentence of paragraph (b)(3)(ii) is 
    revised, and a new paragraph (c)(4) is added, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 881.607  Termination of tenancy and modification of lease.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (3) * * *
        (ii) * * * Failure of the family to timely submit all required 
    information on family income and composition, including failure to 
    submit required evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status 
    (as provided by 24 CFR part 812), failure to disclose and verify Social 
    Security Numbers (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), failure to sign and 
    submit consent forms (as provided by 24 CFR part 760), or knowingly 
    provided incomplete or inaccurate information, shall constitute a 
    substantial violation of the lease. * * *
        (c) * * *
        (4) For provisions related to termination of assistance because of 
    failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, 
    including the informal hearing procedures, see 24 CFR 812.9, and also 
    24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain assistance for mixed 
    families (families whose members include those with eligible 
    immigration status, and those without eligible immigration status) in 
    lieu of termination of assistance, and for provisions concerning 
    deferral of termination of assistance.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 882--SECTION 8 HOUSING ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM--EXISTING 
    HOUSING
    
        40. The authority citation for part 882 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f, 3535(d) and 11401.
    
        41. In Sec. 882.116, paragraph (c) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 882.116  Responsibilities of the PHA.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Receipt and review of applications for participation; selection 
    of applicants; verification of family income and other factors relating 
    to eligibility (including citizenship or eligible immigration status as 
    provided by 24 CFR part 812) and amount of assistance; and maintenance 
    of a waiting list.
    * * * * *
        42. In Sec. 882.118, paragraph (a)(1) is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 882.118  Obligations of the Family.
    
        (a) * * *
        (1) Supply such certification, release, information or 
    documentation as the PHA or HUD determine to be necessary, including 
    submission of required evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status (as provided by 24 CFR part 812), submission of Social Security 
    Numbers and verifying documentation (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), 
    submission of signed consent forms for the obtaining of wage and claim 
    information from State Wage Information Collection Agencies (as 
    provided by 24 CFR part 760), and submissions required for an annual or 
    interim reexamination of family income and composition.
    * * * * *
        43. In Sec. 882.209, paragraph (a)(2) is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 882.209  Selection and participation.
    
        (a) * * *
        (2)(i) The PHA shall determine whether an applicant for 
    participation:
        (A) Qualifies as a family;
        (B) Is income eligible; and
        (C) Is a citizen or is in eligible immigration status as determined 
    in accordance with 24 CFR part 812.
        (ii) The family shall submit any certification, release, 
    information, or documentation as the PHA or HUD determines to be 
    necessary (see the requirements in 24 CFR parts 750, 760, 812, and 
    813).
    * * * * *
        44. In Sec. 882.210, a new paragraph (f) is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 882.210  Grounds for denial or termination of assistance.
    
    * * * * *
        (f) The family's obligations as stated in Sec. 882.118 include 
    submission of required evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status. For a statement of circumstances in which the PHA shall deny or 
    terminate housing assistance payments because a family member is not a 
    U.S. citizen or does not establish eligible immigration status, and the 
    applicable informal hearing procedures, see Sec. 882.216(b) and 24 CFR 
    812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of denial or termination of assistance, and 
    for provisions concerning deferral of termination of assistance.
        45. Section 882.212 is amended by adding two sentences at the end 
    of paragraph (a), and by adding one sentence at the end of paragraphs 
    (b) and (c), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 882.212  Reexamination of Family income and composition.
    
        (a) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the PHA shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship of eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the PHA shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 
    concerning verification of the immigration status of any new family 
    member (except a child born in the United States).
        (b) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when 
    there is a new family member, the PHA shall follow the requirements of 
    24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new family member.
        (c) * * * For provisions requiring termination of housing 
    assistance payments when the PHA determines that a member is not a U.S. 
    citizen or does not have eligible immigration status, see Sec. 882.216 
    and 24 CFR 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning 
    certain assistance for mixed families (families whose members include 
    those with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and for 
    provisions concerning deferral of termination of assistance.
    * * * * *
        46. Section 882.216 is amended by adding a new paragraph (a)(5) and 
    new paragraphs (b)(1)(v) and (b)(8), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 882.216  Informal review or hearing.
    
        (a) * * *
        (5) The informal hearing provisions for the denial of assistance on 
    the basis of ineligible immigration status are contained in 24 CFR 
    812.9.
        (b) * * *
        (1) * * *
        (v) A determination that the participant does not qualify under the 
    PHA's policy for granting special relief under 24 CFR 812.10.
    * * * * *
        (8) The informal hearing provisions for the termination of 
    assistance on the [[Page 14844]] basis of ineligible immigration status 
    are contained in 24 CFR 812.9.
    * * * * *
        47. In Sec. 882.514, paragraph (f) is amended by adding one 
    sentence at the end of the paragraph, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 882.514  Family participation.
    
    * * * * *
        (f) * * * The informal hearing requirements for denial and 
    termination of assistance on the basis of ineligible immigration status 
    are contained in 24 CFR 812.9.
    * * * * *
        48. Section 882.515 is amended by adding two sentences at the end 
    of paragraph (a), and by adding one sentence at the end of paragraphs 
    (b) and (c), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 882.515  Reexamination of family income and composition.
    
        (a) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the PHA shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the PHA shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 
    concerning verification of immigration status of any new family member.
        (b) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when 
    there is a new family member, the PHA shall follow the requirements of 
    24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new family member.
        (c) * * * For provisions requiring termination of assistance when 
    the PHA determines that a family member is not a U.S. citizen or does 
    not have eligible immigration status, see Sec. 882.216 and 24 CFR 812.9 
    and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain assistance for 
    mixed families (families whose members include those with eligible 
    immigration status, and those without eligible immigration status) in 
    lieu of termination of assistance, and for provisions concerning 
    deferral of termination of assistance.
        48a. Section 882.808 is amended by adding two sentences at the end 
    of paragraph (i)(1), one sentence at the end of paragraphs (i)(2), and 
    a sentence at the end of paragraph (l), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 882.808  Management.
    
    * * * * *
        (i) * * *
        (1) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the PHA shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the PHA shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 
    concerning verification of immigration status of any new family member.
        (2) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when 
    there is a new family member, the PHA shall follow the requirements of 
    24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new family member.
    * * * * *
        (1) * * * For provisions requiring termination of assistance when 
    the PHA determines that a family member is not a U.S. citizen or does 
    not have eligible immigration status, see Sec. 882.216 and 24 CFR 
    812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of termination of assistance, or for 
    provisions concerning deferral of termination of assistance.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 883--SECTION 8 HOUSING ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM--STATE 
    HOUSING AGENCIES
    
        49. The authority citation for part 883 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f, 3535(d), and 13611-
    13619.
    
        50. In Sec. 883.101, the last sentence of paragraph (c) is revised 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 883.101  General.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * * Eligible families are families, as defined in 24 CFR part 
    812, whose incomes qualify them for assistance in accordance with 24 
    CFR part 813, and who are otherwise eligible under these parts.
    * * * * *
        51. In Sec. 883.605, a new paragraph (e) is added, to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 883.605  Leasing to eligible families.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Termination of assistance for failure to submit evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status. If an owner who is subject 
    to paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section is required to terminate 
    financial assistance in accordance with 24 CFR 812.9 because the owner 
    determines that the entire family does not have U.S. citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status, the owner may allow continued occupancy of 
    the unit by the family without Section 8 assistance following the 
    termination of assistance, or if the family constitutes a mixed family, 
    as defined in 24 CFR 812.10, the owner shall comply with the provisions 
    of 24 CFR 812.10 concerning assistance to mixed families, and deferral 
    of termination of assistance.
        52. In Sec. 883.702, the section heading and paragraph (b) are 
    revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 883.702  Responsibilities of the owner.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Management and maintenance. The owner is responsible for all 
    management functions (including determination of the eligibility of 
    applicants in accordance with 24 CFR parts 812 and 813, provision of 
    Federal selection preferences in accordance with Sec. 883.714, 
    selection of tenants, obtaining and verifying Social Security Numbers 
    submitted by families (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), obtaining 
    signed consent forms from families for the obtaining of wage and claim 
    information from State Wage Information Collection Agencies (as 
    provided by 24 CFR part 760), reexamination of family income, evictions 
    and other terminations of tenancy, and collection of rents) and all 
    repair and maintenance functions (including ordinary and extraordinary 
    maintenance and replacement of capital items). All these functions 
    shall be performed in compliance with applicable Equal Opportunity 
    requirements.
    * * * * *
        53. Section 883.704 is amended by adding one sentence at the end of 
    paragraph (b)(3), two sentences at the end of paragraph (c)(1), and one 
    sentence at the end of paragraphs (c)(2), and (c)(3), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 883.704  Selection and admission of tenants.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (3) * * * For the informal hearing provisions related to denial of 
    assistance based upon failure to establish citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status, see 24 CFR 812.9, and also see 24 CFR 812.10 for 
    provisions concerning certain assistance for mixed families (families 
    whose members include those with eligible immigration status, and those 
    without eligible immigration status) in lieu of denial of assistance.
    * * * * *
        (c) * * * [[Page 14845]] 
        (1) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 
    812 concerning the verification of the immigration status of any new 
    family member.
        (2) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when 
    there is a new family member, the owner shall follow the requirements 
    of 24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new family member.
        (3) * * * For provisions requiring termination of assistance for 
    failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, see 24 
    CFR 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and for 
    provisions concerning deferral of termination of assistance.
    * * * * *
        54. In Sec. 883.708, the second sentence of paragraph (b)(3)(ii) 
    beginning with ``Failure of * * *'' is revised, and a new paragraph 
    (c)(4) is added, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 883.708  Termination of tenancy and modification of lease.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (3) * * *
        (ii) * * * Failure of the family to timely submit all required 
    information on family income and composition, including failure to 
    submit required evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status 
    (as provided by 24 CFR part 812), failure to disclose and verify Social 
    Security Numbers (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), failure to sign and 
    submit consent forms (as provided by 24 CFR part 760), or knowingly 
    provide incomplete or inaccurate information, shall constitute a 
    substantial violation of the lease. * * *
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (4) For provisions requiring termination of assistance for failure 
    to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, including the 
    applicable informal hearing requirements, see 24 CFR 812.9, and also 24 
    CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain assistance for mixed 
    families (families whose members include those with eligible 
    immigration status, and those without eligible immigration status) in 
    lieu of termination of assistance, and for provisions concerning 
    deferral of termination of assistance.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 884--SECTION 8 HOUSING ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM, NEW 
    CONSTRUCTION SET-ASIDE FOR SECTION 515 RURAL RENTAL HOUSING 
    PROJECTS
    
        55. The authority citation for part 884 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f, 3535(d), and 13611-
    13619.
    
        56. In Sec. 884.118, paragraph (a)(3) is revised to read as 
    follows:
    Sec. 884.118  Responsibilities of the owner.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) Performance of all management functions, including the taking 
    of applications; determining eligibility of applicants in accordance 
    with 24 CFR parts 812 and 813; selection of families, including 
    verification of income, provision of Federal selection preference in 
    accordance with Sec. 884.226, obtaining and verifying Social Security 
    Numbers submitted by applicants (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), 
    obtaining signed consent forms from applicants for the obtaining of 
    wage and claim information from State Wage Information Collection 
    Agencies (as provided in 24 CFR part 760), and other pertinent 
    requirements; and determination of the amount of tenant rent in 
    accordance with HUD established schedules and criteria.
    * * * * *
        57. In Sec. 884.214, paragraph (b)(1) is revised and a new 
    paragraph (b)(8) is added, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 884.214  Marketing.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Eligibility, selection and admission of families. (1) The owner 
    is responsible for determination of eligibility of applicants in 
    accordance with the procedure of 24 CFR part 812, selection of families 
    from among those determined to be eligible (including provision of 
    Federal selection preferences in accordance with Sec. 884.226), and 
    computation of the amount of housing assistance payments on behalf of 
    each selected family, in accordance with schedules and criteria 
    established by HUD.
    * * * * *
        (8) For the informal hearing provisions related to denial of 
    assistance based upon failure to establish citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status, see 24 CFR 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for 
    provisions concerning certain assistance for mixed families (families 
    whose members include those with eligible immigration status, and those 
    without eligible immigration status) in lieu of denial of assistance.
        58. In Sec. 884.216, a new sentence is added at the end of the 
    paragraph to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 884.216  Termination of tenancy.
    
        * * * For provisions requiring termination of assistance for 
    failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, 
    including the applicable informal requirements, see 24 CFR 812.9, and 
    also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning assistance for mixed 
    families (families whose members include those with eligible 
    immigration status, and those without eligible immigration status) in 
    lieu of termination of assistance, and for provisions concerning 
    deferral of termination of assistance.
        59. Section 884.218 is amended by adding two sentences at the end 
    of paragraph (a), and one sentence at the end of paragraphs (b) and 
    (c), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 884.218  Reexamination of family income and composition.
    
        (a) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 
    812 concerning verification of the immigration status of any new family 
    member.
        (b) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when 
    there is a new family member, the owner shall follow the requirements 
    of 24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new family member.
        (c) * * * For provisions requiring termination of assistance for 
    failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, see 24 
    CFR 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and for 
    provisions concerning deferral of termination of 
    assistance. [[Page 14846]] 
        60. In Sec. 884.223, a new paragraph (e) is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 884.223  Leasing to eligible families.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Termination of assistance for failure to establish citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status. If an owner subject to paragraphs (a) 
    and (b) of this section is required to terminate housing assistance 
    payments for the family in accordance with Sec. 812.9 of this chapter 
    because the owner determines that the entire family does not have U.S. 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, the owner may allow 
    continued occupancy of the unit by the family without Section 8 
    assistance following the termination of assistance, or if the family 
    constitutes a mixed family, as defined in 24 CFR 812.10, the owner 
    shall comply with the provisions of 24 CFR 812.10 concerning assistance 
    to mixed families, and deferral of termination of assistance.
    
    PART 886--SECTION 8 HOUSING ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM--SPECIAL 
    ALLOCATIONS
    
        61. The authority citation for part 886 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f, 3535(d), and 13611-
    13619.
    
        62. In Sec. 886.119, the section heading and paragraph (a)(3) are 
    revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 886.119  Responsibilities of the owner.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) Performance of all management functions, including the taking 
    of applications; determining eligibility of applicants in accordance 
    with 24 CFR parts 812 and 813; selection of families, including 
    verification of income, provision of Federal selection preferences in 
    accordance with Sec. 886.132, obtaining and verifying Social Security 
    Numbers submitted by applicants (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), 
    obtaining signed consent forms from applicants for the obtaining of 
    wage and claim information from State Wage Information Collection 
    Agencies (as provided in 24 CFR part 760), and other pertinent 
    requirements; and determination of the amount of tenant rent in 
    accordance with HUD established schedules and criteria.
    * * * * *
        63. In Sec. 886.121, paragraph (b) is revised and a new paragraph 
    (c) is added, to read as follows:
    Sec. 886.121  Marketing.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) The Owner shall comply with the applicable provisions of the 
    Contract, this subpart A, and the procedures of 24 CFR part 812 in 
    taking applications, selecting families, and all related 
    determinations.
        (c) For the informal hearing provisions related to denial of 
    assistance based upon failure to establish citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status, see 24 CFR 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for 
    provisions concerning certain assistance for mixed families (families 
    whose members include those with eligible immigration status, and those 
    without eligible immigration status) in lieu of denial of assistance.
        64. Section 886.124 is amended by adding two sentences at the end 
    of paragraph (a), and one sentence at the end of paragraphs (b) and 
    (c), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 886.124  Reexamination of family income and composition.
    
        (a) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 
    812 concerning verification of the immigration status of any new family 
    member.
        (b) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995, when 
    there is a new family member, the owner shall follow the requirements 
    of 24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new family member.
        (c) * * * For provisions requiring termination of assistance for 
    failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, see 24 
    CFR 812.9 and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and for 
    provisions concerning deferral of termination of assistance
        65. Section 886.128 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 886.128  Termination of tenancy.
    
        Part 247 of this title applies to the termination of tenancy and 
    eviction of a family assisted under this subpart. For cases involving 
    termination of tenancy because of a failure to establish citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status, the procedures of 24 parts 247 and 812 
    shall apply. The provisions of 24 CFR 812.10 concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and 
    concerning deferral of termination of assistance also shall apply.
        66. In Sec. 886.129, a new paragraph (e) is added, to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 886.129  Leasing to eligible families.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Termination of assistance for failure to establish citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status. If an owner subject to paragraphs (a) 
    and (b) of this section is required to terminate housing assistance 
    payments for the family in accordance with 24 CFR 812.9 because the 
    owner determines that the entire family does not have U.S. citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status, the owner may allow continued occupancy 
    of the unit by the family without Section 8 assistance following the 
    termination of assistance, or if the family constitutes a mixed family, 
    as defined in 24 CFR 812.10, the owner shall comply with the provisions 
    of 24 CFR 812.10 concerning assistance to mixed families, and deferral 
    of termination of assistance
        67. In Sec. 886.318, paragraph (a)(3) is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 886.318  Responsibilities of the owner.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) Performance of all management functions, including the taking 
    of applications; determining eligibility of applicants in accordance 
    with 24 CFR parts 812 and 813; selection of families, including 
    verification of income, provision of Federal selection preferences in 
    accordance with Sec. 886.337, obtaining and verifying Social Security 
    Numbers submitted by applicants (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), 
    obtaining signed consent forms from applicants for the obtaining of 
    wage and claim information from State Wage Information Collection 
    Agencies (as provided in 24 CFR part 760), and other pertinent 
    requirements; and determination of the amount of tenant rent in 
    accordance with HUD established schedules and criteria.
    * * * * *
        68. In Sec. 886.321, the first two sentences of paragraph (b)(1) 
    are revised and a new paragraph (b)(7) is added, to read as follows:
    Sec. 886.321  Marketing.
    
    * * * * *
        (b)(1) HUD will determine the eligibility for assistance of 
    families in occupancy before sales closing. After the sale, the owner 
    shall be responsible for determining the eligibility of 
    [[Page 14847]] applicants for tenancy (including compliance with the 
    procedures of 24 CFR part 812 on evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status), selection of families from among those determined 
    to be eligible (including provision of Federal preferences in 
    accordance with Sec. 886.337), and computation of the among of housing 
    assistance payments on behalf of each selected family, in accordance 
    with the Gross Rent and the Total Tenant Payment computed in accordance 
    with 24 CFR part 813. * * *
    * * * * *
        (7) For the informal hearing provisions related to denial of 
    assistance based upon failure to establish citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status, see 24 CFR 812.9, and 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions 
    concerning certain assistance for mixed families (families whose 
    members include those with eligible immigration status, and those 
    without eligible immigration status) in lieu of denial of assistance.
    * * * * *
        69. Section 886.324 is amended by adding two sentences at the end 
    of paragraph (a), and one sentence at the end of paragraph (b) and (c), 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 886.324  Reexamination of family income and composition.
    
        (a) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the owner shall follow the requirements of part 812 
    concerning verification of the immigration status of any new family 
    member.
        (b) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when 
    there is a new family member, the owner shall follow the requirements 
    of 24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new family member.
        (c) * * * For provisions requiring termination of assistance for 
    failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, see 24 
    CFR 812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and for 
    provisions concerning deferral of termination of assistance.
        70. Section 886.328 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 886.328  Termination of tenancy.
    
        Part 247 of this title applies to the termination of tenancy and 
    eviction of a family assisted under this subpart. For cases involving 
    termination of tenancy because of a failure to establish citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status, the procedures of 24 CFR parts 247 and 812 
    shall apply. The provisions of 24 CFR 812.10 concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and 
    concerning deferral of termination of assistance also shall apply.
        71. In Sec. 886.329, a new paragraph (e) is added to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 886.329  Leasing to eligible families.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Termination of assistance for failure to establish citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status. If an owner who is subject to 
    paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section is required to terminate housing 
    assistance payments for the family in accordance with 24 CFR 812.9 
    because the owner determines that the entire family does not have U.S. 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, the owner may allow 
    continued occupancy of the unit by the family without Section 8 
    assistance following the termination of assistance, or if the family 
    constitutes a mixed family, as defined in 24 CFR 812.10, the owner 
    shall comply with the provisions of 24 CFR 812.10 concerning assistance 
    to mixed families, and deferral of termination of assistance.
    
    PART 887--HOUSING VOUCHERS
    
        72. The authority citation for part 887 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437f, and 3535(d).
    
        73. In Sec. 887.105, paragraph (b)(5) is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 887.105  PHA responsibilities.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (5) Determine the amount of, and make, the housing assistance 
    payment (see Sec. 887.353); obtain and verify evidence related to 
    citizenship and eligible immigration status in accordance with 24 CFR 
    part 812; reexamine the family income and family size and composition, 
    at least annually, and redetermine the amount of the housing assistance 
    payment (see Secs. 887.355 through 887.359); adjust the amount of the 
    housing assistance payment as a result of an adjustment by the PHA of 
    any applicable payment standard or utility allowance (see Secs. 887.353 
    and 887.361); and
    * * * * *
        74. In Sec. 887.355, paragraph (b) is redesignated as paragraph 
    (c), and a new paragraph (b) is added, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 887.355  Regular reexamination of family income and composition.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, the PHA 
    shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining 
    and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status 
    of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular reexamination, the 
    PHA shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning 
    verification of the immigration status of any new family member.
    * * * * *
        75. Section 887.357 is amended by adding a new sentence at the end, 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 887.357  Interim reexamination of family income and composition.
    
        * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 that 
    involves the addition of a new family member, the PHA shall follow the 
    requirements of 24 CFR part 812 concerning obtaining and processing 
    evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new 
    family member.
        76. In Sec. 887.401, paragraph (a), introductory text, and 
    paragraph (a)(1) are revised, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 887.401  Family responsibilities.
    
        (a) A family shall:
        (1) Supply any certification, release, information, or 
    documentation that the PHA or HUD determines to be necessary in the 
    administration of the program, including submission of required 
    evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status (as provided by 
    24 CFR part 812), disclosure and verification of Social Security 
    Numbers (as provided by 24 CFR part 750), signing and submission of 
    consent forms for the obtaining of wage and claim information from 
    State Wage Information Collection Agencies (as provided by 24 CFR part 
    760), and other information required for use by the PHA in a regularly 
    scheduled reexamination or interim reexamination of family income and 
    composition in accordance with HUD requirements;
    * * * * *
        77. In Sec. 887.403, paragraphs (d) and (e) are redesignated as 
    paragraphs (e) [[Page 14848]] and (f), and a new paragraph (d) is 
    added, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 887.403  Grounds for PHA denial or termination of assistance.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) The family's obligations as stated in Sec. 887.401 include 
    submission of required evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status. For a statement of circumstances in which the PHA shall deny or 
    terminate assistance because of a family member's inability to 
    establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, and the 
    applicable informal hearing procedures, see 24 CFR 882.216 and 24 CFR 
    812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions concerning certain 
    assistance for mixed families (families whose members include those 
    with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
    immigration status) in lieu of denial or termination of assistance, and 
    for provisions concerning deferral of termination of assistance.
    * * * * *
        78. Section 887.405 is amended by adding a new paragraph (a)(4) and 
    new paragraphs (b)(1)(iv) and (b)(8), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 887.405  Informal review or hearing.
    
        (a) * * *
        (4) The informal hearing provisions for the denial of assistance on 
    the basis of ineligible immigration status are contained in 24 CFR 
    812.9.
        (b) * * *
        (1) * * *
        (iv) A determination that the participant does not qualify under 
    the PHA's policy for granting special assistance under 24 CFR 812.10.
    * * * * *
        (8) The informal hearing provisions for the termination of 
    assistance on the basis of ineligible immigration status are contained 
    in 24 CFR 812.9.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 900--SECTION 23 HOUSING ASSISTANCE PAYMENTS PROGRAM--NEW 
    CONSTRUCTION AND SUBSTANTIAL REHABILITATION
    
        79. The authority citation for part 900 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1410(b) and 3535(d).
    
        80. In Sec. 900.102, the first sentence of paragraph (g) is revised 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 900.102  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        (g) Eligible families. Those families determined by the LHA to meet 
    the requirements for admission into housing assisted under this part in 
    accordance with 24 CFR parts 912 and 913 and other pertinent 
    requirements. * * *
    * * * * *
        81. Section 900.202 is amended by adding a new sentence to the end 
    of paragraph (d)(3), and by redesignating existing paragraphs (g) and 
    (h) as paragraphs (h) and (i) respectively, and by adding a new 
    paragraph (g), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 900.202  Project operation.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (3) * * * For provisions related to denial of assistance because of 
    a failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, the 
    requirements of 24 CFR 960.207 and 24 CFR part 912 shall apply.
    * * * * *
        (g) Termination of assistance. For provisions related to 
    termination of assistance for failure to establish citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status, the requirements of 24 CFR parts 912 and 
    966 shall apply.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 904--LOW RENT HOUSING HOMEOWNERSHIP OPPORTUNITIES
    
        82. The authority citation for part 904 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437-1437ee and 3535(d).
    
        83. In Sec. 904.104, the first sentence of paragraph (b)(1) and 
    paragraph (g)(2) are revised, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 904.104  Eligibility and selection of homebuyers.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Eligibility and standards for admission. (1) Homebuyers shall 
    be lower income families that are determined to be eligible for 
    admission in accordance with the provisions of 24 CFR parts 912 and 
    913, which prescribe income definitions, income limits, and 
    restrictions concerning citizenship or eligible immigration status. * * 
    *
    * * * * *
        (g) * * *
        (2) Applicants who are not selected for a specific Turnkey III 
    development shall be notified in accordance with HUD-approved 
    procedure. The notice shall state:
        (i) The reason for the applicant's rejection (including a 
    nonrecommendation by the recommending committee unless the applicant 
    has previously been so notified by the committee);
        (ii) That the applicant will be given an information hearing on 
    such determination, regardless of the reason for the rejection, if the 
    applicant makes a request for such a hearing within a reasonable time 
    (to be specified in the notice) from the date of the notice; and
        (iii) For denial of assistance for failure to establish citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status, the applicant may request, in addition 
    to the informal hearing, an appeal to the INS, in accordance with 24 
    CFR 912.9.
    * * * * *
        84. In Sec. 904.107, paragraphs (j)(2) and (m)(1) are revised to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 904.107  Responsibilities of homebuyer.
    
    * * * * *
        (j) * * *
        (2) For purposes of determining eligibility of an applicant (see 24 
    CFR parts 912 and 913, as well as this part) and the amount of 
    Homebuyer payments under paragraph (j)(1) of this section, the LHA 
    shall examine the family's income and composition and follow the 
    procedures required by 24 CFR part 912 for determining citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status before initial occupancy. Thereafter, for 
    the purposes stated above and to determine whether a Homebuyer is 
    required to purchase the home under Sec. 904.104(h)(1), the LHA shall 
    reexamine the Homebuyer's income and composition regularly, at least 
    once every 12 months, and shall undertake such further determination 
    and verification of citizenship or eligible immigration status as 
    required by 24 CFR part 912. The Homebuyer shall comply with the LHA's 
    policy regarding required interim reporting of changes in the family's 
    income and composition. If the LHA receives information from the family 
    or other source concerning a change in the family income or other 
    circumstances between regularly scheduled reexaminations, the LHA, upon 
    consultation with the family and verification of the information (in 
    accordance with 24 CFR parts 912 and 913 of this chapter) shall 
    promptly make any adjustments determined to be appropriate in the 
    Homebuyer payment amount or take appropriate action concerning the 
    addition of a family member who is not a citizen with eligible 
    immigration status. Any change in the family's income or other 
    circumstances that results in an adjustment in the Total Tenant Payment 
    and Tenant Rent must be verified.
    * * * * *
        (m) Termination by LHA. (1) In the event the homebuyer breaches the 
    Homebuyers Ownership Opportunity Agreement by failure to make the 
    required monthly payment within ten days after its due date, by 
    [[Page 14849]] misrepresenting or withholding of information in 
    applying for admission or in connection with any subsequent 
    reexamination of income and family composition (including the failure 
    to submit any required evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status, as provided by 24 CFR part 912; the failure to meet the 
    disclosure and verification requirements for Social Security Numbers, 
    as provided by 24 CFR part 750; or the failure to sign and submit 
    consent forms for the obtaining of wage and claim information from 
    State Wage Information Collection Agencies, as provided by 24 CFR part 
    760), or by failure to comply with any of the other homebuyer 
    obligations under the Agreement, the LHA may terminate the Agreement. 
    No termination under this paragraph may occur less than 30 days after 
    the LHA gives the homebuyer notice of its intention to do so, in 
    accordance with paragraph (m)(3) of this section. For termination of 
    assistance for failure to establish citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status under 24 CFR part 912, the requirements of 24 CFR parts 912 and 
    966 shall apply.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 905--INDIAN HOUSING PROGRAMS
    
        85. The authority citation for part 905 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 25 U.S.C. 450e(b); 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437aa, 1437bb, 
    1437cc, 1437ee, and 3535(d).
    
        86. Section 905.102 is amended by adding definitions in 
    alphabetical order for the terms ``Child,'' ``Citizen,'' ``Evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status,'' ``Head of household,'' 
    ``INS,'' ``Mixed family,'' ``National,'' ``Noncitizen,'' ``Section 
    214,'' and ``Section 214 covered program'' to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 905.102  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        Child. A member of the family, other than the family head or a 
    spouse, who is under 18 years of age.
    * * * * *
        Citizen. A citizen or national of the United States.
    * * * * *
        Evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status. The 
    documents which must be submitted to evidence citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status (see Sec. 905.310(e)).
    * * * * *
        Head of household. The adult member of the family who is the head 
    of the household for purposes of determining income eligibility and 
    rent.
    * * * * *
        INS. The U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.
    * * * * *
        Mixed family. A family whose members include those with citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status, and those without citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status.
    * * * * *
        National. A person who owes permanent allegiance to the United 
    States, for example, as a result of birth in a United States territory 
    or possession.
    * * * * *
        Noncitizen. A person who is neither a citizen nor national of the 
    United States.
    * * * * *
        Section 214. Section 214 of the Housing and Community Development 
    Act of 1980, as amended (42 U.S.C. 1436a). Section 214 restricts HUD 
    from making financial assistance available for noncitizens unless they 
    meet one of the categories of eligible immigration status specified in 
    Section 214.
        Section 214 covered programs. Programs to which the restrictions 
    imposed by Section 214 apply are programs that make available financial 
    assistance pursuant to the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 
    1437-1440), Section 235 or Section 236 of the National Housing Act (12 
    U.S.C. 1715z and 1715z-1) and Section 101 of the Housing and Urban 
    Development Act of 1965 (12 U.S.C. 1701s).
    * * * * *
        87. Section 905.310 is added to read as follows:
    Sec. 905.310  Restrictions on assistance to noncitizens.
    
        (a) Requirements concerning documents. For any notice or document 
    (decision, declaration, consent form, etc.) that this section requires 
    an IHA to provide to an individual, or requires that the IHA obtain the 
    signature of the individual, the IHA, where feasible, must arrange for 
    the notice or document to be provided to the individual in a language 
    that is understood by the individual if the individual is not 
    proficient in English. (See 24 CFR 8.6 of HUD's regulations for 
    requirements concerning communications with persons with disabilities.)
        (b) Restrictions on assistance. Assistance provided under a Section 
    214 covered program is restricted to:
        (1) Citizens; or
        (2) Noncitizens who have eligible immigration status in one of the 
    following categories:
        (i) A noncitizen lawfully admitted for permanent residence, as 
    defined by section 101(a)(20) of the Immigration and Nationality Act 
    (INA), as an immigrant, as defined by section 101(a)(15) of the INA (8 
    U.S.C. 1101(a)(20) and 1101(a)(15), respectively) (immigrants). (This 
    category includes a noncitizen admitted under section 210 or 210A of 
    the INA (8 U.S.C. 1160 or 1161), (special agricultural worker), who has 
    been granted lawful temporary resident status);
        (ii) A noncitizen who entered the United States before January 1, 
    1972, or such later date as enacted by law, and has continuously 
    maintained residence in the United States since then, and who is not 
    ineligible for citizenship, but who is deemed to be lawfully admitted 
    for permanent residence as a result of an exercise of discretion by the 
    Attorney General under section 249 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1259);
        (iii) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States 
    pursuant to an admission under section 207 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1157) 
    (refugee status); pursuant to the granting of asylum (which has not 
    been terminated) under section 208 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1158) (asylum 
    status); or as a result of being granted conditional entry under 
    section 203(a)(7) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1153(a)(7)) before April 1, 
    1980, because of persecution or fear of persecution on account of race, 
    religion, or political opinion or because of being uprooted by 
    catastrophic national calamity;
        (iv) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States as a 
    result of an exercise of discretion by the Attorney General for 
    emergent reasons or reasons deemed strictly in the public interest 
    under section 212(d)(5) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)) (parole 
    status);
        (v) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States as a 
    result of the Attorney General's withholding deportation under section 
    243(h) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1253(h)) (threat to life or freedom); or
        (vi) A noncitizen lawfully admitted for temporary or permanent 
    residence under section 245A of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1255a) (amnesty 
    granted under INA 245A).
        (c) Family eligibility for assistance. (1) A family shall not be 
    eligible for assistance unless every member of the family residing in 
    the unit is determined to have eligible status, as described in 
    paragraph (b) of this section;
        (2) Despite the ineligibility of one or more family members, a 
    mixed family [[Page 14850]] may be eligible for one of the three types 
    of assistance provided in paragraph (r) of this section. A family 
    without any eligible members and receiving assistance on June 19, 1995 
    may be eligible for temporary deferral of termination of assistance as 
    provided in paragraph (r) of this section.
        (d) Exemption of certain homebuyers from restrictions of this 
    section. A homebuyer who executed a Homeownership Opportunity Agreement 
    under the Turnkey III program or who executed a Mutual Help and 
    Occupancy Agreement under the Mutual Help Homeownership program before 
    June 19, 1995 is not subject to this citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status requirement for continued participation in the 
    program.
        (e) Submission of evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status. 
        (1) General. Eligibility for assistance or continued assistance 
    under a Section 214 covered program is contingent upon a family's 
    submission to the IHA of the documents described in paragraph (e)(2) of 
    this section for each family member. If one or more family members do 
    not have citizenship or eligible immigration status, the members may 
    exercise the election not to contend to have eligible immigration 
    status as provided in paragraph (f) of this section, and the provisions 
    of paragraph (r) of this section shall apply.
        (2) Evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status. Each 
    family, regardless of age, must submit the following evidence to the 
    IHA:
        (i) For citizens, the evidence consists of a signed declaration of 
    U.S. citizenship;
        (ii) For noncitizens who are 62 years of age or older or who will 
    be 62 years of age or older and receiving assistance under a Section 
    214 covered program on June 19, 1995, the evidence consists of:
        (A) A signed declaration of eligible immigration status; and
        (B) Proof of age document.
        (iii) For all other noncitizens, the evidence consists of:
        (A) A signed declaration of eligible immigration status;
        (B) The INS documents listed in paragraph (k)(2) of this section; 
    and
        (C) A signed verification consent form.
        (3) Declaration. For each family member who contends that he or she 
    is a U.S. citizen or a noncitizen with eligible immigration status, the 
    family must submit to the IHA a written declaration, signed under 
    penalty of perjury, by which the family member declares whether he or 
    she is a U.S. citizen or a noncitizen with eligible immigration status.
        (i) For each adult, the declaration must be signed by the adult.
        (ii) For each child, the declaration must be signed by an adult 
    residing in the assisted dwelling unit who is responsible for the 
    child.
        (4) Verification consent form.--(i) Who signs. Each noncitizen who 
    declares eligible immigration status, must sign a verification consent 
    form as follows:
        (A) For each adult, the form must be signed by the adult;
        (B) For each child, the form must be signed by an adult member of 
    the family residing in the assisted dwelling unit who is responsible 
    for the child.
        (ii) Notice of release of evidence by IHA. The verification consent 
    form shall provide that evidence of eligible immigration status may be 
    released by the IHA, without responsibility for the further use or 
    transmission of the evidence by the entity receiving it, to:
        (A) HUD as required by HUD; and
        (B) The INS for purposes of verification of the immigration status 
    of the individual.
        (iii) Notice of release of evidence by HUD. The verification 
    consent form also shall notify the individual of the possible release 
    of evidence of eligible immigration status by HUD. Evidence of eligible 
    immigration status shall only be released to the INS for purposes of 
    establishing eligibility for financial assistance and not for any other 
    purpose. HUD is not responsible for the further use or transmission of 
    the evidence or other information by the INS.
        (f) Individuals who do not contend to have eligible immigration 
    status. If one or more members of a family elect not to contend that 
    they have eligible immigration status and the other members of the 
    family establish their citizenship or eligible immigration status, the 
    family may be considered for assistance under paragraphs (r) or (s) of 
    this section despite the fact that no declaration or documentation of 
    eligible status is submitted by one or more members of the family. The 
    family, however, must identify to the IHA, the family member (or 
    members) who will elect not to contend that he or she has eligible 
    immigration status.
        (g) Notification of requirements of Section 214--(1) When notice is 
    to be issued. Notification of the requirement to submit evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, as required by this 
    section, or to elect not to contend that one has eligible immigration 
    status as provided by paragraph (f) of this section, shall be given by 
    the IHA as follows:
        (i) Applicant's notice. The notification described in paragraph 
    (g)(1) of this section shall be given to each applicant at the time of 
    application for financial assistance. Families whose applications are 
    pending on June 19, 1995 shall be notified of the requirements to 
    submit evidence of eligible status as soon as possible after June 19, 
    1995.
        (ii) Notice to families already receiving assistance. For a family 
    in occupancy on June 19, 1995, the notification described in paragraph 
    (g)(1) of this section shall be given to each at the time of, and 
    together with, the IHA's notice of the regular reexamination after that 
    date, but no later than one year following June 19, 1995.
        (2) Form and content of notice. The notice shall:
        (i) State that financial assistance is contingent upon the 
    submission and verification, as appropriate, of the evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, as required by this 
    section;
        (ii) Describe the type of evidence that must be submitted and state 
    the time period in which that evidence must be submitted (see paragraph 
    (h) of this section concerning when evidence must be submitted); and
        (iii) State that assistance will be prorated, denied or terminated, 
    as appropriate, upon a final determination of ineligibility after all 
    appeals have been exhausted (see paragraph (n) of this section 
    concerning INS appeal, and paragraph (o) of this section concerning IHA 
    informal hearing process) or, if appeals are not pursued, at a time to 
    be specified in accordance with HUD requirements. Families already 
    receiving assistance also shall be informed of how to obtain assistance 
    under the preservation of families provisions of paragraph (r) of this 
    section.
        (h) When evidence of eligible status is required to be submitted. 
    The IHA shall require evidence of eligible status to be submitted at 
    the times specified in paragraph (h) of this section subject to any 
    extension granted in accordance with paragraph (i) of this section.
        (1) Applicants. For applicants, the IHA must ensure that evidence 
    of eligible status is submitted not later than the date the IHA 
    anticipates or has knowledge that verification of other aspects of 
    eligibility for assistance will occur (see paragraph (l) of this 
    section).
        (2) Families already receiving assistance. For a family already 
    receiving the benefit of assistance in a covered program on June 19, 
    1995, the [[Page 14851]] required evidence shall be submitted at the 
    first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, in accordance with 
    program requirements.
        (3) New occupants of assisted units. For any new family members, 
    the required evidence shall be submitted at the first interim or 
    regular reexamination following the person's occupancy.
        (4) Changing participation in a HUD program. Whenever a family 
    applies for admission to a Section 214 covered program, evidence of 
    eligible status is required to be submitted in accordance with the 
    requirements of this part unless the family already has submitted the 
    evidence to the IHA for a covered program.
        (5) One-time evidence requirement for continuous occupancy. For 
    each family member, the family is required to submit evidence of 
    eligible status only one time during continuously assisted occupancy 
    under any covered program.
        (i) Extensions of time to submit evidence of eligible status--(1) 
    When extension must be granted. The IHA shall extend the time, provided 
    in paragraph (h) of this section, to submit evidence of eligible 
    immigration status if the family member:
        (i) Submits the declaration required under paragraph (e)(3) of this 
    section certifying that any person for whom required evidence has not 
    been submitted is a noncitizen with eligible immigration status; and
        (ii) Certifies that the evidence needed to support a claim of 
    eligible immigration status is temporarily unavailable, additional time 
    is needed to obtain and submit the evidence, and prompt and diligent 
    efforts will be undertaken to obtain the evidence.
        (2) Prohibition on indefinite extension period. Any extension of 
    time, if granted, shall be for a specific period of time. The 
    additional time provided should be sufficient to allow the family the 
    time to obtain the evidence needed. The IHA's determination of the 
    length of the extension needed, shall be based on the circumstances of 
    the individual case.
        (3) Grant or denial of extension to be in writing. The IHA's 
    decision to grant or deny an extension as provided in paragraph (i)(1) 
    of this section shall be issued to the family by written notice. If the 
    extension is granted, the notice shall specify the extension period 
    granted. If the extension is denied, the notice shall explain the 
    reasons for denial of the extension.
        (j) Failure to submit evidence or establish eligible immigration 
    status. If the family fails to submit required evidence of eligible 
    immigration status within the time period specified in the notice, or 
    any extension granted in accordance with paragraph (i) of this section, 
    or if the evidence is timely submitted but fails to establish eligible 
    immigration status, the IHA shall proceed to deny, prorate or terminate 
    assistance, or provide continued assistance or temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance, as appropriate, in accordance, respectively 
    with the provisions of paragraph (m) of this section or paragraph (r) 
    of this section.
        (k) Documents of eligible immigration status--(1) General. An IHA 
    shall request and review original documents of eligible immigration 
    status. The IHA shall retain photocopies of the documents for its own 
    records and return the original documents to the family.
        (2) Acceptable evidence of eligible immigration status. The 
    original of one of the following documents is acceptable evidence of 
    eligible immigration status, subject to verification in accordance with 
    paragraph (l) of this section:
        (i) Form I-551, Alien Registration Receipt Card (for permanent 
    resident aliens);
        (ii) Form I-94, Arrival-Departure Record, with one of the following 
    annotations:
        (A) ``Admitted as Refugee Pursuant to Section 207'';
        (B) ``Section 208'' or ``Asylum'';
        (C) ``Section 243(h)'' or ``Deportation stayed by Attorney 
    General'';
        (D) ``Paroled Pursuant to Sec. 212(d)(5) of the INA'';
        (iii) If Form I-94, Arrival-Departure Record, is not annotated, 
    then accompanied by one of the following documents:
        (A) A final court decision granting asylum (but only if no appeal 
    is taken);
        (B) A letter from an INS asylum officer granting asylum (if 
    application is filed on or after October 1, 1990) or from an INS 
    district director granting asylum (if application filed before October 
    1, 1990);
        (C) A court decision granting withholding or deportation; or
        (D) A letter from an INS asylum officer withholding of deportation 
    (if application filed on or after October 1, 1990).
        (iv) Form I-688, Temporary Resident Card, which must be annotated 
    ``Section 245A'' or ``Section 210'';
        (v) Form I-688B, Employment Authorization Card, which must be 
    annotated ``Provision of Law 274a.12(11)'' or ``Provision of Law 
    274a.12'';
        (vi) A receipt issued by the INS indicating that an application for 
    issuance of a replacement document in one of the above-listed 
    categories has been made and the applicant's entitlement to the 
    document has been verified; or
        (vii) If other documents are determined by the INS to constitute 
    acceptable evidence of eligible immigration status, they will be 
    announced by notice published in the Federal Register.
        (l) Verification of eligible immigration status.--(1) When 
    verification is to occur. Verification of eligible immigration status 
    shall be conducted by the IHA simultaneously with verification of other 
    aspects of eligibility for assistance under a Section 214 covered 
    program. (See paragraph (h) of this section.) The IHA shall verify 
    eligible immigration status in accordance with the INS procedures 
    described in this section.
        (2) Primary verification.--(i) Automated verification system. 
    Primary verification of the immigration status of the person is 
    conducted by the IHA through the INS automated system (INS Systematic 
    for Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE). The INS SAVE system 
    provides access to names, file numbers and admission numbers of 
    noncitizens.
        (ii) Failure of primary verification to confirm eligible 
    immigration status. If the INS SAVE system does not verify eligible 
    immigration status, secondary verification must be performed.
        (3) Secondary verification--(i) Manual search of INS records. 
    Secondary verification is a manual search by the INS of its records to 
    determine an individual's immigration status. The IHA must request 
    secondary verification, within 10 days of receiving the results of the 
    primary verification, if the primary verification system does not 
    confirm eligible immigration status, or if the primary verification 
    system verifies immigration status that is ineligible for assistance 
    under a covered Section 214 covered program.
        (ii) Secondary verification initiated by IHA. Secondary 
    verification is initiated by the IHA forwarding photocopies of the 
    original INS documents listed in paragraph (k)(2) of this section 
    (front and back), attached to the INS document verification request 
    form G-845S (Document Verification Request), or such other form 
    specified by the INS, to a designated INS office for review. (Form G-
    845S is available from the local INS Office.)
        (iii) Failure of secondary verification to conform eligible 
    immigration status. If the secondary verification does not confirm 
    eligible immigration status, the IHA shall issue to the family the 
    notice [[Page 14852]] described in paragraph (m)(4) of this section, 
    which includes notification of appeal to the INS of the INS finding on 
    immigration status (see paragraph (m)(4)(iv) of this section).
        (4) Exemption from liability for INS verification. The IHA shall 
    not be liable for any action, delay, or failure of the INS in 
    conducting the automated or manual verification.
        (m) Delay, denial, or termination of assistance.--(1) Restrictions 
    on delay, denial, or termination of assistance. Assistance to an 
    applicant shall not be delayed or denied, and assistance to a tenant 
    shall not be delayed, denied, or terminated, on the basis of ineligible 
    immigration status of a family member if:
        (i) The primary and secondary verification of any immigration 
    documents that were timely submitted has not been completed;
        (ii) The family member for whom required evidence has not been 
    submitted has moved from the tenant's dwelling unit;
        (iii) The family member who is determined not to be in an eligible 
    immigration status following INS verification has moved from the 
    tenant's dwelling unit;
        (iv) The INS appeals process under paragraph (n) of this section 
    has not been concluded;
        (v) For a tenant, the IHA hearing process under paragraph (o) of 
    this section has not been concluded;
        (vi) Assistance is prorated in accordance with paragraph(s) of this 
    section;
        (vii) Assistance for a mixed family is continued in accordance with 
    paragraph (r) of this section; or
        (viii) Deferral of termination of assistance is granted in 
    accordance with paragraph (r) of this section.
        (2) When delay of assistance to applicant is permissible. 
    Assistance to an applicant may be delayed after the conclusion of the 
    INS appeal process, but not denied until the conclusion of the IHA 
    informal hearing process, if an informal hearing is requested by the 
    family.
        (3) Events causing denial or termination of assistance. Assistance 
    to an applicant shall be denied, and a tenant's assistance shall be 
    terminated, in accordance with the procedures of this section, upon the 
    occurrence of any of the following events:
        (i) Evidence of citizenship (i.e., the declaration) and eligible 
    immigration status is not submitted by the date specified in paragraph 
    (h) of this section, or by the expiration of any extension granted in 
    accordance with paragraph (i) of this section; or
        (ii) The evidence of citizenship and eligible immigration status is 
    timely submitted, but INS primary and second verification does not 
    verify eligible immigration status of a family member; and
        (A) The family does not pursue INS appeal (as provided in paragraph 
    (n) of this section) or IHA informal hearing rights (as provided in 
    paragraph (o) of this section); or
        (B) INS appeal and informal hearing rights are pursued, but the 
    final appeal or hearing decisions are decided against the family 
    member.
        (4) Notice of denial or termination of assistance. The notice of 
    denial or termination of assistance shall advise the family:
        (i) The financial assistance will be denied or terminated, and 
    provide a brief explanation of the reasons for the proposed denial or 
    termination of assistance;
        (ii) That the family may be eligible for proration of assistance as 
    provided in paragraph(s) of this section;
        (iii) In the case of a tenant, the criteria and procedures for 
    obtaining relief under the preservation of families provisions in 
    paragraph (r) of this section;
        (iv) That the family has a right to request an appeal to the INS of 
    the results of the secondary verification of immigration status, and to 
    submit additional documentation or a written explanation in support of 
    the appeal, in accordance with the procedures of paragraph (n) of this 
    section;
        (v) That the family has a right to request an informal hearing with 
    the IHA either upon completion of the INS appeal or in lieu of the INS 
    appeal, as provided in paragraph (n) of this section;
        (vi) For applicants, the notice shall advise that assistance may 
    not be delayed until the conclusion of the INS appeal process, but 
    assistance may be delayed during the pendency of the IHA informal 
    hearing process.
        (n) Appeal to the INS--(1) Submission of request for appeal. Upon 
    receipt of notification by the IHA that INS secondary verification 
    failed to confirm eligible immigration status, the IHA shall notify the 
    family of the results of the INS verification, and the family shall 
    have 30 days from the date of the IHA's notification, to request an 
    appeal of the INS results. The request for appeal shall be made by the 
    family communicating that request in writing directly to the INS. The 
    family must provide the IHA with a copy of the written request for 
    appeal and proof of mailing. For good cause shown, the IHA shall grant 
    the family an extension of time within which to request an appeal.
        (2) Documentation to be submitted as part of appeal to INS. The 
    family shall forward to the designated INS office any additional 
    documentation or written explanation in support of the appeal. This 
    material must include a copy of the INS document verification request 
    form G-845S (used to process the secondary verification request) or 
    such other form specified by the INS, and a cover letter indicating 
    that the family is requesting an appeal of the INS immigration status 
    verification results. (Form G-845S is available from the local INS 
    Office.)
        (3) Decision by INS--(i) When decision will be issued. The INS will 
    issue to the family, with a copy to the IHA, a decision within 30 days 
    of its receipt of documentation concerning the family's appeal of the 
    verification of immigration status. If, for any reason, the INS is 
    unable to issue a decision within the 30 day time period, the INS will 
    inform the family and the IHA of the reasons for the delay.
        (ii) Notification of INS decision and of informal hearing 
    procedures. When the IHA receives a copy of the INS decision, the IHA 
    shall notify the family of its right to request an informal hearing on 
    the IHA's ineligibility determination in accordance with the procedures 
    of paragraph (o) of this section.
        (4) No delay, denial or termination of assistance until completion 
    of INS appeal process; direct appeal to INS. Pending the completion of 
    the INS appeal under this section, assistance may not be delayed, 
    denied or terminated on the basis of immigration status.
        (o) Informal hearing--(1) When request for hearing is to be made. 
    After notification of the INS decision, or in lieu of request of appeal 
    to the INS, the family may request that the IHA provide a hearing. This 
    request must be made either within 14 days of the date the IHA mails or 
    delivers the notice under paragraph (m)(4) of this section, or within 
    14 days of the mailing of the INS appeal decision issued in accordance 
    with paragraph (n)(4) of this section (established by the date of 
    postmark).
        (2) Extension of time to request hearing. The IHA shall extend the 
    period of time for requesting a hearing (for a specified period) upon 
    good cause shown.
        (3) Informal hearing procedures. (i) For tenants, the procedures 
    for the hearing before the IHA are set forth in Sec. 905.340.
        (ii) For applicants, the procedures for the informal hearing before 
    the IHA are as follows: [[Page 14853]] 
        (A) Hearing before an impartial individual. The applicant shall be 
    provided a hearing before any person(s) designated by the IHA 
    (including an officer or employee of the IHA), other than a person who 
    made or approved the decision under review, and other than a person who 
    is a subordinate of the person who made or approved the decision;
        (B) Examination of evidence. The applicant shall be provided the 
    opportunity to examine and copy, at the applicant's expense and at a 
    reasonable time in advance of the hearing, any documents in the 
    possession of the IHA pertaining to the applicant's eligibility status, 
    or in the possession of the INS (as permitted by INS requirements), 
    including any records and regulations that may be relevant to the 
    hearing;
        (C) Presentation of evidence and arguments in support of eligible 
    status. The applicant shall be provided the opportunity to present 
    evidence and arguments in support of eligible status. Evidence may be 
    considered without regard to admissibility under the rules of evidence 
    applicable to judicial proceedings;
        (D) Controverting evidence of the project owner. The applicant 
    shall be provided the opportunity to controvert evidence relied upon by 
    the IHA and to confront and cross-examine all witnesses on whose 
    testimony or information the IHA relies;
        (E) Representation. The applicant shall be entitled to be 
    represented by an attorney, or other designee, at the applicant's 
    expense, and to have such person make statements on the applicant's 
    behalf;
        (F) Interpretive services. The applicant shall be entitled to 
    arrange for an interpreter to attend the hearing, at the expense of the 
    applicant or the IHA, as may be agreed upon by both parties;
        (G) Hearing to be recorded. The applicant shall be entitled to have 
    the hearing recorded by audiotape (a transcript of the hearing may, but 
    is not required to, be provided by the IHA); and
        (H) Hearing decision. The IHA shall provide the applicant with a 
    written final decision, based solely on the facts presented at the 
    hearing within 14 days of the date of the informal hearing. The 
    decision shall state basis for the decision.
        (p) Judicial relief. A decision against a family member under the 
    INS appeal process or the IHA informal hearing process does not 
    preclude the family from exercising the right, that may otherwise be 
    available, to seek redress directly through judicial procedures.
        (q) Retention of documents. The IHA shall retain for a minimum of 5 
    years the following documents that may have been submitted to the IHA 
    by the family or provided to the IHA as part of the INS appeal or the 
    IHA informal hearing process:
        (1) The application for financial assistance;
        (2) The form completed by the family for income re-examination;
        (3) Photocopies of any original documents (front and back), 
    including original INS documents;
        (4) The signed verification consent form;
        (5) The INS verification results;
        (6) The request for an INS appeal;
        (7) The final INS determination;
        (8) The request for an IHA informal hearing; and
        (9) The final hearing decision.
        (r) Preservation of mixed families and other families--(1) 
    Assistance available for mixed families--(i) Assistance available for 
    tenant mixed families. For a mixed family assisted under a Section 214 
    covered program on June 19, 1995, and following the appeals and 
    informal hearing procedures provided in paragraphs (n) and (o) of this 
    section if utilized by the family, one of the following three types of 
    assistance may be available to the family:
        (A) Continued assistance (see paragraph (r)(2) of this section);
        (B) Temporary deferral of termination of assistance (see paragraph 
    (r)(3) of this section); or
        (C) Prorated assistance (see paragraph (s) of this section; a mixed 
    family must be provided prorated assistance if the family so requests).
        (ii) Assistance available for applicant mixed families. Prorated 
    assistance is also available for mixed families applying for 
    assistance, as provided in paragraph (s) of this section.
        (iii) Assistance available to other families in occupancy. For 
    families receiving assistance under a Section 214 covered program on 
    June 19, 1995 and who have no members with eligible immigration status, 
    the IHA may grant the family temporary deferral of termination of 
    assistance.
        (2) Continued assistance. A mixed family may receive continued 
    housing assistance if all of the following conditions are met:
        (i) The family was receiving assistance under a Section 214 covered 
    program on June 19, 1995;
        (ii) The family's head of household or spouse has eligible 
    immigration status as described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section; 
    and
        (iii) The family does not include any person (who does not have 
    eligible immigration status) other than the head of household, any 
    spouse of the head of household, any parents of the head of household, 
    any parents of the spouse, or any children of the head of household or 
    spouse.
        (3) Temporary deferral of termination of assistance--(i) 
    Eligibility for this type of assistance. If a mixed family qualifies 
    for prorated assistance (and does not qualify for continued 
    assistance), but decides not to accept prorated assistance, or if a 
    family has no members with eligible immigration status, the family may 
    be eligible for temporary deferral of termination of assistance if 
    necessary to permit the family additional time for the orderly 
    transition of those family members with ineligible status, and any 
    other family members involved, to other affordable housing. Other 
    affordable housing is used in the context of transition of an 
    ineligible family from a rent level that reflects HUD assistance to a 
    rent level that is unassisted; the term refers to housing that is not 
    substandard, that is of appropriate size for the family and that can be 
    rented for an amount not exceeding the amount that the family pays for 
    rent, including utilities, plus 25 percent.
        (ii) Time limit on deferral period. If temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance is granted, the deferral period shall be for 
    an initial period not to exceed six months. The initial period may be 
    renewed for additional periods of six months, but the aggregate 
    deferral period shall not exceed a period of three years.
        (iii) Notification requirements for beginning of each deferral 
    period. At the beginning of each deferral period, the IHA must inform 
    the family of its ineligibility for financial assistance and offer the 
    family information concerning, and referrals to assist in finding, 
    other affordable housing.
        (iv) Determination of availability of affordable housing at end of 
    each deferral period. Before the end of each deferral period, the IHA 
    must:
        (A) Make a determination of the availability of affordable housing 
    of appropriate size based on evidence of conditions which when taken 
    together will demonstrate an inadequate supply of affordable housing 
    for the area in which the project is located, the consolidated plan (if 
    applicable, as described in 24 CFR part 91), the IHA's own knowledge of 
    the availability of affordable housing, and on evidence of the tenant 
    family's efforts to locate such housing; and
        (B) Notify the tenant family in writing, at least 60 days in 
    advance of the expiration of the deferral period, [[Page 14854]] that 
    termination will be deferred again (provided that the granting of 
    another deferral will not result in aggregate deferral periods that 
    exceed three years), and a determination was made that other affordable 
    housing is not available; or
        (C) Notify the tenant family in writing, at least 60 days in 
    advance of the expiration of the deferral period, that termination of 
    financial assistance will not be deferred because either granting 
    another deferral will result in aggregate deferral periods that exceed 
    three years, or a determination has been made that other affordable 
    housing is available.
        (v) Option to select proration of assistance at end of deferral 
    period. A family who is eligible for, and receives temporary deferral 
    of termination of assistance, may request, and the IHA shall provide, 
    proration of assistance at the end of the deferral period if the family 
    has made a good faith effort during the deferral period to locate other 
    affordable housing.
        (vi) Notification of decision on family preservation assistance. An 
    IHA shall notify the family of its decision concerning the family's 
    qualification for assistance under this section. If the family is 
    ineligible for assistance under this section, the notification shall 
    state the reasons, which must be based on relevant factors. For tenant 
    families, the notice also shall inform the tenant family of any appeal 
    rights.
        (s) Proration of assistance--(1) Applicability. This section 
    applies to a mixed family other than a family receiving continued 
    assistance under paragraph (r)(2) of this section, or other than a 
    family who is eligible for and requests temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance under paragraph (r)(3) of this section. The 
    IHA must provide an eligible mixed family prorated assistance if the 
    family request prorated assistance.
        (2) Method of prorating assistance. The IHA shall prorate the 
    family's assistance by:
        (i) Step 1. Determining total tenant payment in accordance with 
    Sec. 905.325 (annual income includes income of all family members, 
    including any family member who has not established eligible 
    immigration status).
        (ii) Step 2. Subtracting the total tenant payment from a HUD-
    supplied ``Indian housing maximum rent'' applicable to the unit or the 
    housing authority. (``Indian housing maximum rent'' shall be determined 
    by HUD using the 95th percentile rent for the housing authority.) The 
    result is the maximum subsidy for which the family could qualify if all 
    members were eligible (``family maximum subsidy'').
        (iii) Step 3. Dividing the family maximum subsidy by the number of 
    persons in the family (all persons) to determine the maximum subsidy 
    per each family member who has citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status (``eligible family member''). The subsidy per eligible family 
    member is the ``member maximum subsidy''.
        (iv) Step 4. Multiplying the member maximum subsidy by the number 
    of family members who have citizenship or eligible immigration status 
    (``eligible family members'').
        (v) Step 5. The product of steps 1-4, as set forth in paragraph 
    (s)(2) of this section is the amount of subsidy for which the family is 
    eligible (``eligible subsidy''). The family's rent is the ``public 
    housing maximum rent'' minus the amount of the eligible subsidy.
        (t) Prohibition of assistance to noncitizen students--(1) General. 
    The provisions of this section permitting continued assistance, 
    prorated assistance or temporary deferral of termination of assistance 
    for certain families, do not apply to any person who is determined to 
    be a noncitizen student, as defined in paragraph (t)(2) of this 
    section, or the family of the noncitizen student, as described in 
    paragraph (t)(3) of this section.
        (2) Noncitizen student. For purposes of this part, a noncitizen 
    student is defined as a noncitizen who:
        (i) Has a residence in a foreign country that the person has no 
    intention of abandoning;
        (ii) Is a bona fide student qualified to pursue a full course of 
    study; and
        (iii) Is admitted to the United States temporarily and solely for 
    purposes of pursuing such a course of study at an established 
    institution of learning or other recognized place of study in the 
    United States, particularly designated by such person and approved by 
    the Attorney General after consultation with the Department of 
    Education of the United States, which institution or place of study 
    shall have agreed to report to the Attorney General the termination of 
    attendance of each nonimmigrant student (and if any such institution of 
    learning or place of study fails to make such reports promptly the 
    approval shall be withdrawn).
        (3) Family of noncitizen student. The prohibition on providing 
    assistance to a noncitizen student as described in paragraph (t)(1) of 
    this section also extends to the noncitizen spouse of the noncitizen 
    student and minor children of any noncitizen student if the spouse or 
    children are accompanying the student or following to join such 
    student. The prohibition on providing assistance to a noncitizen 
    student does not extend to the citizen spouse of the noncitizen student 
    and the children of the citizen spouse and noncitizen student.
        (u) Protection from liability for IHAs, State, Tribal, and local 
    government agencies and officials--(1) Protection from liability for 
    IHAs. HUD will not take any compliance, disallowance, penalty, or other 
    regulatory action against an IHA with respect to any error in its 
    determination of eligibility for assistance based on citizenship or 
    immigration status:
        (i) If the IHA established eligibility based upon verification of 
    eligible immigration status through the verification system described 
    in paragraph (l) of this section;
        (ii) Because the IHA was required to provide an opportunity for the 
    applicant or family to submit evidence in accordance with paragraphs 
    (h) and (i) of this section;
        (iii) Because the IHA was required to wait for completion of INS 
    verification of immigration status in accordance with paragraph (l) of 
    this section;
        (iv) Because the IHA was required to wait for completion of the INS 
    appeal process provided in accordance with paragraph (n) of this 
    section; or
        (v) Because the IHA was required to provide an informal hearing in 
    accordance with paragraph (o) of this section.
        (2) Protection from liability for State, Tribal and local 
    government agencies and officials. State, Tribal, and local government 
    agencies and officials shall not be liable for the design or 
    implementation of the verification system described in paragraph (l) of 
    this section and the IHA informal hearing provided under paragraph (o) 
    of this section, so long as the implementation by the State, Tribal, or 
    local government agency or official is in accordance with prescribed 
    HUD rules and requirements.
        88. Section 905.315 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (a)(i) 
    and (a)(ii) as (a)(1) and (a)(2), respectively; by redesignating 
    existing paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3) as paragraphs (b) and (c) 
    respectively; and by adding a new paragraph (d), to read as follows;
    
    
    Sec. 905.315  Initial determination, verification, and reexamination of 
    family income and composition.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) Implementation of verification of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status. The IHA shall follow the procedures required by 
    Sec. 905.310 for determining citizenship or eligible immigration status 
    before initial [[Page 14855]] occupancy, and, for tenants admitted 
    before June 19, 1995, at the first reexamination of family income and 
    composition after that date. Thereafter, at the annual reexaminations 
    of family income and composition, the IHA shall follow the requirements 
    of Sec. 905.310 concerning verification of the immigration status of 
    any new family member. The family shall comply with the IHA's policy 
    regarding required interim reporting of changes in the family's income 
    and composition. If the IHA is informed of a change in the family 
    income or other circumstances between regularly scheduled 
    reexaminations, the IHA, upon consultation with the family and 
    verification of the information, shall promptly make any adjustments 
    appropriate in the rent or Homebuyer payment amount or take appropriate 
    action concerning the addition of a family member who is a noncitizen 
    with ineligible immigration status.
    
    PART 912--DEFINITION OF FAMILY AND OTHER RELATED TERMS; OCCUPANCY 
    BY SINGLE PERSONS
    
        89. The authority citation for part 912 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1436a, 1437a, and 3535(d).
    
        90. Section 912.1 is amended by changing the period at the end of 
    paragraph (a)(2) to a semicolon and adding the word ``and'' following 
    the semicolon; and by adding a new paragraph (a)(3), to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 912.1  Purpose and applicability.
    
        (a) * * *
        (3) Implements the statutory prohibition against making assistance 
    under the United States Housing Act of 1937 (``Act'') (42 U.S.C. 1437 
    et seq.) available for the benefit of noncitizens with ineligible 
    immigration status.
    * * * * *
        91. Section 912.2 is amended by adding definitions in alphabetical 
    order for the terms ``Child,'' ``Citizen,'' ``Evidence of citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status,'' ``Head of household,'' ``HUD,'' 
    ``Mixed family,'' ``National,'' ``Noncitizen,'' ``Section 214,'' and 
    ``Section 214 covered program,'' to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 912.2  Definitions.
    
        Child. A member of the family, other than the family head or a 
    spouse, who is under 18 years of age.
        Citizen. A citizen or national of the United States.
    * * * * *
        Evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status. The 
    documents which must be submitted to evidence citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status (see Sec. 912.6(b)).
    * * * * *
        Head of household. The adult member of the family who is the head 
    of the household for purposes of determining income eligibility and 
    rent.
        HUD. The Department of Housing and Urban Development.
    * * * * *
        Mixed family. A family whose members include those with citizenship 
    or eligible immigration status, and those without citizenship or 
    eligible immigration status.
        National. A person who owes permanent allegiance to the United 
    States, for example, as a result of birth in a United States territory 
    or possession.
        Noncitizen. A person who is neither a citizen nor national of the 
    United States.
    * * * * *
        Section 214. Section 214 of the Housing and Community Development 
    Act of 1980, as amended (42 U.S.C. 1436a). Section 214 restricts HUD 
    from making financial assistance available for noncitizens unless they 
    meet one of the categories of eligible immigration status specified in 
    Section 214.
        Section 214 covered programs. Programs to which the restrictions 
    imposed by Section 214 apply are programs that make available financial 
    assistance pursuant to the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 
    1437-1440), Section 235 or Section 236 of the National Housing Act (12 
    U.S.C. 1715z and 1715z-1) and Section 101 of the Housing and Urban 
    Development Act of 1965 (12 U.S.C. 1701s).
    * * * * *
        92. Part 912 is amended by redesignating Secs. 912.1 through 912.4 
    as subpart A, and by adding the subpart heading to read, ``Subpart A--
    General'', and by adding a new subpart B consisting of Secs. 912.5 
    through 912.14, to read as follows:
    
    Subpart B--Restrictions on Assistance to Noncitizens
    
    Sec.
    912.5  General.
    912.5a  Requirements concerning documents.
    912.6  Submission of evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status.
    912.7  Documents of eligible immigration status.
    912.8  Verification of eligible immigration status.
    912.9  Delay, denial, or termination of assistance.
    912.10  Preservation of mixed families and other families.
    912.11  Proration of assistance.
    912.12  Prohibition of assistance to noncitizen students.
    912.13  Compliance with nondiscrimination requirements.
    912.14  Protection from liability for PHAs, State, local, and tribal 
    government agencies and officials.
    
    Subpart B--Restrictions on Assistance to Noncitizens
    
    
    Sec. 912.5  General.
    
        (a) Restrictions on assistance. Assistance provided under a Section 
    214 covered program is restricted to:
        (1) Citizens; or
        (2) Noncitizens who have eligible immigration status in one of the 
    following categories:
        (i) A noncitizen lawfully admitted for permanent residence, as 
    defined by section 101(a)(20) of the Immigration and Nationality Act 
    (INA), as an immigrant, as defined by section 101(a)(15) of the INA (8 
    U.S.C. 1101(a)(20) and 1101(a)(15), respectively) (immigrants). (This 
    category includes a noncitizen admitted under section 210 or 210A of 
    the INA (8 U.S.C. 1160 or 1161), (special agricultural worker), who has 
    been granted lawful temporary resident status);
        (ii) A noncitizen who entered the United States before January 1, 
    1972, or such later date as enacted by law, and has continuously 
    maintained residence in the United States since then, and who is not 
    ineligible for citizenship, but who is deemed to be lawfully admitted 
    for permanent residence as a result of an exercise of discretion by the 
    Attorney General under section 249 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1259);
        (iii) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States 
    pursuant to an admission under section 207 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1157) 
    (refugee status); pursuant to the granting of asylum (which has not 
    been terminated) under section 208 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1158) (asylum 
    status); or as a result of being granted conditional entry under 
    section 203(a)(7) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1153(a)(7)) before April 1, 
    1980, because of persecution or fear of persecution on account of race, 
    religion, or political opinion or because of being uprooted by 
    catastrophic national calamity;
        (iv) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States as a 
    result of an exercise of discretion by the Attorney General for 
    emergent reasons or reasons deemed strictly in the public interest 
    under section 212(d)(5) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1182(d)(5)) (parole 
    status);
        (v) A noncitizen who is lawfully present in the United States as a 
    result of the Attorney General's withholding deportation under section 
    243(h) of the [[Page 14856]] INA (8 U.S.C. 1253(h)) (threat to life or 
    freedom); or
        (vi) A noncitizen lawfully admitted for temporary or permanent 
    residence under section 245A of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1255a) (amnesty 
    granted under INA 245A).
        (b) Family eligibility for assistance. (1) A family shall not be 
    eligible for assistance unless every member of the family residing in 
    the unit is determined to have eligible status, as described in 
    paragraph (a) of this section;
        (2) Despite the ineligibility of one or more family members, a 
    mixed family may be eligible for one of the three types of assistance 
    provided in Sec. 912.10. A family without any eligible members and 
    receiving assistance on June 19, 1995 may be eligible for temporary 
    deferral of termination of assistance as provided in Sec. 912.10.
    
    
    Sec. 912.5a  Requirements concerning documents.
    
        For any notice or document (decision, declaration, consent form, 
    etc.) that Secs. 912.5 through 912.14 require a PHA to provide to an 
    individual, or require that the PHA obtain the signature of the 
    individual, the PHA, where feasible, must arrange for the notice or 
    document to be provided to the individual in a language that is 
    understood by the individual if the individual is not proficient in 
    English. (See 24 CFR 8.6 of HUD's regulations for requirements 
    concerning communications with persons with disabilities.)
    Sec. 912.6  Submission of evidence of citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status.
    
        (a) General. Eligibility for assistance or continued assistance 
    under a Section 214 covered program is contingent upon a family's 
    submission to the PHA of the documents described in paragraph (b) of 
    this section for each family member. If one or more family members do 
    not have citizenship or eligible immigration status, the family members 
    may exercise the election not to contend to have eligible immigration 
    status as provided in paragraph (e) of this section, and the provisions 
    of Sec. 912.10 shall apply.
        (b) Evidence of citizenship or eligible immigration status. Each 
    family member, regardless of age, must submit the following evidence to 
    the PHA:
        (1) For citizens, the evidence consists of a signed declaration of 
    U.S. citizenship;
        (2) For noncitizens who are 62 years of age or older or who will be 
    62 years of age or older and receiving assistance under a Section 214 
    covered program on June 19, 1995, the evidence consists of:
        (i) A signed declaration of eligible immigration status; and
        (ii) Proof of age document.
        (3) For all other noncitizens, the evidence consists of:
        (i) A signed declaration of eligible immigration status;
        (ii) The INS documents listed in Sec. 912,7; and
        (iii) A signed verification consent form.
        (c) Declaration. For each family member who contend that he or she 
    is a U.S. citizen or a noncitizen with eligible immigration status, the 
    family must submit to the PHA a written declaration, signed under 
    penalty of perjury, by which the family member declares whether he or 
    she is a U.S. citizen or a noncitizen with eligible immigration status:
        (1) For each adult, the declaration must be signed by the adult.
        (2) For each child, the declaration must be signed by an adult 
    residing in the assisted dwelling unit who is responsible for the 
    child.
        (d) Verification consent form--(1) Who signs. Each noncitizen who 
    declares eligible immigration status, must sign a verification consent 
    form as follows:
        (i) For each adult, the form must be signed by the adult.
        (ii) For each child, the form must be signed by an adult member of 
    the family residing in the assisted dwelling unit who is responsible 
    for the child.
        (2) Notice of release of evidence by PHA. The verification consent 
    form shall provide that evidence of eligible immigration status may be 
    released by the PHA, without responsibility for the further use or 
    transmission of the evidence by the entity receiving it, to:
        (i) HUD is required by HUD; and
        (ii) The INS for purposes of verification of the immigration status 
    of the individual.
        (3) Notice of release of evidence by HUD. The verification consent 
    form also shall notify the individual of the possible release of 
    evidence of eligible immigration status by HUD. Evidence of eligible 
    immigration status shall only be released to the INS for purposes of 
    establishing eligibility for financial assistance and not for any other 
    purpose. HUD is not responsible for the further use or transmission of 
    the evidence or other information by the INS.
        (e) Individuals who do not contend to have eligible immigration 
    status. If one or more members of a family elect not to contend that 
    they have eligible immigration status and the other members of the 
    family establish their citizenship or eligible immigration status, the 
    family may be considered for assistance under Secs. 912.10 or 912.11 
    despite the fact that no declaration or documentation of eligible 
    status is submitted by one or more members of the family. The family, 
    however, must identify to PHA the family member (or members) who will 
    elect not to contend that he or she has eligible immigration status.
        (f) Notification of requirements of Section 214--(1) Timing of 
    notice. Notification of the requirement to submit evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, as required by this 
    section, or to elect not to contend that one has eligible immigration 
    status as provided by paragraph (e) of this section, shall be given by 
    the PHA as follows:
        (i) Applicant's notice. The notification described in paragraph 
    (f)(1) of this section shall be given to each applicant at the time of 
    application for financial assistance. Families whose applications are 
    pending on June 19, 1995 shall be notified of the requirements to 
    submit evidence of eligible status as soon as possible after June 19, 
    1995.
        (ii) Notice to families already receiving assistance. For a family 
    in occupancy on June 19, 1995, the notification described in paragraph 
    (f)(1) of this section shall be given to each at the time of, and 
    together with, the PHA's notice of the first regular reexamination 
    after that date, but not later than one year following June 19, 1995.
        (2) Form and content of notice. The notice shall:
        (i) State that financial assistance is contingent upon the 
    submission and verification, as appropriate, of the evidence of 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status, as required by this 
    section;
        (ii) Describe the type of evidence that must be submitted and state 
    the time period in which that evidence must be submitted (see paragraph 
    (g) of this section concerning when evidence must be submitted); and
        (iii) State that assistance will be prorated, denied or terminated, 
    as appropriate, upon a final determination of ineligibility after all 
    appeals have been exhausted (see Sec. 912.9 concerning INS appeal, and 
    PHA informal hearing process) or, if appeals are not pursued, at a time 
    to be specified in accordance with HUD requirements. Families already 
    receiving assistance also shall be informed of how to obtain assistance 
    under the preservation of families provisions of Sec. 912.10.
        (g) When evidence of eligible status is required to be submitted. 
    The PHA shall require evidence of eligible status to be submitted at 
    the times specified in paragraph (g) of this section, subject to 
    [[Page 14857]] any extension granted in accordance with paragraph (h) 
    of this section.
        (1) Applicants. For applicants, the PHA must ensure that evidence 
    of eligible status is submitted not later than the date the PHA 
    anticipates or has knowledge that verification of other aspects of 
    eligibility for assistance will occur (see Sec. 912.8(a)).
        (2) Families already receiving assistance. For a family already 
    receiving the benefit of assistance in a covered program on June 19, 
    1995, the required evidence shall be submitted at the first regular 
    reexamination after June 19, 1995, in accordance with program 
    requirements.
        (3) New occupants of assisted units. For any new family members, 
    the required evidence shall be submitted at the first interim or 
    regular reexamination following the person's occupancy.
        (4) Changing participation in a HUD program. Whenever a family 
    applies for admission to a Section 214 covered program, evidence of 
    eligible status is required to be submitted in accordance with the 
    requirements of this part unless the family already has submitted the 
    evidence to the PHA for a covered program.
        (5) One-time evidence requirement for continuous occupancy. For 
    each family member, the family is required to submit evidence of 
    eligible status only one time during continuously assisted occupancy 
    under any covered program.
        (h) Extensions of time to submit evidence of eligible status.--(1) 
    When extension must be granted. The PHA shall extend the time provided 
    in paragraph (g) of this section, to submit evidence of eligible 
    immigration status if the family member:
        (i) Submits the declaration required under Sec. 912.6(b) certifying 
    that any person for whom required evidence has not been submitted is a 
    noncitizen with eligible immigration status; and
        (ii) Certifies that the evidence needed to support a claim of 
    eligible immigration status is temporarily unavailable, additional time 
    is needed to obtain and submit the evidence, and prompt and diligent 
    efforts will be undertaken to obtain the evidence.
        (2) Prohibition on indefinite extension period. Any extension of 
    time, if granted, shall be for a specific period of time. The 
    additional time provided should be sufficient to allow the family the 
    time to obtain the evidence needed. The PHA's determination of the 
    length of the extension needed, shall be based on the circumstances of 
    the individual case.
        (3) Grant or denial of extension to be in writing. The PHA's 
    decision to grant or deny an extension as provided in paragraph (h)(1) 
    of this section shall be issued to the family by written notice. If the 
    extension is granted, the notice shall specify the extension period 
    granted. If the extension is denied, the notice shall explain the 
    reasons for denial of the extension.
        (i) Failure to submit evidence or establish eligible immigration 
    status. If the family fails to submit required evidence of eligible 
    immigration status within the time period specified in the notice, or 
    any extension granted in accordance with paragraph (h) of this section, 
    or if the evidence is timely submitted but fails to establish eligible 
    immigration status, the PHA shall proceed to deny, prorate or terminate 
    assistance, or provide continued assistance or temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance, as appropriate, in accordance with the 
    provisions of Secs. 912.9 and 912.10 respectively.
    
    
    Sec. 912.7  Documents of eligible immigration status.
    
        (a) General. A PHA shall request and review original documents of 
    eligible immigration status. The PHA shall retain photocopies of the 
    documents for its own records and return the original documents to the 
    family.
        (b) Acceptable evidence of eligible immigration status. The 
    original of one of the following documents is acceptable evidence of 
    eligible immigration status, subject to verification in accordance with 
    Sec. 912.8:
        (1) Form I-551, Alien Registration Receipt Card (for permanent 
    resident aliens);
        (2) Form I-94, Arrival-Departure Record, with one of the following 
    annotations:
        (i) ``Admitted as Refugee Pursuant to section 207'';
        (ii) ``Section 208'' or ``Asylum'';
        (iii) ``Section 243(h)'' or ``Deportation stayed by Attorney 
    General'';
        (iv) ``Paroled Pursuant to Sec. 212(d)(5) of the INA'';
        (3) If Form I-94, Arrival-Departure Record, is not annotated, then 
    accompanied by one of the following documents:
        (i) A final court decision granting asylum (but only if no appeal 
    is taken);
        (ii) A letter from an INS asylum officer granting asylum (if 
    application is filed on or after October 1, 1990) or from an INS 
    district director granting asylum (if application is filed before 
    October 1, 1990);
        (iii) A court decision granting withholding of deportation; or
        (iv) A letter from an INS asylum officer granting withholding of 
    deportation (if application is filed on or after October 1, 1990).
        (4) Form I-688, Temporary Resident Card, which must be annotated 
    ``Section 245A'' or ``Section 210'';
        (5) Form I-688B, Employment Authorization Card, which must be 
    annotated ``Provision of Law 274a.12(11)'' or ``Provision of Law 
    274a.12'';
        (6) A receipt issued by the INS indicating that an application for 
    issuance of a replacement document in one of the above-listed 
    categories has been made and the applicant's entitlement to the 
    document has been verified; or
        (c) Other acceptable evidence. If other documents are determined by 
    the INS to constitute acceptable evidence of eligible immigration 
    status, they will be announced by notice published in the Federal 
    Register.
    
    
    Sec. 912.8  Verification of eligible immigration status.
    
        (a) When verification is to occur. Verification of eligible 
    immigration status shall be conducted by the PHA simultaneously with 
    verification of other aspects of eligibility for assistance under a 
    Section 214 covered program. (See Sec. 912.6(g).) The PHA shall verify 
    eligible immigration status in accordance with the INS procedures 
    described in this section.
        (b) Primary verification.--(1) Automated verification system. 
    Primary verification of the immigration status of the person is 
    conducted by the PHA through the INS automated system (INS Systematic 
    for Alien Verification for Entitlements (SAVE)). The INS SAVE system 
    provides access to names, file numbers and admission numbers of 
    noncitizens.
        (2) Failure of primary verification to confirm eligible immigration 
    status. If the INS SAVE system does not verify eligible immigration 
    status, secondary verification must be performed.
        (c) Secondary verification.--(1) Manual search of INS records. 
    Secondary verification is a manual search by the INS of its records to 
    determine an individual's immigration status. The PHA must request 
    secondary verification, within 10 days of receiving the results of the 
    primary verification, if the primary verification system does not 
    confirm eligible immigration status, or if the primary verification 
    system verifies immigration status that is ineligible for assistance 
    under a covered Section 214 covered program.
        (2) Secondary verification initiated by PHA. Secondary verification 
    is initiated by the PHA forwarding photocopies of the original INS 
    documents listed in [[Page 14858]] Sec. 912.7 (front and back), 
    attached to the INS document verification request form G-845S (Document 
    Verification Request), or such other form specified by the INS, to a 
    designated INS office for review. (Form G-845S is available from the 
    local INS Office.)
        (3) Failure of secondary verification to confirm eligible 
    immigration status. If the secondary verification does not confirm 
    eligible immigration status, the IHA shall issue to the family the 
    notice described in Sec. 912.9(d), which includes notification of 
    appeal to the INS of the INS finding on immigration status (see 
    Sec. 912.9(d)(4)).
        (d) Exemption from liability for INS verification. The PHA shall 
    not be liable for any action, delay, or failure of the INS in 
    conducting the automated or manual verification.
    
    
    Sec. 912.9  Delay, denial, or termination of assistance.
    
        (a) General. Assistance to a family may not be delayed, denied, or 
    terminated because of the immigration status of a family member except 
    as provided in this section.
        (b) Restrictions on delay, denial, or termination of assistance --
    (1) General. Assistance to an applicant shall not be delayed or denied, 
    and assistance to a tenant shall not be delayed, denied, or terminated, 
    on the basis of ineligible immigration status of a family member if:
        (i) The primary and secondary verification of any immigration 
    documents that were timely submitted has not been completed;
        (ii) The family member of whom required evidence has not been 
    submitted has moved from the tenant's dwelling unit;
        (iii) The family member who is determined not to be in an eligible 
    immigration status following INS verification has moved from the 
    tenant's dwelling unit;
        (iv) The INS appeals process under Sec. 912.9(e) has not been 
    concluded;
        (v) For a tenant, the PHA hearing process under Sec. 912.9(f) has 
    not been concluded;
        (vi) Assistance is prorated in accordance with Sec. 912.11;
        (vii) Assistance for a mixed family is continued in accordance with 
    Sec. 912.10; or
        (viii) Deferral of termination of assistance is granted in 
    accordance with Sec. 912.10.
        (2) When delay of assistance to an applicant is permissible. 
    Assistance to an applicant may be delayed after the conclusion of the 
    INS appeal process, but not denied until the conclusion of the PHA 
    informal hearing process, if an informal hearing is requested by the 
    family.
        (c) Events causing denial or termination of assistance. Assistance 
    to an applicant shall be denied, and a tenant's assistance shall be 
    terminated, in accordance with the procedures of this section, upon the 
    occurrence of any of the following events:
        (1) Evidence of citizenship (i.e., the declaration) and eligible 
    immigration status is not submitted by the date specified in 
    Sec. 912.6(g) or by the expiration of any extension granted in 
    accordance with Sec. 912.6(h); or
        (2) Evidence of citizenship and eligible immigration status is 
    timely submitted, but INS primary and second verification does not 
    verify eligible immigration status of a family member; and
        (i) The family does not pursue INS appeal or PHA informal hearing 
    rights as provided in this section; or
        (ii) INS appeal and informal hearing rights are pursued, but the 
    final appeal or hearing decisions are decided against the family 
    member.
        (d) Notice of denial or termination of assistance. The notice of 
    denial or termination of assistance shall advise the family:
        (1) That financial assistance will be denied or terminated, and 
    provide a brief explanation of the reasons for the proposed denial or 
    termination of assistance;
        (2) That they may be eligible for proration of assistance as 
    provided under Sec. 912.11;
        (3) In the case of a tenant, the criteria and procedures for 
    obtaining relief under the preservation of families provision in 
    Sec. 912.10;
        (4) The family has a right to request an appeal to the INS of the 
    results of the secondary verification of immigration status and to 
    submit additional documentation or a written explanation in support of 
    the appeal in accordance with the procedures of paragraph (e) of this 
    section;
        (5) The family has a right to request an informal hearing with the 
    PHA either upon completion of the INS appeal or in lieu of the INS 
    appeal as provided in paragraph (f) of this section;
        (6) For applicants, the notice shall advise that assistance may not 
    be delayed until the conclusion of the INS appeal process, but 
    assistance may be delayed during the pendency of the PHA informal 
    hearing process.
        (e) Appeal to the INS--(1) Submission of request for appeal. Upon 
    receipt of notification by the PHA that INS secondary verification 
    failed to confirm eligible immigration status, the PHA shall notify the 
    family of the results of the INS verification, and the family shall 
    have 30 days from the date of the project owner's notification to 
    request an appeal of the INS results. The request for appeal shall be 
    made by the family communicating that request in writing directly to 
    the INS. The family must provide the PHA with a copy of the written 
    request for appeal and proof of mailing. For good cause shown, the PHA 
    shall grant the family an extension of time within which to request an 
    appeal.
        (2) Documentation to be submitted as part of appeal to INS. The 
    family shall forward to the designated INS office any additional 
    documentation or written explanation in support of the appeal. This 
    material must include a copy of the INS document verification request 
    form G-845S (used to process the secondary verification request) or 
    such other form specified by the INS, and a cover letter indicating 
    that the family is requesting an appeal of the INS immigration status 
    verification results.
        (3) Decision by INS.--(i) When decision will be issued. The INS 
    will issue to the family, with a copy to the PHA, a decision within 30 
    days of its receipt of documentation concerning the family's appeal of 
    the verification of immigration status. If, for any reason, the INS is 
    unable to issue a decision within the 30 day time period, the INS will 
    inform the family and the PHA of the reasons for the delay.
        (ii) Notification of INS decision and of informal hearing 
    procedures. When the PHA receives a copy of the INS decision, the PHA 
    shall notify the family of its right to request an informal hearing on 
    the PHA's ineligibility determination in accordance with the procedures 
    of paragraph (f) of this section.
        (4) No delay, denial or termination of assistance until completion 
    of INS appeal process; direct appeal to INS. Pending the completion of 
    the INS appeal under this section, assistance may not be delayed, 
    denied or terminated on the basis of immigration status.
        (f) Informal hearing--(1) When request for hearing is to be made. 
    After notification of the INS decision on appeal, or in lieu of request 
    of appeal to the INS, the family may request that the PHA provide a 
    hearing. This request must be made either within 14 days of the date 
    the PHA mails or delivers the notice under paragraph (d) of this 
    section, or within 14 days of the mailing of the INS appeal decision 
    issued in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section (established by 
    the date of postmark). [[Page 14859]] 
        (2) Extension of time to request hearing. The PHA shall extend the 
    period of time for requesting a hearing (for a specified period) upon 
    good cause shown.
        (3) Informal hearing procedures. (i) For tenants, the procedures 
    for the hearing before the PHA are set forth in 24 CFR part 966.
        (ii) For applicants, the procedures for the informal hearing before 
    the PHA are as follows:
        (A) Hearing before an impartial individual. The applicant shall be 
    provided a hearing before any person(s) designated by the PHA 
    (including an officer or employee of the PHA), other than a person who 
    made or approved the decision under review, and other than a person who 
    is a subordinate of the person who made or approved the decision;
        (B) Examination of evidence. The PHA shall be provided the 
    opportunity to examine and copy at the applicant's expense, at a 
    reasonable time in advance of the hearing, any documents in the 
    possession of the PHA pertaining to the applicant's eligibility status, 
    or in the possession of the INS (as permitted by INS requirements), 
    including any records and regulations that may be relevant to the 
    hearing;
        (C) Presentation of evidence and arguments in support of eligible 
    status. The applicant shall be provided the opportunity to present 
    evidence and arguments in support of eligible status. Evidence may be 
    considered without regard to admissibility under the rules of evidence 
    applicable to judicial proceedings;
        (D) Controverting evidence of the project owner. The applicant 
    shall be provided the opportunity to controvert evidence relied upon by 
    the PHA and to confront and cross-examine all witnesses on whose 
    testimony or information the PHA relies;
        (E) Representation. The applicant shall be entitled to be 
    represented by an attorney, or other designee, at the applicant's 
    expense, and to have such person make statements on the applicant's 
    behalf;
        (F) Interpretive services. The applicant shall be entitled to 
    arrange for an interpreter to attend the hearing, at the expense of the 
    applicant or PHA, as may be agreed upon by both parties;
        (G) Hearing to be recorded. The applicant shall be entitled to have 
    the hearing recorded by audiotape (a transcript of the hearing may, but 
    is not required to be provided by the PHA); and
        (H) Hearing decision. The PHA shall provide the applicant with a 
    written final decision, based solely on the facts presented at the 
    hearing within 14 days of the date of the informal hearing.
        (g) Judicial relief. A decision against a family member, issued in 
    accordance with paragraphs (e) or (f) of this section, does not 
    preclude the family from exercising the right, that may otherwise be 
    available, to seek redress directly through judicial procedures.
        (h) Retention of documents. The PHA shall retain for a minimum of 5 
    years the following documents that may have been submitted to the PHA 
    by the family, or provided to the PHA as part of the INS appeal or the 
    PHA informal hearing process:
        (1) The application for financial assistance;
        (2) The form completed by the family for income re-examination;
        (3) Photocopies of any original documents (front and back), 
    including original INS documents;
        (4) The signed verification consent form;
        (5) The INS verification results;
        (6) The request for an INS appeal;
        (7) The final INS determination;
        (8) The request for a PHA informal hearing; and
        (9) The final PHA hearing decision.
    
    
    Sec. 912.10  Preservation of mixed families and other families.
    
        (a) Assistance available for mixed families. (1) Assistance 
    available for tenant mixed families. For a mixed family assisted under 
    a Section 214 covered program on June 19, 1995, and following 
    completion of the appeals and informal hearing procedures provided in 
    Sec. 912.9 if utilized by the family, one of the following three types 
    of assistance may be available to the family:
        (i) Continued assistance (see paragraph (b) of this section);
        (ii) Temporary deferral of termination of assistance (see paragraph 
    (c) of this section); or
        (iii) Prorated assistance (see Sec. 912.11; a mixed family must be 
    provided prorated assistance if the family so requests); or
        (2) Assistance available for applicant mixed families. Prorated 
    assistance is also available for mixed families applying for assistance 
    as provided in Sec. 912.11.
        (3) Assistance available to other families in occupancy. For 
    families receiving assistance under a Section 214 covered program on 
    the June 19, 1995 and who have no members with eligible immigration 
    status, the PHA may grant the family temporary deferral of termination 
    of assistance.
        (b) Continued assistance. A mixed family may receive continued 
    housing assistance if all of the following conditions are met:
        (1) The family was receiving assistance under a Section 214 covered 
    program on June 19, 1995;
        (2) The family's head of household or spouse has eligible 
    immigration status as described in Sec. 912.5; and
        (3) The family does not include any person (who does not have 
    eligible immigration status) other than the head of household, any 
    spouse of the head of household, any parents of the head of household, 
    any parents of the spouse, or any children of the head of household or 
    spouse.
        (c) Temporary deferral of termination of assistance.--(1) 
    Eligibility for this type of assistance. If a mixed family qualifies 
    for prorated assistance (and does not qualify for continued 
    assistance), but decides not to accept prorated assistance, or if a 
    family has no members with eligible immigration status, the family may 
    be eligible for temporary deferral of termination of assistance if 
    necessary to permit the family additional time for the orderly 
    transition of those family members with ineligible status, and any 
    other family members involved, to other affordable housing. Other 
    affordable housing is used in the context of transition of an 
    ineligible family from a rent level that reflects HUD assistance to a 
    rent level that is unassisted; the term refers to housing that is not 
    substandard, that is of appropriate size for the family and that can be 
    rented for an amount not exceeding the amount that the family pays for 
    rent, including utilities, plus 25 percent.
        (2) Time limit on deferral period. If temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance is granted, the deferral period shall be for 
    an initial period not to exceed six months. The initial period may be 
    renewed for additional periods of six months, but the aggregate 
    deferral period shall not exceed a period of three years.
        (3) Notification requirements for beginning of each deferral 
    period. At the beginning of each deferral period, the PHA must inform 
    the family of its ineligibility for financial assistance and offer the 
    family information concerning, and referrals to assist in finding, 
    other affordable housing.
        (4) Determination of availability of affordable housing at end of 
    each deferral period. Before the end of each deferral period, the PHA 
    must:
        (i) Make a determination of the availability of affordable housing 
    of appropriate size based on evidence of conditions which when taken 
    together will demonstrate an inadequate supply for affordable housing 
    for the area in which the project is located, the consolidated plan (if 
    applicable, as [[Page 14860]] described in 24 CFR part 91), the PHA's 
    own knowledge of the availability of affordable housing, and on 
    evidence of the tenant family's efforts to locate such housing; and
        (ii) Notify the tenant family in writing, at least 60 days in 
    advance of the expiration of the deferral period, that termination will 
    be deferred again (provided that the granting of another deferral will 
    not result in aggregate deferral periods that exceed three years), and 
    a determination was made that other affordable housing is not 
    available; or
        (iii) Notify the tenant family in writing, at least 60 days in 
    advance of the expiration of the deferral period, that termination of 
    financial assistance will not be deferred because either granting 
    another deferral will result in aggregate deferral periods that exceed 
    three years, or a determination has been made that other affordable 
    housing is available.
        (d) Option to select proration of assistance at end of deferral 
    period. A family who is eligible for, and receives temporary deferral 
    of termination of assistance, may request, and the PHA shall provide, 
    proration of assistance at the end of the deferral period if the family 
    has made a good faith effort during the deferral period to locate other 
    affordable housing.
        (e) Notification of decision on family preservation assistance. A 
    PHA shall notify the family of it's decision concerning the family's 
    qualification for assistance under this section. If the family is 
    ineligible for assistance under this section, the notification shall 
    state the reasons, which must be based on relevant factors. For tenant 
    families, the notice also shall inform the family of any applicable 
    appeal rights.
    
    
    Sec. 912.11  Proration of assistance.
    
        (a) Applicability. This section applies to a mixed family other 
    than a family receiving continued assistance under Sec. 912.10(b), or 
    other than a family who is eligible for and requests and receives 
    temporary deferral of termination of assistance under Sec. 912.10(c). 
    An eligible mixed family who requests prorated assistance, must be 
    provided prorated assistance.
        (b) Method of prorating assistance. The PHA shall prorate the 
    family's assistance by:
        (1) Step 1. Determining total tenant payment in accordance with 24 
    CFR 913.107(a) (annual income includes income of all family members, 
    including any family member who has not established eligible 
    immigration status).
        (2) Step 2. Subtracting the total tenant payment from a HUD-
    supplied ``public housing maximum rent'' applicable to the unit or the 
    housing authority. (Public housing maximum rent shall be determined by 
    HUD using the 95th percentile rent for the housing authority.) The 
    result is the maximum subsidy for which the family could qualify if all 
    members were eligible (``family maximum subsidy'').
        (3) Step 3. Dividing the family maximum subsidy by the number of 
    persons in the family (all persons) to determine the maximum subsidy 
    per each family member who has citizenship or eligible immigration 
    status (``eligible family member''). The subsidy per eligible family 
    member is the ``member maximum subsidy.''
        (4) Step 4. Multiplying the member maximum subsidy by the number of 
    ``eligible'' family members.
        (5) Step 5. The product of steps 1-4, as set forth in paragraph 
    (b)(2) of this section is the amount of subsidy for which the family is 
    eligible (``eligible subsidy''). The family's rent is the ``public 
    housing maximum rent'' minus the amount of the eligible subsidy.
    
    
    Sec. 912.12  Prohibition of assistance to noncitizen students.
    
        (a) General. The provisions of Secs. 912.10 and 912.11, permitting 
    continued assistance, prorated assistance or temporary deferral of 
    termination of assistance for certain families, do not apply to any 
    person who is determined to be a noncitizen student, as defined in 
    paragraph (b) of this section, or the family of the noncitizen student, 
    as described in paragraph (c) of this section.
        (b) Noncitizen student. For purposes of this part, a noncitizen 
    student is defined as a noncitizen who:
        (1) Has a residence in a foreign country that the person has no 
    intention of abandoning;
        (2) Is a bona fide student qualified to pursue a full course of 
    study; and
        (3) Is admitted to the United States temporarily and solely for 
    purposes of pursuing such a course of study at an established 
    institution of learning or other recognized place of study in the 
    United States, particularly designated by such person and approved by 
    the Attorney General after consultation with the Department of 
    Education of the United States, which institution or place of study 
    shall have agreed to report to the Attorney General the termination of 
    attendance of each nonimmigrant student (and if any such institution of 
    learning or place of study fails to make such reports promptly the 
    approval shall be withdrawn).
        (c) Family of noncitizen student. The prohibition on providing 
    assistance to a noncitizen student as described in paragraph (a) of 
    this section also extends to the noncitizen spouse of the noncitizen 
    student and minor children of any noncitizen student if the spouse or 
    children are accompanying the student or following to join such 
    student. The prohibition on providing assistance to a noncitizen 
    student does not extend to the citizen spouse of the noncitizen student 
    and the children of the citizen spouse and noncitizen student.
    
    
    Sec. 912.13  Compliance with nondiscrimination requirements.
    
        The PHA shall administer the restrictions on use of assisted 
    housing by noncitizens with ineligible immigration status imposed by 
    this part in conformity with the nondiscrimination requirements of, 
    including, but not limited to, title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 
    (42 U.S.C. 2000d-2000d-5) and the implementing regulations of 24 CFR 
    part 1, section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 794) 
    and the implementing regulations of 24 CFR part 8, the Fair Housing Act 
    (42 U.S.C. 3601-3619) and the implementing regulations of 24 CFR part 
    100, and other civil rights statutes cited in the applicable program 
    regulations. These statutes prohibit, among other things, 
    discriminatory practices on the basis of race, color, national origin, 
    sex, religion, age, disability and familial status in the provision of 
    housing.
    
    
    Sec. 912.14  Protection from liability for PHAs, State, local, and 
    tribal government agencies and officials.
    
        (a) Protection from liability for PHAs. HUD will not take any 
    compliance, disallowance, penalty, or other regulatory action against a 
    PHA with respect to any error in its determination of eligibility for 
    financial assistance based on citizenship or immigration status:
        (1) If the PHA established eligibility based upon verification of 
    eligible immigration status through the verification system described 
    in Sec. 912.8;
        (2) Because the PHA was required to provide an opportunity for the 
    applicant or family to submit evidence in accordance with Sec. 912.6;
        (3) Because the PHA was required to wait for completion of INS 
    verification of immigration status in accordance with Sec. 912.8;
        (4) Because the PHA was required to wait for completion of the INS 
    appeal process provided in accordance with Sec. 912.9(e); or
        (5) Because the PHA was required to provide an informal hearing in 
    [[Page 14861]] accordance with Sec. 912.9(f) or 24 CFR part 966.
        (b) Protection from liability for State, local and tribal 
    government agencies and officials. State, local and tribal government 
    agencies and officials shall not be liable for the design or 
    implementation of the verification system described in Sec. 912.8, and 
    the informal hearings provided under Sec. 912.9(f) and 24 CFR part 966, 
    as long as the implementation by the State, local or tribal government 
    agency or official is in accordance with prescribed HUD rules and 
    requirements.
    
    PART 960--ADMISSION TO, AND OCCUPANCY OF, PUBLIC HOUSING
    
        93. The authority citation for part 960 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437a, 1437c, 1437d, 1437n, and 3535(d).
    
        94. In Sec. 960.204, paragraphs (a) and (d)(4) are revised to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 960.204  PHA tenant selection policies.
    
        (a) In addition to policies and regulations including preferences 
    and priorities established by the PHA for eligibility and admission to 
    its public housing projects pursuant to the Act, the ACC, and parts 912 
    and 913 of this chapter, each PHA shall adopt and implement policies 
    and procedures embodying standards and criteria for tenant selection 
    which take into consideration the needs of individual families for 
    public housing and the statutory purpose in developing and operating 
    socially and financially sound public housing projects that provide a 
    decent home and a suitable living environment and foster economic and 
    social diversity in the tenant body as a whole.
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (4) Provide for verification and documentation of information 
    relevant to acceptance or rejection of an applicant, including 
    documentation and verification of citizenship and eligible immigration 
    status under 24 CFR part 912.
    * * * * *
        95. In Sec. 960.206, paragraph (a) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 960.206  Verification procedures.
    
        (a) General. Adequate procedures must be developed to obtain and 
    verify information with respect to each applicant. (See parts 912 and 
    913 of this chapter, and 24 CFR parts 750 and 760.) Information 
    relative to the acceptance or rejection of an applicant or the grant or 
    denial of a Federal preference under Sec. 960.211 must be documented 
    and placed in the applicant's file.
    * * * * *
        96. Section 960.209 is amended by adding two sentences at the end 
    of paragraph (a), by adding one sentence at the end of paragraph (b), 
    and by adding a new paragraph (c), to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 960.209  Reexamination of family income and composition.
    
        (a) * * * At the first regular reexamination after June 19, 1995, 
    the PHA shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 912 concerning 
    obtaining and processing information on the citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
    reexamination, the PHA shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 912 
    concerning verification of the immigration status of any new family 
    member.
        (b) * * * At any interim reexamination after June 19, 1995 when 
    there is a new family member, the PHA shall follow the requirements of 
    24 CFR part 912 concerning obtaining and processing information on the 
    citizenship or eligible immigration status of the new family member.
        (c) Termination. For provisions requiring termination of 
    participation for failure to establish citizenship or eligible 
    immigration status, see 24 CFR 912.9, and also 24 CFR 912.10 for 
    provisions concerning assistance to certain mixed families (families 
    whose members include those with citizenship and eligible immigration 
    status and those without eligible immigration status) in lieu of 
    termination of assistance.
    
        Dated: March 8, 1995.
    Henry G. Cisneros,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-6358 Filed 3-14-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4210-32-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
6/19/1995
Published:
03/20/1995
Department:
Housing and Urban Development Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-6358
Dates:
June 19, 1995.
Pages:
14816-14861 (46 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. R-95-1409, FR-2383-F-05
RINs:
2501-AA63
PDF File:
95-6358.pdf
CFR: (133)
24 CFR 235.13(a)
24 CFR 812.8(a))
24 CFR 912.9(d)(4))
24 CFR 812.9(e)
24 CFR 200.186(f)
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