September 17, 2007
(REG-128274-03)
Via Federal eRulemaking Portal
RE: REG-128274-03
RIN 1545-BC22
Section 42 Utility Allowance Regulations Update
Dear Deputy Commissioner Brown:
The National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC) is a membership organization
whose members include residents of public and assisted housing and their
organizations, state and local housing coalitions, nonprofit housing providers,
homeless service providers, fair housing organizations, housing researchers,
public housing agencies, private developers and property owners, local and state
government agencies, faith-based organizations, and concerned citizens. While
our members include the wide spectrum of housing interests, we do not represent
any segment of the housing industry. Rather, we focus exclusively on what is in
the best interests of people who receive and those who are in need of federal
housing assistance.
NLIHC has a number of concerns about the proposed changes in the Low Income
Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) regulations at 26 CFR 1.42-10 pertaining to utility
allowances for non-HUD and non-RD units. In general, the concerns center on the
lack of tenant protections that is highly likely to lead to undue housing cost
burdens for low income residents.
The LIHTC statute at 26 USC 42(g)(2)(B)(ii) caps gross tenant rents, which include
a utility allowance, at 30% of an imputed income limitation. The statute?s inclusion
of a utility allowance reflects the importance Congress assigned to protecting
residents from extraordinary housing costs beyond rent to owners. The IRS
proposal to allow two new options for estimating utility costs threatens the
statutory protection.
The proposed rule would unfairly benefit owners of LIHTC units at the expense of
low income residents by allowing owners to choose, without any other
considerations, the lowest of three possible utility allowance estimates. The lower
the utility allowance estimate, the greater the amount of rent collected by the
owner ? and the greater the housing cost burden on the low income household.
? In order to minimize housing cost burden on low income residents, the
regulations should require owners to accept the utility allowance estimate that
yields the greatest utility allowance for low income households.
? When owners obtain multiple estimates based on any of the three
options, the regulations should require 30-day advance resident notification of the
outcomes, access to documentation pertaining to each estimate, and an
opportunity for residents to submit comments to the agency administering the
LIHTC program.
? The regulations should require the agency administering the LIHTC
program to consider resident comments, and provide a means for tenants to seek
a technical review to verify the accuracy of any utility allowance estimate.
? The regulations should afford residents an opportunity to request a
utility company estimate, and this estimate must be considered by the agency
administering the LIHTC program.
Rather than relying on estimating techniques that cannot fully take into account
building-specific situations (such as quality of construction, actual building
materials, quality of heating and cooling equipment in place, predominant unit
orientation with respect to sunlight, prevailing winds, etc.), utility allowances
should be based on actual consumption for the LIHTC building.
Higher utility allowances for elderly and/or disabled people who need special
energy-consuming equipment should be granted upon request.
The regulations should require more frequent utility allowance adjustments:
? Local utility rates should be reviewed and adjusted if necessary on a
quarterly basis. If rates are only reviewed annually, a dramatic rate increase
introduced shortly after an annual review will burden low income residents with
inadequate utility allowances for almost another year.
? Any time there is a utility rate increase greater than 10%, the agency
administering the LIHTC program should be required to notify the owner, and the
owner should be required to adjust the utility allowance.
The timing of utility allowance adjustments should be implemented in a manner
which provides maximum benefit to or minimized burden on low income residents.
? When utility allowances are to be increased, the increase should be
realized by residents within 30 days, not 90 days.
? When utility allowances are to be decreased, the owner should provide
low income residents with a 90-day notice.
? Gross rent increases greater than 5% that are due in part to utility
allowance decreases should be phased in over 90 days.
The proposed regulation at 26 CFR 1.42-10(c)(2) addressing annual reviews
should require utility rate allowance adjustments to be based on calculations
incorporating actual rate changes, rather than merely ?take into account.?
Thank you for the opportunity to comment on this proposal.
Sincerely,
Sheila Crowley, MSW, Ph.D.
President and CEO
Comment on FR Doc # E7-11731
This is comment on Proposed Rule
Section 42 Utility Allowance Regulations Update
View Comment
Attachments:
Attachment on IRS_FRDOC_0001-DRAFT-0056
Title:
Attachment on IRS_FRDOC_0001-DRAFT-0056
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