Guidance
The
final rule for Section 32 Homeownership was published March 11, 2003, and became
effective April 10, 2003. Previously
approved homeownership programs will continue to operate under the existing Section
5(h) rule. Please note that both regulations have the same number, 24
CFR 906, and are accessible from this site.
Overview
The Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act
(QHWRA) permits PHAs, through Section 32 of the U.S. Housing Act of 1937, to make
public housing dwelling units available for purchase by low-income families as
their principal residence. Under Section 32, a PHA may:
- Sell
all or a portion of a public housing development to eligible public or non-public
housing residents;
- Provide Capital Fund assistance to public
housing families to purchase homes; or,
- Provide Capital Fund
assistance to acquire homes that will be sold to low-income families. Section
32 generates an exception, allowing the Public Housing Capital Fund
to be used to acquire units for sale that will not be put under public housing
ACC contracts. This does not apply to the useof the Capital Fund by the PHA to
build or substantially rehabilitate units that are not public housing for sale
under Section 32. Although public housing units that are newly constructed or
substantially rehabilitated may be sold under Section 32, such construction and
rehabilitation by the PHA is not covered under this section, but rather is governed
by the public housing development and modernization regulations. Nonetheless,
the final Section 32 rule replaces the Section 5(h) rule.
Section
32 Homeownership Plans
The specific requirements for preparing a homeownership
plan under Section 32 are set out in the Section 32 Desk Guide, the Inventory
Removals Application (HUD-52860), the Homeownership Addendum (or Homeownership
Term Sheet) to that Application (HUD-52860-C), and the tools available for download
below. The Homeownership Addendum/Term Sheet must be completed to show program
compliance and due diligence and must be attached to a PHA's application for homeownership.
After HUD approval, the Homeownership Addendum/Term Sheet becomes a part of the
PHA's approved Homeownership Plan. All other documents are optional and should
be used at discretion of the PHA.
In order to assist PHAs in completing
a Homeownership Addendum/Term Sheet that meets HUD's requirements, a sample term
sheet is also attached. Note that this term sheet is being provided as a sample
only and PHAs should modify it in accordance with the specific conditions of each
application.
PHAs
should submit their Homeownership Plan (which includes the Inventory Removals
Application, HUD-52860 and Homeownership Addendum/Term Sheet, HUD-52860-C) to
the HUD Special Applications Center (SAC) in Chicago via PIC as previously noted
elsewhere on this site. For those plans covering units not in PIC, contact SAC
management for concurrence to submit hard copy applications.
Non-Qualified
PHAs (as identified under the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA)must
state their intent to submit a homeownership plan to HUD in their Annual PHA Plan.
Qualified PHAs (as identified under HERA) must state their intent to submit a
homeownership plan to HUD in their 5-Year PHA Plan. The SAC will not review any
homeownership plan not addressed in a PHA Plan.
The required components
of the Homeownership Plan, as outlined in 24 CFR Part 906.39, must include at
a minimum:
Method of Sale - The PHA must indicate how units will
be sold, including a description of the exact method of sale (i.e., fee simple,
lease-purchase, condominium, etc). Additionally, the PHA must indicate whether
it, or a Purchase and Resale Entity (PRE) will sell the units to families directly
or via a lease-purchase method.
Property Description - The PHA must
describe in detail the property/properties to be included in the homeownership
program. The specificity of description will vary according to the type of property
the PHA wishes to implement.
Repair or Rehabilitation - The PHA
must provide an assessment of the physical condition of the property/properties
proposed under the Section 32 Homeownership program. If required improvements
and upgrades are anticipated for the proposed homeownership units, the PHA must:
- Describe the process of assessing and implementing the repairs/upgrades;
- Identify
the code violations and description of plans to address each code violation;
- Provide
cost estimate(s) to rehabilitate each development/unit;
- Describe obligation
to make proposed units 504 compliant; and,
- Provide projected repair cost
estimates over the next 5 years.
Additionally, before the
PHA rehabilitates or repairs the properties for homeownership occupancy, or expends
or commits HUD or local funds for such activities, HUD must have completed any
24 CFR Part 50 environmental review and notified the PHA of its approval of the
property.
Purchaser Eligibility and Selection - The PHA must provide
information on purchaser requirements relative to eligibility, selection criteria,
and restrictions (including Recapture, Resale and Anti-Speculation Restrictions).
Additionally, the PHA must describe the process for purchaser eligibility, priorities
for selecting purchasers (e.g., residency), income tiering structure for eligible
program purchasers, if applicable, and any additional requirements (including
housing quality standards for soft second mortgage or acquisition sale programs).
If a PHA intends to allow application for purchase of homeownership units from
families not currently residing in public housing or receiving Section 8 assistance,
an Affirmative Fair Housing Marketing Strategy Plan is required. This Plan should
include steps to inform such families of their eligibility to apply, and to solicit
applications from those in the housing market that are least likely to apply for
the program without special outreach, including persons with disabilities.
Sale
and Financing - The PHA must demonstrate the practical workability of the
Homeownership plan, based on analysis of data on such elements as purchase prices,
costs of repair or rehabilitation, homeownership costs, family incomes, closing
costs, availability of financing and the extent to which there are eligible residents
who are expected to be interested in the purchase of these units. Additionally,
the PHA must provide types and amounts of assistance/subsidy to be provided to
eligible families, including source of funds, terms of loan(s), including second
mortgages, description of any grant(s), subsidy limits for second mortgages, if
any, Fair Market Value (FMV) and any discount the PHA may offer, and resale/recapture
restrictions as established by the PHA.
Resident and Purchaser Consultation
- If the PHA intends to sell existing public housing, the PHA must describe in
its application the resident input obtained during the resident consultation planning
process, and provide a plan for consultation with purchasers during the implementation
stage. The BGHA must meet with the Authority's Resident Advisory Board (RAB) to
discuss and develop a mechanism to ensure resident involvement in implementing
the Section 32 Homeownership program, and provide supporting documentation regarding
the meetings held with the RAB to discuss the Homeownership program. Copies of
meeting announcements, notices, sign-in-sheets and minutes of meetings are required.
Counseling - The PHA must describe its plans and requirements regarding
homeownership counseling for eligible purchasers. Additionally, the PHA must provide
qualifications of the counseling provider(s), if applicable, that will provide
homeownership counseling, training and technical assistance provisions for eligible
families, including duration of counseling and training, and curriculum/scope
of services for the agency under the homeownership proposal.
Sale via
Purchase and Resale Entity (PRE) - If plans are to use a PRE for the sale
of units, the PHA must provide the firm's qualifications, marketing plan, and
a description of that entity's responsibilities as well as information demonstrating
that the written agreement between the PRE and PHA contains or will contain the
rights and responsibilities of parties; assurances of compliance with program
requirements; assurances of deed restrictions on acquisition and resale of units;
description of how the net proceeds will be determined and used; protections against
fraud and misuse; limitations on overhead and profit; record keeping/reporting
requirements; assurances of non-discrimination against eligible purchasers; adequate
legal remedies; assurances of sale only to low-income households; a five-year
limit on sale to eligible buyers; and the notification process to households (relocation,
environmental review).
Non-Purchasing Residents - The PHA must provide
a relocation plan for non-purchasing public housing residents for purposes of
transferring possession of the unit. The PHA must provide a notice 90 days before
displacing the resident, provide for payment of actual costs and reasonable relocation
expenses, ensure that the resident is offered comparable housing and counseling.
Section 32 Sales Proceeds Guidance - A PHA may realize gross sales
proceeds in connection with selling homes under a Section 32 homeownership program.
As part of the homeownership plan submitted to HUD, the PHA must describe the
sources from which it will likely realize gross sale proceeds, along with its
intended use of those proceeds. Gross sales proceeds will likely derive from the
two primary sources: (1) payments made by homebuyers for credit to the purchase
price (e.g. earnest money, down payments, payments out of the proceeds of mortgage
loans, payments made under a lease-purchase arrangement, principal and interest
payments under a purchase-money mortgage, etc.); and (2) payments made to the
PHA upon resale of the homeownership units, including any earned interest.
A PHA may use gross sale proceeds to pay for the costs related to the sale
of the homeownership units (costs may include payments of construction costs,
developer fees, counseling agency fees, etc). If any net proceeds remain after
these costs have been paid, a PHA may use those remaining net sale proceeds as
provided in its HUD-approved homeownership plan. HUD will approve the use of proceeds
in a homeownership plan if the PHA evidences that the proceeds will be used for
purposes related to low-income housing, as defined by the Act. The Act defines
low-income housing as decent, safe, and sanitary dwellings assisted under the
Act. Therefore, PHAs are only permitted to use Section 32 homeownership program
proceeds in connection with public housing units under an ACC, housing assisted
by the Housing Choice Voucher Program, or to fund a homeownership plan under the
Act.
A non-exhaustive list of some of the acceptable HUD-approved uses
of net sale proceeds from a Section 32 homeownership program include: (1) repair
or rehabilitation of existing ACC units; (2) development and/or acquisition of
new ACC units; (3) provision of social services for PHA residents; (4) implementation
of a preventative and routine maintenance strategy for specific ACC units; and
(5) modernization of a portion of a residential building in the PHA's inventory
to develop a recreation room, laundry room, or day-care facility for PHA residents;
(5) modernization of a portion of a residential building in the PHA's inventory
to develop a recreation room, laundry room, or day-care facility for PHA residents;
and (6) funding of another HUD-approved homeownership program authorized under
Section 32, 9, 24 or any other Section of the Act, for assistance to purchasers,
for reasonable planning and implementation costs, and for acquisition and/or development
of homeownership units; (7) in connection with the homeownership plan from which
the proceeds are derived, for purposes that are justified to ensure the success
of the plan and to protect the interests of the homeowners, the PHA, and any other
entity with responsibility for carrying out the plan (e.g. a reserve for the PHA
to repurchase, repair and resell the homes in the event of defaults) (8) leveraging
of proceeds in order to partner with a private entity for the purpose of developing
mixed-finance housing (that will include ACC units) under 24 CFR 941 (Subpart
F).
If the homeownership plan utilizes a PRE, the PHA may opt to have
the PRE return sale proceeds to the PHA or may permit the PRE to use them for
low-income housing purposes.
Sale Proceeds and Asset Management (Section
32 Homeownership Proceeds) - In its written approval of a Section 32 homeownership
plan, the SAC will restrict the use of any proceeds that a PHA may realize from
Section 32 homeownership proceeds to a specific low-income housing purpose (e.g.
ACC, Section 32, or Section 8). Accordingly, under asset management, Section 32
homeownership proceeds will always be restricted program assets and will always
maintain their federalized identity.
When a PHA realizes net proceeds
from Section 32 homeownership plan, it should recognize any gain or loss on sale
on the income statement associated with the balance sheet where that asset is
recorded. If approval has been obtained to use the sales proceeds for activities
outside the original AMP, the PHA should then, when the time is appropriate, transfer
those proceeds to the other project or program where the use has been permitted.
For example, if the SAC approves the use of Section 32 proceeds for the modernization
of a certain AMP, the PHA should, first, recognize the gain on the income statement
of the original project but then transfer the funds to the project where the modernization
work will occur. Any retained sales proceeds should be reflected as a “restricted”
asset on the balance sheet (restricted for the uses specifically approved by the
SAC). A PHA must use net proceeds in accordance with the spending and financial
reporting requirements under the revised 24 CFR Part 990. Please consult a HUD
financial manager for additional guidance and/or clarification of these reporting
requirements.
Records, Accounts and Reports - The PHA must provide
a description of its record keeping, accounting, and reporting procedures that
will be used under the Homeownership Program relative to administrative, purchase
and financial records, and include a plan for annual reporting on sales to HUD/PIC
and in the Annual Plan.
Budget - The PHA must submit a budget for
the proposed Homeownership program. The budget should itemize rehabilitation or
repair costs, any financing assistance, specific program administrative costs
to implement the program (i.e., management, relocation, counseling, legal, etc.),
and the sources of funds that will be used to implement the Homeownership program
even if paid from the Operating Reserves. The PHA should use the sources and uses
budget format similar to Appendix 3 and 4.
Additionally, the PHA
must consider sale price, income, and subsidy contributions when discussing budget
assumptions under the Section 32 Homeownership program. If financial commitments
are being considered from other fund providers as part of the Homeownership Program,
the PHA must provide firm written commitments that such funds are in place, including
their source, type and amount.
Timetable - The PHA must provide
an estimated timeframe for program performance, progress and completion relative
to the major steps required to implement the Homeownership program.
PHA
and PRE Performance in Homeownership - The PHA must provide a statement describing
its capability to successfully implement a homeownership program. The statement
must describe the PHA's and its partners', if applicable, experience in implementing
homeownership programs for low-income families. If the PHA has not previously
implemented a homeownership program, a description of the PHA's experience in
implementing public housing modernization and development projects is required.
The required homeownership plan components above, along with the required
supporting documentation contained at 24 CFR Part 906.40, are intended to provide
HUD with all the necessary information to assess the workability and legality
of the proposed program and the PHA's capacity to implement it. Generally, the
homeownership plan should serve as a roadmap for the program's implementation.
Essential
Criteria of a Homeownership Plan
HUD will use four key criteria to evaluate
Section 32 homeownership plans as explained on the Homeownership Term Sheet:
Feasibility:
The program must be practically workable, with sound potential for long-term success.
Simply put, the plan should make sense for the PHA to implement in its community.
All the necessary components including sufficient demand for the proposed housing
and adequate funding to cover program costs should be in place.
Legality:
The program must be consistent with all applicable federal, state, and local statutes
and regulations and existing contracts law. The PHA must include a letter from
the housing authority's legal counsel attesting to the legality of the proposed
homeownership plan to HUD.
Documentation: The program must be complete
and clear enough to serve as a working document for implementation, and have sufficient
basis for HUD review. The plan should be internally consistent and reflect the
PHA's careful consideration of its elements.
PHA track record in implementing
homeownership programs: The PHA (and any other entity with substantial responsibility
for implementing the homeownership program) must demonstrate its commitment and
capability to successfully implement the homeownership program. PHAs should describe
successes in related activities including similar homeownership programs or modernization
and development projects.
Eligibility
Requirements
Eligible purchasers may earn up to, but not exceed 80%
of Area Median Family Income (AMI). Except in the case of a PHA's offer of
first refusal to a resident occupying the unit, a PHA must certify that the applicants'
income is not over 80% of AMI at the time the contract to purchase the property
is executed.
The PHA may sell units to a Purchase and Resale Entity
(PRE). The PHA must demonstrate that the PRE has the necessary legal capacity
and practical capability to carry out its responsibilities under the program and
sell the units within five (5) years from the date of acquisition; otherwise the
PRE must transfer ownership of the units back to the PHA. The PHA's homeownership
program also must contain a written agreement and the applicable legal documentation
that specifies the respective rights and obligations of the PHA and the PRE.
Affordability
standards must be met for the purchaser. On an average monthly basis, the
estimate of the sum of the applicant's payments for mortgage principal and interest,
insurance, real estate taxes, utilities, maintenance and other recurring homeownership
costs will not exceed the sum of 35% of the applicant's adjusted income and any
subsidy that will be available for such payments.
Principal residence
requirement. The dwelling unit sold to an eligible family must be used as
the principal residence of the family.
PHAs must require purchasers
to pay a minimum down payment. Each household purchasing housing must use
its own resources to contribute an amount of the down payment that is not less
than one percent of the purchase price of the housing.
Other eligibility
restrictions. A PHA may establish additional limitations for households to
purchase housing. Such requirements may include employment, no past criminal activity,
participation in homeownership counseling programs, or other requirements.
Recapture
and Anti-Speculation Restrictions
Anti-speculation. A PHA must have
a policy that provides for retaining all or a portion of the gain from appreciation
generated by the resale of the property to the extent that there are net proceeds
if the house is sold within five years after purchase. The PHA may not recapture
gains from appreciation if the home is resold over five years from the initial
purchase. Gains from appreciation is defined as financial gain solely attributable
to the home's appreciation over time and not attributable to below-market financing
or government-provided assistance (recapture of that subsidy is discussed in recapture
below). The anti-speculation provision must be recorded as a deed restriction
or a restrictive covenant. The recapture amount can be one that the PHA considers
appropriate under the guidelines in this section.
Recapture of subsidy.
The PHA must implement a stated policy to recapture upon resale government-provided
assistance and/or below-market financing made to the purchaser to the extent that
there are net proceeds. This includes the PHA down payment, closing cost assistance,
subordinate mortgage financing, or below-market financing (i.e., sale the unit
for less than appraised value of the home). The PHA may recapture a portion or
entire subsidy provided to the purchaser even for a period of longer than five
years. [PHAs that elect to take back none of the subsidy must include that in
a stated recapture policy.] This provision must be recorded in the appropriate
form of title restriction(s).
Resale. Section 32 regulations do
not require a PHA to implement a resale provision limiting resale to low-income
buyers.
Eligible
Program Activities
PHAs implementing a Section 32 program may use their
funds to provide the following services:
- Subsidy to public housing
residents (using Capital Funds or program income) or other low-income families
(using only program income) in the forms of (a) down payment or closing cost assistance,
(b) subordinate mortgages, and/or (c) below-market financing;
- Acquisition
of existing homes (or homes built for the PHA by a third party 24 CFR 906.41(2))
using Capital Funds for the purpose of sale to income-eligible purchasers without
adding these units to the Annual Contributions Contract (ACC);
- Sale of
public housing rental (ACC) units to income-eligible purchasers; and,
- Operation
of a lease-purchase program.
Key
Program Features
PHAs must use Davis-Bacon wages for all construction
activity. Except in specific cases of non-routine maintenance, Davis-Bacon
prevailing wage rates apply to all construction activities under the program.
Section 32 can be implemented in conjunction with the Section 8(y) program.
The Section 8(y) program is described separately in the PHA's Section 8 Administration
Plan, if applicable to the PHA. See the Housing Choice Voucher (Section 8) homeownership
program summary below for details regarding implementation of a voucher homeownership
program. 8(y) can only be used in connection with units that are not currently
under ACC or that are released from the ACC as a result of the sale of the unit.
Lease to purchase programs would not be eligible for 8(y) during the lease phase.
Nonpurchasing public housing residents may be displaced. In selling
a public housing unit under a homeownership program, the PHA or Purchase and Resale
Entity (PRE) must initially offer the unit to the resident occupying the unit
if they meet the eligibility requirements. The current residents of the public
housing units have the option of applying to the program in order to purchase
their unit, relocating to another comparable unit, or receiving tenant-based assistance.
PHAs must provide the resident with notice 90 days prior to the date of the sale
of their unit, counseling, relocation expenses, and comparable replacement housing
options. The right of first refusal does not extend to residents in non-public
housing units
Plan
Implementation
After a homeownership plan has been approved, the local
HUD office having jurisdiction for the PHA will monitor the plan's implementation
using the format below:
The
Homeownership Plan
The specific requirements for the preparation of a
homeownership plan under Section 32 are set out in the Desk Guide. PHAs should
submit the Plan to the HUD Special Applications Center (SAC) in Chicago. Non high-performing
PHAs must state their intent to submit a homeownership plan to HUD in the Annual
Plan. HUD will not review any homeownership plan not addressed in the PHA Agency
Plan. (High-performing PHAs are exempt from this rule.) The required items, along
with supporting documentation outlined in 24 CFR Part 906.39, are intended to
provide HUD with all the necessary information to assess the workability and legality
of the proposed program and the PHA's capacity to implement it. Generally, the
homeownership plan should also serve as a roadmap for the program's implementation.
Submission
Requirement
The Special Applications Center (SAC) will accept only
electronic submissions made via the PIC Inventory Removals module. To make a paper
submission, contact SAC management for clearance. The Executive Director's signature
on the certification page may be FAXed or scanned and attached electronically
to the rest of the application.
Note: When attaching
supporting documents to the application, PIC users can attach documents with filenames
with spaces provided filenames are no longer than 25 characters (including file
type ending, e.g., ".doc"), and as long as filenames conform to Windows Explorer
file naming rules: filenames with spaces must be enclosed in quotation marks.
Example: - Filename as shown in MS Word: PIC FAQ
Ideas.doc
- Filename to attach to PIC application: "PIC FAQ
Ideas.doc"
For applicants who must submit attachments on
paper because of equipment problems, please send the original to SAC, with a copy
to the local Public Housing servicing office referring to the PIC application
number (DDA*********).
Applicants who have gotten clearance from SAC management
to submit the application on paper should submit one original and two copies of
the application to the SAC and a copy to their local Public Housing servicing
office. If the homeownership plan is for a HOPE VI site, and the HA's grant administrator
is not located in the servicing office, please provide a copy to the HOPE VI grant
administrator also. The address for the SAC is listed below:
Special Applications Center
US Department of Housing and Urban Development
77 West Jackson Boulevard
Room 2401
Chicago, IL 60604-3507
Telephone:
(312) 886-9754
Fax: (312) 886-6413