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Preserving Federally Assisted Housing An Overview

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Title: Preserving Federally Assisted Housing An Overview


1
Preserving Federally Assisted Housing- An Overview
  • May 23, 2007

2
Presenters
  • Kate Allen- Portland Office Director, Enterprise
    Community Partners
  • Lynn Schoessler- Housing Finance Manager, Oregon
    Housing and Community Services Department
  • Leon Laptook- Director, community Development Law
    Center

3
  • This Cyber Café is sponsored by the Neighborhood
    Partnership Fund with funding provided by
    Enterprise Community Partners.

4
Preserving and Revitalizing Oregons Assisted
Housing
  • Of the nearly 170,000 Extremely Low Income
    Households in Oregon, 108,000 (64) spend more
    than 50 of their income for housing.
  • About 23,300 Oregon households live in project
    based federally assisted housing.
  • Oregon had a net loss of 1000 subsidized units
    between 1995-2003

5
Why the Stock of Assisted Housing is At Risk
  • Expiring Contracts, Use Agreements
  • Escalating market values-properties more valuable
    for different populations or different use
  • Aging owners
  • Owners tired of dealing with federal bureaucracy
  • Aging physical assets- insufficient funds/and or
    owner attention to maintain properties to decent
    standards
  • RD portfolio- small projects, rural locations,
    partial RA
  • Federal budget constraints and fed. commitment to
    fund preservation activities.

6
Importance of Preserving this Assisted Housing
  • Serves the poorest Oregonians those least able
    to compete in private market
  • Once project-based assistance is lost, it will
    not be replaced many generations of low-income
    Oregonians will be affected
  • Preservation, on average, is 40-50 less
    expensive than new construction

7
Federally Assisted Housing
  • Low-Income Public Housing-HUD
  • 6,600 units
  • Older Assisted Housing-HUD
  • Newer Assisted Housing- HUD and State
  • 11,500 units (total older and newer)?
  • Rural Assisted Housing- USDA Rural Development
    (RD)?
  • 5,200 units

8
Low Income Public Housing
  • First federal affordable housing program
  • Units developed and owned by local governments
    and public housing authorities
  • Residents pay 30 of income for rent HUD pays
    difference needed to operate properties
  • Threats HUD payments less than cost of
    operations Aging properties- large backlog of
    capital improvement needs.
  • Hope VI- redevelopment/replacement program for
    distressed PH properties

9
Older Assisted Housing
  • 1960s- HUD programs provided direct federally
    insured loans or mortgage subsidies to develop AH
    projects combined with project-based Section 8
    contracts to keep tenant rents at 30 of income
  • Section 221(d)(3)-direct federal loan at 3
  • Section 236- federal subsidizes loan interest
    rate down to 1
  • Section 202 and 811- capital grants/loans with
    project based Section 8 serves special needs
    populations

10
Older Assisted Housing- Contd
  • Programs require limited owner investment and
    provide for limited returns. Owners required to
    rent to LI tenants
  • Threats Expiring Use Agreements Owners deciding
    to opt-out insufficient funds to maintain aging
    properties.
  • Opportunities Mark-to Market Program, HUDs MF
    preservation program

11
Mark to Market Program (M2M)?
  • Older Section 8 properties used above market
    rents (exception rents) as a primary subsidy
    mechanism
  • Current contracts if renewed will exceed HUDs
    budget. Congress mandated that as contracts
    expire rents needed to be reduced to market.
  • Reduction in rents, without reduction in debt
    service, jeopardizes property operations and FHA
    insured mortgage.
  • M2M provides restructuring tools to size debt and
    debt terms to market rents

12
M2M Program (Contd)?
  • Eligible properties
  • Section 8 Contract and
  • FHA insured loan and
  • Rents above market
  • Restructure plans developed by Participating
    Administrative Entities (PAEs)?
  • Kitsap County Housing Authority covers NW

13
M2M Process
  • 1. 120 days before HAP contract expiration HUD
    and/or Owner determines rent above market
  • 2. HUD refers property to PAE
  • 3. PAE develops restructure plan
  • Third party Rent study
  • Third party CNA, environmental screening
  • PAE determines (in consultation with owner, HUD,
    others) market rents, rehab needs, operating
    expenses, new supportable debt, replacement
    reserves, etc

14
M2M Process (contd)?
  • 4. PAE submits restructure plan to HUD
  • 5. Owner signs Restructuring Commitment
  • 6. Transaction closed or processing discontinued

15
M2M Restructures
  • Involves breaking up mortgage new 1st sized to
    be supported by street rents, 2nd and 3rd if
    needed supported by percentage of surplus cash.
  • Owner required to provide 20 of capital for
    project rehabilitation
  • Owner Incentive Package
  • Capital Recovery Payment for owners portion of
    costs- pro forma expense
  • Incentive Performance fees from cash flow
  • Cash flow split

16
M2M- Role for Nonprofits
  • Can acquire projects from existing owners and
    take project thru M2M.
  • Developer fee permitted
  • Forgiveness of all or part of subordinate debt
    allowed
  • All owner incentives apply
  • Longer affordability restrictions apply -50 years
  • Projects can be transferred to NP sponsors after
    M2M
  • Debt forgiveness allowed if transfer within 3
    years of M2M closing

17
Mark Up to Market
  • Used to facilitate transfer of HUD housing to a
    NP or to fund capital improvements for existing
    NP owned HUD property.
  • Applicable when project rents less than street
    rents (20 projects with rents below 80 FMR, 70
    with rents at 80-100 FMR)?
  • 20 year restricted use agreement
  • Nonprofits not entitled to distributions but may
    seek waiver from HUD

18
Newer Assisted Housing
  • 1970s and early 1980s- Section 8 New
    Construction, Section 8 Substantial Rehab
  • HUD provided rental subsidy through long-term
    project based Section 8 Contract
  • Project Development through non-federal sources-
    Oregon State Bond Program
  • Threats same as Older Assisted Housing
  • Not eligible for Mark to Market program

19
Preserving Newer Assisted Housing
  • 6,800 units in Oregon with Section 8 contracts
    expiring between now and 2011. Majority funded
    through State Bond Program
  • Oregon, NJ, NY and RI first states to extensively
    use SHFA bonds and Section 8 to develop AH.
  • These states will be testing ground for the
    development of preservation strategies for
    uninsured Section 8 properties

20
Oregon Has the Tools in Place- Scale is the Issue
  • 9 LIHTC- limited resource QAP preservation
    set-aside
  • 4 LIHTC and tax exempt bonds- plentiful
    resource need for greater amount of gap
    financing high transaction costs
  • CDBG, HOME
  • Housing Trust Fund-limited compared to other
    states
  • Tax abatements
  • Challenges Acquisition, bridge financing
    strategy, multiple property transfers,
    involvement of national partners

21
Rural Rental Housing
  • RD Section 515 Program
  • Started in 1961 for communities of less than
    20,000
  • Provided Federal loans at 1 interest (30 year
    loans, 50 year amortization) combined with
    projectbased Rental Assistance (RA) to keep
    tenant rents at 30 of income.
  • Pre-1989 loans had no prepayment restrictions

22
Rural Rental Housing-Contd
  • 1980-1986 Prepayments of loans escalated
  • 1986 Congress placed moratorium on prepayments
  • 1988 Congress passed Emergency Low Income
    Housing Preservation Act (ELIHPA)- restricted
    rights of owners to prepay
  • 2004 Court of Claims awards damages to owners
    resulting from prepayment restrictions
  • 2006 Claims from 800 owners for damages
  • 2006 ELIHPA upheld by U.S. 9th Circuit Court of
    Appeals

23
RD Section 515 Revitalization
  • 4 main Processing Tracks
  • Prepayment Process (ELIHPA)?
  • Transfer of Ownership
  • Subsequent rehab loans
  • Restructuring Demo (thru annual NOFA)?
  • Principal RD regulations for Loan Processing,
    Servicing, Asset Management
  • 7 CFR Part 3560
  • Handbooks 1,2,3 to 3560

24
Prepayment Process
  • Owner requests prepayment
  • RD offers owner incentives (equity loans,
    additional RA, etc.) to remain in program and
    continue restrictions
  • If owner rejects incentives, project offered to
    nonprofit buyers for 150 days
  • If no NP offer, RD determines impact on
    minorities
  • If no impact, owner prepays without restrictions
  • If impact, owner prepays with restrictions

25
Transfer Process
  • RD assessment of community need for project
  • Evaluation of owner eligibility
  • Evaluation of project capital needs
  • Evaluation of post transaction rents- not to
    exceed comparable market rents
  • Owner equity, project value, rents identified
    through market appraisal
  • Impact on tenants-minimizing displacement
  • Processing and closing
  • Often relies on 3rd party funding

26
Subsequent Rehab Loans
  • Applications submitted to RD National Office
    annually (November). Selections announced
    generally in February/ March
  • Selection based on needs criteria- health/safety,
    code violations, accessibility, etc.

27
Restructuring Demo Program
  • Annual application process- 2007 preapplications
    due May 30
  • Primary Tool- 20 year debt deferral
  • Cash flow redirected to reserves to help met
    physical needs of property
  • Other Tools
  • Grants up to 5,000 per unit
  • 515 rehab loan at 0, 30 years
  • Second mortgage paid from excess cash flow
  • 3rd party debt/equity encouraged
  • Transfers, consolidations permitted

28
Legislative Proposals
  • S.B. 1318 Senators Smith and Schumer and
  • H.R. 1419-
  • Eliminates depreciation recapture (exit tax)
    for owners who sell assisted housing to State
    approved preservation entity. Entity agrees to
    additional 30 years affordability.
  • Intent is to preserve and revitalize existing
    stock of assisted housing provide incentive to
    old owners who feel stuck to move out of
    program expectation that sales prices will be
    reduced.

29
Legislative Proposals (contd)?
  • An extensive list of national legislative
    proposals is available on the National Housing
    Trusts website at www.nhtinc.org in a report
    titled Legislative Provisions to Support the
    Preservation of Affordable Housing.

30
Legislative Proposals (contd)?
  • Housing Alliance Proposal (HB 3551)?
  • 100 million for affordable housing
  • Funded by document recording fee, lottery funds,
    general fund and utility public purpose funds

31
Attributes of Good State Preservation Policy
  • Early knowledge or warning system and coordinated
    response
  • Meet and share knowledge
  • Share data
  • Determine properties most at risk
  • Commitment at highest level, meaning hire someone
    to coordinate
  • Flexibility to meet owners/nonprofits needs
  • Stressing the cost effectiveness of preservation
  • Providing an array of preservation resources

32
Whats Next?
  • Working group of funders, CDLC and AOCDO/CDN
    representative meeting to rough out a systems
    approach to statewide preservation strategy.
  • Early goals emerging
  • Describe full scope of preservation challenge
    over five year period from 2008-2013
  • Attract local and national foundation funding
    for
  • Searchable comprehensive database of at-risk
    projects (HUD, RD, LIHTC)?
  • Technical assistance
  • Rapid Response Preservation Fund
  • Achieve changes to systems at state and federal
  • Effective utilization of OHCS funds for
    preservation
  • Identify and affect HUD barriers via local office
    and legislative changes

33
More Information on Preservation
  • CDLC- Leon Laptook, 503-471-1180,
    leon.laptook_at_lasoregon.org
  • OHCS- Lynn Schoessler, 503-986-2073,
    lynn.schoessler_at_state.or.us
  • OHCS- Shelly Cullin, 503-986-2118,
    shelly.cullin_at_hcs.state.or.us
  • Enterprise- Kate Allen, 503-553-5641,
    kallen_at_enterprisefoundation.org

34
Additional Resources
  • National Housing Trust- www.nht.org
  • Housing Assistance Council- www.ruralhome.org
  • National Housing Law Project-www.nhlp.org
  • HUD-Office of Affordable Housing Preservation
  • /www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/omhar/
  • USDA RD- Section 515 properties
  • http//rdmfhrentals.sc.egov.usda.gov/RDMFHRentals
    /
  • California Department of Housing and Community
    Development- /www.hcd.ca.gov/hpd/hrc/tech/presrv/
  • Washington State Housing Finance Commission
  • www.wshfc.org/preservation/index.htm
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