HUD GIVES HOUSING
AGENCIES ADDED FLEXIBILITY TO HELP FAMILIES FIND RENTAL HOUSING
FOLLOWING HURRICANE SANDY
December 07, 2012
To expand housing
options for families displaced by Hurricane Sandy, the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced that it is giving
public housing agencies greater flexibility in calculating rent payments
in areas experiencing increased demand for rental housing. This is one
of several actions HUD is taking to cut red tape to help families who
were forced from their homes and require alternative housing.
HUD is allowing local housing agencies to increase a payment standard up
to 120 percent of the published “Fair Market Rent” thereby giving
low-income families more options to find available housing in tight
rental markets. Read HUD’s notice.
“We understand that in the wake of a disaster like Sandy, available
rental housing becomes increasingly difficult to find, especially for
lower income families,” said HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan, who President
Obama recently appointed to oversee long-term disaster redevelopment in
the disaster region. “Simply by giving local housing authorities greater
flexibility in calculating rental assistance to these families can make
all the difference in finding a suitable home or not. This is just one
more example of how the Obama Administration is cutting red tape to make
our programs work better following a disaster.”
Local housing agencies use HUD’s annual Fair Market Rents (FMR) to
determine how much rental subsidy low-income families are eligible for
through HUD’s Housing Choice Voucher Program. Currently housing agencies
are allowed to set this payment standard up to 110 percent of an area’s
FMR. However, in Presidentially Declared Disaster Areas, housing
agencies can request a waiver to temporarily establish a payment
standard up to 120 percent of the current FMR.
For example, the FMR for a 2-bedroom unit in Union County, N.J. is
$1,202. Housing of this size in the area could rent for more or less
than that amount, but under HUD’s Housing Choice Voucher program the
local housing authority can set a payment standard anywhere from 90 to
110 percent of the FMR. At the 110 percent payment standard, the maximum
monthly rental assistance would be $1,322. However, under this special
waiver of HUD regulatory requirements, housing agencies can increase the
payment standard to 120 percent, which in this example, would mean the
maximum monthly subsidy could increase to $1,442.
Families would continue to pay their required portion of the rent,
typically 30 percent of adjusted monthly income, but because of the
increase in the maximum subsidy available, the measure would allow
displaced families to afford housing they would not normally be able to
under the regular payment standard, thereby increasing the available
supply of housing that these families could afford. The measure also
prevents the displacement of HUD-assisted families where rents may be
increasing significantly as the result of the loss of rental housing
stock in the disaster areas.
HUD and other federal agencies are helping displaced families find
alternative housing while their homes are repaired. The Federal
Emergency Management’s Housing Portal consolidates rental resources from
HUD, Department of Agriculture, Department of Veterans Affairs, private
organizations, and the public to help families and individuals locate
rental units in their area. HUD is also cutting red tape to help
accelerate the re-housing of these families, including:
Allowing
senior housing providers the flexibility to open up vacant units to
evacuees of Hurricane Sandy under the age of 55 without jeopardizing
a community's qualification for certain legal exemptions under the
Fair Housing Act.
Read HUD’s open letter.
Relaxing federal regulations for dozens of
‘participating jurisdictions’ in Hurricane Sandy-impacted areas so
they can quickly rehabilitate single-family housing and to use
vacant rental units to quickly house displaced families.
Read HUD’s waivers under the HOME Investment
Partnerships Program (HOME).