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The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) subsidizes housing costs for approximately five million low-income households through various forms of rental assistance and construction grants. It also helps revitalize over 4,000 localities through community development programs and offers housing and services to help families and homeless persons move toward self-sufficiency. HUD also encourages homeownership by providing mortgage insurance for five million homeowners, many of whom otherwise might not qualify for loans, and by managing billions of dollars in both guarantees of mortgages and mortgage-backed securities.
The President’s 2005 Budget offers new strategies to: 1) meet aggressive goals for increasing minority homeownership; 2) end chronic homelessness; 3) strengthen housing assistance; 4) pilot improved community development programs, and 5) continue to improve HUD’s performance and provide better stewardship of funds.
The Administration has a multi-part strategy to expand homeownership with a special focus on increasing opportunities for minority households. The strategy combines homebuying simplification, new lending options, targeted assistance, a single-family homeownership tax credit, and education.
The 2005 Budget continues and strengthens the Administration’s commitment to end chronic homelessness by proposing the Samaritan Initiative, a competitive grant program. As part of this initiative, HUD will work with the Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS), Veterans Affairs (VA), and others to support innovative local strategies to end chronic homelessness.
The Budget proposes funding for housing choice vouchers in a form that offers communities greater predictability and flexibility to administer the program to address local needs while continuing to help the same number of low-income families as are currently assisted.
This year, a Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART) found that the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program had several areas of weakness. The program is limited by an unclear mission, loose targeting requirements, and lack of focus on results. To address this, the Administration has laid out several components needed for a successful local CDBG program. The Budget also proposes $10 million to test ways to better coordinate, target, and leverage existing Federal community and economic development programs in a few communities.
HUD has made several improvements in management: it continues to make progress in developing clean financial audit results and more efficient management systems; it provided more rigorous oversight of low-income housing assistance; and it took regulatory and enforcement steps to combat deceptive or fraudulent home lending.
I say ‘social entrepreneurs’ because, in many of our faith institutions, we find people who are willing to reach out in the neighborhood in which they exist to help those who hurt and those who are in need.
HUD has been working to increase the participation of faith and community-based organizations in its programs. The Memorial AME Zion Church in Rochester, New York decided to do something about the housing need of low-income families in its community. Memorial AME Zion started the Frederick Douglass Community Development Corporation and put together a housing project that used more than $5 million in HUD funds to build the Frederick Douglass Village. These projects will allow 50 senior households to gain an affordable place to live, community meals and a medical screening program. The Village also included new single-family homes, which provided over 20 low-income families with their first homes.
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Homeownership in America is at an all-time high of 68.4 percent. HUD has an important role in promoting equal opportunity for homeownership. While minority homeownership is also now at an all time high of 49.3 percent, it still significantly lags behind the national average for all Americans. In June 2002, the President set a goal to add 5.5 million minority homeowners by 2010. Since then, over one million minority families have become homeowners, setting a pace to exceed this goal. HUD is providing financial assistance through the American Dream Down Payment Fund, Self-Help Homeownership Opportunities Program, Section 8 Homeownership Vouchers, and the Section 32 Public Housing Homeownership option. The Administration also proposes to increase affordable housing for low-income Americans by offering a tax credit for the development of single-family homes. (See the Federal Receipts chapter in Analytical Perspectives for an additional description.) HUD proposes new mortgage insurance products and reforms to make it easier to shop for a mortgage and real estate settlement services. HUD and the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation are educating and counseling potential homebuyers. These efforts, described in the accompanying diagram, are essential components to increasing homeownership opportunities for all Americans.
Supervising Government-Sponsored Enterprises' Efforts to Promote Affordable Homeownership. The Administration has proposed broad reform of the supervisory system for Government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) in the housing market. Part of this reform includes establishing a new national home purchase goal for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to enhance minority and low-income homeownership. This portion of the reform is designed to ensure that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lead, not lag behind, the market in providing financing to low and moderate-income homebuyers, particularly first-time buyers. Other important reforms have also been proposed. (See the Department of the Treasury chapter for discussion of GSE regulation and reforms and the Credit and Insurance chapter in Analytical Perspectives for a background discussion.)
A homebuyer obtained a loan to renovate his property. A mortgage broker promised him a 30-year fixed rate at 8.625 percent with $12,000 cash out. The Good Faith Estimate did not disclose a broker fee.
The borrower closed on the loan in April 2002, but discovered after signing that he had inadvertently agreed to a 10.89 percent interest rate on a 15-year loan with a balloon payment and a prepayment penalty for 36 months. He also learned for the first time that the mortgage broker charged him a $3,500 “broker fee.”
HUD was not able to enforce this complaint involving the Good Faith Estimate because the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) provides no penalty for a substantial variance between the amounts given on the Good Faith Estimate and the actual charges at settlement. In addition, the current RESPA regulations do not require the disclosure of all pertinent mortgage loan information, such as prepayment penalties, on documentation provided to the borrower prior to settlement.
The incident described above is a particularly egregious example of behavior that the Administration seeks to curtail through regulation. HUD’s proposed regulations would prohibit this type of abuse, and would facilitate guaranteed-price packaging to help borrowers shop for the cheapest loan (saving, on average, as much as $700 per loan settlement) and be assured that the price will not change at the settlement table.
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HUD’s budget includes $1.3 billion for Homeless Assistance Grants. Altogether, the Administration requests over $3 billion in 2005 for programs directly addressing this need. Other broader housing and social programs also serve homeless individuals and families.
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A study of nearly 5,000 homeless persons with severe mental illness in New York City found that these individuals used an average of $40,451 per person per year in publicly funded shelters, inpatient health care, emergency rooms, and correctional services. The same study found that placement in permanent supportive housing at a cost of $17,280 per unit per year, reduced other public costs by $16,282 per unit per year. The overall public cost of housing these individuals was slightly more than allowing them to remain on the streets or in shelters. The Administration supports innovative local efforts to move chronically homeless individuals from streets and shelters to permanent supportive housing.
The Administration continues the commitment made in 2002 to end chronic homelessness within a decade. Innovative local strategies are being funded through a variety of interagency initiatives to move chronically homeless individuals from the street to permanent supportive housing, and to prevent such people from falling into homelessness in the first place.
The chronically homeless are a sub-population of perhaps 150,000 individuals who often have an addiction or suffer from a disabling physical or mental condition. They are homeless for extended periods of time or experience multiple episodes of homelessness. Research indicates that although these individuals may comprise less than 10 percent of the homeless population, they consume a disproportionately large amount of emergency homeless services because their needs are not comprehensively addressed. Thus, they remain in the homeless services system or on the street.
To help realize the Administration’s goal, the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness has been working closely with communities across the country to create local plans. Already, 41 States have created State interagency councils to combat homelessness, and 80 cities and counties have agreed to develop 10-year plans.
The Administration proposes the Samaritan Initiative to advance its goal of ending chronic homelessness. It will be jointly administered by HUD, HHS and VA. Grants will support the most promising local collaborative strategies to move chronically homeless persons from the streets to safe, permanent housing with supportive services. HUD will provide $50 million for the housing component of the initiative. To complement this grant for housing, VA and HHS will each provide $10 million for services such as substance abuse treatment and primary health care.
The Housing Choice Voucher program provides two million low-income families with subsidies to help them afford a decent place to live. They contribute 30 percent of their income towards their rent; the Government pays the rest. In the past, funds have been appropriated for a specific number of units each year. These funds were then given to public housing agencies (PHAs) based on the number of vouchers they were awarded. HUD and the Congress are concerned that voucher costs have increased at a rate of more than double the average increase in the private rental market for the past two years. This rate of increase, combined with an extremely complex set of laws and rules that govern the program, has limited its effectiveness.
The Administration proposes to simplify the program and give more flexibility to PHAs to administer the program to better address local needs. Building on changes in the 2004 Consolidated Appropriations bill, the Administration proposes switching from a “unit-based” approach to a “dollar-based” approach. PHAs would receive a set dollar amount but would have the freedom to adjust the program to the unique and changing needs of their community, including the ability to set their own subsidy levels based on local market conditions rather than having people in Washington trying to predict and set these for every market in the Nation. These changes would provide a more efficient and effective program by eliminating large balances of unused resources (a concern noted in the 2004 PART review) and helping low-income families more easily obtain decent, safe, and affordable housing.
| Principles of a Successful CDBG Program: An example from Richmond, Virginia | |||||
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Prior to 1999—Status Quo: |
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1999-2002—Steps Richmond took to improve: |
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Select Target Neighborhoods
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Leverage the Private Sector
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Focus on Results: |
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Safe Neighborhood: 17-percent drop in crime from 2000–2002
(versus five percent for the rest of the city).
Increased Property Values: 19-percent increase in assessed real estate values from 1998 to 2002. Safe Housing: 68-percent decrease in properties with code violations from 1999 to 2002. |
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The Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program provides annual grants totaling $4.3 billion each year to over 1,000 eligible cities, counties, and States to help develop viable urban communities in our Nation’s distressed areas. The primary strength of the program is the flexibility each community has to spend funds on the areas of greatest local need such as housing, economic development, and public facilities. A corresponding weakness, however, is that local governments often spread CDBG funds across many different areas, which reduces the ability to achieve the program’s primary objective—revitalizing distressed neighborhoods.
This year, the Administration rated the CDBG program as needing improvement based on several areas of weakness:
lack of clarity in the program’s purpose and design;
weak targeting of funds by the CDBG formula and by grantees to areas of greatest need;
lack of transparent program and performance information; and
lack of annual output and long-term outcome performance measures.
Many of these issues result from an ambiguous mission, loose targeting requirements, and local pressure to spread funds across many groups. To address this, the Administration wants to clarify that the purpose—and only meaningful measure of a successful local CDBG program—is a city’s ability to transform distressed neighborhoods. The Administration plans to work with stakeholders to identify ways to increase local accountability, improve targeting of funds, and demonstrate results, including legislative reforms.
Several cities, such as Richmond, Virginia, have begun to strategically target a few neighborhoods for revitalization. Richmond’s process highlights many of the principles CDBG communities will have to adopt to improve neighborhoods (see accompanying illustration).
The Administration is proposing a Development Challenge Pilot to test ways to better coordinate, target, and leverage existing Federal community and economic development programs. An interagency group will advise on standards for awarding $10 million in competitive capital grants to a few communities prepared to set and meet a limited number of clear, measurable community development goals. In addition, the group will work to develop a common framework of performance measures and accountability for Federal community and economic development investments.
The Budget continues to focus on improving program performance. Twelve of HUD's programs have been assessed using the Program Assessment Rating Tool (PART), which evaluated each programs' design and purpose, strategic planning efforts, how well they are managed, and whether they are generating positive results for taxpayers. Below are some of the highlights and recommendations from the PART evaluations. For further details on HUD’s performance assessments, see the White House budget website at www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/.
| Program | Rating | Explanation | Recommendation |
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| Lead Hazard Control Grants | Moderately Effective | The program has become more efficient and meets its annual targets, but it needs more aggressive production targets to successfully address its long-term outcome goals. | Seek higher production targets. |
| HOPE VI | Ineffective | HOPE VI has achieved its primary goal to demolish 100,000 severely distressed public housing units. However, the program is slow at completing the job and more costly than other alternatives. | Terminate the HOPE VI program in response to these findings. |
| Community Development Block Grants | Ineffective | The program suffers from unclear purpose, loose targeting requirements, and lack of results. | Clarify the program purpose, concentrate resources, and demonstrate change in distressed neighborhoods. |
| Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS | Results Not Demonstrated | The program demonstrates strong program purpose, design, and management, and annually measures the amount of housing assistance provided to the target population. However, the program must establish clear long-term outcome goals. | Develop long-term outcome goals and update annual grantee reporting requirements to include reporting on outcome measures. |
| Human Capital | Competitive Sourcing | Financial Performance | E-Government | Budget and Performance Integration | |
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| Status | |
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| Progress | |
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| HUD’s financial performance and overall stewardship of taxpayer funds is better today than four years ago. HUD earned its fourth “clean” audit opinion this year. The auditor, after assessing HUD’s internal and other controls, eliminated one material weakness and three reportable conditions from its report. New systems enabled HUD to close its books in record time this year and more systematically than in prior years. HUD manages its staff of 10,600 employees with a reliable workload measurement system, enabling the allocation of staff where needed and away from underutilized areas. New electronic systems are re-engineering how HUD hires new employees and providing better management of the very large Federal Housing Administration insurance programs. HUD is just beginning its competitive sourcing efforts with a formal announcement of the first competition expected in early 2004. | |||||
| Initiative | Status | Progress |
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| HUD Management and Performance | |
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| Faith-Based and Community Initiative | |
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HUD Management and Performance. HUD made inroads on its longstanding management problems. HUD has taken aggressive action to assure tenants are properly housed by taking over poorly managed housing authorities and correcting problems. In the Virgin Islands, for example, HUD took over a housing authority unable to account for millions in Federal funds and where many families lived in substandard conditions. HUD has also worked with the U.S. Department of Justice to enforce a prompt eviction policy for those who engage in drug activity on or near public housing properties. HUD successfully reduced erroneous payments attributed to program administrator and processing errors by roughly 30 percent from the 2000 baseline estimate of $2.3 billion, as efforts continue to assure that the right benefits go to the right persons. HUD stepped up efforts to combat predatory lending by targeting unscrupulous lenders, increasing enforcement staff and resources and coordinating with other Federal Government agencies to fight abusive lending practices. The result was the highest number of prosecutions and convictions and settlements in the agency’s history. HUD implemented a number of new rules to address deceptive or fraudulent lending practices. Working with State and local governments, HUD is close to streamlining the requirements for consolidated community plans to make them more meaningful and useful for localities. Faith-Based and Community Initiative. Rules to help increase participation among faith-based organizations for eight major programs took effect on September 30, 2003. HUD also developed an outreach and technical assistance plan to increase the quality of grant applications from such grassroots organizations. HUD will work to streamline the grant application process to match the capabilities of small and first-time grant applicants and establish pilot programs for these organizations. The Budget proposes $5 million for a multi-city pilot program aimed at increasing the participation of faith-based and community organizations in the cities’ community development strategies. |
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| Actual | Estimate | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2001 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | ||
| Spending | |||||
| Discretionary Budget Authority: | |||||
| Community Development Block Grant | 5,113 | 4,905 | 4,934 | 4,618 | |
| HOME Investment Partnerships | 1,796 | 1,987 | 2,006 | 2,084 | |
| American Dream Down Payment Initiative (non-add) | — | (75) | (87) | 200 | |
| Homeless Assistance Grants | 1,023 | 1,217 | 1,260 | 1,332 | |
| Samaritan Housing Grant—Legislative proposal (non-add) | — | — | — | (50) | |
| Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS | 257 | 290 | 295 | 295 | |
| Housing Certificate Fund (net of rescissions) | 11,970 | 15,512 | 16,413 | 16,909 | |
| Public Housing | 6,228 | 6,289 | 6,275 | 6,247 | |
| Native American Housing Block Grant | 649 | 645 | 650 | 647 | |
| Revitalization of Severely Distressed Public Housing (HOPE VI) | 574 | 570 | 149 | — | |
| Housing for the Elderly | 754 | 778 | 774 | 773 | |
| Housing for Persons with Disabilities | 243 | 249 | 250 | 249 | |
| Federal Housing Administration (FHA) | −2,349 | −3,584 | −3,545 | −2,627 | |
| Lead Hazard Reduction | 100 | 175 | 174 | 139 | |
| All other HUD programs | 1,999 | 1,134 | 867 | 448 | |
| Total, Discretionary budget authority | 28,357 | 30,092 | 30,415 | 31,264 | |
| Total, Discretionary outlays | 33,018 | 37,221 | 39,830 | 40,843 | |
| Mandatory Outlays | 921 | 253 | 6,347 | −1,900 | |
| Total, Outlays | 33,939 | 37,474 | 46,177 | 38,943 | |
| Credit activity | |||||
| Direct Loan Disbursements: | |||||
| FHA | 2 | — | 53 | 53 | |
| All other programs | 24 | 4 | — | — | |
| Total, Direct loan disbursements | 26 | 4 | 53 | 53 | |
| Guaranteed Loan Commitments: | |||||
| FHA | 122,687 | 170,655 | 168,310 | 180,512 | |
| All other programs | 356 | 370 | 425 | 432 | |
| Total, Guaranteed loan commitments | 123,043 | 171,025 | 168,735 | 180,944 | |