HUD recently unveiled its fiscal year 2012 budget proposal. Titled “Creating Strong, Sustainable, Inclusive Communities and Quality Affordable Homes,” the budget aims to lead the country out of the economic crisis, in part, by helping responsible families at risk of losing their homes and meeting the need for quality affordable housing.
1. Replace the current cap on household income at 60 percent of area median income (AMI) with the option that properties serve households whose average income is no greater than 60 percent of AMI and with no individual household above 80 percent of AMI. These changes to the Code's low-income occupancy threshold requirements will accomplish three things: (a) it will allow greater income-mixing at the site level, creating opportunities for workforce housing; (b) it will help align LIHTC with HUD's and the USDA's affordable housing programs (which define low income at 80 percent of AMI); and (c) it will lead to the creation of more units targeted to the lowest-income households.
This income-averaging proposal will increase HUD's ability to preserve HUD-assisted sites. Currently, 69,224 households living in public housing and 23,271 households in multifamily housing have incomes above 60 percent of AMI. This proposal allows these units to be counted in basis, increasing the equity flowing to these sites for preservation.
2. Make the 4 percent credit a more viable source of funding for the preservation of the federal affordable housing stock by giving qualifying sites a 30 percent basis boost in the context of preserving, recapitalizing, and rehabilitating existing affordable housing, particularly public housing targeted by the Transforming Rental Assistance (TRA) initiative, as well as Multifamily Housing, Section 236s, BMIRs (Below Market Interest Rate), Rental Assistance Program, Rent Supplement, Section 202, Section 811, HOME, McKinney, and CDBG-funded units, and USDA-RD (Section 515s). This means that a greater amount of equity could be raised per credit even at the higher yields required by investors for 4 percent investments, which, in turn, will generate more interest in LIHTC preservation deals within the investor and developer community.