When your state housing agency tells you the date it plans to inspect low-income units at your tax credit site, it’s a good idea to tell your residents. You can send a letter to residents telling them the date of the inspection and why the agency may be visiting their units. We’ve put together a Model Letter: Tell Residents When State Housing Agency Will Inspect Units, that you can adapt and use for this purpose.
Letting residents know when and why the inspection is being done makes them more likely to cooperate and not create problems when inspectors arrive. Also, if the inspectors see that your residents are expecting them, your agency will have a favorable impression of your organization and its operations. And finally, giving advance notice to your residents that their units may be inspected shows your respect for their privacy, which they’ll appreciate.
Treasury Regulations Section 1.42-5(c)(2)(ii)(B) requires state agencies to conduct on-site inspections of all buildings in a project, and for at least 20 percent of the low-income units, inspect the units and review the certifications, documentation supporting the certifications, and the rent records for all the residents living in those units at least once every three years.
The inspection standard for on-site inspections of buildings and units generally requires state agencies to determine whether the building and units are suitable for occupancy based on local health, safety, and building codes or whether the buildings and units satisfy the uniform physical conditions established by HUD.
Your agency should notify you a few weeks or so beforehand of the date it will be inspecting units at your site. But your agency isn’t required to tell you which or exactly how many units it will inspect before the inspectors arrive. So it’s a good idea to notify all low-income residents that their units may be inspected on that date.
We’ve put together a Model Letter that you can use to notify the low-income residents of your tax credit site about an upcoming agency inspection. Send a letter like it to each of your low-income residents when a state housing agency inspection is scheduled, to tell them about the upcoming inspection.
It might be easier to post a notice in your site’s common areas for all residents to read. But sending individual letters helps ensure that residents read them and shows that you take their privacy seriously. And if you manage a mixed-income site, posting a notice about something that affects only your low-income residents will unnecessarily draw attention to the fact that you have both low-income and market-rate residents at your site.
Your letter, like our Model Letter, should:
In addition, the letter purposefully avoids using the term “low-income” when referring to residents’ units. Instead, these units are described as “rent-restricted” units. This way, you’ll avoid disparaging residents or making them believe that they’re being inconvenienced because they don’t earn much money. Using the term “rent-restricted” also subtly reminds residents why it’s in their best interests to cooperate with inspectors.
Finally, residents may get uneasy if they believe that their living quarters will be subject to an “inspection.” So instead, we describe an upcoming agency inspection as a “visit,” to avoid creating an image of a formal, intrusive procedure. Along these same lines, use the term “employees” when referring to state housing agency inspectors—don’t use the term “inspectors.”