On July 25, in a 28 to 1 vote, the full Senate Appropriations Committee approved the Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Bill.
The bill includes higher funding levels than the fiscal year 2025 House bill, which was passed by the House Appropriations Committee on July 10. The Senate bill is one step toward final FY 2025 HUD appropriations.
The bill seeks to address the shortage of affordable homes by making investments to increase the supply of housing. The bill includes:
The bill maintains support for HUD’s rental assistance programs. It also provides new funding for rehabilitation efforts to help preserve the project-based affordable housing stock and improve living conditions for tenants. This includes:
The committee’s report directs the HUD Secretary to coordinate with the Director of the Federal Insurance Office to complete a report on the current state of the property insurance market with an emphasis on affordable housing properties that are rent-restricted or rent-assisted. This should include properties developed through the use of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit and other applicable state-level affordable housing tax credits, public housing that isn’t self-insured, or properties participating in any federal housing assistance program.
The report also directs the HUD Secretary to make all existing data available, to the extent possible, to the Federal Insurance Office and coordinate to provide an analysis on the potential impact that increasing insurance premiums may have on the supply of new affordable housing, and the financial sustainment of existing affordable housing.
The report tasks HUD with providing an analysis and prediction on the potential effects of increased insurance premiums on federal Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher and project-based rental assistance housing, including properties that have undergone or are undergoing conversion through the rental assistance demonstration. The committee report says the analysis should be done within two years of the date of the bill’s enactment, and update the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations on the status of the report every six months.