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Homeownership Zones (HOZ)

 Information by State
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What's New
HUD Recognizes Indianapolis as Model 'Homeownership Zone'
City is credited with transforming 'Dodge City' neighborhood into Fall Creek Place.
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Want More Information?
HOZ Allocations
Copies of the NOFAs for the FY 96 and FY 97 HOZ programs are available free from Community Connections (1-800-998-9999). A HUD publication "Principles for Designing Homeownership Zones" (HUD-1996) is also available.
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HOZ Strategies
Summary information about each active HOZ, and each completed HOZ is available online.
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This page provides information regarding the Homeownership Zones (HOZ) program for cities that would like a grant that will allow them to revitalize their slum areas into neighborhoods of mixed-income single-family homes with access to jobs and mass transit.

Summary:

The Homeownership Zone Initiative (HOZ) is a HUD demonstration program that was launched in 1996 as part of a national strategy to expand homeownership. The goal of the HOZ initiative is to test the idea that cities can transform their blighted areas into stable, vibrant communities by creating entire new neighborhoods of mixed-income single-family homes, called Homeownership Zones. Homeownership Zones usually consist of several hundred new homes in a concentrated target area near major employment centers. The Homeownership Zone demonstration is nearing completion. Lessons learned from this initiative can help other cities use homeownership housing to revitalize their severely distressed areas.

Purpose:

The Homeownership Zone initiative awarded grants to selected cities as seed money to stimulate investment in their target areas. Homeownership Zone cities were encouraged to apply New Urbanist design principals in developing their HOZ plans by providing for a pedestrian-friendly environment, a mix of incomes and compatible uses, defined neighborhood boundaries and access to jobs and mass transit.

Type of Assistance:

There have been two competitive funding rounds, one in federal fiscal year 1996 (FY 96) and one in federal fiscal year 1997 (FY 97). The first HOZ competition (FY 96) awarded Economic Development Initiative (EDI) grant funds and companion Section 108 loan guarantees to six winning applicants. The second HOZ competition (FY 97) awarded recaptured Nehemiah grant funds to an additional six winners, of which five are still active. No additional grant funds are currently available.

Eligible Grantees:

Any unit of general local government.

Eligible Customers:

At least 51 percent of the homebuyers helped with HOZ funds must have incomes that do not exceed 80 percent of the HUD-determined area median income, adjusted by family size.

Eligible Activities:

FY 96 HOZ grantees must use their HOZ/EDI grant to enhance the security of their companion Section 108 guaranteed loan or strengthen the economic feasibility of projects financed with loan funds. Eligible activities include property acquisition, housing rehabilitation, site preparation and special economic development activities, including new housing construction under limited circumstances through Community-Based Development Organizations (CBDOs). FY 97 HOZ grantees must use their HOZ grant to acquire property, build or rehabilitate housing, finance site preparation, provide direct financial assistance to homebuyers, provide homeownership counseling, and/or construct public improvements. FY 97 grantees may also use up to 5 percent of their grant funds for administrative costs.

Application:

Units of general local government apply in response to a Notice of Fund Availability (NOFA) which announces the next HOZ competition.

Technical Guidance:

HOZ proposals funded in FY 96 are governed by the regulations of the EDI program and the Section 108 loan guarantee program at 24 CRF 570, and the Notice of Funding Availability published in the Federal Register on July 16, 1996. HOZ proposals funded in FY 97 are governed by the Notice of Funding Availability published in the Federal Register on July 28, 1997. The Office of Affordable Housing Programs at the HUD Office of Community Planning and Development (CPD) administers the HOZ demonstration program. For more information, contact Ginger Macomber, Homeownership Zone Coordinator, 451 7th Street, SW, Washington, DC, 20410, or call (202) 708-2684, TTY 1-800-877-8339. For program notices, go to HUDCLIPS.

Outcomes:

Most of the eleven cities that are participating in the HOZ demonstration program have completed or are nearing completion of their HOZ projects. In 2005, HUD undertook an interim evaluation of the HOZ demonstration to assess how well each HOZ city has implemented its approved HOZ proposal, identify best practices or guidelines that other cities can use, and collect baseline data for a final evaluation at the end of the demonstration program. The evaluation concluded that transforming a severely distressed neighborhood into a stable, vibrant, homeownership community takes time, but it can be done with sufficient patience, commitment, vision, and concentration of resources. Other cities can learn valuable lessons from the experiences of the HOZ demonstration cities. More...

Homeownership Zone Contacts

 

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Content updated April 22, 2008   Follow this link to go  Back to top   
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