For Immediate Release:
October 10, 2007
Further Information:
Mark Forest - 202-225-3111/774-487-2534
HOUSE APPROVES AFFORDABLE HOUSING TRUST FUND 
  Delahunt Calls Proposal Key Initiative For The Creation Of Affordable Housing

WASHINGTON, DC – Congressman Bill Delahunt announced today that the House of Representatives approved legislation to create a national housing trust fund in order to expand the supply of quality affordable housing.

The House passed H.R. 2895, the National Affordable Housing Trust Fund Act of 2007 by a vote of 264 to 148.

“Today’s vote is an important step toward expanding the supply of affordable housing to families across the country and throughout my district,” Delahunt said.

The legislation, originally introduced by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank and Congresswoman Maxine Waters, and cosponsored by Congressman Delahunt, addresses the lack of affordable housing in the United States.  According to the National Low Income Housing Coalition, there are only 6.2 million homes renting at prices affordable to the 9 million extremely low income renter households -- a shortage of 2.8 million homes. The bill will establish a national affordable housing trust fund, funded through fees from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, to build or preserve 1.5 million homes or apartments over the next 10 years.

This bill would initially allocate to states and local communities between $800 million and $1 billion annually. The trust fund is set up to target funds for the construction of affordable housing and to help lower income families facing the greatest housing affordability challenges.

Specifically this bill would:

Provide Housing for Struggling Families:  All Trust Fund monies must be used for low- and moderate-income families (below 80 percent of state or local median income).  At least 75 percent of funds must go to extremely low-income families (below 30 percent of median income or national poverty level), with 30 percent of funds for families with incomes below the SSI income limit.  On top of helping very low-income families, the bill reserves some trust fund money (10 percent) to families who earn from 50 percent to 80 percent of median income – helping families of nurses, teachers, firefighters, and police officers.

Provide Funds for the Construction of New Housing:  The bill would allow Trust Fund monies for construction, rehabilitation, acquisition, preservation incentives (including for manufactured housing and community land trusts) and operating assistance to facilitate affordability. Funds may be used for both rental housing that is affordable and for down payment and closing cost assistance by first-time homebuyers. Current programs, such as the HOME program, focus on rehabilitation – not on new construction.

Provide Funding from GSE Fees and Expansion of FHA Loans:  The bill does not turn to taxpayers, but instead is funded through required fees (1.2% of their total outstanding mortgages each year) from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the House-passed GSE Affordable Housing Fund (H.R. 1427), FHA savings that result from larger number of loans generated from the enactment of the Expanding American Homeownership Act (HR 1852), and any other sources of funds subsequently identified.  To ensure FHA efforts to expand homeownership, the bill strengthens protections against increases in FHA premiums and against diversion FHA funds for non-housing purposes.

Provide Distribution of Housing Funds Locally: 60% of monies will go to participating local jurisdictions and 40% to states, Indian Tribes and insular areas, with all grantees required to make funds available in rural areas proportionate to identified need in such areas. These funds would be reserved for eligible recipients, which can be any organization, agency, or other entity, including for-profits, nonprofits, and faith-based organizations, that have demonstrated the experience and the capacity to carry out the proposed Trust Fund activity. HUD allocates grants to Indian tribes by competition.

Prohibited Uses of This Legislation: The bill prohibits funds from being used for administrative costs or expenses, political activities, advocacy, lobbying, counseling, travel expenses, and preparation of or advice on tax returns. In addition there is a requirement that grantee develop systems to ensure program compliance, and require annual state fund use reports, and authority for HUD to impose penalties on states that do not comply with requirements, including requiring states and grantees to reimburse misused funds.

Matching Requirements of the Trust Fund:  Grantees have to match every dollar of trust funds with either 25% in other federal funds, 12.5% in state, local, or private resources, or a combination of the two.  It allows for binding commitments to provide services for residents to qualify towards the match, and also provides for a reduction or waiver of the match where a zoning variance or other waiver of regulatory barriers was required to site Trust Fund-assisted housing.

This proposal now moves on to the U.S. Senate.

To read H.R. 2895, the National Affordable Housing Trust Fund Act of 2007, please click here.

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