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entitled 'Rural Housing Service: Updated Guidance and Additional 
Monitoring Needed for Rental Assistance Distribution Process' which was 
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Report to the Ranking Minority Member, Subcommittee on Agriculture, 
Rural Development, and Related Agencies, Senate Committee on 
Appropriations: 

September 2004: 

RURAL HOUSING SERVICE: 

Updated Guidance and Additional Monitoring Needed for Rental 
Assistance Distribution Process: 

GAO-04-937: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-04-937, a report to Ranking Minority Member, 
Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, and Related Agencies, 
Senate Committee on Appropriations.

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Rural Housing Service’s (RHS) Section 521 rental assistance 
program provides rental subsidies for about 250,000 rural tenants. 
Because the program has a waiting list of 80,000 eligible tenants and 
there are over 1.3 million rural low-income renters eligible for 
housing subsidies, it is important to effectively distribute resources 
to extend assistance to as many needy tenants as possible. Therefore, 
GAO was asked to assess (1) how RHS distributes rental assistance funds 
to properties and tenants, (2) how RHS monitors the use of rental 
assistance funds, and (3) whether there are sufficient internal 
controls in place to ensure that these funds are being effectively 
administered and used.

What GAO Found: 

RHS’s national office pays rental assistance funds to property owners 
through a variety of contracts and transfers of unused rental 
assistance from one property to another. RHS staff calculate the 
payment amounts using information provided by tenants and verified by 
property owners. The current system requires RHS staff to enter 
payment data into the agency’s database manually. However, RHS’s 
national office is upgrading two systems to streamline the payment 
process. But some local RHS staff are concerned that the new process 
may eliminate a layer of review. 

RHS’s national, state, and local offices share responsibility for 
monitoring the rental assistance program, with the local offices 
performing the primary review every 3 years. The national office 
outlines the monitoring activities for the rental assistance program 
in its Rural Development Instructions and provides other guidance, 
such as administrative notices and unnumbered letters. We found that 
state and local offices follow this guidance inconsistently and 
sometimes consider it unclear. National office staff are planning a 
number of initiatives to increase monitoring of the rental assistance 
program, but a number of key management positions in the national 
office are unfilled, which could limit the effectiveness of program 
monitoring. 

RHS’s internal controls do not provide adequate oversight of rental 
assistance funds because RHS guidance is inadequate and tenants’ 
incomes are not adequately verified. First, insufficient guidance on 
the transfer process limits RHS’s ability to move unused rental 
assistance to properties that have tenants with the greatest unmet 
need. Second, the triennial supervisory review does not provide 
reasonable assurance that tenants income and assets, and ultimately 
rental assistance payments, are adequately verified. Alternate methods 
of verifying tenant information also have limited effectiveness but 
could help improve internal control if properly designed and 
implemented. 

How RHS Uses Information from Tenants to Determine Rental Subsidies: 

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Secretary of Agriculture require that program 
officials establish centralized guidance on transferring unused rental 
assistance, improve sampling methods to select tenant household files 
for supervisory reviews, and improve verification of tenant 
information. To help the agency verify tenant information, Congress 
may wish to consider giving RHS access to the Department of Health and 
Human Services’ National Directory of New Hires. 

The Department of Agriculture generally agreed with GAO’s 
recommendations. 

www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-937.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. To view the survey results, click on the following 
link [www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-978SP]. For more information, 
contact William B. Shear at (202) 512-4325 or shearw@gao.gov.

[End of section]

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

RHS Distributes Rental Assistance Funds through Contracts and Sets Per-
Unit Payments Based on Tenants' Verified Income Levels: 

RHS's National and State Offices Monitor the Use Of Rental Assistance, 
with Local Offices Performing the Primary Review Every 3 Years: 

RHS's Internal Controls Do Not Provide Adequate Oversight of Rental 
Assistance Funds: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Matter for Congressional Consideration: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: State Office Survey Responses for Rural Rental Housing 
(RRH) Properties: 

Appendix III: State Office Survey Responses for Off Farm Labor Housing 
(FLH) Properties: 

Appendix IV: Comments from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgements: 

GAO Contacts: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

Table: 

Table 1: Triennial Supervisory Review Workload, Selected RHS Local 
Offices: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Duties of RHS National, State, and Local Offices: 

Figure 2: Rental Assistance Distribution Process: 

Figure 3: How RHS Uses Information from Tenants to Determine Rental 
Subsidies: 

Figure 4: Centralized and Decentralized Processing, by State: 

Figure 5: Key Management Positions in the Rural Housing Service, as of 
July 2004: 

Figure 6: Frequency of Supervisory Reviews of Tenant Household Files: 

Figure 7: Process Used to Verify the Accuracy of Rental Assistance 
Payments: 

Figure 8: States with Wage-Matching Agreements: 

Abbreviations: 

AMAS: Automated Multi-Housing Accounting System: 

FLH: Farm Labor Housing: 

HUD: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development: 

MFIS: Multi-Family Housing Information System: 

MINC: Management Agency Interactive Network Connection: 

RD: Rural Development: 

RHS: Rural Housing Service: 

RRH: Rural Rental Housing: 

USDA: U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

Letter September 13, 2004: 

The Honorable Herbert Kohl: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development and Related Agencies: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
United States Senate: 

Dear Senator Kohl: 

The Rural Housing Service (RHS) of the U. S. Department of Agriculture 
(USDA) provides rental subsidies through the Section 521 rental 
assistance program to about 250,000 low-income rural tenants living in 
federally subsidized properties.[Footnote 1] The rental subsidies, 
which are provided to property owners through multiyear contracts, are 
intended to limit tenants' rent payments to 30 percent of the 
household's adjusted monthly income. With a fiscal year 2004 budget of 
almost $600 million, the program is RHS's largest line-item 
appropriation. Given its size, internal controls are a significant 
factor in administering the program in order to distribute resources 
effectively and reduce the possibilities for fraud, waste, and abuse. 
Because the program already has a waiting list of 80,000 eligible 
tenants and over 1.3 million low-income renters not receiving housing 
subsidies reside throughout rural America, effectively distributing 
resources is important in extending assistance to as many needy tenants 
as possible.[Footnote 2]

We recently reported on the activity level of rental assistance 
contracts and the accuracy of RHS's budget estimates for the Section 
521 rental assistance program.[Footnote 3] To further assist you in 
your oversight of the program, you also asked us to assess (1) how RHS 
distributes rental assistance funds to properties and tenants, (2) how 
RHS monitors the use of rental assistance funds, and (3) whether RHS 
has sufficient internal controls in place to ensure that these funds 
are being effectively administered and used.

To respond to these objectives, we collected written information from 
RHS and talked with its representatives about the processes for 
distributing rental assistance and the means of monitoring those 
processes. We reviewed RHS's guidance for the program and internal 
control standards that apply to the processes. We also conducted a 
nationwide survey of all RHS state and local offices with rental 
assistance responsibilities. Finally, we visited RHS state and local 
offices and property owners or managers in five states to obtain 
documentation related to specific aspects of the rental assistance 
distribution process and to observe how RHS staff implement the 
internal controls that RHS has established to oversee the program. 
Details of our scope and methodology appear in appendix I, and 
appendixes II and III contain state office responses to a number of 
survey items. The survey and a more complete tabulation of the results 
can be viewed at [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-
978SP] www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-978SP.

We conducted our work from September 2003 through June 2004 in a number 
of locations, including Connecticut, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New 
York, South Carolina, Utah, and Washington, D.C., in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards.

Results in Brief: 

Rental assistance funds are paid monthly to property owners through 
multiyear, renewable contracts that designate a set amount of funding 
per rental unit in RHS-subsidized properties. Property owners may also 
request that RHS transfer unused rental assistance from one property to 
another. The actual amount of the payments property owners receive is 
calculated using information provided by tenants, verified by property 
owners, and reviewed by staff at RHS state and local offices. Plans to 
streamline the payment process are under way, but some RHS staff are 
concerned that the new process may eliminate a layer of review.

Responsibility for monitoring the rental assistance program is divided 
among RHS's national, state, and local offices, with the local offices 
performing the primary review of the rental assistance distribution 
process. The national office provides guidance on procedures for 
monitoring the distribution of rental assistance funds, but we found 
that state and local offices apply the guidance inconsistently and that 
some of these offices consider it unclear. Following the guidance, 
local offices conduct supervisory reviews every 3 years, and these 
reviews are RHS's primary tool for detecting misreporting of tenant 
income, and ultimately, unauthorized rental assistance payments. 
Initiatives to increase monitoring of the rental assistance program are 
under way at the national office. However, unfilled management 
positions at the national level could limit RHS's ability to 
effectively monitor the program.

RHS's internal controls do not provide adequate oversight of rental 
assistance funds. First, insufficient and unclear guidance on the 
transfer process limits RHS's ability to transfer unused rental 
assistance to properties with the most needy tenants. Second, RHS's 
triennial supervisory reviews, the primary internal control activity to 
verify the information tenants and property owners submit, are 
conducted infrequently using samples that may be too small to 
effectively mitigate the risks associated with providing unauthorized 
rental assistance. RHS uses alternate methods, such as internal 
database checks and wage matching, to verify tenant and payment 
information. These methods have limited effectiveness in governing the 
rental assistance distribution process but could help to improve 
internal control if they were properly designed and implemented.

This report contains three recommendations for executive action and one 
matter for congressional consideration.

* To ensure that rental assistance funds are effectively distributed to 
properties that have tenants with the greatest need in the multifamily 
housing portfolio, we recommend that the Secretary of Agriculture 
require program officials to (1) establish centralized guidance on 
transferring unused rental assistance, (2) improve sampling methods to 
ensure that a sufficient number of tenant household files are selected 
for supervisory reviews, and (3) improve verification of tenant 
information, including more effective use of alternate methods of 
income verification.

* To enable RHS to improve its verification of tenant income, this 
report includes a matter for congressional consideration. We recommend 
that RHS be added to Section 453 (j)(7) of the Social Security Act, 
"Information comparisons for housing assistance programs."[Footnote 4] 
This action would give RHS access to the National Directory of New 
Hires administered by the Department of Health and Human Services.

In response to our recommendations, RHS agreed to provide centralized 
guidance on transferring unused rental assistance through a new 
administrative notice and to institute broader use of alternate income 
verification methods, such as improved access to wage matching and new 
hires data. However, RHS did not agree to change its sampling methods 
for selecting tenant files when performing supervisory reviews. 
Instead, RHS said that it would revamp the supervisory review process 
to improve its effectiveness and consistency. We agree that the 
supervisory review process should be revised to improve its 
effectiveness and consistency and are encouraged that USDA is taking 
steps to accomplish this. However, to make this process an effective 
control to provide reasonable assurance that rental assistance payments 
are correct, RHS must also improve its sampling methodology, using a 
statistically valid sample to estimate an overall error rate. Thereby, 
RHS would have a firmer basis for determining an approximate sample 
size for its reviews.

Background: 

The Section 521 rental assistance program, started in 1978, is 
administered by RHS's Multifamily Housing Portfolio Management 
Division. The program provides rental assistance for tenants living in 
units created through RHS's Multifamily Direct Rural Rental Housing 
Loans and Multifamily Housing Farm Labor Loans programs. These programs 
provide loans subsidized with interest rates as low as 1 percent to 
help build rental housing for rural residents and farm workers. Under 
the rental assistance program, eligible tenants pay no more than 30 
percent of their income toward the rent, and RHS pays the balance to 
the property owner.[Footnote 5]

RHS allocates rental assistance subsidies through 5-year contracts with 
property owners; 20-year contracts were also issued to units in newly 
constructed properties from 1978 through 1982. In fiscal year 2004, 
contracts were issued for a term of 4 years. The contracts specify that 
owners will receive payments on behalf of tenants in a designated 
number of units at the property. Contracts may be renewed as many times 
as funds are made available, and additional rental assistance units may 
be allocated if funds become available.

Property owners are required to follow RHS guidance in managing their 
properties.[Footnote 6] Each month, they must document how many units 
designated for rental assistance are occupied. If a unit is empty and 
rental assistance is not being used, the property owner is required to 
assign another eligible tenant. If no eligible tenants are waiting for 
the unit, the property owner can work with RHS to transfer the rental 
assistance to another property.

As shown in figure 1, RHS's national, state, and local offices share 
administrative duties for the rental assistance program.

Figure 1: Duties of RHS National, State, and Local Offices: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

The national office develops and implements regulations for the rental 
assistance program and other RHS programs (Rural Development 
Instructions). The current Rural Development (RD) Instruction for the 
rental assistance program has been in effect since the 1980s and was 
last revised in 1993. Other subparts of the RD Instructions also 
outline processes for monitoring RHS programs, including the rental 
assistance program. A proposed rule designed to streamline and 
consolidate the RD Instructions governing the multifamily grant, loan, 
and rental assistance programs was published in the Federal Register in 
June 2003. The proposed rule is intended to modify tenant 
recertification rules, relieve the burden on property owners of 
recovering unauthorized rental assistance from tenants, and reduce the 
amount of time RHS must wait before transferring unused rental 
assistance.

The national office also distributes administrative notices and 
unnumbered letters on an as-needed basis. Administrative notices 
clarify for state and local offices activities outlined in RD 
Instructions. For example, the national office plans to clarify the 
tenant income verification process and provide further guidance on 
monitoring unused rental assistance for transfer through forthcoming 
administrative notices. Unnumbered letters, which address specific 
issues and are less formal than administrative notices, relay important 
information to state and local offices, but they do not pertain to 
policies and procedures. For example, an unnumbered letter released in 
December 2003 included data aggregated at the national office broken 
down by state and by rental assistance distribution goals, such as 
percentage of supervisory reviews completed, unit vacancies, and unused 
rental assistance.

The national office also estimates program budgets; allocates funds; 
and tracks nationwide program statistics. State and local offices work 
directly with property owners, property management companies, and 
tenants to monitor the program. State and local offices are responsible 
for conducting financial, management, and physical reviews of the 
properties; executing rental assistance contracts with property owners; 
approving rent increases; and processing rental assistance payments. 
State and local office staff also collect and maintain property and 
tenant data for their areas.

Support for the program is also provided through two offices in St. 
Louis, Missouri. The Rural Housing Service Branch of the Information 
Resources Management Office maintains the database systems used to 
manage program data. The Office of the Deputy Chief Financial Officer 
uses the program data to generate and maintain the general ledger and 
financial statements for the program. RHS uses two key database systems 
to manage their multifamily housing programs, including the rental 
assistance program. The Automated Multi-Housing Accounting System 
(AMAS) stores data on rental assistance contract obligations, rental 
assistance payments to property owners, and transfers of rental 
assistance. The Multi-Family Housing Information System (MFIS) tracks 
property and tenant information that determine the monthly request for 
rental assistance.

As mandated by the Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act of 1982, 
the Comptroller General issues standards for internal control in the 
federal government.[Footnote 7] These standards provide the overall 
framework for establishing and maintaining internal control and for 
identifying and addressing major performance and management challenges 
and areas at greatest risk of fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement. 
According to these standards, internal control comprises the plans, 
methods, and procedures used to meet missions, goals, and objectives. 
It is the first line of defense in safeguarding assets, and preventing 
and detecting fraud and errors. Internal control, which is synonymous 
with management control, helps government program managers achieve 
desired results through effective stewardship of public resources. No 
matter how well designed and operated, internal control cannot provide 
absolute assurance that all agency objectives will be met, and thus, 
once in place, internal control provides reasonable, not absolute, 
assurance of meeting agency objectives.

RHS Distributes Rental Assistance Funds through Contracts and Sets Per-
Unit Payments Based on Tenants' Verified Income Levels: 

RHS's national office provides rental assistance funds to property 
owners through a variety of contracts. Rental assistance can also be 
transferred, under certain conditions, from one property to another. 
RHS calculates the payments property owners receive using information 
supplied by tenants and verified by property owners, who then use the 
information to create a tenant certification form. Tenants' income must 
be certified yearly on the tenant certification form or whenever 
significant changes occur--for instance, when income increases by a 
specified amount. Property owners send the tenant certification form to 
the responsible state or local office, where RHS staff review the 
information and calculate the amount of the subsidy. In order to 
receive the monthly payments, property owners must provide the 
appropriate RHS office with a project worksheet-a monthly statement 
showing how many units that are eligible for subsidies are occupied by 
tenants in the program. Figure 2 shows the steps that are involved in 
the distribution process. Plans are under way to streamline the payment 
process, although local office staff are concerned this may eliminate 
their chance to review the information on the project worksheet.

Figure 2: Rental Assistance Distribution Process: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

Funds Are Distributed to Properties through Contracts and Transfers of 
Unused Rental Assistance: 

The rental assistance program provides four types of contracts: 
renewal, construction, servicing, and preservation. RHS officials 
report that in the last few years, 96 percent of annual rental 
assistance appropriations have been used for renewal contracts--that 
is, contracts that renew expiring obligations at existing properties. 
Construction contracts, which support new units in recently constructed 
properties, account for only 1 percent. The remaining 3 percent cover 
servicing and preservation contracts. Property owners who take out 
loans to rehabilitate properties and then raise rents to cover the 
servicing costs associated with the loan, for example, are eligible for 
servicing contracts that provide additional rental assistance to help 
tenants cope with the rent increase. Preservation contracts are offered 
as an incentive to property owners who are considering leaving the 
program and provide subsidies for additional units on the property.

According to the authorizing statute, unused rental assistance is to be 
transferred to properties where the assistance is needed. Transfers can 
occur when state and local offices identify unused rental assistance at 
a property or when a property owner requests such a transfer. For 
example, a property owner may want to transfer unused rental assistance 
from a property that has no eligible potential tenants to one that has 
many. During fiscal year 2003 unused rental assistance on approximately 
6,800 units, or about 3 percent of all rental assistance units--with a 
total value of $67 million--were transferred through about 2,000 
transactions. An RHS national office official noted that a portion of 
these units were rental assistance transfers accompanying a property 
transfer, during which an eligible property owner assumes another 
property owner's loan.

Property owners may initiate the transfer of unused rental assistance 
from their properties at any time. If the property owner has not used 
the rental assistance on one or more of the covered units for any 
consecutive 12-month period, RHS may transfer the unused rental 
assistance, as long as at least one unit at the property remains 
covered.[Footnote 8] In either case, before the transfer can occur, RHS 
must verify that the rental assistance has been properly marketed by 
the owner and is not needed at the current property. Property owners 
may appeal decisions to transfer rental assistance from their 
properties by contacting USDA's National Appeals Division, an 
independent office within USDA.

RHS Makes Payments on the Basis of Information Provided by Tenants and 
Verified by Property Owners: 

As figure 2 shows, a number of steps take place between the time rental 
assistance contracts are made or transferred and the time property 
owners receive payments. The two key steps in this process involve 
certifying tenants' income information on the tenant certification form 
and using that information to calculate the payments to property owners 
on the project worksheet. (fig. 3).

Figure 3: How RHS Uses Information from Tenants to Determine Rental 
Subsidies: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

RD Instructions require that tenants be certified at least annually so 
that state and local office staff can document their income and 
determine their rental contributions. Property owners certify tenants 
initially and then every year, or when a tenant's income rises by $40 
or more per month ($480 per year) or decreases by $20 or more per month 
($240 per year). In these cases, the income must be verified again. 
According to RD Instructions, the property owner must obtain 
verification of the tenant's stated income, in writing, from the 
tenant's employer. If the owner is not able to immediately obtain 
written verification, the tenant's income may be temporarily verified 
by examining income checks or check stubs. Income listed from other 
sources, such as Social Security or public assistance, must be verified 
in writing by those sources. Although tenant certifications and income 
verifications help ensure accurate payments to property owners, errors 
can occur when tenants do not accurately report all sources of income 
or when property owners do not adequately verify them.

Calculating the amount of rental assistance and submitting the 
information to RHS is the second key step. Project worksheets document 
the rent and income levels of tenants for whom the property owner can 
request rental assistance and calculate the amount of rental assistance 
due.[Footnote 9] Property owners submit the project worksheets by mail 
to state or local offices, where, according to RHS guidance, staff are 
to compare the worksheet information with information from MFIS. Once 
a month, MFIS also generates project worksheets, based on the previous 
month's occupancy reports and the tenant certifications in the system. 
RHS staff finish processing the worksheets by entering the information 
into AMAS, triggering payments to the property owners.

In over half of the states, individual local offices are responsible 
for processing project worksheets. However, approximately 39 percent 
(17 out of 44) of the state offices we surveyed have chosen to 
centralize their processing function (fig. 4).[Footnote 10]

Figure 4: Centralized and Decentralized Processing, by State: 

[See PDF for image] 

Note: In certain instances, RHS has a single state office for selected 
groupings of states. To depict centralized status in these selected 
state groupings, this figure only shades the state where the state 
office is located. See appendix I for more details on RHS's state 
groupings.

[End of figure] 

Program officials in one of these states told us their centralized 
processing center promotes consistency in administering regulatory 
requirements. In another centralized state, an official stated that 
their centralized payment center had helped to cut costs and increase 
satisfaction, because property owners had one place to call when 
questions or payment issues arose. However, program officials in two 
decentralized states told us that they believed that centralized 
payment systems distanced RHS staff from the properties and property 
owners or managers.

RHS's Plans to Streamline the Payment Process Have Raised Concerns 
about Eliminating a Layer of Review: 

RHS's national office is upgrading two systems to streamline the 
payment process. The Management Agency Interactive Network Connection 
(MINC) is a Web-based electronic transmission process that will upgrade 
the current modem-based process, known as the Industry Interface, that 
property owners can use to transmit tenant certifications to RHS. RHS 
will also be upgrading MFIS in order to create electronic project 
worksheets, so that state and local offices will no longer be required 
to enter data from the project worksheets manually into AMAS. Once the 
property owners approve their electronic project worksheets through 
MINC, the information will be transmitted automatically into AMAS to 
trigger rental assistance payments. As of May 2004, five states have 
been using the MFIS upgrade in conjunction with MINC to process 
payments and the national office expects all states will be using it by 
the end of calendar year 2004.

Local office staff whom we spoke with during one of our site visits 
were concerned that allowing property owners to approve and submit 
project worksheets electronically will eliminate the local office's 
chance to review the information while entering it into AMAS. National 
office staff overseeing these changes stated that electronic project 
worksheets would not affect this review, because the property owner 
would not be able to make any changes directly to the electronic 
project worksheet if he or she did not agree with the amount of rental 
assistance calculated. Rather, any modifications to the project 
worksheets would have to be submitted separately to RHS.

RHS's National and State Offices Monitor the Use Of Rental Assistance, 
with Local Offices Performing the Primary Review Every 3 Years: 

RD Instructions provide guidance for monitoring the use of rental 
assistance funds. The guidance requires reviews at the national, state, 
and local levels. However, the triennial supervisory review is the 
primary tool for verifying the accuracy of rental assistance payments. 
National office staff are planning a number of initiatives to increase 
rental assistance monitoring, but a number of key management positions 
in the national office have been unfilled, potentially limiting the 
effectiveness of monitoring efforts.

Guidance from the National Office Establishes Monitoring Procedures but 
Is Used Inconsistently and Considered Unclear: 

Two main sets of RD Instructions establish procedures for distributing 
rental assistance. These include: 

* RD Instruction 1930-C, Management and Supervision of Multiple Family 
Housing Borrowers and Grant Recipients, particularly exhibits B and E, 
which establishes criteria for tenant and property eligibility for 
rental assistance, among other things.

* RD Instruction 1951-K, Exhibit A, Processing Multiple Housing 
Payments, which outlines the rental assistance payment process.

Although four offices we visited reported following RD Instruction 
1930-C to process tenant certifications, we found little consistency in 
the guidance RHS offices used to process payments, specifically when 
processing project worksheets. Three offices we visited reported using 
the AMAS Online Cash Manual, which provides instructions on using the 
AMAS database to process payments, but two of those offices also 
reported using different parts of the RD Instructions issued by the 
national office. One of these two offices reported using the RD 
Instruction 1951-K. One other office was unaware of official guidance, 
and another office told us that they referred questions to their AMAS 
coordinator in the state office.

Likewise, two sets of RD Instructions provide explicit procedures for 
monitoring the rental assistance program, including the purpose, 
frequency, content, and planning and follow-up procedures: 

* RD Instruction 2006-M, Management Control System, which outlines the 
reviews used at the national and state office levels: the Management 
Control Review and the State Internal Review; and: 

* RD Instruction 1930-C, which outlines the triennial supervisory 
review for local offices.

The national office conducts the Management Control Review on a 5-year 
cycle to review rental assistance administration in randomly selected 
states. A Management Control Advisory Group, which is made up of 
national and local office employees, determines the time frames, 
objectives, and work plan for the Management Control Review cycle. 
Generally, the objectives are designed to assess state-level 
administrative operations, including financial management, internal 
control, and automated systems. RHS national office staff visit the 
selected properties and review a sample of tenant household files from 
each. Based on the results of the review, the national office has the 
authority to make recommendations to the state offices for improving 
rental assistance administration.

State offices are required to conduct the State Internal Review at 
least once every 5 years. This review is designed to, among other 
things, ensure that RHS local offices properly implement Rural 
Development policies and procedures. During these reviews, state office 
staff evaluate program and administrative functions at local offices. 
Reports on the findings from these reviews are provided to the state 
director.

Local offices are to conduct supervisory reviews at least every 3 
years, examining a random sample of tenant household files at each 
property in their portfolios, and RD Instructions mandate more frequent 
reviews for delinquent or problem properties. Local office staff in one 
state we visited told us that they conduct approximately one 
supervisory review per month in order to review each property once 
every 3 years.[Footnote 11] To conduct the review, staff are to pull a 
random sample of at least six tenant household files at each property, 
or review all tenant household files if the property has six units or 
fewer. RHS provides sample forms including a pre-visit worksheet to 
help staff sample units, plan objectives, and assemble required 
documentation for each visit.[Footnote 12] Table 1 shows the number of 
rental assistance units subject to triennial supervisory review at each 
of the five local offices we visited.

Table 1: Triennial Supervisory Review Workload, Selected RHS Local 
Offices: 

State where local office is located: Connecticut; 
Number of rental assistance units: 920; 
Number of dedicated office staff: 2; 
Number of rental assistance units per staff: 460.

State where local office is located: Mississippi; 
Number of rental assistance units: 500; 
Number of dedicated office staff: 4; 
Number of rental assistance units per staff: 125.

State where local office is located: New York; 
Number of rental assistance units: 480; 
Number of dedicated office staff: 2; 
Number of rental assistance units per staff: 240.

State where local office is located: South Carolina; 
Number of rental assistance units: 2149; 
Number of dedicated office staff: 2; 
Number of rental assistance units per staff: 1075.

State where local office is located: Utah; 
Number of rental assistance units: 368; 
Number of dedicated office staff: 2; 
Number of rental assistance units per staff: 184. 

Source: GAO.

[End of table]

In written responses to survey questions, certain respondents cited 
issues related to RHS guidance in the conduct of their rental 
assistance responsibilities. For example, one survey respondent stated 
that RHS guidance needed to be simplified and issued in a timely 
manner. Another survey respondent stated that RHS guidance is sometimes 
unclear. This respondent added that administrative notices helped to 
some degree but added that the office was receiving more guidance from 
unnumbered letters, which do not carry the same force as RD 
Instructions or administrative notices.

Despite these comments, 80 percent of respondents considered national 
administrative notices helpful or very helpful at clarifying policies 
and procedures established by the national office. However, 
approximately 50 percent of respondents were unable to say how many 
notices the national office had issued between January 2003 and January 
2004.

Triennial Supervisory Reviews Are RHS's Primary Monitoring Tool for the 
Rental Assistance Program: 

The triennial supervisory review is the chief activity RHS local 
offices use to verify tenants' income, assets, and expenses--that is, 
the information on which the tenant certifications and project 
worksheets, and ultimately rental assistance payments, are based. RHS 
staff look for supporting documentation that confirms tenants' 
eligibility and income during tenant household file reviews and examine 
the property owner or manager's waiting list, rental rates, and budget. 
While property owners are required to collect supporting documentation 
for tenants' claims of income, assets, and expenses --a process 
referred to as third party income verification--RHS staff do not see 
the original documentation tenants provide at any time other than 
during triennial supervisory reviews.[Footnote 13] Local office staff 
in all five states selected for site visits told us that triennial 
supervisory reviews were the mechanism they used to monitor the 
accuracy and completeness of tenant certification data. Further 
information collected from the local office staff emphasized the value 
of triennial supervisory reviews. For example, four out of five local 
offices we visited recalled finding errors or questionable tenant 
documentation during triennial supervisory reviews.

RHS uses the triennial supervisory review and other mechanisms to 
detect unauthorized rental assistance payments but faces challenges 
recapturing the unauthorized payments. Tenant household file reviews 
can help detect erroneous claims that lead to unauthorized payments. 
For example, during a triennial supervisory review, RHS staff in one 
state found that a property owner had allowed a tenant to overstate 
medical expenses, which could lower the tenant's net income and thus 
increase the payment RHS makes on the rental unit. Employers may also 
file erroneous third-party income verification forms. According to a 
property owner we visited, such errors can occur when employers falsify 
income information in order to maximize rental assistance payments for 
their employees. RHS can detect such errors through wage matching, the 
process of comparing statements of income by tenants or employers to 
data collected by state wage information collection agencies.

According to RHS officials, recapturing unauthorized rental assistance 
payments once they have been made is difficult. Though RHS can report 
false statements of income to state agencies, these agencies seldom 
have recourse against tenants or employers. When surveyed, 49 percent 
of RHS staff stated that they collect unauthorized rental assistance 
payments from property owners. Owners can, in turn, attempt to collect 
the unauthorized payments from tenants through a repayment agreement. 
Twenty-nine percent of the RHS offices that indicated that their office 
is able to reclaim unauthorized rental assistance reported that they 
had attempted to initiate payment agreements with tenants. However, in 
written responses to survey questions, one respondent noted that the 
office is not able to recapture unauthorized rental assistance in over 
95 percent of the cases. Another survey respondent stated that the 
office is successful in recapturing unauthorized rental assistance in 
about 30 to 50 percent of the cases. Additionally, survey respondents 
stated that tenants typically vacated the units before the debt was 
repaid.

Initiatives to Increase Monitoring of the Rental Assistance Program 
Could Be Hindered by the Lack of Key Managers in the National Office: 

Initiatives are under way at the national office to strengthen 
monitoring of the rental assistance distribution process at all levels. 
In response to the Improper Payments Information Act, the national 
office is conducting a review of properties to determine a nationwide 
erroneous rental assistance payments rate.[Footnote 14] The national 
office is also attempting to gain access to the National Directory of 
New Hires, which is administered by the Department of Health and Human 
Services. This database would give RHS state and local offices access 
to national wage-matching data that could be used to further verify 
tenants' income.

A number of key positions in the Rural Development mission area, 
particularly in the Multifamily Housing Division, have been unfilled 
since approximately March 2003, and existing staff were filling two or 
more administrative roles (fig. 5).

Figure 5: Key Management Positions in the Rural Housing Service, as of 
July 2004: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

For example, as of July 2004 the Deputy Administrator of Multifamily 
Housing and Assistant Deputy Administrator of Multifamily Housing 
positions had been unfilled since March 2003 and August 2003, 
respectively.[Footnote 15] Additionally, at times the Deputy 
Administrator for Community Programs filled the roles of both acting 
Rural Housing Service Administrator and acting Deputy Administrator of 
Multifamily Housing.[Footnote 16] Finally, the Director of the 
Portfolio Management Division, which administers the rental assistance 
program, had also at one time filled the role of acting Assistant 
Deputy Administrator for Multifamily Housing. The leadership gap could 
have a negative effect on program staff's ability to develop and 
administer new policies in a timely fashion. For example, the national 
office planned to release administrative notices clarifying procedures 
on, among other things, income verification in July 2004. However, 
because of staffing constraints due to the consolidation of RHS 
regulations, the issue date was extended.

RHS's Internal Controls Do Not Provide Adequate Oversight of Rental 
Assistance Funds: 

RHS's internal controls do not provide reasonable assurance that rental 
assistance funds are used efficiently or that tenants' incomes and 
assets are adequately verified. First, RHS lacks sufficient guidance to 
oversee the transfer process, creating difficulty in moving unused 
rental assistance throughout the multifamily housing portfolio. Second, 
the triennial supervisory review does not provide reasonable assurance 
that errors in tenants' income statements and thus in rental assistance 
payments will be prevented or detected in a timely manner. The guidance 
is inconsistently interpreted and the reviews are conducted 
infrequently using methods, specifically the selection of an 
appropriate sample size to review, which may be insufficient. Alternate 
methods of verification, such as internal MFIS database checks and wage 
matching, could help improve RHS's existing internal controls if 
properly designed and implemented.

Insufficient Guidance on Transfers Limits Ability to Move Unused Rental 
Assistance to Properties with the Neediest Tenants: 

The majority of survey respondents (52 percent) very frequently or 
fairly frequently encountered high vacancy rates as a cause of unused 
rental assistance. Additionally, when asked to identify the three 
greatest challenges to their offices, survey respondents most 
frequently listed monitoring and filling unit vacancies as the greatest 
challenge facing RHS state and local offices. The current lack of clear 
guidance on transferring unused rental assistance may prevent RHS 
officials from using transfers as a tool to fill vacancies within and 
outside of a state.

We found that RHS's guidance on transfers was not sufficient to meet 
GAO's Standards for Internal Control in the Federal Government. GAO's 
standards state that for an entity to run and control its operations, 
it must have relevant, reliable, and timely communications relating to 
internal as well as external events. For communications to be 
effective, information must flow down, across, and up the organization. 
RD Instructions state that transferred rental assistance must be 
directed to properties with tenants or applicants that have the 
greatest need, based on income level. However, RD Instructions are 
silent on whether state and local offices should transfer unused rental 
assistance to properties within their portfolios or redirect it to 
properties outside their portfolios--either within or outside the 
state--where the need is greater. As a result, the guidance is 
interpreted inconsistently, potentially preventing RHS from 
effectively transferring rental assistance.

During our site visits, an RHS official in one state said that her 
office most often conducted transfers within the property owners' 
portfolios, but officials in other states prioritized transfers to 
benefit the most needy tenants throughout the state. An official noted 
that RD Instructions did not explicitly prioritize such transfers. 
Further, because RD Instructions do not state whether rental assistance 
is to be transferred only within states or among states, three state 
offices interpreted the RD Instructions as allowing the transfer of 
unused rental assistance to other states with a greater need. However, 
76 percent of survey respondents reported that their office did not 
have, or they did not know if it had, formal procedures for conducting 
state-to-state transfers.

In written responses to our survey questions, certain respondents noted 
that RHS guidance on transferring unused rental assistance was 
insufficient. For example, one survey respondent noted that states were 
currently responsible for transferring unused rental assistance without 
a great deal of guidance from the national office. Another respondent 
noted that regulatory and instructional requirements for transferring 
rental assistance were "not efficient." Yet another noted that RD 
Instructions did not outline procedures for transferring unused rental 
assistance among properties or states.

Officials in the national office told us that one of their functions 
was to encourage the transfer of rental assistance both within and 
among states. One official stated that RD Instructions did offer 
guidance on where to transfer rental assistance but could not point to 
specific details. The official also stated that the goal of the 
transfer policy was to provide rental assistance to the tenant with the 
greatest need. However, the current RD Instruction on transfers does 
not provide the necessary control to ensure that this goal is met. In 
addition, to determine where the greatest need exists, RHS national 
office would have to consistently assess need within portfolios, within 
states, and among states. RHS officials acknowledged that they were 
reviewing the guidance on transfers and stated that RHS planned to 
issue an administrative notice to clarify procedures for transferring 
unused rental assistance.

The issue of unclear guidance on transfers is complicated by the fact 
that RD Instructions give property owners certain protections that 
limit transfers of unused rental assistance. While RHS can transfer 
unused rental assistance on covered units after 12 months, at least one 
unit must remain covered at the property. RHS must also notify property 
owners 30 days in advance of its intent to make a transfer and ensure 
that the property owners know their appeal rights. According to RHS 
officials in the states we visited, property owners most often 
instigated transfers when they occurred, typically to other properties 
they owned. An official in one state estimated that property owners 
initiated 95 percent of transfers in that area.

We found that RHS officials in one state hesitated to recommend 
transferring unused rental assistance outside of the property owner's 
portfolio because of the appeals process. The State Director of Rural 
Development in that state said that it could take at least 18 months to 
transfer unused rental assistance to another property if the property 
owner appealed, as the appeals process could take up to 6 months. 
Additionally, one survey respondent would have liked to have the 
authority to transfer unused rental assistance without giving the 
property owner appeal rights. RHS national office officials noted that, 
since 2001, there had been only two requests for review of a property 
owner's appeal. In both cases, RHS's National Appeals Director decided 
against the property owner, and allowed RHS to transfer the unused 
rental assistance to properties outside of the property owner's 
portfolios.

Triennial Supervisory Reviews Are Not Adequate as the Primary 
Monitoring Tool for the Rental Assistance Program: 

Approximately 56 percent of survey respondents reported that they were 
able to verify the accuracy of information provided during the tenant 
certification process. Of those, 56 percent said they did so during the 
triennial supervisory review. Likewise, all of the local offices we 
visited during our site visits stated that information provided for 
tenant certifications was verified during or in preparation for 
triennial supervisory reviews. And approximately 83 percent of survey 
respondents reported that triennial supervisory reviews provided them 
with the information necessary to effectively monitor properties in 
their portfolios to a great or very great extent.

However, we found that the triennial supervisory review was not a 
sufficient means of detecting problems such as misreported income, 
verification errors, and unauthorized rental assistance payments. GAO's 
standards state that internal control should generally be designed to 
assure that ongoing monitoring occurs in the course of normal 
operations, is performed continually, and is ingrained in the agency's 
operations. RHS's triennial supervisory reviews did not meet this 
standard because they are conducted infrequently using a sample size 
that may be too small to provide reasonable assurance that all tenant 
certifications are reviewed at least once or more than once every 
several years. RD Instructions require a sample of at least six tenant 
household files from a property with more than six units, and all 
tenant household files for properties with six units or fewer. With a 
sample size this small, however, tenants could move from a unit they 
had rented before the local office has a chance to sample their 
household file during a supervisory review.

Local offices in the states we visited said that they interpreted RD 
Instructions as requiring a 20-or 25-percent sample of tenant household 
files. However, we found that staffing and time limitations did not 
allow staff to conduct the reviews this way.[Footnote 17] For example, 
an official in one local office stated that her office reviewed six 
tenant household files for every property, even if 20 percent of the 
property comprised a greater number of units. Furthermore, about 20 
percent of survey respondents reported not having sufficient staff to 
conduct reviews, and about 27 percent reported not having sufficient 
time to conduct the reviews according to the RD Instructions. A local 
office official in another state we visited said that staff reviewed 
either six tenant household files or 10 percent of the total-whichever 
was greater. Even if the local offices consistently used a 20 percent 
or 25 percent sample of tenant household files, however, as figure 6 
shows a rental assistance unit could go without review for 12 to 15 
years.[Footnote 18]

Figure 6: Frequency of Supervisory Reviews of Tenant Household Files: 

[See PDF for image] 

Note: This figure assumes a 20 percent or 25 percent sampling of tenant 
household files. This figure assumes that RHS local office staff sample 
tenant household files without replacement. That is, the portion of 
files selected on an initial supervisory review will not be selected 
for subsequent supervisory reviews.

[End of figure] 

RHS's national office does not have a basis for determining whether 
sampling a minimum of six tenant household files per property is 
sufficient to provide reasonable assurance that errors in tenant and 
payment information are adequately detected. In order to design a cost 
efficient sampling strategy that can provide reasonable assurance with 
respect to tenant income and rental assistance payments, RHS needs 
information on the overall error rates. One way to determine an overall 
error rate is to conduct a national statistically valid random sample 
of tenant household files. Information gathered from this sample would 
provide RHS with a better idea of the level of erroneous income tenants 
were reporting and enable RHS to estimate the level of improper rental 
assistance payments that are being made throughout the program. In 
addition, it would provide RHS officials with valuable information on 
how to structure future supervisory reviews in a more efficient and 
effective manner.

In a June 2003 report assessing controls over the tenant certification 
process and accuracy of rental subsidies conducted by the USDA Office 
of Inspector General, the audit team found that in Florida, tenant 
certifications for an estimated 20.8 percent of the 14,705 units 
contained errors that resulted in households receiving an estimated 
$4.7 million in improper rental subsidies.[Footnote 19] This finding 
emphasizes the importance of being able to detect errors in tenant 
information in a timely manner.

In March 2004, RHS began a review of properties to determine an overall 
error rate for rental assistance payments to comply with the Improper 
Payments Information Act. RHS officials selected a sample of 539 
assisted units in 321 RHS properties, and the national office expects 
to report their findings by the end of September 2004.[Footnote 20] 
Until RHS determines an overall error rate using a statistically valid 
sample, RHS will not be able to determine an appropriate sampling 
strategy for use with supervisory reviews to estimate error rates and 
compliance with internal controls.

GAO's internal control standards also state that agencies should 
evaluate their monitoring activities, and the evaluations should depend 
on the assessment of risks and the effectiveness of the monitoring 
procedures. RHS officials in the states we visited said that they found 
errors or questionable tenant documentation during triennial 
supervisory reviews. For example, RHS officials in one state said that 
they would follow up with the property owner if they found errors in 
the data that are being verified. The official added that property 
owners might be given a 15-or 30-day period to correct any 
deficiencies. An RHS official in another state said that RHS staff 
sometimes found questionable supporting documents during triennial 
supervisory reviews. The official explained that the staff note the 
problem in the triennial supervisory review report and request that the 
property owner obtain the correct documentation. These examples suggest 
that, if properly designed and implemented, the triennial supervisory 
review can be valuable in detecting tenant and payment errors.

Alternate Controls Used by RHS to Verify Tenant and Payment Information 
Have Had Limited Effectiveness: 

RHS staff use alternate controls, such as MFIS database checks and wage 
matching, to verify tenant and payment information. According to RHS 
officials, the MFIS system has internal checks that help RHS officials 
avoid and catch errors. When tenant certifications are submitted 
electronically through the Industry Interface, MFIS automatically 
rejects those that are problematic. For example, a tenant certification 
would be rejected if it showed that the tenant might already reside at 
another property--that is, if the tenant's Social Security number 
already existed within the system.

Also, MFIS allows RHS officials to reject tenant certifications for 
certain reasons and thus flag them for review. For example, as we have 
seen tenants must recertify their eligibility for rental assistance if 
their income increases by $40 a month ($480 a year) or decreases by $20 
a month ($240 a year). MFIS allows each office to compare incoming 
tenant certifications to the prior batch of tenant certifications. RHS 
staff in each office can then establish a threshold in MFIS to reject 
tenant certifications that show a change in income of more than an 
established amount, for example, 20 percent, and hold them for further 
review.

Although RD Instructions determine income changes in terms of dollar 
amounts, the MFIS database check has been implemented to use 
percentages to set the threshold for rejecting tenant certifications. 
However, setting the threshold in terms of dollar amounts would be 
consistent with the RD Instruction that describes how to determine 
changes in income. For example, if a tenant reported zero income on an 
initial certification, any subsequent increase in income would be more 
than 20 percent, thereby triggering a rejection, although the dollar 
increase could be less than $40. Likewise, if a tenant's reported 
income increased from $30 to $40 per month, for example, the MFIS 
system would also reject this certification because the percentage 
increase is greater than 20 percent. However, a $10 increase in income 
is not enough to warrant recertification. But if a tenant's reported 
income increased from $300 to $345 per month, MFIS would accept this 
certification because the percentage increase in income is less than 20 
percent, although the dollar increase is more than $40.

An RHS official in the national office stated that the MFIS database 
check could be designed to use dollar amounts instead of percentages to 
establish the threshold. In either case, however, the national office 
does not currently have an established percentage benchmark in MFIS for 
all offices to use, and RHS local offices are not setting the 
thresholds consistently.[Footnote 21] In one local office we visited, 
RHS staff established their threshold to reject tenant certifications 
that change by 20 percent. However, in another state we visited, local 
office staff set MFIS to reject changes in income of 25 percent or 
more. Setting the threshold higher than an established benchmark would 
make this control less effective at detecting changes in income. 
Setting a threshold lower than an established benchmark would make 
this control more effective but would result in a higher number of 
pending certifications that would likely require more staff resources.

Although the RHS national office has established the MFIS database 
check as a control, we identified and were told of errors on tenant 
certifications. For example, in one state we identified a tenant 
certification that listed two dependents as living in a unit receiving 
rental assistance. However, the dependents were not listed in MFIS. RHS 
local office officials stated that, in such a situation, the two 
dependents would not change the amount of rent owed by the tenant or 
the amount of rental assistance due to the property owner. But because 
rental assistance payments are based on household size, among other 
things, the presence or absence of dependents could influence rental 
assistance payments. For example, if a tenant got married an additional 
person would be living in the unit and would possibly have an 
additional source of income. If a tenant gave birth, the tenant would 
receive an income deduction for the newborn, decreasing the amount of 
income used in determining the amount of the rental assistance payment.

Further, RHS officials in four of the states we visited stated that, 
following RHS guidance, they verified the accuracy of rental assistance 
payments by comparing property owners' project worksheets with project 
worksheets generated using MFIS. According to an RHS official, any 
errors on the property owners' project worksheets should be detected 
during the comparison with the MFIS-generated project worksheet. But 
since the MFIS project worksheet is generated with the same information 
from tenant certifications that property owners used to generate their 
project worksheets, RHS is essentially comparing duplicate data from 
the same source (see fig. 7).

Figure 7: Process Used to Verify the Accuracy of Rental Assistance 
Payments: 

[See PDF for image] 

[End of figure] 

According to GAO Standards for Internal Control in the Federal 
Government, such a check is not sufficient. Internal control calls for 
comparisons and assessments using different sets of data so that 
relationships can be analyzed and appropriate actions taken. In order 
for RHS to have a meaningful reconciliation, MFIS data would need to be 
compared with a different data source to identify differences in 
reported tenant and payment information.

An RHS official in the national office believed that this internal 
control standard is not applicable to this situation. The official 
stated that discrepancies between the MFIS-generated project worksheet 
and the property owner's project worksheet often arise because the 
property owner may not send complete information. For example, if a 
property owner did not submit a form indicating that a tenant had 
vacated a unit, or if the owner did not perform a calculation 
correctly, a discrepancy would occur that RHS would look into. We agree 
that this system can catch errors of inconsistency. But a property 
owner could consistently be submitting complete, but inaccurate, 
information reported by the tenant. In such cases, RHS would not be 
able to detect errors or improper rental assistance payments by 
comparing the two project worksheets. RHS would need to consult another 
source of information, such as data on earned income that could be used 
for wage matching, to verify that information reported by the tenant 
and submitted by the property owner is accurate. Wage matching would 
allow staff to verify tenant's reported income using wage information 
collected by the state.

RHS was told by the USDA Office of the Inspector General over 5 years 
ago to continue their efforts to ensure that RHS state and local 
offices utilize wage matching to detect misreported tenant 
income.[Footnote 22] In a February 1999 report, the Inspector General's 
audit team evaluated methods RHS and property owners used to ensure 
that tenants' incomes were properly reported on tenant certifications. 
The audit team found that 47 percent of tenant certifications in six 
states (29,238 out of 62,815) were incorrect due to inaccurately 
reported income, income changes, and property managers that did not 
properly verify income reported by tenants. Further, the audit team 
found that about 93 percent of the income errors involved tenants that 
had reported earned income. The Inspector General recommended that RHS 
be more aggressive in expanding its wage-matching efforts.

Some RHS state offices are granted access to wage-matching data through 
agreements between the offices and wage collection agencies, such as 
state labor departments. These agreements follow state laws. Our survey 
results showed that 64 percent of RHS state offices (28 of 44 RHS state 
offices that responded) had access to state employment information to 
conduct wage matching (see fig. 8.)

Figure 8: States with Wage-Matching Agreements: 

[See PDF for image] 

Note: In certain instances, RHS has a single state office for selected 
groupings of states. To depict wage-matching status in these selected 
state groupings, this figure only shades the state where the state 
office is located. See appendix I for more details on RHS's state 
groupings.

[End of figure] 

However, some RHS officials believe that state-based wage matching has 
limitations. For example, officials in one state we visited noted that 
their office did not place much emphasis on wage matching because their 
area bordered other states and many individuals worked across state 
lines. Without access to wage-matching data in the bordering states, 
RHS staff were not able to adequately certify reported income. Further, 
officials noted that state wage data were often outdated and did not 
capture all sources of income.

RHS is attempting to acquire access to the Department of Health and 
Human Services' National Directory of New Hires by contacting the U. S. 
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to discuss the 
language originally proposed by HUD for the authority to use the 
directory.[Footnote 23] The National Directory of New Hires, which 
includes centralized sources of state wage, unemployment insurance, and 
new hires data for all 50 states, would provide nationwide data for 
wage matching. Access to this directory would likely help solve the 
problem of verifying income for tenants who work across state lines. 
Also, wage data from the National Directory of New Hires is more recent 
than state data and captures all earned income.

Conclusions: 

RHS's internal controls do not provide reasonable assurance that rental 
assistance resources are used effectively. RHS national office transfer 
guidance is insufficient and RHS local offices have inconsistently 
interpreted what is available. As a result, rental assistance funds may 
not be directed to the most needy tenants or may go unused. 
Additionally, the infrequency of the triennial supervisory reviews 
using a sampling methodology that may be insufficient cannot reasonably 
ensure that tenants' income and assets, and ultimately rental 
assistance payments, are adequately verified. RHS does not have a basis 
for determining what constitutes a sufficient sample size for the 
triennial supervisory reviews without establishing an overall error 
rate for rental assistance payments. These shortcomings increase the 
risk that RHS will provide rental assistance to tenants that may not be 
eligible.

RHS currently uses alternate methods of income verification, including 
MFIS database checks that, if properly designed and implemented, could 
provide reasonable assurance that errors in tenant and payment 
information are detected in a timely manner. However, the effectiveness 
of these alternate methods is limited because of their faulty design 
and implementation. RHS officials stated that access to the National 
Directory of New Hires would help with income verification and has made 
efforts to gain access to this information.

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To ensure that rental assistance funds are effectively distributed to 
properties that have tenants with the greatest need, GAO recommends 
that the Secretary of Agriculture require program officials to (1) 
establish centralized guidance on transferring unused rental 
assistance, (2) improve sampling methods to ensure that a sufficient 
number of tenant household files are selected for supervisory reviews 
and (3) improve verification of tenant information including more 
effective use of alternate methods of income verification.

Matter for Congressional Consideration: 

Congress may wish to consider adding RHS to Section 453 (j)(7) of the 
Social Security Act, "Information comparisons for housing assistance 
programs."[Footnote 24] This action would grant RHS access to the 
Department of Health and Human Services' National Directory of New 
Hires for wage-matching purposes. If such access were granted, RHS and 
the Department of Health and Human Services would have to develop 
specific procedures to facilitate it.

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided USDA with a draft of this report for review and comment. 
The Acting Undersecretary for Rural Development provided written 
comments that are presented in appendix IV. The letter included a 
summary of activities that were planned or had recently begun at RHS 
that the Acting Undersecretary said were designed to improve the 
oversight, monitoring, and guidance of the multifamily housing program.

In response to our recommendation on establishing centralized guidance 
on transferring unused rental assistance, the Acting Undersecretary for 
Rural Development agreed to establish this guidance in an 
administrative notice. Concerning our recommendation that RHS improve 
sampling methods to ensure that a sufficient number of tenant files are 
selected for supervisory reviews, the Acting Undersecretary responded 
that USDA would instead revamp the supervisory review process to 
improve its effectiveness and consistency. We agree that the 
supervisory review process should be revised to improve its 
effectiveness and consistency and are encouraged that USDA is taking 
steps to accomplish this. However, to make this process an effective 
control to ensure that the rental assistance payments are correct, or 
that incorrect payments are discovered in the normal course of 
business, USDA must also improve its sampling methodology as we 
described in the report. In particular, RHS must determine an overall 
error rate using a statistically valid sample to determine how many 
tenant household files are sufficient to detect errors. Unless this 
methodology is improved in conjunction with the supervisory review 
process, USDA will continue to lack any assurance as to the propriety 
of the rental assistance payments that are not reviewed. The Acting 
Undersecretary agreed with our recommendation that RHS improve its 
methods for verifying tenant information, including using alternate 
income verification methods. He stated that USDA would institute 
broader use of alternate income verification methods, such as improved 
access to wage matching and new hires data, but noted that USDA needed 
to be able to share this data with third parties, particularly the 
property owners. As noted in this report, if RHS were granted access to 
data from the National Directory of New Hires, RHS and the Department 
of Health and Human Services would have to develop specific procedures 
to facilitate such access.

The Acting Undersecretary also noted that GAO said in the report that 
streamlining and automating borrower's requests for rental assistance 
payments could remove an important layer of agency review. However, GAO 
did not take a position on this issue. We merely summarized concerns 
expressed by RHS local office staff we visited, attributing the 
comments appropriately. We also noted that national office staff 
overseeing the changes had told us that streamlining the payment 
process would not eliminate this review and that not all states were 
currently using the streamlined process. Finally, we incorporated 
updated information USDA provided on RHS staffing.

As agreed with your office, unless you publicly announce the contents 
of this report earlier, we plan no further distribution until 30 days 
from the report date. At that time, we will send copies of this report 
to interested Members of Congress and congressional committees. We will 
also send copies to the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture and 
the Director of the Office of Management and Budget and make copies 
available to others upon request. In addition, this report will be 
available at no charge on the GAO Web site at 
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. Our survey of RHS state and local 
offices administering Section 521 rental assistance and a more complete 
tabulation of the survey results will also be available on the GAO Web 
site at [Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-978SP]. 

Please contact me at (202) 512-4325, or Andy Finkel at (202) 512-6765, 
if you or your staff have any questions concerning this report. Key 
contributors to this report are listed in appendix V.

Sincerely yours,

Signed by: 

William B. Shear: 
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment: 

[End of section]

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To determine how RHS distributes rental assistance funds and monitors 
the rental assistance program, and to identify the internal controls 
RHS has established to ensure that rental assistance funds are 
administered and used effectively, we collected written and testimonial 
information from agency officials in the national office and in the 
Office of the Deputy Chief Financial Officer in St. Louis, Missouri on 
the rental assistance distribution process and the guidance governing 
the distribution process. We consulted GAO's Standards for Internal 
Control in the Federal Government [Hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO/AIMD-00-21.3.1] to review control 
activities that apply to RHS's distribution of rental assistance funds. 
We used these standards to assess whether RHS's current internal 
controls were sufficient to effectively monitor the rental assistance 
program.

We also surveyed RHS state and local offices that were identified as 
having rental assistance responsibilities by their respective State 
Directors or the appropriate designee. We identified 248 state and 
local offices with rental assistance responsibilities.[Footnote 25] 
These consisted of 46 RHS state offices and 202 local offices in 
existence as of December 2003.[Footnote 26] To ensure security and data 
integrity, we provided each of the 248 offices with a web address, a 
unique identification number, and a password to allow the office access 
to one questionnaire.

The questionnaire covered topics related to the rental assistance 
program. Specifically, the questions covered general office and staff 
information, renewal contracts, unused rental assistance, transfers, 
tenant certifications, project worksheets, rent setting, reserve 
accounts, and technology and resources. To prepare for the survey, we 
conducted interviews in three state offices: the combined state office 
of Maryland and Delaware, and the Texas and Illinois state offices, and 
interviewed RHS local offices in Texas and Illinois. Of these, Maryland 
and Delaware and Texas had centralized their processing of rental 
assistance payments. We also pretested the questionnaire with state and 
local offices in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin to determine whether 
respondents would understand questions the way we intended. Since the 
questionnaire was administered via the Internet, we conducted a 
usability pretest with yet another RHS local office in Virginia to 
observe respondents answering the questionnaire as it would appear when 
activated.

We took the following steps to increase the response rate for all 
sectors of the population. We sent one reminder notice via e-mail and 
conducted follow-up telephone calls to those offices that did not 
respond to our survey by the initial deadline. Collection of survey 
data ended on May 3, 2004. We received responses from 230 offices, 
providing an overall response rate of 92.7 percent. Specifically, 44 
state offices and 186 local offices responded, resulting in response 
rates of 95.7 percent and 92.1 percent, respectively. We did not 
independently verify the information obtained through the survey.

The practical difficulties of conducting any survey may introduce 
certain types of errors, commonly referred to as nonsampling errors. 
For example, differences in how a particular question is interpreted, 
the sources of information available to respondents, or the types of 
people who do not respond can introduce unwanted variability into the 
survey results. Steps such as pretesting and follow-up contacts to 
increase response rates serve to minimize nonresponse error. In 
addition, steps such as performing statistical analyses to identify 
inconsistencies and having a second independent reviewer for the data 
analysis can further minimize such error.

Data from the Web survey were entered electronically by participants 
and imported into an electronic data file. Close-ended questionnaire 
items were analyzed using statistical software. A coding scheme was 
developed, and open-ended questionnaire items were content analyzed by 
two trained coders, who revised their codes until 100 percent agreement 
was reached. The results of the content analysis apply only to those 
survey participants who provided responses. We only content analyzed 
open-ended responses that were discussed in this report. We conducted 
our survey work from April 2003 through July 2004 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards.

To obtain more in-depth information, we conducted site visits to RHS 
state and local offices in five states: Utah; South Carolina; New York; 
Mississippi; and the Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island state 
grouping. We designed a site visit interview guide that enabled the 
team to follow the distribution process beginning with the property 
owner or manager and proceeding to the local office, and finally, to 
the state office. Using the interview guide, we observed and discussed 
with RHS staff the tenant certification, project worksheet, and 
transfer processes, among others.

To determine the states where we would conduct the site visits, we 
conducted a stratified random sample. Two centralized and three 
decentralized states were randomly selected from a list of state 
offices, after eliminating the offices we visited to prepare and 
pretest the survey.[Footnote 27] After the state offices were selected, 
we randomly selected one local office from the local offices available 
in that state. We judgmentally selected the property owners based on 
their distance from the local office and their most recent rental 
assistance transfer. However, the experiences of these states are not 
necessarily representative of the experiences of any other state.

During each of the site visits, we interviewed a property owner or 
manager, RHS officials in a local office, and RHS officials in the 
state office. Using the interview guide, we also obtained key documents 
related to the three processes that were being discussed. Specifically, 
the interview guide required the team to obtain from the property owner 
or manager the most recent, completed project worksheet; tenant 
certifications associated with certain rental assistance units; tenant 
applications corresponding to the tenant certifications; a current 
waiting list; and documentation of a recent transfer of rental 
assistance. We tracked these documents through the local offices and 
the state offices to observe internal controls at each level. After all 
site visits were completed, we interviewed officials from RHS's Office 
of the Deputy Chief Financial Officer to obtain information on their 
role in the rental assistance distribution process. Last, we 
interviewed the RHS national office to determine its role in monitoring 
the rental assistance distribution process and to assess the internal 
controls they have established to oversee rental assistance funds.

We also consulted GAO's Standards for Internal Control in the Federal 
Government to review control activities that apply to RHS's 
distribution and monitoring of rental assistance funds. We reviewed 
site visit documents to provide examples of RHS's internal controls. We 
performed our site visit work from March through May 2004 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards.

[End of section]

Appendix II: State Office Survey Responses for Rural Rental Housing 
(RRH) Properties: 

State: Alaska; 
RRH properties: 42; 
RRH units: 897; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 32; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 44; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 784.

State: Alabama; 
RRH properties: 495; 
RRH units: 16,191; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 954; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 3,206; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 8,033.

State: Arkansas; 
RRH properties: 361; 
RRH units: 9,908; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 174; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 1,076; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 6,092.

State: Arizona; 
RRH properties: 118; 
RRH units: 3,775; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 140; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 217; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 3,080.

State: Delaware; 
RRH properties: 221; 
RRH units: 6,975; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 581; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 320; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 4,210.

State: Georgia; 
RRH properties: 478; 
RRH units: 15,427; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 233; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 4,134; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 7,972.

State: Hawaii; 
RRH properties: 22; 
RRH units: 903; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 3; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 3; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 680.

State: Iowa; 
RRH properties: 679; 
RRH units: 11,717; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 242; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 170; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 8,884.

State: Kansas; 
RRH properties: 409; 
RRH units: 6,651; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 111; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 613; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 3,858.

State: Kentucky; 
RRH properties: 456; 
RRH units: 12,284; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 291; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 525; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 6,437.

State: Louisiana; 
RRH properties: 415; 
RRH units: 12,637; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 347; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 2,360; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 7,537.

State: Massachusetts; 
RRH properties: 143; 
RRH units: 4,949; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 491; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 349; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 3,487.

State: Michigan; 
RRH properties: 723; 
RRH units: 18,653; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: NR; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: NR; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 8,905.

State: Minnesota; 
RRH properties: 673; 
RRH units: 12,064; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: DC; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: DC; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 6,389.

State: Missouri; 
RRH properties: 896; 
RRH units: 19,868; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 1,964; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 8,493.

State: Mississippi; 
RRH properties: 564; 
RRH units: 16,416; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 669; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 1,252; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 8,825.

State: Montana; 
RRH properties: 168; 
RRH units: 2,634; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 87; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 184; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 1,939.

State: North Dakota; 
RRH properties: 253; 
RRH units: 3,365; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 187; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 102; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 2,147.

State: Nebraska; 
RRH properties: 280; 
RRH units: 3,908; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 197; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 141; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 2,566.

State: New Jersey; 
RRH properties: 83; 
RRH units: 3,347; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 78; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 445; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 2,009.

State: New Mexico; 
RRH properties: 116; 
RRH units: 4,005; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 347; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 211; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 3,072.

State: Nevada; 
RRH properties: 80; 
RRH units: 1,800; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 1,100.

State: New York; 
RRH properties: 471; 
RRH units: 13,210; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 148; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 1,101; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 5,194.

State: Ohio; 
RRH properties: 402; 
RRH units: 14,912; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 553; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 1,429; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 8,905.

State: Oklahoma; 
RRH properties: 302; 
RRH units: 8,111; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 224; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 140; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 5,130.

State: Pennsylvania; 
RRH properties: 330; 
RRH units: 10,640; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: DC; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: DC; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 6,840.

State: South Carolina; 
RRH properties: 352; 
RRH units: 12,309; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 430; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 2,847; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 5,880.

State: South Dakota; 
RRH properties: 503; 
RRH units: 6,844; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 70; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 4,570.

State: Tennessee; 
RRH properties: 386; 
RRH units: 13,038; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 6,539.

State: Texas; 
RRH properties: 804; 
RRH units: 26,466; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 707; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 4,046; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 14,397.

State: Utah; 
RRH properties: 93; 
RRH units: 2,095; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 1,595.

State: Virginia; 
RRH properties: 272; 
RRH units: 10,498; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: DC; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: DC; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 6,461.

State: Washington; 
RRH properties: 298; 
RRH units: 8,989; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 97; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 909; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 6,205.

State: West Virginia; 
RRH properties: 255; 
RRH units: 7,221; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 281; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 977; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 4,240.

State: Wyoming; 
RRH properties: 62; 
RRH units: 1,655; 
RRH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 118; 
RRH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 252; 
RRH units receiving rental assistance: 1,188.

Source: GAO.

Notes: 

DC = Don't collect: 

DK = Don't know: 

NR = No response: 

We surveyed only state offices with rental assistance responsibilities. 
Also, in certain instances, RHS has a single state office for selected 
groupings of states. For these selected groupings, this chart only 
displays the state name where the state office is located. Thus, the 
total number of state offices is less than 50. See appendix I for more 
details on RHS's selected state groupings.

This chart displays survey responses for RHS state office respondents 
only, if they indicated that they had Rural Rental Housing (Section 
515) properties in its portfolio and if they provided data other than 
Don't Collect, Don't Know, or No Response for at least one of the above 
questions.

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix III: State Office Survey Responses for Off Farm Labor Housing 
(FLH) Properties: 

State: Hawaii; 
Off FLH properties: 1; 
Off FLH units: 31; 
Off FLH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 0; 
Off FLH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 0; 
Off FLH units receiving rental assistance: 10.

State: Massachusetts; 
Off FLH properties: 2; 
Off FLH units: 48; 
Off FLH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 2; 
Off FLH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 1; 
Off FLH units receiving rental assistance: 46.

State: Michigan; 
Off FLH properties: 2; 
Off FLH units: 44; 
Off FLH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 0; 
Off FLH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 0; 
Off FLH units receiving rental assistance: 43.

State: New Mexico; 
Off FLH properties: 5; 
Off FLH units: 111; 
Off FLH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 19; 
Off FLH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 5; 
Off FLH units receiving rental assistance: 103.

State: Oklahoma; 
Off FLH properties: 2; 
Off FLH units: 42; 
Off FLH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 0; 
Off FLH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 0; 
Off FLH units receiving rental assistance: 39.

State: Texas; 
Off FLH properties: 20; 
Off FLH units: 1,415; 
Off FLH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 13; 
Off FLH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 36; 
Off FLH units receiving rental assistance: 1,000.

State: Virginia; 
Off FLH properties: 2; 
Off FLH units: 46; 
Off FLH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
Off FLH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: DK; 
Off FLH units receiving rental assistance: 34.

State: Washington; 
Off FLH properties: 24; 
Off FLH units: 753; 
Off FLH units occupied by zero income tenants, as of 1/1/04: 9; 
Off FLH units occupied by rent-overburdened tenants, as of 1/1/04: 21; 
Off FLH units receiving rental assistance: 521.

Source: GAO.

Notes: 

DK = Don't know: 

We surveyed only state offices with rental assistance responsibilities. 
Also, in certain instances, RHS has a single state office for selected 
groupings of states. For these selected groupings, this chart only 
displays the state name where the state office is located. Thus, the 
total number of state offices is less than 50. See appendix I for more 
details on RHS's selected state groupings.

This chart displays survey responses for RHS state office respondents 
only, if they indicated that they had Off Farm Labor Housing (Section 
514/516) properties in its portfolio and if they provided data other 
than Don't Collect, Don't Know, or No Response for at least one of the 
above questions. 

[End of table]

[End of section]

Appendix IV: Comments from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE: 
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY: 
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20250:

AUG 31 2004:

William B. Shear:
Director, Financial Markets and Community Investment: 
United States Government Accountability Office:
441 G Street, NW: 
Room 2A10: 
Washington, DC 20548:

Dear Mr. Shear:

Thank you for providing the United States Department of Agriculture 
(USDA), Rural Development with your draft report on "RURAL HOUSING 
SERVICE: Updated Guidance and Additional Monitoring Needed for Rental 
Assistance Distribution Process, Audit No. GAO-04-937." I would like to 
offer the following comments for your consideration, and ask that a 
copy of this response be included in your final report.

USDA provides affordable multi-family housing to almost a half-million 
residents in rural America. One of the most important tools available 
is the Rental Assistance (RA) program, which enables eligible very low 
and low-income residents to pay only 30 percent of their income towards 
rent. USDA takes very seriously its stewardship of this program.

We welcome the review done by Congress and appreciate their efforts to 
highlight those areas where we need to improve. As noted in your 
report, many of these weaknesses were already known to us and were the 
subject of planned improvements. We are pleased to present an overview 
of activities we have designed to improve oversight, monitoring and 
guidance of the multi-family housing program.

With respect to the recommendations put forth by the Government 
Accountability Office (GAO), 1) we agree to establish centralized 
guidance on transferring unused RA and to do so through issuance of an 
Administrative Notice (AN); 2) GAO suggests that we change sampling 
methods in selecting tenant files; however, we will instead revamp the 
supervisory visit process to improve its effectiveness and consistency; 
and 3) we agree to increase local office monitoring of tenant income 
verifications and to institute broader use of alternate income 
verification methods, such as wage matching and new hires data, where 
available. It is important to stress that we must have the ability to 
share this data with third parties, particularly with the borrower and 
his management agent. Having the data without the ability to share it 
will make no difference because actual verification of tenant incomes 
is done by the borrower and not Agency staff.

Issues noted in the GAO report.

GAO stated in the report that the streamlining and automation of 
receiving and reviewing borrowers' requests for subsidy may remove an 
important layer of Agency review. The improvement of the current 
process does not change any review by Agency staff, but automating this 
process eliminates human error during data entry. This automation will 
improve the effectiveness, efficiency, and customer service of every 
local office in Rural Development.

Automation will also free up staff time to undertake independent 
reviews of flagged discrepancies and reviews of problem borrowers or 
problem management agents. The intent of this automation is not to 
remove or eliminate a level of review but rather enable and empower 
staff with the additional time to investigate anomalies and errors.

The GAO recommendation for centralized guidance on unused RA is very 
timely. A review of unused rental assistance was started within the 
Agency earlier this year, both as a part of the comprehensive property 
assessment study and as a management tool to stretch available 
resources. As a result of the review, State Offices stepped up efforts 
to use languishing RA for rent overburdened tenants, rehabilitation 
projects, and some states shared RA with other states. The overall 
result of this effort was more efficient use of rental assistance and 
better service to our tenants. Additionally, the National Office made 
some efficiency changes in the new regulation 3560. However, we also 
recognize the need for additional and targeted National Office guidance 
on recapturing and prioritizing unused RA and we expect to issue such 
guidance later this year.

GAO states in the report that oversight and effective program 
management are at risk because key management positions have been 
vacant. We are pleased to advise you that the Administrator's position 
has been filled by Russell T. Davis and the Multi-Family Housing (MFH) 
Deputy Administrator's position has been filled by Jack Gleason. The 
Assistant Deputy Administrator position, still vacant, is not involved 
in day-to-day operations and has no supervisory responsibility over the 
two multi-family divisions of Processing and Portfolio Management. This 
assistant position acts as an advisor and program advocate. We are also 
very pleased to advise you that all program staff positions within the 
two divisions are filled and we now have a full complement of program 
staff, following seven retirements in the last year.

Activities Underway at Rural Housing Service (RHS) MFH.

In addition to the Unused RA AN, we have been working on a 
comprehensive AN to address tenant income verifications. One of the 
major findings from the most recent management control review done on 
the rental assistance program (2004) was the inconsistency of property 
managers in verifying tenant income and the lack of this discovery 
during monitoring through supervisory visits.

One of the key authorities that the new regulation 3560 will provide is 
the ability of the Agency to recapture unauthorized rental assistance 
and to invoke civil money penalties. An improved tenant certification 
form will alert tenants to the Agency's intent to pursue reimbursement 
of such unauthorized assistance.

The Agency also intends to undertake an effort to educate the tenants 
directly about our expectations regarding income verification and use 
of the Treasury Offset Program to recapture unauthorized assistance. We 
hope this effort will educate tenants more clearly on their 
responsibilities with respect to income reporting and our 
responsibilities with respect to verification.

The streamlining we currently have underway for the tenant 
certification form and borrower subsidy request (project worksheet) are 
some of the most sweeping technological changes that Multi-Family has 
undertaken. The latest phase of improvements to our primary database 
include automation of borrower reporting, automation of payment 
processing, and automation of debiting and crediting of borrower bank 
accounts. All of these automation improvements eliminate the 
possibility of human error when inputting data. These improvements 
continually improve our ability to monitor Agency-financed properties.

Training and process improvements are areas where we intend to focus in 
the upcoming fiscal year. Training will be undertaken on the new 
regulation and budget reviews, process improvements will be undertaken 
on the property classification system, State Office servicing goals, 
and revamping of the supervisory visit procedure. The supervisory, or 
triennial, visit encompasses a review of many management, physical and 
occupancy areas, primarily because it is performed only once every 
three years and tries to capture everything going on at a property. 
During the upcoming year, we intend to break down this activity and 
improve its efficacy, including the probability of separating review of 
certain activities and increasing the frequency of reviews.

Overall, we anticipated most of the findings in the GAO report and look 
forward to the opportunity to review the results from the State Office 
surveys. We believe this information will provide us with a better 
sense of trends in the field within the MFH programs and not just in 
the RA program. We have found our own management control reviews and 
State Internal Reviews to be of invaluable importance when considering 
program policy changes. The GAO report confirmed some of the trends we 
had previously identified.

USDA is committed to the future of rural communities and we continue to 
work towards improving the RA Program. 

Thank you for this opportunity to comment on the report. If you have 
any questions, please contact John M. Purcell, Director, Financial 
Management Division, at (202) 692-0080.

Signed by: 

GILBERT GONZALEZ: 
Acting Under Secretary: 
Rural Development: 

[End of section]

Appendix V: GAO Contacts and Staff Acknowledgements: 

GAO Contacts: 

Andy Finkel (202) 512-6765 [Hyperlink, finkela@gao.gov] 
Katherine Trimble (202) 512-5033 [Hyperlink, trimblemk@gao.gov] 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to those named above, William Bates, Emily Chalmers, Jamila 
Jones, Austin Kelly, Alison Martin, Marc Molino, and Julie Trinder made 
key contributions to this report.

(250197): 

FOOTNOTES

[1] The Section 515 Multifamily Direct Rural Rental Housing Loans 
program provides subsidized loans to developers to build rental 
housing. The Section 514 Multifamily Housing Farm Labor Loans program 
provides grants and subsidized loans to build rental housing for farm 
laborers, either off or on the farmer's property. Only "off-farm" labor 
housing is eligible for rental assistance subsidies. All properties 
must be established on a nonprofit or limited profit basis to receive 
rental assistance.

[2] GAO analysis of the 2003 American Housing Survey. This figure 
excludes cash renters, and rural areas include rural parts of 
metropolitan areas and excludes urbanized parts of non-metropolitan 
areas. The American Housing Survey is the largest, regular national 
housing sample survey in the United States. The U. S. Census Bureau 
conducts the American Housing Survey to obtain up-to-date housing 
statistics for the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

[3] Rural Housing Service: Standardization of Budget Estimation 
Processes Needed for Rental Assistance Program, GAO-04-424, 
(Washington, D.C.: March 2004).

[4] 42 USC 653 (j)(7).

[5] Eligible tenants are persons with very low and low incomes, the 
elderly, and persons with disabilities who are unable to pay the basic 
monthly rent within 30 percent of their adjusted monthly income. Very 
low income is defined as below 50 percent of the area median income; 
low income is between 50 and 80 percent of area median income. 

[6] Rural Development Instructions allow property owners to delegate or 
assign management responsibilities, in full or in part, to a property 
manager. Therefore, the term "property owner" used throughout this 
report may also refer to a designated property manager, unless property 
manager is specifically stated.

[7] Internal Control: Standards for Internal Control in the Federal 
Government, GAO, (Washington, D.C.: November 1999). 

[8] The consecutive 12-month period can begin only after the end of the 
first year of the rental assistance agreement. RHS's proposed rule to 
update the current RD Instructions gives the agency the authority to 
transfer rental assistance that has not been used for a 4-month period. 
(See 7 C.F.R. Part 3560.259, Proposed Rule).

[9] Rental assistance is used in conjunction with RHS loans, and is 
provided directly to the owners of some RHS-financed properties. The 
amount of rental assistance requested by the property owner is 
subtracted from the amount of the property owner's monthly mortgage 
payment. If the expected amount of rental assistance exceeds the amount 
of the property owner's monthly mortgage payment, then RHS will issue a 
rental assistance check to the property owner.

[10] We surveyed only RHS state offices with rental assistance 
responsibilities. Also, in certain instances RHS has a single state 
office for selected groupings of states. For example, the state office 
for Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island is located in 
Massachusetts. Thus, the total number of state offices is less than 50.

[11] Based on a Connecticut local office portfolio of 34 properties and 
920 rental assistance units.

[12] RD Instruction 1930-C, Exhibits F and F-1.

[13] In one local office we visited, RHS staff stated that they have 
augmented their review process to include spot checks of tenant 
documentation on an annual basis.

[14] The Improper Payments Information Act of 2002 requires that 
agencies review all their programs and activities annually and identify 
those that may be susceptible to significant improper payments. The act 
further requires those agencies with improper payments exceeding $10 
million to provide a report on the actions being taken to reduce the 
payments. 

[15] The Deputy Administrator of Multifamily Housing position was 
filled in August 2004.

[16] Community Programs, a division of the Rural Housing Service, is 
part of USDA's Rural Development mission area. Community Programs 
administers programs designed to develop essential community facilities 
for public use in rural areas.

[17] A national office official stated that local offices likely 
interpret the Instructions this way because Exhibit F-1 in RD 
Instruction 1930-C uses 25 percent as an example sample size. 
Ultimately, according to the Instructions, the percentage of units a 
local office should review is based on that office's "preference for 
sample size," as long as local offices select at least six units for 
properties with six or more units. 

[18] This figure assumes a 20 percent or 25 percent sampling of tenant 
household files. The figure also assumes that RHS local staff sample 
tenant household files without replacement. That is, the portion of 
files selected on an initial supervisory review will not be selected 
for subsequent supervisory reviews.

[19] The 95 percent confidence interval for the 20.8 percent estimate 
is from 11.3 to 30.2 percent. The estimated $4.7 million, reported in 
"Rural Development, Rural Housing Service, Rural Rental Housing 
Program, Tenant Income Verification, Gainesville, Florida, Audit No. 
04004-3At," consisted of estimated overpayments of $4.4 million and 
underpayments of $0.3 million. The 95 percent confidence interval for 
this total amount extends from $2.4 to $7.0 million.

[20] We did not assess the validity of RHS's sample selection methods.

[21] A national office official stated that the benchmark was 10 
percent when this database check was designed, but noted that MFIS had 
been redesigned to give local offices the flexibility to establish 
their own thresholds. 

[22] USDA Office of the Inspector General Evaluation Report No. 04801-
0004-Ch, Rural Housing Service, Rural Rental Housing Program, Tenant 
Income Verification Process, Washington, D.C., Feb. 1999. 

[23] Through Section 453 (j)(7) of the Social Security Act, 
"Information comparisons for housing assistance programs," 42 USC 653 
(j)(7), HUD was given the authority to access nationwide tenant wage 
information through the National Directory of New Hires. According to 
RHS, its request for inclusion, however, came too late.

[24] 42 USC 653 (j)(7).

[25] Consistent with its use throughout this report, the term "local 
office" encompasses RHS local, area, servicing, and field offices.

[26] The following state groupings have a combined state office: 
Delaware and Maryland; Florida and the Virgin Islands; Hawaii, American 
Samoa and the Western Pacific; Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode 
Island; and Vermont and New Hampshire. Also, we only surveyed state 
offices with rental assistance responsibilities. Thus, the number of 
state offices we surveyed was less than 50.

[27] During our site visits, we learned that one of the two centralized 
states selected was, in fact, a decentralized state for rental 
assistance payment processing.

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