Scheduled for publication on the Federal Register on 5/29/24: "HUD's HOME Investment Partnerships Program (HOME program or HOME) provides formula grants to States and units of general local government to fund a wide range of activities to produce and maintain affordable rental and homeownership housing and provides tenant-based rental assistance for low-income and very low-income households. This proposed rule would revise the current HOME regulations to update, simplify, or streamline requirements, better align the program with other Federal housing programs, and implement recent amendments to the HOME statute. This rule also includes minor revisions to the regulations for the Community Development Block Grant and Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) Programs consistent with the implementation of proposed changes to the HOME program."
Marissa Y.’s Post
More Relevant Posts
-
FCI is excited to highlight the March closing of a $4 million New Markets Tax Credits (NMTC) deal with our partners Milwaukee Habitat for Humanity for the construction of 13 single-family homes in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods across Milwaukee. These homes will be available to households earning between 30-80% of the area median income. This project would not have been possible without the advisory services of Hope Community Capital LLC, a close partner of both Milwaukee Habitat for Humanity and FCI. Using NMTC allocation for the construction of for-sale single-family housing is a first for FCI. This method aligns with Milwaukee’s Community Development Alliance (CDA) Collective Affordable Housing Plan, which aims to provide housing opportunities for 18,000 Milwaukeeans earning 30-80% of the area median income over the next 10 years. These critical housing goals are instrumental in building a stronger, more resilient, and more equitable Milwaukee. Read more about this exciting NMTC project on our website: https://bit.ly/3wZocMC
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
As 327,565 U.S. homes are set to lose affordability restrictions by 2026, communities need to act to create and preserve affordable housing. The National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD) is a unique resource in the effort to keep families stably housed and neighborhoods strong. 📅 Launched in 2012, the NHPD is today used by thousands of affordable housing stakeholders, including government agencies, community development organizations, legal aid organizations, advocates, researchers, and lower-income families. NHPD's data and research have been cited in more than 100 studies and articles. 📊 As the only de-duplicated source of address-level data for nearly 80,000 federally assisted rental properties in the U.S., the NHPD helps users to: - Estimate the supply of affordable homes in a given area and create a needs assessment - Document tangible risks and build a strong affordable housing preservation plan - Target properties for community investment, energy efficiency, and disaster preparedness - Research trends of the affordable housing stock over time - Locate affordable housing options - Identify funding characteristics of properties to provide tenants with legal aid 👉 The database is available free of charge to registered non-profits, government agencies, university students, and individuals seeking housing. https://lnkd.in/g799YTVS
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Veteran Housing Corp urges local, state and federal goverments find a better way to do affordable housing programs that are permanent so future generations are not burdened with the issue of loss of affordability periods. All government supported or taxpayer funded affordable housing should have affordability periods in perpetuity
As 327,565 U.S. homes are set to lose affordability restrictions by 2026, communities need to act to create and preserve affordable housing. The National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD) is a unique resource in the effort to keep families stably housed and neighborhoods strong. 📅 Launched in 2012, the NHPD is today used by thousands of affordable housing stakeholders, including government agencies, community development organizations, legal aid organizations, advocates, researchers, and lower-income families. NHPD's data and research have been cited in more than 100 studies and articles. 📊 As the only de-duplicated source of address-level data for nearly 80,000 federally assisted rental properties in the U.S., the NHPD helps users to: - Estimate the supply of affordable homes in a given area and create a needs assessment - Document tangible risks and build a strong affordable housing preservation plan - Target properties for community investment, energy efficiency, and disaster preparedness - Research trends of the affordable housing stock over time - Locate affordable housing options - Identify funding characteristics of properties to provide tenants with legal aid 👉 The database is available free of charge to registered non-profits, government agencies, university students, and individuals seeking housing. https://lnkd.in/g799YTVS
Home - National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD)
preservationdatabase.org
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Did you know that affordable housing promotes community stability and economic opportunity? Learn how our Affordable Housing Program can support the communities you serve https://bit.ly/3EMZ64m
Affordable Housing
corp.fhlbatl.com
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
As 327,565 U.S. homes are set to lose affordability restrictions by 2026, communities need to act to create and preserve affordable housing. The National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD) is a unique resource in the effort to keep families stably housed and neighborhoods strong. Launched in 2012, the NHPD is today used by thousands of affordable housing stakeholders, including government agencies, community development organizations, legal aid organizations, advocates, researchers, and lower-income families, among others. NHPD's data and research have been cited in more than 100 studies and articles. As the only de-duplicated source of address-level data for nearly 80,000 federally assisted rental properties in the U.S., the NHPD helps users to: - Estimate the supply of affordable homes in a given area and create a needs assessment - Document tangible risks and build a strong affordable housing preservation plan - Target properties for community investment, energy efficiency, and disaster preparedness - Research trends of the affordable housing stock over time - Locate affordable housing options - Identify funding characteristics of properties to provide tenants with legal aid The database is available free of charge to registered non-profits, government agencies, university students and individuals seeking housing. https://lnkd.in/g799YTVS
Home - National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD)
preservationdatabase.org
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
As 327,565 U.S. homes are set to lose affordability restrictions by 2026, communities need to act to create and preserve affordable housing. The National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD) is a unique resource in the effort to keep families stably housed and neighborhoods strong. 📅 Launched in 2012, the NHPD is today used by thousands of affordable housing stakeholders, including government agencies, community development organizations, legal aid organizations, advocates, researchers, and lower-income families. NHPD's data and research have been cited in more than 100 studies and articles. 📊 As the only de-duplicated source of address-level data for nearly 80,000 federally assisted rental properties in the U.S., the NHPD helps users to: - Estimate the supply of affordable homes in a given area and create a needs assessment - Document tangible risks and build a strong affordable housing preservation plan - Target properties for community investment, energy efficiency, and disaster preparedness - Research trends of the affordable housing stock over time - Locate affordable housing options - Identify funding characteristics of properties to provide tenants with legal aid 👉 The database is available free of charge to registered non-profits, government agencies, university students, and individuals seeking housing. https://lnkd.in/g799YTVS
Home - National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD)
preservationdatabase.org
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
As 327,565 U.S. homes are set to lose affordability restrictions by 2026, communities need to act to create and preserve affordable housing. The National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD) is a unique resource in the effort to keep families stably housed and neighborhoods strong. Launched in 2012, the NHPD is today used by thousands of affordable housing stakeholders, including government agencies, community development organizations, legal aid organizations, advocates, researchers, and lower-income families, among others. NHPD's data and research have been cited in more than 100 studies and articles. As the only de-duplicated source of address-level data for nearly 80,000 federally assisted rental properties in the U.S., the NHPD helps users to: - Estimate the supply of affordable homes in a given area and create a needs assessment - Document tangible risks and build a strong affordable housing preservation plan - Target properties for community investment, energy efficiency, and disaster preparedness - Research trends of the affordable housing stock over time - Locate affordable housing options - Identify funding characteristics of properties to provide tenants with legal aid The database is available free of charge to registered non-profits, government agencies, university students and individuals seeking housing. https://lnkd.in/g799YTVS
Home - National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD)
preservationdatabase.org
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
As 327,565 U.S. homes are set to lose affordability restrictions by 2026, communities need to act to create and preserve affordable housing. The National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD) is a unique resource in the effort to keep families stably housed and neighborhoods strong. Launched in 2012, the NHPD is today used by thousands of affordable housing stakeholders, including government agencies, community development organizations, legal aid organizations, advocates, researchers, and lower-income families, among others. NHPD's data and research have been cited in more than 100 studies and articles. As the only de-duplicated source of address-level data for nearly 80,000 federally assisted rental properties in the U.S., the NHPD helps users to: - Estimate the supply of affordable homes in a given area and create a needs assessment - Document tangible risks and build a strong affordable housing preservation plan - Target properties for community investment, energy efficiency, and disaster preparedness - Research trends of the affordable housing stock over time - Locate affordable housing options - Identify funding characteristics of properties to provide tenants with legal aid The database is available free of charge to registered non-profits, government agencies, university students and individuals seeking housing. https://lnkd.in/g799YTVS
Home - National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD)
preservationdatabase.org
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
As 327,565 U.S. homes are set to lose affordability restrictions by 2026, communities need to act to create and preserve affordable housing. The National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD) is a unique resource in the effort to keep families stably housed and neighborhoods strong. Launched in 2012, the NHPD is today used by thousands of affordable housing stakeholders, including government agencies, community development organizations, legal aid organizations, advocates, researchers, and lower-income families, among others. NHPD's data and research have been cited in more than 100 studies and articles. As the only de-duplicated source of address-level data for nearly 80,000 federally assisted rental properties in the U.S., the NHPD helps users to: - Estimate the supply of affordable homes in a given area and create a needs assessment - Document tangible risks and build a strong affordable housing preservation plan - Target properties for community investment, energy efficiency, and disaster preparedness - Research trends of the affordable housing stock over time - Locate affordable housing options - Identify funding characteristics of properties to provide tenants with legal aid The database is available free of charge to registered non-profits, government agencies, university students and individuals seeking housing. https://lnkd.in/g799YTVS
Home - National Housing Preservation Database (NHPD)
preservationdatabase.org
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
So much development policy in the Caribbean assumes that an individual deed to a piece of land singlehandedly solves all the social and economic issues a household faces. But is that true? Join us Tuesday Sept. 17 @ 12:00p (Jamaica Time) as we explore how a self-built community in Puerto Rico achieved land tenure security through communal land ownership. Rejecting the approach of individual titles, communal ownership has been an instrument of emancipation and community empowerment. https://lnkd.in/ehmCvCGB
Join us Tuesday Sept. 17 @ 12:00p (Jamaica Time) for the second conversation in our captureland series. https://lnkd.in/ehmCvCGB Self-built or self-help housing refers to dwellings to which the inhabitants have contributed all or most of the construction input themselves. By the 1990s, more than two-thirds of the population of Montego Bay and half of Spanish Town fell into this category. Island-wide, the state estimates that over 20% of the population is living “informally”. Despite this legacy of people incrementally improving and expanding their accommodations over time, state resources have gone almost entirely toward facilitating the private housing market through the financing of long-term mortgages for sprawling suburban housing units. This option has always been out of reach of Jamaicans most in need of housing. In this webinar, we explore how a self-built community in Puerto Rico achieved land tenure security through communal land ownership. Residents of the Caño Martín Peña created the first community land trust in Latin America, ensuring affordability and protection from displacement and gentrification. Rejecting the approach of individual titles, communal ownership has been an instrument of emancipation and community empowerment.
To view or add a comment, sign in