The Administration supports many of the objectives of H.R. 2, and appreciates
the passage of several amendments that improve the bill as well as the
determination to enact long overdue program reforms. However, the
Administration remains opposed to passage of H.R. 2 unless it is amended
to address the concerns summarized below (and explained in more detail in the
attachment).
H.R. 2 would codify much of the Administration's agenda for transforming the
Nation's public housing system by: (1) facilitating the demolition and
replacement of severely distressed housing developments, including replacement
with mixed-income housing through partnerships with the private sector; (2)
demanding prompt improvement of troubled public housing agencies (PHAs) or
replacing their management; (3) promoting rent policies and coordination with
supportive service efforts that encourage work; and (4) getting tougher on
crime.
Administration Concerns. Although the Administration appreciates the
purposes of H.R. 2 and the improvements in the bill, the Administration remains
opposed to H.R. 2 unless it is amended to:
- Provide more targeting of scarce housing assistance to the neediest
families;
- Set the payment standard at no higher than the Fair Market Rent;
- Set the minimum rent at $25 per month for public housing and tenant-based
assistance and allow HUD to grant hardship exemptions;
- Address the serious flaws in the home rule flexible grant option;
- Delete the "Housing Evaluation and Accreditation Board";
- Delete the "self-sufficiency agreement" between PHAs and public housing
residents or recipients of tenant-based assistance;
- Delete Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) sanctions against local
governments contributing to the troubled status of a PHA; and
- Delete the apparent requirement that private owners of federally assisted
housing be provided with information regarding the criminal conviction records
of adult applicants for, or tenants of, that housing.
Pay-As-You-Go Scoring. H.R. 2 would affect direct spending; therefore,
it is subject to the pay-as-you-go requirement of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1990. OMB's preliminary scoring estimate of this bill is
under development.
ATTACHMENT-STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY ON H.R. 2
Objectives of HR 2. The Administration supports many of the
objectives of H.R. 2: to promote safe, decent, and affordable housing, to
streamline and strengthen the publichousing and tenant-based assistance
programs, and to give well-run public housing agencies ("PHAs") more
flexibility to administer housing assistance in accordance with local needs and
conditions.
Committee Amendments. The Administration appreciates the passage of
several amendments that improve H.R. 2, including a bipartisan amendment
ensuring that excess Section 8 reserves are available to renew Section 8
contracts and adding physical conditions as an indicator of PHA performance.
The Administration looks forward to working with Congress to further streamline
the program in a responsible manner, such as by reducing the reporting and
review requirements in the PHA plan along the lines of the proposal contained
in the Administration's bill.
Administration Concerns. Although the Administration appreciates the
purposes of H.R. 2 and the improvements recently made to the bill, as well as
the determination to enact program reforms that are long overdue, the
Administration remains opposed to H.R. 2 unless it is amended to:
- Provide more targeting of scarce housing assistance to the neediest
families by:
- Retaining the income eligibility level for tenant-based assistance at 50
percent of median income; further targeting 75 percent of such assistance to
families with incomes not exceeding 30 percent of median income; and deleting
the fungibility provision. H.R. 2 would require that 40 percent of new
recipients of tenant-based assistance be families with incomes not exceeding 30
percent of median income. The remaining new recipients could be families with
incomes up to 80 percent of median income. Further, H.R. 2 would allow a PHA
to treat the public housing and tenant-based targeting requirements fungibly,
so that if the PHA exceeded H.R. 2's targeting requirement for public housing,
then it would be permitted to fall short of the targeting for tenant-based
assistance by a proportional amount. These provisions could change the focus
of the tenant-based program from one that is currently targeted to very
low-income families to one that largely serves families with much less need for
housing assistance. Instead, tenant-based assistance should continue to be
more targeted than public housing because it effectively integrates families
into mixed-income settings.
- Improving the income targeting requirements for public housing so that:
(1) of the families that a PHA admits to public housing in a given year, at
least 90 percent have incomes not exceeding 60 percent of median income and at
least 40 percent have incomes not exceeding 30 percent of median income; and
(2) at least 40 percent of families in occupancy at each PHA housing
development have incomes not exceeding 30 percent of median income. H.R. 2
would only require that 35 percent of the families a PHA admits to public
housing in a given year have incomes below 30 percent of median income, and
even that requirement could be avoided under the bill's fungibility provision.
All other families could have incomes up to 80 percent of median income. H.R.
2 also contains only general language prohibiting the concentration of the
poorest families in particular developments. Both the PHA-wide and development
targeting provisions of H.R. 2 must be amended to increase the number of very
low-income families served by the program and to ensure access by those
families to all developments.
- Establishing an income limit for Section 8 project-based assistance
requiring that 40 percent of new admissions must have incomes at or below 30
percent of median income, and 90 percent must have incomes at or below 60
percent of median income. H.R. 2 contains no income limits for Section 8
project-based assistance.
- Set the payment standard at no higher than the Fair Market Rent.
H.R. 2 would permit PHAs to establish payment standards up to 120 percent of
the Fair Market Rent (FMR) established by HUD. Under the current voucher
program, PHAs have the discretion to set payment standards no higher than the
FMR, with HUD approved exception rents. The national average FMR for a
two-bedroom unit will be about $600 in FY 1998. H.R. 2 would allow the average
PHA to set a payment standard up to $720. The Administration is opposed to
these more generous subsidy payments that would work against the national goal
of assisting more families in need.
- Set the minimum rent at $25 per month for public housing and
tenant-based assistance and allow HUD to grant hardship exemptions. H.R. 2
would allow PHAs to set minimum rents of between $25 and $50 per month and
would allow only PHAs to set hardship exemptions. The Administration believes
minimum rents above $25 per month would pose a genuine economic hardship to
some families and that HUD must have the authority to grant appropriate relief
through hardship exemptions when PHAs do not do so.
- The Home Rule Flexible Grant Option is seriously flawed. This
provision of H.R. 2 does not adequately ensure that housing assistance will be
targeted to those with very substantial housing needs. In addition, it
provides for insufficient guarantees that residents will be charged reasonable
rents and that housing assistance will be administered by experienced entities.
- Delete the "Housing Evaluation and Accreditation Board". H.R. 2
would create a new Executive branch agency that would largely replace HUD in
overseeing PHAs and administering the public housing and tenant-based
programs. Although H.R. 2 requires that a study of alternative PHA evaluation
methods (including accreditation) be done first, it presumes the results of the
study and creates an accreditation board. The Administration is opposed to
creating a new permanent Federal agency prior to receiving the results of a
study to determine whether this step is necessary, advisable, or the best
approach.
- Delete the "self-sufficiency agreement" between PHAs and public housing
residents or recipients of tenant-based assistance. The Administration
supports the purpose of this provision, but does not believe that PHAs have the
capacity or resources to implement self-sufficiency agreements with every
covered individual. The Administration's proposal clarifies that it would be t
he PHA's job to assist State welfare agencies in their self-sufficiency efforts.
- Delete Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) sanctions against local
governments contributing to the troubled status of a PHA. H.R. 2 would
authorize the Secretary to withhold or redirect the CDBG funds of any local
government whose actions or inactions have substantially contributed to the
troubled status of a PHA. Current law coupled with new sanctions included in
H.R. 2 will provide HUD with sufficient authority to deal with the problems of
a troubled PHA, including receivership if the troubled status continues for
over a year. The proposed CDBG sanction could lead to substantial charges,
countercharges, and litigation without resulting in the improvement of troubled
PHAs.
- Delete the apparent requirement that private owners of federally
assisted housing be provided with information regarding the criminal conviction
records of adult applicants for or tenants of that housing. The
Administration opposes allowing any private citizens or entities, including the
private owners of federally assisted housing, to obtain such information about
other individuals. The provision of such sensitive information to private
individuals and entities raises significant privacy concerns. The
Administration will work with Congress to identify other means of bolstering
security efforts in privately owned, federally assisted housing.
|