[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 46 (Wednesday, March 9, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12985-12989]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-5263]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR-5466-N-01]
Request for Comments on Trend Factor Methodology Used in the
Calculation of Fair Market Rents
AGENCY: Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and
Research, HUD.
ACTION: Request for Public Comments on the methodology used to
calculate the trend factor component of the Fair Market Rent estimates.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Section 8(c)(1) of the United States Housing Act of 1937
(USHA) requires the Secretary to publish FMRs periodically, but not
less than annually, for effect on October 1 of each year. Today's
notice requests public comment regarding the manner in which HUD
calculates the trend factor used in the Fair Market Rent (FMR)
estimates to meet the statutory requirement that FMRs be ``trended so
the rentals will be current for the year to which they apply''. HUD
provides several proposed alternatives to the current trend factor and
requests comments on these alternatives as well as suggestions of other
ideas.
DATES: Comment Due Date: April 8, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit comments regarding
HUD's alternative proposals for trending FMRs and/or other ideas for
trending FMRs, to the Office of General Counsel, Rules Docket Clerk,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 Seventh Street, SW.,
Room 10276, Washington, DC 20410-0001. Communications must refer to the
above docket number and title and should contain the information
specified in the ``Request for Comments'' section. There are two
methods for submitting public comments:
1. Submission of Comments by Mail. Comments may be submitted by
mail to the Regulations Division, Office of General Counsel, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street, SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410-0500.
2. Electronic Submission of Comments. Interested persons may submit
comments electronically through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
http://www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly encourages commenters to
submit comments electronically. Electronic submission of comments
allows the commenter maximum time to prepare and submit a comment,
ensures timely receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to make them immediately
available to the public. Comments submitted electronically through the
http://www.regulations.gov Web site can be viewed by other commenters
and interested members of the public. Commenters should follow the
instructions provided on that site to submit comments electronically.
No Facsimile Comments. Facsimile (FAX) comments are not acceptable.
Public Inspection of Public Comments. All properly submitted
comments and communications submitted to HUD will be available for
public inspection and copying between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays at the
above address. Due to security measures at the HUD Headquarters
building, an advance appointment to review the public comments must be
scheduled by calling the Regulations Division at 202-708-3055 (this is
not a toll-free number). Individuals with speech or hearing impairments
may access this number through TTY by calling the Federal Information
Relay Service at 800-877-8339. Copies of all comments submitted are
available for inspection and downloading at http://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical information on the
current methodology used to develop FMRs or a listing of all FMRs,
please call the HUD USER information line at (800) 245-2691 or access
the information on the HUD Web site http://www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/fmr.html. Also at this Web address, HUD maintains detailed on-
line documentation systems that catalog each step in the calculation of
FMRs for any area of the country selected by the user.
Electronic Data Availability: This Federal Register notice is
available electronically from the HUD User page at http://www.huduser.org/datasets/fmr.html. Federal Register notices also are
available electronically from http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/index.html,
the U.S. Government Printing Office Web site.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 8 of the USHA (42 U.S.C. 1437f) authorizes housing
assistance to aid lower-income families in renting safe and decent
housing. Housing assistance payments are limited by FMRs established by
HUD for different geographic areas. In the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV)
program, the FMR is the basis for determining the ``payment standard
amount'' used to calculate the maximum monthly subsidy for an assisted
family (see 24 CFR 982.503). In general, the FMR for an area is the
amount that would be needed to pay the gross rent (shelter rent plus
utilities) of privately owned, decent, and safe rental housing of a
modest (non-luxury) nature with suitable amenities. In addition, all
rents subsidized under the HCV program must meet reasonable rent
standards.
Section 8(c) of the USHA requires the Secretary of HUD to publish
FMRs periodically, but not less frequently than annually. Section 8(c)
states, in part, as follows:
Proposed fair market rentals for an area shall be published in
the Federal Register with reasonable time for public comment and
[[Page 12986]]
shall become effective upon the date of publication in final form in
the Federal Register. Each fair market rental in effect under this
subsection shall be adjusted to be effective on October 1 of each
year to reflect changes, based on the most recent available data
trended so the rentals will be current for the year to which they
apply, of rents for existing or newly constructed rental dwelling
units, as the case may be, of various sizes and types in the market
area suitable for occupancy by persons assisted under this section.
(emphasis added)
Equivalent language is repeated in HUD's regulations at 24 CFR part
888, which also provide that HUD will develop proposed FMRs, publish
them for public comment, provide a public comment period of at least 30
days, analyze the comments, and publish final FMRs for effect at the
beginning of the fiscal year. (See 24 CFR 888.115.)
The part of the statute that was emphasized is the basis for the
application of a trend factor that establishes FMRs at the midpoint of
the fiscal year, or to the following April. Because Consumer Price
Index (CPI) data series for rent and utilities are used to update FMRs
to the end of previous calendar year, the FMRs are trended forward 15
months. For example, the FY 2011 FMRs (75 FR 61254), were published for
effect October 1, 2010, use 2009 annual CPI data for rent (rent of
primary residence) and utilities (fuels and utilities). This CPI data
brought the FMRs to the end of 2009. HUD trended the FY 2011 FMRs from
2009 year end to April 2011 (15 months) using an annual growth rate of
3.0 percent as the trend factor, applied over the 15-month period. This
trend factor represents the average annual rate of growth in gross
rents between 1990 and 2000, as measured by the decennial censuses.
Prior to the application of the 2000 census data in the FMR estimation
process (FY 2005 FMRs), HUD used a trend factor of 2.98 percent based
on the average annual rate of growth in gross rent between 1980 and
1990, as measured by these decennial censuses.
II. FMR Estimation Methodology
This section provides a brief overview of how current FMRs are
estimated. Documentation systems which completely describe the
calculation processes are available for FMRs from FY 2005 through FY
2011 at http://www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/fmr.html. A timeline of
the FMR estimation process is shown below: \1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ This timeline represents the general methodology used in the
calculation of FMRs from FY 2009 through FY 2011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Begin with Final 2-Bedroom FMR for Current Fiscal Year.
2. Remove Trending and CPI Updates from this 2 Bedroom FMR, (do not
remove ACS Update).
3. Determine Current Year ACS Update Factor and Apply to Value in
Step 2.
4. Apply CPI Update Factor to Value in Step 3.
5. Apply National Historical Trend Factor for 15 months (to the
Midpoint of the publication Fiscal Year).
A. Base Year Data
FMRs start with base rents estimated with Census 2000 long form
survey data. The American Community Survey (ACS) replaces the decennial
long-form survey, but with less data collected over a longer period of
time. Since FY 2008, FMR base rents are updated using the most recent
ACS data available for an area. In large metropolitan areas the 2000
base rents may be replaced rather than updated with rents from the ACS.
Random digit dialing (RDD) surveys may also be used to replace 2000
base rents. ACS and RDD rents are compared with the previous year's FMR
updated to the time of survey. If the survey data (from either the ACS
or an RDD) is statistically different from the updated rent, the survey
data becomes the base year rent.
B. Application of ACS Data
HUD applies ACS survey data according to the type of area (core-
based statistical area (CBSA), metropolitan subarea, or nonmetropolitan
county), the amount of survey data available, and the reliability of
the survey estimates. HUD uses both one- and three-year ACS tabulations
to update rents. Beginning with the FY 2012 FMRs HUD will incorporate
the use of five-year ACS data. All areas are updated with the annual
change in state or metropolitan one-year standard quality median rents.
HUD tests these rent changes for statistical significance \2\ before
applying them to the appropriate base rent. Any state- or metropolitan-
level change that is not statistically significant is not applied. HUD
applies this test as a means to minimize fluctuations in rents due to
survey error.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The change is considered statistically significant if Z >
1.645 where Z equals the Difference between the new and old rent
estimate (EST1-EST2) divided by the square
root of the difference of the standard error of the estimates
[SQRT(SE1-SE2)].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
HUD uses metropolitan-level rent changes for CBSA areas and
subareas that have more than 200 standard quality sample cases in 2007
and 2008. All other areas are updated with state-level rent changes.
For subareas, State and CBSA change factors continue to be selected
based on which factor brings the subarea rent closer to the CBSA-wide
rent. HUD updates subareas that have 200 or more local standard quality
survey observations with their local area update factor.
After all areas have been updated with a standard quality median
rent change, HUD further evaluates local areas with estimates that
reflect more than 200 one-year recent mover cases. If the updated rent
is outside the confidence interval of the ACS recent mover estimate,
HUD replaces the updated rent with the ACS recent mover rent estimate.
In areas without 200 or more one-year ACS recent mover observations,
but with 200 or more three-year ACS recent mover observations, HUD uses
the three year estimate \3\ if it is statistically different from the
updated rent based on the standard quality median rent change. This
process provides a June rent estimate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The recent mover estimate from the three year data includes
all those who moved in the most recent 24 month period. The 3-year
data used for FY 2011 FMRs is 2006-2008. That means that no 2006
survey data are included in this ``three-year'' recent mover
classification and the likelihood of having a valid (with 200 or
more sample cases) three-year recent mover rent is lower for these
estimates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Application of CPI
As described above, HUD uses ACS data to update the rents from June
of the previous year to June of the year of the ACS data. In the FY
2011 FMRs, 2008 ACS data bring the FMRs forward 12 months from June
2007 to June 2008. HUD uses half of the 2008 (the 2007 to 2008) and all
of the 2009 (the 2008 to 2009) change in CPI rent and utilities price
index data to update the June 2008 rents to the end of 2009. HUD uses
Local CPI data for FMR areas with at least 75 percent of their
population within Class A metropolitan areas covered by local CPI data.
HUD uses CPI data by Census regions to calculate update factors for FMR
areas in Class B and C size metropolitan areas and nonmetropolitan
areas without local CPI information.
D. Application of Trend Factor
The national 1990 to 2000 average annual rent increase trend of 3
percent is applied to end-of-2009 rents for 15 months, to the midpoint
of the FY 2011 FMRs, or April 2011.
The documentation system that provides area-specific data and
computations used to calculate proposed FY 2011 FMRs and FMR area
definitions can be found at http://www.huduser.org/portal/datasets/fmr.html.
[[Page 12987]]
III. FMR Trend Factor Issues
In an effort to balance programmatic needs with the desire to have
FMRs be an accurate estimate of current market conditions, the
following section discusses potential issues with the calculation of
the trend factor used in the estimation process. The section poses
questions that readers may choose to address in their comments.
Constant Trend Factor. HUD has historically used a trend factor
based on the average annual growth in gross rents between the decennial
censuses. This trend factor is a constant derived from the measured
growth in gross rents over a ten-year period. The growth rate of gross
rents measured in this way was little changed at about 3 percent over
the two decades of the 1980s and 1990s. While early indications from
the ACS suggest that a 10-year average growth rate for gross rents
between the 2000 Census and the 2010 one-year ACS is likely again to be
close to 3 percent, the comparison between these two surveys is not
valid; the surveys have a significant difference in area coverage and
error. HUD cannot update the current trend factor using the growth rate
between the 2000 and 2010 censuses; the 2010 census does not provide a
gross rent value. The ACS was not fully implemented until 2005, so the
2000 ACS test data is not fully comparable to survey results from 2005
and later. Is this a valid concern, or is the gross rent data at the
national level good enough to allow such comparisons from 2000 test
data or 2000 Census data? Should a growth rate be calculated over a
fixed ten-year period, or with the ACS data available annually should
the timeframe be allowed to ``roll'' over the most recent years of
available data? Should the period be reduced to five fixed or rolling
years, or an even shorter period? Both the shortening of the re-
estimation period and the use of rolling years add variation to the
trend factor.
A more basic issue is whether HUD should continue to use a constant
factor, based on a standard historical time period (e.g., five or ten
years). Is a constant factor, that does not contribute additional
variation to the FMR estimates from year to year, desirable or should
the trend factor be adjusted annually as market conditions change?
Which is of more importance for a trend factor, to not affect the FMR
estimation, or to move the FMR closer to current market conditions?
Contemporaneous Trend Factor. A different approach to trending FMRs
would use the most current data available as a projection. Based on
HUD's experience and analysis of factors affecting affordable housing
gross rents, a contemporaneous trend factor would be CPI (for rent and
utilities) based. The CPI-based trend would make use of more current
data that is available on a national, rather than local level. For
example, monthly CPI data for all urban consumers is available
nationally (as the U.S. City Average) or for the four Census regions
(Northeast, Midwest, South and West), with a 6-week lag. The same trend
factor based on the CPI for U.S. City Average could be applied to all
areas, or the four regional factors CPI factors could be applied. The
same rent and utility CPI data that is used on an area basis could be
extended on a national basis, to provide more current data, or the CPI
covering all products and services could be used (to prevent double
counting of the rent and utility data and/or to provide the leading
impact of other price changes).
HUD envisions several ways recent CPI data could be used to develop
a trend factor. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) advocates
calculating annual changes by showing the change from April of one year
to April of the following year to eliminate seasonality issues. HUD
would then apply this newly created index to the end of the FMR
estimate, which is the previous year, to the midpoint of the next
fiscal year, or 15 months. Under this approach, the FMR estimation
process would include a double counting of CPI data. CPI data on an
area basis (for most metropolitan areas) is used to bring the ACS-
updated FMR to the end of the previous year, or 2009 in the case of the
FY 2011 FMRs. The trend factor would be developed using April 2010 CPI
data (nationally) over April 2009, but all of 2009 CPI data is already
included in the FMR. Is this a concern? Should HUD calculate an index
showing the change from December of the previous year to April of the
current year (to use the most current data available without double
counting any data already used), and apply it to the CPI-updated FMR?.
Even though this second construct would not cover an entire 12 months,
HUD would likely use the change as an annual change carrying the FMR
forward to April of the next year.
Timeframe Considerations. As noted earlier, current practices and
legislative constraints drive the publication and application of FMRs.
HUD is required to publish FMRs in the Federal Register, both for
comment, and in final form to be effective October 1st, the start of
the fiscal year. FMRs shall be based on the most recent available data
trended for the year to which they apply, which HUD interprets as the
midpoint of the fiscal year or April. Given these constraints, April
CPI data, available by mid-May, is the most recent that could possibly
be used for FMR estimation. This data is not available by CPI area,
except for the three largest metropolitan areas, New York City, Los
Angeles, and Chicago. The remaining 24 large metropolitan areas have
data collected bimonthly or semiannually. April CPI data could be
incorporated into the FMR estimation process with the publication of a
Federal Register notice of proposed FMRs likely in early July,
providing six weeks to prepare the FMR and review them for publication;
however, this is a shorter time period than normal and assumes no
delays. Recently, HUD has published proposed FMRs as late as late as
August, but many commenters have rightly complained that the limited
time was not sufficient for them to provide analysis of the new FMRs,
so a July publication date, becomes the earliest possible for
incorporation of contemporaneous CPI data while also providing the most
time possible for comments.
Historically, HUD published proposed FMRs for comment in April or
May; however, HUD could only incorporate CPI data through February
(only two additional months of data) to publish by early May, assuming
the availability of other data sources such as the ACS. HUD could
update the final FMR calculations to include more recent CPI data
relative to what was available for the proposed FMRs. Following such a
procedure could potentially render the proposed FMR publication and
public comment meaningless however, as virtually all FMRs could be
expected to change between the proposed and final FMRs when new CPI
data are introduced.
Reduce Constraints Through Legislative Changes. As an alternative
to making changes to the way a trend factor is calculated and applied,
or in addition to, HUD could seek legislative changes that reduce the
time period over which a trend factor is applied, or eliminate the need
for a trend factor altogether. One possible avenue is to eliminate the
requirement that HUD publish proposed FMRs for public comment. If HUD
did not have to publish proposed FMRs in the Federal Register for
comment, then more current data could be used in the final FMR
estimation process. As currently proposed for HUD's FY 2012 budget,
FMRs shall no longer be published in proposed form for comment. The
proposed legislation establishes a separate procedure that allows
interested parties to comment on FMRs and request reevaluation of FMRs
in
[[Page 12988]]
their jurisdiction. FMRs would only be required to be published
annually with an effective date no earlier than 30 days after
publication. The FMRs would be published on the internet with notice of
the publication in the Federal Register. These proposed changes
eliminate the October 1 deadline for making FMRs effective. Interested
parties would be provided an opportunity to comment on FMRs, and all
comments will be addressed by subsequent Federal Register notices,
including any proposed material changes in methodology.
The annual CPI data currently used in the FMR estimation process
could allow publication of FMRs in April, effective in May or June.
Similarly, half-yearly CPI data that is available for all the areas in
the annual CPI data is released in mid-August. This data could be used
to calculate local and regional factors which would update FMRs to June
of the current year, providing an additional six months of update than
the current process. The FMRs would then be trended to the midpoint of
the fiscal year; the trend factor would be applied for a nine-month
period instead of the current 15-month period for the trend factor. If
HUD set FMRs at a level equal to the beginning of the fiscal year
(October) instead of the mid-point of the fiscal year (April), only a
three-month trend factor would be applied. Lastly, HUD could set the
FMR equal to the date of the latest available data, thereby eliminating
the required use of a trend factor; this would also require a Federal
Register notice seeking comments on this change.
IV. Possible Effects on FMRs of Alternative Trend Factors
Currently HUD uses a constant trend factor that will be too low in
markets where rents are increasing and too high for sluggish markets.
This trend factor is based on historical data at the national level and
does not attempt to reflect current market conditions. HUD developed
the current trend factor methodology to minimize the impact on annual
changes in FMRs. This notice outlines the consideration of using the
trend factor to continue the annual adjustment of the FMR in markets
with different movements in rents. Formerly, HUD conducted about 50
area-wide surveys to provide the most current data and improve the
estimation of FMRs annually. Due to several factors, the expense of
these surveys has limited this number conducted to at most 5 per year.
Other data must be evaluated to improve the estimation of FMRs on an
annual basis. Therefore, HUD is evaluating the calculation and timing
of the application of the trend factor. Comments concerning the
departure to a trend factor that is adjusted annually, based on the
most current market data available and how to do so is what is being
addressed in this notice.
Below are some alternatives to the current national trend factor
that have been reviewed by HUD:
1. Use the most recent year's data from the overall CPI to
calculate a trend factor;
2. Use the most recent year's data from CPI-rent and utilities to
calculate a trend factor;
3. Use proprietary data covering rental markets (like REIS Reports,
Inc.) to calculate a trend factor;
4. Assuming the legislative changes as proposed in the FY 2012 HUD
budget, (and assuming that HUD trends to the midpoint of the fiscal
year), and using CPI rent and utility data through the first half of
the year to calculate the trend factor (by region and local area),
apply the trend factor for nine months to April. These FMRs could be
effective between October and December;
5. Assuming the legislative changes as proposed in the FY 2012 HUD
budget (and assuming that HUD trends only to the beginning of the
fiscal year), and using CPI rent and utility data through the first
half of the year to calculate the trend factor (by region and local
area), apply the trend factor for three months to the start of the
fiscal year. These FMRs could be effective between October and
December; and
6. Assuming the legislative changes as proposed in the FY 2012 HUD
budget and HUD eliminates trending for the FMRS, the half-yearly CPI
rent and utility data would provide the most recent update to the FMRs.
There would be no trending and FMRs would effectively represent mid-
year rent for the year they are published. But they would be published
(effective) at the end of the year, between October and December.
Except for the third alternative (use of proprietary data), all of
the alternatives HUD has examined rely on some use of CPI data to
develop a new trend factor. The third alternative would rely on the use
of private sector rent surveys that generally focus on rents in large
apartment complexes; in turn, these large apartment complexes typically
comprise 20 percent or less of most rental markets. HUD investigated
data provided by REIS and similar sources as a means of updating FMRs,
but have found these sources to be surprisingly uncorrelated with
broader measures of rent over time such as the decennial census, and
the American Housing Survey; therefore, HUD does not want to
incorporate this type of information because it will not improve the
FMR estimation process. In addition, the geographic limitations of
these data sources further limit its use in the FMR estimation process.
Nonmetropolitan areas and smaller metropolitan areas typically have no
coverage in these data sources. Finally, these proprietary data have
disclosure restrictions that may prevent HUD from fully documenting
individual FMR calculations. HUD is required to provide as much
transparency as possible in the FMR estimation process, especially
after a 2004 study by the Government Accountability Office, and HUD
does not want to reduce its efforts by using a data source that cannot
be divulged.
The remaining suggestions focus on using the CPI, because the CPI
measures rent and utility changes, and provides current data, at least
on a national and regional basis. Local data, published for 27
consolidated metropolitan areas (and used for almost 100 FMR areas), is
only available on a monthly basis for the three largest metropolitan
areas (New York, NY, Los Angeles, CA, and Chicago, IL). Half-yearly CPI
data for rent and utilities is all that is available for 13 of the
remaining 24 local areas, but this information is not published until
mid-August, too late to start the proposed/final publication of FMRs in
the Federal Register under current regulations. The remaining 11 areas
have CPI data on rent and utilities available every odd (four areas) or
every even month (7 areas). This would provide inconsistent time
periods for incorporating additional CPI data into the trend
calculation. Aside from the three large metropolitan areas (New York,
NY; Los Angeles, CA; and Chicago, IL), the lowest level of geographic
area aggregation for monthly data, are the four census regions
(Northeast, Midwest, South and West).
Monthly CPI data would have to be used to capture the recent trend
in rent and utilities not already captured in the FMR estimation
process (which uses CPI data as of the previous year-end). Capturing
current CPI data, however, is limited by the time required to process,
review and publish proposed FMRs for comment and to publish final FMRs
by October 1. The review and publication process for both the proposed
and final FMRs averages six weeks, though it has taken as little as
four weeks. The minimum comment period is 30 days, though on an ongoing
basis, 60 days provides more time for interested parties to analyze the
proposed FMRs. The latest CPI month that could be used for a trend
factor, would be April, which would be available in mid-May. Under
[[Page 12989]]
current statute and regulations, the proposed FMRs would be produced (2
weeks) and reviewed and published (4 weeks) in early July. A 30-day
comment period (with an additional 1 week to be added to the end of the
comment period to cover all filings that are not posted by the due
date) would provide for analysis of comments (1 week), and 1 week to
spare for publishing October 1. This timeline should not represent the
normal process, because it does not provide HUD or commenters the time
necessary to review comments and FMRs. With a trend factor that changes
every year, it is important to provide additional time for all to have
a chance to review proposed FMRs. Using the March CPI instead would
increase the time for commenters to review their FMRs, though HUD's
review of comments will be the same. HUD specifically requests comments
as to whether or not an additional 3 or 4 months of CPI is believed to
significantly improve the quality of the FMRs, or if, without
legislative relief from publishing proposed FMRs, HUD should use a
trend factor that mimics the average annual CPI data already used. This
would eliminate a constant trend factor, and would extend the rent and
utility changes from the most recent year an additional 15 months.
An additional concern regarding the monthly data is that, except at
a national level, the monthly data are not seasonally adjusted. This
means that basing trend factors on monthly CPI statistics would depend
critically on which months are chosen as the base and final months. HUD
analyzed applying a new trend factor using the six months of regional
CPI data available in the summer 2009 (through June 2009) and the
national average FMR was 1.6 percent higher than the national average
FMR for the previous year. However, using only the first five months of
CPI data (through May 2009), the national average FMR was 2.2 percent
higher. There can be considerable monthly fluctuations in the rent and
utility data of the CPI, even on a regional basis. This leads to
another question: Should a national factor be used instead of a
regional trend factor so that seasonally adjusted data can be used?
Under the current regulations and legislative constraints, CPI data
are released in the interim period between publication of proposed and
final FMRs; should these be incorporated? How would this best be
achieved? Would this render the public comment process meaningless, as
nearly all rents would change between proposed and final, and locations
that would benefit from the new data would lobby for the update while
those made worse off would push for the status quo?
The last three suggested alternatives assume the legislative
changes that eliminate the requirement that FMRs be published for
effect on October 1st, but there are three different assumptions about
the date of the FMR, October, (3 months trending), April (9 months
trending) and June (of that year and no trending). Is the accuracy of
the FMRs best served by using the most current data and reducing or
eliminating the trend factor?
V. Request for Public Comments
HUD seeks public comments on the trend factor that is used in the
FMR estimation process. Comments on the trend factor must include
sufficient information in support of one of the alternatives listed by
HUD, or a new proposal. The following issues should be addressed:
1. Should HUD continue to use a constant trend factor or should the
trend factor be updated annually to attempt to capture market changes?
2. The constant trend factor that HUD has used in the past cannot
be replicated for 2000 to 2010 based on available 2010 Census data. If
a constant trend factor is appropriate, what data and time period
should be used for a constant trend factor?
3. Is a national trend factor appropriate, or should HUD limit
itself to use of more local options such as regional factors?
4. Should HUD allow changes between the proposed and final FMRs
resulting from updated trend factors?
5. Is using the more current data for estimating the FMRs more
important than providing for public comment before establishing final
FMRs for effect?
6. Is the seasonality of rent and utility prices important in
considering what month to collect data for trending? If so, how should
HUD select the month to use or to compare it with?
7. Is double counting of CPI data a concern?
8. Is it more important to base a trend on the most recent data
possible, or on the most specific geography?
9. Is it better to use rent and utility CPI data in developing a
trend factor or should other prices be included?
10. Should HUD pursue legislative and regulatory changes to reduce
or eliminate the need for trending?
11. Is there a data source or aggregation of sources of data
provided on a more current basis than the CPI that could be used in the
FMR estimation process?
Dated: March 2, 2011.
Raphael W. Bostic,
Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research.
[FR Doc. 2011-5263 Filed 3-8-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P