[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 24, Volume 4]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 24CFR811.110]

[Page 41-43]
 
                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
  CHAPTER VIII--OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR HOUSING-FEDERAL
 
PART 811_TAX EXEMPTION OF OBLIGATIONS OF PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCIES AND 
RELATED AMENDMENTS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 811.110  Refunding of obligations issued to finance Section 8 
projects.

    (a) This section states the terms and conditions under which HUD 
will approve refunding or defeasance of certain outstanding debt 
obligations which financed new construction or substantial 
rehabilitation of Section 8 projects, including fully and partially 
assisted projects.
    (b) In the case of bonds issued by State Agencies qualified under 24 
CFR part 883 to refund bonds which financed projects assisted pursuant 
to 24 CFR part 883, HUD requires compliance with the prohibition on 
duplicative fees contained in 24 CFR part 883 and with paragraphs (f) 
and (h) of this section, as applicable to the projects to be refunded.
    (c) No agency shall issue obligations to refund outstanding 11(b) 
obligations until the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Housing 
sends the financing agency a Notification of Tax Exemption based on 
approval of the proposed refunding's terms and conditions as conforming 
to this part's requirements, including continued operation of the 
project as housing for low-income families, and where possible, 
reduction of Section 8 assistance payments through lower contract rents 
or an equivalent cash rebate to the U.S. Treasury (i.e. Trustee Sweep). 
The agency shall submit such documentation as HUD determines is 
necessary for review and approval of the refunding transaction. Upon 
conclusion of the closing of refunding bonds, written confirmation must 
be sent to the Office of Multifamily Housing by bond counsel, or other 
acceptable closing participant, including a schedule of the specific 
amount of savings in Section 8 assistance where applicable, CUSIP number 
information, and a final statement of Sources and Uses.
    (d)(1) HUD approval of the terms and conditions of a Section 8 
refunding proposal requires evaluation by HUD's Office of Multifamily 
Housing of the reasonableness of the terms of the Agency's proposed 
financing plan, including projected reductions in project debt service 
where warranted by market conditions and bond yields. This evaluation 
shall determine that the proposed amount of refunding obligations is the 
amount needed to: pay off outstanding bonds; fund a debt service reserve 
to the extent required by credit enhancers or bond rating agencies, or 
bond underwriters in the case of unrated refunding bonds; pay credit 
enhancement fees acceptable to HUD; and

[[Page 42]]

pay transaction costs as approved by HUD according to a sliding scale 
ceiling based on par amount of refunding bond principal. Exceptions may 
be approved by HUD, if consistent with applicable statutes, in the event 
that an additional issue amount is required for project purposes.
    (2) The stated maturity of the refunding bonds may not exceed by 
more than one year the remaining term of the project mortgage, or in the 
case of an uninsured loan, the later of expiration date of the Housing 
Assistance Payments Contract (the ``HAPC'') or final maturity of the 
refunded bonds.
    (3) The bond yield may not exceed by more than 75 basis points the 
20 Bond General Obligation Index published by the Daily Bond Buyer for 
the week immediately preceding the sale of the bonds, except as 
otherwise approved by HUD. An amount not to exceed one-fourth of one 
percent annually of the bonds' outstanding principal balance may be 
allowed for servicing and trustee fees.
    (e) For projects for which the Agreement to enter into the HAPC was 
executed between January 1, 1979, and December 31, 1984 (otherwise known 
as ``McKinney Act Projects''), for which a State or local agency 
initiates a refunding, the Secretary shall make available to an eligible 
issuing agency 50 percent of the Section 8 savings of a refunding, as 
determined by HUD on a project-by-project basis, to be used by the 
agency in accordance with the terms of a Refunding Agreement executed by 
the Agency and HUD which incorporates the Agency's Housing Plan for use 
of savings to provide decent, safe, and sanitary housing for very low-
income households. In determining the amount of savings recaptured on a 
project-by-project basis, as authorized by section 1012(b) of the 
McKinney Act, HUD will take into account the physical condition of the 
projects participating in the refunding which generate the McKinney Act 
savings and, if necessary, HUD will finance in refunding bond debt 
service correction of existing deficiencies which cannot be funded 
completely by existing project replacement reserves or by a portion of 
reserves released from the refunded bond's indenture. For McKinney Act 
refundings of projects which did not receive a Financing Adjustment 
Factor (``FAF''), HUD will allow up to 50 percent of debt service 
savings to be allocated to the project account; in which case, the 
remainder will be shared equally by the Agency and the U.S. Treasury.
    (f) For refundings of Section 8 projects other than McKinney Act 
Projects, and for all transactions which substitute collateral for, but 
do not redeem, outstanding obligations, and for which a HUD approval is 
needed (such as assignment of a HAPC or insured mortgage note), the 
Office of Multifamily Housing in consultation with HUD Field Office 
Counsel will review the HAPC, the Trust Indenture for the outstanding 
obligations, applicable HUD regulations, and reasonableness of proposed 
financing terms. In particular, HUD review should be obtained for the 
release of reserves from the trust indenture of the outstanding 11(b) 
bonds that are being refunded, defeased, or pre-paid. A proposal to 
distribute to a non-Federal entity the benefits of a refinancing, such 
as debt service savings and/or balances in reserves held under the 
original Trust Indenture, should be referred to the Office of 
Multifamily Housing for further review. In proposals submitted for HUD 
approval, HUD will consent to release reserves, as provided by the Trust 
Indenture, in an amount remaining after correction of project physical 
deficiencies and/or replenishment of replacement reserves, where needed. 
In the case of a refunding of 11(b) bonds by a public agency issuer 
which is the owner of the project and is entitled to reserves held under 
the Trust Indenture, HUD requires execution by the project owner of a 
use agreement, and amendment of a regulatory agreement, if applicable, 
to extend low-income tenant occupancy for ten years after expiration of 
the original HAPC term. In the case of HAP contracts with renewable 5-
year terms, the Use Agreement shall extend for 10 years after the 
project owners first opt-out date. The Use Agreement may also be 
required of private entity owners, unless the refunding is incidental to 
a transfer of project ownership or a transaction which provides a 
substantial public

[[Page 43]]

benefit, as determined by the Office of Multifamily Housing. Proposed 
use of benefits shall be consistent with applicable appropriations law, 
the HAPC, and other requirements applicable to the original project 
financing, and the proposed financing terms must be reasonable in 
relation to bond market yields and transaction fees, as approved by the 
HUD Office of Multifamily Housing.
    (g) Agencies shall have wide latitude in the design of specific 
delivery vehicles for use of McKinney Act savings, subject to HUD audit 
of each Agency's performance in serving the targeted income eligible 
population. Savings may be used for shelter costs of providing housing, 
rental, or owner-occupied, to very low-income households through new 
construction, rehabilitation, repairs, and acquisition with or without 
rehab, including assistance to very low-income units in mixed-income 
developments. These include programs designed to assist in obtaining 
shelter, such as rent or homeownership subsidies. Self-sufficiency 
services in support of very low-income housing are also eligible, and 
may include, but are not limited to, homeownership counseling, 
additional security measures in high-crime areas, construction job 
training for residents' repair of housing units occupied by very low-
income families, and empowerment activities designed to support 
formation and growth of resident entities. Except for the cost of 
providing third-party program audit reports to HUD, eligible costs 
exclude consultant fees or reimbursement of Agency staff expenses, but 
may include fees for professional services required in the Agency's 
McKinney Act programs of assistance to very low-income families. Unless 
otherwise specified by HUD in a McKinney Agreement, savings shall be 
subject to the above use requirements for 10 years from the date of 
receipt of the savings.
    (h) Refunding bonds, including interest thereon, approved under this 
Section shall be exempt from all taxation now or hereafter imposed by 
the United States, and the notification of approval of tax exemption 
shall not be subject to revocation by HUD. Whether refunding bonds 
approved under this section meet the requirements of Section 103 or any 
other provisions of the Internal Revenue Code is not within the 
responsibilities of HUD to determine. Such bonds shall be prepaid during 
the HAPC term only under such conditions as HUD shall require.

[61 FR 14461, Apr. 1, 1996]