[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: 24CFR850.151]

[Page 44-46]
 
                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
  CHAPTER VIII--OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR HOUSING-FEDERAL
 
PART 850_HOUSING DEVELOPMENT GRANTS--Table of Contents
 
                      Subpart F_Project Management
 
Sec. 850.151  Project restrictions.


    (a) Owner-grantee agreement. The grantee and the owner must enter 
into an agreement that requires the owner (including its successors in 
interest) to carry out the requirements of this section and of the grant 
agreement, as appropriate. The grantee-owner agreement must require the 
grantee to monitor (where required) and to take appropriate legal action 
to enforce compliance with the owner's responsibilities thereunder. The 
owner's compliance with its obligations under this section must be 
secured by a mortgage or other security instrument meeting the 
requirements of Sec. 850.155. Nothing in this section shall preclude 
enforcement by the Federal government of grant agreement provisions, 
civil rights statutes, or other provisions of law that apply to the 
Housing Development Grant Program.
    (b) Restriction on conversion. The owner shall not convert the units 
in the project to condominium ownership or to a form of cooperative 
ownership that is not eligible to receive a housing development grant, 
during the 20-year period from the date on which the units in the 
project are available for occupancy.
    (c) Tenant selection. The owner shall determine the eligibility of 
applicants for lower income units in accordance with the requirements of 
24 CFR parts 812 and 813, including the provisions of these parts 
concerning citizenship or eligible immigration status and income limits, 
and certain assistance to mixed families (families whose members include 
those with eligible immigration status, and those without eligible 
immigration status.). The owner shall not, during the 20-year period 
from the date on which the units in the project are available for 
occupancy, discriminate against prospective tenants on the basis of 
their receipt of, or eligibility for, housing assistance under any 
Federal, State, or local housing assistance program or, except for an 
elderly housing project, on the basis that they have a minor child or 
children who will be living with them.
    (d) Restriction on leasing assisted units. The owner shall assure 
that the percentage of low-income units specified in the grant agreement 
is occupied, or is available for occupancy, by low-income households 
during the period beginning on the date on which the units in the 
project are available for occupancy through 20 years from the date on 
which 50 percent of the units are occupied. The owner may lease a low-
income unit only to a tenant that is a low-income household at the time 
of its initial occupancy. An owner may continue to lease a low-income 
unit to a tenant that ceases to qualify as a low-income household only 
as provided in paragraph (f) of this section.
    (e) Low-income unit rent. (1) Section 17(d)(8)(A) of the U.S. 
Housing Act of 1937 prohibits the rents for low-income units from 
exceeding ``30 per centum of the adjusted income of a family whose 
income equals 50 per centum of the median income for the area, as 
determined by the Secretary with adjustments for smaller and larger 
families.'' This paragraph describes how these maximum rent 
determinations are made.
    (2) The maximum rents that may be charged for low-income units are 
based on the size of the unit by number of bedrooms, and are calculated 
in accordance with the following procedure. For each unit size, HUD will 
provide the Section 8 very low-income limits. HUD will also provide 
income adjustments for each unit size, consistent with 24 CFR part 813. 
An adjusted income amount for each unit size is calculated by the owner 
or grantee by subtracting the income adjustment from the Section 8 
limit. The adjusted income amount is multiplied by 30 percent and 
divided by 12 to obtain the maximum monthly gross rent for each low-
income unit. A monthly allowance for the utilities and services 
(excluding telephone) to be paid by the tenant is subtracted from the 
maximum monthly gross rent to obtain the maximum

[[Page 45]]

monthly rent that may be charged for low-income units. Information to be 
provided by HUD will be available from the responsible HUD Field Office.
    (3) The initial monthly allowance for utilities and services to be 
paid by the tenant must be approved by HUD. Subsequent calculations of 
this allowance must be approved by the grantee in connection with its 
review and approval of rent schedules under paragraph (e)(4) of this 
section. The maximum monthly rent must be recalculated annually, and may 
change as changes in the Section 8 very low-income limit, the income 
adjustments, or the monthly allowance for utilities and services 
warrant.
    (4) The grantee must review and approve any schedule of rents 
proposed by the owner for low-income units. Any schedule submitted by an 
owner within the permissible maximum will be deemed approved, unless the 
grantee informs the owner, within 60 days after receiving the schedule, 
that it is disapproved.
    (5) Any increase in rents for low-income units is subject to the 
provisions of outstanding leases, in any event, the owner must provide 
tenants of those units not less than 30 days prior written notice before 
implementing any increase in rents.
    (f) Reexamination of tenant income and composition. (1) The owner 
shall reexamine the income of each tenant household living in low-income 
units at least once a year. At the first regular reexamination after 
June 19, 1995 the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 812 
concerning obtaining and processing evidence of citizenship or eligible 
immigration status of all family members. Thereafter, at each regular 
reexamination, the owner shall follow the requirements of 24 CFR part 
812 concerning verification of the immigration status of any new family 
member.
    (2) If this reexamination indicates that the tenant no longer 
qualifies as a low-income household, the owner must take one of the 
following actions, as appropriate: (i) If the unit occupied by the 
tenant must be leased to a low- income household to maintain the 
percentage of low-income units specified in the grant agreement, the 
owner must notify the tenant that it must move when the current lease 
expires or six months after the date of the notification, whichever is 
later; (ii) If the owner can meet this percentage without the unit 
occupied by the tenant (for example, by designating another comparable 
unit as a low-income unit), the owner may continue to lease to that 
tenant, but is free to renegotiate the rent at the expiration of the 
current lease.
    (3) For provisions related to termination of assistance for failure 
to establish citizenship or eligible immigration status, see 24 CFR 
812.9, and also 24 CFR 812.10 for provisions related to certain 
assistance to mixed families (families whose members include those with 
eligible immigration status, and those without eligible immigration 
status) in lieu of termination of assistance, and for provisions related 
to deferral of termination of assistance.
    (g) Affirmative fair housing marketing. Marketing must be done in 
accordance with the HUD-approved Affirmative Fair Housing Marketing 
Plan, Form HUD-935.2, and all fair housing and equal opportunity 
requirements. The purpose of the Plan and the requirements is to provide 
for affirmative marketing through the provision of information regarding 
the availability of units in projects assisted. Affirmative marketing 
steps consist of good faith efforts to provide information and otherwise 
attract eligible persons from all racial, ethnic and gender groups in 
the housing market area to the available housing.
    (h) Management and maintenance functions. The owner must perform all 
management and maintenance functions in compliance with equal 
opportunity requirements. These functions include selection of tenants, 
reexamination of family income, evictions and other terminations of 
tenancy, and all ordinary and extraordinary maintenance and repairs, 
including replacement of capital items.
    (i) Residency preferences. Local residency requirements are 
prohibited. Local residency preferences may be applied in selecting 
tenants only to the extent that they are not inconsistent with 
affirmative fair housing marketing objectives and the owner's HUD-

[[Page 46]]

approved AFHM Plan. With respect to any residency preference, persons 
expected to reside in the community as a result of current or planned 
employment will be treated as residents.

[49 FR 24641, June 14, 1984, as amended at 60 FR 14841, Mar. 20, 1995]