[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 24, Volume 4]
[Revised as of April 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 24CFR901.1]

[Page 235-238]
 
                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
CHAPTER IX--OFFICE OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR PUBLIC AND INDIAN HOUSING, 
               DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
 
PART 901_PUBLIC HOUSING MANAGEMENT ASSESSMENT PROGRAM--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 901.1  Purpose, program scope and applicability.




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  Editorial Note: Nomenclature changes to chapter IX appear at 59 FR 
14090, Mar. 25, 1994.
Part                                                                Page
901             Public Housing Management Assessment Program         237
902             Public Housing Assessment System............         266
903             Public housing agency plans.................         295
904             Low rent housing homeownership opportunities         308
905             The Public Housing Capital Fund Program.....         354
906             Public housing homeownership programs.......         360
908             Electronic transmission of required family 
                    data for public housing, indian housing, 
                    and the section 8 rental certificate, 
                    rental voucher, and moderate 
                    rehabilitation programs.................         372
941             Public housing development..................         373
943             Public housing agency consortia and joint 
                    ventures................................         398
945             Designated housing--public housing 
                    designated for occupancy by disabled, 
                    elderly, or disabled and elderly 
                    families................................         402
954             Indian home program.........................         411
960             Admission to, and occupancy of, public 
                    housing.................................         438
963             Public Housing--Contracting with resident-
                    owned businesses........................         453
964             Tenant participation and tenant 
                    opportunities in public housing.........         456
965             PHA-owned or leased projects--general 
                    provisions..............................         473
966             Public housing lease and grievance procedure         485
968             Public housing modernization................         498
969             PHA-owned projects--continued operation as 
                    low-income housing after completion of 
                    debt service............................         536
970             Public housing program--demolition or 
                    disposition of public housing projects..         538

[[Page 236]]

971             Assessment of the reasonable revitalization 
                    potential of certain public housing 
                    required by law.........................         553
972             Conversion of public housing to tenant-based 
                    assistance..............................         560
982             Section 8 tenant based assistance: housing 
                    choice voucher program..................         572
983             Section 8 project-based certificate program.         654
984             Section 8 and public housing family self-
                    sufficiency program.....................         677
985             Section 8 management assessment program 
                    (SEMAP).................................         692
990             Annual contributions for operating subsidy..         703
1000            Native American housing activities..........         728
1001-1002       [Reserved]
1003            Community development block grants for 
                    Indian tribes and Alaska native villages         770
1004            [Reserved]
1005            Loan guarantees for Indian housing..........         806
1006            Native Hawaiian Housing Block Grant Program.         810
1007            Section 184A loan guarantees for Native 
                    Hawaiian housing........................         826
1008-1699       [Reserved]

[[Page 237]]





Sec.
901.1 Purpose, program scope and applicability.
901.5 Definitions.
901.10 Indicator 1, vacancy rate and unit turnaround time.
901.15 Indicator 2, modernization.
901.20 Indicator 3, rents uncollected.
901.25 Indicator 4, work orders.
901.30 Indicator 5, annual inspection of units and systems.
901.35 Indicator 6, financial management.
901.40 Indicator 7, resident services and community building.
901.45 Indicator 8, security.
901.100 Data collection.
901.105 Computing assessment score.
901.110 PHA request for exclusion or modification of an indicator or 
          component.
901.115 PHA score and status.
901.120 State/Area Office functions.
901.125 PHA right of appeal.
901.130 Incentives.
901.135 Memorandum of Agreement.
901.140 Removal from troubled status and mod-troubled status.
901.145 Improvement Plan.
901.150 PHAs troubled with respect to the program under section 14 (mod-
          troubled PHAs).
901.155 PHMAP public record.
901.200 Events or conditions that constitute substantial default.
901.205 Notice and response.
901.210 Interventions.
901.215 Contracting and funding.
901.220 Resident participation in competitive proposals to manage the 
          housing of a PHA.
901.225 Resident petitions for remedial action.
901.230 Receivership.
901.235 Technical assistance.

    Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1437d(j); 42 U.S.C. 3535(d).

    Source: 61 FR 68933, Dec. 30, 1996, unless otherwise noted.


    (a) Purpose. This part establishes the Public Housing Management 
Assessment Program (PHMAP) to implement and augment section 6(j) of the 
1937 Act. PHMAP provides policies and procedures to identify public 
housing agency (PHA), resident management corporation (RMC), and 
alternative management entity (AME) management capabilities and 
deficiencies, recognize high-performing PHAs, designate criteria for 
defining troubled PHAs and PHAs that are troubled with respect to the 
program under section 14 (Public Housing Modernization Program), and 
improve the management practices of troubled PHAs and mod-troubled PHAs.
    (b) Program scope. The PHMAP reflects only one aspect of PHA 
operations, i.e., the results of its management performance in specific 
program areas. The PHMAP should not be viewed by PHAs, the Department or 
other interested parties as an all-inclusive and encompassing view of 
overall PHA operations. When viewing overall PHA operations, other 
criteria, including but not limited to, the quality of a PHA's housing 
stock, compliance issues, Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity issues, 
Board knowledge and oversight of PHA operation, etc., even though not 
covered under the PHMAP, are necessary in order to determine the 
adequacy of overall PHA operations. The PHMAP can never be designed to 
be the sole method of viewing a PHA's overall operations. A PHA should 
not manipulate the PHMAP system in the short-term in order to achieve a 
higher PHMAP score, thereby delaying or negating long-term improvement. 
Making a correct and viable long-term decision (doing the right thing) 
may hurt a PHA in the short-term (i.e., lower PHMAP score), but will 
result in improved housing stock and better overall management of a PHA 
over the long-term and a higher sustainable PHMAP score.
    (c) Applicability. (1)(i) The provisions of this part remain 
applicable to PHAs and RMC/AMEs as described in paragraph (c)(1)(ii) 
until September 30, 1999.
    (ii) The provisions of this part apply to PHAs and RMC/AMEs as noted 
in the sections of this part. The management assessment of an RMC/AME 
differs from that of a PHA. Because an RMC/AME enters into a contract 
with a PHA to perform specific management functions on a development-by-
development or program basis, and because the scope of the management 
that is undertaken varies, not every indicator that applies to a PHA 
would be applicable to each RMC/AME.

[[Page 238]]

    (2) Due to the fact that the PHA and not the RMC/AME is ultimately 
responsible to the Department under the ACC, a PHA's score will be based 
on all of the developments covered by the ACC, including those with 
management functions assumed by an RMC or AME (pursuant to a court 
ordered receivership agreement, if applicable). This is necessary 
because of the limited nature of an RMC/AME's management functions and 
the regulatory and contractual relationships among the Department, PHAs 
and RMC/AMEs.
    (3) A significant feature of RMC management is that 24 CFR 
Sec. Sec. 964.225 (d) and (h) provide that a PHA may enter into a 
management contract with an RMC, but a PHA may not contract for 
assumption by the RMC of the PHA's underlying responsibilities to the 
Department under the Annual Contributions Contract (ACC).
    (4) When a PHA's management functions have been assumed by an AME:
    (i) If the AME assumes only a portion of the PHA's management 
functions, the provisions of this part that apply to RMCs apply to the 
AME (pursuant to a court ordered receivership agreement, if applicable); 
or
    (ii) If the AME assumes all, or substantially all, of the PHA's 
management functions, the provisions of this part that apply to PHAs 
apply to the AME (pursuant to a court ordered receivership agreement, if 
applicable).
    (5) To ensure quality management results from a contract between an 
AME and a PHA, or between an AME and HUD, minimum performance criteria 
that relate to the PHMAP indicators, as applicable, should be included 
in such contract. Failure to meet the performance criteria would be a 
basis for termination of the contract. However, even in the absence of 
explicit contractual provisions, this part applies to AMEs in accordance 
with paragraph (b)(4) of this section, above.

[61 FR 68933, Dec. 30, 1996, as amended at 63 FR 46617, Sept. 1, 1998]