[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 24, Volume 4]

[Revised as of April 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 24CFR891.125]



[Page 180-182]

 

                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

 

  CHAPTER VIII--OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR HOUSING-FEDERAL 

 

PART 891_SUPPORTIVE HOUSING FOR THE ELDERLY AND PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES

--Table of Contents

 

                 Subpart A_General Program Requirements

 

Sec.  891.125  Site and neighborhood standards.



    All sites must meet the following site and neighborhood 

requirements:

    (a) The site must be adequate in size, exposure, and contour to 

accommodate the number and type of units proposed, and adequate 

utilities (water, sewer, gas, and electricity) and streets must be 

available to service the site.

    (b) The site and neighborhood must be suitable from the standpoint 

of facilitating and furthering full compliance with the applicable 

provisions of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Fair Housing 

Act, Executive Order 11063 (27 FR 11527, 3 CFR, 1958-1963 Comp., p. 

652); as amended by Executive Order 12259, (46 FR 1253, 3 CFR, 1980 

Comp., p. 307)); section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and 

implementing HUD regulations.

    (c) New construction sites must meet the following site and 

neighborhood requirements:

    (1) The site must not be located in an area of minority 

concentration (or minority elderly concentration under the Section 202 

Program) except as permitted under paragraph (c)(2) of this section, and 

must not be located in a racially mixed area if the project will cause a 

significant increase in the proportion of minority to nonminority



[[Page 181]]



residents (or minority elderly to nonminority elderly residents, under 

the Section 202 Program) in the area.

    (2) A project may be located in an area of minority concentration 

(or minority elderly concentration, under the Section 202 Program) only 

if:

    (i) Sufficient, comparable opportunities exist for housing for 

minority elderly households or minority disabled households, as 

applicable (or minority families, for projects funded under Sec. Sec.  

891.655 through 891.790), in the income range to be served by the 

proposed project, outside areas of minority concentration (see paragraph 

(c)(3) of this section for further guidance on this criterion); or

    (ii) The project is necessary to meet overriding housing needs that 

cannot be met in that housing market area (see paragraph (c)(4) of this 

section for further guidance on this criterion).

    (3)(i) Sufficient does not require that in every locality there be 

an equal number of assisted units within and outside of areas of 

minority concentration. Rather, application of this standard should 

produce a reasonable distribution of assisted units each year which over 

a period of several years will approach an appropriate balance of 

housing opportunities within and outside areas of minority 

concentration. An appropriate balance in any jurisdiction must be 

determined in light of local conditions affecting the range of housing 

choices available for very low-income minority elderly or disabled 

households, as applicable (or low-income minority families, for projects 

funded under Sec. Sec.  891.655 through 891.790), and in relation to the 

racial mix of the locality's population.

    (ii) Units may be considered to be comparable opportunities if they 

have the same household type (elderly or disabled, as applicable) and 

tenure type (owner/renter); require approximately the same total tenant 

payment; serve the same income group; are located in the same housing 

market; and are in standard condition.

    (iii) Application of this sufficient, comparable opportunities 

standard involves assessing the overall impact of HUD-assisted housing 

on the availability of housing choices for very low-income minority 

elderly or disabled households, as applicable (or low-income minority 

families, for projects funded under Sec. Sec.  891.655 through 891.790), 

in and outside areas of minority concentration, and must take into 

account the extent to which the following factors are present, along 

with any other factor relevant to housing choice:

    (A) A significant number of assisted housing units are available 

outside areas of minority concentration.

    (B) There is significant integration of assisted housing projects 

constructed or rehabilitated in the past ten years, relative to the 

racial mix of the eligible population.

    (C) There are racially integrated neighborhoods in the locality.

    (D) Programs are operated by the locality to assist minority elderly 

or disabled households, as applicable (or minority families, for 

projects funded under Sec. Sec.  891.655 through 891.790), that wish to 

find housing outside areas of minority concentration.

    (E) Minority elderly or disabled households, as applicable (or 

minority families, for projects funded under Sec. Sec.  891.655 through 

891.790), have benefitted from local activities (e.g., acquisition and 

write-down of sites, tax relief programs for homeowners, acquisitions of 

units for use as assisted housing units) undertaken to expand choice for 

minority households (or families) outside of areas of minority 

concentration.

    (F) A significant proportion of minority elderly or disabled 

households, as applicable (or minority households, for projects funded 

under Sec. Sec.  891.655 through 891.790), have been successful in 

finding units in nonminority areas under the Section 8 Certificate and 

Housing Voucher programs.

    (G) Comparable housing opportunities have been made available 

outside areas of minority concentration through other programs.

    (4) Application of the overriding housing needs criterion, for 

example, permits approval of sites that are an integral part of an 

overall local strategy for the preservation or restoration of the 

immediate neighborhood and of sites in a neighborhood experiencing 

significant private investment that is demonstrably changing the 

economic character of the area (a ``revitalizing



[[Page 182]]



area''). An overriding housing need, however, may not serve as the basis 

for determining that a site is acceptable if the only reason the need 

cannot otherwise be feasibly met is that discrimination on the basis of 

race, color, creed, sex, or national origin renders sites outside areas 

of minority concentration unavailable, or if the use of this standard in 

recent years has had the effect of circumventing the obligation to 

provide housing choice.

    (d) The neighborhood must not be one that is seriously detrimental 

to family life or in which substandard dwellings or other undesirable 

conditions predominate, unless there is actively in progress a concerted 

program to remedy the undesirable conditions.

    (e) The housing must be accessible to social, recreational, 

educational, commercial, and health facilities and services, and other 

municipal facilities and services that are at least equivalent to those 

typically found in neighborhoods consisting largely of unassisted, 

standard housing of similar market rents.

    (f) For the Section 811 Program of Supportive Housing for Persons 

with Disabilities, the additional site and neighborhood requirements in 

Sec.  891.320 apply.