[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: 24CFR891.505]



[Page 196-198]

 

                 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 E_Loans for Housing for the Elderly and Persons with 

                              Disabilities

 

Sec.  891.505  Definitions.



    For the purposes of this subpart E:

    Act means section 202 of the Housing Act of 1959, as amended (12 

U.S.C. 1701q).

    Borrower means a private nonprofit corporation or a nonprofit 

consumer cooperative that may be established by the Sponsor, which will 

obtain a Section 202 loan and execute a mortgage in connection therewith 

as the legal owner of the project. ``Borrower'' does not mean a public 

body or the instrumentality of any public body. The purposes of the 

Borrower must include the promotion of the welfare of elderly and/or 

handicapped families. No part of the net earnings of the Borrower may 

inure to the benefit of any private shareholder, contributor, or 

individual, and the Borrower may not be controlled by or under the 

direction of persons or firms seeking to derive profit or gain 

therefrom. Because of the nonprofit nature of the Section 202 program, 

no officer or director, or trustee, member, stockholder or authorized 

representative of the Borrower is permitted to have any financial 

interest in any contract in connection with the rendition of services, 

the provision of goods or supplies, project management, procurement of 

furnishings and equipment, construction of the project, procurement of 

the site or other matters whatsoever.

    Elderly family means:

    (1) Families of two or more persons the head of which (or his or her 

spouse) is 62 years of age or older;

    (2) The surviving member or members of any family described in 

paragraph (1) of this definition living in a unit assisted under subpart 

E of this part with the deceased member of the family at the time of his 

or her death;

    (3) A single person who is 62 years of age or older; or

    (4) Two or more elderly persons living together, or one or more such 

persons living with another person who is



[[Page 197]]



determined by HUD, based upon a licensed physician's certificate 

provided by the family, to be essential to their care or well being.

    Handicapped family means:

    (1) Families of two or more persons the head of which (or his or her 

spouse) is handicapped;

    (2) The surviving member or members of any family described in 

paragraph (1) of this definition living in a unit assisted under subpart 

E of this part with the deceased member of the family at the time of his 

or her death;

    (3) A single handicapped person over the age of 18; or

    (4) Two or more handicapped persons living together, or one or more 

such persons living with another person who is determined by HUD, based 

upon a licensed physician's certificate provided by the family, to be 

essential to their care or well being.

    Handicapped person or individual means:

    (1) Any adult having a physical, mental, or emotional impairment 

that is expected to be of long-continued and indefinite duration, 

substantially impedes his or her ability to live independently, and is 

of a nature that such ability could be improved by more suitable housing 

conditions.

    (2) A person with a developmental disability, as defined in section 

102(7) of the Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights 

Act (42 U.S.C. 6001(5), i.e., a person with a severe chronic disability 

that:

    (i) Is attributable to a mental or physical impairment or 

combination of mental and physical impairments;

    (ii) Is manifested before the person attains age twenty-two;

    (iii) Is likely to continue indefinitely;

    (iv) Results in substantial functional limitation in three or more 

of the following areas of major life activity:

    (A) Self-care;

    (B) Receptive and expressive language;

    (C) Learning;

    (D) Mobility;

    (E) Self-direction;

    (F) Capacity for independent living;

    (G) Economic self-sufficiency; and

    (v) Reflects the person's need for a combination and sequence of 

special, interdisciplinary, or generic care, treatment, or other 

services that are of lifelong or extended duration and are individually 

planned and coordinated.

    (3) A person with a chronic mental illness, i.e., if he or she has a 

severe and persistent mental or emotional impairment that seriously 

limits his or her ability to live independently, and whose impairment 

could be improved by more suitable housing conditions.

    (4) Persons infected with the human acquired immunodeficiency virus 

(HIV) who are disabled as a result of infection with the HIV are 

eligible for occupancy in section 202 projects designed for the 

physically disabled, developmentally disabled, or chronically mentally 

ill depending upon the nature of the person's disability. A person whose 

sole impairment is alcoholism or drug addition (i.e., who does not have 

a developmental disability, chronic mental illness, or physical 

disability that is the disabling condition required for eligibility in a 

particular project) will not be considered to be disabled for the 

purposes of the section 202 program.

    Housing and related facilities means rental or cooperative housing 

structures constructed or substantially rehabilitated as permanent 

residences for use by elderly or handicapped families, or acquired with 

or without moderate rehabilitation for use by nonelderly handicapped 

families as group homes. The term includes structures suitable for use 

by families residing in the project or in the area, such as cafeterias 

or dining halls, community rooms, or buildings, or other essential 

service facilities. In the case of acquisition with or without moderate 

rehabilitation, at least three years must have elapsed from the later of 

the date of completion of the project or the beginning of occupancy to 

the date of the application for a Section 202 fund reservation. Except 

for intermediate care facilities for the mentally retarded and 

individuals with related conditions, this term does not include nursing 

homes, hospitals, intermediate care facilities, or transitional care 

facilities.

    Nonelderly handicapped family means a handicapped family in which 

the head of the family (and spouse, if any) is less than 62 years of age 

at the time of the family's initial occupancy of a project.



[[Page 198]]



    Section 8 Program means the housing assistance payments program that 

implements section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 

1437f note).