[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: 24CFR903.2]



[Page 289-292]

 

                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

 

CHAPTER IX--OFFICE OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR PUBLIC AND INDIAN HOUSING, 

               DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

 

PART 903_PUBLIC HOUSING AGENCY PLANS--Table of Contents

 

    Subpart A_Deconcentration of Poverty and Fair Housing in Program 

                               Admissions

 

Sec.  903.2  With respect to admissions, what must a PHA do to 

deconcentrate poverty in its developments and comply with fair 

housing requirements?



    (a) General. The PHA's admission policy includes the PHA's policy 

designed to promote deconcentration of poverty and income mixing in 

accordance with section 16(a)(3)(B) of the 1937 Act (42 U.S.C. 1437n), 

which is submitted to HUD as part of the PHA Annual Plan process. 

Deconcentration of poverty and income mixing is promoted by a policy 

that provides for bringing higher income tenants into lower income 

developments and lower income tenants into higher income developments.

    (1) The provisions of this section apply to applicants to and 

residents seeking voluntary transfers within covered public housing 

developments (``covered developments'' as specified in paragraph (b) of 

this section).

    (2) The statutory requirement to design a policy to provide for 

deconcentration and income mixing is not to be construed to impose or 

require any specific income or racial quotas for any development or 

developments.

    (b) Applicability of deconcentration of poverty and income mixing 

requirements--(1) Developments subject to deconcentration of poverty and 

income mixing requirements. The deconcentration requirements of this 

subpart apply to general occupancy, family public housing developments, 

excluding those developments listed in paragraph (b)(2) of this section. 

Developments to which this subpart is applicable are referred to as 

``covered developments''.

    (2) Developments not subject to deconcentration of poverty and 

income mixing requirements. This subpart does not apply to the following 

public housing developments:



[[Page 290]]



    (i) Public housing developments operated by a PHA with fewer than 

100 public housing units;

    (ii) Public housing developments operated by a PHA which house only 

elderly persons or persons with disabilities, or both;

    (iii) Public housing developments operated by a PHA which consist of 

only one general occupancy, family public housing development;

    (iv) Public housing developments approved for demolition or for 

conversion to tenant-based assistance; and

    (v) Public housing developments which include public housing units 

operated in accordance with a HUD-approved mixed-finance plan using HOPE 

VI or public housing funds awarded before the effective date of this 

rule, provided that the PHA certifies (and includes reasons for the 

certification) as part of its PHA Plan (which may be accomplished either 

in the annual Plan submission or as a significant amendment to its PHA 

Plan) that exemption from the regulation is necessary to honor an 

existing contractual agreement or be consistent with a mixed finance 

plan, including provisions regarding the incomes of public housing 

residents to be admitted to that development, which has been developed 

in consultation with residents with rights to live at the affected 

development and other interested persons.

    (c) Deconcentration of poverty and income mixing--(1) Steps for 

implementation. To implement the statutory requirement to deconcentrate 

poverty and provide for income mixing in covered public housing 

developments, a PHA must comply with the following steps:

    (i) Step 1. A PHA shall determine the average income of all families 

residing in all the PHA's covered developments. A PHA may use median 

income, instead of average income, provided that the PHA includes a 

written explanation in its PHA Annual Plan justifying use of median 

income in the PHA's Annual Plan.

    (ii) Step 2. A PHA shall determine the average income of all 

families residing in each covered development. In determining average 

income for each development, a PHA has the option of adjusting its 

income analysis for unit size in accordance with procedures prescribed 

by HUD.

    (iii) Step 3. A PHA shall determine whether each of its covered 

developments falls above, within or below the Established Income Range. 

The Established Income Range is from 85 to 115 percent (inclusive) of 

the average family income (the PHA-wide average income for covered 

developments as defined in Step 1), except that the upper limit shall 

never be less than the income at which a family would be defined as an 

extremely low income family under 24 CFR 5.603(b).

    (iv) Step 4. A PHA with covered developments having average incomes 

outside the Established Income Range may explain or justify the income 

profile for these developments as being consistent with and furthering 

two sets of goals: the goals of deconcentration of poverty and income 

mixing as specified by the statute (bringing higher income tenants into 

lower income developments and vice versa); and the local goals and 

strategies contained in the PHA Annual Plan. Elements of explanations or 

justifications that may satisfy these requirements may include, but 

shall not be limited to the following:

    (A) The covered development or developments are subject to consent 

decrees or other resident selection and admission plans mandated by 

court action;

    (B) The covered development or developments are part of PHA's 

programs, strategies or activities specifically authorized by statute, 

such as mixed-income or mixed-finance developments, homeownership 

programs, self-sufficiency strategies, or other strategies designed to 

deconcentrate poverty, promote income mixing in public housing, increase 

the incomes of public housing residents, or the income mix is otherwise 

subject to individual review and approval by HUD;

    (C) The covered development's or developments' size, location, and/

or configuration promote income deconcentration, such as scattered site 

or small developments;

    (D) The income characteristics of the covered development or 

developments are sufficiently explained by other circumstances.



[[Page 291]]



    (v) Step 5. Where the income profile for a covered development is 

not explained or justified in the PHA Annual Plan submission, the PHA 

shall include in its admission policy its specific policy to provide for 

deconcentration of poverty and income mixing in applicable covered 

developments. Depending on local circumstances, a PHA's deconcentration 

policy (which may be undertaken in conjunction with other efforts such 

as efforts to increase self-sufficiency or current residents) may 

include but is not limited to providing for one or more of the following 

actions:

    (A) Providing incentives designed to encourage families with incomes 

below the Established Income Range to accept units in developments with 

incomes above the Established Income Range, or vice versa, including 

rent incentives, affirmative marketing plans, or added amenities;

    (B) Targeting investment and capital improvements toward 

developments with an average income below the Established Income Range 

to encourage applicant families whose income is above the Established 

Income Range to accept units in those developments;

    (C) Establishing a preference for admission of working families in 

developments below the Established Income Range;

    (D) Skipping a family on the waiting list to reach another family in 

an effort to further the goals of the PHA's deconcentration policy;

    (E) Providing such other strategies as permitted by statute and 

determined by the PHA in consultation with the residents and the 

community, through the PHA Annual Plan process, to be responsive to the 

local context and the PHA's strategic objectives.

    (2) Determination of compliance with deconcentration requirement. 

HUD shall consider a PHA to be in compliance with this subpart if:

    (i) The PHA's income analysis shows that the PHA has no general 

occupancy family developments to which the deconcentration requirements 

apply; that is, the average incomes of all covered developments are 

within the Established Income Range;

    (ii) The PHA has covered developments with average incomes above or 

below the Established Income Range and the PHA provides a sufficient 

explanation in its Annual Plan that supports that the income mix of such 

development or developments is consistent with and furthers the goal of 

deconcentration of poverty and income mixing and also the locally 

determined goals of the PHA's Annual and Five Year Plans, and the PHA 

therefore need not take further action to deconcentrate poverty and mix 

incomes; or

    (iii) The PHA's deconcentration policy provides specific strategies 

the PHA will take that can be expected to promote deconcentration of 

poverty and income mixing in developments with average incomes outside 

of the Established Income Range.

    (3) Right of return. If a PHA has provided that a family that 

resided in a covered public housing development has a right to admission 

to a public housing unit in that development after revitalization, the 

requirements of paragraph (c) of this section do not preclude fulfilling 

that commitment or a PHA's commitment to return a family to another 

development after revitalization.

    (4) Family's discretion to refuse a unit. A family has the sole 

discretion whether to accept an offer of a unit made under a PHA's 

deconcentration policy. The PHA may not take any adverse action toward 

any eligible family for choosing not to accept an offer of a unit under 

the PHA's deconcentration policy. In accordance with the PHA's 

established policies, the PHA may uniformly limit the number of offers 

received by applicants.

    (5) Relationship to income targeting requirement. Nothing in this 

section relieves a PHA of the obligation to meet the requirement to 

admit annually at least 40 percent families whose incomes are below 30 

percent of area median income as provided by section 16(a)(2) of the 

1937 Act, 42 U.S.C. 1437n(a)(2).

    (d) Fair housing requirements. All admission and occupancy policies 

for public housing and Section 8 tenant-based housing programs must 

comply with Fair Housing Act requirements and with regulations to 

affirmatively further fair housing. The PHA may not impose any specific 

income or racial



[[Page 292]]



quotas for any development or developments.

    (1) Nondiscrimination. A PHA must carry out its PHA Plan in 

conformity with the nondiscrimination requirements in Federal civil 

rights laws, including title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the 

Fair Housing Act. A PHA cannot assign persons to a particular section of 

a community or to a development or building based on race, color, 

religion, sex, disability, familial status or national origin for 

purposes of segregating populations (Sec.  1.4(b)(1)(ii) of this title).

    (2) Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing. PHA policies that govern 

eligibility, selection and admissions under its PHA Plan should be 

designed to reduce racial and national origin concentrations. Any 

affirmative steps or incentives a PHA plans to take must be stated in 

the admission policy.

    (i) HUD regulations provide that PHAs should take affirmative steps 

to overcome the effects of conditions which resulted in limiting 

participation of persons because of their race, national origin or other 

prohibited basis (Sec.  1.4(b)(1)(iii) and (6)(ii) of this title).

    (ii) Such affirmative steps may include but are not limited to, 

appropriate affirmative marketing efforts; additional applicant 

consultation and information; and provision of additional supportive 

services and amenities to a development.

    (3) Validity of certification. (i) HUD will take action to challenge 

the PHA's certification under Sec.  903.7(o) where it appears that a PHA 

Plan or its implementation:

    (A) Does not reduce racial and national origin concentration in 

developments or buildings and is perpetuating segregated housing; or

    (B) Is creating new segregation in housing.

    (ii) If HUD challenges the validity of a PHA's certification, the 

PHA must establish that it is providing a full range of housing 

opportunities to applicants and tenants or that it is implementing 

actions described in paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this section.

    (e) Relationship between poverty deconcentration and fair housing. 

The requirements for poverty deconcentration in paragraph (c) of this 

section and for fair housing in paragraph (d) of this section arise 

under separate statutory authorities and are independent.



[65 FR 81222, Dec. 22, 2000, as amended at 67 FR 51033, Aug. 6, 2002]