[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: 24CFR972.239]



[Page 566-570]

 

                 TITLE 24--HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

 

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

               DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT

 

PART 972_CONVERSION OF PUBLIC HOUSING TO TENANT-BASED ASSISTANCE--Table 

of Contents

 

      Subpart B_Voluntary Conversion of Public Housing Developments

 

Sec.  972.239  HUD actions with respect to a conversion plan.



    (a) When a PHA submits a conversion plan to HUD, HUD will review it 

to determine whether:

    (1) The conversion plan is complete and includes all of the 

information required under Sec.  972.230; and

    (2) The conversion plan is consistent with the conversion assessment 

the PHA submitted.

    (b) HUD will disapprove a conversion plan only if HUD determines 

that:

    (1) The conversion plan is plainly inconsistent with the conversion 

assessment;

    (2) There is reliable information and data available to the 

Secretary that contradicts the conversion assessment; or

    (3) The conversion plan is incomplete or otherwise fails to meet the 

requirements under Sec.  972.230.



 Appendix to Part 972--Methodology of Comparing Cost of Public Housing 

                with the Cost of Tenant-Based Assistance



                   I. Public Housing-Net Present Value



    The costs used for public housing shall be those necessary to 

produce a viable development for its projected useful life. The 

estimated cost for the continued operation of the development as public 

housing shall be calculated as the sum of total operating cost, 

modernization cost, and costs to address accrual needs. Costs will be 

calculated at the property level on an annual basis covering a period of 

30 years (with options for 20 or 40 years). All costs expected to occur 

in future years will be discounted, using an OMB-specified real discount 

rate provided on the OMB Web site at http://www.whitehouse.gov/OMB/

Budget, for each year after the initial year. The sum of the discounted 

values for each year (net present value) for public housing will then be 

compared to the net present value of the stream of costs associated with 

housing vouchers.

    Applicable information on discount rates may be found in Appendix C 

of OMB Circular A-94, ``Guidelines and Discount Rates for Benefit Cost 

Analysis of Federal Programs,'' which is updated annually, and may be 

found on OMB's Web site at http://www.whitehouse.gov/OMB. All cost 

adjustments conducted pursuant to this cost methodology must be 

performed using the real discount rates provided on the OMB Web site at 

http://www.whitehouse.gov/OMB/Budget. HUD will also provide information 

on current rates, along with guidance and instructions for completing 

the cost comparisons on the HUD Homepage (http://www.hud.gov). The 

Homepage will also include a downloadable spreadsheet calculator that 

HUD has developed to assist PHAs in completing the assessments. The 

spreadsheet calculator is designed to walk housing agencies through the 

calculations and comparisons laid out in the appendix and allows housing 

agencies to enter relevant data for their PHA and the development being 

assessed. Results, including net present values, are generated based on 

these housing agency data.



                           A. Operating Costs



    1. Any proposed revitalization or modernization plan must indicate 

how unusually high current operating expenses (e.g., security, 

supportive services, maintenance, tenant, and PHA-paid utilities) will 

be reduced as a result of post-revitalization changes in occupancy, 

density and building configuration, income mix, and management. The plan 

must make a realistic projection of overall operating costs per occupied 

unit in the revitalized or modernized development, by relating those 

operating costs to the expected occupancy rate, tenant composition, 

physical configuration, and management structure of the revitalized or 

modernized development. The projected costs should also address the 

comparable costs of buildings or developments whose siting, 

configuration, and tenant mix is similar to that of the revitalized or 

modernized public housing development.

    2. The development's operating cost (including all overhead costs 

pro-rated to the development--including a Payment in Lieu of Taxes 

(P.I.L.O.T.) or some other comparable payment, and including utilities 

and utility allowances) shall be expressed as total operating costs per 

year. For example, if a development will have 375 units occupied by 

households and will have $112,500 monthly non-utility costs (including 

pro-rated overhead costs and appropriate P.I.L.O.T.) and $37,500 monthly 

utility costs paid by the PHA, and $18,750 in monthly utility allowances 

that are deducted from tenant rental payments to the PHA because tenants 

paid some utility bills directly to the utility company, then the 

development's monthly operating cost is $168,750 (or $450 per unit per 

month) and its annual operating cost would be $5,400 ($450 times 12). 

Operating costs are assumed to begin in the initial year of the



[[Page 567]]



30-year (or alternative period) calculation and will be incurred in each 

year thereafter.

    3. In justifying the operating cost estimates as realistic, the plan 

should link the cost estimates to its assumptions about the level and 

rate of occupancy, the per-unit funding of modernization, any physical 

reconfiguration that will result from modernization, any planned changes 

in the surrounding neighborhood, and security costs. The plan should 

also show whether developments or buildings in viable condition in 

similar neighborhoods have achieved the income mix and occupancy rate 

projected for the revitalized or modernized development. The plan should 

also show how the operating costs of the similar developments or 

buildings compare to the operating costs projected for the development.

    4. In addition to presenting evidence that the operating costs of 

the revitalized or modernized development are plausible, when the 

projected initial year per-unit operating cost of the renovated 

development is lower than the current per unit cost by more than 10 

percent, then the plan should detail how the revitalized development 

will achieve this reduction in costs. To determine the extent to which 

projected operating costs are lower than current operating costs, the 

current per-unit operating costs of the development will be estimated as 

follows:

    a. If the development has reliable operating costs and if the 

overall vacancy rate is less than 20 percent, then the development-based 

method will be used to determine projected costs. The current costs will 

be divided by the sum of all occupied units and vacant units fully 

funded under the Operating Fund Program plus 20 percent of all units not 

fully funded under the Operating Fund Program. For instance, if the 

total monthly operating costs of the current development are $168,750 

and it has 325 occupied units and 50 vacant units not fully funded under 

the Operating Fund Program (or a 13 percent overall vacancy rate), then 

the $2,250,000 is divided by 335--325 plus 20 percent of 50--to give a 

per unit figure of $504 per unit month. By this example, the current 

costs per occupied unit are at least 10 percent higher (12 percent in 

this example) than the projected costs per occupied unit of $450 for the 

revitalized development, and the reduction in costs would have to be 

detailed.

    b. If the development currently lacks reliable cost data or has a 

vacancy rate of 20 percent or higher, then the PHA-wide method will be 

used to determine projected costs. First, the current per unit cost of 

the entire PHA will be computed, with total costs divided by the sum of 

all occupied units and vacant units fully funded under the Operating 

Fund Program plus 20 percent of all vacant units not fully funded under 

the Operating Fund Program. For example, if the PHA's operating cost is 

$18 million, and the PHA has 4,000 units, of which 3,875 are occupied 

and 125 are vacant and not fully funded under the Operating Fund 

Program, then the PHA's vacancy adjusted operating cost is $385 per unit 

per month--$18,000,000 divided by the 3,825 (the sum of 3,800 occupied 

units and 20 percent of 125 vacant units) divided by 12 months. Second, 

this amount will be multiplied by the ratio of the bedroom adjustment 

factor of the development to the bedroom adjustment factor of the PHA. 

The bedroom adjustment factor, which is based on national rent averages 

for units grouped by the number of bedrooms and which has been used by 

HUD to adjust for costs of units when the number of bedrooms vary, 

assigns to each unit the following factors: .70 for 0-bedroom units, .85 

for 1-bedroom units, 1.0 for 2-bedroom units, 1.25 for 3-bedroom units, 

1.40 for 4-bedroom units, 1.61 for 5-bedroom units, and 1.82 for 6 or 

more bedroom units. The bedroom adjustment factor is the unit-weighted 

average of the distribution. For instance, consider a development with 

375 occupied units that had the following under an ACC contract: 200 

two-bedroom units, 150 three-bedroom units, and 25 four-bedroom units. 

In that example, the bedroom adjustment factor would be 1.127--200 times 

1.0, plus 150 times 1.25, plus 25 times 1.4 with the sum divided by 375. 

Where necessary, HUD field offices will arrange for assistance in the 

calculation of the bedroom adjustment factors of the PHA and its 

affected developments.

    c. As an example of estimating development operating costs from PHA-

wide operating costs, suppose that the PHA had a total monthly operating 

cost per unit of $385 and a bedroom adjustment factor of .928, and 

suppose that the development had a bedroom adjustment factor of 1.127. 

Then, the development's estimated current monthly operating cost per 

occupied unit would be $467--or $385 times 1.214 (the ratio of 1.127 to 

.928). By this example, the development's current operating costs of 

$467 per unit per month are not more than 10 percent higher (3.8 percent 

in this example) than the projected costs of $450 per unit per month and 

no additional justification of the cost reduction would be required.



                            B. Modernization



    Under both the required and voluntary conversion programs, PHAs 

prepare modernization or capital repair estimates in accordance with the 

physical needs of the specific properties proposed for conversion. There 

are three key assumptions that guide how PHAs prepare modernization 

estimates that affect remaining useful life and determine whether the 

20-, 30-, or discretionary 40-year remaining useful life evaluation 

period are used for the cost-test. When calculating public housing 

revitalization costs for



[[Page 568]]



a property, PHAs will use a 30-year period if the level of modernization 

addresses all accumulated backlog needs and the planned redesign ensures 

long-term viability. For modernization equivalent to new construction or 

when the renovations restore a property to as-new physical conditions, a 

40-year remaining useful life test is used. When light or moderate 

rehabilitation that does not address all accumulated backlog is 

undertaken, but it is compliant with the International Existing Building 

Codes (ICC) or Public Housing Modernization Standards in the absence of 

a local rehabilitation code, the 20-year remaining useful life 

evaluation period must be used.

    Except for some voluntary conversion situations as explained in 

paragraph E below, the cost of modernization is, at a minimum, the 

initial revitalization cost to meet viability standards. In the absence 

of a local code, PHAs may refer to the Public Housing Modernization 

Standards Handbook (Handbook 7485.2) or the International Existing 

Building Codes (ICC) 2003 Edition. To justify a 40-year amortization 

cycle that increases the useful life period and time over which 

modernization costs are amortized, PHAs must demonstrate that the 

proposed modernization meets the applicable physical viability 

standards, but must also cover accumulated backlog and redesign that 

achieves as-new physical conditions to ensure long-term viability. To be 

a plausible estimate, modernization costs shall be justified by a newly 

created property-based needs assessment (a life-cycle physical needs 

assessments prepared in accordance with a PHA's Capital Fund annual or 

5-year action plan and shall be able to be reconciled with standardized 

measures, such as components of the PHAs physical inspection and chronic 

vacancy due to physical condition and design. Modernization costs may be 

assumed to occur during years one through four, consistent with the 

level of work proposed and the PHA's proposed modernization schedule. 

For example, if the initial modernization outlay (excluding demolition 

costs) to meet viability standards is $21,000,000 for 375 units, a PHA 

might incur costs in three equal increments of $7,000,000 in years two, 

three, and four (based on the PHA's phased modernization plan). In 

comparing the net present value of public housing to voucher costs for 

required conversion, a 30-year amortization period will normally be 

used, except when revitalization would bring the property to as-new 

condition and a 40-year amortization would be justified. On the other 

hand, when the modernization falls short of meeting accumulated backlog 

and long-term redesign needs, only a 20-year amortization period might 

be justified.



                               C. Accrual



    Accrual projections estimate the ongoing replacement repair needs 

for public housing properties and building structures and systems 

required to maintain the physical viability of a property throughout its 

useful life as the lifecycle of building structures and systems expire. 

The cost of accrual (i.e., replacement needs) will be estimated with an 

algorithm that meets all ongoing capital needs based on systems that 

have predictable lifecycles. The algorithm starts with the area index of 

housing construction costs (HCC) that HUD publishes as a component of 

its TDC index series. Subtracted from this HCC figure is half the 

estimated modernization per unit, with a coefficient of .025 multiplied 

by the result to provide an annual accrual figure per unit. For example, 

suppose that the development after modernization will remain a walkup 

structure containing 200 two-bedroom, 150 three-bedroom, and 25 four-

bedroom occupied units, and if HUD's HCC limit for the area is $66,700 

for two-bedroom walkup structures, $93,000 for three-bedroom walkup 

structures, and $108,400 for four-bedroom walkup structures. Then the 

unit-weighted HCC cost is $80,000 per unit and .75 of that figure is 

$60,000 per unit. Then, if the per unit cost of the modernization is 

$56,000, the estimated annual cost of accrual per occupied unit is 

$1,300. This is the result of multiplying .025 times $52,000 (the 

weighted HCC of $80,000) minus $28,000 (half the per-unit modernization 

cost of $56,000). The first year of total accrual for the development is 

$487,500 ($1,300 times 375 units) and should be assumed to begin in the 

year after modernization is complete. Accrual--like operating cost--is 

an annual expense and will occur in each year over the amortized period. 

Because the method assumes full physical renewal each year, this accrual 

method when combined with a modernization that meets past backlog and 

redesign needs justifies a 30- or 40-year amortization period, because 

the property is refreshed each year to as-new or almost as-new 

condition.



              D. Residual Value (Voluntary Conversion Only)



    Under the voluntary conversion program, PHAs are required to prepare 

market appraisals based on the ``as-is'' and post-rehabilitation 

condition of properties, assuming the buildings are operated as public 

or assisted, unassisted, or market-rate housing. Section 972.218 

requires PHAs to describe the future use for a property proposed for 

conversion and to describe the means and timetable to complete these 

activities. HUD will permit a PHA to enter the appraised market value of 

a property into the cost-test in Years 1 through 5 when a PHA 

anticipates selling a property or receiving income generated from the 

sale or lease of a property.



[[Page 569]]



    As a separate line item to be added to total public costs as a 

foregone opportunity cost, a PHA shall include in the voluntary cost-

test calculations the appraised market or residual value (or net sales 

proceeds) from the sale or lease of a property that is to be voluntarily 

converted to tenant-based voucher assistance. The PHA must hire an 

appraiser to estimate the market value of the property using the 

comparable sale, tax-assessment, or revenue-based appraisal methods. 

PHAs are advised to select one or more of these appraisal methods to 

accurately determine the actual or potential market value of a property, 

particularly the comparable sales or revenue-based methods. The market 

or residual value is to be determined by calculating the estimated 

market value for the property based on the appraisal, minus any costs 

required for demolition and remediation. The residual value must be 

incorporated into the cost-test instead of the actual market value only 

when any demolition, site remediation, and clearance costs that are 

necessary are covered by the selling PHA. However, if the sum of the 

estimated per unit cost of demolition and remediation exceeds 10 percent 

of the average Total Development Cost (TDC) for the units, the lower of 

the PHA estimate or a figure based on 10 percent of TDC must be used. 

Suppose the estimated remediation and demolition costs necessary for 

conversion sale are $7,000 per unit. Also, suppose the TDC limits are 

$115,000 for a two-bedroom unit, $161,000 for a three-bedroom unit, and 

$184,000 for a four-bedroom unit. Then the average TDC of a development 

with 200 two-bedroom units, 150 three-bedroom units, and 25 four-bedroom 

units is $138,000 (200 times $115,000, plus 150 times $161,000, plus 25 

times $184,000, the sum divided by 375) and 10 percent of TDC is 

$13,800. In this example, the estimated $7,000 per unit costs for 

demolition and remediation is less than 10 percent of TDC for the 

development, and the PHA estimate of $7,000 is used. If estimated 

expenses had exceeded 10 percent of TDC ($13,800 in this example), 

demolition and remediation expenses must be capped at the lower amount.



             E. Accumulated Discounted Cost: Public Housing



    The overall cost for continuing to operate the development as public 

housing is the sum of the discounted values of the yearly stream of 

costs up for the amortization period, which can range from 20 to 30 to 

40 years, depending on the extent of modernization relative to the 

current physical and redesign needs of the development. In calculating 

net present value for required conversion, the sum of all costs in each 

future year is discounted back to the current year using the OMB-

specified real discount rate. For voluntary conversion, the discount 

rate is applied forward as a direct inflation factor. To assist PHAs in 

completing the net present value comparison and to ensure consistency in 

the calculations, HUD has developed a spreadsheet calculator that is 

available for downloading from the HUD Internet site. Using PHA data and 

property specific inputs (to be entered by the housing agency), the 

spreadsheet will discount costs as described above and will generate net 

present values for amortization periods of 20, 30, and 40 years.



                       II. Tenant-Based Assistance



    The estimated cost of providing tenant-based assistance under 

Section 8 for all households in occupancy shall be calculated as the 

unit-weighted average of recent movers in the local area; plus the 

administrative fee for providing such vouchers; plus $1,000 per unit (or 

a higher amount allowed by HUD) for relocation assistance costs, 

including counseling. However, if the sum of the estimated per unit cost 

of demolition, remediation, and relocation exceeds 10 percent of the 

average Total Development Cost (TDC) for the units, the lower of the PHA 

estimate or a figure based on 10 percent of TDC must be used.

    For example, if the development has 200 occupied two-bedroom units, 

150 occupied three-bedroom units, and 25 occupied four-bedroom units, 

and if the monthly payment standard for voucher units occupied by recent 

movers is $550 for two-bedroom units, $650 for three-bedroom units, and 

$750 for four-bedroom units, the unit-weighted monthly payment standard 

is $603.33. If the administrative fee comes to $46 per unit, then the 

monthly per unit operating voucher costs are $649.33, which rounds to an 

annual total of $2,922,000 for 375 occupied units of the same bedroom 

size as those being demolished in public housing. To these operating 

voucher costs, a first-year relocation is added on the voucher side. For 

per-unit relocation costs of $1,000 per unit for relocation, then 

$375,000 for 375 units is placed on the voucher cost side of the first 

year.



                  Accumulated Discounted Cost: Vouchers



    The overall cost for vouchers is the sum of the discounted values of 

the yearly stream of costs up for the amortization period, which can 

range from 20 to 30 to 40 years, depending on the extent of 

modernization relative to the current physical and redesign needs of the 

development. The amortization period chosen is the one that was 

appropriate for discounting public housing costs. In calculating net 

present value for required conversion, the sum of all costs in each 

future year is discounted back to the current year using the OMB-

specified real discount rate. For voluntary conversion, the discount 

rate is applied forward as a direct inflation factor.



[[Page 570]]



    To assist PHAs in completing the net present value comparison and to 

ensure consistency in the calculations, HUD has developed a spreadsheet 

calculator that will be available for downloading from the HUD Internet 

site.



                       III. Results of the Example



    With the hypothetical data used in the examples, under an 

amortization period of 30 years, the discounted public housing costs 

under required conversion sums to $69,633,225, and the discounted 

voucher cost under required conversions totals $60,438,698. The ratio is 

1.15, which means that public housing is 15 percent more costly than 

vouchers. With this amortization and this data, the PHA would be 

required to convert the development under the requirements of subpart A 

of this part, except in a situation where a PHA can demonstrate a 

distressed property that has failed the cost-test can be redeveloped by 

meeting each of the four factors that compose the long-term physical 

viability test to avoid removal from the inventory. With the same data, 

but a 40-year amortization period, public housing is still 11 percent 

costlier than vouchers, and with a 20-year amortization, public housing 

is 25 percent costlier than vouchers. In voluntary conversion, with the 

same hypothetical data, but a slightly different methodology (use of 

residual value as a public housing cost, inflating forward the discount 

numbers), the ratio of public housing costs to voucher costs would be 

1.16 for the 20-year amortization period, 1.03 for the 30-year 

amortization period, and .97 for the 20-year amortization period. Thus, 

in voluntary conversion, the appropriate amortization period would 

decide whether public housing is more costly or is slightly more costly, 

or less than vouchers. Under a 20-year amortization assumption and 

possibly under a 30-year amortization period, the PHA would have the 

option of preparing a conversion plan for the development under subpart 

B of this part. Different sets of data would yield different conclusions 

for required and voluntary conversion determinations.



[71 FR 14336, Mar. 21, 2006]



    Effective Date Note: At 71 FR 14336, Mar. 21, 2006, part 972 was 

amended by adding an appendix, effective Apr. 20, 2006.