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July 6, 2015 · A.J. Johnson

RAD - Revised Program Notice PIH-2012-32, REV-2

On June 26, 2015, HUD published a Notice in the Federal Register revising some of the rules of the Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD) Program. HUD’s original notice on the program was published on June 26, 2012. The RAD program provides the authority to convert various housing programs to long-term project-based Section 8 rental assistance. The revised Notice PIH-2012-32, REV-2 summarizes key changes made to the program. Most elements of the revised Notice are effective June 26, 2015.   Background   RAD allows for the conversion of assistance under the Public Housing, Rent Supplement (Rent Supp), Rental Assistance (RAP), and Moderate Rehabilitation (Mod Rehab) programs to long-term, renewable Section 8 assistance. RAD has two separate components:
  1. First Component: allows projects funded under the Public Housing and Mod Rehab programs to convert to long-term Section 8 rental assistance contracts. These contracts may be either Project-Based Vouchers (PBVs) or Project-Based Rental Assistance (PBRA). The RAD statute authorizes up to 185,000 units to convert under this component.
  2. Second Component: allows owners of projects funded under the Rent Supp, RAP, and Mod Rehab Programs with a contract expiration or termination occurring after October 1, 2006, to convert Tenant Protection Vouchers (TPVs) to PBVs or PBRA. There is no cap on the number of units that may be converted under this component of RAD.
  Key Changes     New Waivers & Alternative Requirements   These requirements are effective as of July 6, 2015:
  1. Under-Occupied Units at Time of Conversion: Families occupying, at the time of conversion of assistance, a unit that is larger than appropriate, may remain in the unit until an appropriate-sized unit becomes available in the covered project. Under the Second Component, this alternative requirement will only apply to families who are elderly or disabled.
  2. Assistance for Families when Total Tenant Payment (TTP) Exceeds Gross Rent: PHAs and owners must continue to treat certain families in public housing that has converted assistance as assisted and charge 30 percent of adjusted gross income for rent. The families covered by this alternative requirement must have incomes high enough for their TTP to exceed the contract rent yet still remain eligible for assistance or otherwise be unable to afford market rate housing in their community;
  3. Choice-Mobility Cap for Public Housing Conversions to PBV: PHAs may, for projects that have converted assistance from Public Housing to PBV, provide one of every four turnover vouchers to households on their regular HCV waiting list instead of for Choice-Mobility vouchers;
  4. Rent Supp/RAP Contracts After Section 236 Prepayment: The original RAP or Rent Supp contract may remain in place for 60-days after repayment of a Section 236 mortgage until the PBV HAP contract is executed;
  5. Uniform Physical Condition Standards (UPCS) Inspections: All units converting assistance to PBRA must meet the Uniform Physical Condition Standards no later than the date of completion of initial repairs as indicated in the RAD conversion commitment; and
  6. Floating Units: For certain projects (Choice, Mixed Finance, and HOPE VI), HUD is allowing PBV assistance to float among unassisted units.
  Participants in the RAD program should obtain and review the requirements of the revised Notice.
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