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Issue 1, 2002
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
A Look at Public
Housing Authorities
The country’s 3,300-plus
public housing authorities are providing affordable,
decent and safe rental housing for about 3 million
low-income households. According to the Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 427 Texas communities
have a housing authority. Louisiana has 164 and
New Mexico, 50.
Since the 1930s, PHAs have
been a key source of housing for very low-income
families, the elderly and disabled. Until the
1990s, most PHAs relied solely on public funds
to develop and maintain their properties. But
many PHAs have worked hard in recent years to
develop mixed-income housing, using both public
funds and private financing. They are also developing
and maintaining quality housing that both residents
and their neighbors view positively.
This issue of Perspectives
looks at how five PHAs have developed innovative
programs and how they’ve financed them. These
five PHAs are proud of their businesslike approach.
They are accountable to their communities through
their boards of directors, which are appointed
by city councils or county commissioner courts.
The PHAs have audited financial statements and
productive relationships with local banks. And
they meet frequently with community representatives.
To find out how to contact
your local housing authority, go to HUD’s web
site at www.hud.gov/offices/pih/pha/contacts/index.cfm [off-site].
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Nancy
Vickrey
Assistant Vice President
and Community Affairs Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas |
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Woodhill
A Bond-able Development
Woodhill Apartments is the biggest
mixed-income rehab project the San Antonio Housing Authority
(SAHA) has ever taken on. Its scope meant SAHA would have
to tap financing sources in addition to the federal money
housing authorities have traditionally used. Woodhill was
the first development for which SAHA issued publicly rated
bonds, allowing for the extensive work needed to the 532-unit
project on the city’s Northwest side.
SAHA manages and operates 6,078 units
of public housing and administers 12,000 Section 8 rental
vouchers. Since the 1990s, housing authorities have been encouraged
to build mixed-income, but affordable, housing that is made
available to both Section 8 voucher holders and the general
public. The idea is to avoid the high concentrations of public
housing that isolate the poor from the larger community.
The 2,713 units of mixed-income housing
SAHA manages were developed with both public and private financing.
Since 1999 SAHA has created public facility corporations (PFCs)
to acquire and redevelop its seven mixed-income developments.
The PFCs have made it easier for SAHA to obtain private financing.
And using private funds increases SAHA’s flexibility, says
Diana Kinlaw, vice president of its Development and Asset
Management Division. "If SAHA relied solely on public
funding, we would have more limited facilities."
Woodhill was part of HUD’s property
inventory and in bad shape when SAHA purchased it in 1994
for $1 plus a commitment to invest $4.8 million in improvements.
HUD provided a list of work items that it estimated would
cost $5 million to complete. Once the rehab began, however,
it became obvious that more extensive renovation would be
needed. SAHA’s in-house rehab crew encountered unexpected
asbestos, mold, wiring, drainage and foundation problems.
SAHA ended up gutting Woodhill’s Phase 1, built in 1973, to
the framework. Phase 2, which is two years newer, required
only exterior work. Ultimately, the cost would run more than
double HUD’s original estimate.
Armed with a reputation for making projects
like this work, SAHA put a plan into action. The authority
approached Frost National Bank, which made a $4.68 million
loan for interim financing of the development.
"SAHA’s corporate structure gives
it the flexibility to provide both public and mixed-income
housing and allows a commercial bank to offer financing,"
says Betsy Gleiser, executive vice president of Frost’s Real
Estate Division.
SAHA was able to repay the interim loan
and continue renovating the apartments by issuing more than
$10.6 million in Standard & Poor’s A-rated bonds. The
bonds were issued in two amounts: $2,615,000 in bonds maturing
in 2015 and $8 million in bonds maturing in 2029. JPMorgan
Chase serves as the trustee for both bond issues, which have
been sold to a private third party.
The Woodhill project was completed using
the Frost loan, the bond issue and rental income generated
by the property itself. Rental income, now the source of repayment
for the bonds, also enabled SAHA to continue rehab work on
other Woodhill units. SAHA went to great lengths to accommodate
its tenants during the process. While work on Phase 1 was
under way, tenants were temporarily relocated to Phase 2 and
other properties.
Woodhill has received project-based
Section 8 funding for the 50 units it’s required to rent to
very low-income people. The remaining units are priced to
target individuals and families whose incomes fall between
50 and 80 percent of the area median, a group with a big demand
for housing. "That’s our income target for our privately
financed properties. We can’t go below 50 percent of the median
income because the numbers don’t work," says Melvin Braziel,
SAHA president and CEO.
Today, Woodhill Phase 1 consists of
25 buildings housing 212 apartments, two laundry rooms, an
office, equipment storage space and a pool. In Phase 2, 16
buildings house 320 apartments, two laundry rooms, an equipment
and maintenance shed, a clubhouse and a pool.
"Woodhill is a good-looking development
that, compared with other multifamily properties, would probably
be rated as a B because it’s older and has low-maintenance
landscaping," says Frank Jasso, SAHA vice president of
Architectural and Construction Services.
Located in one of San Antonio’s fastest
growing neighborhoods, Woodhill is close to a new class A
property and adjacent to new single-family housing. "The
increased competition in the area forces us to keep the property
looking good," Jasso says.
SAHA properties enjoy a good reputation
in San Antonio, Braziel says. But he and SAHA staff members
work hard to maintain community support by talking to the
neighbors of proposed SAHA property. When talking to them,
Braziel always asks, "When a private-sector property
needs repair, who can you complain to? If SAHA messes up,
you know who to call."
The city council appoints the SAHA board,
he points out. "We can’t ignore the community. We have
to respond."
—Diana Mendoza
What is a Public
Facility Corporation?
Chapter 303 of Texas’
Local Government Code provides for the creation
of public facility corporations with the broadest
possible powers to finance or provide for the
acquisition, construction and rehabilitation of
public facilities at the lowest possible borrowing
cost.
A sponsor—such as a municipality,
county, school district or housing authority—may
create one or more of the nonprofit public facility
corporations to:
- Issue bonds to purchase sponsor obligations.
- Finance public facilities on behalf of the
sponsor.
- Issue bonds on the sponsor’s behalf to finance
the cost of the public facilities.
- Loan the proceeds of the obligations to other
entities to accomplish the sponsor’s purposes.
To learn more about public
facility corporations, see the Texas Legislature’s
web site at www.capitol.state.tx.us/statutes/lg/lg0030300toc.html [off-site]. |
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San Antonio
Housing Authority
Woodhill Apartments Rehab Project
SAHA acquired Woodhill
from HUD in 1994 for $1 plus a commitment to spend
$4.8 million on rehabilitating the property. However,
when the work got started, SAHA discovered the
cost to rehab Woodhill far exceeded HUD’s original
estimates. Extensive interior and exterior work
on Phase 1 and minor repairs to the exterior of
Phase 2 were completed in September 2001 at a
cost of $11,370,000.
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The Changing
Face of Public Housing
On the edge of downtown Dallas, the
city’s oldest federally funded public housing is undergoing
a major renovation. Roseland Homes’ 611 apartments, built
in 1942, are being reduced to 486 units. The Dallas Housing
Authority (DHA) site will provide 259 apartments for families,
100 high-rise units for the elderly and 40 townhouses for
home ownership. On completion, 87 market-rate apartments will
be available to the general public.
About 130 miles south of Dallas, the
Temple Housing Authority (THA) has built and sold 262 single-family
homes and owns and operates student housing at Temple College,
a child development center and a senior citizens center.Along
the U.S.–Mexico border, Metro Affordable Housing, a community
development corporation and affiliate of the Laredo Housing
Authority (LHA), has built 10 of 20 single-family homes and
is preparing to build 30 single-room units for transitional
housing and a 160-unit multifamily complex.
Sound like yesterday’s public housing
projects? Hardly.
Public housing authorities are evolving.
They have become developers, community partners and social
services providers. They are supplying affordable housing
in many forms, including improved rental units for housing-choice
(Section 8) voucher recipients, single-family homes available
for ownership, and apartments and townhouses that rent at
market rates. While many PHAs have a ways to go, the Dallas,
Temple and Laredo housing authorities are good examples of
how the entrepreneurial spirit is bringing a new perspective
to public housing.
For many years, public housing meant
large concentrations of low-income families in impoverished
neighborhoods. But a shift in thinking about how to assist
those with very low incomes, as well as legislative changes
in the 1990s, has led PHAs to replace centralized projects
with smaller, mixed-income developments in scattered sites
throughout a community.
Dallas
Partnerships with corporations and financial
institutions have been key to expanding DHA’s services.
"For our families, providing affordable
housing is only the first step," says Ann Lott, DHA president
and CEO. "We also have to work on the psychosocial problems
people face when they are in a crippling economic situation."
DHA has taken a holistic approach to
address these issues, forming partnerships with Bank One,
Walgreens, Marriott, Goodwill and others to offer preemployment
skills training, GED classes and job fairs. Through a program
offered by Bank One and Goodwill of Dallas, DHA residents
can receive training for bank teller and other entry-level
positions.
PHAs are no longer relying solely on
HUD money to meet the demand for their services. Instead,
they’re using a mix of financing.
For example, renovating the Dallas authority’s
Roseland Homes is costing $75 million. DHA is using $35 million
in HOPE VI funds. The remaining $40 million is being funded
with low-income tax credits, private activity bonds, the Federal
Home Loan Bank’s Affordable Housing Program money and loans
from several Dallas-area banks.
Says Lott, "Being able to seek
out a variety of funding sources gives DHA the opportunity
to provide a healthy mix in our housing developments."
Temple
Hal Rose, executive director of THA,
caught the entrepreneurial bug years ago. Rose anticipated
changes in the role of public housing authorities and began
taking cues from HUD in the ’90s.
In 1997, THA launched a home-ownership
program with the building of 41 single-family homes for families
with incomes between 60 and 80 percent of the area median.
"The city, banks, mortgage companies, Texas Department
of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA), builders and the
housing authority all came together to make this happen,"
Rose says.THA acquired land from the city and developed lots
for single-family homes. The city reduced building fees and
provided infrastructure. Builders purchased the lots from
THA and built homes that were sold to families that had graduated
from a home-ownership counseling program. The homes, which
sold for under $64,145, range from 950 to 1,150 square feet,
with two to four bedrooms and one bath. Among the amenities
are exterior brick veneer on all four sides, an engineered
foundation, and central air and heat. Of the 262 homes this
program produced, 33 were bought by families who were making
the move from public housing to home ownership.
THA administers the home-ownership program,
obtaining HUD HOME funds through TDHCA and supplements from
the city to provide $10,000 in down payment assistance to
each buyer. Through the down payment assistance program, borrowers
can use funds for down payment and closing costs, as well
as for principal reduction or to buy down their interest rate,
says Dave Kuebler, vice president and branch manager of Guaranty
Residential Lending, a Guaranty Bank subsidiary. The point
is to find the best match of lending product and individual.
Kuebler stresses that a new home’s low maintenance costs can
make all the difference in affordability in the long run.
In 2000, HUD recognized THA’s Affordable
Homeownership Program as a Best Practices winner in Texas.
Laredo
"Families don’t want to live in
a development labeled as assisted housing," says Jose
Ceballos, special projects director for LHA and its Metro
affiliate. "Most families strive to live in an area where
they feel the pride of home ownership, even if they need a
little assistance from us."
To help them accomplish this, Metro
tries to build homes that look like other houses in the market.
"What goes on behind the scenes to make a house affordable
yet attractive is Metro’s business; what stands in front of
the home is a proud family."
Ceballos says that legislative reform
such as HOPE VI and the Quality Housing and Work Responsibility
Act (QHWRA) fundamentally changed the way public housing authorities
do business. The HOPE VI program works to replace public housing
complexes with mixed-income housing; QHWRA allows PHAs to
own, operate, assist or otherwise participate in mixed-financing
projects.
"Our greatest challenge had been
finding a way to meet housing needs in a saturated multifamily
market when all we had was our housing-choice vouchers,"
says Ceballos. "Because landlords can choose to accept
or deny the vouchers, many families are driven to colonias
or other places of below-standard housing."
To address the situation, the housing
authority created Metro as a nonprofit subsidiary; then Metro
obtained status as a community housing development organization.
As such, Metro is able to access HOME funds from HUD.
Next, Metro forged community partnerships
to develop affordable housing. Metro joined with the city
of Laredo, Fannie Mae and International Bank of Commerce (IBC)
to build 20 single-family homes for a lease–purchase program.
These homes are available to families living in public housing
or participating in the housing authority’s family self-sufficiency
program.
Metro built the homes on land provided
by the city and used the city’s HOME funds to partially finance
the construction. IBC originated the lease–purchase mortgage
loans to Metro, and Fannie Mae purchased the loans through
a product created specifically for Metro. Fannie Mae worked
with Metro to tailor mortgage guidelines that helped housing
authority residents qualify.
During the lease period, families make
rental payments equal to the monthly principal, interest and
taxes on the mortgage. They also use a savings account to
set aside money that will go toward a down payment. In addition,
borrowers are required to contribute a 1 percent down payment
from their own funds.
Prospective homebuyers have one to three
years to achieve qualifying credit status and become eligible
to assume the loan from Metro, giving families the time to
resolve any past credit problems while saving money for the
down payment.
"Having the housing authority form
Metro as its development entity has helped create more affordable
housing in Laredo," says IBC Vice President Fernando
de la Cerda. "We are helping develop homeowners and long-standing
contributors to the community."
—Veronica Garza and Jackie Hoyer
Public Housing
in the United States
1933
National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 creates
the Public Works Administration, allowing for
the construction of public housing.
1937
Cedar Springs Place in Dallas becomes
the first public housing project in Texas built
under the PWA.
Housing Act of 1937
establishes and funds the Public Housing
Administration.
Santa Rita Courts
in Austin becomes the first public housing
development in the nation built under the Housing
Act of 1937.
1940
Lanham Act of 1940 provides federal funds
to build public housing for defense industry workers.
1948
10,332 public housing units are constructed
in Texas over the first 10 years of public housing.
1953–55
West Dallas complex of 3,500 barracks-style
homes becomes the largest public housing development
in the nation.
1965
Department of Housing and Urban Development
is created as a Cabinet-level agency to administer
the public housing program.
Section 23 program
authorizes housing authorities to lease units
from private owners and sublease them to low-income
tenants.
1968
Fair Housing Act bars discrimination
based on race, color, religion, national origin,
sex, familial status and disability in the sale
and rental of housing and other real estate transactions.
1974
Housing and Community Development Act of 1974
increases low-income families’ choice
of housing with Section 8 tenant-based certificates.
1987
Housing and Community Development Act of 1987
creates a voucher program that requires
families to pay approximately 30 percent of their
adjusted incomes toward rent.
1993
HOPE VI program encourages PHAs to seek
new partnerships with private entities to create
mixed-finance and mixed-income affordable housing.
1998
Quality Housing and Work Responsibility Act creates
incentives and opportunities for residents to
work, become self-sufficient and ultimately transition
into private housing. |
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Bank Qualified
Tax-Exempt Obligations
Travis County Housing Authority
Travis County Housing Authority (TCHA)
manages more than 200 affordable and public housing units
in the small communities surrounding Austin. TCHA administers
575 housing-choice vouchers for low-income families, runs
a family self-sufficiency program and is developing both affordable
and market-rate housing. All of this takes office space, and
until 2001, TCHA lacked a permanent home.
But then TCHA Executive Director Wiley
Hopkins found a suitable 7,800-square-foot building in East
Austin. The building, vacant for almost a year, was located
in a low-income neighborhood.
"I felt the building was an anchor
in the neighborhood’s revitalization effort, and the central
location would be easy for our clients," he says. TCHA
had the 10 percent down payment for the $725,000 building
but needed a way to finance the remainder.
Looking at the Options
Public housing authorities (PHAs) can
receive tax-exempt financing for public facilities, such as
the office building TCHA wanted to buy. Tax-exempt financing
can also be used for low-cost financing of affordable housing
owned by PHAs.
Typically, the tax-exempt financing
is in the form of a bond. The cost to issue the bonds is high,
so most bond issues are for $10 million or more to be cost-effective.
Issuing a bond requires legal opinions on the tax-exempt status
of the issuing entity and the project, and the bond must be
underwritten and rated by a credit rating firm.
In this case, TCHA needed to finance
only $697,000 to purchase the building. But it also needed
low-cost, tax-exempt financing to make the deal work. The
housing authority created a subsidiary, Travis County Public
Facility Corp., to purchase the building and lease it to the
housing authority and other nonprofits. Under Texas law, the
PFC qualifies for tax-exempt financing.
Hopkins approached Kathaleen Ford-Smith,
a vice president at Bank of America, seeking financing using
a bank-qualified tax-exempt obligation (QTEO).
According to Ford-Smith, banks can originate
QTEOs for public facility corporations that issue less than
$10 million in bonds during a calendar year. Like a bond transaction,
to qualify as tax-exempt financing the project must receive
a legal opinion regarding the tax-exempt status of the PFC
and the project. However, Ford-Smith explains, banks can carry
the debt on its books rather than sell the bond on the open
market. The bank will not have to pay income tax on the interest
income and can take an expense deduction of up to 80 percent
of the cost of funds.
"Booking the debt as a QTEO saves
the borrower money because there is no debt rating and the
underwriting fees are lower," she says. "Because
the cost of originating the debt is less, originating smaller
tax-exempt obligations can be justified."
Putting the Package Together
Bank of America originated a QTEO to
the public facility corporation for $697,000 at 6G percent
interest. The term of the debt is seven years, with a 15-year
amortization. The debt will be repaid from rental income generated
by leasing about two-thirds of the building to other governmental
entities or nonprofits and income from ongoing TCHA operations.
The cost of originating the tax-exempt
financing was far lower than the fees for issuing bonds going
to the open market. Among the costs were attorney fees for
creating the PFC and the legal opinion on the project’s tax-exempt
status, as well as the loan origination fee.
The loan probably would not have been
economically feasible without tax-exempt financing, says Ford-Smith.
Taxable financing for a building such as the one TCHA bought
would cost at least 8 percent a year, with loan origination
fees of about $8,000. The 6G percent interest rate for the
Bank of America loan lowers the monthly payment by more than
$670 and over the term of the loan saves TCHA almost $56,000
in interest. These savings significantly exceed the additional
cost of originating the loan as a tax-exempt obligation.
"Typically, tax-exempt financing
is good business," says Ford-Smith. "The lower interest
rate helps make the credit risk more reasonable, and the debt
can be structured as a profitable transaction for the bank."
—Nancy Vickrey
For Tax Treatment
of QTEOs
Sections 256(b), 265(b)
(3),103(a) and 142(d) (3) of the Internal Revenue
Code provide guidance on the tax treatment of
bank-qualified tax exempt obligations.
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| About Banking
and Community Perspectives
Perspectives
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Community Affairs Office
P.O. Box 655906
Dallas, Texas 75265-5906
Gloria Vasquez Brown
Vice President |
Nancy C. Vickrey
Assistant Vice President and
Community Affairs Officer |
Diana Mendoza
Community Affairs Specialist |
Karen Riley
Community Affairs Specialist |
Jackie Hoyer
Houston Branch
Community Affairs Advisor |
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The views expressed are
those of the authors and should not be attributed
to the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal
Reserve System. Articles may be reprinted on the
condition that the source is credited and a copy
is provided to the Community Affairs Office. |
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