Housing
Roundtable Update
October 16, 2008
Click here to download this update as a PDF file.
Since our last update, much has changed in Illinois’ affordable
housing world due to the recently accelerated national economic
downturn sparked many months ago by the foreclosure crisis. In
addition to the usual budget and legislative updates, in this newsletter
we attempt to provide a relatively concise explanation of some
of the major issues impacting affordable housing development statewide,
as well as the response of federal and state government.
General Assembly Restores Supportive Housing Funding But
Action Needed by Governor
Late in September, the General Assembly passed two pieces of legislation
to restore about $200 million of the $1.4 billion in cuts made
by Governor Rod Blagojevich to balance the fiscal year 2009 budget
that was passed by the General Assembly in May. Funds restored
included $4 million in new funding for supportive housing services
and much larger sums for substance abuse treatment, mental health
treatment and the operation of state parks.
On October 7, Governor Blagojevich signed one of these pieces
of legislation, Senate Bill 790, into law. SB 790 authorizes
the transfer (or “sweep”) of more than $221 million
from special state funds to the General Revenue Fund. However,
the Governor has not taken any action on the companion appropriations
bill, Senate Bill 1103, that actually restores the funding.
The supportive housing services line item will fund social services
in 769 units of new supportive housing that will serve over 900
homeless men, women, and children and/or people who have mental
illness or other special needs. These 769 units leverage at least
5 times the $4 million in state funds, or over $20 million in federal
funding, and an additional $600,000 will be returned to Illinois
in federal Medicaid reimbursement funding.
The Supportive Housing Providers Association is urging people
to contact Governor Blagojevich asking him to sign SB 1103 into
law. For more information, contact Janet Hasz at the Supportive
Housing Providers Association. Her email is supportivehsg@aol.com.
Illinois Affordable Housing Trust Fund Suffering from
Declining Revenues
The Illinois Affordable Housing Trust Fund, funded by one-half
of the proceeds of the state real estate transfer tax, is suffering
from declining revenues caused by the soft housing market. The
poor fiscal condition of the Trust Fund was compounded by the recent
sweep of $2 million from the Trust Fund (see previous article).
During the first three months of the current 2009 fiscal year,
July through September, Trust Fund Revenue was $16.4 million—11%
less than in fiscal year 2008 and 28% less than in fiscal year
2007. If receipts remain stable for the rest of the year,
total revenue for fiscal year 2009 would be just over $65 million,
or only about 70% of all the appropriations made from the Trust
Fund for the current year based on overoptimistic anticipated
revenue of $91.6 million.
The State is prioritizing available Trust Fund resources for existing
affordable housing development projects, the Homelessness Prevention
Program and a community reintegration program that allows people
with disabilities to move from institutions into housing that allows
them a higher level of independence.
In July, the Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) announced
that until further notice they will not accept new single-family
applications for Trust Fund resources and any new multi-family
housing applications to the Trust Fund are unlikely to be funded
until fiscal year 2010. Other programs funded by the Trust
Fund, such as housing programs in the Department of Corrections
and the Department of Aging, are also unlikely to be funded this
year. In addition, $5 million in Homelessness Prevention
funding that was to come from the Trust Fund is being paid for
with federal Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) funding.
Although it impossible to know for sure, the recent $2 million
sweep of the Trust Fund appears to have happened when Speaker Madigan’s
staff quickly put together a fund sweeps proposal and at the time
the Trust Fund showed a balance in excess of $9 million. What
the fund balance did not show was that the obligated funds within
30 days of that date were in excess of the fund balance. Political
pressure to pass the sweeps bill through the House within hours
of its introduction prevented consideration of any changes to the
bill after the true fiscal situation of the Trust Fund came to
light.
Resources for the Illinois Affordable Housing Trust Fund will
obviously continue to be a concern in the next fiscal year, as
well. Housing Action Illinois is working with other groups
to explore appropriate policy responses.
Other State Housing Resources Negatively Impacted by Larger
Economic Trends
Declines in Illinois Affordable Housing Trust Fund revenue are
being compounded by the diminishing value of Low Income Housing
Tax Credits (LIHTCs), the federal program that is Illinois’ largest
resource for the development of affordable rental housing. A
recent article in Affordable Housing Finance magazine
estimate that as many as 10% to 20% of the affordable housing deals
receiving credits this year may not find investors, and the developers
that do find buyers will likely receive less money for their LIHTCs
than expected, leaving large gaps in their project budgets. (Tax
Credits are less marketable for numerous factors, including declining
corporate profits and the resulting reduced need to offset taxable
income with the purchase of tax credits.) Many projects that had
already received their LIHTC allocation and were supposedly completely
funded are going back to the IHDA to seek additional money to fill
those gaps.
The economic downturn is also negatively impacting IHDA’s
homeownership finance programs. On October 14, IHDA announced
it is temporarily suspending their single-family loan program,
known as the I-Loan program or the Mortgage Revenue Bond program,
because they can currently not find investors in the municipal
bond market to secure new funding for the program. The program
offers 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with below market interest
rates to qualified purchasers through private lenders
IHDA’s announcement stressed that the existing single-family
loan portfolio is strong and has not seen the same upswing in defaults
and foreclosures as in the subprime market. IHDA also
stated that all loans that have been reserved prior to the suspension
will be funded as scheduled and that they intend to re-enter the
financial markets as soon as it is economically feasible. IHDA’s
entire statement is available at http://www.ihda.org/.
Lack of activity in various tax-exempt bond markets in recent
weeks has negatively impacted state and local governments all over
the country in terms of their ability to manage day-to-day cash
flow and move forward on long-term capital projects. For example,
in September 2007 state and local governments issued about $23
billion of fixed-rate municipal bonds. This September they issued
$15 billion—all but about $2.2 billion of it in the first
two weeks of the month, according to Municipal Market Advisors,
a research and strategy firm.
$172.5 Million In Neighborhood Stabilization Funds Awarded
Statewide
On September 26, the United States Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) announced the formula allocations for the Neighborhood
Stabilization Program (NSP), supplemental Community Development
Block Grant (CDBG) funds to acquire and redevelop foreclosed properties.
The funds were appropriated as part of the Housing and Economic
Recovery Act of 2008, signed into law at the end of July. The total
allocation statewide is $172.5 million. The City of Chicago
and 12 other local governments received allocations, as did the
State of Illinois. State funds can be used in parts of the
Illinois not otherwise funded and to supplement funds allocated
to local governments.
Each recipient government must submit a plan to use the funds
to HUD by December 1 and will have 18 months to obligate these
funds. Any funds not spent within four years will be recaptured
by HUD. Draft plans must be made available on the Internet
and there is a mandatory two-week public comment period prior to
submission of the plans. Housing Action Illinois will post
links to draft plans as they become available at http://www.housingactionil.org. More
information on the NSP is available at http://www.hud.gov.
HOPE for Homeowners and the National Housing Trust Fund
Two additional provisions of the Housing and Economic Recovery
Act are the HOPE for Homeowners Program and the National Housing
Trust Fund.
Through HOPE for Homeowners, which went into effect on October
1, borrowers having difficulty paying their mortgages are eligible
to refinance into Federal Housing Administration (FHA)-insured
mortgages they can afford. Available only to owner-occupants,
borrowers must demonstrate their long-term ability to repay the
mortgage and meet several other requirements. More information
is available at http://www.fha.gov.
The National Low Income Housing Coalition has a released an FAQ
on the National Housing Trust Fund. The FAQ is partly in
response to concerns that the Trust Fund will not have any revenue
in the aftermath of the government takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac, which provide the Trust Fund’s dedicated revenue sources. The
FAQ points out that funding is based on a percentage of Fannie’s
and Freddie’s new business, not their profits. The
FAQ and other updates are available at http://www.nlihc.org.
Community Reinvestment Act Unfairly Blamed for Economic Downturn
As the media attempts to explain the roots of the foreclosure
crisis and the economic downturn, and debate over the proper strategy
to restore economic health heightens as the Presidential election
nears, the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) has come under increasing
attack from those rejecting the idea that free market principles
have to be balanced with the regulation of markets. Established
by the federal government in 1977, CRA monitors the level of lending,
investments, and services in low- and moderate-income neighborhoods
traditionally underserved by lending institutions. A request
by lenders to expand services or merge with another lender can
be delayed or denied based on CRA performance.
Powerful arguments against current criticisms of CRA include the
facts that only about 25% of subprime mortgage loans were made
by institutions covered by CRA and that CRA penalizes banks for
reckless, irresponsible and predatory lending. The National
Community Reinvestment Coalition, http://www.ncrc.org,
has lots of background information on CRA and Chicago’s own
Woodstock Institute, http://www.woodstockinst.org,
has recently posted their response to CRA critics.
Attorney General Settles with Countrywide and Bank of
America
On October 6, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan announced
a $8.7 billion settlement in a predatory lending lawsuit against
Countrywide, the nation’s largest mortgage lender and servicer.
Madigan led the national settlement with California Attorney General
Jerry Brown. Nine other states joined the settlement. This
settlement establishes the first mandatory loan modification program
in the country, and hopefully will serve as a model for other lenders
and the federal government for how to help homeowners on the verge
of foreclosure. Almost 11,000 borrowers in Illinois are expected
to be eligible for loan modifications.
The program will only be available to Countrywide borrowers who
are living in the mortgaged home and who received a subprime loan
or a Pay Option Adjustable Rate Mortgage between January 1, 2004
and December 31, 2007. The borrower must be behind on their
payments or likely to fall behind. The program goes
into effect on December 1. More information is available
at http://www.countrywide.com.
What About the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act?
Most all of the media coverage of the Emergency Economic Stabilization
Act signed into law on October 3, otherwise known as the “$700
Billion Bailout” bill, has focused on the federal government’s
purchase of “troubled assets” and ownership shares
in banks to restore confidence in the stock and credit markets. There
have been few statements from Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
about how homeowners in danger of foreclosure, and renters displaced
due to foreclosure, will be directly assisted by the legislation. This
is the case despite the fact that the law does require the Treasury
Secretary to implement plans to reduce foreclosures for mortgages
and mortgage-backed securities acquired by the federal government
and to permit tenants who are current on their rent to remain in
their homes under the terms of the lease. Hopefully, details
on these initiatives will be available soon. More information
is available at http://www.ustreas.gov.
2007 American Community Survey Is Reminder That Housing
Crisis Isn’t New
On September 23, the United States Census Bureau released data
from the 2007 American Community Survey (ACS), a survey of roughly
3 million households conducted during 2007. Estimates are
available for all geographic areas with a population of at least
65,000. (In December, estimates will be released for all areas
with a population of at least 20,000.) For Illinois as a
whole, 46.6% of all renter households and 38.7% of owner households
with a mortgage paid 30% or more of their income on housing in
2007. In 2005, these statistics were 46.1% and 37.2%, respectively.
Data is available at http://www.census.gov/acs.
Second Funding Round to Administer Rental Housing Support
Program Open
The second of three initial funding rounds for organizations applying
to administer the State Rental Housing Support Program are available. The
deadline to apply is December 1. The application is available on
IHDA’s website at http://www.ihda.org and
can be found on the Rental Housing Support Program’s section
of the site, under Multi-family programs. More information
regarding the application, the application process and general
program information is also available there. Agencies who
want to cover areas not currently being served in Illinois are
encouraged to apply. The Rental Housing Support Program assists
extremely low-income households pay their rent through subsidies
to participating landlords.
Safe Homes Act Amendment Signed Into Law by Governor Blagojevich
On October 6, Governor Blagojevich signed an amendment to the
Safe Homes Act, Senate Bill 2287, into law. The amendment
restricts landlords from disclosing the identities of tenants who
make use of the Safe Homes Act to protect themselves from domestic
violence or sexual assault. Landlords who violate this provision
shall be liable to the tenant for actual damages up to $2,000 and
reasonable legal fees and costs. Developed by the Sargent Shriver
National Center on Poverty Law and Housing Action Illinois, more
information on the Safe Homes Act is available at http://www.povertylaw.org.
Illinois Affordable Housing Month is November 2008
Especially in light all the news summarized above, Affordable
Housing Month in November is a good opportunity for organizations
and individuals throughout the state to raise public awareness
about the importance of affordable, accessible and fair housing
and build momentum for future housing victories through public
education. Housing Action Illinois wants to work with you to plan
activities. Information and resources are available at http://www.housingactionil.org.
Housing Roundtable Contacts
Adam Gross and Susannah Levine, Business and Profession People
for the Public Interest, 312-641-5570.
Bob Palmer and Mimi Chedid, Housing Action Illinois, 312-939-6074.
Summary
of Federal Housing and Economic Recovery Act Available
On July 30, President Bush signed the Housing and
Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (H.R. 3221) into law (Public Law
No: 110-289). The Act represents the most comprehensive response
yet to the American mortgage crisis, and will help families facing
foreclosure keep their homes, help other families avoid foreclosures
in the future, and help the recovery of communities harmed by empty
homes caught in the foreclosure process.
Among its many provisions, the Act will strengthen
neighborhoods hardest hit by the foreclosure crisis by providing
resources to allow cities and states to buy up and rehabilitate
foreclosed properties, providing tax breaks to spur home buying,
establishing the HOPE for Homeowners program to help
delinquent or at-risk borrowers refinance into affordable mortgages
and creating a Housing Trust Fund to boost the nation’s
stock of affordable rental housing in both rural and urban areas
for low and very low-income individuals and families.
The Act also expands and improves the Low-Income
Housing Tax Credit, which is the largest source of federal support
for the construction and rehabilitation of affordable housing,
as well as increasing volume limits on housing bonds to
finance low-income rental housing and first-time homebuyers, while
also providing states with greater flexibility on how to use those
bonds efficiently.
Click here
to download a summary of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act
of 2008.
Housing Action
Illinois 2007 Annual Report Available
August 1, 2008
Dear Members and Supporters:
As the Co-Chairs of the Board of Directors of Housing Action Illinois,
we are proud to present our organization’s 2007 Annual Report.
As challenging as the housing market and political environment
in Illinois continue to be, this annual snapshot reminds us that,
by joining together, we make real the principle that housing is
a basic human right.
During 2007 HAI won an increase in the Emergency Food and Shelter
Grant Program, expanded the protections of the Safe Homes Act for
victims of domestic violence and worked with advocates across our
country to record significant progress toward the National Housing
Trust Fund (which was just passed!). We helped train more than
120 non-profit housing professionals, allowing them to more effectively
and efficiently provide shelter, build housing and provide housing
counseling services.
As an organization, we are embarking on our five-year strategic
plan with Sharon Legenza, our new Executive Director, at the helm.
Sharon brings a wealth of legal skills, housing-related experience
and a new perspective to Housing Action Illinois and we’re
excited about moving forward.
This year of progress would not be possible without the work and
support of our members, our funders and all the other partners
who support our mission to make housing safe, decent, affordable,
and accessible for the people of Illinois. On behalf of the entire
Board of Directors thank you for your contribution to our organization’s
success and your continued support of our efforts.
Cheryll Boswell and Mike Wasserberg
Click here to download our 2007 Annual Report
as a PDF file.
Housing
is Still Out of Reach for Many
HOUSING WAGE IS $16.23 for TWO-BEDROOM APARTMENT IN ILLINOIS
April 7, 2008
According to a report released today, the Housing
Wage for Illinois is $16.23 for a two-bedroom apartment. The Housing
Wage is the hourly wage a family must earn—working 40 hours
a week, 52 weeks a year—to afford a modest two-bedroom
apartment renting for $844. The Housing Wage has increased 25.3%
since 2000.
The report, Out of Reach 2007-2008, was jointly released by the
National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC), a Washington, DC-based
housing advocacy group, and Housing Action Illinois.
Federal guidelines state that no one should spend more than 30%
of their income on housing,including rent or mortgage payments,
utilities, property taxes and insurance.
“As rents continue to rise across the state, Illinois workers
are spending more and more of their income on their housing and
have less money for food, clothing, transportation and other basic
needs,” said
Mimi Chedid, Policy Coordinator for Housing Action Illinois. “The
persistent shortage of affordable rental housing combined with
the current economic slowdown—largely caused by the mortgages
foreclosure crisis—threatens the
economic security of Illinois families.”
In Illinois, among metropolitan and non-metropolitan areas, the
lowest Housing Wage for a two-bedroom apartment is $10.15 in the
metro-east Bond County metropolitan area. The highest housing wage
for a two-bedroom apartment is $18.15 in the Chicago metropolitan
area.
In Illinois, a minimum wage worker earns an hourly wage of $7.50.
In order to afford market rate rents for a two-bedroom apartment,
a minimum wage earner must work 87 hours per week, 52 weeks per
year. Or a household must include 2.2 minimum wage earners working
40 hours per week year-round in order to afford a two-bedroom apartment.
Housing Action Illinois’ mission is to increase and preserve
the supply of decent, affordable, accessible housing in Illinois
for low-and moderate-income households through advocacy, public
education, and technical assistance to nonprofits.
Data for every state, metropolitan area and county in the country
is available online, at www.nlihc.org/oor/oor2008.
Briefing
Book Calls for Affordable Housing in Capital Budget
February 27, 2008
At the State Capitol yesterday a briefing book for state legislators
was released calling for the inclusion of affordable housing funding
in the state’s capital budget.
Governor Blagojevich’s $25 billion capital budget proposal, released on February 20, includes a $300 million "Illinois Community Assets Fund" for economic development activities, affordable housing and health care development for the life of the capital budget, generally three to five years.
“That is a big step in the right direction, but with so many families, communities and businesses suffering because of the lack of affordable housing, Illinois should be investing at least an additional $100 million a year just for housing,” said Adam Gross, Director of the Regional Housing Initiative for Business and Professional People for the Public Interest, one of the book’s authors. “But we’re encouraged that for the first time ever in Illinois affordable housing is in a proposed capital budget.”
To support the need for including affordable housing in the capital budget, the briefing book notes that federal guidelines say that no one should spend more than 30% of their income on housing, but according to the U.S. Census Bureau, 1.5 million households in Illinois—roughly one in three—pay more than 30% of their income for housing and 722,000 households in Illinois—roughly one in six—pay more than 50% of their income for housing.
The briefing book also points out that the housing industry serves as a critical economic engine locally, statewide, and nationally. The authors cited data showing that each dollar spent on residential construction generates an additional $1.27 in additional economic activity through the purchase of construction materials and other means. And new funding for housing construction and rehabilitation would bring back jobs in a sector that has been hard hit by the foreclosure crisis and the economic downturn.
“The foreclosure crisis has refocused attention on the importance of affordable housing in people’s lives and to overall economic health,” said Bob Palmer, Policy Director for Housing Action Illinois, another of the book’s authors. “The briefing book makes the case that if there had been a larger supply of affordable homes, people would not have needed the risky mortgages that they now struggle to repay.”
The book’s authors are encouraging Governor Blagojevich and members of the General Assembly to negotiate a capital budget in a good faith, including identifying a revenue source that does not further harm the state’s long-term fiscal situation and does not unduly burden low-income households.
The briefing book also includes a summary of proposed and recently enacted affordable housing legislation.
The full copy of the briefing book is available here.
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