PRICE Act
Sponsored By: Representative Bonamici
Introduced
Summary
Preserve long-term affordability of manufactured housing communities. This bill would create a competitive grant program under the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 to fund preservation, revitalization, and long-term affordability of manufactured housing communities through infrastructure, home repair and replacement, planning, and resident services.
Show full summary
- Residents and families gain funding for infrastructure, utilities, reconstruction or repair of homes, replacement housing that meets modern standards, health and safety upgrades, and services like relocation assistance and eviction prevention. Eligible communities must be affordable to low- and moderate-income households not exceeding 120 percent of area median income.
- Indian Tribes and tribally designated housing entities are eligible and may receive a specific set-aside of funds to support tribal manufactured housing communities.
- Local governments, housing authorities, resident-owned cooperatives, nonprofits, community development financial institutions, and states can compete for grants for land acquisition, expansion infrastructure, and planning. The Secretary may waive many statutory or regulatory requirements to facilitate use of funds but may not waive fair housing, nondiscrimination, labor standards, or environmental requirements.
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Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
1 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Grants to upgrade manufactured home communities
The bill would create competitive grants to fix and preserve manufactured home communities. Grants could fund utilities, roads, land, planning, and health and safety work. They could also pay for home repairs or replacements, relocation help, eviction prevention, and down payment help. Communities would need to mainly serve low- and moderate-income people, up to 120% of area median income. They must be resident-owned or kept affordable for the long term. Grants could not rehab homes built before June 15, 1976; any replacements must meet federal safety standards. The Secretary would set selection rules and may set aside money for Tribes. The Secretary could waive some admin rules, but not fair housing, nondiscrimination, labor, or environmental rules. It would also adjust other housing rules so these grants are clearly allowed. Funding would depend on future appropriations.
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Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Bonamici
OR • D
Cosponsors
Bacon
NE • R
Sponsored 7/17/2025
Salinas
OR • D
Sponsored 7/17/2025
Harder (CA)
CA • D
Sponsored 9/9/2025
Nunn (IA)
IA • R
Sponsored 9/26/2025
Whitesides
CA • D
Sponsored 11/25/2025
McDonald Rivet
MI • D
Sponsored 12/12/2025
Bresnahan
PA • R
Sponsored 12/19/2025
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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