Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 13— - NATIONAL HOUSING › § 1701q–1
The Secretary can fine owners of buildings with five or more living units that have the specific federal mortgage covered by this law if the owner knowingly breaks important written promises. One trigger is when an owner agreed to use outside income to make cash payments for the mortgage, reserves, repairs, or other project bills and then knowingly and seriously fails to do that. The fine for this can be no more than the loss the government would face if the property were sold at foreclosure. The Secretary can also fine owners for many other serious breaks of the written regulatory agreement. Examples include selling or pledging the property or project rents without written approval, transferring management rights or beneficial interests without approval, making major physical changes without approval, charging extra deposits beyond one month’s rent plus the first month’s rent, failing to keep security deposits in a separate trust, paying over $500 for goods or services at much higher than local rates, not keeping proper books and records, missing the audited annual financial report due within 60 days after the fiscal year ends (unless the Secretary allows more time), not providing occupancy reports or needed information, failing to make mortgage, tax, insurance, or reserve payments when there is enough income, and changing corporate articles or bylaws without approval. Each violation under this list can be fined up to $25,000. The Secretary must make rules for how fines are handled. A fine can only be imposed after a hearing, and an owner has 15 days after receiving notice to ask for that hearing or the fine becomes final. The Secretary may review a decision within 90 days. When setting the fine amount, the Secretary will consider things like how serious the violation was, past violations, ability to pay, harm to tenants or the public, and deterrence. After using all administrative steps, an owner can ask a U.S. court of appeals to review the penalty within 20 days. If the owner still won’t pay after all reviews are finished, the Secretary can ask the Attorney General to sue in federal district court for the money, and the court may include the government’s legal costs. The Secretary may reduce or cancel fines. “Knowingly” means actual knowledge, deliberate ignorance, or reckless disregard. All collected fines go into the housing fund specified by law.
Full Legal Text
Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 1701q–1
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73