Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 13— - NATIONAL HOUSING › § 1701y
Creates the National Homeownership Foundation to help private and public groups expand homeownership and housing for lower‑income families. The Foundation must encourage investment, offer counseling and technical help, and give grants and loans to organizations that run homeownership programs. It is set up as a nonprofit corporation in Washington, D.C., not as a federal agency, and Congress can change or end its charter. No part of its profits may go to private people, it must stay nonpolitical, and officers and employees cannot be paid more than the salary of a Cabinet department head. The Foundation may take donations and grants, may contract with public and private groups, and may use only donated funds or interest earned on its loans to pay principal and interest on any borrowings. The Foundation must have an 18‑member board: 15 members appointed by the President with Senate approval and three ex officio members (the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, the Secretary of Agriculture, and the Director of the Office of Economic Opportunity). The President must appoint the first 15 members within 30 days after August 1, 1968. Appointed members serve three‑year terms, with the first group staggered so five terms end after one year, five after two years, and five after three years. No more than five appointed members at any time may be full‑time government employees. Nonfederal appointed members may be paid up to $100 per day when doing board work and receive travel expenses. The Board picks an Executive Director, makes bylaws, and must publish them on request. The Foundation can train staff, sponsor research and information programs, and make grants or loans to cover start‑up, preconstruction, and counseling costs if the applicant shows federal funds are not available. It must consult with HUD and other agencies, report to the President and Congress within 120 days after each fiscal year, be audited by the Government Accountability Office (with the audit report to Congress within six and one‑half months), deposit funds in banks that support housing, and may receive up to $10,000,000 in appropriations available until spent.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
12 U.S.C. § 1701y
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73