Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 13— - NATIONAL HOUSING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - MORTGAGE INSURANCE › § 1715z–11a
HUD must offer certain HUD-owned residential properties to local governments or local nonprofit community development corporations before selling them to others. From fiscal year 1997 on, HUD may manage and sell HUD-owned multifamily properties and may use grants and loans from the General Insurance Fund for needed rehab, demolition, or construction. Grants given in fiscal years 2006 through 2010 are allowed only if Congress provides money ahead of time and those grants cannot come from the General Insurance Fund. A “qualified HUD property” is owned by HUD and, at the first notice, has been owned or been vacant or substandard for at least 6 months. Qualified properties include unoccupied or substandard multifamily projects and certain unoccupied 1- to 4-family homes that meet the rules. HUD must set clear rules and deadlines. Local governments and community development corporations get notice and time to ask for properties. HUD must give them first chance to buy. HUD may offer single-family properties to local governments for $1 when selling at that price does not cost the federal government more than other disposal methods. Nonprofits may buy only on a cost-recovery basis (price = appraised value plus HUD’s costs since it took title). HUD must accept qualifying offers in the offered period or explain rejections in writing. If no acceptable offer arrives, HUD can sell by negotiation, bidding, or other ways. HUD must cancel any debt tied to a property before transfer. HUD must assess properties on December 21, 2000, when it acquires them, and periodically after that. Transfers must support neighborhood revitalization and follow local rules. Properties set aside for the homeless are not covered while they are used for that purpose. Definitions (one line each): community development corporation – nonprofit that promotes housing for low-income families; cost recovery basis – sale price equals appraised value plus HUD’s costs since acquisition; multifamily housing project – as defined elsewhere; residential property – multifamily or single-family; Secretary – HUD Secretary; severe physical problems – major defects that make units unsafe or unusable; single family property – 1- to 4-family residence; substandard – 25% or more units with severe problems; unit of general local government – the local government with jurisdiction; unoccupied – local government certified the property is not inhabited. HUD had to issue interim rules within 30 days and final rules within 60 days after December 21, 2000.
Full Legal Text
Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 1715z–11a
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73