Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 8— - LOW-INCOME HOUSING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II–A— - HOPE FOR PUBLIC HOUSING HOMEOWNERSHIP › § 1437aaa–2
The Secretary can give implementation grants to groups that run approved homeownership programs, including co-op programs. Grants can pay for many things tied to those programs, such as architectural and engineering work; buying a public housing project so it can be sold to eligible families; rehabilitation done to the Secretary’s standards; lead-paint hazard removal required by law; administrative costs (no more than 15% of the grant); developing resident management organizations (only if not already funded elsewhere); counseling and training for buyers and owners; tenant relocation (voluntary or temporary during rehab); some operating costs and replacement reserves (but not more than the project would have gotten from the Operating Fund with comparable adjustments, and not for scattered-site public housing); replacement housing plans; legal fees; ongoing training for the recipient; and economic development to help residents become self-sufficient. Grant recipients must provide matching contributions equal to at least 25% of the grant (not counting post-sale operating costs and replacement housing). Matches can be cash (with some federal funds excluded), non‑Federal payment of admin costs, waived taxes or fees, land value, infrastructure investments, or other in-kind items the Secretary allows. The Secretary may reduce the match using the formula in section 220(d) of the Cranston-Gonzalez Act. Applicants must use the Secretary’s form and include details like the amount and uses requested; any needed Section 8 help; the applicant’s experience; a description and cost schedule of the homeownership program showing affordability; tenant and project info; proof of matching resources and financing; sales prices and terms; resale limits; management plans; a local housing strategy certification; and civil‑rights and fair-housing assurances. The Secretary will set selection rules (covering ability to carry out the program, feasibility, tenant affordability, program quality, local plan priority, geographic balance, and local rental supply). Grants are only for projects in jurisdictions that meet certain housing-plan requirements. The Secretary must tell applicants whether they are approved within 6 months and may give conditional approval for Section 8 replacement assistance that depends on future funding.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 1437aaa–2
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73