Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 8— - LOW-INCOME HOUSING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II–A— - HOPE FOR PUBLIC HOUSING HOMEOWNERSHIP › § 1437aaa–4
The Secretary must approve any plan to move a public housing project from the housing agency to another group, and then the agency must transfer the project under the approved homeownership plan. When picking families for homeownership, current tenants who qualify get first priority, and families who finished a Secretary‑specified self‑sufficiency program get second priority. The Secretary can set cost limits for activities under this program. Even if a project or unit is bought, the Secretary will keep paying annual contributions for the project, but not more than the maximum in section 1437c(a). Operating Fund money cannot be used for a project after the housing agency sells it. Money from initial sales must pay for the homeownership program (like running costs, repairs, business help for low‑income families, support services, and more if the Secretary approves). Homeowners may sell their units, but the program can limit resales. Resident management groups, resident councils, or cooperatives that run the unit have the first right to buy at the firm contract price. If they do not buy and the buyer is not low‑income, the housing agency or grant recipient may buy at that price. The homeowner must sign a note for the difference between market value and purchase price, secured by a mortgage. If the unit is sold within 6 years, the family’s gain is limited to what they paid in equity, the value of family‑paid improvements, and a limited inflation allowance set when first sold. Sales from year 6 to year 20 must allow the program or Secretary to recapture the declining balance on that note. Fifty percent of any net sales proceeds the homeowner cannot keep goes to the entity that sold the units for program uses; the other 50% goes back to the Secretary, subject to appropriation limits. Recipients must keep records, and the Secretary and the Comptroller General can audit them. The rules can be enforced in court and prevailing parties may get attorney fees. No more than $250,000 from specified program funds may be used for economic development in any one project. Recipients must transfer ownership to tenants within a reasonable time set by the Secretary; until then they must run the housing as rentals with Secretary‑approved tenant selection rules and give written reasons to rejected applicants. To get a certain grant, a resident management group or council must show 3 years of effective management or hire a qualified manager.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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42 U.S.C. § 1437aaa–4
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73