Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 44— - DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT › § 3545
HUD must tell the public in the Federal Register when money or other help is available, how to apply, and any deadlines. HUD must publish the rules for choosing winners at least 30 days before an application deadline. HUD will only give money in response to a written application in a HUD‑approved form, and it must keep enough records to show why awards were given or denied. HUD and any state or local government that passes on HUD money must publish funding decisions at least quarterly in the Federal Register. Those notices must name the recipient, identify the project, list the dollar amount, give the legal basis for the decision, and include other details HUD thinks are needed. HUD must make each application and related documents available to the public for at least 5 years, starting no less than 30 days after the award. HUD can skip the publication rules in an emergency but must explain why within 30 days. People or groups that expect to get more than $200,000 in HUD‑area assistance in one fiscal year must tell HUD about other public help for the project, who has a financial interest in the project, and a report of sources and uses of money. They must update that info within 30 days if something major changes. HUD must make sure its help is no more than needed after counting other aid, and it can adjust awards if facts change. If HUD finds a likely violation of the disclosure rules, it can stop a selection, cancel an award, take back funds, impose sanctions (including debarment), or take other steps. HUD may also impose civil money penalties up to $10,000 per violation. People must get a hearing before a penalty. After using HUD’s appeals, a person can ask the U.S. court of appeals to review the penalty within 20 days of HUD’s final order. If someone refuses to pay a final penalty, HUD can ask the Attorney General to sue. HUD can settle or change penalties, write rules to run this program, and must send collected fines to the Treasury. Department = Department of Housing and Urban Development; Secretary = HUD Secretary; person = any individual or organization; assistance = contracts, grants, loans, mortgage insurance, or similar help; knowingly = actual knowledge or deliberate ignorance or reckless disregard. The rule becomes effective on the date HUD sets in its regulations after notice and public comment.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 3545
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73