HUD Probes Paychecks of Public Housing Agency Bosses
Published Date: 5/13/2025
Notice
Summary
HUD wants to collect info about how much top leaders at public housing agencies get paid. They’re asking for your thoughts on this for 60 days before making it official. This helps keep things clear and fair, with no extra costs expected for agencies or the public.
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Collecting Public Housing Executive Pay
HUD will collect information about how much top leaders (executive compensation) at public housing agencies are paid. This collection is intended to increase transparency and fairness in how public housing agencies report executive pay.
No Expected Additional Costs
HUD states that the proposed information collection on executive compensation is expected to impose no additional costs on public housing agencies or the public. The notice seeks comment but does not propose fees or new spending requirements.
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this regulation affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Key Dates
Department and Agencies
Related Federal Register Documents
2026-08406 — HOME Investment Partnerships Program: Further Program Updates and Streamlining
HUD is updating the HOME Investment Partnerships Program to make it simpler and more flexible, especially for green building projects and scattered site manufactured housing rentals. These changes affect local housing groups that get federal money to build or fix affordable homes. Public comments are open until June 1, 2026, so folks can share their thoughts before the new rules take effect.
2026-08339 — HOME Investment Partnerships Program: Further Program Updates and Streamlining
HUD is hitting the pause button on some new HOME program rules that were supposed to start in 2025. This delay affects local governments and housing groups waiting for updated rules about affordable housing projects. No new changes or money moves will happen until HUD finishes reviewing and publishes the next final rule—so, hang tight!
2026-08244 — Equal Access to Housing in HUD Programs Revisions
HUD is updating its rules to focus on biological sex instead of gender identity when it comes to housing programs. This means shelters and similar places can ask for proof of sex to keep everyone safe. These changes affect people using HUD housing services and those running them, with public comments open until June 29, 2026.
2026-06926 — HOME Investment Partnerships Program-Maximum Per-Unit Subsidy Limit Methodology and Amount; Notice for Comment
HUD is updating how it sets the maximum money allowed per housing unit for the HOME Investment Partnerships Program. This change affects builders and developers using HOME funds starting May 11, 2026, and HUD wants your thoughts before finalizing it. The new limits help make sure funds stretch fairly and wisely to build affordable homes.
2026-04990 — Revocation of the 30-Day Notification Requirement Prior to Termination of Lease for Nonpayment of Rent; Indefinite Delay of Effective Date
HUD is hitting the pause button on a new rule that would have stopped the 30-day heads-up before evicting tenants for not paying rent. This means public housing tenants and property owners won’t see changes just yet, as HUD reviews feedback and legal challenges. No rent-related notices are changing for now, so everyone can breathe easy until HUD decides the next move.
2026-04095 — Establishing Flexibility for Implementation of Work Requirements and Term Limits
HUD is proposing new rules that let local housing agencies and some apartment owners require adults to work and set time limits on housing help for families who aren’t elderly or disabled. This gives communities more control to encourage self-sufficiency and mix incomes, helping tackle the affordable housing crunch. Comments on these changes are open until May 1, 2026, so get ready to weigh in!
Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2025-08348 — Agency Information Collection Activities: Proposed Collection; Comment Request
CMS wants your thoughts on their plan to collect info from the public and is asking for comments over the next 60 days. This helps make sure the questions they ask aren’t too much work and actually useful. If you’re someone who deals with CMS forms, this is your chance to speak up before any changes happen!
Next: 2025-08354 — Combined Notice of Filings #1
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission got a bunch of new filings from power companies asking for changes in rules and rates. These include requests to change how some solar and power plants operate, with some asking for waivers or updated prices. If you’re involved or interested, mark your calendar—comments are due by late May, and some changes could affect electricity costs starting early 2024 or mid-2025.