Title 42 › Chapter 8A— SLUM CLEARANCE, URBAN RENEWAL, AND FARM HOUSING › Subchapter III— FARM HOUSING › § 1490m
Allows the Secretary to give grants to eligible groups (private nonprofits, Indian tribes, local governments, counties, States, and consortia of these) to fix or replace single-family homes and certain rental or cooperative housing in rural areas for low- and very low-income people. Grants or loans can pay for repairs, interest reduction, or replacement (up to $15,000 per unit for single-family replacement when repair is not practical and the owner cannot get a loan under section 1472). Rental or cooperative help may cover no more than 75% of a building’s rehab or replacement cost. Help must make housing affordable (with priority for people at or below 50% of area median income), avoid displacing current residents, and meet health and safety standards in section 1479(a). State funds are split by a formula that averages rural population, rural poverty, and rural substandard housing. One grantee may not get more than 50% of a State’s share unless it is the only eligible grantee. Grantees must submit a yearly plan for public comment and consult local officials. The Secretary scores plans by set criteria (helping those without adequate shelter, serving very low-income people, leveraging other funds, serving areas under 10,000 people or remote places, cost-effectiveness, minimizing displacement and overcrowding, and keeping admin costs low; longer owner commitments over 5 years score better). Replacement work needs proof that rehab is infeasible, the owner cannot get a section 1472 loan, and the owner can afford the new terms. Rental and cooperative owners must sign agreements, pass debt savings to tenants, not convert to condos, not refuse tenants because they get housing help, keep units for low-income tenants, use written leases with eviction only for good cause, and allow independent inspection. If owners break agreements they must repay the full assistance plus interest (not compounded) at a rate the Secretary sets based on recent U.S. long‑term yields. The Secretary may make advance payments, audit grantees at least yearly and reallocate funds, issue rules within 90 days after November 30, 1983, and issue regulations for subsection (a)(2) by 30 days after February 5, 1988. Work affecting historic properties must meet Interior Department rehabilitation standards and allow State or federal historic review.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 1490m
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60