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Public Housing Annual Contributions Contract and Inventory Removal Application

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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 217 / Friday, November 8, 2019 / Notices

DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–7011–N–50]

30-Day Notice of Proposed Information
Collection: Public Housing Annual
Contributions Contract for Capital and
Operating Grant Funds: 30-Day Notice
of Proposed Information Collection:
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Public Housing Annual
Contributions Contract for Capital and
Operating Grant Funds
Office of the Chief Information
Officer, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:

HUD has submitted the
information collection described below
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval, in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act. The public housing
program provides Operating Funds and
Capital Funds to public housing projects
owned and operated by public housing
agencies (PHAs), subject to the terms
and conditions contained in the federal
award, HUD–53012.
HUD has revised the federal award
based on current applicable statutes and
regulations as well as in response to
public comments received during the
public comment period provided for by
the 60-Day Notice of Proposed
Information Collection. These revisions
are more thoroughly described below.
One notable revision is that HUD has
revised the title of the public housing
federal award; previously entitled
Public Housing Annual Contributions
Contract for Capital and Operating
Grant Funds, the award will now be
entitled Annual Contributions Terms
and Conditions for the Public Housing
Program. For clarity and consistency,
the award will continue to be referred
to as ‘‘ACC.’’ Additionally, mixedfinance provisions in the proposed ACC

SUMMARY:

Information collection

Number of
respondents

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HUD–92577 ACC ........
Mixed-Finance Amendment.

3,107
94

have been removed from the revised
ACC and will instead be included in an
ACC amendment; a model mixedfinance ACC amendment is published
herewith.
This publication is to provide notice
to PHAs of the revisions and to give
PHAs the opportunity to comment on
such revisions. The purpose of this
notice is to allow for an additional 30
days of public comment. Please note
that the 30-Day Notice of Proposed
Information Collection for the Moving to
Work Amendment to Consolidated
Annual Contributions Contract is
published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register.
DATES: Comments Due Date: December
9, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this proposal. Comments should refer to
the proposal by name and/or OMB
Control Number and should be sent to:
HUD Desk Officer, Officer of
Management and Budget, New
Executive Office Building, Washington,
DC 20503; fax: 202–395–5806; email:
[email protected].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Colette Pollard, Reports Management
Officer, QDAM, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Washington, DC 20410; email
Colette Pollard at Colette.Pollard@
hud.gov or telephone 202–402–3400.
Persons with hearing or speech
impairments may access this number
through TTY by calling the toll-free
Federal Relay Service at (800) 877–8339.
This is not a toll-free number. Copies of
available documents submitted to OMB
may be obtained from Ms. Pollard.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice informs the public that HUD has
submitted to OMB a request for
approval of the information collection
described in Section A. The Federal
Register notice that solicited public

Frequency of
response

Burden
hour per
response

Responses
per annum

1 each ............
1 each ............

1
1

comment on the information collection
for a period of 60 days was published
on December 27, 2018 at 83 FR 66729.
A. Overview of Information Collection
Title of Information Collection:
Annual Contributions Terms and
Conditions for the Public Housing
Program.1
OMB Approval Number: 2577–0075.
Type of Request: Revision of a
currently approved collection.
Form Number: HUD–53012.2
Description of the need for the
information and proposed use: The
proposed Annual Contributions Terms
and Conditions for the Public Housing
Program (ACC) is necessary to establish
the basic terms and conditions for a
PHA’s public housing program and
requires the PHA to manage and operate
its public housing projects in
accordance with the United States
Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437 et
seq.) (1937 Act) and all applicable HUD
requirements.
This 30-Day Notice of Proposed
Information Collection provides PHAs
with notice of revisions to the current
ACC form HUD–53012. The ACC
published in this notice updates HUD–
53012 to streamline the ACC. In order
to further streamline the ACC and in
response to public comments received,
the ACC published in this notice deletes
or revises several ACC provisions
published in the 60-Day Notice of
Proposed Information Collection. Those
revisions are summarized in Section E
of this notice. Additionally, HUD has
summarized public comments and
provided responses to those comments
in Section F of this notice.
Respondents: Public housing
agencies.
Total Estimated Burdens: The burden
costs associated with this collection are
as follows:
Annual
burden
hours

1.00
1.00

3,107
94

Hourly cost
per response
$52.88
52.88

Cost
$164,298
4,970

The burden costs shown represent
burden associated with a one-time

execution of the ACC for all PHAs and
the burden represented with each one-

time transactional execution of a MixedFinance Amendment to the ACC, with

1 The previous title was Public Housing Annual
Contributions Contract for Capital and Operating
Grant Funds.
2 The forms listed in the 60-Day Notice were
‘‘HUD–52840A, HUD–53012A, HUD–53012B.’’
HUD forms HUD–53012A and HUD–53012B have
been combined into one form, HUD–53012. HUD is

not revising HUD–52840A, the Capital Fund
Program (CFP) Amendment to the Annual
Contributions Contract (ACC), with this proposed
information collection. The HUD–52840A (exp. 01/
31/2021) is available at HUDCLIPS, https://
www.hud.gov/program_offices/administration/
hudclips/forms. If HUD continues to use the HUD–
52840A, it will be incorporated into the ACC as an

amendment. The forms approved as part as OMB
Control Number 2577–0075 that are not being
revised at this time are: HUD–51999; HUD–52190A;
HUD–52190B; HUD–52840A; HUD–52860, HUD–
52860B, HUD–52860C; HUD–52860; HUD–52860E,
and HUD–52860F, HUD–52860G, HUD–5838 and
HUD–5837 (expiration date of 01/31/2021).

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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 217 / Friday, November 8, 2019 / Notices
94 such transactions estimated to occur
in any given year. Previously, in the 60Day PRA Notice published on December
27, 2018 at 83 FR 66729, HUD overestimated the estimated burden hours
associated with the execution of the
ACC and the Mixed-Finance ACC
Amendment. The burden hours did not
account for the fact that the ACC and
Mixed-Finance ACC Amendment have
been streamlined and no longer repeat
statutory and regulatory requirements.
Additionally, the burden hours
included the hours estimated for all
HUD forms that are part of OMB Control
Number 2577–0075, not just the ACC
and the Mixed-Finance ACC
Amendment. During the 60-Day
comment period, HUD received no
comments related to the estimated
burden hours.
B. Solicitation of Public Comment
This notice is soliciting comments
from members of the public and affected
parties concerning the collection of
information described in Section A on
the following:
(1) Whether the proposed collection
of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the functions of
the agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) The accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of the burden of the proposed
collection of information;
(3) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and
(4) Ways to minimize the burden of
the collection of information on those
who are to respond, including through
the use of appropriate automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
HUD encourages interested parties to
submit comments in response to these
questions.

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C. Authority
Section 3507 of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35.
D. Background
In 1995 the Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD) issued
PIH Notice 95–44 which transmitted
Consolidated Annual Contributions
Contract (ACC), Form HUD–53012A and
Form HUD–53012B. The forms were
intended to replace the 1969
Consolidated ACC(s) (Form HUD–
53011), and any amendments to the
ACC, between HUD and HAs with
respect to low-rent and homeownership
public and Indian housing projects.
HUD noted that:

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[t]he revised ACC eliminates the
recitation of the specific statutory,
regulatory and executive order
requirements to which a HA is subject
with respect to its public or Indian
housing projects. Instead, the HA is
made subject to ‘‘all applicable laws,
executive orders and regulations,’’
whether or not these authorities are
specifically incorporated by reference in
the ACC. The purpose of this revision is
to minimize the scope of the
requirements contained in the ACC, so
that this document can remain a living
and vital contract even after statutes,
executive orders and regulations to
which a HA is subject are enacted,
promulgated, amended or repealed.
With the execution of this revised ACC,
HUD intends to eliminate the
obsolescence that has developed over
time in the existing ACC as a result of
the enactment of new legislation and the
promulgation of new regulations that
conflict with specific requirements
contained in the ACC.
HUD is further revising the ACC to
achieve the goals first articulated in
1995, to ‘‘eliminate specific statutory,
regulatory and executive order
requirements to which a PHA is subject
. . . and to minimize the scope of the
requirements contained in the ACC.’’
HUD’s intent is to include those terms
and conditions that apply to the
acceptance and use of federal financial
assistance for the public housing
program which are necessary to ‘‘insure
the lower income character of the
project involved in a manner consistent
with the public housing agency plan’’
(42 U.S.C. 1437d), and that are not
already specifically included in HUD
regulations at Title 24 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR), the Uniform
Administrative Requirements, Cost
Principles, and Audit Requirements for
Federal Awards (‘‘Uniform Guidance’’ at
2 CFR part 200), and/or made applicable
by statute.
HUD initially proposed a revised ACC
through an information collection
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) 60-day
Notice soliciting public comment issued
on March 1, 2016 at 81 FR 10651. The
changes were primarily additional
requirements applicable to mixedfinance and public housing
development, and clarifications and
updates consistent with the Uniform
Guidance. HUD received no public
comments on the 60-day notice. On
September 6, 2017, HUD issued a 30day notice soliciting public comment at
82 FR 42106, and no comments were
received. HUD received considerable
feedback on the ACC it issued. As a
result, HUD decided to re-open the ACC
a second time for additional public

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comment. On December 27, 2018 HUD
published a revised ACC in the Federal
Register via a second PRA notice at 83
FR 66729. This notice provided 60-days
for the public to comment on the
revised ACC. The comments received
are summarized in Section F of this
notice.
E. Overview of Significant Changes
Made to the ACC
The following represents the most
notable changes to the ACC. However,
other changes have also been made
which may not be identified below
because they are editorial or nonmaterial and minor changes. The ACC
should be reviewed in its entirety to
determine the exact nature and scope of
these revisions. HUD has posted a
document online that provides a sideby-side comparison of the ACC
proposed in the 60-Day Notice and the
ACC proposed in this 30-Day Notice.
The side-by-side document is available
at https://www.hud.gov/program_
offices/public_indian_housing/
programs/ph/capfund/2018pi/acc.
• The revised agreement is retitled
slightly to more clearly reflect its
purpose. The new title is the Annual
Contributions Terms and Conditions for
the Public Housing Program. For clarity
and consistency, the agreement will
continue to be referred to as ‘‘ACC.’’
• In the 1995 ACC, the PHA was
made subject to ‘‘all applicable laws,
executive orders and regulations,’’
whether or not these authorities are
specifically incorporated by reference in
the ACC. The ACC published in the 60day notice on December 27, 2018
contained similar language in Section 3
of the ACC (HUD Requirements). The
revised ACC requires the PHA to
administer its Public Housing Funds in
compliance with all ‘‘Public Housing
Requirements,’’ which include the
United States Housing Act of 1937 (1937
Act), HUD regulations at Title 24 CFR,
the Uniform Guidance, appropriations
acts, and ‘‘other federal statutes,
regulations and executive orders
applicable to Public Housing Funds and
Public Housing Projects,’’ as they exist
now and amended in the future,
whether or not those requirements are
incorporated by reference in the ACC.
• HUD deleted the following
definitions: Annual Contributions
Contract, Consolidated Contributions
Contract, Cooperation Agreement, Fiscal
Year, Grant Funding Exhibit, Operating
Costs (Operating Expenditures or
Operating Expenses), Operating
Receipts, Operating Reserve, Program,
Program Receipts, and Replacement
Reserve Account.

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• HUD has used the term ‘‘public
housing funds’’ in a manner that defines
such term in Section 1. Additionally, in
Section 1, HUD has included by
reference to existing regulations at Title
2 Part 200 of Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) the following terms:
Federal award, federal financial
assistance, and recipient; and Section 2
has included by reference to existing
regulation at 24 CFR 905.108 the
definition of ‘‘public housing project.’’
In Section 2, the term Public Housing
Requirements is also defined. Finally,
HUD has included a new Section 11—
Remedies, in response to public
comments.
• HUD has responded to public
comments by excluding all mixedfinance specific language in the revised
ACC. HUD has determined that, to the
extent PHAs need mixed-finance terms
that vary from what is stated in the
ACC, HUD will continue to work with
PHAs on project-specific solutions,
including the use of the revised mixedfinance amendment (a copy of HUD’s
revised model document is published
herewith), adding language to
Regulatory and Operating Agreements
that are required for mixed-finance
development, or adding language to the
restrictive covenant.
• HUD has deleted the following
sections from the 60-day published
ACC: Section 1—Definitions, Section
2—Mission of HUD and PHA, Section
4—Cooperation Agreement, Section 9—
Accounts, Records and Government
Access, Section 14—HUD in Possession
of Project(s). Please refer to Section G of
this notice to review a chart
summarizing these deletions as well as
the existing statutory or regulatory
public housing requirements that
already apply to PHAs.
• HUD has retained but revised in
part the following sections from the 60day published ACC: Section 3—HUD
Requirements (retained in part at
Section 2), Section 5—Declaration of
Restriction Covenants (retained in part
at Section 4), Section 6—Disposition
and Encumbrances (retained in part at
Section 3), Section 7—Insurance
Requirements (retained in section 5),
Section 8—Employer Requirements
(retained at Section 6), Section 10—
Grant Funding (revised and retained in
part at Section 1), Section 11—
Depository (revised and retained in part
at Section 7), Section 12—Termination
of a Project (revised and retained in part
at Section 10), Section 13—Notices,
Defaults, Remedies (retained in part at
Section 9), Section 15—Conflicts of
Interests (revised and retained in part at
Section 8), Section 16—Civil Rights and
Employment Requirements (retained in

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part at Section 6), Section 17—Members
or Delegates to Congress (HUD has
retained prohibition in Section 8),
Section 18—Rights of Third Parties
(retained at Section 12), and Section
19—Waiver or Amendment (revised and
retained at Section 13).
F. Summary of Public Comments
Responding to the 60-Day Information
Collection Notice
HUD received 79 comments on the
revised ACC published on December 27,
2018 through www.regulations.gov. The
comments can be found on the
www.regulations.gov website at https://
www.regulations.gov/docket?D=HUD2018-0103. HUD also received two
additional letters relating to the
proposed ACC outside of the formal
public comment process: A letter from
a public housing agency forwarded by
Congressman H. Morgan Griffith and a
letter from Senator Charles E. Grassley.
ACC Generally
Comment: Commenters disagreed
with HUD’s characterization of the ACC
as a grant agreement for a variety of
reasons. Commenters asked: If the new
ACC is substantively the same as the old
ACC, why is HUD revising it? Others
felt that HUD was misinforming the
public about its ACC changes when
HUD stated that it was simply adding
requirements applicable to mixedfinance public housing development
and making minor clarifications.
Finally, some commenters felt HUD’s
primary motivation for proposing these
changes was its loss in the United States
Court of Federal Claims in suits
contesting the Department’s funding
distribution method used in 2012.
HUD Response: The changes update
the ACC to reflect that the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) revised
its Uniform Guidance which applies to
all agencies that award federal financial
assistance (with regard to the public
housing program, these requirements
were formerly covered in HUD
regulations at 24 CFR part 85). The
revised ACC ensures that the Uniform
Guidance is applied consistently, and
that all PHAs are subject to the same
terms and conditions applicable to
public housing funds.
Additionally, the changes are
intended to achieve the goals first
articulated in 1995 to eliminate ‘‘the
recitation of the specific statutory,
regulatory and executive order
requirements to which a HA is subject
. . .’’ (See PIH Notice 95–44
transmitting the 1995 ACC). This
revision further minimizes the scope of
the requirements contained in the ACC.
Since 1995 there have been numerous

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changes to the specific statutory,
regulatory and executive order
requirements to which a PHA is subject
with respect to its public projects. For
example, on October 24, 2013 HUD
revised the Capital Fund Program at 24
CFR part 905 (78 FR 63770). Part 905
combines and streamlines the former
legacy public housing modernization
programs, including the Comprehensive
Grant Program, the Comprehensive
Improvement Assistance Program and
the Public Housing Development
Program (which encompasses mixedfinance development).
More than 400 PHAs continue to
operate under the 1969 version of the
ACC, which was developed prior to the
conversion of the public housing
program from a loan program. In 1995,
HUD noted PHAs that failed to execute
the revised ACC would continue to be
governed by requirements contained in
their existing ACC with HUD, which in
certain instances was more restrictive
than requirements established in the
revised 1995 ACC (e.g., the revised 1995
ACC eliminated the requirement under
section 307(A) of the 1969 version
concerning the need for a comparability
analysis of PHA personnel policies and
the 1969 ACC term for PHA
procurements set at two years with a
one-year option with the approval of
HUD).
The ACC, pursuant to section 6(a) of
the 1937 Act, sets forth the terms and
conditions deemed necessary by HUD to
insure the low-income character of
public housing projects and that PHAs
act in accordance with Public Housing
requirements. The ACC governs PHA
conduct in connection with its
acceptance and receipt of federal
assistance. While addressing past
litigation outcomes is not a principal
purpose for HUD’s revisions to the ACC,
HUD makes clear in the current version
that HUD has never contemplated
money damages for action or inaction by
HUD with respect to the ACC. Nothing
in the revised ACC forecloses avenues
for judicial relief from any HUD action
that is arbitrary, capricious or contrary
to law.
Comment: A commenter stated that
PHAs are confused, anxious, and
concerned as to what HUD’s changes are
trying to remedy.
HUD Response: The revised ACC
ensures that the Uniform Guidance is
applied consistently, and that all PHAs
are subject to the same terms and
conditions applicable to public housing
funds. Additionally, the changes
eliminate specific statutory, regulatory
and executive order requirements to
which a PHA is subject and to minimize
the scope of the requirements contained

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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 217 / Friday, November 8, 2019 / Notices
in the ACC. There have been many
changes to the public housing program
since 1995, which require that PHAs be
more familiar with specific regulatory
requirements, and the 1969 or 1995 ACC
versions may be inconsistent or
misleading.
Comment: Commenters disagreed
with HUD’s ‘‘redefining’’ of the ACC as
a grant agreement, and stated that the
ACC is, and has always been, a contract,
and should consistently refer to itself as
such. A comment stated that Congress
and HUD have consistently failed to
view the existing public housing CACC
as a contract and need to treat public
housing contracts in the same way as
the contracts for Project Based Section
8.
HUD Response: The Public Housing
program, which was initially a loan
program, was changed by Congress to a
direct grant program in 1987, through
which HUD awarded grants for the
development and operation of public
housing (see sections 112 and 119 of the
Housing and Community Development
Act of 1987, Public Law 100–242
(approved Feb. 5, 1988) (the HCD Act)).
Consequently, in 1988, HUD
implemented OMB Circular A–102,
‘‘Grant Awards and Cooperative
Agreements with State and Local
Governments,’’ by codifying its
provisions in 24 CFR part 85 (March 11,
1988, 53 FR 8025, 8650). HUD made the
public housing program subject to 24
CFR part 85. Below is the statement
HUD made regarding Part 85
applicability to the public housing
funding (53 FR 7875):
HUD previously took the position that
annual contributions for public housing
development and modernization were
not subject to Circular A–102
requirements because the Federal
assistance to public housing agencies
(PHAs) was in the form of loans and
loan guarantee commitments made by
HUD. The Department’s current method
of funding public housing development
and modernization by means of capital
grants (as opposed to loans, as in the
past) has the effect of subjecting public
housing development and
modernization funding to A–102
requirements. Public housing operating
subsidies are administered as grants
and therefore are also appropriate for A–
102 grant management treatment
[emphasis added].
Accordingly, as a result of the changes
to the program made by the HCD Act,
since 1988, HUD consistently
administered the public housing
program subject to the requirements of
24 CFR part 85 (until such requirements
were superseded by the Uniform
Guidance). In addition to codifying A–

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102 at 24 CFR part 85, HUD codified the
provisions of OMB Circular A–133,
‘‘Audits of States, Local Governments
and Non-Profit Organizations,’’ in 24
CFR parts 84 and 85 in 1997 (November
18, 1997, 62 FR 61617), and such other
circulars related to grants management.
In the intervening years since codifying
the guidance in these circulars, HUD
has cross-referenced applicable
provisions of 24 CFR part 85 throughout
program regulations, including
applicable regulations for public
housing development, modernization
and operating funding.
The 1995 version of the ACC was
revised against the backdrop of these
above-mentioned statutory and
regulatory requirements (e.g., 24 CFR
941.103 (ACC definition), §§ 941.612,
and 968.103). Consequently, the ACC,
when it was revised in 1995 was an
agreement related to the receipt of
public housing grant funding. In 1998,
when the public housing funding was
fully converted to formula funding,
HUD continued to use the same version
of the ACC and continued to subject the
formula funding and public housing
program to the requirements of 24 CFR
part 85. Nothing in the rulemaking
processes for the Operating Fund
regulation or the Capital Fund
regulation changed the form of the
funding that was being provided by
HUD, and the Operating Fund and
Capital Fund Rules specifically
included and made applicable the
requirements of Part 85. HUD’s
proposed changes to the ACC were
consistent with Congressional intent
first expressed 1987.
Comment: HUD is seeking to
‘‘redefine’’ terms to position themselves
more favorably and insulate themselves
from future challenges/litigation.
HUD Response: HUD notes the
consistency of its position in litigation
regarding the characterization of the
federal financial assistance provided for
the public housing. Furthermore, such
funding is provided subject to a broad
array of statutory and administrative
requirements, including appropriations
acts. HUD’s changes to the ACC were
not proposed in response to litigation,
but HUD is aware of litigation
surrounding the ACC. HUD makes clear
in the current version that HUD has
never contemplated money damages for
action or inaction by HUD with respect
to the ACC. Nothing in the revised ACC
forecloses avenues for judicial relief
from any HUD action that is arbitrary,
capricious or contrary to law.
While the United States Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit
determined the Performance-Based
Annual Contributions Contract (PBACC)

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to be a procurement contract, no such
court has made such a determination
with respect to the public housing ACC.
In the absence of legislation to the
contrary, HUD is required to continue to
administer the public housing program
consistent with the HCD Act of 1987,
and other applicable requirements.
Comment: ‘‘Operating Receipts’’ and
‘‘Program Receipts’’ are interrelated
terms, and changes to one affect the
others. Commenters said that ‘‘program
receipts,’’ previously called ‘‘operating
receipts,’’ had been broadened. One
commenter said ‘‘this could potentially
recapture de-federalized funds and
require HUD approval for uses of all
forms of income and proceeds produced
by projects. The new definition restricts
the use of all program and operation
funds to public housing expenditures,
which potentially captures defederalized funds.’’ Similarly, other
commenters expressed concerns that
‘‘the categories covered by ‘program
receipts’ has been broadened and could
potentially allow HUD to ‘‘recapture defederalized funds and require HUD
approval for uses of all forms of income
and proceeds produced by projects.’’
Another commenter said ‘‘[t]he
definitions of Operating Reserves,
Operating Costs, Operating Receipts,
and Program Receipts are interrelated.
HUD should explain and justify these
definitions within the framework of the
APA.’’ More specific concerns related to
the definition of Operating Receipts was
that ‘‘broadening this definition to
include ‘Program Receipts’ results in
controlling non-federal resources earned
by PHAs and the refederalization of fees
paid into a PHA’s Central Office Cost
Center.’’
Finally, a number of comments
expressed concerns about HUD’s having
‘‘restricted the definition of the term
‘operating expenses’ or ‘operating
expenditures’ to those costs which may
be charged against Operating Receipts in
accordance with the CACC and HUD
requirements.’’ A commenter noted that
‘‘[i]t is unclear what impacts these
definition changes will have on reserves
and offsets of reserve balances for
operation expenses and . . . requests
further clarity on these proposed
changes as they appear to be an attempt
to change statutory funding
obligations.’’
HUD Response: Operating Receipts is
a term that was already defined in the
1995 version of the ACC. The changes
between the 1995 ACC and the
proposed ACC published in the 60-Day
Notice were slight, and were made
primarily to align the term with the
Uniform Guidance, and to make the
definition more consistent with 24 CFR

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part 905, subpart F. Because PHAs are
already bound by HUD regulations,
including the requirements of the
Uniform Guidance, HUD has deleted
this definition from the ACC since it is
adequately covered by regulations.
Additionally, HUD considers the
following definitions: Operating Costs
(Operating Expenditures or Operating
Expenses), Operating Reserve, Program,
Program Receipts, and Replacement
Reserve Account, to be unnecessary due
to regulatory coverage; and they have
also been deleted. The determination of
eligible costs and the use of program
funds are covered by the Uniform
Guidance and HUD regulations at Title
24 CFR, specifically those regulations at
Parts 905 and 990.
As to concerns regarding the
broadening of the term ‘‘program
receipts,’’ HUD agrees that HUD cannot
regulate PHA activity outside of the
public housing program. However,
program income (as that term is defined
at 2 CFR 200.80), non-rental income (as
covered by statute and by regulations
determined by HUD), and proceeds from
the sale of public housing real property
are already subject to federal statutes
and regulations. HUD has deleted the
term ‘‘program receipts’’ as it is
redundant of regulatory and statutory
requirements. HUD has no intention of
changing statutory funding obligations,
and notes that public housing funding is
subject to various statutory
requirements, including funding
requirements in the appropriations acts,
HUD regulations, and the Uniform
Guidance.
PHA Mission
Comment: Many commenters
indicated that the PHA mission needs to
be developed locally with public input
and approval of its Board of
Commissioners rather than by contract
with HUD. Commenters noted that the
addition of a requirement to comply
with all applicable HUD requirements,
coupled with changes in the proposed
Section 3 of the ACC, unfairly imposes
any HUD non-regulatory provisions, and
the Mission statement should be
removed.
HUD Response: The ACC mission
statement incorporated the essential
PHA requirements under Sections 2(a)
and 3(a) of the 1937 Act, (42 U.S.C. 1437
note, and 1437a respectively), and has
been part of the 1969 and 1995 ACC
versions. By accepting public housing
funds, the PHA makes itself subject to
the statutory requirement that property
funded with public housing assistance
including dwelling units assisted with
public housing funds be rented only to
low income families. Because the

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mission statement is unnecessary and
redundant of statutory and regulatory
requirements, this section has been
deleted from the ACC. PHAs are
required to administer their Public
Housing Funds in compliance with all
‘‘Public Housing Requirements’’ which
include the 1937 Act, HUD regulations
at Title 24 CFR, the Uniform Guidance,
appropriations acts, and ‘‘other federal
statutes, regulations executive orders
applicable to Public Housing Funds and
Public Housing Projects,’’ as they exist
now and are amended in the future,
whether or not those requirements are
incorporated by reference in the ACC.
HUD Requirements
Comment: Most commenters objected
to including HUD-issued notices, forms,
and agreements as HUD requirements
because, the commenters state, these
requirements do not have a regulatory or
statutory basis.
HUD Response: The HUD
Requirements section was added to the
ACC as a reminder. PHAs are already
required in the 1995 version of the ACC
to comply with ‘‘all applicable laws,
executive orders, and regulations that
are not specifically incorporated [in the
ACC] by reference’’; and under 24 CFR
905.108, to comply with HUD-issued
ACC and amendments, HUD notices, all
applicable federal statutes, executive
orders and regulatory requirements, as
amended. All required forms are issued
through the Paperwork Reduction Act
process with public opportunity to
comment or are required by the
regulations, which were properly
promulgated under the APA. However,
to lessen confusion, the HUD
Requirements section has been deleted
from the ACC, and the term ‘‘HUD
Requirements’’ has been replaced with
the term used in existing regulations at
24 CFR 905.108, ‘‘Public Housing
Requirements.’’
Comment: MTW PHAs stated that
requiring compliance with HUD’s
notices, forms, and agreements would
reduce MTW flexibilities.
HUD Response: The MTW Standard
Agreement contains a provision that it
‘‘supersedes the terms and conditions of
one or more ACCs between the Agency
and HUD, to the extent necessary for the
Agency to implement its MTW
demonstration initiatives as laid out in
the Agency’s Annual MTW Plan, as
approved by HUD.’’ This provision
covers regulatory or statutory waivers
granted under the MTW Agreement and
provisions in PIH notices implementing
provisions thereof to the extent of a
conflict between the authorized MTW
activity and the Public Housing
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amendment for the MTW expansion,
similarly, amends the ACC to the extent
necessary to allow the agency to
participate in the MTW demonstration
in accordance with the MTW
Operations Notice. Because the MTW
ACC Amendment requires compliance
with all HUD requirements not
exempted by the MTW Operations
Notice, language has been added to that
document to clarify the applicability of
subregulatory guidance impacting MTW
authorizations.
Cooperation Agreement
Comment: ‘‘HUD should not have
prior approval of Cooperation
Agreements entered into with local
governments to address local needs.
Ratification or review to protect federal
interest should be sufficient. HUD has
no right to inject itself into local
negotiations over changes to
Cooperation Agreements.’’ One
commenter also noted that ‘‘HUD’s
proposed involvement in local
cooperation agreements will potentially
upend ‘win-win’ arrangements between
PHAs and local governments that have
ultimately benefited its tenants and
communities for years.’’ Additionally,
one commenter noted that ‘‘[w]hile
Section 4 of the proposed ACC requires
a Cooperating [sic] Agreement to be in
effect, Cooperation Agreements do not
apply to mixed finance projects that
have made an election pursuant to
Section 35(f) of the United States
Housing Act of 1937, as amended.’’
HUD Response: HUD’s requirement
concerning a local cooperation
agreement is authorized by statute and
regulations. Specifically, Section 5(e)(2)
of the of the 1937 Act provides that
Federal financial assistance to PHAs
shall not be made unless the governing
body of the locality involved enters into
an agreement with the PHA providing
for the local cooperation required by the
1937 Act. In order to implement this
requirement, HUD requires PHAs to
comply with the provisions of a
Cooperation Agreement in the form
prescribed by HUD, which form has not
changed since 1968; and not terminate
or amend the Cooperation Agreement
without prior written approval of HUD.
HUD has a statutory obligation to
monitor and ensure the proper use of
public housing funds. However, in light
of HUD’s determination that this
agreement should not unnecessarily
repeat statutory or regulatory
requirements, the proposed Section 4
has been deleted as the requirement for
the HUD-prescribed Cooperation
Agreement is in the 1937 Act, and HUD
implementing regulations at 24 CFR part
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The ACC provides general terms that
apply to all housing authorities. As
noted by the commenter, Section 35(f)
of the 1937 Act allows for a PHA to
choose to exclude mixed finance
projects from the Section 6(d) tax
exemption and the Cooperation
Agreement. If a PHA does not make that
election, a Cooperation Agreement is
required. If a PHA makes that election,
HUD regulations implement this
requirement at 24 CFR 905.606(a)(8),
and an express statement is not needed.
Declaration of Restrictive Covenants

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Comment: One commenter stated that
the ‘‘DOT [Declaration of Trust] signed
by the PHA restricts the use of the units
deeded to the PHA. Units are to be used
by low-income families.’’ Another
comment noted that the use of ‘‘shall’’
in the proposed Section 5.a means this
is a requirement (vs. prior 1995 version
that said ‘‘may’’), and that ‘‘HUD ought
to clarify its reasoning behind this
modification as it removes PHA
discretion and as such may negatively
impact current project implementation.’’
HUD Response: The proposed Section
5 was updated to reflect statutory and
regulatory requirements that have been
in effect since the public housing
program was a loan program—namely
the use of restrictive covenants to
ensure the long-term use restrictions
mandated by the 1937 Act. For more
than 30 years the form instrument
prescribed by HUD was a ‘‘Declaration
of Trust.’’ See Form HUD–52190
(current DOT form available at https://
www.hud.gov/hudclips). The
requirement that the Declaration of
Trust be the first recorded document
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longstanding and ensures the long-term
use of public housing projects by lowincome families. See 24 CFR 905.108
(definition of Declaration of Trust),
905.304, and 905.505(c)(4). The use of
‘‘may’’ in Section 5.a of the 1995 version
of the ACC applies to the form of the
instrument but not to the requirement
for order of recordation. Because of the
mixed-finance program, HUD began to
allow the use of other HUD-approved
instruments otherwise known as
declarations of restrictive covenants,
and the change in language is not
intended to change this practice;
however, the recordation requirement is
long-standing, and any exceptions have
always required HUD approval.
Comment: One commenter said
‘‘[t]hough Section 5.b of the proposed
ACC requires a declaration be recorded
against the Project ‘prior to the
recordation of any other encumbrance,’
such requirement is inconsistent with
HUD’s practice, and we advise HUD to
instead require such only ‘unless
otherwise approved by HUD.’ ’’
HUD Response: The general
requirement for any form of restrictive
covenant is that it be the first recorded
document. See 24 CFR 905.505(c)(4).
We believe waiver of the ACC provision
(now located at Section 4—Restrictive
Covenants) is sufficient to allow HUD to
approve, after a finding of good cause,
those circumstances when a restrictive
covenant is not recorded prior to the
recordation of other encumbrances.
Disposition and Encumbrances
Comment: A commenter stated as to
proposed Section 6:
• 6.a: The general covenant against
disposition and encumbrances does not

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acknowledge that mixed finance
projects will need to enter into
mortgages, use restrictions, and other
encumbrances to finance the projects.
Accordingly, we would recommend
HUD clearly state that mixed finance
projects will instead only be subject to
the provisions contained in the
proposed Section 6.b.
• 6.b: Modifications are required in
order to be consistent with the standard
language in prior HUD mixed finance
deals that has been vetted extensively
with lenders and investors.
HUD Response: The HUD regulations
at Title 24 CFR (in particular those
provisions at 24 CFR part 905, subpart
F) address the concerns raised by the
commenter. HUD has not incorporated
any mixed-finance specific language in
the revised ACC. However, in response
to comments HUD has revised the
model Mixed-Finance Amendment. To
the extent PHAs need commitments for
mixed finance approvals beyond what is
stated in the ACC, HUD will continue to
work with PHAs on project-specific
solutions, including the use of a mixedfinance amendment, adding language to
the Regulatory and Operating
Agreements that are required for a
mixed-finance development, or adding
language to the restrictive covenant.
HUD notes that it has revised the
proposed published version of Section
6. Additionally, Section 3 of the revised
ACC published herein makes specific
reference to the Public Housing
Requirements, which include 42 U.S.C.
1437p and HUD regulations at 24 CFR
part 970.
Comment: One commenter included a
markup of proposed Section 6:
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P

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HUD Response: As previously stated,
HUD has decided not to incorporate any
mixed-finance specific language in the
revised ACC but has revised the model
Mixed-Finance Amendment. To the
extent PHAs need commitments for
mixed finance approvals beyond what is
stated in the ACC, HUD will continue to
work with PHAs on project-specific
solutions, including the use of a mixedfinance amendment, adding language to
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Agreements that are required for a
mixed-finance development, or adding
language to the restrictive covenant.
Insurance
Comment: HUD failed to allow for
PHA’s professional judgment on risk
and cost benefit of various types of
insurance as well as ignoring state law
on tort immunity. Commenters
requested that HUD indicate what is
adequate coverage. Commenters stated it

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is unnecessary for HUD to collect and
monitor Certifications of Insurance.
HUD Response: HUD’s primary
concern is making sure that public
housing projects acquired, developed
and assisted with federal assistance, and
public housing assets are covered from
losses. This provision has been in place
since the 1969 ACC. The list of
mandatory and recommended, but
optional insurance is consistent with, or
required by, 2 CFR 200.447 and 24 CFR

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965 subpart B, and identifies those
‘‘costs of insurance required or
approved and maintained, pursuant to
the Federal award’’ that are allowable (2
CFR 200.447(a)). To further assist PHAs
in understanding HUD’s intentions,
HUD refers PHAs to its explanatory
guidance on insurance in PIH Notice
2016–13.
HUD will continue to require
Certifications of Insurance and require
that PHAs keep copies of it in their
records, and make them available for
inspection, subject to Public Housing
Requirements. The revised ACC
removes the process of establishing a
PHA self-insurance fund, because 24
CFR 965.205(c) details this process.
Employer Requirements
Comment: Various commenters noted
that a provision appearing in a
previously proposed ACC limiting the
use of funds made available under the
1937 Act for the salary, including
bonuses, for PHA employees (30-day
notice published on September 6, 2017
at 82 FR 42106) is not included in the
proposed ACC. These commenters
assert that the elimination of this
provision reflects HUD’s understanding
that it lacks Congressional authorization
to limit the use of funds made available
under the 1937 Act for PHA employee
salaries.
HUD Response: HUD disagrees with
commenters asserting that HUD lacks
Congressional authorization to limit the
use of funds made available under the
1937 Act for PHA salaries; since Federal
Fiscal Year (FFY) 2012, through HUD
appropriations, Congress has imposed
limits on the amount of Section 8 HCV
and Section 9 funds PHAs may use for
employee salaries. PIH Notice 2016–14
and PIH Notice 2018–13 detail PHA
salary limitations and PHA reporting
responsibilities. Additionally, for FY
2019, division G, title II, section 222 of
the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2019 (under the heading ‘‘General
Provisions—Department of Housing and
Urban Development’’) states: ‘‘None of
the funds made available by this Act, or
any other Act, for purposes authorized
under section 8 (only with respect to the
tenant-based rental assistance program)
and section 9 of the United States
Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. 1437 et
seq.), may be used by any public
housing agency for any amount of
salary, including bonuses, for the chief
executive officer of which, or any other
official or employee of which, that
exceeds the annual rate of basic pay
payable for a position at level IV of the
Executive Schedule at any time during
any public housing agency fiscal year
2019.’’ PHAs remain subject to the

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provisions contained in HUD
appropriations, regardless of
incorporation into the Terms and
Conditions agreement pursuant to
Section 2 of the revised ACC.
Accounts, Records, and Government
Access
Comment: Section 9.b: Commenters
state that the proposed Section 9.b
would interfere with PHA compliance
with information requests pursuant to
FOIA or local open records laws by
requiring prior HUD approval before
releasing information contained in
HUD’s systems of records. A few
commenters express doubt that HUD
would have the capacity to track and
approve PHA submissions and requests
in a timely fashion. A few commenters
state that requiring HUD approval prior
to a release of records, especially in
response to a valid information request,
could subject a PHA to liability for
denying a request. Additionally, the
proposed provision could make it more
difficult for law enforcement entities to
conduct investigations of issues such as
public benefit fraud.
One commenter stated that the
proposed Section 9 does not make it
clear that Section 9.b refers only to data
held within HUD’s systems of records.
Another commenter states that section 9
would inhibit a PHA from operating in
a transparent manner by limiting the
release of information to stakeholders. A
number of commenters assert that, as
independent entities and political
subdivisions of States, PHAs are not
subject to HUD’s control relating to
transparency to the public.
Comment: Section 9.c: Numerous
commenters assert that the proposed
Section 9.c of the proposed ACC would
expose privileged communications,
records, and information, including
records protected by attorney-client
privilege, to HUD examination.
Comment: Section 9.e: Several
commenters state that the proposed
Section 9.e of the ACC could impact the
ability of PHAs to engage in datasharing agreements and other
arrangements with third-party services
providers. One MTW PHA expresses
concern that the proposed provision
would hinder its ability to monitor,
evaluate, and understand policy
questions that guide its MTW activities.
Numerous commenters stated that the
proposed Section 9.e of the proposed
ACC is overly broad and would open all
records of a PHA agent or contractor,
not just those records of work
supporting the operation of public
housing, to HUD inspection. These
commenters assert that PHA contractors
and partners will terminate their

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relationships with PHAs to protect their
confidential records. Alternatively, a
couple of commenters state that PHAs
might have to pay higher costs to
contractors or use substandard
contractors because of the HUD record
inspection requirements contained in
the proposed Section 9.e. Several
commenters express concern that HUD
might misuse its access to contractor
records to obtain records outside of
HUD’s authority. A few commenters
suggest that the phrase ‘‘assists in
fulfilling any obligation under this
CACC’’ is too broad and would capture
too many activities. A couple of
commenters assert that HUD would
make PHAs liable for the actions of
independent contractors and that it is
unreasonable to impute contractor
actions to a PHA that could be deemed
a PHA violation of the ACC.
HUD Response: HUD notes that the
proposed Section 9 (or a similar
provision) has been included in the
1969 and 1995 versions of the ACC. The
change in language in the proposed
2018 version was to remind PHAs of
their responsibility to make information
available consistent with applicable
statutory and administrative
requirements, and that the maintenance
of information and the prohibition on
sharing particular information, such as
tenant data, is prohibited by the same or
similar statutory and administrative
requirements, including regulations
issued by HUD at title 24 CFR. HUD has
removed the proposed Section 9 from
the ACC because PHAs remain subject
to statutory and regulatory
recordkeeping and monitoring
requirements (including HUD notices on
HUD’s system of records (SORN) (e.g.,
https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/
DOC_15179.PDF, and https://
www.hud.gov/program_offices/officeof
administration/privacy_act/pia/
fednotice/SORNs_LoB#pih) in
connection with the use of financial
assistance provided pursuant to the
1937 Act. HUD recognizes attorneyclient privilege as a longstanding
common law protection, and HUD does
not unduly compel PHAs to disclose
privileged or work product protected
information. However, HUD reminds
PHAs that the disclosure of information
related to the public housing program is
required to be shared for various
reasons.
Section 5(h)(1) of the 1937 Act (42
U.S.C. 1437c(h)(1)) provides that when
a PHA carries out activities using
financial assistance provided pursuant
to the 1937 Act for the operation,
modernization, and development of
public housing, the PHA must allow
HUD access to books, documents, and

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records related to the activities. Section
5(h)(1) of the 1937 Act and 2 CFR
200.336 also require that the HUD
Inspector General, Comptroller General
of the United States, and all of their
authorized representatives, have the
right to inspect a PHA’s records that
pertain to a public housing award. In
the context of audits, pursuant to 2 CFR
200.501(g), PHAs are ‘‘responsible for
ensuring compliance for procurement
transactions which are structured such
that the contractor is responsible for
program compliance or the contractor’s
records must be reviewed to determine
program compliance.’’ To the extent that
a PHA contractor is responsible for
public housing program compliance
(e.g., under a management contract),
PHAs are responsible for ensuring that
the contractor has adequate records.
More specific recordkeeping
requirements include, but are not
limited to, the requirements at 24 CFR
905.326 and 990.325.
Other 1937 Act statutory requirements
that concern recordkeeping or
information sharing include section 42
U.S.C. 1437y (Provision of information
to law enforcement and other agencies)
and 42 U.S.C. 1437n(e)(C)(4).
Additionally, pursuant to Section 904 of
the Stewart B. McKinney Homeless
Assistance Amendments Act of 1988
(‘‘McKinney Homeless Amendments’’),
tenant and participant income
information required or necessary to be
collected by a PHA, for the purpose of
verifying income information pertinent
to the applicant’s or participant’s
eligibility or level of benefits, must be
kept under the terms of the Privacy Act,
as such terms are made applicable by
HUD. The McKinney Homeless
Amendments are implemented at 24
CFR part 5. Pursuant to 5 CFR 5.212(a),
‘‘[t]he collection, maintenance, use, and
dissemination of [social security
numbers] SSNs, [Employer
Identification Numbers] EINs, any
information derived from SSNs and . . .
EINs and income information under this
subpart shall be conducted, to the extent
applicable, in compliance with the
Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) and all other
provisions of Federal, State, and local
law. Thus, regardless of local open
records laws, PHAs must retain records
in compliance with the McKinney
Homeless Amendments the Privacy Act
as provided at 24 CFR part 5; other
Public Housing requirements, including
HUD SORNs; and are required to get
HUD approval to release information
maintained in HUD databases such as
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Depository
Comment: Commenters stated that
this section imposes federal deposit and
investment requirements on
defederalized and non-federal fees paid
to PHAs’ COCC, as well as contributions
from affiliates and subsidiaries. These
commenters stated that HUD does not
have the authority to so impose such
requirements.
HUD Response: Commenters misread
the coverage of this requirement and
HUD’s changes. The General Depository
Agreement (GDA) (HUD–51999) has
been a requirement in the 1969 and
1995 ACC versions. The GDA is just one
part of HUD’s implementation
requirements imposed on HUD with
regard to the disbursement of federal
funds before such funds have been
expended. Additionally, the GDA
requirement applies to Public Housing
Funds, disposition proceeds and
program income, and other funds that
are restricted, by statute or regulations,
in their use, and/or are received by or
held for the account of the PHA in
connection with the development,
operation, improvement and disposition
of its public housing property. These
funds are to be insured or fully and
continuously collateralized above the
federal insurance limits per the General
Depository Agreement and Department
of the Treasury statutes and regulations,
including but not limited to 31 CFR part
202. HUD has slightly revised this
section in the ACC.
The changes to the ACC are not
intended to address any future changes
to the Public Housing requirements
regarding COCC.
HUD in Possession of Project(s)
Comment: Commenters stated that the
proposed ACC must clarify that a PHA’s
decision to subject its mixed-finance
public housing units to real estate taxes
should not result in a violation of
section 14.b(6) of the ACC published in
the 60-Day Notice, which states that
‘‘termination of tax exemption (either
real or personal property) on behalf of
a Project covered under the CACC’’
constitutes a substantial default.
Commenters also recommend HUD
insert the following sentence to the
proposed section 14.e to ensure HUD
will not disturb a compliant mixed
finance Owner Entity’s rights:
‘‘Notwithstanding the forgoing, for
Mixed Finance projects, so long as the
Owner Entity shall not be in default of
its obligations related to such a project,
HUD shall not exercise any rights under
this sub-section 13.e. in such a manner
as to disturb the Owner Entity’s and

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other participating parties’ rights under
any Project agreements.’’
HUD Response: The proposed Section
14 has been removed from the ACC.
HUD believes the provision is
essentially redundant of requirements at
title 24 of the CFR, specifically 24 CFR
part 907. However, HUD has retained in
the new section 9 (Substantial Default)
the standard for default under such
ACC. Section 9 does not retain the
specific requirements for mixed finance
public housing projects, which are
included in the model Mixed-Finance
Amendment. The ACC provides general
terms that apply to all housing
authorities. To the extent PHAs need
commitments for mixed finance
approvals beyond what is stated in the
ACC, HUD will continue to work with
PHAs on project-specific solutions,
including the use of a mixed-finance
amendment, adding language to the
Regulatory and Operating Agreements
that are required for a mixed-finance
development, or adding language to the
restrictive covenant. Whatever the
project-specific solution, HUD would
continue to make clear that a PHA that
subjects its mixed-finance public
housing units to real estate taxes is not
in a violation of Public Housing
requirements.
Conflict of Interest
Comment: Many commenters objected
to what was mistakenly understood to
be a ‘‘new written conflict of interest’’
standard for board members.
Commenters also stated that HUD lacks
the authority to impose such a
requirement and the requirement may
conflict with existing state and local
conflict of interest requirements
involving public officials.
HUD Response: This is not a new
conflict of interest standard for board
members. Sections 19 and 515
respectively, of the 1995 and 1969
versions of the ACC had conflict of
interest provisions that covered board
members. Section 15.a. of the proposed
ACC provides that PHAs must maintain
written standards of conduct covering
conflicts of interest and governing the
performance of its board members,
executives, and employees engaged in
the administration and operation of
Projects covered by the ACC. This
requirement is consistent with the
Uniform Guidance at 2 CFR 200.112 and
200.318, which requires that PHAs
maintain written standards of conduct
covering conflicts of interest. For clarity
HUD has revised the provision at
Section 8 of the ACC. Because PHAs are
already bound by the Uniform
Guidance, HUD revised the section to
reflect coverage when PHAs are using

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public housing funds for its
procurements (as required by the
Uniform Guidance); HUD includes
members and delegates to Congress in
the covered classes for purposes of
evaluating conflicts in PHA hiring and
procurement. Additionally, Section 8.e
of the revised ACC repeats the language
in Section 14 of the 1995 version that
public housing funds cannot be used ‘‘to
pay any compensation for the services
of members of the PHA’s Board of
Commissioners.’’

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Civil Rights and Employment
Requirements
Comment: A number of commenters
stated that a sentence in the Section
16.d of the proposed ACC, ‘‘Civil Rights
and Employment Requirements,’’
should be removed as irrelevant: ‘‘The
HA may, consistent with applicable law
and regulation, utilize work
requirements when and where
appropriate.’’ One commenter added
that the inclusion of this sentence could
confuse PHAs and result in the
implementation of polices that harm
vulnerable families.
HUD Response: HUD agrees with
commenters that the inclusion of the
sentence would have been confusing;
additionally, consistent with HUD’s
removal of provisions that repeat
existing statutory and regulatory
requirements, the proposed Section 16
has been removed from the final ACC,
but it has been retained in part and
moved to Section 6 of the ACC.
Additionally, HUD includes by
reference under Section 2 (Public
Housing Administration) PHA
obligations to comply with statutory and
regulatory civil rights requirements.
PHAs are also reminded that section 5A
of the 1937 Act states that PHAs ‘‘will
carry out the public housing agency
plan in conformity with title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 [42 U.S.C.
2000d et seq.], the Fair Housing Act [42
U.S.C. 3601 et seq.], section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973 [29 U.S.C.
794], and title II of the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 [42 U.S.C. 12131
et seq.], and will affirmatively further
fair housing.’’
Waiver or Amendment
Comment: A commenter suggested a
need for an expiration date for waivers
and amendments to be agreed to in
writing by HUD and the PHA. Another
commenter suggested that HUD must
seek written agreement from HAs to any
proposed changes. Other comments
noted that the ‘‘most responsible
approach for HUD to take is for it to

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negotiate the revision of the ACC with
industry groups who then, if the
negotiations are fruitful, encourage their
members to agree to the amendments.’’
Commenters stated that ‘‘the revised
ACC provides that the contract can be
amended in writing, presumably only
by HUD. Such a contract is an illusory
contract.’’ Commenters stated that [t]he
appropriate method to implement a new
CACC would be to work with
representatives of local housing
authorities to arrive at a mutually
agreeable product that could be adopted
by PHAs without controversy.’’
HUD Response: Section 19 of the
proposed ACC published in the 60-Day
Notice stated that ‘‘[t]his agreement may
be amended in writing.’’ This provision
was not intended to provide HUD with
the ability to unilaterally revise the ACC
during its term. Pursuant to section 6(a)
of the 1937 Act, HUD is authorized to
change the ACC terms and conditions as
the Secretary deems necessary, but these
changes will not alter the ACC terms
and conditions applicable to prior year
public housing funds. In response to the
comments, HUD has revised the ACC to
make clear that a PHA may request an
amendment to the ACC. Additionally,
upon a request of a PHA, HUD may
waive administrative provisions in the
ACC, based on a finding of good cause.
HUD cannot waive statutory
prohibitions.
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA),
Administrative Procedures Act (APA),
and Negotiation
Comment: A few commenters state
that use of the Paperwork Reduction Act
(‘‘PRA’’) is not a legitimate means with
which to promulgate public comment
on the proposed ACC. A number of
commenters assert that the proposed
ACC does not collect information, so the
PRA does not apply. Many commenters
add that PRA standards for public
comments do not satisfy Administrative
Procedures Act requirements. As noted
by a few commenters, while the Federal
Register PRA notice provides a
description of proposed ACC revisions,
it does not provide an explanation of the
underlying rationale, public policy
purpose or benefits, or statutory or
regulatory basis of the proposed ACC
revisions. Additionally, these
commenters assert that PRA does not
require HUD to formally respond to
comments received. A few commenters
state that HUD’s actions in revising the
ACC are ‘‘arbitrary and capricious,’’ and
they assert that the proposed ACC
Federal Register notices have been
deceptive. Finally, several commenters

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criticize HUD’s burden hour chart and
cost estimate as being unrealistic.
A number of commenters state that
HUD must promulgate changes to the
public housing ACC pursuant to
Administrative Procedures Act (APA)
rulemaking rather than pursuant to
PRA. Several commenters added that
statutory changes may also be required
because the proposed ACC includes
significant substantive changes from the
prior ACC.
HUD response: Information collection
can occur by a number of vehicles in
addition to standard government forms.
As discussed above, the Public Housing
program has been a grant program since
1987. The ACC is an information
collection under the definitions in 5
CFR 1320.3(c)(1), which states that a
collection of information may be in any
form or format, including an agreement.
The ACC is a form with an OMB form
number; therefore, review and public
comment under the PRA are
appropriate.
Contrary to statements in the
comments, the PRA process does
require solicitation of and response to
public comments (see 5 CFR
1320.5(a)(1)(F) (requiring ‘‘A summary
of the public comments received under
§ 1320.8(d), including actions taken by
the agency in response to the
comments’’). In fact, HUD received 79
comments and is here responding to the
issues raised as well as providing its
rationale for proposed ACC revisions.
HUD revises the ACC pursuant to its
inherent authority under the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development Act (42 U.S.C. 3531 et
seq.), and section 6 of the 1937 Act. A
primary purpose of this revision is to
minimize the scope of the requirements
contained in the ACC and to ensure that
Public Housing requirements are
uniformly applied. More than 400 PHAs
continue to operate under the 1969
version of the ACC. The revised ACC
ensures that the Uniform Guidance is
applied consistently, and that all PHAs
are subject to the same terms and
conditions applicable to the receipt of
public housing funds.
Regarding the assertion that the
proposed ACC Federal Register notices
have been deceptive, HUD has taken
steps to clearly identify the provisions
that have been deleted, revised or
retained. However, the ACC should be
reviewed in its entirety to determine the
exact nature and scope of any revisions.
As to the comment on the burden
hour statement, HUD’s prior experience
indicates that it is reasonable.

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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 217 / Friday, November 8, 2019 / Notices
signature by both HUD and Housing
Authorities.
HUD Response: The ACC serves as
notice of the terms and conditions that
attach to HUD’s award and the PHA’s
request for, acceptance, and use of
federal financial assistance. Execution
of the ACC represents acceptance of
those terms and conditions
undergirding all instruments
subsequently executed to provide public
housing funding, including, but not
limited to SF–424 forms, Operating
Fund budget letters, competitive grant
agreements, etc. Pursuant to Section 1.a
of the ACC published in this notice,
such funding instruments will be
incorporated into the ACC as
amendments or funding exhibits.
HUD agrees that entering into the
ACC requires Board and Executive
Review. HUD expects the Board and
Executive Review approval would be
conducted as part of same process
engaged by PHAs before making
submissions for financial assistance
through the Operating Fund and Capital
Fund formulas (e.g., using an SF–424
form). Electronic signatures are
permissible for HUD programs, and that
option will be made available for the
ACC; however, HUD has added a
signature line for PHAs on the revised
form for those PHAs that prefer or are
required under State law to effectuate
agreements by a wet signature.
Comment: Two commenters did not
think that drawing down funds should
result in an agreement between HUD
and the PHA. One argued that PHA staff
lack authority to bind the PHA, which
could make the agreement unlawful or
against the PHA’s internal governing
procedures.
HUD Response: A PHA’s drawdown
of funds is a certification by the PHA
that the funds are being drawn for, or in
connection with, an eligible activity
under the public housing program.
Federal financial management
requirements are based on the
presumption that the personnel in a
PHA’s organization who drawdown
funds are authorized to do so.
Consequently, PHA employees should
not be drawing down funds or taking
any other actions on behalf of the PHA

without proper authority. Every draw
down or use of funding must be in
compliance with HUD statutes,
regulations and other HUD
requirements. It is incumbent on PHAs
(not HUD) to ensure that PHA personnel
are authorized to act on their behalf.

60-Day notice proposed ACC

30-Day notice proposed ACC

Existing public housing requirements that apply to
deleted portions of the 60-Day notice proposed ACC

Sec. 1—Definitions .......................................................

Deleted ........................................................................

Sec. 2—Mission of HUD and HA .................................

Deleted ........................................................................

‘‘Cooperation Agreement’’ (24 CFR 905.108); ‘‘Operating Costs’’ (24 CFR 990.115); ‘‘Operating Receipts’’ (2 CFR 200.80, Sec. 9(k) and Sec. 18(a)(5)
of the 1937 Act); ‘‘Program Receipts’’ (2 CFR
200.80); ‘‘Public Housing’’ (24 CFR 905.108); ‘‘Replacement Reserve Account’’ (Sec. 109 of
HOTMA, P.L. 114–201).
Sec. 2(a), Sec. 3(b)(1) (‘‘low-income housing’’ and
‘‘public housing’’) and Sec. 3(b)(6) (‘‘Public Housing Agency’’) of the 1937 Act.

Comment: Some commenters argue
that even if HUD followed APA
rulemaking requirements, APA
rulemaking is not the appropriate
method by which to amend the public
housing ACC because a regulation
cannot override or amend contract
terms. A couple of commenters assert
that HUD must withdraw the proposed
ACC and negotiate revisions to the 1995
ACC with PHAs. One commenter asserts
that the proposed ACC needs to be
reviewed by ‘‘an independent legal
authority’’ to determine its fairness and
compliance with statutes.
HUD response: Pursuant to section
6(a) of the 1937 Act, and section
200.38(b) of the Uniform Guidance, the
Secretary has the authority to include in
the ACC such covenants, conditions, or
provisions as he may deem necessary in
order to insure the low-income
character of public housing projects and
that PHAs act in accordance with Public
Housing requirements; the Secretary is
not obligated to negotiate with PHAs as
it is within his discretion what terms
and conditions related to the federal
award are ‘‘necessary.’’ Accordingly, the
Secretary, through the ACC, establishes
the necessary terms and conditions
related to the award of public housing
funds. The terms and conditions of the
ACC published in this notice do not
override or amend prior versions of the
ACC. The ACC terms and conditions
apply to a PHA’s public housing
funding received after execution. Prior
awards of public housing funding
received by a PHA while subject to
either the 1969 or 1995 ACC will
continue to be governed by the terms of
those ACCs. To the extent commenters
were concerned that the ACC did not
comply with relevant statutes, the
revised ACC minimizes the scope of the
ACC requirements, and eliminates the
recitation of specific statutory and
regulatory requirements. As noted
earlier, the PRA process requires
solicitation of and response to public
comments.
Implementation of ACC
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the new ACC must include Board
and Executive review and approval and

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Moving to Work
Comment: MTW agencies commented
that HUD was precluded from revising
the ACC by the 2016 appropriations act
language extending the current MTW
agreements and by language regarding
the ACC in the MTW Standard
Agreement.
HUD Response: HUD disagrees. The
new ACC does not amend the MTW
Standard Agreement. The MTW
Standard Agreement provision stating
that the agreement supersedes the terms
of the ACC to the extent of a conflict
between the ACC and a HUD-approved
MTW activity continues to apply to the
new ACC.
Comment: MTW agencies raised
concerns that the new ACC would
change the funding formulas provided
under those agreements and that it
would allow HUD to circumvent
statutory requirements regarding offsets
of MTW PHA reserves.
HUD Response: The funding language
in Attachment A of the MTW Standard
Agreement varies among MTW agencies.
The majority of MTW agencies do not
have a unique funding formula for
public housing funds in their MTW
agreements and receive public housing
funds in accordance with the same
formulas and requirements as non-MTW
PHAs. Agencies with specific
alternative formulas for public housing
funds in their MTW Agreements
continue to have those same provisions
in their MTW Agreements under the
new ACC. Further, the MTW
Agreements were amended in 2016 to
incorporate the statutory provision
prohibiting offset of reserves equal to
four months of operating expenses.
G. Chart Summarizing Statutory or
Regulatory Public Housing
Requirements Deleted From the ACC
Proposed in the 60-Day Notice

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60-Day notice proposed ACC

30-Day notice proposed ACC

Sec. 3—HUD Requirements ........................................

Sec. 2—Public Housing Administration (deletes compliance with HUD notices).
Deleted ........................................................................
Sec. 4—Restrictive Covenants (deletes description of
instrument terms and mixed-finance provisions).

Sec. 4—Cooperation Agreement(s) .............................
Sec. 5—Declaration of Restrictive Covenants .............

Sec. 6—Disposition and Encumbrances ......................

Sec. 3—Encumbrances (deletes general disposition
requirements and mixed-finance provisions).

Sec. 7—Insurance Requirements ................................

Sec. 5—Insurance Requirements (deletes self-insurance provision and mixed-finance provisions and
optional insurance coverage).
Sec. 6—Civil Rights and Employer Requirements
(deletes civil rights provisions summarizing civil
rights requirements).

Sec. 8—Employer Requirements .................................
Sec. 16—Civil Rights and Employment Requirements

Sec. 9—Accounts, Records, and Government Access

Deleted ........................................................................

Sec. 10—Grant Funding ...............................................

Sec. 1—Annual Contributions Terms and Conditions
(a.k.a. ACC) (revised and deletes specific information about funding calculations).

Sec. 11—Depository .....................................................
Sec. 12—Termination of a Project ...............................
Sec. 13—Notices, Defaults, Remedies ........................

Sec. 7—Depository (no significant deletions) .............
Sec. 10—Termination (no significant deletions) ..........
Sec. 9—Substantial Default (deletes notice and possession provisions and deletes mixed-finance provisions).

Sec. 14—HUD in Possession of Project(s) ..................
Sec. 15—Conflict of Interest ........................................
Sec. 17—Members or Delegates to Congress ............

Deleted ........................................................................
Sec. 8—Conflict of Interest (deletes procurement
conflicts of interest and resident board member requirement).
Sec. 12—Rights of Third Parties (no deletions) ..........
Sec. 13—Waiver or Amendment (no significant deletions).
Sec. 11—Remedies (did not appear in 60-day notice
version of the ACC, therefore no deletions).

Sec. 18—Rights of Third Parties ..................................
Sec. 19—Waiver or Amendment ..................................

Dated: November 5, 2019.
Colette Pollard,
Department Reports Management Officer,
Office of the Chief Information Officer.

Annual Contributions Terms and
Conditions for the Public Housing
Program
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development

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Office of Public and Indian Housing
1. Annual Contributions Terms and
Conditions (a.k.a. ACC)—This
agreement between the Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
and a Public Housing Agency (PHA)
establishes HUD’s basic terms and
conditions for the PHA’s federally
funded public housing program, and is
authorized pursuant to the United States

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Housing Act of 1937 (the 1937 Act), (42
United States Code (U.S.C.) § 1437 et
seq.).
a. The ACC includes any funding
exhibits, or amendments, to the ACC;
and supersedes any previous ACC, or
consolidated contributions agreement
for the public housing program.
b. The ACC together with the PHA’s
written submissions for public housing
funds including but not limited to, the
SF–424 (or successor document) and
any exhibits to the SF–424 reflecting
HUD’s commitment to provide such
financial assistance, constitutes a
federal award which is not awarded
under the Federal Acquisition
Regulations.
c. Public housing funds are federal
financial assistance provided to a PHA
pursuant to the 1937 Act for the

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Existing public housing requirements that apply to
deleted portions of the 60-Day notice proposed ACC
‘‘Public housing requirements,’’ 24 CFR 905.108.
Sec. 5(e)(2) of the 1937 Act and 24 CFR 905.108.
Sec. 9(d)(3) and 9(e)(3) of the 1937 Act and 24 CFR
905.108 (‘‘Declaration of Trust,’’ ‘‘Declaration of
Restrictive Covenant’’); 24 CFR 905.304(a); and 24
CFR 905.505(c); [Mixed-finance provisions will be
included in a mixed-finance ACC amendment].
Sec. 18 of 1937 Act and 24 CFR part 970 [Mixed-finance provisions will be included in a mixed-finance ACC amendment].
24 CFR 965.205(c) [Mixed-finance provisions will be
included in a mixed-finance ACC amendment].
Civil rights laws, e.g., Title VI of the Civil Rights Act
of 1964 (42 U.S.C. 2000d; 24 CFR part 1); the Fair
Housing Act (42 U.S.C. 3601–3619; 24 CFR part
100); section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
(29 U.S.C. 794; 24 CFR part 8); (the Age Discrimination Act of 1975 (42 U.S.C. 6101™6107; 24 CFR
part 146); the Americans with Disabilities Act (Pub.
L. 101–336, approved July 26, 1990; 28 CFR part
35); Executive Order 11063 on Equal Opportunity
in Housing (24 CFR part 107); Executive Order
11246 on Equal Employment Opportunity, as
amended by Executive Order 11375 (41 CFR part
60); and Executive Order 12892 on Affirmatively
Furthering Fair Housing.
Sec. 5(h)(1) of the 1937 Act; 2 CFR 200.336; 2 CFR
200.501(g); 24 CFR 905.326; 24 CFR 990.325; 42
USC 1437y and 1437n(e)(C)(4); Sec. 904 of
McKinney Homeless Amendments (42 USC 3544);
and 5 CFR 5.212(a).
24 CFR 905.108 (‘‘Public Housing Requirements’’ include ‘‘all applicable federal statutes,’’ including appropriations acts); 24 CFR part 905, subpart D
(Capital Fund formula); and 24 CFR part 990, subparts B–E (Operating Fund formula).
N/A.
N/A.
Sec. 6(j) and Sec. 6(g)(2) of the 1937 Act; and 24
CFR part 907, particularly 24 CFR 907.5 [Mixed-finance provisions will be included in a mixed-finance ACC amendment].
Sec. 6(j)(3)(H) of the 1937 Act.
2 CFR 200.318(c) and Sec. 2(b)(1) of the 1937 Act;
24 CFR part 964, subpart E.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.

development or operation of public
housing and include public housing
formula funding. Public housing
formula funding is provided as noncompetitive federal awards for:
• Capital funding provided to a PHA
pursuant to section 9(d) (42 U.S.C.
1437g(d) of the 1937 Act (the Public
Housing Capital Fund program), and
• operating funding provided to
PHAs pursuant to section 9(e) (the
Public Housing Operating Fund
program) (42 U.S.C. 1437g(e)) of the
1937 Act.
d. The terms ‘‘federal award’’ ‘‘federal
financial assistance’’ and ‘‘recipient’’ are
defined in 2 Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) (Version 2018) at
§§ 200.38, 200.40(a)(1), and 200.86
respectively.

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2. Public Housing Administration.
The PHA shall administer its public
housing program for the provision of
decent, safe, and sanitary housing to
eligible families in accordance with this
agreement and Public Housing
Requirements. The PHA shall comply
with, and shall ensure compliance by,
any contractors or subcontractors with,
the Public Housing Requirements.
a. Public Housing Requirements
include but are not limited to:
• The 1937 Act as it exists now and
as it may be amended in the future;
• Regulations issued by HUD at Title
24 of the CFR and the Uniform
Guidance at 2 CFR part 200 as they exist
now and as they may be amended in the
future;
• Appropriations acts, as they exist
now and amended in the future; and
• Other federal statutes, regulations
and executive orders applicable to
Public Housing Funds and Public
Housing Projects; as they exist now and
as they may be amended in the future.
b. Nothing herein shall release the
PHA from compliance with all
applicable laws, executive orders, and
regulations (as they exist now or are
amended in the future) applicable to the
receipt, use, and maintenance of public
housing funds and public housing
projects that are not specifically
incorporated herein by reference. The
term ‘‘public housing project’’ is defined
in 24 CFR 905.108.
3. Encumbrances. Except for dwelling
leases with eligible families for public
housing dwelling units and normal uses
associated with the operation of
dwelling units, the PHA shall not
encumber (including the pledge as
collateral for a loan) a public housing
project or portion thereof, public
housing funds, or other public housing
assets without the prior written
approval of HUD.
4. Restrictive Covenants. Promptly
upon the PHA’s acquisition,
development, or assistance of any real
property with public housing funds, the
PHA shall, consistent with Public
Housing Requirements, execute, file for
record (prior to the recordation of any
other encumbrance), and maintain an
instrument against the property (which
may be in the form of a declaration of
trust, declaration of restrictive covenant,
or such other document), as approved or
prescribed by HUD.
5. Insurance Requirements. Consistent
with 24 CFR 965.205 the PHA shall
procure adequate insurance to protect
the PHA from financial loss resulting
from various hazards.
a. Mandatory Insurance Coverage.
The following types of insurance are
required:

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1. Commercial Property. Each policy
must be written with a blanket limit, on
a replacement cost basis, and with an
agreed value clause eliminating any
coinsurance provision.
2. Commercial General Liability.
3. Workers Compensation and
Employers Liability.
4. Owned and Non-Owned
Automobile Liability.
5. Theft, Disappearance, and
Destruction, only if the amount of cash
and checks on hand at any one time
exceeds the amount prescribed by HUD.
6. Employee Dishonesty.
7. Boiler and Machinery only if steam
boilers have been installed.
8. Flood Insurance for property
located in a flood plain, as determined
in the Federal Government’s National
Flood Insurance Program.
9. Lead-Based Paint Liability for PHAs
undergoing lead-based paint testing and
abatement.
b. Optional Insurance Coverage.
Subject to the Cost Principles of the
Uniform Guidance, the following
insurance coverage is recommended and
can be purchased if the PHA determines
that exposure exists:
1. Boiler and Machinery coverage is
recommended if there is extensive
central, conditioning, electrical
transformers, or similar equipment.
2. Directors and Officers or Public
Officials Liability.
3. Law Enforcement Liability: Highly
recommended where the exposure
exists, and the Commercial General
Liability insurer has excluded coverage.
4. Fidelity Bond Coverage. The PHA
is recommended to carry adequate
fidelity bond coverage, as required by
HUD, of its officers, agents, or
employees handling cash or authorized
to sign checks.
c. Authorized Insurance Companies.
Insurance must be purchased from an
insurance company or other entity that
is licensed or duly authorized to write
insurance in the State where the PHA is
located. At each renewal, the PHA shall
promptly have certificates of insurance
submitted by the insurers to HUD
describing the types of coverage, limits
of insurance, policy numbers, and
inception and expiration dates.
d. Waivers. Requests for waivers of
this section not to purchase any form of
required insurance, must be submitted
in writing to HUD for approval and
include specific justification and risk
analysis.
e. Restoration—Unless the PHA
received prior written approval of HUD
to the contrary, the PHA shall, to the
extent that insurance proceeds permit,
promptly restore, reconstruct, and/or
repair any damaged or destroyed Public

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60425

Housing Project, in accordance with all
Public Housing Requirements.
6. Civil Rights and Employer
Requirements. Nothing herein shall
release the PHA from compliance with
all applicable civil rights laws,
executive orders, and regulations
applicable to the receipt, use, and
maintenance of Public Housing Funds;
and the operation and development of
Public Housing Projects, that are not
specifically incorporated herein by
reference. The PHA shall comply with
all State and Federal laws applicable to
employee benefit plans and other
conditions of employment.
7. Depository. The PHA shall deposit
and invest its public housing funds
received by, or held for the account of,
the PHA in connection with the
development, operation, improvement,
and disposition of its Public Housing
Project in accordance with the terms of
a General Depository Agreement (GDA).
The GDA shall be in the form prescribed
by HUD and must be executed by the
PHA and the depository.
a. Immediately upon the execution of
a GDA, the PHA shall furnish to HUD
an executed or conformed copy thereof
as HUD may require. A GDA shall not
be terminated except after 30 days’ prior
notice to HUD.
b. The PHA shall maintain records
that identify the source and application
of funds in such a manner as to allow
HUD to determine that all funds are and
have been expended in accordance with
Public Housing Requirements. Except as
approved by HUD, and consistent with
Public Housing Requirements, funds
provided as separate federal awards are
not fungible.
8. Conflict of Interest. In addition to
any Uniform Guidance conflict of
interest requirements at 2 CFR Subpart
D, PHAs are subject to the following
conflict of interest requirements:
a. Neither the PHA nor any of its
contractors or subcontractors may enter
into any contract or arrangement,
including employment contracts or
arrangements, in connection with the
operation and administration of the
public housing program in which any of
the following classes of persons has any
real or apparent interest, (direct or
indirect), during his or her tenure or for
one year thereafter:
1. Any present or former member or
officer of the PHA (except a present
tenant commissioner who does not
serve on the governing body of a
resident corporation, and who does not
occupy a policymaking position with
the resident corporation, the PHA or a
business entity), or any member of the
officer’s immediate family;

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2. Any employee of the PHA, or any
contractor, subcontractor or agent of the
PHA, who formulates policy or who
influences decisions with respect to the
programs, or any member of the
employee’s immediate family;
3. Any public official, member of a
governing body, or State or local
legislator, who exercises functions or
responsibilities with respect to the
programs, or any member of such
individual’s immediate family; or
4. Any member of the Congress of the
United States; or resident commissioner.
As used in this section, the term
‘‘resident commissioner’’ refers to an
individual appointed to oversee a
territory or possession of the United
States of America, (e.g., Guam).
b. The officers, employees, and agents
of the PHA shall neither solicit nor
accept gratuities, favors or anything of
monetary value from residents of public
housing or participants in programs
covered by this agreement; nor enter
into any financial arrangement (direct or
indirect) with public housing residents
or participants in program covered by
this agreement. However, the PHA may
set written standards for situations in
which a gift is an unsolicited item of
nominal value.
c. Any member of the classes
described in paragraph (a) of this
section must disclose their interest or
prospective interest to the PHA and
HUD.
d. The conflict of interest prohibition
under this section may be waived by
HUD for good cause if HUD is provided
with written evidence that (1) a
prohibited contract or arrangement is
permitted under State and local law;
and (2) the PHA Board of
Commissioners supports the waiver.
e. No Public Housing Funds may be
used to pay any compensation for the
services of members of the PHA’s Board
of Commissioners.
f. For purposes of this section and the
Uniform Guidance (or any succeeding
requirements thereto) the term
‘‘immediate family member’’ means:
spouse, domestic partner, mother,
father, mother-in-law, father-in-law,
brother, sister, brother-in-law, or sisterin-law, or child of a covered class
member (whether related as a full blood
relative, or as a ‘‘half’’ or ‘‘step’’ relative,
e.g., a half-brother or stepchild).
9. Substantial Default. Upon the
occurrence of a substantial default by
the PHA, as determined by HUD, the
PHA shall (1) convey to HUD title to the
Project(s), or (2) deliver possession and
control of the Project(s) to HUD if, in the
determination of HUD (which
determination shall be final and
conclusive), such conveyance or

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possession is necessary to achieve the
purposes of the 1937 Act. HUD shall
also be entitled to any or all other
remedies allowed by the Public Housing
Requirements. A substantial default is a
serious and material violation of any
one or more of the covenants contained
in this agreement, or as defined in the
Public Housing Requirements.
a. Events of substantial default under
this agreement shall include, but shall
not be limited to any of the following
occurrences: (1) PHA’s failure to
maintain and operate the Public
Housing Project in a decent, safe, and
sanitary manner; (2) PHA’s
encumbrance of any Public Housing
Project or portion thereof without HUD
approval; (3) abandonment of any
Public Housing Project or assets by the
PHA, (4) the determination by HUD that
the powers of the PHA to operate the
public housing program in accordance
with the provisions of this agreement or
the Public Housing Requirements are
curtailed or limited to an extent that
will prevent the accomplishment of the
objectives of this Agreement.
b. Nothing contained in this
agreement shall prohibit or limit HUD
exercising any other right or remedy
existing under applicable law, or
available at equity. HUD’s exercise or
non-exercise of any right or remedy
under this agreement shall not be
construed as a waiver of HUD’s right to
exercise that or any other right or
remedy at any time.
10. Termination. If a Public Housing
Project is disposed of (through sale or
other method), all related public
housing funds shall (in accordance with
Public Housing Requirements) become
part of another Public Housing Project
administered by the PHA. If no other
Public Housing Project exists, the
remaining personal and real property
(including any funds held under or
required to be held under a GDA) shall
be distributed as directed by HUD,
consistent with Public Housing
Requirements, which may include
remittance to HUD.
11. Breach. This agreement does not
contemplate money damages as a
remedy for a breach of the agreement by
HUD.
12. Rights of Third Parties. Nothing in
this agreement shall be construed as
creating any right of any third party to
enforce any provision of this agreement,
or to assert any claim against HUD or
the PHA.
13. Waiver or Amendment. The PHA
may request a waiver or amendment to
this ACC. Any administrative right that
HUD may have under this ACC may be
waived in writing by HUD for good
cause.

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Name: lllllllllllllll
Signature and Title: lllllllll
Date: llllllllllllllll
Department of Housing and Urban
Development
PHA Acceptance: The PHA hereby
accepts this agreement executed by the
Department of Housing and Urban
Development on the above date as a
Recipient designated to receive federal
financial assistance for public housing,
and agrees to comply with the terms and
conditions of this agreement, applicable
Public Housing Requirements, and other
requirements of HUD now or hereafter
in effect, pertaining to the federal
financial assistance provided the PHA
for its public housing program.
Name: lllllllllllllll
Signature and Title: lllllllll
Date: llllllllllllllll
Public Housing Agency
Mixed-Finance Amendment
To the Annual Contributions Terms and
Conditions for the Public Housing
Program (ACC)
I. On lllll the United States
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (‘‘HUD’’) and lllll
(‘‘PHA’’) executed an Annual
Contributions Terms and Conditions for
the Public Housing Program (‘‘ACC’’),
which establishes HUD’s basic terms
and conditions for the PHA’s federally
funded public housing grant programs.
II. This Mixed-Finance Amendment to
the ACC (‘‘Mixed-Finance
Amendment’’) sets forth additional
requirements that apply to the public
housing units and related
appurtenances (‘‘Project Units’’ or
‘‘Project’’), which are being developed
as part of the larger development known
as lllll (the ‘‘Development’’), for
which HUD approved a development
proposal and related evidentiary
documents (together known as the
‘‘Development Proposal’’) on
lllll.
III. The following amendments are
made to the ACC and shall apply to the
Project Units and/or Project, unless
otherwise approved by HUD.
A. Section 3, Encumbrances: The
requirements of Section 3 of the ACC
are replaced with the following
requirements:
1. Neither the Project Units nor any
part thereof shall be demolished or
disposed of, encumbered in any way, or
the assets of the Project pledged as
collateral for a loan, other than in
accordance with the terms of the Public
Housing Requirements and only with
prior written approval of HUD, so long
as this Mixed-Finance Amendment

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remains in force with respect to the
Project, with the exception of:
a. Mortgage, deeds of trust, and other
financing arrangements approved as
part of the Development Proposal;
b. Dwelling leases with eligible
families living in the Project;
c. Conveyance or dedication of land
for use as streets, alleys, or other public
rights-of-way, and grants and easements
for the establishment, operation and
maintenance of public utilities
approved as part of the Development
Proposal;
d. A memorandum of ground lease for
record against the Project prior to
recordation of the HUD restrictive
covenant, as approved by HUD as part
of the Development Proposal; and,
e. Normal uses associated with
operation of the Project.
2. No transfer, conveyance, or
assignment of the Project shall be made
without the prior written approval of
HUD of:
a. Any interest of a managing member,
general partner, or controlling
stockholder (any such interest being
referred to as a ‘‘Controlling Interest’’) of
the Owner; or
b. a Controlling Interest in any entity
which has a Controlling Interest in the
Owner; or
c. any other interest in the Owner, or
in any partner or member thereof, prior
to the payment in full of all equity
contributions, as approved in the
Development Proposal.
3. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
HUD consent is not required where a
business organization that has a limited
interest (non-controlling and nonmanaging) in the Owner transfers a noncontrolling and non-managing interest
in the business organization, provided
that the Owner:
a. Provides HUD with written notice
of such transfer; and
b. certifies to HUD that the new owner
of the limited interest remains obligated
to fund its equity contribution in
accordance with the terms of the
organizational documents of the Owner.
4. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
prior approval of HUD shall not be
required for the exercise by the investor,
i.e., limited partner, limited owner, etc.
or its affiliates (‘‘Limited Interest’’), of
their rights to remove a Controlling
Interest of the Owner or partner or
member thereof and to designate an
affiliate of the Limited Interest as a
substitute Controlling Interest under the
terms of the Partnership Agreement or
Operating Agreement, provided that
HUD is given prior written notice of
default and of the Limited Interest’s
intent to exercise its right of removal
and appointment under the Partnership

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Agreement or Operating Agreement (the
‘‘Notice’’). However, HUD consent shall
be required for the appointment of any
permanent replacement Controlling
Interest or substitute Controlling Interest
beyond a 90-day period. Such 90-day
period will commence on the date of the
Notice (the ‘‘Interim Replacement
Period’’). With notice and the prior
written approval of HUD, the Interim
Replacement Period may be extended
for an additional 90 days to allow the
Limited Interest to find a permanent
replacement Controlling Interest
acceptable to HUD, provided that prior
to the expiration of such additional 90day period, the substitute Controlling
Interest demonstrates that the Limited
Interest is continuing to fund (or has
already funded) its equity contribution,
as required under the Partnership
Agreement or Operating Agreement, and
that the Project continues to be operated
in a manner consistent with the Public
Housing Requirements.
5. HUD and the PHA authorize a
Controlling Interest to collaterally assign
and pledge its interest in the Owner to
a construction and/or permanent lender,
and to allow a construction and/or
permanent lender to exercise any of its
rights pursuant thereto, so long as the
construction and/or permanent lender
gives prompt written notice to HUD at
the time it exercises such rights (the
‘‘Pledge Notice’’). However, consent of
HUD shall be required for the
appointment of any permanent
replacement Controlling Interest or
substitute Controlling Interest
(including construction and/or
permanent lender or its Affiliates)
extending beyond a 90-day period. Such
90-day period will commence on the
date of the Pledge Notice (the ‘‘Pledge
Replacement Period’’). With notice to
the PHA and notice and prior written
consent of HUD, the Pledge
Replacement Period may be extended
for an additional 90 days to allow
construction and/or permanent lender
to find a permanent replacement
Controlling Interest acceptable to HUD
and the PHA, provided that prior to the
expiration of such additional 90-day
period, the substitute Controlling
Interest demonstrates that the Limited
Interest is continuing to fund (or has
already funded) its equity contribution
as required by the Owner’s Partnership
Agreement (or, if the Owner is a limited
liability company, the Owner’s
Operating Agreement) and that Project
continues to be operated in accordance
with the Public Housing Requirements.
6. HUD will not unreasonably
withhold, delay, or condition a request
by the Owner for HUD’s consent to an
internal reorganization of the corporate

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60427

or partnership structure of the Owner or
any of the partners, members or
stockholders of the Owner.
B. Section 4, Restrictive Covenants:
The requirements of Section 4 of the
ACC are replaced with the following
requirements:
1. The PHA shall require the Owner
to execute and file on record against the
Development, in the order approved by
HUD, an instrument against the
property (which may be in the form of
a declaration of trust, declaration of
restrictive covenants, or such other
document as approved or prescribed by
HUD) that encumbers the property and
confirms the Owner’s obligation to
develop, maintain and operate the
Project in compliance with the Public
Housing Requirements. This instrument
may not be modified, amended or
released without the prior written
approval of HUD.
C. Section 5(e), Restoration: The
requirements of Section 5(e) of the ACC
are replaced with the following
requirements:
1. Taking or Casualty: In the event of
a taking or threatened taking by
condemnation or other exercise of
eminent domain of all or a portion of
the Development (collectively a
‘‘Taking’’) or the occurrence of a fire or
other casualty resulting in damage to all
or a portion of the Development
(collectively a ‘‘Casualty’’), the
following shall apply:
The PHA shall promptly cause the
restoration, reconstruction, and/or
repair (‘‘Restoration’’) of any damaged
or destroyed property of the
Development, but only to the extent that
insurance proceeds or condemnation
award proceeds (‘‘Proceeds’’) permit
and only if Restoration is feasible. The
obligation for Restoration, to the extent
Proceeds and other funds (if any are
made available by the Owner or the
PHA) permit, is also a requirement with
which the Owner must comply, if
Restoration is feasible. In addition, each
mortgagee must permit Restoration if
Proceeds permit and if Restoration is
feasible (rather than require application
of Proceeds to reduce mortgage debt.)
Restoration is deemed ‘‘feasible’’ if
(without limitation), following
Restoration, the financial viability of the
Project would not be materially
impaired from its condition prior to the
casualty, including (without limitation)
if tax benefits would not be materially
reduced or if committed sources of debt
or equity financing would not be
relieved of their obligation to fund as a
result of the Casualty.
However, a mortgage may provide and
a mortgagee may exercise (with HUD
approval, as provided below), an option

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to apply any Proceeds to repayment of
the mortgage debt instead of restoration,
if any of the following conditions is met
in the reasonable determination of the
mortgagee or, if different, the lender:
a. There is no substantial certainty of
sufficient funds for Restoration (whether
from insurance proceeds, a
condemnation award or settlement, or
other funds that may be provided by the
Owner, the PHA or other lenders);
b. there is no substantial certainty that
Restoration will be completed prior to
the maturity date of the note secured by
the mortgage;
c. if the loan is a construction loan,
there is no substantial certainty that
committed and sufficient loan
repayment sources will be available
upon Restoration, completion and loan
maturity;
d. there is no substantial certainty that
the operating income of the
Development following Restoration will
be sufficient to meet all operating costs
and other expenses, payments for
reserves, and loan repayment
obligations relating to the Development;
e. there is no substantial certainty that
Restoration of the Development to a
condition approved by lender will be
completed prior to the earlier of the
maturity date of the loan or any fixed
date resulting from tax credit
requirements or otherwise imposed by
schedule sources of repayment for the
loan.
2. Restoration Is Not Feasible: In the
event a lender, Owner and/or PHA
determines that Restoration is not
feasible, the PHA shall apply to HUD for
approval not to restore the Project,
which shall not be unreasonably
withheld, conditioned or delayed. Upon
HUD approval not to restore the project,
Proceeds shall be applied as follows:
a. To pay-off or reduce outstanding
mortgage debt in accordance with the
recordation order of the mortgage liens
on the Development;
b. to reduce any outstanding
indebtedness of the Owner to the PHA
for an unsecured loan;
c. to reimburse the PHA for any funds
disbursed to the Owner for development
of the Development other than by loan.
Such reimbursement shall include any
funds provided by the PHA for
predevelopment work or soft costs;
d. to the Owner, in an amount equal
to the amount that the Owner or its
general partner or managing member is
required to pay to any investor member
or partner in connection with the
Casualty or Taking, as provided for in
the Owner’s limited partnership
agreement or operating agreement, such
as repurchase of an interest, the

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triggering of ‘‘credit adjusters’’, or
otherwise;
e. to the Owner, to the extent not
otherwise covered by paragraph (d),
above, in an amount equal to the
amount that the Owner is required to
pay or distribute upon dissolution in
accordance with its limited partnership
agreement or operating agreement,
including without limitation all debts of
the Owner whether to third persons or
to partners or members, and whether for
funds advanced, property or services,
but disregarding for this purpose any
provision in the limited partnership
agreement or operating agreement for
distribution of residual funds.
f. to the PHA an amount equal to the
total ‘‘cost of construction’’ attributable
to the Project Units, less the sum of (a),
(b) and (c) above; and,
g. to the Owner Entity.
3. Restoration Is Feasible—Partial
Loss: In the event lender, Owner Entity
and/or PHA determine that Restoration
is feasible and less than all of the
dwelling units in the Development are
damaged, destroyed or lost as a result of
casualty or condemnation, the following
provisions shall apply:
a. If the Proceeds are sufficient to
restore the Development to the same
number of units that existed prior to the
Casualty or Taking, the number of
Project Units in the Development shall
be the same number (and bedroom
configuration) that existed prior to the
Casualty or Taking.
b. If the Proceeds are not sufficient to
restore the Development to the same
number of units that existed prior to the
Casualty or Taking, the number of
Project Units in the Development shall
be the same percentage of the total
number of units (and bedroom
configuration) as existed prior to the
Casualty or Taking.
c. Any excess Proceeds remaining
following redevelopment shall be
distributed as follows:
i. To pay-off or reduce outstanding
mortgage debt in accordance with the
recordation order of the mortgage liens
on the Development;
ii. to reduce any outstanding
indebtedness of the Owner to the PHA
for an unsecured loan;
iii. to reimburse the PHA for any
funds disbursed to the Owner Entity for
development of the Development other
than by loan. Such reimbursement shall
include any funds provided by the PHA
for predevelopment work or soft costs;
iv. to the Owner, in an amount equal
to the amount that the Owner or its
general partner or managing member is
required to pay to any investor member
or partner in connection with the
Casualty or Taking, as provided for in

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the Owner’s limited partnership
agreement or operating agreement, such
as repurchase of an interest, the
triggering of ‘‘credit adjusters’’, or
otherwise;
v. to the Owner, to the extent not
otherwise covered by paragraph (iii),
above, in an amount equal to the
amount that the Owner is required to
pay or distribute upon dissolution in
accordance with its limited partnership
agreement or operating agreement,
including without limitation all debts of
the Owner whether to third persons or
to partners or members, and whether for
funds advanced, property or services,
but disregarding for this purpose any
provision in the limited partnership
agreement or operating agreement for
distribution of residual funds;
vi. to the PHA an amount equal to the
total ‘‘cost of construction’’ attributable
to the Project Units, less the sum of (i),
(ii) and (iii), above; and,
vii. to the Owner.
4. Restoration is Feasible—Total Loss:
In the event that all of the units in the
Project are damaged, destroyed or lost as
a result of casualty or condemnation,
and lender, Owner and/or PHA
determine that restoration is feasible,
the following provisions shall apply:
a. If the Proceeds are sufficient to
restore the Development to the same
number of units that existed prior to the
Casualty or Taking, the number of
Project Units in the Development shall
be the same number (and bedroom
configuration) that existed prior to the
Casualty or Taking.
b. If the Proceeds are not sufficient to
restore the Development to the same
number of units that existed prior to the
Casualty or Taking, the number of
Project Units in the Development shall
be the same percentage of the total
number of units (and bedroom
configuration) as existed prior to the
Casualty or Taking.
c. Any excess Proceeds remaining
following redevelopment, shall be
distributed as follows:
i. To pay-off or reduce outstanding
mortgage debt in accordance with the
recordation order of the mortgage liens
on the Development;
ii. to reduce any outstanding
indebtedness of the Owner Entity to the
PHA for an unsecured loan;
iii. to reimburse the PHA for any
funds disbursed to the Owner Entity for
development of the Development other
than by loan. Such reimbursement shall
include any funds provided by the PHA
for predevelopment work or soft costs;
iv. to the Owner, in an amount equal
to the amount that the Owner or its
general partner or managing member is
required to pay to any investor member

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or partner in connection with the
Casualty or Taking, as provided for in
the Owner’s limited partnership
agreement or operating agreement, such
as repurchase of an interest, the
triggering of ‘‘credit adjusters’’, or
otherwise;
v. to the Owner, to the extent not
otherwise covered by paragraph (iii),
above, in an amount equal to the
amount that the Owner is required to
pay or distribute upon dissolution in
accordance with its limited partnership
agreement or operating agreement,
including without limitation all debts of
the Owner whether to third persons or
to partners or members, and whether for
funds advanced, property or services,
but disregarding for this purpose any
provision in the limited partnership
agreement or operating agreement for
distribution of residual funds;
vi. to the PHA an amount equal to the
total ‘‘cost of construction’’ attributable
to the Project Units, less the sum of (i),
(ii) and (iii), above; and,
vii. to the Owner.
5. The term ‘‘cost of construction’’
shall mean the total cost of developing
the Development, less land acquisition
costs, if any, included as part of the
initial development budget.
6. The above restoration requirements
must be incorporated into or otherwise
addressed by the Regulatory and
Operating Agreement between the PHA
and the Owner (and ground lease, if
applicable) and all mortgage documents
encumbering the Development shall be
consistent with these provisions.
D. Section 9, Substantial Default: In
addition to the requirements of Section
9 of the ACC, the following shall
constitute an event of substantial default
under the ACC:
1. The drawdown and/or expenditure
of Public Housing Funds is in an
amount greater than approved in the
Development Proposal or in an amount
greater than allowed by the Public
Housing Requirements;
2. a serious and material breach of any
provision of the Development Proposal;
and,
3. a serious and material breach of any
terms, covenants, agreements,
provisions, or warranties of:
a. The PHA, which in the opinion of
HUD, adversely affects the performance
obligations of the PHA, the Owner, and/
or other participating parties; and
b. the Owner, partner, or other
participating party, made in any
agreement or document submitted to
HUD as part of the Development
Proposal, which, in the opinion of HUD,
adversely affects the performance
obligations of the PHA, the Owner,

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partner, and/or other participating
parties.
4. HUD shall permit an Owner,
partner, or lender to participate, and
may in its discretion, permit any other
party to the Development to participate
in any appeal from a notice of
substantial default delivered by HUD to
the PHA pursuant to this Mixed-Finance
Amendment or the Public Housing
Requirements, with respect to the
Project.
5. During the term of any agreement
between the PHA and Owner, and so
long as the Owner shall not be in default
of its obligations thereunder, HUD
agrees that in the event of the
substantial default by the PHA under
this Mixed-Finance Amendment, HUD
shall exercise any remedies or sanctions
authorized by the ACC and this MixedFinance Amendment or the Public
Housing Requirements, including taking
possession of the PHA’s interest in the
Project, in such a manner as not to
disturb the Owner’s rights under any
such agreements.
6. Any rights of the mortgagee under
a Note and First Mortgage (if any),
including the right to exercise all
remedies specified therein, shall not be
subordinate to any other obligations
imposed upon the Project, except as
such obligations (a) shall be reflected in
the HUD restrictive covenant approved
by HUD, as provided for in Paragraph B
of this Mixed-Finance Amendment, or a
memorandum of lease (if applicable),
and/or any other recorded instrument
which shall have been recorded prior to
the lien of the First Mortgage or (b) shall
be the subject of a subordination
agreement with such mortgagee.
IV. Terms and Conditions: All other
terms and conditions of the ACC shall
remain applicable to the Project, unless
otherwise waived or amended by HUD.
[Signature on the Following Page]
In consideration of the foregoing
covenants, the parties do hereby execute
this Mixed-Finance ACC Amendment:
Housing Authority
By: llllllllllllllll
(signature)
Name: lllllllllllllll
Title:
lllllllllllllll
United States of America
Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development
By: llllllllllllllll
(signature)
Name: lllllllllllllll
Title:
lllllllllllllll

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60429

Date: llllllllllllllll
[FR Doc. 2019–24426 Filed 11–7–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P

DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
[Docket No. FR–7016–N–03]

60-Day Notice of Proposed Information
Collection: License for the Use of
Personally Identifiable Information
Protected Under the Privacy Act of
1974
Office of Policy Development
and Research, HUD.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:

The Department of Housing
and Urban Development (HUD) is
seeking approval from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for the
information collection described below.
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, HUD is requesting
comments from all interested parties on
the proposed collection of information.
The purpose of this notice is to allow for
60 days of public comment.
DATES: Comments Due Date: January 7,
2020.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this proposal. Comments should refer to
the proposal by name and/or OMB
Control Number and should be sent to:
Anna P. Guido, Reports Management
Officer, QDAM, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Room 4176, Washington, DC
20410–5000; telephone 202–402–5534
(this is not a toll-free number) or by
email at [email protected] for a
copy of the proposed forms or other
available information. Persons with
hearing or speech impairments may
access this number through TTY by
calling the toll-free Federal Relay
Service at (800) 877–8339.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Anna P. Guido, Reports Management
Officer, QDAM, Department of Housing
and Urban Development, 451 7th Street
SW, Washington, DC 20410–5000; email
Anna P. Guido at Anna.P.Guido@
hud.gov or telephone 202–402–5535
(this is not a toll-free number). Persons
with hearing or speech impairments
may access this number through TTY by
calling the toll-free Federal Relay
Service at (800) 877–8339. Copies of
available documents submitted to OMB
may be obtained from Ms. Guido.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice informs the public that HUD is
seeking approval from OMB for the
SUMMARY:

E:\FR\FM\08NON1.SGM

08NON1


File Typeapplication/pdf
File Modified2019-11-08
File Created2019-11-08

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