WHAT IS PUBLIC HOUSING?
Public housing was established to provide decent and safe rental housing
for eligible low-income families, the elderly, and persons with
disabilities. Public housing comes in all sizes and types, from scattered
single family houses to highrise apartments for elderly families. There
are approximately 1.2 million households living in public housing units,
managed by some 3,300 HAs. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) administers Federal aid to local housing agencies (HAs)
that manage the housing for low-income residents at rents they can afford.
HUD furnishes technical and professional assistance in planning,
developing and managing these developments.
WHO
IS ELIGIBLE?
Public housing is limited to low-income families and individuals. An HA
determines your eligibility based on: 1) annual gross income; 2) whether
you qualify as elderly, a person with a disability, or as a family; and 3)
U.S. citizenship or eligible immigration status. If you are eligible, the
HA will check your references to make sure you and your family will be
good tenants. HAs will deny admission to any applicant whose habits and
practices may be expected to have a detrimental effect on other tenants or
on the project's environment.
HAs use income
limits developed by HUD. HUD sets the lower income limits at
80% and very low income limits at 50% of the median income for the
county or metropolitan area in which you choose to live. Income limits
vary from area to area so you may be eligible at one HA but not at
another. The HA serving your community can provide you with the income
levels for your area and family size, or you can also find the income
limits here on the internet.
HOW
DO I APPLY?
If you are interested in applying for public housing, contact your
local HA. If you have trouble contacting the HA, contact the local
HUD Field Office.
HOW
DOES THE APPLICATION PROCESS WORK?
The application must be written. Either you or the HA representative will
fill it out. An HA usually needs to collect the following information to
determine eligibility:
(1) Names of all
persons who would be living in the unit, their sex, date of birth, and
relationship to the family head;
(2) Your present
address and telephone number;
(3) Family
characteristics (e.g., veteran) or circumstances (e.g., living in
substandard housing) that might qualify the family for tenant selection
preferences;
(4) Names and
addresses of your current and previous landlords for information about
your family's suitability as a tenant;
(5) An estimate of
your family's anticipated income for the next twelve months and the
sources of that income;
(6) The names and
addresses of employers, banks, and any other information the HA would need
to verify your income and deductions, and to verify the family
composition; and
(7) The PHA also may
visit you in your home to interview you and your family members to see how
you manage the upkeep of you current home.
After obtaining this
information, the HA representative should describe the public housing
program and its requirements, and answer any questions you might have.
WILL I NEED TO PRODUCE ANY DOCUMENTATION?
Yes, the HA representative will request whatever documentation is needed
(e.g., birth certificates, tax returns) to verify the information given on
your application. The PHA will also rely on direct verification from your
employer, etc. You will be asked to sign a form to authorize release of
pertinent information to the PHA.
WHEN WILL I BE NOTIFIED?
An HA has to provide written notification. If the HA determines that you
are eligible, your name will be put on a waiting list, unless the HA is
able to assist you immediately. Once your name is reached on the waiting
list, the HA will contact you. If it is determined that you are
ineligible, the HA must say why and, if you wish, you can request an
informal hearing.
WILL I HAVE TO SIGN A LEASE?
If you are offered a house or apartment and accept it, you will have to
sign a lease with the HA. You may have to give the HA a security deposit.
You and the HA representative should go over the lease together. This will
give you a better understanding of your responsibilities as a tenant and
the HA's responsibilities as a landlord.
ARE
THERE ANY SELECTION PREFERENCES?
Sometimes there are. Giving preference to specific groups of families
enables an HA to direct their limited housing resources to the families
with the greatest housing needs. Since the demand for housing assistance
often exceeds the limited resources available to HUD and the local HAs,
long waiting periods are common. In fact, an HA may close its waiting list
when there are more families on the list than can be assisted in the near
future.
Each HA has the
discretion to establish preferences to reflect needs in its own community.
These preferences will be included in the HAs written policy manual. You
should ask what preferences they honor so you will know whether you
qualify for a preference.
HOW
IS RENT DETERMINED?
Your rent, which is referred to as the Total Tenant Payment (TTP) in this
program, would be based on your family's anticipated gross annual income
less deductions, if any. HUD regulations allow HAs to exclude from annual
income the following allowances: $480 for each dependent; $400 for any
elderly family, or a person with a disability; and some medical deductions
for families headed by an elderly person or a person with disabilities.
Based on your application, the HA representative will determine if any of
the allowable deductions should be subtracted from your annual income.
Annual income is the anticipated total income from all sources received
from the family head and spouse, and each additional member of the family
18 years of age or older.
The formula used in
determining the TTP is the highest of the following, rounded to the
nearest dollar:
(1) 30 percent of
the monthly adjusted income. (Monthly Adjusted Income is annual income
less deductions allowed by the regulations);
(2) 10 percent of
monthly income;
(3) welfare rent, if
applicable; or
(4) a $25 minimum
rent or higher amount (up to $50) set by an HA.
WHAT IS THE ROLE OF THE HA?
An HA is responsible for the management and operation of its local public
housing program. They may also operate other types of housing programs.
(1) On-going
functions: (a) Assure compliance with leases. The lease must be signed by
both parties; (b) Set other charges (e.g., security deposit, excess
utility consumption, and damages to unit); (c) Perform periodic
reexaminations of the family's income at least once every 12 months; (d)
Transfer families from one unit to another, in order to correct over/under
crowding, repair or renovate a dwelling, or because of a resident's
request to be transferred; (e) Terminate leases when necessary; and (f)
maintain the development in a decent, safe, and sanitary condition.
(2) Sometimes HAs
provide other services, that might include such things as: homeownership
opportunities for qualified families; employment training opportunities,
and other special training and employment programs for residents; and
support programs for the elderly.
HOW
LONG CAN I STAY IN PUBLIC HOUSING?
In general, you may stay in public housing as long as you comply with the
lease.
If, at reexamination
your family's income is sufficient to obtain housing on the private
market, the HA may determine whether your family should stay in public
housing. You will not be required to move unless there is affordable
housing available for you on the private market.