1 / 68

Assembling the Resources for Supportive Housing

Assembling the Resources for Supportive Housing. Minneapolis, June 7, 2012 ryan.moser@csh.org. What Is Supportive Housing?. A cost-effective combination of permanent, affordable housing with services that helps people live more stable, productive lives. Models of Supportive Housing.

yen-kelley
Télécharger la présentation

Assembling the Resources for Supportive Housing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Assembling the Resources for Supportive Housing Minneapolis, June 7, 2012 ryan.moser@csh.org

  2. What Is Supportive Housing? A cost-effective combination of permanent, affordable housing with services that helps people live more stable, productive lives.

  3. Models of Supportive Housing • Single-Site, Single Purpose • Single-Site, Integrated • Clustered Scattered-Site • Scattered-Site • Set-Asides

  4. SERV – Integrated Housing • Bergenline Ave (Hudson County, NJ) and Boulevard East (Bergen County, NJ) • Each building has12 units that include 5 PSH units and 7 affordable units. • Guttenberg (Hudson County, NJ) • 14 unit property that offers 6 PSH units and 8 affordable units. • PSH units serve people with serious mental illness. All units serve people at 50% and below AMI.

  5. Vision Drives Resource Development • Mission Mandate • Community and Individual Needs • Agency Priorities • Budget Drivers • Choice of Population, There is Never Enough Supportive Housing to Serve Everyone

  6. Developing a Supportive Housing Initiative • Can be confusing! • Not necessarily linear • No standard model • Tasks are interdependent • Multiple players

  7. ONE: Concept Go? TWO: Feasibility No Go? Go? Go? THREE: Dealmaking No Go? Go? FOUR: Development FIVE: Operations

  8. Targeted Tenancy Capital Services Operating Development Budget Services Budget Operating Budget

  9. A Typical Deal Capital HOME/CDBG Low Income Housing Tax Credits Federal Home Loan Bank Operating HUD McKinney Section 8 Services Medicaid Philanthropy/Foundations Local Sources Specialized Partnership Services Development Scattered-Site or Set-Aside C

  10. The First Leg:Capital C

  11. To Build or Not to Build,That is the Question. Pros • Long term project stability • Take advantage of property assets; affordable housing market • Building culture can be pro-social • Exciting flagship • Easier to offer onsite services Cons • Minimum 3 year timeframe • Development Requires a High Capacity Housing Partner • Not In My Back Yard • Concentration C

  12. Capital Builds the Box • The costs of designing, purchasing, building or rehabilitating, and filling housing units with tenants. • Soft Costs: Consultant Fees, Architectural Drawings, Marketing Units, Appraisals, Legal Fees, Permits, and Studies • Hard Costs: Acquisition, Construction or Rehabilitation, and Offsite Improvements C

  13. Capital Sources • Capital funding is generally offered in the form of either: • A grant • A deferred loan (which operates as a grant for a specified period of time) • A low-interest loan • A Low-Income Housing Tax Credit Award providing investment equity

  14. Castle Gardens, The Fortune Society Capital Sources • NYS Housing Finance First Mortgage $3,600,000 • NYS Housing Finance Second Mortgage $4,000,000 • Federal Home Loan Bank Affordable Housing Program $1,500,000 • NYS Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance, • Homeless Housing Assistance Program $5,500,000 • NYC Supportive Housing Loan Program (SHLP) $8,300,000 • Mayor’s Fund $250,000 • NY City Council $2,000,000 • Borough President Capital Funds $1,000,000 • NYS Energy Research Development Authority $239,390 • Enterprise Green Communities $50,000 • Low Income Housing Tax Credits $16,060,594 • Deferred Developer Fee $ 1,000,000 Total $43,499,984 C

  15. Sources & Uses • Schedule of Sources & Uses • Combines costs with the financing C

  16. Sources of Financing Federal Sources: • Federal Home Loan Bank Affordable Housing Program (AHP) ($750,000) • HUD 811 & 202 C

  17. Sources of Financing State Sources: • Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) • Indiana Development Fund or New York State Housing Assistance Program • HOME and Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Funds C

  18. Sources of Financing County or Municipal Sources: • HOME/CDBG • Local Housing Trust Funds • Tax Reaction/Scavenger Sale/donation of publicly-owned land (for acquisition) • Tax Increment Financing Districts (TIFs) • Empowerment Zones • Enterprise Zones C

  19. Low-Income Housing Tax Credits • Eligibility is based on tenant income using HUD median income data, adjusted for family size • Rent restrictions – below 60% of AMI • Tax credits received over the first 10 years of operation, but compliance period is 15 • Typically suited for projects of at least 20 units C

  20. Key Concept:Housing Funding is Restricted to Housing

  21. The Second Leg:Operating

  22. Operating Pays the Bills • The costs of operating and maintaining the housing, including all costs of maintaining the project once it is ready for occupancy: • Utilities • Maintenance Services • Insurance • Security • Debt Service or other Loan Payments • Operating and Replacement Reserves • (rent)

  23. Relationship with the Development Budget O

  24. Who Pays for Operating Support • Sources that pay for costs of operating and/or maintaining the housing or physical component of supportive housing • Who comprises the primary sources? • Federal - HUD • State • County/Municipal • Again, depends on your TARGET POPULATION O

  25. Sources Overview O

  26. HUD McKinney – Shelter Plus Care • Rental assistance only eligible activity under SPC • Funds provide the operating costs excluding services • Target Population: Homeless and Disabled as defined by HUD • Applicant must provide supportive services in an amount at least equal to the rental assistance provided during the term of the grant O

  27. HUD – Shelter Plus Care • New construction: 5-year initial grant • Rehabilitation: 10-year initial grant • Can be sponsor-based or project-based subsidies • Must apply through the local Continuum of Care • Grants are large because must be for 5 or 10 years is there room in the Continuum? • Example: 15 unit, 1bd, SPC for 5 years = around $1 million dollars O

  28. HUD – Supportive Housing Program • Operations • HUD Regulation: Pay up to 75% of annual costs • Using other cash resources, make up difference between the total costs and the SHP grant • Leasing • Can pay for up to 100% of annual leasing costs • With leasing, you cannot be the owner O

  29. SHP Considerations • SHP budgets do not allow for annual increases, even if your costs rise over time • Continuums may have additional budget requirements • Initial grant is typically for 2-3 years. Grants are renewed competitively on annual basis after initial award • Grant is a direct grant with HUD • Online: www.hud.gov/offices/cpd/homeless/library/shp/index.cfm O

  30. Continuum of Care Homeless Bonus Project • Bonus allocated to Continuums on annual basis • Must fund ONE permanent supportive housing project that serves homeless, disabled • Equal 15% of Continuum’s pro-rata allocation • In past, project had to be 80% housing and 20% services O

  31. Bonus Project Considerations • Good money if your project is located in Continuum with a decent size bonus • Can fund leasing or operations • Some Continuums are not able to use their bonus dollars due to lack of matching funds O

  32. Key Concept:Get to know your Continuum of Care.

  33. Tenant-Based Section 8 • The typical scattered-site rental subsidy only program • Can be challenging for tenants with special needs to navigate • Specialized waiting lists can be set up by PHAs O

  34. Project-Based Section 8 • Project-Based voucher remains attached to the unit. • Lesser known voucher component, and is optional for the PHA up to 20%. • PHA attaches rent subsidy to a unit of rental housing through a contract with the owner that can last from 1 year to 15 years. O

  35. Sponsor-Based Section 8 • Newer process, similar to Shelter Plus Care administration where vouchers go to a sponsor agency • Can be used to increase access for people in need of supportive services • Available in Moving To Work sites • Signals from HUD that they will review waiver requests for PSH related sponsor-basing O

  36. Project-Based Section 8 Considerations • PHA may have restrictions that exclude the population project intended to serve • May require some education with PHA • Section 8 certificates may be oversubscribed • More info: www.tacinc.org/Docs/HH/OpeningDoors/ODIssue28.pdf O

  37. Public Housing Units • Also administered by the PHA, although there are sometimes different applications • Barriers can be harder to negotiate • Efficiencies sometimes have higher vacancy rates O

  38. Key Concept:Get to know your PHA/Vouchering Agency.

  39. State/Local Rental Assistance • Does not necessarily have the same targeting as Federal rental assistance. • May not have the same barriers related to CJ populations. O

  40. Section 811 • The Section 811 program allows persons with disabilities to live as independently as possible in the community by increasing the supply of rental housing with the availability of supportive services. • Current RFP has changed the format providing only operating assistance and requiring a partnership with the Medicaid administering agency and focus on high cost recipients. O

  41. Section 811 Considerations • Announced through competitive process in the HUD SuperNOFA (notice of funding availability) • Timeframe: Spring O

  42. HUD HOPWA Program • National dollars – Competitive SPNS dollars • Local dollars – formula dollars funneled through Dept of Public Health or Dept of Housing • Amount of funding varies by location • Funding specific for HIV/AIDS population • Funding can include rental assistance, however, grants are typically not for more than 2-4 years at one time O

  43. Funding Restrictions to Consider • As we discussed with services, public financing program rules can differ significantly by source • Need to consider: • How does the source define homelessness? • Are their qualifying disabilities? • Are there barriers based on Criminal Justice or other restrictions? O

  44. Key Concept:Operating stream may hide the need for capital funding.

  45. The Third Leg:Services S

  46. Develop a Service Plan You’ll use it to inform your Service Budget • TARGET POPULATION • Service Needs • Services Program • Overview, Partners and Roles, Staffing, Outcomes • Budget and Staffing Plan S

  47. Common Approaches • Contracts with funders for services to a set of eligible clients. • Reimbursement agreement for certain services to eligible clients. • Fixed fee for maintaining the health of individual clients. • Grants that help cover service expenses. S

  48. Budget Components (cont) • Other expenses • Consultant/contractual services • Social/client services • Transportation • Staff training • Supplies & materials for services • General office supplies and support S

  49. Federal Service Funding • Significant portion of funding for services • Some funding directly apply to feds • Continuum of Care (through local process) • Special request for proposals S

  50. Federal Service Funding • Majority of funding flow to local level • Alphabet Soup - TANF, Medicaid, SAMHSA, Dept of Ed, VA, DOL, SSA • Departments of Health & Human Services, Social Services, Education/Training, Employment, Workforce Investment Board, Schools S

More Related