2024 Office of Housing Administrative Plan
Albemarle County Office of Housing (ACOH) is proposing changes to its Administrative Plan and is offering a 45-day public review and comment period to community stakeholders.
Review the Proposed Changes
Important Changes We Propose + Why We Propose Them
ACOH-Proposed Changes
These changes will be effective 5/1/24, pending Board approval. Until that time, current policies remain in effect.
Change the Homeless Preference to require a referral from the Continuum of Care (CoC) Lead Agency, the Blue Ridge Area Coalition for the Homeless (BRACH). A "limited" preference will be established – up to 25% of all new vouchers issued within aContinue reading
Albemarle County Office of Housing (ACOH) is proposing changes to its Administrative Plan and is offering a 45-day public review and comment period to community stakeholders.
Review the Proposed Changes
Important Changes We Propose + Why We Propose Them
ACOH-Proposed Changes
These changes will be effective 5/1/24, pending Board approval. Until that time, current policies remain in effect.
Change the Homeless Preference to require a referral from the Continuum of Care (CoC) Lead Agency, the Blue Ridge Area Coalition for the Homeless (BRACH). A "limited" preference will be established – up to 25% of all new vouchers issued within a calendar year will be reserved for this preference. The waitlist will be kept open for the homeless preference, so that referrals can be accepted as needed on an ongoing basis.
- This change clarifies the preference and implements a referral process for families and individuals experiencing homelessness. The homeless preference will only apply to families and individuals referred to ACOH by the CoC Lead Agency (BRACH). This will alleviate confusion among applicants and service providers as to how the preference is applied.
- This change helps ACOH remain responsive to the needs of our community’s most vulnerable and housing-instable population. By keeping the waitlist open for the homeless preference, ACOH will be able to respond to urgent and critical housing needs more readily and effectively for those community members experiencing homelessness who have been referred by the CoC Lead Agency (BRACH).
Add Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH) units for households formerly experiencing homelessness to the list of exceptions to the 25% per project cap. In general, PHAs may not project-base more than the greater of 25 units or 25% of the number of units (assisted or unassisted) in a project. The PHA can establish a list of excepted units where this cap does not apply.
- This change expands the list of excepted units to include PSH units for households formerly experiencing homelessness. This means that ACOH can now project-base more than 25 or 25% of units at PSH projects.
Update local “PHA Policy” sections for the Family Unification Program (FUP) to comport with a new Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) that was executed between ACOH, Albemarle County Department of Social Services (ACDSS), and BRACH in May 2023.
- This change adds BRACH as the CoC involved in the MOU. Previously, the MOU was executed between ACDSS and ACOH and did not involve the CoC.
- This change states that ACOH, in addition to ACDSS, will provide supportive services for all FUP youth for a period of 36 months. This change adds ACOH as a second party responsible for the provision of supportive services. The 2023 MOU states which supportive services will be provided by whom.
- This change lists additional supportive services offered by ACOH and/or ACDSS to FUP youth. In accordance with the 2023 MOU, the following additional supportive services will be provided:
- Housing Search Assistance, including Neighborhood Tours, Unit Viewings, and Landlord Introductions in low-poverty census tracts
- Financial Assistance, including Security Deposit Assistance, Rental Application Fees Assistance, and Utility Startup (including utility arrears)
- Post-Move Counseling, including Subsequent-Move Counseling and Landlord-Tenant Mediation
- This change updates the FUP referral process to comport with the 2023 MOU. It adds the CoC as a participant in the referral process.
Increase the minimum deadline for rent increase request submissions by owners to ACOH from 60 days to 90 days.
- This change aligns the notice period with the term of a voucher. This means, should the client decide not to renew with the rent increase, they retain the full 90-day term to utilize their voucher in searching for a new home.
HUD-Proposed Changes
HOTMA [Housing Opportunity through Modernization Act of 2016]
These changes will be effective at a currently unknown date in 2024, pending Board approval. Until that time, pre-HOTMA policies remain in effect. PHAs with a fiscal year start date of 7/1, such as ACOH, must have these policies updated in their plan 75 days prior to 7/1/24.
The Final Rule Implementing HOTMA Sections 102, 103, and 104 was officially published in the Federal Register on February 14, 2023, and revises HUD regulations to put those sections of HOTMA into effect. These sections make changes to the United States Housing Act of 1937, particularly those affecting income calculation, reviews, and program eligibility. Click here for more information about HOTMA.
- Chapter 3: Income, Assets, and Eligibility
Income and net family assets of household members are excluded when determining income eligibility; however, household members are considered for purposes of unit size and subsidy standards
- Chapter 6: Income and Subsidy Determinations
Many changes to income definitions (all income is included unless excluded), including assets and income from assets, absent family members, students, and new methods for calculating deductions and medical care expenses.
- Chapter 7: Verification
Changes here include policies governing when and how to use other federal program’s income determinations, streamlined income determinations for fixed income, and income verification methods and hierarchy.
NSPIRE [National Standards for the Physical Inspection of Real Estate]
These changes will be effective 7/1/24, pending Board approval. Until that time, current policies remain in effect.
On May 11, 2023, HUD published the NSPIRE Rule to implement one of NSPIRE's core objectives—the formal alignment of expectations of housing quality and consolidation of inspection standards across HUD programs. NSPIRE standards replace Housing Quality Standards (HQS), which is the set of standards currently used to conduct inspections of units rented or to be rented by voucher-holders. Click here for more information about NSPIRE.
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CLOSED: This survey has concluded.
Please review the proposed changes to our Administrative Plan: Proposed Changes
Comments submitted during the 45-day comment period will be reviewed by the PHA prior to presenting the proposed revision to the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors. Adjustments may be made as a result of submitted comments at the time of review or in subsequent administrative plan revisions. We seek to implement changes that benefit our client families and community and value your input.
Responses will be collected through April 1, 2024.
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Background Information
The administrative plan is essentially a Public Housing Agency’s (PHA) rulebook.
Every decision the PHA makes is guided by its administrative plan. The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) publishes and periodically updates federal regulation, and a PHA’s administrative plan includes that federal regulation, and, in some cases, allows the PHA to interpret federal regulation in a way that best serves the PHA’s client families and community.
Albemarle County Office of Housing (ACOH) updates its administrative plan on a yearly basis.
Each administrative plan revision must be approved by Albemarle County’s Board of Supervisors, which also serves as ACOH’s Board of Commissioners. Some changes – when they constitute major systemic shifts – are also reviewed by the community during a public comment period.
Components of the Administrative Plan
The administrative plan includes rules and regulations for every function of a PHA’s voucher program. There are chapters on verifying income, maintaining a waiting list, inspecting units, and more. Part of the administrative plan is federally regulated and cannot be changed. The other part of the administrative plan is PHA Policy, which is always labeled and indented on the page. PHAs have the discretion to change sections that are PHA Policy to best meet the needs of their clients' families and communities.
Who's Listening
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Housing Program Manager
AHEmail aharo@albemarle.org