
NATIONAL HOUSING TRUST FUND CAMPAIGN
President Signs Housing Trust Fund Into Law
July 30, 2008
Today, President George W. Bush signed the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008. Among the bill’s numerous provisions is the establishment of a national Housing Trust Fund. This is a major victory for low income housing advocates and the lowest income people in our country with the most serious needs.
The Housing Trust Fund’s most important features are:
This is the first new federal housing production program since the HOME program was created in 1990 and the first new production program specifically targeted to extremely low income households since the Section 8 program was created in 1974.
Funds for the Housing Trust Fund will come from annual contributions made by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The amount will be based on a percentage of each company’s annual new business. Using the formula in the bill, the amount in 2007 would have been $557 million. Because their new business is increasing, the amount in 2008 is expected to be higher. However, 25% of the funds each year must first go to a reserve fund at the Treasury to offset scoring problems.
The remaining 75% of the funds will be divided between the Housing Trust Fund, which gets 65%, and a new Capital Magnet Fund that gets 35%. For the first three years, a percentage of the funds (100% in FY09, 50% in FY10, and 25% in FY11) will be diverted to a reserve fund to cover losses that the FHA might incur refinancing troubled mortgages through the new HOPE for Homeowners program. Based on the projected amount the formula will produce in calendar year 2008, approximately $300 million would have been available for the housing trust fund this year had it been in place with no diversions for the HOPE for Homeowners reserve fund. Funds not needed to cover FHA losses eventually will revert to the Housing Trust Fund and the Capital Magnet Fund.
Given the recent instability of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, concerns have been raised about whether any funds will be available for new programs. The new regulator has the authority to suspend contributions under certain circumstances related the fiscal distress of the GSEs. However, no money will be available for the Housing Trust Fund until FY10, by which time Freddie Mac’s and Fannie Mae’s fiscal conditions are expected to be much improved.
Now that it has achieved this important and long-sought milestone, the National Housing Trust Fund Campaign will turn its attention to the next two steps towards achieving its goal of 1.5 million homes in 10 years. The first is implementation of the program—working with HUD to create an effective and timely fund distribution system. The second is to identify and advocate for additional sources of dedicated revenue. The bill specifically provides that Congress may “transfer, appropriate, or credit” other funds to the Housing Trust Fund.
More details about the Housing Trust Fund and the Capital Magnet Fund provisions follow:
Housing Trust Fund
Capital Magnet Fund
o the percentage of low income families or the extent of poverty
o the rate of unemployment or underemployment
o the extent of blight and disinvestment
o projects targeting extremely low, very low , and low income families in an area of economic distress
o or any other criteria chosen by the Secretary
For more information, go to www.nhtf.org.
Updates on National Affordable Housing Trust Fund:
Recent Campaign News
Reed GSE Affordable Housing Fund Compared to House Version, 11/30/07
Senate Fails to Pass FHA Modernization, GSE Bills, 11/16/07
Senator Reed Introduces GSE Mission Improvement Bill; Trust Fund Provision Included, 11/16/07
Trust Fund Campaign Responds to Administration Opposition, 11/16/07
GSE Bill, NHTF Funding Source, Stalled in Senate, 11/09/07
