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Kentucky Housing Association HCV Update. Milan Ozdinec, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Housing and Voucher Programs. Topics. Overview of HCV Program HUD’s HCV Objectives HUD’s Management Plan Goals for HCV Budget. Overview of HCV Program.
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Kentucky Housing AssociationHCV Update Milan Ozdinec, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Housing and Voucher Programs
Topics • Overview of HCV Program • HUD’s HCV Objectives • HUD’s Management Plan Goals for HCV • Budget
Overview of HCV Program • HCV program currently assists 2.1 million households • 31,455 households are assisted in Kentucky • 2010 ABA for the entire HCV program was $16.6 billion • Kentucky’s total 2010 ABA accounts for $171.2 million • 2010 renewal funding for the HCV program is $16.4 billion • Excludes new incrementals such as new units and special purpose vouchers • Management goals are focused on leasing potential and shortfall prevention
Voucher Renewal Funding 2001-2010 $ in millions Note: Does not include incrementals. The 2008 funding excludes the $723 million offset and the 2009 funding excludes the $750 million offset appropriated by Congress. 2010 funding includes the $150 million set-aside awarded in April.
Budget Utilization Trends $ in millions • HAP expenditures have fallen short of budget authority in recent months • For June 2010 HAP Budget Authority was $1.39 billion and HAP expenditures was $1.35 billion
Trends in the Number of Vouchers • HCV program currently serves 2.1 million households • Number of voucher-assisted households increased by 0.4% over last year Note: Includes MTW housing authorities.
Trends in Leasing Rates • Additional funding was made available in December 2009 for PHAs facing shortfalls which reduced the decline in leasing at the end of 2009 • Leasing continued to decrease in early 2010
Our Objectives? • Bottom Line – house more people with HCV and stabilize HCV • Sept 2009 – Sept 2011 • New Increments: VASH, FUP, Disability related, etc. • Leasing more of the existing program • HUD Efforts • Developing spreadsheet tools to identify leasing potential / shortfall prevention • Identifying resources, building capacity • Being organizationally more flexible • Outreach to our partners – training, consultation
HCV Initiative: One Year Earlier…. • Last Year’s Conference – Problem identified: Inadequate attention to HUD’s largest subsidized housing program • Management Commitment to re-focus on HCV • HCV Working Group Formed • FO and HQ team members
One Year Later…. • Investment in capacity building in HUD and PHAs • Field Office Points of Contact and Subject Matter Experts identified and trained • Training at numerous PHA conferences and at HUD FOs • Development of Spreadsheet Tools • Nationwide Data Report to Identify Risk and Opportunities • Individual PHA Projection Spreadsheet • Shortfall Prevention Team and Process launched • Utilization SharePoint Site developed to manage process and data • Region 4 Pilot initiated
Our Objective: Optimizing and Stabilizing HCV Leasing Nationally
Optimizing and Stabilizing HCV Leasing in Kentucky • Stabilization and optimization metrics for Kentucky: • 4 PHAs with potential shortfalls using projections for end of CY • No PHAs in the Top 200, 29 PHAs have some leasing potential using projections for end of CY • 12 PHAs in the optimal zone using YTD budget and leasing numbers • Comparison of Kentucky to Nation using YTD numbers
Building Capacity by Mastering Critical Variables Success Rate Hierarchy of HCV Capacity Turn over Rate Time from Issuance to Lease Per Unit Cost
Two Year Forecasting The key to stability: • Projecting into Year Two • Estimating Funding: Modeling Re-benchmarking • Testing Issuance scenarios – monthly updating
HUD HCV Management Goals • Increasing Families Served • Making VASH work • Partnership and problem solving
Budget Status • 2011 Status • 2012 Planning • Relevance to HCV efforts at Optimizing and Stability