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Week of April 19, 2004

Front Page

President's Message

* For Working Families, Affordable Housing Is in Short Supply

Housing Forum

* Letters to the Editor

Housing and Economics

* Housing Starts Advance in March
* Report Studies Housing Affordability Issues in Florida
* Don’t Miss NAHB’s Spring Construction Forecast Conference

Building Systems

* Builders Turn to Concrete as Alternative to Volatile Lumber Prices
* Builder Donates Log Home to Habitat for Humanity

Business Management

* Customer Satisfaction Surveys Make Good Business Sense
* See How You Measure Up With ‘Cost of Doing Business Study’

Multifamily

* In a Win for NAHB's Multifamily Members, FHA Improves Mortgage Insurance Program

Small Builders and Remodelers

* The Dangers of Raising Your Prices
* Publicize May as National Remodeling Month in Your Market

Smart Growth

* Online Lectures Advocate High Density Housing
* Land Conservation Conference Examines Pedestrian-Friendly Community

State and Local

* Mold Legislation Introduced in 21 States
* San Diego Voters Reject Growth Control Measure
* Grand Rapids Builders Respond to Land Use Report

Research

* Participants Sought for Home Builder Research Panel

Design

* Inventor Turns Grounded Airplanes Into For-Sale Houses

Legal Issues

* Ask the Lawyer — About Down-Zoning

Housing Finance

* House Bill Would Index VA Loan Guaranty

Labor

* Job Corps Tour Makes Stops at Home Builder Shows

Building Products

* Online Tools Help Architects and Builders With Coastal Projects

Building News Coast To Coast

Association News & Events

* Sign Up for the Legislative Conference and Make Housing a Priority in Congress
* Help Build This Year’s Family Build Home for a Mother of Three
* Recruit Three Members, Get a Membership Day Jean Jacket
* Share Your Knowledge and Expertise
* Calendar of Events

NBN Back Issues

 

In a Win for NAHB's Multifamily Members, FHA Improves Mortgage Insurance Program

NAHB’s long campaign to improve and modernize the FHA multifamily mortgage insurance programs came to a successful conclusion on April 2, when the final rule on new FHA multifamily mortgage loan limits published by HUD contained provisions allowing the HUD secretary to increase the limits in areas where they are too low.

Limits can now be increased by up to 140% of the statutory base limits and by as much as 170% in HUD-designated "high-cost" areas. Previouysly, those increases were 110% and 140%, respectively. In areas not designated as high cost, builders can request as much as a 140% increase over the base limit on a case-by-case basis.

NAHB staff provided guidance during HUD’s deliberations on the methodology for determining high cost areas. Under the final rule advocated by the association, developers now can more easily build rental housing in the nation’s costliest markets — areas that tend to be among those most in need of such housing.


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NAHB’s efforts to improve the FHA multifamily insurance program began by helping to modify the model HUD used to set premiums, which were unreasonably high. In  meetings with HUD, NAHB economists suggested solutions that have been incorporated into the model and that have produced more accurate results and lowered premiums.

That was followed in fall 2001 by a successful NAHB effort to persuade Congress to raise the FHA multifamily mortgage insurance program’s base loan limits by 25%. Those limits had not been raised since 1992. Last year, Congress agreed to index those limits to inflation, effective Jan. 1, 2004.

But there is still some work to be done. NAHB fears that the FHA — which has been doing a record amount of multifamily mortgage insurance business since these improvements were implemented — will not have sufficient commitment authority in FY 2004 to meet the demand for FHA-insured multifamily loans.

With a commitment authority level of $25 billion (only $2 billion more than provided in FY 2003), it is likely that FHA will have to shut down the program before the end of the fiscal year. The FHA multifamily programs were temporarily shut down twice in 2003 and again in early 2004 because HUD’s authority to issue commitments for new loans ran out.
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