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Banking and Community

Perspectives
ISSUE 1 2007

In this issue:
General Obligation
Bonds
Private Activity Bonds
Housing Trust Funds
Infill Incentives
Tax Increment Financing

W

e have

changed our look
but not our in-depth
content. Banking and
Community Perspectives
will continue to provide
thorough analysis of
current and critical
issues facing low- and
moderate-income people
and communities. We
hope you like the new
design.

F e d e r a l

Rese r v e

B a n k

o f

D a l l a s

Retooling Affordable
Housing Strategies
Case Studies of Local
Finance Options

ISSUE 1 2007

Banking and
Community

Perspectives
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Community Affairs Office
P.O. Box 655906
Dallas, TX 75265-5906
Gloria Vasquez Brown
Vice President, Public Affairs
gloria.v.brown@dal.frb.org
Alfreda B. Norman
Assistant Vice President and
Community Affairs Officer
alfreda.norman@dal.frb.org
Wenhua Di
Economist
wenhua.di@dal.frb.org
Julie Gunter
Senior Community Affairs Advisor
julie.gunter@dal.frb.org
Jackie Hoyer
Houston Branch
Senior Community Affairs Advisor
jackie.hoyer@dal.frb.org
Roy Lopez
Community Affairs Specialist
roy.lopez@dal.frb.org
Elizabeth Sobel
Community Affairs Specialist
elizabeth.sobel@dal.frb.org
Editor: Jennifer Afflerbach
Designer: Gene Autry
Researcher and Writer: Roy Lopez
May 2007
The views expressed are the authors’ and
should not be attributed to the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal
Reserve System. Articles may be reprinted
if the source is credited and a copy is
provided to the Community Affairs Office.

This publication and our webzine,
e-Perspectives, are available on
the Dallas Fed website at
www.dallasfed.org.

2

A

cross the nation,

more and more Americans are
facing a housing cost burden—
that is, paying more than 30
percent of their gross income on
housing. For many working families, home prices and rental rates
are increasing faster than their incomes. In the Eleventh
Federal Reserve District, this is a growing challenge. The supply of decent,
affordable housing lags far behind the rate of demand.
This serious cost burden and the need for quality, affordable housing is not
limited to low-income households. Firefighters, nurses, police officers, teachers,
health care workers and other middle-income earners are increasingly finding
it difficult to live in the communities where they work. Recognizing this problem, policymakers and housing providers are reaching into an ever-expanding
tool kit of public finance options. Their creative approach toward affordable
housing production has generated many successes. This issue of Banking and
Community Perspectives explores these finance tools and demonstrates how
local municipalities are leveraging public funds to provide safe, decent, quality
housing that is affordable for all income earners.

Alfreda B. Norman
Assistant Vice President and Community Affairs Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Banking and Community Perspectives

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Retooling Affordable Housing Strategies
Case Studies of Local Finance Options

A

Photo: Elizabeth Sobel

ffordable housing is housing that costs the owner or tenant no more
than 30 percent of gross income, according to
the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). Rent or mortgage payments
that exceed this percentage are considered a
cost burden to the household because other
basic expenses like health care, education
and transportation are compromised.
In Texas, the number of families facing
a cost burden is growing three times faster
than the availability of decent, affordable
housing, according to the Texas Low Income
Housing Information Service. Rising housing
costs have created a housing shortage not
only for lower-income groups, but also for
middle-income professions such as teachers,
nurses, firefighters, police officers and others
who can’t afford to live in the communities
they serve. Maintaining employment does not

guarantee that a family
can find decent affordable housing.
The problem is
compounded by the
federal government’s
diminishing role in
housing and community
development programs.
Local entities rely on
federal assistance programs to buy down the
cost of housing for lowand moderate-income
residents. According to
Lyons Gardens, a 53-unit senior complex in
Austin, is a model for similar development.
the Center on Budget
and Policy Priorities
(CBPP), because of budget deficits, the current
ties, however, are discovering that affordadministration and Congress have reduced
able housing and community development
funding for a number of domestic programs,
programs can flourish even with reduced
including most low-income
federal backing. This issue of Banking and
housing programs. Community
Community Perspectives presents case studies
Table 1
development block grants, the
that show resourceful ways local entities are
Texas Housing Affordability Index
Home Investment Partnerships
promoting affordable housing and expandHUD
Program and public housing
ing community development opportunities.
Median
median
Housing
MLS
house
Interest
Required
family affordability
have been hit the hardest;
Even though many of these programs are not
area
price
rate
income
income
index
their funding declined by 20
new, they are undersubscribed or have fresh
percent, 16 percent and 11
potential to impact more residents.
Austin
$174,300
6.63%
$42,879
$69,600
1.62
percent, respectively, from
Brownsville
$  88,600
6.87%
$22,339
$33,000
1.48
Dallas
$156,100
6.51%
$37,927
$65,500
1.73
2004 to 2006. In 2007, the adGeneral Obligation Bonds in Austin
El Paso
$132,100
6.63%
$32,497
$39,500
1.22
ministration proposed further
In Austin, the shortage of affordable
Fort Worth
$116,800
6.51%
$28,379
$63,400
2.23
cutbacks of $1.3 billion. These
housing has been aggravated by falling
Houston
$148,200
6.61%
$36,383
$60,900
1.67
decreases in large federal
incomes and rising housing costs. In 2006, inLubbock
$102,400
6.63%
$25,191
$48,500
1.93
block assistance programs
comes dropped 4 percent while housing costs
McAllen
$114,400
6.87%
$28,844
$30,800
1.07
have affected nearly every
increased 10 percent. This mismatch between
San Antonio
$141,700
6.87%
$35,727
$53,100
1.49
low-income housing grant
income and home prices gives Austin one of
Texas
$142,400
6.63%
$35,031
$54,300
1.55
program important to state and the highest cost burdens in Texas.
U.S.
$219,300
6.55%
$53,504
$59,600
1.11
local plans to increase affordThe Texas A&M Real Estate Center’s
NOTES: The Multiple Listing Service (MLS) area represents the local reporting Realtors association’s
able housing. And as federal
housing affordability index shows the degree
geographical coverage area. The housing affordability index is the ratio of median family income to
the income required to qualify for an 80 percent, fixed-rate mortgage to purchase the median-priced
funding declines, construction
of affordability by city (Table 1).1 Dividing
home. Data are for fourth quarter 2006.
costs continue to rise.
HUD median family income by the required
SOURCE: Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University.
Some local communiincome for homeownership, affordability in

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Banking and Community Perspectives

3

The advantage of general
obligation bonds is that they
permit the city to borrow
Photo: Bridget A. Moreno

funds at one of the lowest
possible interest rates.
Private activity bonds helped finance Hillcrest
Manor Senior Community in Lubbock.

Austin (1.62) is better than the state average (1.55) but worse than Dallas (1.73), Fort
Worth (2.23) and Houston (1.67). Furthermore, Austin’s housing authority currently
reports that it has about 4,000 families on
the public housing waiting list and 6,000
on the Housing Choice Voucher (Section 8)
list. Neighborhood Housing and Community
Development (NHCD) Director Paul Hilgers
says the affordable housing crunch is getting
worse as the number of new citizens and
jobs coming to Austin outpaces the number
of available affordable housing units. Austin
realized it had a problem, Hilgers says, and its
citizens have taken action.
In November 2006, Austin voters approved a $55 million affordable housing bond
program by 62 percent. As a result, the city
will issue general obligation bonds allocated
over seven years to fund the financing, acquisition, development or rehabilitation of safe,
clean and affordable housing.
The advantage of general obligation
bonds is that they permit the city to borrow
funds at one of the lowest possible interest
rates. They are a form of long-term borrowing
in which the city issues municipal securities
and pledges its full faith and credit to their
repayment. Bonds are repaid through annual
debt service. Property taxes for this one initiative will rise about $6 a year for the owner of
a $174,000 home—the median-priced home
in the city. Nonprofit, for-profit and preservation groups can apply for funding through a
4

request-for-proposal to finance developments
that meet the program’s objective.
“Because we know these funds are
available and not subject to budget cuts, they
greatly increase our ability as a community to
plan, leverage and be creative on how these
dollars will be used over time,” says Margaret
Shaw, deputy director of the city’s NHCD
department.
Austin’s bond program is only the second in the state, after Houston, to use general
obligation bonds specifically for affordable
housing. Program administrators hope the
bonds will attract $300 million in additional
funds and create over 12,000 jobs. NHCD
has established the program’s accountability
guidelines, which were subject to public comment. The notice of funding availability will
be released this summer.
Heather Way and Karen Paup of Housing
Works Action, an advocacy coalition based
in Austin, credit the following tactics for the
bond campaign’s success:2
• Having a consistent and compassionate
message that resonated with voters. Campaign literature described the estimated
unmet and growing need at $1.3 billion.
• Identifying voter perceptions with preelection surveys to gauge the interest of
affordable housing programs.
• Creating alliances with other advocacy
groups. In Austin, environmental advocates
proved most influential.
• Working closely with the city’s bond

Banking and Community Perspectives

election advisory committee early in the
process, which enabled the advocates to
have their initiative placed on the ballot.
Advocates and community leaders point
to existing local models like Lyons Gardens,
an award-winning, 53-unit senior complex in
East Austin that is experiencing a nearly twoyear waiting list. Hilgers says that with this
additional source of bond financing, more
communities like Lyons Gardens can help
alleviate an unmet need.

Private Activity Bonds
State and local jurisdictions can raise
revenue through the sale of tax-exempt private
activity bonds (PABs), which can be used to
finance affordable multifamily developments or
provide funds for low- and moderateincome homebuyer mortgage assistance. PAB
funds can also be used for public programs,
such as airports, sewers, industrial parks and
student loans. States are allotted a debt limit
for such bond issuances. The 2006 limit was
$85 per state resident, a $5 increase over 2005.
According to the Texas Bond Review Board,
this raised Texas’ 2007 cap to just under $2
billion, an increase of almost $170 million from
2006. Half of the allocation goes to local and
state multifamily and single-family mortgage
programs and half to other public needs.3
Public activity bonds have the capability
to assist many residents but have been underused because of program complexities and
changing market conditions. PABs are broken

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

down into two types, mortgage revenue
bonds and multifamily bonds, depending
on what is being financed. Both types allow
state and local governments to access private
financing to support affordable housing. By
lowering the interest rate on mortgage loans,
mortgage revenue bonds make homeownership affordable for families that can’t meet
payments on a conventional loan. Multifamily bonds give low-income families access
to quality housing the market might not
otherwise provide.

State Housing Trust Fund
Over the past six years, Texas’ state housing

tutions, developers, environmentalists, rural interests

trust fund has dispersed roughly $7 million a year. The

and service providers that will lobby the Legislature.

state Legislature mandates that at least $3 million of

The coalition’s legislative agenda recommends a doc-

the fund be used for the Texas Bootstrap Loan

ument recording fee or real estate transfer tax

Program, a colonia self-help construc-

to raise revenue for a dedicated fund.

tion program, limiting funds for the

This would allow more long-range

remainder of the state. Relative

planning, rather than advocating

to the size of other state hous-

for the fund every two years as is

ing trust funds, Texas’ is quite

done today.  

small. Illinois, Arizona and Ohio

One proposal that has

have dedicated funding sources
Private Activity Bonds in Lubbock

Lubbock Housing Finance Corp. (LHFC)
administers PAB housing programs in Lubbock. The corporation has not issued singlefamily bonds in recent years because there
was a significant gap between the interest
paid on the outstanding bonds and the interest that would have been earned by investing the bonds’ proceeds. Negative arbitrage
has been the largest barrier over the years,
according to LHFC Executive Director Shari
Flynn.
With improving economic circumstances
and higher interest rates, bond issuance is
Figure 1

Growth of Housing Trust Funds in U.S.
Number
600

500

400

300

200

100

0

1980

1985

1990

1995

2000

garnered coalition support is

that create revenues of well over

2004

2007

SOURCE: Housing Trust Fund Project, Center for Community Change.

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

creating local housing trust funds

$25 million a year. Florida, a peer

with state matching contributions, but

state with a population similar to Texas’,

ultimately the structure and mission would

has a housing trust fund with revenues in excess of

be decided by the Legislature. Supporters are seeking

$300 million.

a dedicated source of funding that would collect $25

Housing Texas, an Austin-based advocacy co-

million to $50 million a year and support the construc-

alition, is developing a comprehensive strategy for

tion of 25,000 homes to shelter 75,000 Texans. As of

expansion of the state housing trust fund. Its tactics

this writing, a House–Senate conference committee

include building alliances among community leaders,

voted to approve an increase to the state housing trust

community development corporations, financial insti-

fund by an additional $10 million for the biennium.

now more attractive and competitive. In 2007,
the LHFC plans to partner with South Plains
Housing Finance Corp. to issue a combined
$37 million in single-family mortgage revenue
bonds that will service Lubbock and 14 counties outside the city. Single-family bonds will
be used to finance below-market-interest-rate
mortgage loans through a network of local
lenders. Families and individuals who are
purchasing their first home or who have not
owned a home in the past three years will be
eligible.
In 2006, the LHFC also issued a $10
million multifamily bond for a complex in
north Lubbock called Hillcrest Manor Senior
Community. The 220-unit housing facility,
still under construction, is subsidized by an
additional $624,800 in 4 percent tax credits
from the Texas Department of Housing and
Community Affairs (TDHCA). The 4 percent
housing tax credit typically accompanies such
bonds and is used to further subsidize the
project and help provide below-market rents
for income-eligible residents.
Flynn stresses that PAB programs are
more likely to succeed if they have profession-

al staff or consultants who understand how
to structure a bond deal, know the real estate
market, and learn from the successes and
mistakes of other local issuers. Texas has 82
housing finance corporations throughout the
state. Not all are active, but according to Flynn,
if conditions are favorable, more of these
organizations could impact a great number
of low- and moderate-income residents, even
in rural areas, where HUD income limits are
lower, making bond financing more difficult.

Housing Trust Funds
Housing trust funds—public revenues set
aside by cities, counties or states for affordable
housing development—have exploded across
the country; since 1990, over 500 new ones
have emerged (Figure 1). Texas has not kept
pace with the rest of the nation. It has only
three: one in Austin, one in San Antonio and
a statewide one created by the Legislature and
housed at TDHCA in Austin (see box). The city
of Fort Worth is close to finalizing plans for a
housing trust fund this year.
A housing trust fund receives revenue
from such sources as taxes, fees, loan repay-

Banking and Community Perspectives

5

Photo: Roy C. Lopez

ments and interest from an endowment fund
or corpus (a fund’s principal). The funds are
more flexible than federal grant dollars and
can be layered with other funding. Local injection of dollars can mitigate risk and allow for
deeper subsidies for residents. Most housing
trust funds are administered by the agency or
city department responsible for federal housing programs.
Creating a housing trust fund is not a
simple or quick political process. It is often
fraught with difficult funding choices. Dedicating money to an affordable-housing fund
limits overall budget flexibility, which is not
always popular with elected officials. Often,
housing trust funds are created in response to
public demand that the government address
critical housing needs.

nio Housing Trust has created 3,600 units of
affordable housing since its inception.

have developed strategies to sustain infill
growth and investment.

San Antonio Housing Trust

Infill Incentives

Neighborhood Empowerment Zone in

Unlike the Austin and statewide housing trust funds that are currently supported
through appropriated general revenue dollars,
the San Antonio Housing Trust relies on the
dedicated interest generated from an affordable
housing corpus. Created in 1988 by the city of
San Antonio with an initial investment of $10
million from the sale of its cable franchise, the
fund is governed by an 11-member board of
trustees appointed by the City Council.
The trust fund is unique in that it is a
nonprofit subsidiary, a community housing
development organization, a housing finance
corporation and the city’s housing trust fund
administrator. This makes the organization
flexible in its approach to funding development requests. The trust is independent of any
city department, but the board can only make
funding recommendations to the City Council,
based on a review of development proposals.
Interest earned from the $10 million
corpus and loan servicing capitalize the
funding rounds that are held about every one
and a half years. Since its inception, the trust
has awarded almost $13 million to nonprofit
housing organizations, historic preservation
groups and private developers. These funds
have leveraged over $190 million in private
and public funds, a nearly 15 to 1 ratio. John
Kenny, executive director, says the San Anto-

Municipal leaders have long touted infill
development as an alternative to conventional development patterns that cause urban
sprawl. Infill can be defined as the recycling
of vacant or underused tracts within cities
and suburbs. Every city, town and suburb has
properties that need rehabilitation or development. Local governments use infill incentives
to promote development in places where
infrastructure and services are present.
According to PolicyLink, a national nonprofit research organization, local governments
offer infill incentives for a number of reasons:
• Reusing vacant or blighted properties,
which can revitalize underperforming
neighborhoods;
• Increasing jobs, spurring commerce and
creating safer neighborhoods, which can
generate a tax base, particularly for school
districts;
• Taking advantage of economies of scale
by building denser developments;
• Reducing auto congestion and pollution
when infill is close to transit routes or is in
walking distance of services and entertainment. Many cities and older communities in
the Eleventh Federal Reserve District have
seen core neighborhoods improve under
this type of incentive.
Cities such as Fort Worth and Richardson

Fort Worth

6

Construction is under way in the 232-lot Sierra Vista development in
Fort Worth’s Rolling Hills Neighborhood Empowerment Zone.

Banking and Community Perspectives

In the late 1990s, Fort Worth’s inner city
was in danger of decaying while new development encircled it like a lasso, city officials
recall. In response, the City Council designated specific districts as priorities for spurring
commercial and residential development.
In 1999, the Texas Legislature authorized
municipalities to establish zones to revitalize
distressed neighborhoods through waived
fees and municipal tax abatements.
The Fort Worth City Council was the first
to take advantage of this legislative tool by
establishing a neighborhood empowerment
zone program in 2001 to promote private
investment in housing and businesses.4 To be
designated such a zone, the area must have a
plan to promote the creation or rehabilitation
of affordable housing and increase economic
development activity.
Fort Worth currently has 16 inner-city
neighborhood empowerment zones. To
qualify for the program, the property owner
must spend at least 30 percent of the appraisal district value of the home, excluding
land, on the rehabilitation. For example, if a
home is appraised at $50,000, the documented rehabilitation costs must exceed $15,000.
To be eligible for the incentives, property
owners or developers must fill out an applica-

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Home Improvement Incentive Program in
Richardson

As a strategy to attract business and
in response to neighborhood advocacy for
a policy that would revitalize deteriorating
housing stock, the city of Richardson recently
initiated the Home Improvement Incentive Program.5 The neighborhood services
department of this inner-ring suburb of Dallas
manages the program, which offers a onetime tenfold rebate on the increase in city
taxes based on a home’s postimprovement
appraised value. For example, if a homeowner makes improvements and sees a $300
increase in the city portion of his property
tax bill, the homeowner would receive a onetime $3,000 rebate check from the city.
To qualify, an improvement project
must have begun after Feb. 12, 2007, cost at
least $20,000 and be completed within 24
months of project approval. Property owners
are required to sign a contract with the city,
provide officials with a project cost estimate,
consent to periodic inspections and authenticate construction costs. The county appraisal
district determines the home’s certified value.

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Although the tax rebate program is open
to any owner of a single-family home, the
hope is that the program will benefit the older sections of Richardson and curtail a trend
toward declining property values as residents
move to newer suburbs or into Dallas. Don
Magner, who oversees the incentive program,
says Richardson was compelled to implement
the plan because it promotes a dual objective
of both infill and economic development.
“The City Council believes that infill
residential redevelopment will attract and
encourage business relocation and expansion,
since business will look to the immediate and
available housing stock to meet the needs of
the workforce,” he explains.

In the standard TIF model,
municipal bonds are used to
raise the capital needed to
finance site improvements like
public works projects, affordable housing, demolition and
environmental remediation.

tractive to investors, push up property values
and therefore generate more taxes. These incremental taxes are removed from the general
tax rolls and used to fund public improvements within the TIF district (Figure 2).
In the standard TIF model, municipal
bonds are used to raise the capital needed to
finance site improvements like public works
projects, affordable housing, demolition
and environmental remediation. If the city
decides to issue bonds for initial financing,
the incremental tax revenue is used to repay
the bonds. When the bonds are retired, the
TIF-generated tax base reverts to the general
tax rolls. Other TIF zones opt for a pay-asyou-go model, financing the improvements as
the revenues are raised.

Tax Increment Financing
Tax increment financing (TIF) is a tool
local governments can use to publicly invest
in building and infrastructure improvements
within a defined area. These improvements
are usually associated with community revitalization but have not always been implemented in such a manner, even though that was
an original intent of the Texas TIF legislation.
Another intention of the TIF is to promote the viability of existing businesses and
attract development to an area. The public
improvements, which make the area more atFigure 2

TIF Assessed Value Over Project Life
$

ent

pm

Assessed Value (AV)

tion, be current on all property taxes and have
no liens previously filed against them. Liens
that can be released include weed, demolition,
board-up and paving liens, which can reach
into the thousands of dollars. Fees that can be
waived include building, demolition and water
impact fees. Properties may also qualify for
five-year, 100 percent tax abatements on the
city’s portion of the property tax liability.
Critics say the city may be creating too
many incentives, forgoing fees and taxes it
would ordinarily capture within these zones
for day-to-day city services. Jerome Walker,
Fort Worth housing director, responds that
much of the development would not occur
without these incentive awards and they are
an investment that will pay dividends over
the long term. According to city officials, the
neighborhood empowerment zone program
has waived nearly $22 million in potential
taxes and fees, the majority in municipal tax
abatements. Program investments within the
zone have totaled over $400 million.

om

fr
AV
sed

lo
eve

D

New
Post-Project AV

rea

Inc

Total AV now
belongs to all
taxing districts
in project area

Incremental AV
Incremental real property tax belongs to
TIF authority to pay project costs

Base AV

AV belongs to all other taxing districts in project area
0

5

15

10

20

25

25-year TIF
Created

Terminated

SOURCE: Craig L. Johnson and Robinson and Cole Law Firm, “Tax Increment Financing,” National Association of Realtors, November 2000.

Banking and Community Perspectives

7

TIF opponents have expressed concern that
this financing tool will lead to gentrification,
the use of eminent domain and rapid transformation of a community’s historic character.
Many fear that overuse of TIFs will lead to
higher property tax bills because a declining
portion of the tax base is available to local
government agencies to pay for everyday
services like code compliance, fire protection
and police enforcement.
Midland Tax Increment Financing

When Midland’s downtown area
experienced an economic downturn in the
1990s, the city lost its standing as the region’s
undisputed energy center. The exodus of major oil companies and declining office staffs
reduced demand for downtown office space.
The ensuing low rental rates made it difficult
for owners to invest in capital upgrades. As a
result, the downtown tax base dropped from
$180 million in 1991 to $122 million in 2001.
City leaders felt intervention was
necessary to save the long-term viability of
downtown. The area needed retail, cultural
and, most important, residential development
to bring vitality to its economy. In March
2001, the City Council established a TIF zone
to finance affordable housing infrastructure in
the zone.

Six years later, the TIF district is starting
to bear fruit. The total assessed value in 2005
exceeded the base-year value (2001) by $9.2
million, which resulted in a tax increment of
over $121,000 for the year ending Dec. 31,
2005.6 According to estimates, the TIF district’s
2006 revenue will be nearly $230,000, which
includes the revenue of the four participating
taxing entities.
With its generated increment, the city
is currently partnering with the Midland
Community Development Corp. to finance
qualified public improvements to Old Pueblo
Park, a 25-unit single-family housing development on the downtown periphery. The
development has added nearly $2 million
in assessed value to the tax rolls, and more
affordable-housing investment is scheduled in
the coming year. The homes are priced from
the mid-$70s, with demand soaring. Although
most observers point to the energy industry’s
resurgence in the Permian Basin as the main
reason for the downtown rebound, the TIF
has contributed to the recovery and economic
diversification.

forced local entities to assume an increased
role in addressing the housing needs of their
residents. The approaches described here
are part of a varied and expansive tool kit
available to local officials. By committing to
innovative finance options, policymakers can
address the sobering affordable housing realities that many cities are facing. Communities
throughout the Eleventh Federal Reserve District are adapting to changing economic and
political environments and finding success as
the affordable housing paradigm shifts.
NOTES
Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University: Texas Housing
Affordability Index, http://recenter.tamu.edu/data/dataaffd.
html.
2
Housing Works Action, www.housingworksaction.org.
1

For more information on private activity bonds, see the
Texas Bond Review Board website, www.brb.state.tx.us/pab/
pab.html.
4
For more information, see the city of Fort Worth’s website,
www.fortworthgov.org/housing/info.
5
For more information on Richardson’s Home Improvement
Incentive Program, see www.cor.net/NeighborhoodServices/
HomepageImprovement.html.
6
“Reinvestment Zone No. 1: Downtown Midland TIRZ Annual
Report 2005,” City of Midland, April 2006.
3

Future Framework
The gap between income and housing costs, coupled with declining federal
grant assistance for affordable housing, has

Preserving
Homeownership

Addressing the Foreclosure Issue
June 12, 2007 • Dallas, Texas

Hosted by the
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
in partnership with the
U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development
Dallas Field Office

Rising foreclosure and mortgage delinquency rates in Texas have
become a troubling trend. “Preserving Homeownership: Addressing
the Foreclosure Issue,” a one-day conference, will focus on innovative
strategies for foreclosure prevention and early intervention.
View conference agenda and register today at
www.dallasfed.org/news/ca/2007/07home.cfm