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3/5/2024

Treasury Department Announces New Efforts to Increase Housing Supply in the United States | U.S. Department of the …

Treasury Department Announces New Efforts to Increase
Housing Supply in the United States
March 5, 2024

Alongside new e orts, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally Adeyemo releases new blog
post detailing how Treasury Department programs have helped keep families in their homes
and contributed to housing construction and preservation
WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. Department of the Treasury announced new e orts to
increase the supply of housing in the year ahead. These e orts include:
1. Updated guidance for the American Rescue Planʼs (ARP) State and Local Fiscal Recovery
Funds (SLFRF) to make it easier for recipients to use remaining funds to construct
a ordable housing;
2. New clarifications to the ARPʼs Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA) program which will
make clear that qualifying recipients can use remaining funds on a broad range of uses to
fund a ordable housing serving very low-income families; and
3. An extension of the Federal Financing Bankʼs (FFB) financing support for a risk-sharing
initiative between the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and state
and local housing finance agencies in order to lower the cost of creating and preserving
a ordable housing.
These announcements build on the Biden-Harris Administrationʼs Housing Supply Action Plan
to boost the nationʼs stock of a ordable housing and lower housing costs, including through
new actions announced last week.
Over the past three years, the speed and strength of the Biden-Harris Administrationʼs
pandemic response helped to thwart the worst economic outcomes anticipated from the
COVID shock and fostered the fastest – and fairest – economic recovery in recent history.
During this recovery, the Treasury Department encouraged communities to address housing
supply needs by making innovative use of ARP funds, complementing Administration-wide
e orts to help families across the country remain in their homes, including increased options
for mortgage payment forbearance, enhanced loan modifications to resolve delinquencies,
and a foreclosure moratorium. The Treasury Department has also supported the construction
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3/5/2024

Treasury Department Announces New Efforts to Increase Housing Supply in the United States | U.S. Department of the …

of new a ordable housing through tax incentives, such as the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit
(LIHTC), the largest source of federal support for construction and rehabilitation of a ordable
rental housing across the country, and community development programs like the Capital
Magnet Fund. The combination of these programs has resulted in historically low foreclosure
and eviction rates, and has increased the supply of and access to a ordable housing.
Todayʼs announcements will help increase the supply of housing in communities across the
country and strengthen housing security for all Americans. More information on these
initiatives is detailed below and in a new blog post by Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Wally
Adeyemo. In addition, the Treasury Department will hold a series of stakeholder convenings
throughout the year to identify the most promising levers that may be at the Departmentʼs
disposal to increase housing supply, while also supporting broader Administration and
legislative e orts. The first of these convenings occurred February 29, during which Deputy
Secretary Adeyemo and other senior Treasury Department o icials met with housing leaders
and stakeholders to discuss challenges and opportunities to expand housing supply.

SLF RF GUIDANCE
The State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (SLFRF) program is driving investments at every
level of government to create new and improve existing a ordable housing stock. The
Treasury Department has encouraged jurisdictions to use their SLFRF funds to support
housing stability and the construction and preservation of new a ordable housing. In the
summer of 2022, the Department expanded the flexibility for recipients to use their SLFRF
funds to invest in long-term a ordable housing projects

. In the approximately one year

following that announcement, governments increased their funds budgeted in this area by
more than 50%. As of September 30, 2023, governments have budgeted more than $7.1 billion
in SLFRF award funds for long-term a ordable housing, including both rental and owneroccupied homes, which is part of $18.5 billion in SLFRF funds budgeted for housing uses
overall. These investments are supporting more than 20,000 units of a ordable housing.
Today, the Treasury Department is making it easier for recipients to use available recovery
funds to boost housing supply. The Department is updating the SLFRF guidance to enable
states and localities with remaining resources to use those funds on more eligible housing
projects. Recipients funding an a ordable housing project will be presumed to have used
funds for an eligible use if the project will house families earning up to 120% of area median
income, an increase from 65%, or if the project meets the terms of one of more than a dozen
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Treasury Department Announces New Efforts to Increase Housing Supply in the United States | U.S. Department of the …

federal housing programs. Recipients can also fund projects supported by Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac that meet the needs of teachers, firefighters, nurses, and other workers
increasingly priced out of certain markets.

ERA GUIDANCE
The more than $46 billion in Emergency Rental Assistance (ERA) program funding created the
first nationwide infrastructure for eviction prevention, delivering federal relief to millions of
households and enabling communities to set up eviction diversion programs – many for the
first time. Today, the Treasury Department is announcing new clarifications to the ERA2
program to make clear that qualifying recipients that have obligated at least 75% of their
funds for financial assistance, housing stability services, and administrative costs can use
their remaining funds for predevelopment and acquisition costs for a ordable housing serving
very low-income families – in addition to other eligible uses like construction, rehabilitation, or
preservation of a ordable housing. While the ERA program has already made more than 12.3
million household payments to keep renting families in their homes, these changes will build
out the pipeline to bring additional rental units onto the market.

F F B -HUD RISK SHARING INIT IAT IVE
Through a new agreement with the Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) announced last week, the Treasury Department is indefinitely extending the Federal
Financing Bankʼs (FFB) financing support for a risk-sharing initiative between HUD and state
and local housing finance agencies. This will dramatically lower the cost of capital for certain
low-risk housing developments. Prior iterations of this FFB program, which was restarted by
the Biden Administration in 2021, leveraged nearly $5 billion for the development or
substantial rehabilitation of 42,000 a ordable rental homes for low-income families, seniors,
and persons with disabilities. The Treasury Department estimates that tens of thousands of
additional a ordable homes will be created or preserved through this initiative over the next
decade.
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