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<title> - HUD OVERSIGHT: MISSION, MANAGEMENT, AND PERFORMANCE</title> |
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[House Hearing, 105 Congress] |
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[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office] |
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HUD OVERSIGHT: MISSION, MANAGEMENT, AND PERFORMANCE |
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HEARING |
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before the |
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SUBCOMMITTEE ON HUMAN RESOURCES |
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of the |
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COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT |
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REFORM AND OVERSIGHT |
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HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
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ONE HUNDRED FIFTH CONGRESS |
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FIRST SESSION |
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__________ |
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FEBRUARY 27, 1997 |
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__________ |
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Serial No. 105-8 |
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Printed for the use of the Committee on Government Reform and Oversight |
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39-819 U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE |
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WASHINGTON : 1997 |
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____________________________________________________________________________ |
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For Sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office |
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Internet: bookstore.gpr.gov Phone: toll free (866) 512-1800; (202) 512�091800 |
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Fax: (202) 512�092250 Mail: Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402�090001 |
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COMMITTEE ON GOVERNMENT REFORM AND OVERSIGHT |
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DAN BURTON, Indiana, Chairman |
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BENJAMIN A. GILMAN, New York HENRY A. WAXMAN, California |
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J. DENNIS HASTERT, Illinois TOM LANTOS, California |
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CONSTANCE A. MORELLA, Maryland ROBERT E. WISE, Jr., West Virginia |
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CHRISTOPHER SHAYS, Connecticut MAJOR R. OWENS, New York |
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STEVEN H. SCHIFF, New Mexico EDOLPHUS TOWNS, New York |
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CHRISTOPHER COX, California PAUL E. KANJORSKI, Pennsylvania |
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ILEANA ROS-LEHTINEN, Florida GARY A. CONDIT, California |
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JOHN M. McHUGH, New York CAROLYN B. MALONEY, New York |
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STEPHEN HORN, California THOMAS M. BARRETT, Wisconsin |
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JOHN L. MICA, Florida ELEANOR HOLMES NORTON, Washington, |
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THOMAS M. DAVIS, Virginia DC |
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DAVID M. McINTOSH, Indiana CHAKA FATTAH, Pennsylvania |
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MARK E. SOUDER, Indiana TIM HOLDEN, Pennsylvania |
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JOE SCARBOROUGH, Florida ELIJAH E. CUMMINGS, Maryland |
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JOHN SHADEGG, Arizona DENNIS KUCINICH, Ohio |
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STEVEN C. LaTOURETTE, Ohio ROD R. BLAGOJEVICH, Illinois |
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MARSHALL ``MARK'' SANFORD, South DANNY K. DAVIS, Illinois |
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Carolina JOHN F. TIERNEY, Massachusetts |
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JOHN E. SUNUNU, New Hampshire JIM TURNER, Texas |
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PETE SESSIONS, Texas THOMAS H. ALLEN, Maine |
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MIKE PAPPAS, New Jersey ------ |
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VINCE SNOWBARGER, Kansas BERNARD SANDERS, Vermont |
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BOB BARR, Georgia (Independent) |
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------ ------ |
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Kevin Binger, Staff Director |
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Daniel R. Moll, Deputy Staff Director |
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Judith McCoy, Chief Clerk |
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Phil Schiliro, Minority Staff Director |
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------ |
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Subcommittee on Human Resources |
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CHRISTOPHER SHAYS, Connecticut, Chairman |
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VINCE SNOWBARGER, Kansas EDOLPHUS TOWNS, New York |
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BENJAMIN A. GILMAN, New York DENNIS KUCINICH, Ohio |
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DAVID M. McINTOSH, Indiana THOMAS H. ALLEN, Maine |
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MARK E. SOUDER, Indiana TOM LANTOS, California |
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MIKE PAPPAS, New Jersey BERNARD SANDERS, Vermont (Ind.) |
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STEVEN SCHIFF, New Mexico THOMAS M. BARRETT, Wisconsin |
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Ex Officio |
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DAN BURTON, Indiana, HENRY A. WAXMAN, California |
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Lawrence J. Halloran, Staff Director and Counsel |
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Christopher J. Allred, Professional Staff Member |
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R. Jared Carpenter, Clerk |
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Ronald Stroman, Minority Professional Staff |
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C O N T E N T S |
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Page |
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Hearing held on February 27, 1997................................ 1 |
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Statement of: |
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Cuomo, Andrew, Secretary, Department of Housing and Urban |
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Development, accompanied by Paul Leonard, Assistant |
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Secretary for Policy Development & Research; Stephanie |
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Smith, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Housing; and Michael |
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Stegman, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy Development. 15 |
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Letters, statements, etc., submitted for the record by: |
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Cuomo, Andrew, Secretary, Department of Housing and Urban |
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Development: |
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Information concerning community development block grants 46 |
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Prepared statement of.................................... 20 |
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Gilman, Hon. Benjamin, a Representative in Congress from the |
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State of New York, prepared statement of................... 9 |
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Pappas, Hon. Michael, a Representative in Congress from the |
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State of New Jersey, prepared statement of................. 14 |
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Shays, Hon. Christopher, a Representative in Congress from |
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the State of Connecticut, prepared statement of............ 2 |
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Towns, Hon. Edolphus, a Representative in Congress from the |
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State of New York, prepared statement of................... 4 |
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HUD OVERSIGHT: MISSION, MANAGEMENT, AND PERFORMANCE |
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1997 |
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House of Representatives, |
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Subcommittee on Human Resources, |
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Committee on Government Reform and Oversight, |
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Washington, DC. |
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The subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 11:10 a.m., in |
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room 2247, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Christopher |
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Shays (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding. |
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Present: Representatives Shays, Snowbarger, Gilman, Pappas, |
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Towns, Kucinich, and Allen. |
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Staff present: Lawrence J. Halloran, staff director and |
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counsel; Christopher J. Allred, professional staff member; R. |
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Jared Carpenter, clerk; Ronald Stroman, minority professional |
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staff; and Ellen Rayner, minority chief clerk. |
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Mr. Shays. I would like to call this hearing to order and |
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to welcome our guest, our witness, the Secretary of HUD, who |
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has honored us by his presence. Our goal today is constructive |
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oversight. Our goal is to continue the dialog that we had with |
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Secretary Cisneros in his two appearances before this |
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committee. |
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In the last Congress, this subcommittee examined HUD's |
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takeover of the Chicago Housing Authority, waste in the public |
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housing Tenant Opportunity Programs and the growing |
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unsustainable cost of insured multi-family housing subsidy |
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contract renewals. The question then and now is: can HUD |
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overcome the internal and external obstacles to performing its |
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missions? The internal challenges, acknowledged management |
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weaknesses that have been a part of HUD as long as I have been |
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a part of Congress and certainly are not attributed to any one |
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individual, any one administration, or any one party, and the |
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external challenges, the budget constraints that Congress |
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imposes, as well as the White House, on the operations of HUD |
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and the huge cost of past subsidy commitments on multi-family |
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projects. |
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This subcommittee looks forward to hearing from Secretary |
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Cuomo, to hearing Secretary Cuomo's plans for HUD to meet these |
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challenges and commit continued constructive oversight to help |
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the people of HUD meet its mission and do an even better job. |
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At this time, I would like to acknowledge and ask if my co- |
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friend and co-worker in this effort, Mr. Towns, if he would |
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like the floor. |
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[The prepared statement of Hon. Christopher Shays follows:] |
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T9819.001 |
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Mr. Towns. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, because the |
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Secretary of HUD is a New Yorker. That is the reason I was here |
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so early. I was delighted to see him. |
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Mr. Chairman, I am pleased to join you today in welcoming |
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Secretary Cuomo to this subcommittee. I also want to commend my |
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fellow New Yorker for his sterling record of public service, |
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first, as an advocate for the homeless and then as HUD |
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Assistant Secretary for Community Planning and Development, |
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where he did a magnificent job. |
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Mr. Chairman, throughout his public career, Secretary Cuomo |
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has demonstrated innovation, insight, leadership, and |
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sensitivity to the community as well. I am confident that as |
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HUD's Secretary he will bring the same level of achievement and |
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dedication to the entire range of HUD programs. |
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Secretary Cuomo faces many difficult challenges at HUD. One |
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of the most important will be what to do about the expiring |
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Section 8 contracts. As the Secretary is well aware, 3 million |
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Section 8 contracts supporting more than 6 million people will |
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expire over the next 5 years. It will be necessary for Congress |
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and the administration to work in a bipartisan fashion, and I |
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stress bipartisan fashion, to make sure that HUD has sufficient |
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budget authority to renew the expiring Section 8 contracts. |
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Failure to renew those contracts would hasten the loss of |
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affordable housing, devastate neighborhoods, and increase |
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homelessness. |
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I am also concerned about certain provisions of H.R. 2 |
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introduced by Congressman Lazio. The bill includes a section |
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which would repeal income base rent in housing developments. |
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Such a repeal would lead to rent increases for public housing |
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tenants and further segregation of the poor. Public housing |
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authorities might direct families choosing the pay income base |
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rent to those properties where the authority would lose the |
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least money, while those families who agree to pay flat rent |
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would be steered to better properties. And that concerns me. It |
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would be essential in any reform of such public housing that we |
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keep income base rent capped at 30 percent. |
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Finally, Mr. Chairman, the General Accounting Office and |
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the Inspector General at HUD have consistently discussed with |
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us the continuing management problems at HUD. These are |
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difficult problems which will require thoughtful solutions. I |
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look forward to working on them with the Secretary, knowing |
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that he has the ability to provide the kind of leadership that |
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is really needed during these difficult days. I yield back. |
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[The prepared statement of Hon. Edolphus Towns follows:] |
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T9819.002 |
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T9819.003 |
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T9819.004 |
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Mr. Shays. I thank the gentleman. I agree with his |
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statement. |
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At this time, I would like to invite the vice chairman of |
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this subcommittee, Mr. Snowbarger, from Indiana, if he has a |
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statement or comments. |
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Mr. Snowbarger. From Kansas, Mr. Chairman. |
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Mr. Shays. I am sorry. |
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Mr. Snowbarger. The note is incorrect and I noticed that. |
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I would like to welcome the Secretary and say to you that I |
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am as new to this process as you are, but I hope you know more |
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about this issue than I do. I am looking forward to your |
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comments today, looking forward to establishing a long term |
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relationship between you and this committee so that we can |
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address the housing needs of those in the United States. |
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Thank you, Mr. Chairman. |
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Mr. Shays. Thank you. And I am sorry. Wrong State. |
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[Laughter.] |
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Mr. Snowbarger. Oh. |
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Mr. Shays. Listen. It is a great State. He is the vice |
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chairman. |
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Mr. Pappas, from New Jersey. |
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Mr. Gilman. |
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Mr. Gilman. Thank you, Chairman Shays, and I thank you for |
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the opportunity---- |
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Mr. Shays. I need to comment. This is the first time we |
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have had Mr. Gilman in this committee, so you have brought out |
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the best. |
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Secretary Cuomo. Best in New York, anyway, Mr. Chairman. |
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Mr. Gilman. I had to be here for a fellow New Yorker. |
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Mr. Chairman, I am pleased that we are holding today's |
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hearing in light of GAO's citing of HUD as a high-risk agency, |
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and I look forward to hearing from our newly appointed HUD |
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Secretary, Andrew Cuomo, who I want to personally congratulate. |
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Secretary Cuomo. Thank you. |
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Mr. Gilman. And wish him well in his new endeavors. We want |
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to know how he plans to address GAO's concerns. As the agency |
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responsible for our Nation's housing and community development |
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programs, it is imperative that HUD identify the problems that |
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it currently faces and develop a plan to seriously address |
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those issues. I am certain our new Secretary has some ideas of |
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his own. The mission of providing adequate housing for low- |
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income families in our communities is extremely important and |
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one that should not be jeopardized by any mismanagement. I |
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have, throughout my tenure in Congress, fought hard for |
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affordable housing programs for low- and middle-income |
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Americans. In fact, during the past two Congresses, I |
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introduced legislation which was approved by the House and |
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later stalled in the Senate to remove Rockland County's median |
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income level from the New York Primary Metropolitan Statistical |
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Area, the PMSA, and we look forward to working with you on that |
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problem. |
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Currently, as you know, this New York Statistical Area |
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includes all of New York City and grossly misrepresents |
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adjoining counties median income. In fact, currently, Rockland |
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County's median income for a family of four is reported by HUD |
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as $40,500 when, actually, the median income level should be |
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$60,479 as reported in the 1990 census, a difference of some |
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$20,000. Accordingly, many hard working families who cannot |
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afford a piece of the American dream are considered by HUD to |
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be making more than is necessary to purchase a home and, |
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therefore, are not eligible for affordable housing assistance. |
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By removing Rockland County from the current PMSA, these |
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families will be eligible for Federal and State affordable |
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housing programs, something that many of us would like to see |
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come about. So I look forward to working with Secretary Cuomo |
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and with this committee in resolving problems such as the one I |
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mentioned. I am confident that by working together with the |
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Congress, HUD can once again successfully provide the kind of |
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needed housing in our communities. And I want to thank Chairman |
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Shays for holding this meeting once again. Thank you. |
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[The prepared statement of Hon. Benjamin Gilman follows:] |
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T9819.005 |
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T9819.006 |
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T9819.007 |
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T9819.008 |
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Mr. Shays. Mr. Gilman, it is really terrific to have you |
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here because you are extraordinarily busy and you have pointed |
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out, again, to the new Members that no Member is too senior to |
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plug for a local project. [Laughter.] |
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Mr. Gilman. Especially housing. |
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Mr. Shays. At this time, I would like to call the gentleman |
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from Ohio, Mr. Kucinich. |
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Mr. Kucinich. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, members of |
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the committee, Mr. Secretary. As a former councilman and clerk |
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of courts and mayor of the city of Cleveland, I have had |
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opportunities to be very much involved with HUD policies over |
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the years and I am glad to see that the Secretary is now in a |
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position where he can work with Congress to help construct an |
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urban policy. Because I think one of the things that we have |
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really lacked over the last few decades without in any way |
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diminishing the contributions that have been made by past |
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Secretaries is a coherent urban policy which addresses not only |
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the housing needs of our various communities, but also the |
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question of urban development and the choices which we should |
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make to encourage urban development and to make sure that we |
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have sustainable development as well. |
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So your participation as the Secretary of HUD and your |
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vision is going to be needed to help make the promise of HUD |
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and the potential of HUD become a reality. I think every Member |
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of this Congress is well familiar with the litany of problems |
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which have been the result of administrative challenges that |
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have not been met in HUD over the years; but you have a new |
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opportunity and with it comes a chance to help revive the |
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fortunes of America's cities. So I look forward to working with |
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the chairman and with you and the members of this committee in |
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helping to move this country forward on issues that relate to |
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housing and urban development. Thank you. |
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Secretary Cuomo. Thank you, sir. |
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Mr. Shays. I thank the gentleman. I would like to get some |
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housekeeping out of the way and ask unanimous consent that all |
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members of the subcommittee be permitted to place an opening |
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statement in the record and that the record remain open for 3 |
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days for that purpose. Without objection, so ordered. |
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[The prepared statement of Hon. Michael Pappas follows:] |
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] T9819.009 |
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Mr. Shays. I also ask unanimous consent that our witnesses |
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be permitted to include their written statements in the record. |
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Without objection, so ordered. |
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Mr. Secretary, before calling on you, I would like to just |
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introduce some of the staff members in our committee who will |
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be working with your people. We have on the minority side, |
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Chanda Tuck, right here and then we also have Ron Stroman, who |
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works for the full committee. And my chief counsel in this |
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committee, Larry Halloran, and also Chris Allred in the back |
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right here, who handles all housing issues. |
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And as you know, we swear in all our witnesses, including |
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Members of Congress, so I would just ask if you would stand now |
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and I will swear you in. |
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[Witness sworn.] |
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Mr. Shays. Thank you very much. Mr. Secretary, we are |
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delighted to have you here and you can summarize your |
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statement, just make whatever comments you want, and then we |
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will get in with the questioning. |
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STATEMENT OF ANDREW CUOMO, SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND |
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URBAN DEVELOPMENT, ACCOMPANIED BY PAUL LEONARD, ASSISTANT |
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SECRETARY FOR POLICY DEVELOPMENT & RESEARCH; STEPHANIE SMITH, |
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DEPUTY ASSISTANT SECRETARY, HOUSING; AND MICHAEL STEGMAN, |
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ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR POLICY DEVELOPMENT AND RESEARCH |
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Secretary Cuomo. I will not take a lot of the committee's |
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time with an opening statement, because I think in your opening |
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remarks you touched on the issues that, basically, we are here |
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to discuss. |
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If I might, Mr. Chairman, please allow me to introduce some |
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of the people who are here from HUD just so we can put some |
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faces with the names. |
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Mr. Shays. Terrific. |
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Secretary Cuomo. We have Mike Stegman, who is the Acting |
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Chief of Staff of the Department. |
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Mike, if you could just signal. |
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Mr. Shays. Yes, he has acknowledged himself. He has raised |
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his hand. We can see him here. |
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Secretary Cuomo. And Paul Leonard, who is the Deputy |
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Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research; Hal |
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DeCell, who is the Assistant Secretary for Congressional |
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Affairs; Cheryl Fox, who is a special assistant to me, works on |
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all the issue briefings; Stephanie Smith, who is the Deputy |
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Assistant Secretary for Housing, which is an important area |
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handling Section 8 issues, among others; Mark Gordon, who is a |
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senior advisor to the Secretary and Jon Sheiner, who is a |
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Deputy Assistant Secretary for Legislation. |
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I think, gentlemen, that I take over HUD at a very |
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interesting time in this country, many things going very, very |
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well. President Clinton, working with Congress, has certainly |
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amassed an impressive record, putting the country in the right |
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direction. But that is not to say that we do not have a lot to |
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do. The President is the first to say there is still a lot that |
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needs to be done. In his State of the Union Address, there are |
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very few of us who can go back to our homes or our districts |
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and not see the challenges that face us in cities like |
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Bridgeport and areas like Brooklyn right across the country. |
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There are still real problems that have to be addressed, and |
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that is where HUD comes in and HUD's mission as we see it. |
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One of the questions posed to me was what are the main |
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obstacles facing HUD. And I think they were mentioned in your |
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remarks, but I would say there were two. First and foremost, in |
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my opinion, is what we referred to as the Section 8 crisis, |
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which is not a glamorous topic. It is not an overly appealing |
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topic. It is a technical topic, but it has a potentially |
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devastating impact on the Department and housing, in general. |
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The second issue, as again you mentioned, is the overall |
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management problems at HUD. And it is something that we are |
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also making a top priority. |
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If I could refer you to the charts on your left, just to |
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talk quickly about this Section 8 problem. The Section 8 |
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crisis, as we refer to it, is the expiration of contracts that |
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are coming due. These are contracts that were signed 30 years |
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ago, 20 years ago, or as recently as 1 year ago. And these |
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contracts are now coming up for renewal. They are expiring. The |
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question is, what do we do once they come up for renewal. Very, |
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very big numbers: 1.8 million units; 4.4 million Americans; 6 |
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million Americans by about 2002. |
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You look at the impact which is all across the country |
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where these Section 8 units are coming up where they are |
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expiring, New York City, 111,000; Bridgeport, 3,300; Cleveland, |
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21,000; San Francisco, 16,000; Indianapolis, 15,000. All big |
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numbers across the country. And again, the universe is as high |
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as 6 million people 2000, 2002. You cannot just afford to allow |
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the contracts to expire and lose the units to the inventory. |
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The numbers are big on the people who inhabit the units. They |
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are also big on the cost of renewals. The cost to renew the |
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contracts that are coming due, it is just about $10 billion, a |
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little less, about $10 billion. How much is $10 billion? It is |
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about half of HUD's entire budget this year, just from the cost |
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of renewal. |
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Now, this is a problem that we have talked about for a long |
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time, but, as it is thorny, no one has really wanted to grapple |
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with it. So the numbers and the impact are devastating. What |
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would happen to the people who are displaced if we allowed |
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ourselves to lose these units? I do not think it is overly |
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dramatic to say you could have massive homelessness in the |
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Nation, which then triggers another problem as this committee |
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knows. |
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So the first question we pose to the committee is, renew or |
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not renew. That is the question, to paraphrase. The second |
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question is, if you choose to renew, if you say we cannot lose |
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these units, we cannot have 4 million Americans homeless, we |
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have to renew the contracts, the question becomes, where does |
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the funding come from to renew the contracts? |
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This year, the 1998 budget which we are here to discuss, |
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requires $5.6 billion in new budget authority to renew the |
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contracts. Where do you get the $5.6 billion? |
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One theory would say, we will take it from the existing HUD |
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budget. ``If you want to renew the contracts, HUD, God bless |
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you. Take it from your budget.'' |
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To take $5.6 billion out of the HUD budget, you would |
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basically have to cut everything else 35 percent across the |
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board--public housing moneys would have to be cut $1.9 billion; |
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the CDBG program, total program $4.6 billion, one of the |
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strongest HUD programs, would have to be cut $1.6 billion. The |
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HOME program which is a model of a block grant affordable |
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housing program would have to be cut by $549 million. The |
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homeless assistance would have to be cut by $288. Housing for |
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people with AIDS would have to be cut $71 million. |
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In our opinion, if you tried to take the $5.6, the $5.6 |
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billion necessary to renew the contracts, if you tried to take |
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that from the rest of the HUD budget, it would be a cut-and- |
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shift-the-burden strategy which would be counter productive. It |
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is robbing Peter to pay Paul. You would be trying to help |
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communities on one hand and hurting them with the other. These, |
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35 percent of the HUD budget being cut, would have a truly |
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disastrous impact on the communities that have been working |
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long and hard to come back. |
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What is our solution to the problem? Twofold. First, we |
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say, the $5.6 billion in new budget authority should not be |
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taken from the HUD budget, but should be additional BA added to |
|
the HUD budget. The President's budget for 1998 does that. The |
|
HUD budget goes up 30 percent. The 30 percent increase is just |
|
to take care of this renewal crisis. |
|
At the same time, we say it is not enough just to say new |
|
money to cover it, how can we reduce the cost of these |
|
contracts and the Section 8 program overall? So we have also |
|
come up with $2.4 billion in savings. So that our solution, the |
|
way we propose we address this crisis is twofold: $5.6 billion |
|
in new budget authority and $2.4 billion in savings from |
|
reforms. |
|
What is in that $2.4 billion? There are a number of |
|
savings, the most notable of which is what we call the ``Mark- |
|
to-Market'' proposal, the so-called portfolio re-engineering |
|
proposal which would save about half of that $2.4, about $1.2 |
|
billion. It is a proposal we have discussed for a couple of |
|
years. And what that says is this. Of the expiring Section 8's |
|
there is a segment of that portfolio which the FHA has insured |
|
and we subsidize with Section 8 certificates and vouchers. The |
|
cost on some of those units are currently in excess of the fair |
|
market rents. In other words, the taxpayers subsidize apartment |
|
rents subsidies to the tune of 150, 160, sometimes 200 percent |
|
of fair market rent to landlords. So the American taxpayer pays |
|
twice what the same unit could be worth just down the block. We |
|
think that is unconscionable. We think it is intolerable. |
|
Something has to be done about it. We say, ``Mark-to-Market,'' |
|
which would say, ``Reduce the FHA mortgage on the property |
|
which would then allow you to reduce the Section 8 rents which |
|
that project requires to be liquid down to fair market rent.'' |
|
Reduce that 200 percent, 160 percent, get it down in keeping |
|
with what you have to pay. That, in a nutshell, is the Mark-to- |
|
Market proposal. You have to go project by project, reduce the |
|
FHA mortgage and now you can reduce the Section 8 rent. We need |
|
legislative authority to do it, but it would bring us a very |
|
large savings, $1.2 billion, which would help us solve the |
|
overall problem. More importantly, I think, as a matter of |
|
fairness, as a matter of equity in these times where we are all |
|
very concerned about balanced budgets and fiscal austerity and |
|
government departments are downsizing and working very hard to |
|
be efficient and intelligent about it, you cannot justify |
|
paying a private landlord twice what the going rent is for an |
|
apartment in light of everything else that is going on and how |
|
precious these resources really are. That is the Section 8 |
|
crisis. This year, 4.4 million Americans are affected. |
|
The second challenge to HUD is, as you said, the overall |
|
management reforms and I see the lights are going off. Let me |
|
sum up---- |
|
Mr. Shays. Do not worry about the lights. That is not a |
|
problem. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. OK. On the management reform side, as the |
|
committee has pointed out, these are problems that have plagued |
|
HUD for a long time. The GAO gives HUD the unique distinction |
|
of being the only department that is, ``a high risk'' |
|
department. Some of the reasons for that are historical. The |
|
high risk designation is, in part, because of the so-called HUD |
|
scandals in the 1980's and that is one of the things that got |
|
us that designation and one of the things that continues to |
|
give us that designation. But there is no doubt that as HUD has |
|
made progress and Secretary Henry Cisneros did amazing things |
|
on the management side as GAO will point out, there is still a |
|
long way to go on the management side. That is going to be a |
|
top, top priority for me. The two priorities for my tenure at |
|
this point will be the Section 8 crisis and improving the |
|
management of HUD, earning the public trust, right across the |
|
board, from both clients--be they private landlords, be they |
|
public housing authorities, be they the residents of public |
|
housing, demanding more responsibility, ``one-strike-and- |
|
you're-out'' policies on criminal behavior and drug behavior. |
|
Demand responsibility from our clients, also demand |
|
responsibility and managerial efficiency and intelligence from |
|
ourselves. Begin cleaning up by cleaning up your own house and |
|
that is what we want to do at HUD. We have already made strides |
|
in that area in just the first few weeks. We have mapped out a |
|
plan we think that will show real management change in about 18 |
|
months, and we are going to pursue that aggressively. So the |
|
reforms on the management side at HUD, I share this committee's |
|
concern. I know they are long standing. I know we have made |
|
progress, but I know that we have a long way to go. |
|
Before I was Secretary, I was Assistant Secretary in |
|
Community Planning and Development. During those 4 years, the |
|
CPD, as they call it, staff was reduced by 25 percent and at |
|
the same time, we actually administered more resources. |
|
Literally did more with less, consolidated applications, |
|
consolidated reports. We even won an award from Harvard for the |
|
consolidation efforts that we did. So that doing more with |
|
less, the consolidation, streamlining, getting the funding, |
|
getting the authority back to communities that we did at CPD |
|
for the past 4 years, is what we are looking forward to |
|
continuing doing with the entire department. |
|
I also know from my past 4 years as Assistant Secretary |
|
that nothing happens unless it happens together. That as hard |
|
as we work at the Department, unless we are doing it in |
|
partnership with Congress, we will not be successful. And in |
|
that mode, I come to this committee and I say I am looking |
|
forward to a productive rela- |
|
tionship, a close relationship, a synergistic relationship that |
|
helps us both do what we want to do. And I think we can and I |
|
am looking forward to the opportunity and I am looking forward |
|
to beginning today. Thank you. |
|
[The prepared statement of Secretary Cuomo follows:] |
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|
Mr. Shays. Thank you, Mr. Secretary, that was very helpful. |
|
What we are going to do is I am going to recognize Mr. Towns |
|
first. We may have a vote and I may leave before they even call |
|
the vote or as soon as they call it, and then I will come back |
|
and be able to ask some questions. But I think what we will do |
|
is we will start with Mr. Towns. |
|
We are going to keep the 5-minute rules, given that we have |
|
a number of Members, and then we are going to do another round |
|
where we might take 10 minutes per Member just so that we can |
|
have a first round. So Mr. Towns. |
|
Mr. Towns. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. |
|
And let me begin by saying, Mr. Secretary, I am elated to |
|
have you to come before the committee, look forward to working |
|
with you. I know of the outstanding job that you have done up |
|
to this point. And the first question is the Genesis Project, |
|
which I took the budget chair--Mr. Kasich, who visited the |
|
district, and, when you take people to your district, you know, |
|
you want to show them the best. So I took him to the Genesis |
|
Project to show him in terms of what was going on there and how |
|
things could be done. This project, of course, is in my |
|
district and provides housing for 150 families, as well as a |
|
wide range of other services as you know, that are there to |
|
support these families, is a wonderful organization. And I |
|
wonder if you have any intentions of funding organizations like |
|
Genesis on a national level, because it seems to me that is a |
|
way that we will be able to provide adequate housing and at the |
|
same time, the housing will be protected. Because, as you know, |
|
during the old days--and I say ``the old days,'' we would build |
|
something and they would tear it down and, of course, we would |
|
have to come back and build it all over again. But this is |
|
something that really works. So I would like to get your views |
|
on whether you plan to take this nationally? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Congressman, that is an interesting |
|
question and a helpful starting-off point. I think before I |
|
answer the question, just as a matter of full disclosure, I |
|
would ask who the management of the Genesis Project was and who |
|
did that project in your district? |
|
Mr. Towns. Well, I must admit it was Secretary Andrew |
|
Cuomo. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Oh, well. [Laughter.] |
|
Well, I think it is a great project. And I think it has a |
|
lot to do with the leadership of the organization. I was |
|
actually with Chairman Kasich the other day and he reminded me |
|
of that visit which was back, I guess, in like 1988 now. And he |
|
remembered the project. This is in Bedford-Stuyvesant, |
|
Schnediker and Hinsdale, in the Congressman's district, and he |
|
had a tour and Congressman Kasich had come out and I had led |
|
the tour and we discussed the concept at that time. The concept |
|
was unique. This was transitional, quote/unquote, housing at a |
|
time before we really knew about transitional housing. And it |
|
started to make the breakthrough that said, ``Look. You have to |
|
do the housing as the foundation, as the starting point.'' |
|
Everybody needs the housing just to have the security, but then |
|
you have to build from there. And the housing alone is often |
|
not enough to help the individual and often not enough to help |
|
the community. |
|
Comprehensive approaches, be they on the community |
|
development side or on the individual development side, |
|
specifically in a homeless-related context, often are the most |
|
appropriate path to follow. Genesis did that in Brooklyn. It |
|
has been open just about 10 years, now, actually, Congressman, |
|
since we first started that. And I am pleased to be able to say |
|
that in my opinion, and, again, I gave you the disclosure, but |
|
that it is working as well today as it did 10 years ago. And if |
|
you go to the people and the neighbors in the community, they |
|
will tell you that. |
|
So that kind of approach that says comprehensive solutions, |
|
give people housing, but also give them the services and the |
|
tools they need to do for themselves and move on, Genesis is |
|
transitional. You do not come and live there forever. You come, |
|
you get the services, you get the help you need and then you |
|
move on to independence. Independence is the goal. Right? |
|
Independence is the goal of all these government programs. The |
|
goal of the government program is to end the reliance on the |
|
government program. The goal of the government program is to |
|
end the need for the program, to almost self-terminate. And |
|
that is what Genesis is doing. Not for profits. Comprehensive. |
|
In partnership with communities. I think that is the way to go. |
|
Mr. Towns. Right. I will tell you, it is working. No |
|
question about it. In more ways than I think one would realize |
|
in terms of the service that it provides to the community, |
|
community meetings and being involved in community activities, |
|
and to see tenants suddenly recognize the importance of being |
|
involved in the community. I want to extend the invitation to |
|
the chairman. My good friend Mr. Kasich has already seen it, so |
|
I want to take the chairman there to see it because I am hoping |
|
that, as we get people to see it and they know what is going |
|
on, that we can buildup some support here. In fact, I may |
|
invite the entire committee after we take the chairman out. You |
|
know, that is how excited I am about it. |
|
But let me just move along to one other question in terms |
|
of the legislation that has been put forth by Congressman |
|
Lazio, which is referred to as H.R. 2, the Housing Opportunity |
|
and Responsibility Act of 1997. The bill contains a provision |
|
to repeal the income-based renting public housing or what is |
|
really known as the Brook amendment. |
|
This caused a tremendous uproar among public housing |
|
residents in the last term. Let me add that I opposed this |
|
provision. I want to go on record right now indicating that. |
|
How can we balance HUD's need to decrease its rental subsidies |
|
with the need to maintain affordable low and moderate income |
|
housing? How can we work out a balance? |
|
Mr. Shays. If we could have a relatively, maybe a first |
|
pass at that answer, because the gentleman's time is up and I |
|
am going to really try to respect---- |
|
Mr. Towns. I want to respect--I will even withdraw the |
|
question. |
|
Mr. Shays. Why do we not withdraw it now and then we will |
|
do it. |
|
Mr. Towns. I will withdraw it. |
|
Mr. Shays. And you will get to repeat it twice that you are |
|
against the bill. |
|
Mr. Towns. I want to cooperate because I want to get you to |
|
Brooklyn. I withdraw it. |
|
Mr. Shays. You can ask the question a second time and |
|
emphasize that you oppose the bill a second time. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Well, if Mr. Towns would allow, I would be |
|
happy to have the question answered in my timeframe. |
|
Mr. Shays. If it is a question you want to ask. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Go ahead and answer the question, yes. |
|
Mr. Towns. I would like to thank the gentleman. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Shays. Let me try to be economical with the time. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. I do not think there is a short answer, |
|
Congressman. I think before we look to get the shortfall from |
|
the tenant who can least afford it by raising their rent, we |
|
should look to, again, our own house. How can HUD do more with |
|
less? How can the local public housing authority do more with |
|
less? How can we get working families into that public housing |
|
who then can pay more because the 30 percent is a larger number |
|
because they are working and they have higher incomes. Use that |
|
mechanism to make up some of the short fall. But I think the |
|
last place to go is to a tenant who is barely making it and |
|
say, ``You have to pay more than the 30 percent Brook |
|
guarantee.'' |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Let me followup on a couple of things you |
|
mentioned during your statements and in answer to the question |
|
first. Explain to me, you are dealing with a freshman here, why |
|
are we subsidizing up to 200 percent of these rents to |
|
landlords? How did that come about? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Congressman, first, you have to appreciate |
|
you are dealing with a freshman, also, but I had the same--I |
|
had the same question when I walked in. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Like I said, I hope you have more answers |
|
than I have questions. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Yes. What happened on the Section 8 |
|
contracts, remember that many of these contracts were signed 30 |
|
years ago, 20 years ago, they came up with certain assumptions |
|
and one of the assumptions was we, government, will sign the |
|
contract 20 years ago and we will pay escalators, adjustments |
|
to the rent over a period of years. And we signed that 20 years |
|
ago. |
|
As it worked out for many of these contracts, those |
|
escalators have now brought the subsidies to a point where they |
|
exceed the subsidies which are in the neighborhood fair market |
|
rents in the neighborhood. We have been contractually bound in |
|
many cases to be paying these. |
|
The contracts expire. That is good news and bad news. The |
|
bad news is now we have 4 million people, 6 million people in |
|
2002, that we have to figure out how to house. It is an |
|
expensive problem. That is the bad news. The good news is the |
|
contract expired, you can do something different. You are no |
|
longer bound to pay 200 percent. You are no longer bound to use |
|
the same buildings if you do not want to. You are no longer |
|
bound to say 100 percent of the people in this building, all |
|
poor people, 100 percent every unit. You do not have to do |
|
that. You can say, we are going to go to mixed income in |
|
buildings because that is smarter. You can say, now, we are |
|
going to use a Section 8 voucher, not just to pay a landlord's |
|
mortgage, but to allow a person to go buy their own home with a |
|
Section 8 voucher. So the contract expired. You now can do all |
|
sorts of creative things. You can repair the mistakes that you |
|
made in that first contract signing, because you have learned a |
|
heck of a lot over 20 or 30 years. |
|
And first and foremost, you do not have to pay 200 percent |
|
for a unit that you can rent in the marketplace down the block |
|
for half the price. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Can you describe those escalators for me? |
|
Apparently, it was not done just based on a CPI or something of |
|
that nature. Was there a percentage increase guaranteed every |
|
year? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. I have a team of people---- |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. The staff is looking at each other and they |
|
cannot figure it out. So I may be asking the wrong---- |
|
Secretary Cuomo. I can get you more specific information |
|
because, Congressman, we have a number of programs that were |
|
signed at different times all with slightly different deals at |
|
whatever time they were doing it. Remember, these contracts, |
|
some were signed in the Sixties, some in the Seventies, some in |
|
the Eighties. Some are very recent roll-overs. But |
|
interestingly, the past couple of years, we have been trying to |
|
get legislation to do something about this. When we do not get |
|
the legislation, and we have been unsuccessful, there has not |
|
been a housing authorization bill in 6 years, the result of |
|
doing nothing is continuing the status quo where even if the |
|
contract has been expired, we have been renewing them at the |
|
excessive rents, rolling them over, if you will, at the |
|
excessive rents because we have not come up with legislation |
|
that changes the course significantly. So to do nothing is to |
|
continue the status quo. But specifically, I can get you the |
|
actual terms of the contracts that were signed years ago that |
|
brought those rents up. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Well, I understand there may be multiple |
|
ways of having done that. It would be helpful to me. Following |
|
up on your statement there, what is it about the legislation |
|
that is required or that was passed that required you to roll |
|
over the same terms? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Two things. First, before we can reduce |
|
the rent in many cases, we have to reduce the mortgage. In |
|
other words, we are both mortgage holder of many of these |
|
properties, FHA mortgage, and subsidizer and rent-payer. And |
|
the mortgage is matched to the rent. And we are paying out of |
|
both pockets. If you want to reduce the rent, you have to |
|
reduce the mortgage so you do not default on your own mortgage. |
|
We do not want to reduce the rent and then wind up with massive |
|
defaults on FHA mortgages. So we need legislation to do that. |
|
When we have not gotten the legislation, since nobody wanted to |
|
displace all the people who were in the units, Congress said, |
|
``Continue. Roll over. You can pay 160 percent of fair market |
|
rent.'' And that is what has happened for the past few years. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger [presiding]. Thank you. I think my time has |
|
expired. Mr. Allen, do you have questions? |
|
Mr. Allen. Yes, I do. I apologize for being late. And if |
|
some of my questions cover matters that you went into before, |
|
my apologies. |
|
I was once the mayor of Portland. I was on the city council |
|
in Portland, ME, for 6 years. And my first question has to do |
|
with if you went through the city of Portland right now, looked |
|
at the public housing, it works, and it works very well. And I |
|
think the Section 8 program works pretty well. We have gone |
|
through some periods where we had to make sure that we were |
|
paying, what we were paying was more in line with market rents. |
|
I know that your Department, of necessity, has to deal with |
|
some of the larger cities in this country, and I am just |
|
wondering, are there any issues that you foresee that will |
|
affect small cities and more rural areas differentially than |
|
the larger cities in this country that we ought to be aware of? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. It is an interesting question, |
|
Congressman. I think two things. First, the Section 8 crisis is |
|
almost unique to HUD in that this problem affects almost all |
|
cities across the country. Different degrees, depending on the |
|
size of the city, because that is the number of units--larger |
|
cities probably have more units. But proportionately, it is |
|
still a devastating impact. New York City's number is 111,000 |
|
people on a larger universe, obviously. But Cleveland, 21,000; |
|
San Francisco, 15,000; and that is across the country. And that |
|
is one of the powerful problems of this crisis is the blanket |
|
effect across the country. |
|
Having said that, public housing is interesting in a number |
|
of ways to me. It really has gotten a bad rap, public housing. |
|
People talk about public housing as if it was a failure. It is |
|
too often the way it is portrayed. Public housing, oh, that was |
|
a mistake. That was a problem. |
|
It was not, really. Public housing is actually a great |
|
success story in this Nation and it is actually a testament to |
|
what government can do. Public housing works. Portland, public |
|
housing works; 95 percent of the time, public housing works. |
|
Public housing has been too often typified by some of the large |
|
developments in the large cities, Cabrini Greens in Chicago. |
|
That is not the face of public housing. It is smaller. It is |
|
less dense. It is more welcomed by the community, and it works. |
|
What we want to do at HUD is change, as one of our |
|
management reforms, change our management depending on what the |
|
authority is and what its performance is. The smaller |
|
authorities that are performing well, God bless them, let them |
|
run the business, devolve authority to them. Deregulate to the |
|
extent you can. Not irresponsibly, but deregulate. Portland |
|
Housing Authority is working. Give them the funding and let |
|
them run it. Focus, instead, on the larger, more troubled |
|
public housing authorities. |
|
Mr. Allen. Just by way of an example, we have married to |
|
our community policy effort to our public housing and we have |
|
been increasingly tough about people who have criminal records. |
|
They are now being moved out of the public housing. It has made |
|
a huge difference. We have got educational programs. They are |
|
all--they all seem to me to be moving along in the right |
|
direction. |
|
One last question. The field operations for HUD in the |
|
State of Maine consist of two people in Bangor and one person |
|
in Portland. As you reduce the staff, you know, nationwide of |
|
HUD people, obviously, we would be concerned the field |
|
operations might take more of a hit than the central, than the |
|
D.C. offices and I wondered if you could respond to that. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Two things, Congressman. First, between |
|
the headquarters and the field, I think your point--there is a |
|
lot of wisdom in your point. And if there is a disparate impact |
|
in the reductions, I think it should be disparate toward |
|
headquarters if anything, because we are trying to get more |
|
authority out to the field and we need people in the field to |
|
do that. |
|
Having said that, 4 years ago, HUD was 13,000 people. In 4 |
|
years, I am pledged to reduce it to 7,500. That is almost a 50 |
|
percent reduction. So there are going to have to be fewer HUD |
|
people in a lot of places. At the same time, we want to make |
|
sure we have representation. And if it is only a couple of |
|
people now there, I would have to do it all within the context, |
|
but I would rather see a continued presence and a reduction in |
|
other areas that have more people. But I would not, if we can |
|
avoid it, I do not want to lose the presence entirely in an |
|
area. |
|
Mr. Allen. Good. Thank you very much. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. My pleasure. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. I apologize to the Secretary. We do have a |
|
vote that is taking place right now and I think we are going to |
|
take a brief recess. The chairman is expected back shortly. We |
|
will stand in recess. |
|
[Recess.] |
|
Mr. Shays. I would like to call this hearing back to order. |
|
What I would like to do, I was delinquent in doing this. The |
|
Secretary may want to call on one of his staff that is to |
|
answer a specific question. And so, what I am going to ask is |
|
any staff member that might respond to a question, not |
|
necessarily will, but might, if they would stand up and we will |
|
just take care of swearing you in and then it may be that none |
|
of you will have to respond to anything, but at least this way |
|
you have the flexibility. You can stay seated, Mr. Secretary, |
|
but if the others would stand and raise their right hand? And |
|
we will just make sure we identify who they are. |
|
[Witnesses sworn.] |
|
Mr. Shays. Thank you. Could you just each state your names? |
|
Mr. Stegman. Michael Stegman. |
|
Mr. Shays. And? |
|
Mr. Leonard. Paul Leonard. |
|
Ms. Smith. Stephanie Smith. |
|
Mr. Shays. We will make sure you have cards for the |
|
recorder if there is responses. |
|
Take them down for any reason? Are we all set to go? Do we |
|
have them anywhere? |
|
Mr. Secretary, I can start. I can start and we can see if |
|
we can recapture them. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. We will get them back up. |
|
Mr. Shays. OK. It strikes me that, first off, I will say to |
|
you in this room we had the hearings, really, the Lantos |
|
hearings, and I was part of that committee that looked into |
|
Section 8 housing. And we knew of the tremendous abuse. One of |
|
the big abuses was that people would get the housing and they |
|
would get a tax credit. They would get financing and, in |
|
essence, what we found is they took all their money out up |
|
front. And then HUD had this incentive to continue with large |
|
subsidies in order to pay the mortgages that would, if they |
|
went bankrupt, HUD ended up with. |
|
And if you could just kind of sort out for me this process? |
|
I know almost every community, particularly the large |
|
communities, have Section 8 housing that is running out. And |
|
so, you have that one issue. So one of my questions will be the |
|
mortgages run out at the same time question. The other issue is |
|
when we had hearing on Section 8 housing last time, we were |
|
really appalled with the condition of some of the housing and I |
|
can say that we have the same circumstance, say, in Monteray |
|
Village in Norwalk. It is not untypical, where we are actually |
|
paying higher than market rate as you have pointed out. |
|
I am unclear as to how you sort this out: (1) Are the |
|
mortgages paid up by these individuals and, therefore, do we no |
|
longer have the at-risk of HUD taking over the facility with |
|
the guarantee? And (2) does this mean then that their cash |
|
needs are different because they do not have large mortgages? |
|
How do you sort all that out? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Mr. Chairman, if I can, I said when you |
|
were out of the room before, the expiration of the contracts is |
|
a good news/bad news scenario. |
|
Mr. Shays. OK. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Bad news is we are in danger of losing |
|
units that would house about 6 million people by the year 2002, |
|
and the cost of renewal is very high. |
|
Mr. Shays. Is very what? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Is very high at a time when there are not |
|
many resources. That is the $5.6 billion that is required in |
|
new budget authority plus $2.4 billion in savings. That is just |
|
the cost of renewal. The HUD budget goes up 30 percent this |
|
year just to cover the cost of renewal. We are not doing |
|
anything else. The rest of the HUD budget is basically flat |
|
besides the renewal---- |
|
Mr. Shays. Is that a one shot or is it continuous? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. No. That is not a one shot. That is the |
|
problem. This wave of expirations, of contract expirations, |
|
starts to break in 1998, but it breaks in 1998, 1999, 2000, |
|
2001, 2002 is the main impact. We want to get something done |
|
now so we can reduce the cost in the later years because the |
|
number gets higher as we go out, not lower. 1998 is significant |
|
because one of the largest increases is in 1998 from 1997. A |
|
jump from 1997 to 1998. But 1998 to 1999, 2000, 01, 02, it is |
|
also a very, very significant number, so we have to do |
|
something. That is the bad news is the impact on the numbers. |
|
The good news is you can now literally rewrite housing |
|
policy for the first time in 30 years. The good news is the |
|
contracts are expired and you are no longer bound by the |
|
situations that you were bound by. You are no longer |
|
handcuffed. How many times did we walk through a community and |
|
we said, ``Well, that's a Section 8 project. We can't do |
|
anything because we have a contract and it would foreclose or |
|
default and it would be a tremendous problem.'' The contracts |
|
expire. So I would say, now you have a chance to rewrite |
|
Federal housing policy, change the policy and start with a |
|
blank slate. Do you want to renew that building? Maybe the |
|
building is an asset to the community. Maybe it is not an asset |
|
to the community. I would pose the question: Do you want to |
|
renew that building? |
|
If you do want to renew the building, do you want to renew |
|
it at 100 percent subsidized units? Some people think that |
|
mixed income is a good idea, not 100 percent. If you want to |
|
renew the building, would you like to get in not-for-profit |
|
management, if it was a possibility. Would you like to offer |
|
tenant mobility? If the tenant chooses to leave the building, |
|
should the tenant have that choice? If the tenant chooses to |
|
leave and leaves with a Section 8 voucher, should the tenant be |
|
able to use that Section 8 voucher to buy their own home? Home |
|
ownership as opposed to rental. These are all questions that |
|
are triggered when you are freed from the contractual |
|
parameters. |
|
Mr. Shays. But there are two contracts. Right? There is one |
|
that is a subsidy. The other is the mortgage. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. No. |
|
Mr. Shays. Do the mortgages end when the--is that what is |
|
happening? Have they paid off their mortgage? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. No. No. Here is the caveat. When you go |
|
to--and, again, there are a lot of different flavors within |
|
this. |
|
Mr. Shays. Some can pay back early? Correct? You have the |
|
20 and the 40. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Yes. You have different situations. Some |
|
have the right to prepay at the end of 20 years, which is a |
|
different portfolio than the portfolio we are talking about |
|
here. This is basically we want to reduce the rent, the Section |
|
8 subsidy, but you have to make sure that what you reduce the |
|
rent to can satisfy the mortgage. Because, as you have pointed |
|
out, you also, the Federal Government, hold the mortgage. You |
|
do not want to reduce the rent to a level that would see that |
|
mortgage default because now you have a lot of properties and a |
|
lot of foreclosures. So reduce the mortgage, write down the |
|
mortgage, mark it to market, reduce the mortgage as you are |
|
reducing the Section 8 rent. And you can reduce them both, but |
|
they both have to balance. In some cases, you may be able to |
|
expire the mortgage. |
|
Mr. Shays. I have a sense that the mortgages are, in some |
|
cases, greater than the value of the property, except over |
|
time, part of the mortgage has been paid back. But even then, |
|
probably if they defaulted, you would lose--HUD, the |
|
government, would lose. |
|
Let me just tell you what I am thinking of. I think of the |
|
Section 8 housing that is not properly maintained and then I |
|
see Section 8 housing that is very well maintained. It happens |
|
to be, say, in downtown Stanford, Four Acres. I know what that |
|
builder is going to do. It has already been sold a few times, |
|
but they are not selling it in my judgment so that they can |
|
renew Section 8 housing. They are either going to go right out |
|
into the marketplace which was, in one sense, the original |
|
design of this program, to create more housing and then |
|
privatize it. Or they are just going to tear it down because it |
|
is 4 acres in downtown Stanford and then you will have hundreds |
|
of people without housing. |
|
So what I am trying to sort out, and I really do not yet |
|
have a clear picture of this, is the contracts are coming due, |
|
are ending for the subsidies. They're able to be bought out |
|
because this time has arrived. So the ones who will want to |
|
buy-out, it seems to me, would be the ones that are in prime |
|
choice areas. And the ones that will want to continue are the |
|
ones that, frankly, took everything out of the project early on |
|
and are just going from month to month. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Yes. I am going to ask Mike or Stephanie |
|
to give you a sense of the numbers in two different portfolios, |
|
we call the preservation portfolio which are those units where |
|
the owner now has a right to prepay the FHA mortgage. |
|
Mr. Shays. That is called preservation. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Preservation. |
|
Mr. Shays. Do you need another chair? |
|
Ms. Smith. No. I'm fine. |
|
Mr. Shays. OK. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. And the other is the Mark-to-Market |
|
portfolio. And if Stephanie could also speak to---- |
|
Mr. Shays. I am sorry. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Stephanie Smith. Your issue is might there |
|
be units where the owner chooses to go to the market and not |
|
renew the expiring contract. |
|
Mr. Shays. OK. And I am making an assumption that in many |
|
cases we still hold the mortgage insurance. |
|
Ms. Smith. Mr. Chairman? |
|
Mr. Shays. Yes. |
|
Ms. Smith. The Secretary is referring to two distinct |
|
portfolios. There is one portfolio for which we have Section 8 |
|
contracts which are beginning to expire now and will continue |
|
to expire for the next decade. And those Section 8 contracts |
|
rent significantly above market, as he mentioned. |
|
Mr. Shays. Yes. |
|
Ms. Smith. We also have FHA insurance on the mortgage. The |
|
structural flaw in the program is that the Section 8 contracts |
|
are for 20 years. The mortgage insurance is for 40 years. So in |
|
all those cases, the mortgage insurance usually runs for at |
|
least another 20 years, if not a little bit longer. |
|
There are about half-a-million units which are expiring in |
|
the next 10 years where the Section 8 contracts are |
|
significantly above market and we have FHA insurance on the |
|
mortgage. The other distinct portfolio which you are raising is |
|
the preservation portfolio. In many cases, those Section 8 |
|
contracts are also expiring in the next few years, by the end |
|
of the decade, but those are the projects in which the owners |
|
have the right to prepay their mortgages. Congress restored |
|
that right to those owners last year. But if the owner prepays |
|
the mortgage, that does not mean that he is released from the |
|
Section 8 contract. He has prepaid his FHA-insured mortgage. |
|
There is a certain set of restrictions that he is released from |
|
on the mortgage side, but he still has the Section 8 contract. |
|
If the owner decides to opt out of the Section 8 contract |
|
at the point of expiration, then he has to give the Department |
|
1 year's notice prior to opting out of the program. We then |
|
provide the tenant at the expiration of that 1 year notice |
|
period with tenant-based vouchers and certificates, so they |
|
continue to receive assistance, but it may not be tied to that |
|
specific building. |
|
So there are two very distinct portfolios that are being |
|
discussed here at the moment. That portfolio which is sort of |
|
preservation-eligible, there is about 350 or 400,000 units in |
|
that particular portfolio. Many of those units have Section 8 |
|
contracts with rents below market because of the way they were |
|
developed 20 years ago. |
|
Mr. Shays. I am sorry to ask such ignorant questions, but I |
|
learn from my questions. Do I make an assumption that the face |
|
value of the mortgage has been brought down over 20 years so |
|
maybe then it actually is worth the market price? Or, do we |
|
still have problems that even after 20 years of paying down the |
|
mortgage, it is not a balloon mortgage? Right? It is a |
|
constant. |
|
Ms. Smith. It is not a balloon mortgage. It is an |
|
amortizing mortgage. |
|
The best way I think to think about this, Mr. Chairman, is |
|
that these are two distinct portfolios of properties. |
|
Mr. Shays. Right. |
|
Ms. Smith. For the portfolio that the Secretary mentioned |
|
with rents significantly above market, in many cases, the face |
|
value of the mortgage is greater than the actual value of the |
|
property. |
|
Mr. Shays. And hence, why we pay more. |
|
Ms. Smith. Right. |
|
Mr. Shays. OK. |
|
Ms. Smith. In the case of the portfolio that is prepayment |
|
eligible which is below market, in many cases, there is not a |
|
lot of debt remaining on those properties. |
|
Mr. Shays. Yes. |
|
Ms. Smith. They were developed at a time where the mortgage |
|
amount was smaller, the amount of debt remaining on the |
|
property is significantly less. And in many cases, the value of |
|
the property is probably equivalent to the value of the |
|
mortgage. |
|
Mr. Shays. In some cases, they did not mortgage to the top. |
|
Ms. Smith. These are sort of two distinct ways in which |
|
these portfolios---- |
|
Mr. Shays. It is hard for me to understand, though, how we |
|
are in a very good bargaining condition if we still hold the |
|
debt insurance and they are basically telling us to pay more |
|
than the market rate. I guess I do not really understand the |
|
Mark-to-Market. Are you suggesting that, basically, we are |
|
going to buy down the mortgage by just writing it off? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. You would have to--your point---- |
|
Mr. Shays. Thank you very much. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Thank you, Stephanie. |
|
The dilemma you see is the real one. You would have to, |
|
under this proposal, negotiate with that owner as to the bona |
|
fide expenses of operating the building, bona fide cost of |
|
operations, et cetera, and what mortgage payment that building |
|
could satisfy to keep it at the fair market rent and then you |
|
would have to reduce in some cases the actual mortgage, write |
|
down the mortgage and in those cases, there would be an expense |
|
to the FHA fund. Net, when you do all of this, you are reducing |
|
the Section 8, you are reducing the mortgages. Some are a cost |
|
in the reduction of the mortgage because you would literally |
|
have to write it off. Net, the cost is minimal. There are some |
|
scenarios where we can even figure out making money with the |
|
right tax consequences. But there are scenarios where to reduce |
|
the rent you have to reduce the mortgage. |
|
Mr. Shays. OK. And then that raises the question in my mind |
|
of whether or not, since we have given a benefit to the owner |
|
of these facilities who have already, frankly, made a lot of |
|
money off of these facilities, they would have continued |
|
obligations to keep them in the housing stream, in perpetuity. |
|
In other words, would there be a quid pro quo for that for |
|
writing down the debt? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. That is one of the issues that is being |
|
discussed in proposals that are going forward and it depends in |
|
whose opinion. In my opinion, I would say, in the Department's |
|
opinion, I would say, yes. If we are going to reduce the rent, |
|
write down the mortgage, reduce the rents---- |
|
Mr. Shays. We pay either way. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. We pay either way. |
|
Mr. Shays. Except, we are up for renegotiations. So that is |
|
where we have some strength. If you wanted, you could basically |
|
close them down and then you have the facility. And I would |
|
think in some cases, if you did not have a willing negotiator |
|
on the other side, you just close him down, take over the |
|
property. You will look at those tradeoffs, I would gather. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. And those would all be the tradeoffs on an |
|
individual basis. Again, Mr. Chairman, some buildings, you may |
|
not want to renew. Some buildings you may say, this did not |
|
work. It hurt the community. The people who live there do not |
|
want to stay there. So you may choose not to renew a building. |
|
Mr. Shays. They have to feel you may be willing to not give |
|
them what they want in order to get what you want from them. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. That's exactly right. And right now, HUD |
|
is in no negotiating position because if the owners do nothing, |
|
they are basically renewed at the current rent. As a matter of |
|
fact, by law, HUD is prevented from reducing the rent. So you |
|
have landlords who if nothing happens, if no legislation is |
|
passed, status quo serve them. They will be rolled over, they |
|
will be renewed as much as 160 percent of fair market rent. |
|
Mr. Shays. I am going to get to Mr. Snowbarger in just a |
|
second, but let me just pursue this point. That means, clearly, |
|
that you would be looking to us to strengthen your bargaining |
|
position in Congress, to give you a little more flexibility, I |
|
would think. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. That is exactly what we are looking for. |
|
Mr. Shays. And so, that will be something that you will be |
|
deciding with, I guess particularly Mr. Lazio, and the Senate |
|
side, I do not know who that is. Who is the Senate side? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Mr. Mack. Senator Mack. |
|
Mr. Shays. You will be working with them to figure out how |
|
to proceed on that issue. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Yes, sir. |
|
Mr. Shays. Let me just ask this one last question related |
|
to it. Both GAO and the Inspector General's Office have |
|
questioned the ability of HUD to take on this massive project. |
|
This is going to take some very smart energetic people who know |
|
the marketplace and a whole host of different places. And you |
|
have alerted us so now we have to be part of the solution. And |
|
I am happy you have. The question is what steps are you taking |
|
and will be taking so that you have a strong group within HUD |
|
that can take on this project. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Mr. Chairman, there are two sides to this |
|
issue. The first one we have discussed, the impact, what kind |
|
of legislative authority we need to actually do something about |
|
it. Second, as you accurately point out, if you have the fix, |
|
the legislative authority to do a fix, how do you now implement |
|
it? Eight thousand five hundred properties. How do you now |
|
implement it with 8,500 properties across the country? |
|
One scenario would say, ``Well, we are going to bring HUD-- |
|
hire more people, increase the size of HUD and we will perform |
|
this task.'' That is not our recommendation. |
|
We have a plan to downsize HUD. We want to stay on that |
|
downsizing track and our implementation vehicle for this would |
|
look to outside parties, outside third parties, be they housing |
|
finance agencies, be they subcontractors, but there is talent |
|
in the private marketplace that can do this very well. This is |
|
a very skilled expertise. These are people who have to be able |
|
to come to the table and negotiate and know the facts because |
|
they are against trained real estate developers on the other |
|
side. So our opinion is there is expertise in the marketplace. |
|
Let HUD contract for the expertise rather than trying to |
|
develop it in house. |
|
Mr. Shays. I am struck by the fact that you really have |
|
almost a war-room type of situation where I would almost |
|
visualize someplace in HUD where you have got a gigantic map |
|
and time lines and so on, especially, if you are going to be |
|
farming out some of this, because this is going to be a massive |
|
undertaking. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. It is a massive undertaking. In any |
|
scenario, it is a massive undertaking. It is massive even if |
|
you contract it out. It is massive just to coordinate it. But I |
|
think it is a far more doable task if you contract it out, get |
|
the best expertise you can get out there and then manage the |
|
process of contracting out. |
|
Mr. Shays. Well, I have not spoken to Mr. Towns and the |
|
other members of the committee, I suspect that we are going to |
|
probably have a few hearings on this issue to weigh in with the |
|
authorizing committees to see how we could provide suggestions. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger, has the gentleman from Ohio asked |
|
questions? |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. He has not. |
|
Mr. Shays. He has not. Do you mind if we---- |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. That would be fine. |
|
Let me make just two real quick ones. |
|
Mr. Shays. Yes. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Two real quick ones, because they have to |
|
do with the questions. |
|
Mr. Shays. You have the floor. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. |
|
They have to do with the questions that were asked by the |
|
chairman: We are talking about 8,500 properties out there and |
|
we are trying to figure out what our leverage is. Do we have |
|
any analysis of those properties in terms of are they in--now, |
|
I have got to figure out how to ask the question right. Are |
|
they in markets where there are excessive units on the market? |
|
Are they in markets where housing is very tight? Obviously, if |
|
there are excessive units on the market, it seems to me we are |
|
in a pretty decent bargaining position there. And then, how do |
|
those particular contracts relate to these 200 percent rental |
|
subsidies that we were talking about earlier? Do we have that |
|
kind of analysis that you have done already? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. We can get you, Congressman, where the |
|
buildings are. We have a more thorough breakdown of the cities |
|
that you see on that chart. We have a breakdown by city of |
|
where they are across the country. And then we know where the |
|
markets are a little tight or a little soft. We also know the |
|
locations within cities and, obviously, sometimes the housing |
|
market changes within different parts of the city. So we have |
|
that data and we can get it to you. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. OK. And then, the last followup was on this |
|
management side of things. I want to congratulate on the job |
|
that you did in terms of downsizing with the Community Planning |
|
and Development and it sounds like that is a part of the |
|
process for all of the Department is a downsizing. |
|
I guess I am curious as to where you see downsizing fitting |
|
in at a point in time when the tasks that you are called upon |
|
to accomplish, at least for a short term here, are massively |
|
increased. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. That is the challenge, Congressman. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. But apparently, you see that it can be |
|
done. I mean, that is what you proposed. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Yes. Our plan is we were at 13,000. We are |
|
now at about 10,000. The plan is to go to 7,500. Our challenge |
|
is to not be driven by the number, but change the management |
|
plan, change the mission of the Department which then can work |
|
with a smaller work force. And I think it can be done. It is |
|
not--it is by no means an easy task, but that is why I point to |
|
the CPD experience. We reduced the work force 25 percent and |
|
administered more funding, ran more programs, got more things |
|
done than when we had the larger work force. You can do it. You |
|
have to rethink the mission, but we have to rethink the mission |
|
of HUD anyway. Public housing areas. I was saying in response |
|
to Congressman Allen, we have to have a new vision of how we |
|
want to manage public housing in this Nation. The overwhelming |
|
majority of public housing authorities work well. ``Well, then, |
|
why are we spending a lot of time regulating them and |
|
monitoring them? Deregulate and let the high performers work. |
|
Focus on the troubled portfolio.'' |
|
You start to make those kinds of changes in your mission, |
|
you can do it. You start talking about contracting out more |
|
functions, especially these highly specialized functions rather |
|
than trying to hire a work force, train the work force, keep |
|
them up to date with all the changes in the tax code and all |
|
the changes in the real estate law. Contract out with attorneys |
|
and accountants and housing finance agencies that can do it. |
|
Those kinds of changes in the mission will then allow us to |
|
make the kind of efficiencies that we are looking to make. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. You had mentioned earlier devolving a lot |
|
of these responsibilities back to local authorities that have a |
|
track record of managing well. Do you have any feel for how |
|
much of this responsibility can be shifted? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Well, we have a little bit of apples and |
|
oranges. On this task, the Mark-to-Market task, the 8,500 |
|
properties, that task is going to be staff-intensive whether we |
|
contract out, whether we do part of it in-house and part of |
|
it--I do not see significant, if any, reductions in that area |
|
on the multi-family side. That does not mean you cannot make |
|
those reductions in other parts of the Department. In other |
|
words, the work force has to come down. I am not saying it has |
|
to come down everywhere equally. It depends on where you can |
|
change the mission. This is not one of those areas. The |
|
devolution is more on the public housing side, to the high |
|
performing public housing authorities, the Portland Public |
|
Housing Authority. If they are working well, devolve the |
|
responsibility, monitor them so when they get into trouble, we |
|
know it, but otherwise devolve the responsibility and that is |
|
where you can save staff. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Well, I guess the question was on the |
|
public housing side. Do you have a feel for how much of that |
|
can be devolved at this point? Or is it just anecdotal? You |
|
know, this one works well. That one works well. We do not have |
|
any idea---- |
|
Secretary Cuomo. We are going to have a draft of a specific |
|
proposal in the next several weeks, Congressman, but the |
|
overwhelming majority of public housing authorities work well. |
|
It is a handful that are the so-called troubled housing |
|
authorities that really require attention. |
|
Mr. Snowbarger. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. |
|
Mr. Shays. If we could, we will get further into the |
|
troubled housing authorities. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. |
|
Mr. Secretary. |
|
Mr. Shays. And I think what we will do is we will go 10- |
|
minute cycles now. OK? |
|
Mr. Kucinich. Thank you. |
|
I have been informed by staff of the ongoing discussion you |
|
have had about the Section 8 program and I have also been |
|
informed that the housing court in the city of Cleveland has |
|
been experiencing a very brisk trade in evictions in connection |
|
with landlords and contractors involved in Section 8. What I |
|
would like to have happen is for somebody from your office |
|
contact the Cleveland Housing Court, Judge Ray Biantra is the |
|
administrator of it, and to see if there is anything that can |
|
be done to effectively intervene to try to protect people from |
|
being thrown out of their homes. |
|
I mean, the problem of homelessness in this country, as all |
|
of us agree, is serious enough without contractors taking |
|
advantage of various provisions that HUD may have. And you |
|
know, perhaps it is within your authority to intervene to see |
|
if you can protect some people from being thrown out on the |
|
street. So I would really like you to look into that and I just |
|
wanted to mention that in connection with this overall |
|
discussion about the program, if you would. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. It would be my pleasure, Congressman. I am |
|
not familiar with the specifics that are going on in Cleveland, |
|
but we will be shortly, as soon as we leave the hearing. As you |
|
know, there are protections within the Section 8 program, and |
|
we will find out what is going on. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. Yes. I have just been informed just now, |
|
myself, and I thought I would notify you. |
|
A question I have, Mr. Secretary and Mr. Chairman, there |
|
have been instances in the past in which local governments have |
|
attempted to use community development block grant funds to |
|
attract jobs and companies from other States. I wondered if it |
|
is your policy as Secretary if you thought it was appropriate |
|
use of community development block grant resources to be |
|
attracting, using those resources to attract jobs and companies |
|
from one State to another? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. No, sir. We have been aggressive in |
|
promoting the use of CDBG for economic development purposes. |
|
CDBG is one of the largest programs HUD administers, $4.6 |
|
billion, 20-year program. So it has consistency, continuity, an |
|
entire infrastructure that understands how to use it. |
|
Historically, it was not used for economic development. It did |
|
a lot of good things, social services, infrastructure, public |
|
services, but not economic development primarily because HUD |
|
had not steered the program that way. It was part of the |
|
President's empowerment agenda, trying to get jobs into cities. |
|
We have been pushing the CDBG program as a way to attract |
|
businesses, grow businesses, small business loans, micro- |
|
enterprise loans, community development banks, all can be done |
|
by CDBG. |
|
There is a specific prohibition against what they call |
|
piracy. New definition of piracy. It is no longer on the high |
|
seas. For us, it is stealing businesses from one city to the |
|
other by using EZ and EC dollars. So that is specifically |
|
prohibited. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. Now, when you say it is prohibited, is it by |
|
regulation? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Yes, sir. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. By administrative rule? By what? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. I know it is prohibited by regulation. I |
|
do not know if it is in the law. I believe it is regulation. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. Excuse me? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. I believe it is by regulation, sir. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. OK. And when were those regulations |
|
promulgated? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. I do not know, but I can check. The anti- |
|
piracy regulations on the CDBG? |
|
You stumped the entire staff on that one, Congressman. It |
|
does not happen often, but we can find out, and we will get |
|
back to you. |
|
[The information referred to follows:] |
|
|
|
The Empowerment Zones and Enterprise Communities |
|
Initiative, which benefits 105 urban and rural areas including |
|
Cleveland, Ohio, prohibits using funds to relocate businesses |
|
from one area to another [Section 1391(f)(2)(F) of the Omnibus |
|
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993.] |
|
The Community Development Block Grant program requires |
|
communities to use the funds in such a way that minimizes the |
|
displacement of existing businesses [Section 105(a)(17) of the |
|
Housing and Community Development Act of 1974.] However, the |
|
23-year old program does not clearly restrict the use of funds |
|
to relocate businesses from one area to another. |
|
|
|
Mr. Shays. And that is not, certainly, our objective. There |
|
may be a number of questions, if I could just at this time say |
|
that if we are not able to answer, we will just get the answer. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. OK. That is fine. And I agree with the Chair. |
|
It is not my intention to raise questions that cannot be |
|
answered. I would like to find out what the policy is to make |
|
sure that it is in place and to make sure that it is enforced, |
|
that there is not any movement of jobs being occasioned through |
|
the use of Federal funds in community development block grants. |
|
And I appreciate your expression of what your policy is, |
|
because that is going to be very comforting to those of us who |
|
are concerned about keeping our jobs in our communities and |
|
when I was mayor of the city, we used that community |
|
development block grant program to go to, in fact, to improve |
|
the infrastructure of neighborhoods. And that, in turn, was |
|
responsible for helping to spark some local investment and |
|
helped a lot of the businesses in the area. So I know about the |
|
value of that program and I am pleased to see that you are |
|
intending to make sure that communities are protected in the |
|
use of those funds. And I am very gratified to hear your |
|
policy. I just like to know the history on it. |
|
I have one other question, if I may, Mr. Chairman. |
|
And this may be another one that, perhaps, you have already |
|
decided on and as a new Member, you may help me to catch up on |
|
some of these issues. Before August 1996, I understand that HUD |
|
had a J-1 visa waiver policy that allowed foreign physicians to |
|
come into the United States and practice medicine in under- |
|
served areas in the city where poverty-stricken people live. |
|
The program helped to provide medical services to many people |
|
in lower income communities. I wondered what the status is of |
|
that policy. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Congressman, could I just quickly step |
|
back to your other issue on the tracking business. It's a CDBG |
|
issue. It has also been an empowerment zone issue. Cleveland is |
|
also an empowerment zone city and one of the problems is moving |
|
businesses from one city rather than creating new jobs. And |
|
both were related. And I will get you information on both, the |
|
empowerment zones and the CDBG. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. I would be interested in that because, of |
|
course, the empowerment zone is of great concern to Cleveland. |
|
I think we received over $100 million. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Yes. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. In a program that has great implications for |
|
a large area of Cleveland. So your looking into that would also |
|
be very much appreciated. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Fine. I will do that, sir. |
|
Second, on the J-1 visas. We are trying to get HUD |
|
downsized and we are trying to get HUD to focus on our core |
|
mission. Some tasks that are good tasks have to give way |
|
understanding the realities of the downsizing, et cetera. The |
|
J-1, the J-1 visa program, well, I think very intelligent in |
|
its intent, was difficult for HUD to administer. We were not |
|
really in a position where we can police, verify whether or not |
|
the doctors are then working in the areas where they are |
|
supposed to be working to qualify for these visas. It is not in |
|
our usual portfolio, the function of monitoring doctors and |
|
verifying where their service area is. |
|
We discontinued the J-1 visa program at HUD. And we are now |
|
considering what, if anything, should be done about it, but the |
|
program is now discontinued. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. I would like to say on behalf of my |
|
constituents, Mr. Chairman, and members of the committee, that |
|
there is a great concern in areas such as Cleveland, |
|
particularly where foreign physicians have given their services |
|
in under-served areas, that the J-1 visa program be continued |
|
and I--on the one hand, it is comforting to know that the |
|
reason for its discontinuation were more administrative which I |
|
suppose relates to the dollar issues and not that the program, |
|
itself, proved to be a failure. What I think would be helpful, |
|
as we are all government looking at ways of doing better with |
|
Federal funds, it would be good to see if a cost benefit |
|
analysis was arrived at with respect to that program. To see if |
|
a discontinuation of it is not really more expensive in terms |
|
of the toll on the health of the people in the areas where |
|
these physicians were looking. I would really appreciate it if |
|
you could do that, because it would at least give us a chance |
|
to make an evaluation as to whether or not it was in the |
|
interest of the people to do that. I would really appreciate it |
|
if you would consider that, Mr. Secretary. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. We will, Congressman. |
|
One of the points I tried to get to in my opening statement |
|
was there were two focuses at HUD: (1) Section 8 crisis; (2) |
|
management. Part of the management is restoring the public |
|
trust. I want to make sure that if we are administering a |
|
program, we are sure that it is being run properly. |
|
On the J-1 program, there was some suggestions that the |
|
certifications that were being put in, that doctors were |
|
working in those areas, that there were some cases where that |
|
was not actually the fact. And especially given the nature of |
|
this committee, I want to be able to say that if we are running |
|
a program, I know that it is working well and that we are in a |
|
position to run this program. And that is one of the issues |
|
that was with the J-1 program, whether or not the doctors were |
|
actually where they were supposed to be to get the visas in the |
|
first place and what was HUD's capacity to make sure that was |
|
the case, but we will--I will give you the analysis that we |
|
have done back at the Department. And then if you would like to |
|
chat about it, it will be my pleasure. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. Well, again, thank you, Mr. Chairman. I just |
|
want to conclude this round by saying that this is a very |
|
important department for so many of our urban areas. And as a |
|
person who represents a substantial part of the city of |
|
Cleveland, I am grateful that we have a Secretary who is |
|
showing this sensitivity to these issues and I think that it |
|
augers well for your relationship with the Congress. And I |
|
thank you so much for being here. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Thank you, sir. |
|
Mr. Kucinich. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. |
|
Mr. Shays. I thank the gentleman. |
|
Mr. Pappas. |
|
Mr. Pappas. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. |
|
Mr. Secretary, again, congratulations to you. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Pappas. I want to shift gears a bit and talk about two |
|
programs that I dealt with as a county official in New Jersey, |
|
that being the community development block grant program and |
|
the HOME Program. |
|
First, a comment. The way it was structured, I believed was |
|
probably a great example of how even at times the Federal |
|
Government can allow great flexibility at the local level where |
|
local government officials can include people from municipal |
|
government and from the community to help make decisions. At |
|
least that is how we did it in Somerset County, NJ. And for my |
|
more than a decade as a county elected official, the CDBG |
|
program was very effective and one that really helped meet |
|
needs that were addressed in neighborhoods and communities. I |
|
think we need to do more of that. The HOME Program is not as |
|
old, at least my involvement is not as long standing; but, |
|
again, I felt that is a great example of how local governments |
|
could very effectively deal under some broad Federal |
|
guidelines, but we could meet identified needs at the local |
|
level. I would just encourage you to--you and your colleagues |
|
here from the President's cabinet to do that as frequently as |
|
possible. |
|
Having said that, I am wondering if you could just comment |
|
and I apologize because you may have covered this while I was |
|
absent from the room, but if you could just comment as to how |
|
you view those programs and how you view their continuation in |
|
your overall priorities. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Congressman, thank you for the opportunity |
|
and thank you for the comment. The CDBG program and the HOME |
|
Program, I would just affirm everything you said with the only |
|
stipulation that I put a exclamation mark at the end of the |
|
paragraph. CDBG and HOME, to me, are as close to the model of |
|
Federal, local, State relations as you can get, because what |
|
they say is everything we have been talking about for the past |
|
few years: devolution, local control. But--but, not a blank |
|
check block grant. Right? Oversight committee. We want to make |
|
sure the funds are going to where they are supposed to go. |
|
Federal, Federal purpose. |
|
And that is basically what CDBG and HOME do. They say, |
|
``This is the Federal goal, Federal purpose. This money is |
|
supposed to go to provide housing affordability to low and |
|
moderate income people, basically, the HOME Program.'' Federal |
|
goal, but let the local community figure out how to do it. We |
|
cannot sit here and decide what housing policies work for |
|
Somerset County or what community development needs are No. 1, |
|
2, 3 in Somerset County. |
|
Let's set the Federal goal, affordable housing, community |
|
development for low and moderate income people under CDBG. Let |
|
Somerset County figure out how to do it. Let them set the local |
|
means. One caveat and one caveat only, they should include the |
|
community when they start making those decisions, citizen |
|
participation process. CDBG started as a Republican program-- |
|
since it is bipartisan and in my opinion really a great model |
|
of what should happen. |
|
The HOME Program follows the basic template of CDBG. And as |
|
the Congressman points out the HOME Program has only been |
|
around since 1992, so it does not have the same institutional |
|
bearing or experience that CDBG does, but it is the same |
|
template: Federal goals, local means, involve the community, |
|
let the community decide. And those are the two mainstays of |
|
HUD. |
|
You know, when people talk about HUD, we have the FHA |
|
housing side, public housing and then the community development |
|
side and the HOME and the CDBG program are the two pillars of |
|
community development. And where the funding goes in HUD, $4.6 |
|
billion, I believe the largest single program is CDBG. And it |
|
works well almost universally. |
|
Mr. Pappas. We have had over the years, when I was county |
|
official, there were probably only three occasions in the 12 or |
|
more years that I was involved in it there was any kind of a |
|
question or objection from the community. And when you are |
|
dealing with 21 municipalities and my county and the number of |
|
local officials, municipal officials that we got involved and |
|
people from the community, that is quite a track record. And I |
|
would even just, in conclusion, would just add that I think the |
|
HOME Program was even as good as the CDBG program is, the HOME |
|
Program, I think, is even improved--it is an improvement in |
|
that I viewed there is almost less bureaucracy involved, at |
|
least that was my experience in New Jersey in the |
|
administration of it. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Well, Congressman, we ran the HOME |
|
Program--actually, 4 years ago at my confirmation hearing and |
|
the confirmation of Secretary Henry Cisneros, the complaint was |
|
the HOME Program, which at that time was not spending, because |
|
the department had so many regulations on it, at that time 4 |
|
years ago, only 3 percent of the money had been spent because |
|
there were so many regulations. And it was made clear to me at |
|
the Senate confirmation that they wanted that changed. Today, |
|
we have a spend-out of about 92 percent of the HOME Program, |
|
110,000 units built. So it is working. |
|
I do not like to say which is better, HOME or CDBG, because |
|
that gets me into trouble, but they are both working well. |
|
Mr. Pappas. Let me just say one other thing. You're right. |
|
People back home, I hope they do not hear that I said that, but |
|
the community support, the understanding that they have of how |
|
well it works I think has been great. And I also think for both |
|
programs the pressure that there is to make sure that this |
|
money is spent within a reasonable amount of time I think is |
|
very appropriate. There are many non-profit agencies or most |
|
instances whenever there has been a proposal for some sort of |
|
housing, it is not housing rehabilitation of people's homes |
|
that meet the criteria, but where there have been non-profit |
|
community-based organizations whether it is for people and |
|
whatever their circumstances. Some just have not been able to |
|
put it all together and within a couple of years they are not |
|
able to and that money has been reallocated and it just works |
|
very well. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Pappas. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Shays. I thank the gentleman. |
|
At this time, I will call on Mr. Towns. |
|
Let me give you an idea, Mr. Secretary, I know you have |
|
pressing needs and you have been very generous with your time. |
|
It is about 15 of, now. We are going to get you out of here no |
|
later than 15 after and maybe sooner. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Mr. Chairman, whatever works. At the |
|
pleasure of the committee, my time is yours. |
|
Mr. Shays. Thank you. You have been very cooperative, but |
|
it will just give your staff an idea of how much. We will |
|
proceed about a half-hour more. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Towns. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. |
|
There was testimony earlier about the empowerment zones |
|
and, of course, empowerment of communities. Could you sort of |
|
give us an assessment? I know you have not been around that |
|
long in terms of your views, your feelings as to how they are |
|
working up to this point? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Congressman, I think the empowerment zone |
|
initiative, the empowerment zone program as designed by the |
|
Federal Government is working well primarily because it allows |
|
for the individual circumstances that different cities and |
|
different communities bring. How are the empowerment zones |
|
doing? Which I think is a different question than how is the |
|
empowerment zone program doing. The empowerment zone program is |
|
doing well. |
|
Mr. Towns. I agree with you. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. The empowerment zones, it depends. It |
|
depends on what zone in what city in what context. The |
|
Cleveland zone is going very well. Really going gangbusters. I |
|
have been to the city a few times. They are actually attracting |
|
businesses from the suburbs back into the city with the |
|
empowerment zone, which is the exact opposite cycle that we |
|
have been seeing, businesses moving out of cities to suburbs. |
|
So Cleveland, it is working very well. Comprehensive, the |
|
communities involved, and it is bringing back jobs which is the |
|
purpose of the program. |
|
Some other cities we have had more obstacles in the |
|
startup. Sometimes political obstacles, sometimes community |
|
obstacles. Some of the situations that we are trying to solve |
|
are more complex and they have opposition existing between and |
|
among community groups. And then the empowerment zone has to |
|
work through that context. So I think it depends. But the |
|
program, itself, is doing well. By and large, the cities are |
|
doing very well, some better than others. |
|
Mr. Towns. Thank you very much. In New York State, in |
|
particular, we have been hearing a lot about privatization. You |
|
can go to any housing development and another rumor has started |
|
that it is going to be privatized. And of course, I am not |
|
saying, it is good, bad or indifferent. I think the real |
|
question is based on what has happened in Louisiana, and |
|
similar where there have actually been some selling of, what |
|
happens to the poor and the homeless if that happens? Is there |
|
any provision for them if there is move toward privatizing? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. I think, Congressman, there is no silver |
|
bullet and sometimes we struggle for one solution that sounds |
|
like it is the panacea and it is going to solve everything. And |
|
I think in that context, sometimes privatization is thrown |
|
around. We privatize and then, presto, change-o, all the |
|
problems are gone. |
|
I do not think it is a silver bullet. I think it has its |
|
place in some contexts and we have had good experience with |
|
privatization in some context. I think it is always, when you |
|
talk about privatization, it is always important to make sure |
|
you protect those whom it may not be in the private interest to |
|
serve. And that has to be factored in. Otherwise, it will not |
|
work for those who most desperately need the help which is the |
|
point of the program in the first place. |
|
Mr. Towns. Mr. Chairman, I yield back. But I also, just |
|
before I yield back, want to say that I am impressed with your |
|
sensitivity, I am impressed by your commitment and your |
|
dedication. So I want to let you know I look forward to working |
|
with you and trying to be able to solve some of these problems. |
|
I know it is going to require a lot, because, let's face it, |
|
when you are cutting a budget the way you are cutting it and at |
|
the same time the need for services are increasing, you have to |
|
almost be a miracle maker. What we are saying to you is that I |
|
am hoping that this committee along with the Congress will join |
|
you in terms of trying to be able to come up with some |
|
solutions. So I look forward to working with you. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Thank you very much, Congressman. Thank |
|
you. |
|
Mr. Shays. I thank the gentleman. |
|
I am going to focus in on the distressed public housing, |
|
but I just want to touch on the fact that you clearly have a |
|
massive undertaking here. Is it your intention to suggest |
|
reorganization of HUD? Are you going to be coming in with any |
|
plan? Or are you just going to be responding to proposals that |
|
have been made by others? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. We will be coming in with a management |
|
plan for HUD, Mr. Chairman. We will be coming in with a plan |
|
that is driven by a new vision of the mission of the |
|
Department, how to accomplish that and then a downsizing plan |
|
for the work force in response to the revised mission. |
|
Mr. Shays. Thank you. And clearly, your management needs |
|
are acute. I mean I would say that to whoever was Secretary. I |
|
would also say to you because I know it is so significant, I |
|
have some sense of patience about how long it will take and so |
|
on, but it would seem to me--if I were Secretary, I would |
|
almost have a crisis management team on this issue, I would |
|
have a crisis management team on management. And the other area |
|
that I am concerned about is the whole issue of distressed |
|
public housing. I am pretty convinced from my obviously limited |
|
experience in my own district, because I just have 10 towns, |
|
but I have a Stanford, a Norwalk, and a Bridgeport, but I have |
|
been on this committee, now, for 10 years and one of the things |
|
that surprised me is if you have a capable and talented public |
|
housing authority that really uses money well and does not try |
|
to hire people for political reasons, but just hires the best |
|
and the brightest, you can do extraordinary things. If I can |
|
get a little parochial, I just am extraordinarily impressed |
|
with the housing director in Bridgeport and what HUD has been |
|
able to do with this housing authority. And Mayor Ganum happens |
|
to be a Democrat who has been a very good leader of that |
|
community. |
|
Mr. Towns. Most Democrats are. [Laughter.] |
|
Mr. Shays. That is true, most are. And in one case, in one |
|
case, one of the most is in Bridgeport. Now, I could say all |
|
Republicans are--[laughter.] |
|
But I am concerned. I think we provide a lot of money to |
|
public housing authorities. And if they use it well, they can |
|
use it to leverage, they can do a lot. But what concerns me is |
|
that I do not think there is a real plan on how you decide when |
|
to take over a public housing authority. And I do not know how |
|
you wean them off the list. And if you could just touch a |
|
little bit about troubled housing authorities? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Yes, sir, Mr. Chairman. |
|
First of all, on your overall point about the serious |
|
nature of this problem, I could not agree with you more, and we |
|
do very much have a crisis mentality on this issue. And I said |
|
in response to Congressman Snowbarger, we have a downsizing |
|
plan, a management plan, but it is driven by how to get the job |
|
done. It is not a numbers game. And we will have personnel |
|
where we need personnel and we need personnel to work this out. |
|
Mr. Shays. You are talking about Section 8. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Section 8. |
|
Mr. Shays. Yes. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Even though we want to go primarily to |
|
third party outside sources to implement it, we still have to |
|
make sure it is done right. So this is no doubt a priority. |
|
On the distressed public housing, I could not agree more. |
|
Where you have a good public housing authority, it is amazing |
|
the kinds of things that they can do. Father Panis Village Hope |
|
Six Grant which basically just--program on Hope Six was those |
|
comprehensive solutions devolved to the local authority, |
|
learning the lessons that we have learned, but let the local |
|
authorities work it out. And it has been working quite well. |
|
And what we would like to see on the public housing side is |
|
more devolution, deregulation to those high performing PHAs. |
|
Let us focus on the distressed public housing authorities. |
|
And then the chairman raises another interesting point: |
|
What is a distressed public housing authority? At what point do |
|
you become a distressed public housing authority? HUD has a |
|
grading system. We call it PHMAP, but it is actually a grading |
|
system that grades the management of a housing authority. And |
|
you get a score. You then have a passing score or a failing |
|
score. If you fail, you are now a troubled housing authority. |
|
If you pass, you are an acceptable performer. That score, that |
|
PHMAP score which we have revised recently, we are going to |
|
have discussions about revising it again, especially if we move |
|
more toward deregulation, because then that score is very |
|
important. Based on that score, you will decide to deregulate |
|
or not. And that is the PHMAP score. And as I said, it has just |
|
been revised within the past several weeks and we are going to |
|
take a second look at it, especially if we go more toward |
|
deregulation. |
|
Mr. Shays. It just strikes me that you have a danger of |
|
making sure that you do not manipulate it or game it. There are |
|
so many ways you can make a decision on who is distressed. |
|
Obviously, you have to have gradations. And I suspect that even |
|
with the limit of staff that you have that you are going to |
|
have a hard time dealing with all the distressed public housing |
|
that you have. |
|
What I am trying to understand is do you have a management |
|
team that focuses on this? A management team on Section 8, a |
|
management team that focuses in on distressed public housing? A |
|
management team that is focusing just on management problems? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Yes. You have the three main program |
|
areas. We are talking about, one is the housing department. |
|
Nick Retsinas, Stephanie Smith is the deputy who is here today. |
|
You heard from her earlier. That is basically working on this |
|
as their top priority. The Section 8 crisis is their top |
|
priority. |
|
Mr. Shays. Right. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Public housing, Assistant Secretary Kevin |
|
Marchman is focusing on the public housing problem and we are |
|
focusing on that PHMAP monitoring score, how to deregulate high |
|
performers and how to handle the distressed public housing in |
|
this country without HUD running out there and managing every |
|
project. The third program area is community planning and |
|
development. That is the HOME Program, CDBG, and then fair |
|
housing would be the fourth. |
|
Mr. Shays. I am just going to express some concerns and |
|
then I will be done and I do not know if any Member just wants |
|
to jump in for later. It seems to me that there is obviously |
|
multi-discipline. One of the things I was amazed to find is the |
|
Department of Agriculture has public housing for rural areas. |
|
And that was a surprise to me. But I mean I can see a tough |
|
decision for you as Secretary to decide, ``Well, do you get |
|
into policing? Do you get into drug control issues? Do you get |
|
into welfare reform?'' |
|
And I would think in one sense the answer is, yes. And the |
|
other way, you are just saying, ``Well, my gosh, I am just |
|
dangerously spreading myself and the Department too thinly.'' I |
|
am not asking for a indepth explanation, but tell me how far |
|
you take the interdisciplinary and where do you sometimes bring |
|
another department in or do you say, ``Heck, we can do it and |
|
we should do it?'' |
|
Secretary Cuomo. I think, Mr. Chairman, you have to do |
|
both. I think the interdisciplinary is almost forced, if you |
|
are going to make any of these things happen because we talk |
|
about comprehensive solutions on the community level. Community |
|
development people, local housing authorities will say, ``We |
|
need comprehensive solutions, otherwise it doesn't work.'' They |
|
will talk about holistic solutions. They will talk about |
|
continuums. They will say, ``I cannot just do housing. I have |
|
to do housing and community development and I have to have the |
|
jobs or else none of this works.'' That, by definition, is |
|
interdisciplinary. How do you do that? I think on the highest |
|
level, it is interdisciplinary among Federal departments. |
|
Cooperation among Federal departments. It is the point of the |
|
Vice President's Empowerment Board that cross cylinders, cross |
|
Federal departments, bring that coordination. |
|
And then within HUD, it is the same thing. When we go to |
|
talk to a city of Bridgeport or any city in the country and we |
|
say, ``We are here to help,'' they do not ask us just for |
|
housing. They need housing, but they need more than housing. |
|
And they need that housing in a context. And they ask for |
|
economic development assistance, which we have a very large |
|
portfolio we did not really talk about today, but we have |
|
significant efforts in economic development, job creation, |
|
which is more and more a priority. Welfare reform: at one |
|
point, the time limit is up. Somebody needs a job, otherwise |
|
nothing is going to work. They need the economic development. |
|
They need the policing. They need safety in public housing. |
|
``One strike and you're out.'' ``Operation Safe Home.'' |
|
Initiatives that we have. CDBG works in that area. They need |
|
the community development and they need the housing. So I think |
|
for us to do our job, we have to be able to come up with a |
|
comprehensive solution, albeit in a very intelligent and |
|
efficient manner, given all the other constraints. |
|
Mr. Shays. I am just going to make a few observations and I |
|
welcome any of the other Members--we are going to get you out |
|
by 15 after, but---- |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Whatever. Take your time. |
|
Mr. Shays. I know. The problem is not on your side. |
|
One is that I spent about 3 years, but a year really |
|
focused on how do we rebuild cities, since I represent three. |
|
And we met with every conceivable group. And when we came right |
|
down to it, we came down to this basic answer: the way you save |
|
urban areas is to bring businesses back in to do two things, to |
|
pay taxes and help create jobs. And of all the things, so I |
|
know that this Congress is not as eager to have HUD in economic |
|
development, but if you gave me a choice, frankly, of fixing up |
|
public housing in some instances or providing an area where you |
|
could bring in a business and they could employ people there, I |
|
would encourage that. |
|
Now, one of the ways I think that HUD can serve in a very |
|
dynamic way, you have the issue of impacted/non-impacted. And I |
|
will not even localize it to a particular community. But in an |
|
area where you are redoing significant public housing, your |
|
requirement is to go into a certain number of non-impacted |
|
areas. And non-impacted areas sometimes tend to be low-zoned |
|
areas where you do not have as much density. And one of the |
|
things that we found in one of our communities is that when we |
|
did the vouchers, we actually created something we did not |
|
intend. We took home-owned neighborhoods that were mixed. |
|
Black, Hispanic, white, but they were home-owned. And they were |
|
solid. And then Section 8 came in and really in some cases |
|
Section 8 pays more than the vouchers, paid more than the |
|
market rate, which is kind of interesting. And they came in and |
|
they ended up making some streets rental instead of home-owned. |
|
And it had a very kind of negative, unintended impact. And the |
|
irony was that in one of my communities, the public housing is |
|
better than the neighborhood. They have a flag. They have a |
|
shield up front pointing out this is public housing. It is |
|
well-maintained and they have upgraded neighborhoods. And it |
|
would seem to me that one of the ways to rethink the whole |
|
issue of impacted and non-impacted would be to give communities |
|
some leeway if in the process of building more and impacted, |
|
they have a partnership and require them to have partnership |
|
with the business community and others to do economic |
|
development, store fronts, a whole host of other things that |
|
really--then you have taken the public housing that has been a |
|
catalyst for economic development without even your putting |
|
money in. But basically saying, ``OK, we will forego to some |
|
measure the impact and non-impacted, but we have different |
|
requirements now. You have to upgrade the community |
|
economically by your doing that.'' And it may be a way for you |
|
to do that interdisciplinary just because of the carrot that |
|
you have of saying, ``Well, if you don't, you are going to go |
|
into single family neighborhoods.'' |
|
I mean the silly thing was that we were having in one of |
|
our communities, HUD was buying individual homes, just a |
|
plethora of them and having minimal impact over all. So that is |
|
just the one thing I just want to share with you. |
|
Do you have anything you would like to share? |
|
Mr. Towns. Thanks, Mr. Chairman. |
|
Mr. Shays. We usually close by asking is there any question |
|
that you wish we had asked. And also, with your indulgence-- |
|
sometimes the staff who get to enjoy not saying anything, but |
|
also think a lot in terms of your response to our questions--if |
|
any of your staff want to make a point, we would welcome that. |
|
If there is some point in hearing these questions and the |
|
answers of the Secretary, we would welcome you doing that. And |
|
I do not think the Secretary would mind, because I am sure you |
|
would not contradict him. But do any of you want to make an |
|
emphasis? |
|
Secretary Cuomo. They are a shy group, Mr. Chairman. |
|
Mr. Shays. They are shy. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Here, they are a shy group. Not at HUD. I |
|
can promise you that. |
|
Mr. Shays. No, but they are sizing you up. Any question |
|
that you wish we had asked? [Laughter.] |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Let me say, if I might, Mr. Chairman, I |
|
hope we have made clear in this hearing and I know that the |
|
committee stated it in your opener, so you did not need us to |
|
bring it to your attention, but if we could reaffirm it, |
|
hopefully, the Section 8 problem we need help with. It is a |
|
desperate situation for the Department. I have been told by |
|
people who have been at the Department from day one that this |
|
is the greatest crisis HUD has ever faced. Forget the 1980's |
|
and the scandals and everything else. This is it. And it is not |
|
just for the Department. This is not an inside-the-beltway |
|
story. |
|
Mr. Shays. Yes. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. This is every city across the country--6 |
|
million Americans. This will be the legacy of affordable |
|
housing between now and the year 2000. What happens here will |
|
be what we did with affordable housing as a Nation. And we need |
|
your help. We cannot do it without Congress. We understand |
|
that. |
|
Second, on the management, that is something that we can |
|
do. That will be our priority. I have heard this committee, I |
|
have seen it in your correspondence earlier, it will be my |
|
personal priority and we will be working on it. And I hope to |
|
have in 18 months noticeable change that we can report back to |
|
the committee. And beyond that, Mr. Chairman, again, my 4 years |
|
as Assistant Secretary showed me the only way anything happens |
|
is when it happens together, bipartisan, with Congress; and I |
|
am looking forward to a productive relationship and I think we |
|
can do good things. We have real challenges here, but we also |
|
have real opportunities. And met, we can make things better |
|
than they are today if we work together. |
|
Mr. Shays. Do you want to just thank the Secretary? |
|
Mr. Towns. Right. Mr. Chairman, thanks a lot. |
|
I would just like to thank the Secretary for coming and |
|
that I really think that he shed a tremendous amount of light |
|
on many subjects. And of course, as I indicated early on, I |
|
look forward to working with you. It just feels good to have |
|
someone that truly understands the problems out there. And I |
|
think that also makes a major difference. Sometimes you get a |
|
new Secretary, they have to spend 2\1/2\ years getting familiar |
|
with the problems that are out there. And then by the time they |
|
get familiar with the problems, they are gone. Your situation |
|
is so different. You are thoroughly familiar with the problems |
|
and we look forward to working with you. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Shays. I concur and thank you again for coming. Have a |
|
great day. |
|
Secretary Cuomo. Thanks for having us. |
|
Mr. Shays. This hearing is adjourned. |
|
[Whereupon, at 1:05 p.m., the subcommittee was adjourned.] |
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