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Housing Choice Voucher Program Administrative Fee Study

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Housing Choice Voucher Program Administrative Fee Study

Overview

PHAs can only help low-income families with Housing Choice Vouchers if they can pay the costs of administering the program. Since the beginning of the program in the mid-1970s, the formula for allocating administrative fees has largely relied on differences in fair market rents (FMR) for determining administrative fee allocations, based on the weak theory that FMRs correlate with wage rates and other costs of operation, like office rent.

The lack of actual data on how much it costs to run a high performing and efficient voucher program has undermined HUD’s efforts to ensure adequate levels of funding throughout the nation.

Through a very detailed and methodical approach, this study captured all costs incurred (labor, non-labor, direct, indirect, overhead costs) at a broad sample of 60 PHAs operating high performing and efficient HCV programs across the country between 2012 and 2014. The study proposes a new administrative fee formula, which is based on cost drivers that cover the actual costs to administer the HCV program and has implications for the overall budget and for individual PHAs.

Public Briefing

On Friday April 17, 2015 from 11 am – 12:30 pm, HUD held a Public Briefing to release the Housing Choice Voucher Program Administrative Fee Study. This event was for Public Housing Agencies (PHAs), PHA industry groups, HUD staff, and other interested stakeholders to learn about the study methodology and to hear the study results firsthand. The study proposes a new administrative fee formula that has implications for the overall budget and for individual PHAs. Learn more.