Housing and Urban Development: HUD's Management Deficiencies, Progress on

Reforms, and Issues for Its Future (Testimony, 03/06/97,

GAO/T-RCED-97-89).

GAO discussed progress that the Department of Housing and Urban

Development (HUD) has made in addressing serious management and

budgetary problems, focusing on: (1) the long-standing management

deficiencies that hamper HUD's effectiveness, progress made in

addressing these problems, and the work remaining in the coming years;

(2) the problems in HUD's assisted and public housing programs, which

account for the largest portion of its outlays and a vast share of the

budget authority HUD expects to need in the future; and (3) the need to

achieve consensus on federal housing policy, HUD's mission, and the

resources devoted to achieving that mission.

GAO noted that: (1) four long-standing departmentwide management

deficiencies continue to make HUD vulnerable to waste, fraud, abuse, and

mismanagement: (a) weak internal controls; (b) inadequate information

and financial management systems; (c) an ineffective organizational

structure; and (d) an insufficient mix of staff with the proper skills;

(2) while HUD has made progress in addressing these weaknesses, GAO has

determined that much remains to be done and HUD continues to warrant the

focused attention that comes with being designated by GAO as a

"high-risk area"; (3) HUD faces a variety of problems in its largest

assisted and public housing programs, including how to: (a) continue

providing Section 8 housing assistance to 3 million families while not

undermining funding for other important housing and community

development programs; (b) reduce excess rental subsidies to some insured

multifamily properties while minimizing insurance losses to the Federal

Housing Administration fund and ensuring that those properties meet

basic housing quality standards; and (c) help public housing authorities

deal with increasingly tight funding levels while ensuring a minimum

level of oversight and assistance from HUD for the authorities with

management problems; (4) the Congress and the administration need to

agree on the future direction of federal housing policy and put in place

the organizational and program delivery structures that are best suited

to carrying out that policy; and (5) doing so will require revisiting

fundamental issues about that policy, including whom the federal

government will serve, how much will be spent on those being served, and

how those policies will be implemented.

--------------------------- Indexing Terms -----------------------------

REPORTNUM: T-RCED-97-89

TITLE: Housing and Urban Development: HUD's Management

Deficiencies, Progress on Reforms, and Issues for Its Future

DATE: 03/06/97

SUBJECT: Internal controls

Cost control

Agency missions

Management information systems

Federal agency reorganization

Human resources utilization

Insurance losses

Federal aid for housing

Community development

Housing programs

IDENTIFIER: GAO High Risk Program

Federal Housing Administration Fund

HUD Section 8 Housing Assistance Program

HUD Public Housing Management Assessment Program

HUD Reinvention Blueprint

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Cover

================================================================ COVER

 

Before the Subcommittee on Human Resources and Intergovernmental

Relations, Committee on Government Reform and Oversight, House of

Representatives

For Release

on Delivery

Expected at

1:30 p.m. EST

Thursday

March 6, 1997

HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT -

HUD'S MANAGEMENT DEFICIENCIES,

PROGRESS ON REFORMS AND ISSUES FOR

ITS FUTURE

Statement of Lawrence J. Dyckman,

Associate Director

Housing and Community Development Issues,

Resources, Community, and Economic

Development Division

GAO/T-RCED-97-89

GAO/RCED-97-89T

 

(385665)

 

Abbreviations

=============================================================== ABBREV

HUD -

GPRA -

GAO -

FHA -

PHA -

PHMAP -

============================================================ Chapter 0

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee:

Two years ago before this Subcommittee, we discussed the most

important management and budget problems facing the Department of

Housing and Urban Development (HUD) as part of your effort to help

set the stage for addressing those problems. We are pleased to

return here today to discuss progress that has been made since then

and the problems and challenges that remain for both the Congress and

HUD.

HUD remains a Department with serious management and budgetary

problems. While it has formulated approaches and initiated actions

over the last 2 years to address some of its most significant

problems, those actions are far from complete. HUD's programs

continue to represent large federal loan commitments and

discretionary spending, much of which goes for rental assistance to

those people who are least able to afford decent housing. Therefore,

we believe that controlling spending for these programs will require

a continued reexamination--by both the Congress and the

administration--of federal housing policies and the type of program

delivery systems best suited to carry out those policies.

As we said in a statement to your full Committee on February 12 of

this year, the Congress is an important partner in working with

executive branch agencies to implement the Government Performance and

Results Act (GPRA), which focuses on clarifying missions, setting

programmatic goals, and measuring performance toward those goals.\1

Building on GPRA's call to measure performance better and focus on

results, the Congress has enacted additional important reforms

including (1) the Government Management Reform Act of 1994, which

expanded the 1990 Chief Financial Officers (CFO) Act's requirements

for financial statements and controls that can pass the test of an

independent audit; and (2) the 1996 Clinger-Cohen Act, which is

directed at more effective management and use of information

technology to better support agencies' missions and improve program

performance.

Our statement today is based on several reports that we have issued

and testimony that we have given over the past 2 years as well as our

ongoing work. (See app. I for a list of related GAO products). It

will focus on (1) the long-standing management deficiencies that

hamper HUD's effectiveness, progress made in addressing these

problems, and the work remaining in the coming years; (2) the

problems in HUD's assisted and public housing programs--which account

for the largest portion of its outlays and a vast share of the budget

authority HUD expects to need in the future; and, (3) the need to

achieve consensus on federal housing policy, HUD's mission, and the

resources devoted to achieving that mission.

In summary, we found the following:

-- Four long-standing, Department-wide management deficiencies

continue to make HUD vulnerable to waste, fraud, abuse, and

mismanagement. These deficiencies are weak internal controls,

inadequate information and financial management systems, an

ineffective organizational structure, and an insufficient mix of

staff with the proper skills. While HUD has made progress in

addressing these weaknesses, we have determined that much

remains to be done and that therefore the Department continues

to warrant the focused attention that comes with being

designated by GAO as a "high-risk area."\2

-- HUD faces a variety of problems in its largest assisted and

public housing programs. These include how to (1) continue

providing Section 8 housing assistance to 3 million families

while not undermining the funding for other important housing

and community development programs, (2) reduce excess rental

subsidies to some insured multifamily properties while

minimizing insurance losses to the Federal Housing

Administration (FHA) fund and ensuring that those properties

meet basic housing quality standards, and (3) help public

housing authorities deal with increasingly tight funding levels

while ensuring a minimum level of oversight and assistance from

HUD for the authorities with management problems.

-- The Congress and the administration need to agree on the future

direction of federal housing policy and put in place the

organizational and program delivery structures that are best

suited to carrying out that policy. Doing so will require

revisiting fundamental issues about that policy, including whom

the federal government will serve, how much will be spent on

those being served, and how--via existing systems, block grants,

devolution to states, or other means--those policies will be

implemented.

 

--------------------

\1 Managing for Results: Using GPRA to Assist Congressional and

Executive Branch Decisionmaking (GAO/T-GGD-97-43, Feb. 12, 1997).

\2 We identified areas throughout the government that are especially

vulnerable to waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement and termed these

"high-risk areas." See GAO's High-Risk Series (GAO/HR-97-1, Feb.

1997).

 

BACKGROUND ON HUD'S PROGRAMS

AND BUDGET

---------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:1

Established in 1965, HUD is the principal federal agency responsible

for programs dealing with housing and community development and fair

housing opportunities. Through its programs, HUD provides rental

assistance to more than 4 million lower-income households, has

insured mortgages for about 23 million homeowners, has helped

revitalize over 4,000 communities, and helps ensure that access to

housing is equally available to all.

HUD is responsible for the expenditure of significant amounts of tax

dollars. The net budget outlays for HUD's programs were close to

$25.5 billion in fiscal year 1996, the vast majority of which was for

assisted and public housing programs. HUD also is responsible for

managing more than $400 billion in mortgage insurance, $464 billion

in guarantees of mortgage-backed securities, and about $180 billion

in prior years' budget authority for which it has future financial

commitments.

 

HUD'S MANAGEMENT DEFICIENCIES

---------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:2

The HUD scandals of the late 1980s served to focus a great deal of

public attention on the management problems at HUD. HUD's

information and financial management systems were inadequate, failing

to meet program managers' needs or to provide adequate oversight of

housing and community development programs. These internal controls

weaknesses were a major factor leading to the scandals. The

organizational problems at HUD included overlapping and ill-defined

responsibilities and authorities between the Department's

headquarters and field organizations as well as a fundamental lack of

management accountability and responsibility. Finally, an

insufficient mix of staff with the proper skills hampered HUD's

ability to effectively monitor and oversee its programs.

HUD's slow progress in correcting the fundamental management

weaknesses that allowed the scandals to occur and a concern that HUD

needed heightened congressional attention led us to designate the

Department as a "high-risk area" in January 1994. In February 1995,

we reported in more depth on HUD's management deficiencies as part of

GAO's biennial High-Risk Series,\3 and, last month, we reported on

the corrective actions that HUD has taken or initiated since our

February 1995 report.\4 Because HUD is still working to correct its

management weaknesses and, in some areas, has a long way to go, we

have determined that the Department continues to warrant being

designated as a "high-risk area."

HUD has made progress in addressing each of the major management

deficiencies, but in most cases, much work remains for the Department

before its actions will be complete. For example, HUD has made

progress improving its internal controls, but major problems persist.

HUD has implemented a new management planning and control program

intended to identify and rank the major risks in each program and

develop strategies to abate those risks. Also, HUD has reported that

its number of material internal control weaknesses dropped from over

51 in the early 1990s to only 9 at the end of fiscal year 1995.

However, we and HUD's Inspector General question the effectiveness of

the Department's management control program in identifying material

weaknesses and assessing front-end risks. For example, we noted in

our review of the fiscal years 1995 and 1996 management plans

prepared by several of HUD's major program areas that the only risks

identified in the management control section of each plan were

previously identified material weaknesses and the abatement actions

were those previously outlined in HUD's report on compliance with the

Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act. In addition, the

Inspector General stated that weaknesses existed in the management

control program because HUD's major program areas were not performing

front-end risk assessments on new or substantially modified programs,

as required.

Furthermore, even though HUD has reduced the number of material

internal control weaknesses, some of those remaining weaknesses are

significant and long-standing. For example, these remaining material

weaknesses (first identified in fiscal years 1983 through 1993)

include weaknesses that affect more than $18 billion in subsidy funds

that HUD disburses annually, primarily through its Section 8 and

Section 236 programs. For both fiscal years 1994 and 1995, HUD's

auditors were not able to express an opinion on the reliability of

HUD's consolidated financial statements. The fiscal year 1995 audit

of FHA's financial statements continued to identify internal control

weaknesses, including a lack of staff and administrative resources

for such tasks as performing loss mitigation functions, managing

troubled assets, and implementing new automated systems.\5

Much work also remains for HUD to improve its information and

financial management systems. HUD has continued to make progress on

these systems over the last 2 years, moving beyond the planning

stages to where portions of major new systems are becoming

operational. However, some of the projects involving major

improvements to HUD's systems will not be completed before the year

2000. Furthermore, HUD reported in March 1996 that 93 out of 116 of

its information and financial management systems did not meet the

requirements of the Federal Managers' Financial Integrity Act and

therefore could not be relied upon to provide timely, accurate, and

reliable information and reports to management. As we said in our

testimony last month,\6

conclusions about what the government is accomplishing with the

taxpayers' money cannot be drawn without adequate program performance

and cost information. HUD plans to replace or enhance these systems,

but its efforts have been hampered by problems with systems

development, funding constraints, and data conversion problems.

HUD has taken a number of steps to address the problems with its

organizational structure. It has completed a field reorganization,

which was intended to eliminate previously confused lines of

authority, enhance communications, reduce levels of review and

approval, and improve customer service; transferred direct authority

for field staff and resources to the Assistant Secretaries in HUD

headquarters; and, restructured its 81 field offices. HUD is

continuing its reorganization efforts, which will include reducing

headquarters staff, redeploying staff, and further streamlining and

consolidating field activities. When we recently conducted a

telephone survey of HUD's field directors about the Department's

reorganization efforts, the respondents rated three areas as good or

excellent--HUD's success in improving the lines of program management

authority, empowering staff, and improving communications with

headquarters and HUD's customers.\7 However, HUD has found that, to

some extent, the reorganization has impaired communications across

program lines at its field offices. HUD is taking actions, such as

adding program integration requirements to senior managers'

performance expectations and appraisals, that it believes will

alleviate this situation.

HUD has made progress on its efforts to address the problems with

staff members' skills. HUD has begun to implement a needs assessment

process to plan future training. In addition, HUD has increased

staff training and has begun to evaluate the effectiveness of its

stepped-up training efforts. While the field directors we surveyed

generally believed that the skills of their staff have improved over

the past 2 years, 40 percent of these directors rated HUD's current

training as less than good. The field directors also said that more

training is needed in the use of information systems, the

implementation of program regulations, HUD-related technical skills,

and interpersonal skills. In addition, we and HUD's Inspector

General continue to find staff resource problems in some of HUD's

major program areas, including public housing and FHA.

 

--------------------

\3 High-Risk Series: Department of Housing and Urban Development

(GAO/HR/95-11, Feb. 1995).

\4 High-Risk Series: Department of Housing and Urban Development

(GAO/HR-97-12, Feb. 1997).

\5 Federal Housing Administration, Audit of Fiscal Year 1995

Financial Statements, prepared by KPMG Peat Marwick LLP for the

Office of Inspector General (June 7, 1996).

\6 See footnote 1.

\7 HUD: Field Directors' Views on Recent Management Initiatives

(GAO/RCED-97-34, Feb. 12, 1997).

 

HUD'S ASSISTED AND PUBLIC

HOUSING PROGRAMS FACE DIFFICULT

MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET PROBLEMS

---------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:3

In addition to wrestling with critical agencywide management

weaknesses, HUD faces a daunting task in managing the costs

associated with (1) renewing Section 8 contracts for assisted

housing, (2) the multifamily projects that FHA has insured, and (3)

ensuring the soundness of public housing in a time of intense

scrutiny and pressure on all housing programs in light of the move to

reduce the budget deficit. As I mentioned earlier, these rental

assistance programs serve more than 4 million low-income households;

figure 1 illustrates the number of households currently receiving

Section 8 tenant-based and project-based assistance and the number in

public housing.

Figure 1: Number of Households

in HUD-funded Assisted and

Public Housing

(See figure in printed

edition.)

Figure 2 gives you an overall picture of whom HUD's rental assistance

programs are serving.

Figure 2: Characteristics of

HUD-assisted Renters

(See figure in printed

edition.)

 

RETAINING SUPPORT FOR

IMPORTANT HOUSING PROGRAMS

IN THE FACE OF THE SPIRALING

COSTS OF SECTION 8 CONTRACT

RENEWALS

-------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:3.1

Under Section 8 of the 1937 Housing Act (as amended), HUD contracts

with public housing authorities and private property owners to

provide housing assistance for low income families. In fiscal year

1998, Section 8 contracts covering 1.8 million housing units will

expire, an increase of more than a million over 1997. To the extent

that HUD may not have the budget authority to renew these contracts,

the currently assisted families could face rent increases or

displacement. Moreover, owners of many multifamily properties

currently receiving Section 8 assistance will default on their

FHA-insured mortgages if the assistance is withdrawn. (We address in

greater detail those properties with FHA-insured loans later in this

testimony).

Overall, the price of renewal is high and will increase over the next

several years. Figure 3 shows HUD's estimates of over $9 billion for

the fiscal year 1998 budget authority it will need to renew contracts

covering over 1.8 million housing units; figure 3 also shows how the

escalating needs for section 8 budget authority will soon surpass

funding levels for all of HUD's other programs. As you can see in

figure 4, this budget authority grows to over $21 billion by the year

2006. This amount exceeds HUD's total budget authority of about

$19.3 billion in fiscal year 1997. With increases in budget

authority of this magnitude forecast for the next 8 years, other

long-standing HUD programs with significant funding could be at risk

of being funded at levels less than would support their current

commitments. These programs include public housing at more than $6

billion, community development block grants at nearly $5 billion, and

homeless assistance at nearly $1 billion.

Figure 3: Budget Authority

Required to Renew Existing

Section 8 Contracts

(See figure in printed

edition.)

Figure 4: Budget Authority

Required to Renew Existing

Section 8 Contracts Through

Fiscal Year 2006

(See figure in printed

edition.)

Funding these programs as well as the Section 8 housing assistance

program will be difficult in the face of other agencies' competing

budget requests. The challenge for HUD will be to demonstrate that

it is operating its programs efficiently, that it has planned

realistic reforms that will lead to decreased costs, and that the

programs themselves are achieving the goals and policy objectives

that the Congress envisioned in creating them.

 

COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH

MULTIFAMILY PROJECTS

-------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:3.2

Over the past 2 years, HUD has begun the difficult process of

attempting to resolve three basic problems affecting its insured

Section 8 portfolio: high subsidy costs, high exposure to insurance

loss, and the poor physical condition of some properties. In 1995,

HUD introduced its "mark-to-market" proposal (subsequently renamed

"portfolio reengineering"), through which it sought to (1) reduce

subsidies by setting rents at market levels, (2) reduce the mortgages

on those properties as necessary to achieve positive cash flows and

terminate the FHA mortgage insurance on them, and (3) replace

project-based Section 8 subsidies with portable tenant-based

subsidies.

The insured Section 8 portfolio--the subject of the portfolio

reengineering proposal--consists of more than 8,600 properties

containing just under 859,000 apartments. The properties provide

housing for a diverse population, including families and single

adults as well as special-needs populations such as the elderly and

the disabled. These properties have FHA insurance, loans with unpaid

principal balances of nearly $18 billion, and receive project-based

Section 8 assistance, much of which HUD provided under long-term

contracts executed in the 1970s. Over time, these properties'

Section 8 subsidies have increased dramatically, and today many of

the Section 8 contracts are reaching their expiration. However, for

many properties, reductions in the Section 8 subsidies without a

reduction in the outstanding mortgage balances on those properties

would lead to defaults and partial claims against FHA's insurance

fund. This would happen because, without a continuation of the

subsidy, many of the projects would not be economically viable.

Recognizing this predicament--properties that cannot command market

rents high enough to cover their federally insured mortgages but

which continue to receive excessively costly Section 8 subsidies--HUD

proposed to restructure the FHA-insured mortgages and bring income

and expenses into line so that they could operate on market rents.

HUD's fiscal year 1997 appropriation includes a demonstration program

covering those properties with contract rents exceeding 120 percent

of fair market rents. For owners who are eligible for and agree to

participate in this demonstration, HUD has the flexibility to use

tools such as reinsurance, debt forgiveness, and second mortgages to

decrease the escalating costs of Section 8 rental assistance, prevent

mortgage defaults, protect residents against dislocation, and resolve

associated tax issues.\8

In 1996, HUD hired Ernst & Young LLP to study a randomly selected

sample of 558 properties to obtain information about how HUD's

original mark-to-market proposal would affect them. Subsequently, we

selected 10 of the properties included in Ernst & Young's study as

case studies and hired three licensed real estate appraisal firms to

help assess the effects of HUD's proposal on them.\9 Among other

things, Ernst & Young found that 60 to 66 percent of the properties

in the insured Section 8 portfolio receive above-market rents and

that $9.2 billion to $10.2 billion would be required to address

deferred maintenance and future capital needs at the properties if

they were to compete in the marketplace without project-based

subsidies. We believe that for the most part, the methodology and

assumptions that Ernst & Young used were reasonable given their

study's overall scope. However, for most of the 10 properties we

reviewed, the study estimated substantially higher deferred

maintenance needs than did the property owners or managers and our

contract appraisers.

HUD's initiative to reengineer its portfolio recognizes a reality

that has existed for some time--namely, that the value of many of the

properties in the insured Section 8 portfolio is far lower than the

mortgages on the properties suggest. Addressing the problems of

HUD's insured multifamily portfolio will inevitably be costly and

difficult. As the Congress evaluates the options for addressing this

situation, the fundamental problems that have affected the portfolio

and their underlying causes will be important to consider. Any

approach that is implemented should address not only the high costs

of Section 8 subsidies, but also the government's high exposure to

insurance loss, the poor physical condition of some of the

properties, and the underlying causes of these long-standing problems

with the portfolio. The overarching objective should be to implement

the process as efficiently and cost-effectively as possible,

recognizing not only the interests of the parties directly affected

by restructuring but also the impact on the federal government.

 

--------------------

\8 For owners who are eligible for but do not choose to participate

in the demonstration, contract rents are reduced to 120 percent of

fair market rents. For projects with rents below 120 percent of fair

market rents, the appropriation requires HUD, if requested by the

project owner, to renew the assistance contract for 1 year.

\9 Multifamily Housing: Effects of HUD's Portfolio Reengineering

Proposal (GAO/RCED-97-7, Nov. 1, 1996).

 

ENSURING THE SOUNDNESS OF

PUBLIC HOUSING

-------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:3.3

About 3 million low-income people, many of whom are elderly or

disabled, live in public housing, which is operated on a day-to-day

basis by local public housing authorities (PHA). HUD currently

provides PHAs with $5.4 billion a year to help them operate and

modernize their projects. However, over time, the costs for PHAs

have begun to exceed the financial resources available to them

because their tenants' incomes--on which the amount they pay the PHAs

in rent is based--have declined steadily over the last decade. In

addition, over the last several years, the amounts appropriated for

HUD's operating subsidy to the PHAs have not kept pace with the PHAs'

expected costs. The recent welfare reforms could further reduce the

rents that the tenants are able to pay if they lose welfare benefits

without finding work. With funding for the PHAs increasingly tight,

interest has been keen in knowing how well the PHAs are managing

their properties and whether HUD has been adequately identifying and

helping those PHAs having management problems.

 

REDUCING HOUSING

AUTHORITIES' NEED FOR

OPERATING SUBSIDIES

-------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:3.4

HUD provides the PHAs with an operating subsidy to supplement the

rent paid by residents because federal statutory requirements

generally limit the amount that tenants may be required to pay to 30

percent of their income. Also, until recently, federal preferences

for admission to public housing required the PHAs to give preference

to admitting those who are usually the poorest of the poor. By

concentrating the very poor in public housing, these preferences

limited the PHAs' ability to meet operating expenses on their own and

gave rise to the need for a subsidy from HUD to make up the

difference between the rents that the PHAs could charge and what it

costs them to operate their projects.

A decline in the average income of public housing residents since

1981 has led to a steady increase in the PHAs' need for operating

subsidies. In 1981, the average income of public housing residents

was 33 percent of the area median income, but by 1995 the average had

dropped to 17 percent. As a result, 1982 operating subsidy needs

were $1.5 billion, while in 1996 needs reached $3.1 billion (in

nominal dollars). However, for several years in a row now, budgetary

pressures and reduced appropriations have meant that HUD could not

fully fund the difference between tenants' rents and the PHAs'

operating costs--for example, in fiscal year 1996, HUD's subsidy was

90 percent of the PHAs' expected operating costs. In many cases, the

effect of reduced operating subsidies can be that the PHAs defer

routine maintenance, which, over time, can lead to deteriorated

housing conditions and higher accrued needs for major rehabilitation

and modernization.

Congress has proposed legislation and HUD has taken steps over the

last 2 years to give the PHAs more flexibility in managing their

properties to strengthen the long-term viability of this housing.

These steps--public and assisted housing reform bills in both the

House and Senate\10 and HUD's efforts to relax some requirements--are

aimed at encouraging the PHAs to find additional sources of income

and allowing them to admit tenants with a broader mix of incomes so

that the PHAs have less need for an operating subsidy from HUD. For

its part, HUD has attempted to increase incentives for the PHAs to

generate additional nonrental income by allowing them to keep more of

that income to meet their operating expenses. Previously, each

dollar of extra income that a PHA generated reduced its subsidy by a

dollar, thereby creating a disincentive to generating additional

income from sources other than rent.

The Congress, HUD, and many of those in the public housing industry

were in general agreement on the financial and other benefits of

admitting tenants with a broader mix of incomes to public housing to

better ensure public housing's long-term viability. However, neither

of the reform bills nor a compromise between the two has been enacted

into law. As a result, each of HUD's last two annual appropriations

included provisions temporarily repealing the federal preferences as

well as other statutory requirements that were seen as limiting the

PHAs' management discretion.\11

The reforms that were contained in H.R. 2406 and S. 1260 would

likely improve the long-term viability of public housing. The PHAs

have agreed, telling us that reforms such as allowing them to admit

tenants with incomes higher than those they currently house will

enable them to adjust to possible reductions in the operating

subsidies.\12 However, the PHAs also said that they need an

adjustment period in which to admit new tenants before the subsidies

are significantly cut; industry associations representing PHAs have

said that the PHAs need more certainty that these reforms are

permanent so that they know that they will not be operating under the

old rules in the next new federal fiscal year.

In public housing, just as in a myriad of other HUD programs, there

remains a need for HUD and the Congress to reach consensus on whom

will be served and at what cost. While, over time, income mixing can

help the PHAs meet more of their operating expenses on their own,

adopting such a strategy comes at the expense of those very

low-income people who have been given preference for admission to

public housing for years. This strategy may also exacerbate

worst-case housing needs among the poor, which, according to HUD, are

at an all-time high.

 

--------------------

\10 The House of Representatives passed H.R. 2406, The United States

Housing Act of 1996, and the Senate passed S. 1260, the Public

Housing Reform and Empowerment Act of 1995. Agreement was not

reached on a compromise between the two bills before the 104th

Congress adjourned.

\11 For example, each appropriation waived the "one-for-one"

replacement requirement, which mandated that the PHAs replace each

unit of housing they elect to demolish with another unit or a Section

8 certificate.

\12 Housing and Urban Development: Public and Assisted Housing

Reform (GAO/T-RCED-96-25, Oct. 13, 1995).

 

IMPROVING HUD'S OVERSIGHT OF

HOUSING AUTHORITIES'

PERFORMANCE

-------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:3.5

With the funding for public housing increasingly tight, knowing how

well the PHAs are managing their properties with the resources HUD

gives them takes on added importance. However, we recently found

that HUD's primary tool for measuring PHAs' performance, the Public

Housing Management Assessment Program (PHMAP), needs to be more

accurate and useful in order for HUD to ensure that it is identifying

all of the PHAs to which it should be targeting its limited oversight

and technical assistance resources.\13

HUD uses PHMAP to annually collect data from each PHA on basic

indicators of management performance, such as vacancy rates and

operating expenses. The PHAs submit and certify to the accuracy of

most of the data on these indicators. On the basis of aggregate

performance against these indicators, HUD calculates a score from 0

to 100 for each authority and assigns one of the following three

designations: "troubled performer" for a score less than 60,

"standard performer" for a score between 60 and less than 90, and

"high performer" for a score of 90 or above. Troubled PHAs must

enter into a binding agreement with HUD stipulating the problems the

authority needs to address and an approach and timetable to resolve

them. Standard- and high-performing authorities that fail any

indicator must submit a plan for improving their performance in that

indicator. HUD requires its field offices to go to troubled PHAs to

verify the data that the PHAs submit (and thus, the PHMAP score) when

those data would lead to a score high enough to remove the "troubled"

designation.

We found HUD needs to do a better job of ensuring that all of its

field offices comply with PHMAP's follow-up requirements and use

PHMAP scores and other information available to them to better target

their limited technical assistance resources. HUD's field offices

have the bulk of the Department's responsibility for the day-to-day

implementation of PHMAP, including negotiating the binding agreements

required of troubled PHAs, approving improvement plans for standard

and high performers, and monitoring the PHAs' progress in meeting

agreed-upon goals to which they have committed themselves. However,

according to the results of a survey of all of HUD's public housing

field offices, we found HUD has not been systematically complying

with PHMAP's statutory and regulatory follow-up requirements for all

housing authorities. For example, in 1995,

-- less than 20 percent of the troubled PHAs that should have been

operating under a binding agreement with HUD actually were;

-- nearly a third of HUD's field offices had not ensured that

standard- and high-performing PHAs developed improvement plans

for each indicator they failed; and,

-- the field offices confirmed the accuracy of the data behind

fewer than 30 percent of the troubled PHAs' PHMAP scores that

HUD requires them to confirm.

Some field offices cited resource constraints--a lack of staff,

travel funds, or expertise--as the main reason for not meeting

follow-up requirements, while others opted not to enforce the

requirements when they believed the PHAs were already addressing

their problems. Differences in how the field offices interpret their

role in helping the PHAs improve performance also played a part in

the field offices' oversight and technical assistance activities.

Some field offices told us they interpret their role narrowly,

generally limiting their assistance to advice, information on

complying with HUD's regulations, and suggestions for solving

management problems. Others were more willing to get involved in the

PHAs' operations by performing tasks such as setting up proper tenant

rent records and waiting lists.

The bottom line is that HUD is not maintaining a consistent,

minimally acceptable level of oversight at all PHAs. Without this

oversight, HUD cannot be reasonably confident that the housing

authorities are using federal funds appropriately, managing and

maintaining their developments properly, and reporting performance

information accurately.

 

--------------------

\13 Public Housing: HUD Should Improve the Usefulness and Accuracy

of Its Management Assessment Program (GAO/RCED-97-27, Jan. 29,

1997).

 

FUTURE FEDERAL HOUSING AND

COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT POLICY:

COMING TO CONSENSUS ON HUD'S

MISSION

---------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:4

Since it was created in 1965, HUD has grown to include some 240

programs and activities (according to a December 1994 report by HUD's

Inspector General) and hundreds of billions of dollars in financial

commitments. Through its multiple social and financial roles, it

directly or indirectly affects most Americans. Over the years, we

and others have criticized the inefficiencies in HUD's organization

and the deficiencies in its management. Leaders in the

administration and in the Congress agree that HUD must, at a minimum,

be restructured to better meet the nation's housing and community

development needs. Some policymakers believe that HUD's problems are

so great that they can be cured only by dismantling the agency and

transferring or eliminating its functions. In its initial

Reinvention Blueprint, HUD proposed major changes, including

consolidating programs, devolving responsibility for program design

and implementation to states and localities, and HUD's assuming the

role of overseer and clearinghouse for national models. While some

limited, yet significant, improvements to HUD's existing program

structure have been made, a comprehensive redesign of HUD's overall

mission and program delivery structure has not occurred. Likewise,

various bills to fundamentally restructure HUD's programs to

subsidize multifamily rental housing also have been proposed, but

thus far none has been enacted.

HUD's programs will remain at high risk to fraud, waste, abuse, and

mismanagement until the agency completes more of its planned

corrective actions and until the debate over HUD's future--in which

the Congress must participate--is settled. In our view, the Congress

now has an excellent opportunity to help HUD eliminate the

deficiencies that make it a high risk and to align the agency's

management responsibilities and capacity by authorizing a major

restructuring strategy that focuses HUD's mission and significantly

consolidates, reduces, and/or reengineers its many separate program

activities. What is needed now is for the administration and the

Congress to agree on the future direction of federal housing and

community development policy and the organizational and program

delivery structures that are best suited to carry out that policy--a

process that will involve inherent trade-offs between the needs of

those seeking HUD's assistance and other demands on the total federal

budget. As the Congress provides input to HUD's and other agencies'

strategic plans, as required by GPRA, it can insist that agencies

show how their programs are aligned with related efforts in other

agencies.\14 Congress can also use the GPRA planning process to seek

opportunities to streamline government by comparing the effectiveness

of similar program efforts carried out by different agencies.

 

--------------------

\14 In order to successfully implement the initial requirements of

GPRA, HUD must prepare, by the end of this fiscal year a strategic

plan that includes a statement of its mission.

 

-------------------------------------------------------- Chapter 0:4.1

Mr. Chairman, this concludes our prepared remarks. We will be

pleased to respond to any questions that you or other Members of the

Subcommittee might have. We in GAO look forward to working with the

Congress to help address HUD's management deficiencies and their

impact on housing and community development programs.

 

 

 

RELATED GAO PRODUCTS

============================================================ Chapter I

Public Housing: Status of the HOPE VI Demonstration Program

(GAO/RCED-97-44, Feb. 25, 1997).

Housing and Urban Development: Potential Implications of Legislation

Proposing to Dismantle HUD (GAO/RCED-97-36, Feb. 21, 1997).

Managing for Results: Using GPRA to Assist Congressional and

Executive Branch Decision-Making (GAO/T-GGD-97-43, Feb. 12, 1997).

HUD: Field Directors' Views on Recent Management Initiatives

(GAO/RCED-97-34, Feb. 12, 1997).

GAO High-Risk Series (GAO/HR-97-1, Feb. 1997).

High-Risk Series: Department of Housing and Urban Development

(GAO/HR-97-12, Feb. 1997).

Public Housing: HUD Should Improve the Usefulness and Accuracy of

Its Management Assessment Program (GAO/RCED-97-27, Jan. 29, 1997).

Multifamily Housing: Effects of HUD's Portfolio Reengineering

Proposal (GAO/RCED-97-7, Nov. 1, 1996).

Public Housing: Partnerships Can Result in Cost Savings and Other

Benefits (GAO/RCED-97-11, Oct. 17, 1996).

Housing and Community Development Products 1995 (GAO/RCED-96-248W,

Aug. 1996).

Multifamily Housing: HUD's Portfolio Reengineering Proposal: Cost

and Management Issues (GAO/T-RCED-96-232, July 30, 1996).

Multifamily Housing: Issues Facing the Congress in Assessing HUD's

Portfolio Reengineering Proposal (GAO/T-RCED-96-231, July 26, 1996).

Executive Guide: Effectively Implementing the Government Performance

and Results Act (GAO/GGD-96-118, June 20, 1996).

Housing and Urban Development: Limited Progress Made on HUD Reforms

(GAO/T-RCED-96-112, Mar. 27, 1996).

Housing and Urban Development: Public and Assisted Housing Reform

(GAO/T-RCED-96-22 and GAO/T-RCED-96-25, Oct. 13, 1995).

Public Housing: Converting to Housing Certificates Raises Major

Questions About Cost (GAO/RCED-95-195, June 20, 1995).

Public Housing: Funding and Other Constraints Limit Housing

Authorities' Ability to Comply With One-for-One Rule (GAO/RCED-95-78,

Mar. 3, 1995).

Housing and Urban Development: Reforms at HUD and Issues for Its

Future (GAO/T-RCED-95-108, Feb. 22, 1995).

High-Risk Series: Department of Housing and Urban Development

(GAO/HR/95-11, Feb. 1995).

*** End of document. ***