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HUD-Funded Rehabilitation
The requirements for rehabilitation projects are based on the amount of federal rehabilitation assistance which is determined by calculating both the hard cost of the rehabilitation work (exclusive of the lead hazard control work) and the level of federal funds to determine the amount of federal rehab assistance per-unit.
Units receiving $5,000 or less per unit in Federal rehab assistance: Provision of Pamphlet Determine Whether to Evaluate or Presume
Provision of Notice of hazard reduction activity, including clearance results, to occupants Ongoing Lead-Based Paint Maintenance required after rehab of a rental property using HOME or CILP funds Record Keeping
Units receiving more than $5,000, up to and including $25,000 per unit in Federal rehab assistance: Provision of Pamphlet Determine Whether to Evaluate or Presume
Provision of Notice of hazard reduction activity, including clearance results, to occupants Ongoing Lead-Based Paint Maintenance required after rehab of a rental property using HOME or CILP funds Record Keeping
Units receiving more than $25,000 per unit in Federal rehab assistance: Provision of Pamphlet Determine Whether to Evaluate or Presume
Provision of Notice of hazard reduction activity, including clearance results, to occupants Ongoing Lead-Based Paint Maintenance required after rehab of a rental property using HOME or CILP funds Record Keeping
Read Subpart J of the Regulation
Read the Joint EPA-HUD Letter about Rehabilitation and Abatement
Read Interpretive Guidance about Subpart J
Check for a notice about the availability of financial assistance for clearance testing. See transition assistance policy for further information.
Calculating the Level of Assistance
The lead hazard evaluation and reduction activities required for rehabilitation projects depend on the level of rehabilitation assistance received by the project. The level of assistance is determined by taking the lower of the cost per unit for rehabilitation hard costs, or federal assistance per unit. Under this "dual threshold", both federal funds and rehab hard costs must exceed the lower threshold of the next highest level of assistance. For a small job to be classified in the $5,000 - $25,000 category, both types of costs must equal or exceed $5,000. For a moderate job to be classified above $25,000, both types of costs must exceed $25,000.
Rehabilitation Hard Costs are calculated using only hard costs. They do not include soft costs, relocation, acquisition, environmental reviews or administrative costs, nor the costs of lead hazard evaluation and reduction.
Soft Costs:
- Financing fees
- Credit reports
- Title binders and insurance
- Recordation fees, transaction fees, impact fees
- Legal and accounting fees
- Appraisals
- Architectural and engineering fees, including specifications and job progress inspections
Lead Hazard Evaluation and Reduction Costs include costs for site preparation, occupant protection, relocation, interim controls, abatement, clearance, and waste handling attributable to lead-based paint hazard reduction. The basis for excluding the costs of correcting lead-based paint hazards from rehab costs should be documented through the report from a risk assessment, a paint test, or a visual assessment of the deteriorated paint on the subject surfaces which is supplemented by historical information about lead-based paint hazards in the same property and/or neighborhood.
Federal Assistance includes all Federal funds provided to the project. This also includes funds from program income, but excludes low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC) funds, Department of Energy Weatherization Program Funds, and non-Federal HOME Program match funds.
Interpretive Guidance about calculating costs
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