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9.14.2007

Job Opportunity: Executive Director

Executive Director:

The Franklin Housing Authority (TN) seeks an experienced housing professional to lead a progressive and active agency located in beautiful Williamson County which is close by the City of Nashville, TN.

The candidate is required to have five (5) years progressive administrative experience, (preferred executive or department head level) in the area of public or private housing. Experience in the development/redevelopment of affordable housing, a plus. Emphasis on ability to provide excellent resident services and relationships is important. A 4-year college degree, required. A combination of education and excellent experience acceptable. Expert community relations, staff leadership, communications with public officials and ability to relate to a capable board, required. The agency has 298 units of family and senior housing and a staff of eleven employees. Salary negotiable.

Submit cover letter, resume to Leo Dauwer, Search Consultant, 20 Shady Lane, Needham, MA 02492. Attn: Franklin Search. Email: dowerassociates@comcast.net. No faxes, please. Position open until filled.

RFQ/RFP: Co-developer, Financial Advisor, Special Counsel

The Riviera Beach Housing Authority is seeking to engage the services of:

� Co-developer
� Financial Advisor
� Special Counsel

These professional services will provide the Riviera Beach Housing Authority with the required expertise to develop its conceptual site plan for 16.5 acres of mixed income, home-ownership town homes, elderly and multi-family affordable rental housing. Interested parties should request an RFQ Package in writing addressed to:

Philip O. Goombs, Executive Director
Riviera Beach Housing Authority
2014 West 17th Court
Riviera Beach, FL. 33404
or by emailing adminassist-rbha@earthlink.net,

All responses must be received at the above address by 4:00 p.m. e.s.t. on Friday, October 12th 2007, NO PHONE REQUEST FOR PACKAGES WILL BE HONORED

RFQ: Energy Services

The Housing Authority of Hopkinsville (PHA) is seeking proposals from interested Energy Services Companies (ESCOs) for Energy Performance Contracting for the PHA's housing complexes. Proposals will be received on September 27, 2007.

Interested firms are required to tour representative complexes of the PHA's inventory on September 7, 2007 at 10:00 a.m., c.d.t.

Proposal documents may be obtained by contacting:

Janice Powell, Director of Facilities
270-887-4275 ext 3117
e-mail jpowell@housingah.org

RFQ: Professional Consulting Services

The Public Housing Authority of Abilene (PHA) is soliciting responses from qualified firms to provide a comparative analysis evaluating the feasibility, operational and financial effects of a modification to the current relationship between the PHA and the City of Abilene. The City currently provides employees and services to the PHA under contract. The goal of this analysis will be to evaluate the potential operation of the PHA as a fully independent entity. Interested parties can call obtain a full copy of the RFQ by calling (325) 676- 6379 or sending an email to MaryAnn.Martell@abilenetx.com

Affordable Housing Needs

Affordable Housing Needs 2005: Report to Congress

May 2007, 99 pages

Source: HUD USER

In 1990, the U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee directed HUD to "resume the annual compilation of a worst case housing needs survey of the United States... [to estimate] the number of families and individuals whose incomes fall 50 percent below an area's median income, who either pay 50 percent or more of their monthly income for rent, or who live in substandard housing."

Households with "worst case needs" are defined as unassisted renters with very low incomes who have one of two "priority problems" either paying more than half of their income for housing ("severe rent burden") or living in severely substandard housing. Renters are classified by income using three income limits: Low Income (LI) if their income does not exceed 80 percent of area median income (AMI), Very Low Income (VLI) if income is not more than 50 percent of AMI, and Extremely Low Income (ELI) if income is not more than 30 percent of AMI.

This report is the tenth in a series of Worst Case Needs reports to Congress. This 2005 report is organized into five basic sections Chapter 1 provides an introduction, including a discussion of terms and sources. Chapter 2 outlines the findings of worst case needs by various categories such as demographics and geography. Chapter 3 presents an analysis using data from the Census Bureau's Survey of Income and Program Participation to examine the duration of severe rent burdens. Chapter 4 assesses the supply of affordable rental housing. Chapter 5 presents new analysis of how worst case needs relate to neighborhood poverty rates.

Download the Worst Case Needs tables used in the Affordable Housing Needs 2005 report.



An Historical and Baseline Assessment of HOPE VI

Source: HUD User

HOPE VI, also known as the Urban Revitalization Demonstration, is designed to revitalize the Nation's most severely distressed public housing. Congress and HUD created the HOPE VI grant program in 1992 to provide a flexible source of support for investments in public housing developments and for their residents. An Historical and Baseline Assessment of HOPE VI presents findings from the first phase of a planned long-term evaluation of HOPE VI sites.

Revitalizing severely distressed public housing -- even with HOPE VI funds -- will be no easy task, the investigation finds. Serious design flaws, such as high densities and inadequately sized units, plague most of the developments targeted for revitalization, with researchers rating the physical conditions of almost one-half of the developments as "poor" or "very poor." All 15 public housing authorities (PHAs) studied have experienced serious management problems -- nine had recently replaced their executive director, and two-thirds of grantees were on HUD's list of troubled PHAs as of March 1992. The majority of residents have extremely low incomes and are inadequately educated, and an average of 84 percent report income from public assistance. Conditions in the surrounding neighborhoods are almost as severe as those in the HOPE VI developments.

PHAs will pursue HOPE VI revitalization through a variety of approaches: development of mixed-income communities, demolition and/or renovation of current developments, deconcentration and dispersion, emphasis on family self-sufficiency, and resident management of properties. All but three sites reported planning to redevelop a public housing community for mixed-income families. Eight PHAs have approved physical plans, most using a townhouse design for their renovated or newly constructed developments. Of the 13 PHAs with approved management plans, 5 intend to place control of their HOPE VI developments under private management. Only six PHAs had developed clear community service plans at the time of their assessment.

Researchers divided the sites into four groups based on their prospects for success. The most promising PHAs are Baltimore, Cuyahoga Metro (Cleveland), and San Antonio. These sites showed effective collaboration with HUD and local government agencies and a capacity to manage a project of the magnitude of HOPE VI. Also key at these sites were strong support for HOPE VI by residents, institutions, and businesses in the surrounding neighborhoods, and the sites showed encouraging levels of involvement by tenant councils and residents. The four least promising sites had problems such as weak PHA leadership, poor management of capital improvements, and reputations for breaking promises to residents.

The first volume of this three-volume report synthesizes study findings and discusses their national implications. The second volume offers detailed case studies of the 15 sites. Case studies include an overview of the housing authority, a description of the developments and the surrounding neighborhoods, a review of the local HOPE VI planning process, and a summary of implementation progress. The third volume presents the study methodology and baseline data.

The insights from this early assessment of HOPE VI communities will inform national policymakers and local practitioners as they continue their attempts to revitalize severely distressed public housing. More HERE