The Homeless Housing and Assistance Surcharge.
Both the state and local homeless housing programs receive funding from the homeless housing and assistance surcharge collected by each county auditor when a document is recorded. The surcharge is $62 per recorded document. The surcharge is applied in addition to any authorized surcharges, as well as any administrative fees collected by the county auditor. Ten dollars of the $62 surcharge must be distributed to counties for the purpose of implementing local homeless housing programs and plans and is not subject to existing surcharge distribution requirements. An additional homeless housing and assistance surcharge of $8 is also collected by each county auditor.
Both the state and the county receive a percentage of the money collected from each surcharge. For the $62 homeless housing and assistance surcharge, approximately 60 percent is distributed to the county, and approximately 40 percent to the state. The funds collected for the $62 local homeless housing and assistance surcharge are distributed as follows:
"Private rental housing" means housing owned by a private landlord and includes housing owned by a nonprofit housing entity.
A county may use additional surcharge fees collected to pay off general obligation bonds issued by the county to carry out local homeless housing and assistance purposes.
The $62 homeless housing and assistance surcharge applies to most recorded documents. Documents exempt from the surcharge include:
Home Security Fund Account.
The state's share of the $62 homeless housing and assistance surcharge is deposited into the Fund, along with funds from the additional $8 homeless housing and assistance surcharge. This Fund is an appropriated account and may be used only for homeless housing programs. Commerce uses the funds for multiple homeless housing programs.
The Office of Financial Management (OFM) must secure an independent expenditure review of state homeless assistance and housing surcharge funds received and deposited into the Fund on a biennial basis. The purpose of the expenditure review is to assess the consistency in achieving policy priorities within the private market rental housing segment for housing persons experiencing homelessness.
The Homeless Housing and Assistance Surcharge.
The direction that at least 45 percent of the remaining 87.5 percent of surcharge funds must be set aside for private rental housing payments is removed, and instead the set-aside for private rental housing payments is combined with the uses for the remaining 87.5 percent of funds.
Home Security Fund Account.
Language is removed requiring the OFM to secure an independent expenditure review of state homeless assistance and housing surcharge funds received and deposited into the Fund on a biennial basis to assess the consistency in achieving policy priorities within the private market rental housing segment for housing persons experiencing homelessness.
(In support) This bill eliminates an unnecessary administrative burden that impacts the state as well as local government and nonprofit housing providers. When the Legislature removed the specific for-profit set-aside it failed to also remove the audit requirement that went along with the set-aside. This audit is really unnecessary and a strain on people, power, and time. There is support to pass this cleanup bill and help Commerce and local government. Repealing this language does not change anything on the ground in terms of who gets served. The audit requirement that this bill repeals is pure waste; a wasteful $90,000, on average, audit.
(Opposed) None.