Low-income home rehabilitation loan program.
The Department of Commerce (Department) administers the low-income home rehabilitation loan program, offering deferred loans to rural, low-income single-family residential households that need repairs and essential improvements for their primary residence for health, safety, or durability (home rehabilitation loans). Examples of essential improvements include rot removal, foundation or structural improvements, energy-related improvements, lead-based paint and asbestos work, improvements for handicapped persons, repair or replacement of major housing systems, emergency storm repairs, seismic retrofits, or radon mitigation. The cost of the home rehabilitation may not exceed the lesser of 80 percent of the property's assessed value post-rehabilitation, or $40,000.
To qualify for the program, a homeowner must:
Homeowners who are senior citizens, persons with disabilities, veterans, or have families with children five years old or younger receive priority for home rehabilitation loans.
All loans against the property, including the home rehabilitation loan, cannot exceed 80 percent of the assessed value of the property. The interest rate of the loan must be equal to the previous year's annual average consumer price index as determined by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, United States Department of Labor (inflation).
Participating homeowners may defer repayment of the loan principal, interest, and any fees related to the loan. Any amounts due under the loan become due and payable when the home is sold or upon the change of ownership of the home. All repayments must be deposited into the state low-income home rehabilitation revolving loan program account.
The Department must contract with local rehabilitation agencies to provide home rehabilitation services to participating homeowners. Preference is provided to local agencies delivering programs and services with similar eligibility criteria. A rehabilitation agency may charge a homeowner an administrative fee of no more than 7 percent of the rehabilitation loan amount. Any rehabilitation agency receiving funding through the program must report to the Department at least quarterly or in alignment with federal reporting, whichever is the greater frequency, the project costs and the number of homes repaired or rehabilitated.
The interest rate for home rehabilitation loans is modified to the lesser of inflation or 1.5 percent. The act is remedial, curative, and retroactive, and it applies to all loans issued on or after January 1, 2022. To this extent, the act applies retroactively, but in all other respects applies prospectively.