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Jennifer Emerling / There Is More Work To Be Done
Jennifer Emerling / There Is More Work To Be Done
The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, introduced on March 2 by Senators Tim Scott (R-SC) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), combines provisions from the ROAD to Housing Act approved by the Senate Banking Committee in July, the Housing for the 21st Century Act passed by the House in February, and the White House’s desire to limit institutional investor ownership of housing. The White House supports this bill. It includes most of the provisions of the Rural Housing Service Reform Act, supported by HAC. The full Senate is likely to consider the bill soon and may adopt amendments such as a package of provisions on CDFIs, including making USDA’s Native CDFI pilot program permanent. After passage of a Senate bill, the House and Senate could negotiate a revised bill acceptable to both, or the House could vote on the Senate’s measure.
A proposed rule would allow – but not require – public housing agencies and rental property owners to impose work requirements and set time limits for residents in public housing or with Housing Choice Vouchers, Project-Based Vouchers, or Project-Based Rental Assistance. Up to 40 hours of work per week could be required for tenants meeting certain criteria. Term limits could be two years or longer. Comments are due May 1.
Activating Rural Investments in the Next Round of Opportunity Zones: Recommendations for States, a guide just released by HAC, Partners for Rural Transformation, and Hope Policy Institute, offers concrete recommendations states can act on now to ensure the upcoming round of Opportunity Zone designations delivers transformative rural investment. On March 12, a webinar titled Opportunity Zones 2.0: A Guide for Activating Rural Investments will cover all things rural OZs: what has changed, what’s at stake, and where state leadership matters most.
HAC’s latest research report, Understanding Ownership, Unlocking Investment: Clarifying the Legal Process for Title Resolution and Opportunities for Financial Funding for Heirs’ Property, is now available on Heirs’ Property Central. The report explains the various forms of shared land tenure, the legal process of title resolution, obstacles faced by collective landowners with tangled titles, and how funding can be designed for successful outcomes in heirs’ property work.
The National Women’s History Alliance explains the 2026 theme, Leading the Change: Women Shaping a Sustainable Future.
Recent annual shipments of new manufactured homes in the United States remained relatively unchanged from the previous year. In 2025, an estimated 102,700 manufactured homes were shipped from factories – down slightly from 103,300 shipments in 2024. Source: Housing Assistance Council tabulations of the U.S. Census Bureau’s Manufactured Housing Survey data.
HAC is now accepting applications for OneRural Technical Assistance Services, offering customized support to rural nonprofits, Tribal housing entities, and Tribes. This program helps organizations strengthen their housing and community development efforts through expert guidance and capacity building. Applications received by March 31 will receive priority consideration. If space remains after the priority review, additional applications will be considered through April 15. Learn more and apply here.
The House Agriculture Committee approved H.R. 7567, the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026, on March 5. The bill includes very few rural development provisions. The Senate has not yet released the text of its version of the bill.
HUD and USDA have issued separate regulations ending requirements for 30-day notices before property owners evict assisted tenants for nonpayment of rent. A suit has been filed challenging HUD’s rule.
USDA’s provision is a final rule that was effective immediately on February 25, the day it was published. It applies to properties with Section 515 or Section 514 loans. It rescinds a 2024 rule that implemented a 30-day notice requirement enacted by Congress in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act. USDA explains that the regulatory provision was unnecessary because compliance with the CARES Act 30-day notice requirement “is generally captured” in its project management requirements. USDA also rescinded a requirement for borrowers to provide information to tenants when federal emergency funding is available, explaining that the agency will notify tenants.
HUD’s provision is different in several ways. It is an interim final rule, effective on March 30, with comments due on April 27. It rescinds a rule that was not based on the CARES Act, but required a 30-day notice before eviction for nonpayment. The National Housing Law Project explains that, without that protection, in some places renters can be evicted for being as little as one dollar short or one day late on rent. This rule change does not impact the CARES Act’s notice requirement. NHLP and others filed suit, charging that HUD should have published a proposed rule and considered public comments before finalizing it.
Comments are due April 9 on a USDA request for information on opportunities, challenges, and emerging areas in statistical data, analysis, and research produced by three of its agencies: the Economic Research Service, the National Agricultural Statistics Service, and the Office of the Chief Economist’s World Agricultural Outlook Board.
Nominations for USDA’s Tribal Advisory Committee can be submitted by representatives of Tribes, Tribal organizations, or national or regional organizations with relevant expertise such as national or regional Tribal serving organizations, land-grant institutions, and Native CDFIs. The deadline is March 31.
On February 25 Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins and other administration officials announced “the imminent disposal” of USDA’s South Building in Washington, DC. It is not clear whether the building will be sold or when and where its occupants will move. Food and Nutrition Service offices in suburban Virginia will be moved to other DC-area locations and the lease on their building will be terminated.
New guidance from USDA Rural Development instructs field staff to obtain National Office review at three points in the application process for some Community Facilities direct loans and grants.
The lowest-income renters in the U.S. face a shortage of 7.2 million affordable and available rental homes, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition’s annual report, The Gap: A Shortage of Affordable Homes. Nationwide, only 35 affordable and available homes exist for every 100 extremely low-income renter households. No state has an adequate supply of affordable and available homes for extremely low-income renters.
Analyzing Demographics Within Rural Populations, an article from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, can guide researchers on ways to avoid treating rural communities as monoliths. The piece provides insight into when it is advisable to disaggregate data by demographic or economic characteristics, the challenges that can arise when doing so, and the best ways to make comparisons. Those seeking housing data might also refer to The Evolution of Housing Data in the United States, Part 2: The Rise of Modern Housing Data, a brief article from HUD that summarizes many of the currently available data sets on the subject. HAC has combined many of these data sets in one place at Rural Data Central.
Community Lending: Leveraging Private Capital for Public Good examines how Community Development Financial Institutions function within the broader financial system. Using real-world examples – including HAC – and market data, this brief and an accompanying video from the National Association of Affordable Housing Lenders are designed to inform policymakers, financial institutions, and stakeholders seeking to understand how community lending delivers outcomes for housing, small businesses, and local economies.
The National Housing Law Project’s Toolkit for Defending Tenants Against Homelessness Prevention Cuts offers strategies, scenario examples, sample templates, and fair housing information to help advocates defend renters facing potential loss of vital federal housing supports. This guide is designed to support legal defense against evictions and program reductions that could push families into homelessness.
On January 29, HAC Research Director Lance George testified on heirs’ property before the Committee on Disaster Recovery, Infrastructure, and Planning of the Legislature of the U.S. Virgin Islands. Included in HAC’s testimony was a presentation of Heirs’ Property: Elevating the Story, a video presenting the complex, nuanced, and diverse experiences of heirs’ property owners, community members, and the organizations that support them in the U.S. Virgin Islands. This feature is one in a series of videos highlighting the voices of community members, leaders, and practitioners that can now be viewed on HAC’s new interactive clearinghouse, Heirs’ Property Central.
HAC job listings and application links are available on our website.
HAC’s loan fund provides low interest rate loans to support single- and multifamily affordable housing projects for low-income rural residents throughout the U.S. and territories. Capital is available for all types of affordable and mixed-income housing projects, including preservation, new development, farmworker, senior and veteran housing. HAC loan funds can be used for pre-development, site acquisition, site development, construction/rehabilitation and permanent financing. Contact HAC’s loan fund staff at hacloanfund@ruralhome.org, 202-842-8600.
Please note: HAC is not able to offer loans to individuals or families. Borrowers must be nonprofit or for-profit organizations or government entities (including Tribes).
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