- April 18, 2012
The HOME Investment Partnerships Program (HOME), authorized in 1990, provides grants to state and local governments to produce affordable housing for low‐income families. Since 1990, over 1 million units of housing have been produced with HOME funds.
- April 10, 2012
Entries for the 2012 Robert C. Larson Workforce Housing Public Policy Awards should be submitted by May 18 and sent directly to the Urban Land Institute Terwilliger Center.
- March 20, 2012
This briefing covers NCSHA's 2012 legislative priorities, recent action from Congress and the Administration, and what HFAs and other housing stakeholders can do to support NCSHA's priorities and affordable housing.
- January 23, 2012
- December 13, 2011
NCSHA’s priorities, adopted annually by its Board of Directors after consultation with all state HFAs, set the agenda for NCSHA’s business development activities and advocacy before Congress, the Administration, and the federal agencies concerned with housing, including HUD, USDA, and the Treasury.
- September 1, 2011
NCSHA's comments to HUD dated August 26, 2011.
- August 23, 2011
Fitch Ratings published its 2011 State Housing Finance Agencies (HFAs) Statistical Report in August 2011. The report provides comparative financial statistics for HFAs using FY 2010 financial statement information for 50 HFAs.
- April 18, 2011
Entries for the 2011 Robert C. Larson Workforce Housing Public Policy Awards should be submitted by June 15 and sent directly to the Urban Land Institute Terwilliger Center.
- April 13, 2011
This Ernst & Young report, Understanding the Dynamics V: Housing Tax Credit Investment Performance, published in 2010, discusses operating performance of Housing Credit properties between 2000 and 2006.
- April 6, 2011
In this letter addressed to the Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs) of the House Committee on Financial Services, NCSHA says the cumulative measures proposed by the Subcommittee and those endorsed by the Administration to wind down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will deny worthy first-time homebuyers and rental housing developments access to affordable mortgages.