Ohio Housing Finance Agency
Faces of Home Stories
- Permanent supportive rental apartments help an Ohio woman stop struggling.
Related News
- HFA NewsNovember 7, 2011U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Midwest Regional Administrator Antonio R. Riley, United States Department of Rural Development State Director J. Anthony Logan, and Ohio Housing Finance Agency Executive Director Doug Garver announced an interagency agreement to reduce duplicate physical inspections of local subsidized affordable housing – allowing developers and owners to focus on delivering more housing and resources to those in need.
- HFA NewsJune 17, 2011The Ohio Housing Finance Agency (OHFA) has been awarded $1,461,561 to continue supporting the availability of foreclosure counseling and prevention services across the state.
- HFA NewsApril 5, 2011The Ohio Housing Finance Agency (OHFA) today announced the 2011 Housing Tax Credit Program recipients who will each receive a portion of $23.8 million in federal housing tax credits for the construction, acquisition and rehabilitation of affordable housing units in Ohio.
- HFA NewsDecember 1, 2010Over 1,400 housing professionals from across Ohio and the nation will gather at one of the largest statewide annual housing conferences in the country beginning today. The 12th annual Ohio Housing Conference, appropriately themed "Mapping the Future," will be held at the Greater Columbus Convention Center through December 2. The event hosted by the Ohio Housing Finance Agency (OHFA) and the Ohio Capital Corporation for Housing (OCCH) is one of the largest and most informative housing conferences in the United States.
- HFA NewsSeptember 27, 2010Ohio has been awarded $320 million from the U.S. Department of Treasury's Hardest-Hit Fund to help homeowners avoid foreclosure. The Ohio Housing Finance Agency (OHFA) will administer Restoring Stability: A Save the Dream Ohio Initiative, to help an estimated 26,000 families who are at high risk of default or foreclosure. These new resources will help people, especially unemployed homeowners, who haven't been able to use existing foreclosure prevention programs.
