Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008






Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress



The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, P.L. 110-289, is likely to affect most owner-
occupied housing in the United States through a variety of channels.
The act creates a new, stronger, unified regulator for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal
Home Loan Banks (the housing GSEs). As a result of various provisions in the act, the secondary
mortgage market is likely to be broadly affected. For example, the Secretary of the Treasury is
given (until December 31, 2009) the authority to lend or invest in the housing GSEs on whatever
terms the Secretary determines to be appropriate. Starting in 2009, the maximum high cost
conforming loan limit is increased to 150% of the conforming loan limit; this will be $625,500 in

2009. For the first time, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac can and have gone into conservatorship.


The GSEs were placed under conservatorship on September 7, 2008, and Treasury used its new
power to enter into a series of agreements to provide them with financial support.
The act also modernizes many aspects of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). In high-cost
areas, the maximum loan that the FHA can insure is identical to the maximum mortgage amount
that the housing GSEs can purchase. The minimum downpayment on FHA-insured mortgages is
increased from 3% to 3.5%, seller-assisted downpayment assistance is prohibited, and there is a
moratorium until October 31, 2009, on the FHA’s implementation of risk-based insurance
premiums.
HOPE for Homeowners authorizes the FHA to insure up to $300 billion in mortgages that
refinance homeowners who are unable to pay their current high interest rate mortgages. As a
condition of the borrower being eligible for the program, the current lender must agree to write-
down the principal of the existing mortgage to achieve a 90% loan-to-value ratio.
Other provisions lengthen from 90 days to 9 months the stay of foreclosure on service members’
homes and provide additional support for disabled veterans with special needs. The act
appropriates $4 billion for state and local governments to purchase and rehabilitate abandoned
and foreclosed housing. This housing would be sold or rented to low- and moderate-income
individuals and families.
Tax provisions in the act include a refundable tax credit based on 10% of the price of a home
purchased by a first time homebuyer. The maximum tax credit is $7,500 and the homebuyer pays
back the credit over 15 years. This is roughly equivalent to a price reduction to one-third of the
amount of the credit ($2,500). Homeowners who do not itemize on their tax returns can deduct
state and local property taxes up to $500 ($1,000 on joint returns).
This report will be updated.






Introduc tion ..................................................................................................................................... 1
GSE Oversight..........................................................................................................................1
HOPE for Homeowners............................................................................................................2
Mortgage Licensing..................................................................................................................2
FHA Modernization..................................................................................................................2
Increased VA Guarantee Limits and Service Member Home Foreclosure...............................3
Redeveloping Abandoned and Foreclosed Homes....................................................................3
Assisting Disabled Veterans with Special Housing Needs........................................................3
Housing-Related Tax Provisions...............................................................................................4
Key Provisions................................................................................................................................4
Reform of the Government Sponsored Enterprises (Division A, Title I-III)............................4
Title I, Subtitle A—Improvement of Safety and Soundness Supervision..........................4
Title I, Subtitle B—Improvement of Mission Supervision.................................................6
Title I, Subtitle C—Capital.................................................................................................9
Title I, Subtitle E—General Provisions............................................................................10
Title II—Federal Home Loan Banks.................................................................................10
Title III—Transfer of Functions, Personnel, and Property of OFHEO and the
FHFB ........................................................................................................................... ... 11
HOPE for Homeowners (Division A, Title IV)........................................................................11
Shared Appreciation..........................................................................................................12
HOPE Safe Harbor............................................................................................................12
HUD Implementation and Lender Participation...............................................................12
Truth in Lending Act (TILA)............................................................................................13
S.A.F.E. Mortgage Licensing Act (Division A, Title V).........................................................13
FHA Modernization Provisions (Division B, Title I)..............................................................13
FHA Premiums.................................................................................................................14
Minimum Cash Downpayment.........................................................................................14
Home Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECMs)...............................................................14
Mutual Mortgage Insurance (MMI) Fund.........................................................................14
FHA Improvements...........................................................................................................15
Increased Veterans Affairs Guarantee Limit and Mortgage Foreclosure Protection for
Service Members (Division B, Title III).............................................................................15
Temporary Increase in Maximum Loan Guaranty Amount..............................................15
Counseling ........................................................................................................................ 15
Protections for Service Members Relating to Mortgages and Mortgage
Forecl osur es ................................................................................................................... 15
Emergency Assistance for Redevelopment of Abandonedand Foreclosed Homes
(Division B, Title III)...........................................................................................................16
Veterans Housing Matters (Division B, Title VI)....................................................................18
Definition of Income for Assisted Housing......................................................................18
Housing Preservation (Division B, Title VIII)........................................................................18
Affordable Housing..........................................................................................................18
Small PHA Paperwork Reduction Act..............................................................................19
Tax Provisions (Division C, Title I)........................................................................................19
First-Time Home Buyer Credit.........................................................................................19
Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC)......................................................................19
Additional Standard Deduction for Real Property for Nonitemizers................................20





Homeowner Capital Gains Exclusion...............................................................................20
Table 1. Housing Trust Fund Allocations, 2009-2012.....................................................................8
Table B-1. CRS Housing Experts..................................................................................................22
Table C-1. Housing Acronyms......................................................................................................23
Appendix A. Legislative History (110th Congress)........................................................................21
Appendix B. CRS Experts.............................................................................................................22
Appendix C. Acronyms.................................................................................................................23
Author Contact Information..........................................................................................................24






The Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, P.L. 110-289, changes many laws that affect
both the housing and mortgage markets. Included in the act are provisions to strengthen and to
unify oversight of the housing government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs—Fannie Mae, Freddie
Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks). The Treasury is authorized to lend or invest an
unlimited amount of money in any of the regulated entities in the event of financial or mortgage 2
market emergencies. Other provisions address mortgage licensing, revise Federal Housing
Administration (FHA) operations, protect (for a limited time) service members against home
foreclosures, promote redevelopment of abandoned and foreclosed homes, and assist disabled
veterans with special housing needs. The act also contains housing related tax provisions. This
report surveys the most important of these changes.
In recent years, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which are congressionally chartered stockholder-
owned companies, have faced a series of accounting and financial problems. Some of the Federal
Home Loan Banks (FHLBs), which are congressionally chartered member-owned companies,
have also had financial problems. Collectively, these problems led many in Congress to conclude
that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the FHLBs need a stronger regulator. P.L. 110-289 creates the
Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) to be the new regulator for the housing GSEs,
replacing the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) and the Federal Housing
Finance Board (FHFB). The task of setting mission goals is moved to FHFA from the Department 3
of Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
P.L. 110-289 gives FHFA broad authority to regulate the housing GSEs. FHFA is given the
responsibility to review and to approve new types of mortgages. FHFA was granted the authority
to take over and reorganize an insolvent Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac and this authority was used 4
on September 7 when the FHFA placed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac under conservatorship. The
FHFA has greater authority to set capital requirements for the housing GSEs. FHFA can now
require the GSEs to dispose of assets and limit their portfolio sizes.
FHFA also has broad regulatory powers over the FHLBs, and is required by law to recognize the
differences between Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the FHLBs. For example, both enterprises
must continue to exist, whereas the 12 FHLBs can merge, and FHFA can require FHLBs to
merge. FHFA has all the powers of the FHFB, which formerly regulated the FHLBs, including
conservatorship and receivership.

1 Meredith Peterson, an information research specialist in the CRS Knowledge Services Group, contributed to this
report.
2 The legislation usesregulated entity to refer to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the FHLBs. It usesenterprise to
refer to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
3 The GSE provisions are in Division A, Titles I-III. CRS Report RL33940, Reforming the Regulation of Government-
Sponsored Enterprises in the 110th Congress, by Mark Jickling, N. Eric Weiss, and Edward V. Murphy has more
details on the GSE provisions.
4 Among CRS reports on the GSEs under conservatorship are CRS Report RS22950, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in
Conservatorship, by Mark Jickling; CRS Report RL34657, Financial Institution Insolvency: Federal Authority over
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Depository Institutions, by David H. Carpenter and M. Maureen Murphy, and CRS
Report RL34661, Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's Financial Problems, by N. Eric Weiss.





In the event of mortgage and financial market emergencies, P.L. 110-289 gives the Secretary of
the Treasury the authority to lend or invest as much money as necessary to the regulated entities
and to set the terms of the loan. This authority expires December 31, 2009. The Congressional
Budget Office (CBO) has estimated the expected federal budgetary costs at $25 billion based on a
less than 50% probability of Treasury having to use this authority before the authority expires at 5
the end of December 2009. Since Treasury has invoked this authority, CBO estimate implies an
expected cost of $50 billion or more. CBO estimated that there was almost a 5% chance that the
losses would total more than $100 billion. The act authorizes the Federal Reserve and Treasury to
consult with FHFA on safety and soundness issues including use of the loan authority.
Concerns over rising rates of delinquency, default, and foreclosure as well as other mortgage
market conditions prompted some members to seek a way to help homeowners who are at risk of
losing their homes. The act creates a voluntary program with an authorization level of $300
billion in FHA-insured mortgages to refinance mortgages of homeowners unable to pay their 6
current mortgages. Homeowners who meet certain conditions can refinance into a FHA-insured
mortgage if the current lender(s) agrees to write-down the principal of the current loan to achieve
a 90% loan-to-value ratio and to pay a 3% insurance premium. CBO projects that 400,000 7
homeowners with $68 billion in new mortgages will take advantage of this program.
Weak enforcement oversight of mortgage originators in some states and the lack of such laws in
other states has sometimes made it difficult to take legal action against those who allegedly
violated various state and federal laws. Moreover, it has made it difficult for mortgage originators
to investigate fully the background of individuals that they are considering hiring. The act seeks
to create uniformity in mortgage originator licensing and registration. It will result in the creation
of a national database of mortgage originators. The act encourages states to develop a system to 8
license and register anyone who originates a home mortgage. HUD is to create a backup system,
which would apply in states that fail to meet the requirements of this title.
Earlier in the 110th Congress, the FHA asked for congressional approval to modernize its lending
practices to allow it to compete with private sector lenders. The FHA has said that these changes
would allow it to better serve homeowners and to help more renters become homeowners. The act
increases FHA loan limits, prohibits seller-funded downpayment assistance with FHA-insured
loans, raises the loan limit on home equity conversion mortgages (HECMs) to the conforming

5 Letter from Peter R. Orszag, director, Congressional Budget Office, to John M. Spratt, chairman, Budget Committee,
House of Representatives, July 22, 2008.
6 Division A, Title IV. For further information, see CRS Report RL33879, Housing Issues in the 110th Congress, by
Libby Perl et al..
7 Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate: Federal Housing Finance Regulatory Reform Act of 2008, June 2, 2008,
pp. 6-11.
8 Division A, Title V.





and high cost loan limits, increases the minimum downpayment on FHA mortgages from 3% to 9

3.5%, and prohibits HUD from implementing risk-based insurance premiums.


The new FHA loan limit in high-cost areas is the lesser of 115% of the local area median home
price or 150% of the GSE conforming loan limit ($417,000 x 150% = $625,500 based on the

2009 conforming loan limit).


The Economic Stimulus Act of 2008, P.L. 110-185, created a temporary new high-cost exception
to the conforming loan limit and increased the maximum size loan that the FHA can insure. It did
not change the guarantee limit for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). The Housing and
Economic Recovery Act of 2008, P.L. 110-289, increases the maximum mortgage that the VA can
guarantee to the FHA’s maximum until December 31, 2008. P.L. 110-289 also requires the
Department of Defense to develop a counseling program for service members who are likely to 10
face home foreclosure. It increases the current stay of foreclosure for service members from 90
days to 9 months from the end of active duty.
Some Members of Congress and housing advocates have been concerned that high concentrations
of foreclosed and abandoned homes can have an adverse impact on neighborhoods. P.L. 110-289
appropriates $4 billion in community development block grants (CDBG) to state and local 11
governments for the redevelopment of abandoned and foreclosed homes. HUD was given 60
days from enactment to develop an allocation formula that considers the percentage of foreclosed
homes, the percentage of homes with subprime mortgages, and the percentage of loans in default
or delinquent. Participating governments must purchase the homes at a discount from current
market appraised value.
Under prior law, the VA Specially Adapted Housing for Disabled Veterans program made grants 12
to seriously injured veterans to construct or modify housing to accommodate their disabilities.
Veterans were eligible for up to $50,000 in assistance if they (1) had lost the use of both lower
extremities, (2) were blind and had lost the use of one lower extremity, (3) had lost the use of one
lower extremity together with either organic disease or the loss of one upper extremity, or (4) had

9 Division B, Title I. For additional information see CRS Report RS22662, H.R. 1852 and Revisiting the FHA Premium
Pricing Structure: Proposed Legislation in the 110th Congress, by Darryl E. Getter; CRS Report RS22934, Treatment
of Seller-Funded Downpayment Assistance in FHA-Insured Home Loans, by Bruce E. Foote; and CRS Report
RS20530, FHA-Insured Home Loans: An Overview, by Bruce E. Foote and Katie Jones.
10 Division B, Title II.
11 Division B, Title III. For additional information on this aspect, see CRS Report RS22919, Community Development
Block Grants: Legislative Proposals to Assist Communities Affected by Home Foreclosures, by Eugene Boyd and
Oscar R. Gonzales.
12 Division B, Title V.





lost the use of both upper extremities at or above the elbows. Veterans were eligible for up to
$10,000 in assistance if they (1) were blind, or (2) had lost the use of both hands.
P.L. 110-289 makes active duty members of the Armed Forces, as well as veterans, eligible for
the program. In addition, the law makes a new disability category—individuals with severe burn
injuries—eligible for assistance. It raises the amounts for which disabled individuals are eligible
to $60,000 and $12,000, depending on the type of disability. The act also authorizes the Defense
Department to pay for a wider range of improvements and structural changes to the homes of
service members with permanent disabilities.
Some members of Congress have been concerned that the turmoil in the housing and financial
markets has made it more difficult for renters to purchase their first homes and that increasing
property taxes are hurting homeowners who do not itemize. P.L. 110-289 authorizes a refundable 13
tax credit of up to $7,500 for first-time homebuyers. The act allows homeowners who do not
itemize on their tax returns to deduct up to $500 in property taxes (up to $1,000 for joint filers). It
places restrictions on the homeowner capital gains exclusion on houses originally purchased as
second homes.

The remainder of this report summarizes key provisions of the act. It does not provide exhaustive
coverage of the legislation. The legislative history of H.R. 3221 is in Appendix A. A list of CRS
experts who assisted with this report is in Appendix B, and Appendix C contains a list of
acronyms used in this report.
This division is entitled the Federal Housing Finance Regulatory Reform Act of 2008. (Section

1001)


The act creates the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) as an independent federal agency
with general supervisory and regulatory authority over Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal
Home Loan Bank system. (Section 1101)

13 Division C, Title I. For additional information on housing and taxation, see CRS Report RS22389, An Introduction to
the Design of the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit, by Mark P. Keightley; CRS Report RS22917, The Low-Income
Housing Tax Credit Program: The Fixed Subsidy and Variable Rate, by Mark P. Keightley; CRS Report RL32978, The
Exclusion of Capital Gains for Owner-Occupied Housing, by Jane G. Gravelle and Pamela J. Jackson; and CRS Report
RS22841, Mortgage Revenue Bonds: Analysis of Sections 3021 and 3022 of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act
of 2008, by Mark P. Keightley and Erika Lunder.





FHFA is headed by a director, appointed by the President, with advice and consent of the Senate,
for a five-year term. The director is to oversee the operations of each regulated entity and require
them to operate in a safe and sound manner to foster a liquid, efficient, competitive, and resilient
national housing finance market to minimize the cost of housing finance (including for housing
for low- and moderate-income families). FHFA is authorized to issue any regulations, guidelines,
or orders that are necessary to carry out the authorizing statutes.
The FHFA reviews and can reject acquisition or transfer of a controlling interest in a regulated
entity. It can administer conservatorship or receivership through litigation without Department of
Justice involvement. FHFA makes certain that the regulated entities operate in the public interest
and that the entities remain adequately capitalized.
FHFA is to establish standards for each regulated entity for internal controls, audits, and risk
management. (Sections 1101, 1102, 1107, and 1108)
The prohibition (in prior law) against excessive executive compensation is enhanced by
permitting FHFA to take into account wrongdoing on the part of the executive, and to hold pay in
escrow while a determination is made. (Sections 1113 and 1114)
In the event of a financial or mortgage market emergency, the Treasury is given the authority to
stabilize the housing finance system by purchasing obligations and securities of the housing GSEs
in unlimited amounts under terms and conditions determined by Treasury. This authority expires
December 31, 2009. (Section 1117)
FHFA is to confer with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System about the risks
posed to the financial system by the housing GSEs. FHFA must consult with the Chairman of the
Board of Governors before placing Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac in receivership or
conservatorship. This requirement expires December 31, 2009. (Section 1118)
FHFA is to establish risk-based and minimum capital requirements for the enterprises to ensure
safe and sound operation and maintenance of sufficient capital and reserves to support risk
exposure. (Sections 1110 and 1111)
FHFA is to promulgate regulations to govern the portfolio holdings of the enterprises, to ensure
that the holdings are backed by sufficient capital, and are consistent with the mission and the safe
and sound operations of the enterprises. These criteria shall take into consideration the ability of
the enterprises to provide a liquid secondary market through securitization activities and their
portfolio holdings in relation to the overall mortgage market. FHFA may order an enterprise to
dispose of or acquire any asset. (Section 1109)





If FHFA finds that a regulated entity has failed to meet any prudential standard, the entity must
submit a corrective plan within 30 days, and FHFA may prohibit any increase in total assets of the
entity, require an increase in regulatory capital, or take other actions until the deficiency is
corrected. FHFA shall take one or more of these actions if the entity fails to meet prescribed
standards, if the deficiency is not corrected, and if the entity underwent extraordinary growth in
the 18 months prior to the date when it first failed to meet the standard. (Section 1108)
The act creates the Federal Housing Finance Oversight Board to advise the Director on overall
strategies and policies. Board members are the Secretaries of the Treasury and of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD), the Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC),
and the FHFA Director, who chairs the Board. (Section 1103)
The FHFA is funded by assessments collected from the enterprises. Assessments collected from
the Federal Home Loan Banks are to be used only for their supervision. (Section 1106)
Each regulated entity shall create an Office of Minority and Women Inclusion to ensure the
inclusion and utilization of minorities and women in all levels of business activities. (Section

1116)


HUD’s authority for new product approval and housing goals is transferred to the FHFA. New
products must be consistent with the enterprise’s charter, be in the public interest, and be
consistent with the safety and soundness of the enterprise and the mortgage finance system.
Requests for new product approval are published in the Federal Register with a 30-day public
comment period. The request must be approved or denied within 30 days after the close of the
comment period. Temporary approval may be given without public comment under exigent
circumstances. (Sections 1121, 1122, and 1123)
The conforming loan limit will increase to reflect the annual change in a housing price index
maintained by FHFA. The limit cannot decline; decreases are “banked” and used against later
increases. In high-cost housing areas, defined as areas where the median home price exceeds the
conforming loan limit, the limit is increased to the lesser of 115% of area median or 150% of the
national conforming loan limit. For example, using 2009’s conforming loan limit (which was
unchanged from the 2008 limit) of $417,000, the maximum high-cost limit would be $625,500.





According to the legislation, the Sense of Congress is that loans above the national conforming 14
loan limit should not be held in a GSE’s portfolio, but should be securitized. (Section 1124)
The authority to establish and monitor housing goals for the enterprises is moved to the FHFA
from HUD. There are four single-family housing goals and one multifamily housing goal. In
addition, the enterprises are required to provide FHFA with sufficient information to determine if
minorities are charged a different interest rate than nonminorities.
FHFA is to set annual goals for each enterprise’s purchase of conventional, conforming, single-
family, owner-occupied, purchase money mortgages financing housing for (1) low-income
families, (2) very low-income families, and (3) families that reside in low-income areas. A fourth
goal is to be created for the purchase of refinance mortgages by low-income families.
Low-income areas are census tracts or block numbering areas in which the median income does
not exceed 80% of the area median income, and includes families having incomes not greater
than 100% of the area median income who reside in minority census tracts.
Very low-income is defined for owner-occupied units as income not in excess of 50% of area
median income; and for rental units, it is income not in excess of 50% of area median income,
adjusted for family size.
Extremely low-income owner-occupied units are owned by families with incomes not in excess of
30% of the area median income, or rented by families whose income is not in excess of 30% of
the area median income, with adjustments for family size.
There is an annual multifamily special affordable housing goal for mortgages on multifamily
housing that is affordable to low-income families. There is a subgoal for units affordable to very
low-income families. Units financed with state housing finance agency bonds will count. Within
the multifamily special affordable housing goal, FHFA is to establish additional requirements for
the smaller multifamily housing projects.
A regulated entity may petition the Director to reduce the level of any goal. (Sections 1128, 1129,
and 1134)
If it appears that an enterprise will not meet any housing goal and that the goal is feasible, FHFA
has a number of tools at its disposal: it can require a corrective plan from the enterprise, it can
issue a cease and desist order, impose civil fines, or prohibit any new products until the enterprise
complies. (Sections 1129 and 1130)
The act explicitly states that the enterprises are obligated to serve underserved markets as long as
this provides a reasonable economic return (that may be less than the return earned on other

14 CRS Report RL34236, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: Changes to the Regulation of Their Mortgage Portfolios, by
N. Eric Weiss, analyzes the systemic risks that might be caused by the GSEs retained mortgage portfolios and earlier
legislative proposals.





activities). The enterprises are also obligated to improve the liquidity of, and the distribution of
capital available for, mortgage financing for underserved markets. Underserved markets are
manufactured housing purchased by very low-, low-, and moderate-income families, affordable
housing preservation, and rural housing for very low-, low-, and moderate-income families and
for any other market that FHFA determines to be underserved. In 2009, the 2008 housing goals
previously set for HUD apply, unless FHFA modifies them.
A Housing Trust Fund is created to increase housing opportunities among very low-income
families and families in low-income areas. Grants can be used for (1) the production,
preservation, and rehabilitation of rental housing for the benefit of extremely and very low-
income families, and (2) the production, preservation, and rehabilitation of housing for
homeownership (including such forms as downpayment assistance, closing cost assistance, and
assistance for interest-rate buy-downs) for extremely and very low-income first-time home
buyers.
Grants cannot be used for political activities, advocacy, lobbying, counseling services, travel
expenses or preparing or providing advice on tax returns. FHFA shall issue regulations that grant
amounts may not be used for administrative, outreach, or other costs of the grantee or any
recipient of such grant amounts, except that grant amounts may be used for administrative costs
of the grantee of carrying out the program required under this section.
Each enterprise is to contribute to the Housing Trust Fund 4.2 basis points (0.042%) of the unpaid
principal balances of its total new business purchases. If this had been in effect in calendar year

2007 when Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac purchased $1.2 trillion in mortgages, the enterprises 15


would have contributed $500.8 million to the trust. The contributions can be suspended if they
would cause severe financial problems for an enterprise.
Each year, 25% of the housing trust fund goes to support a reserve fund for HOPE for
Homeowners bonds. During the first three years, a decreasing percentage (100%, 50%, 25%) of
the other 75% will go for the HOPE program. Of this other 75% (as adjusted in the first three
years), 65% goes to the Housing Trust Fund; 35% goes to a Capital Magnet Fund to provide
competitively awarded grants to support affordable housing for primarily extremely low-, very
low-, and low-income families. Table 1 shows how these percentages work out.
Table 1. Housing Trust Fund Allocations, 2009-2012
Year HOPE Bond Reserve Fund HOPE Program Housing Trust Fund Capital Magnet Fund Total
2009 25% 75% (100% of 75%) 0% 0% 100%
2010 25% 37.50% (50% of 75%) 24.375% (65% of 37.50%) 13.125% (35% of 37.50%) 100%
2011 25% 18.75% (25% of 75%) 36.56% (65% of 56.25%) 19.69 (35% of 56.25%) 100%

15 Mortgage purchases are reported in Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, 2008 Report to Congress, p.
111.





Year HOPE Bond Reserve Fund HOPE Program Housing Trust Fund Capital Magnet Fund Total
2012 25% 0% 48.75% (65% of 75%) 26.25% (35% of 75%) 100%
Source: Section 1131 and CRS calculations.
HUD is to create a formula to distribute the fund’s money to states and Indian tribes, who must
establish and publish their own plans for distributing grants each year. The minimum allocation
for states and the District of Columbia is $3 million.
If future legislation creates another affordable housing trust fund used only for affordable rental
and owner-occupied housing, this fund will be merged into the new fund. (Section 1131)
FHFA is to set capital classification standards for the FHLB, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac that
reflect the differences in operations between the banks and the enterprises. (Section 1142)
FHFA may downgrade the capital classification of a regulated entity (1) whose conduct could
rapidly deplete core or total capital, or (in the case of an enterprise) whose mortgage assets have
declined significantly in value, (2) which is determined (after notice and opportunity for a
hearing) to be in an unsafe or unsound condition, or (3) which is engaging in an unsafe or 16
unsound practice.
No growth in total assets is permitted for an undercapitalized GSE, unless (1) FHFA has accepted
the GSE’s capital restoration plan, (2) an increase in assets is consistent with the plan, and (3) the
ratio of both total capital to assets and tangible equity to assets is increasing. An undercapitalized
entity is subject to heightened scrutiny and supervision.
If a regulated entity is significantly undercapitalized, FHFA must take one or more of the
following actions: new election of Directors, dismissal of Directors and/or executives, and hiring
of qualified executive officers, or other actions. Without prior written approval, executives of a
significantly undercapitalized regulated entity may not receive bonuses or pay raises. In addition,
FHFA may appoint a receiver or conservator for several specified causes related to financial
difficulty and/or violations of law or regulation.
Mandatory receivership requires FHFA to appoint itself as the receiver if a regulated entity’s
assets are (and have been for 60 days) less than its obligations to its creditors, or if the regulated
entity has (for 60 days) not been generally paying its debts as they come due. (Sections 1142 and

1143)



16 Capital classifications are adequately capitalized, undercapitalized, significantly undercapitalized, and critically
undercapitalized. (Sec. 1142)





FHFA may issue subpoenas and cease-and-desist orders against a regulated entity, or a regulated
entity-affiliated party (such as corporate officers), for safety and soundness reasons, but not for
failure to comply with housing goals. FHFA may impose fines ranging from $10,000 to $2
million per day. In certain extreme cases, FHFA may suspend or remove regulated entity-
affiliated parties and may also issue industry-wide suspensions; these actions may be appealed to
the courts. Criminal penalties apply to anyone who participates, directly or indirectly, in the
affairs of a regulated entity while it is under suspension or order of removal.
FHFA may apply to U.S. District Court for an injunction to enforce cease and desist orders, or
any other order. (Sections 1151, 1152, 1153, 1155, 1156, and 1158)
The act eliminates the five presidentially appointed members of the boards of directors of Fannie
Mae, Freddie Mac, and the FHLBs and reduces the size of their boards from 18 to 13, or such
number as FHFA establishes. (Sections 1162 and 1202)
While FHFA is given regulatory oversight of all the housing GSEs, it is directed to take into
account differences between the enterprises and the FHLBs in taking supervisory or enforcement
actions. (Section 1201)
Each FHLB will be managed by a board of 13 directors, or other number as FHFA determines.
The President no longer appoints members to the boards. The majority of each board must be
officers of member banks, and at least two-fifths of board members must be independent
directors. Directors are elected by the member banks. (Section 1202)
FHLBs may merge with other FHLBs with the approval of FHFA. The number of FHLB districts
may be reduced to fewer than eight as a result of voluntary mergers or liquidation of a bank; prior
to the act, the minimum number of FHLB districts was eight. (Sections 1209 and 1210)
FHLBs are exempt from some SEC reporting regulations, including ownership of capital stock in
the FHLB, tender offers related to FHLB capital stock, and reporting related party transactions in
the FHLB system. Shares of FHLB capital stock are defined as “exempted securities” for the
purposes of defining a government securities broker or a government securities dealer.
Nevertheless, the FHFBs have individually agreed to file reports with the SEC. (Section 1208)





Community Financial Institution members must have total assets of $1 billion. The earlier
minimum was $500 million. (Section 1211)
FHLBs are given authority to refinance mortgages on primary residences of families at or below

80% of area median income. (Section 1218)


OFHEO and FHFB are abolished one year after enactment. HUD’s authority to set housing goals
is transferred to FHFA upon enactment. Employees are given lateral transfers to FHFA. (Sections

1133, 1301, and 1311-1314)


This title, also called the “HOPE for Homeowners Act of 2008,” creates a program to help
financially distressed homeowners to refinance into more affordable FHA-insured mortgages.
HOPE is a voluntary program in which lenders agree to write-down the balance of the loan to
90% of the current appraised value of the property in return for an FHA guarantee of the new
loan. New loans must have a fixed interest rate and have a maturity of 30 years. The borrower’s
new debt-to-income ratio may not exceed 31%. To participate in the program, borrowers and
current lenders need to take certain actions.
To be eligible for the HOPE program, borrowers must provide two years of tax returns and certify
that
• they are not intentionally defaulting;
• as of March 31, 2008, their debt-to-income ratio was greater than 31%, or as
Board determines;
• this is their primary residence, and that it is a single-family home (1-4 units); and
• they have not been convicted of mortgage fraud.
The current lender(s) must agree to certain conditions:
• To pay a 3% one-time insurance fee to FHA;
• To write-down the mortgage if necessary to achieve a 90% loan-to-value ratio;
• To waive prepayment penalties on the existing mortgage; and
• To release all existing claims, such as second mortgages. HUD may facilitate
coordination with subordinate lien holders.
The new loans carry certain restrictions:





• The new loan may not exceed 90% of current appraised value of the property;
• The maximum loan amount is 132% of the Freddie Mac limit (in 2007, $417,000
x 132% = $550,440); (Section 1402)
• Second liens will not be allowed for the first five years, except as permitted by
regulation; and
• The interest rate must be fixed for the life of the loan, which cannot exceed 30
years.
When the mortgage is issued, a single insurance premium of 3% from proceeds to mortgage
holder is charged. There are annual insurance premiums of 1.5%.
When an owner sells or refinances a mortgage, HOPE and the borrower share any equity created
as a direct result of such sale or refinance:
• Less than 1 year, HOPE gets 100%;
• Year 1-2, HOPE gets 90%;
• Year 2-3, HOPE gets 80%;
• Year 3-4, HOPE gets 70%;
• Year 4-5, HOPE gets 60%; and
• Year 5+, HOPE gets 50%.
When a property is sold, the program and borrower shall each get 50% of any appreciation in the
appraised value that occurs after the time that the mortgage was insured.
Treasury may issue up to $300 billion in bonds to finance these mortgages, and Ginnie Mae is
authorized to package them into mortgage-backed securities for sale in the secondary market.
Mortgages in this program may be issued from October 1, 2008, to September 20, 2011. (Section

1402)


The act creates a safe harbor for loan modifications that enable homeowners to refinance in the
HOPE program. Absent provisions to the contrary, loan servicers have a duty to maximize total
funds to the loan pool, not a duty to individual investors. (Section 1403)
The act delegated to HUD responsibility for making necessary rules for implementation of the
program. As of November 19, 2008, HUD reported that “ ... because of strict guidelines and a
number of unique and specialized requirements in the original law, few lenders have actually





signed up and few borrowers have submitted applications. Clearly, meaningful changes are 17
needed.” One of the changes instituted by HUD was to allow lenders to write-down the loans to
only 96.5% of current appraised value (rather than 90%) for some qualified borrowers. In
addition, HUD will offer to pay some subordinate lienholders to remove objections to loan
modifications. HUD will also allow lenders to extend the loan maturity from 30 years to 40 years.
It remains to be seen if these changes will result in significantly higher participation.
TILA is amended in several ways. Section 1403 of the act provides legal protections to certain
mortgage servicers that provide loan modifications as a part of the Hope for Homeowners 18
program. Additionally, Division B—Foreclosure Prevention expands the definition of mortgages
that are subject to Truth in Lending disclosures, while also enhancing the disclosure requirements
for those mortgages. The main impetus of these enhanced disclosures relates to adjustable interest
rates and how they may affect monthly payments. The bill also increases penalties for certain
TILA violations.
This title, also known as Secure and Fair Enforcement for Mortgage Licensing Act of 2008 or
S.A.F.E. Mortgage Licensing Act of 2008, provides for state or federal licensing or registration of
anyone originating a home mortgage. States, acting through the Conference of State Bank
Supervisors and the American Association of Residential Mortgage Regulators, are to establish a
nationwide mortgage licensing and registry system for residential mortgage loan originators.
Within one year of enactment, the federal banking agencies, through the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council and the Farm Credit Administration, are to develop a system for
registering employees of depository institutions and their subsidiaries as registered loan
originators. (Section 1507)
HUD is to create a backup system for loan originators in states that do not implement a licensing
and registration system. If at any time HUD determines that the Nationwide Mortgage Licensing
System and Registry is failing to meet the requirements of the S.A.F.E. Mortgage Licensing Act,
HUD is directed to establish and maintain such a system.
This title is also called FHA Modernization Act of 2008. The FHA high cost area loan limit is
increased to the lesser of 115% of the median price of a single-family residence, as determined by
the HUD Secretary, or 150% of the Freddie Mac conforming loan limit. In 2009, this is $625,500
(150% of the conforming loan limit, $417,000). The FHA loan obligation is not to exceed 100%
of the appraised value of the property. These limits are effective upon expiration of the Economic
Stimulus Act of 2008 (January 1, 2009). (Section 2112)

17 See “Prepared Remarks of HUD Secretary Steve Preston at the National Press Club, November 19, 2008,available
at http://www.hud.gov/news/speeches/2008-11-19.cfm.
18 David Carpenter, legislative attorney in the American Law Division, wrote this section.





The law increases the FHA upfront mortgage insurance premium from 2.5% to 3% of the
mortgage amount, and for a borrower that has received homeownership counseling, the upfront
mortgage insurance premium is increased from 2% to 2.75% of the mortgage amount. The act
places a 12-month moratorium on FHA’s planned implementation of risk-based premiums as set
forth in a notice published in the Federal Register on September 20, 2007. (Section 2133)
To obtain an FHA-insured loan, prior law required borrowers to contribute at least 3% in cash or
its equivalent to the cost of acquiring the property. The act increases the cash requirement to
3.5%. Loans from family members are considered as cash for this purpose. If the borrowed
amount is secured by a lien (i.e., a second mortgage), the lien must be subordinate to the
mortgage. The sum of the lien and the mortgage may not exceed 100% of the appraised value of
the property. Prohibited sources of funding for the required funds include (1) the seller, (2) any
entity that financially benefits from the transaction, or (3) any third party that is directly or
indirectly reimbursed by the parties in (1) or (2). (Section 2113)
It establishes a HECM loan limit equal to the Freddie Mac conforming loan limit or the high cost
loan limit and requires that the borrower must receive counseling by an independent third party
that is not associated with, or compensated by, the party that is involved in funding, originating,
or servicing the mortgage; or the sale of annuities, investments or other financial or insurance
products. (Section 2122)
Origination fees are limited to 2% of the first $200,000 of the maximum claim amount, plus 1%
of the claim amount in excess of $200,000, but may not exceed $6,000. This maximum
origination fee may be adjusted in increments of $500 whenever the percentage change in the
Consumer Price Index would produce a number that exceeds $500 when applied to the current
maximum origination fee. (Section 2122)
Lenders cannot require borrowers to purchase insurance, an annuity, or other product as a
condition of eligibility of for a HECM. (Section 2122)
The act rewrites the section of law governing the MMI fund to (1) limit loan commitments to the
amount specified in appropriations acts for each fiscal year; (2) establish that HUD has the
fiduciary responsibility to ensure that the MMI fund remains financially sound; (3) require an
annual independent actuarial study of the fund; (4) require quarterly reports to Congress; (5)
require the adjustment of insurance premiums when needed; (6) establish operational goals for
the Fund; and (7) provide that the Homeownership Voucher program and the home equity
conversion program become obligations of the MMI Fund instead of the General Insurance Fund.
(Section 2118)





The act authorizes $25 million in each year from FY2009 until FY2013 to improve the
technology, processes, program performance, elimination of fraud and staffing at FHA. (Section

2126)


The VA guarantees mortgage payments by a veteran to the lender in case of borrower default.
Prior to the act, the maximum guaranty was 25% of the Freddie Mac conforming loan limit. The
Economic Stimulus Act of 2008 increased the Freddie Mac conforming loan limits through
December 31, 2008, to the higher of the 2008 conforming loan limits, or 125% of the median
home price for the area in which the property is located, but in no case could the loan limit exceed
175% of the Freddie Mac limit. It was later discovered that these increased limits did not apply to
home loans guaranteed by the Department of Veterans Affairs because of the way the language of
the act was drafted. The VA guarantee is determined by the “permanent” conforming loan limits.
The act provides that through December 31, 2008, the maximum VA guaranty amount is 25% of
the Freddie Mac loan limit as increased by the Economic Stimulus Act. (Section 2201)
The Department of Defense is directed to develop and implement mortgage foreclosure
counseling for members of the Armed Forces returning from active duty abroad. (Section 2202)
The act prevents lenders from foreclosing on a veteran’s home within nine months after the end of
military service. Similarly, any proceedings on the home or property of a service member can be
stayed for nine months after the end of military service. The interest rate on a mortgage created
before entering military service can be no higher than 6% during the term of military service and
one year thereafter. (Section 2203)
The provisions of this title are effective immediately and expire on December 31, 2010. (Section

2204)





The act appropriates $4.1 billion for assistance to state and local governments to redevelop 19
abandoned and foreclosed homes. Of this amount, $3.92 billion is supplemental assistance to 20
state and local governments, as defined below. HUD administers the program as part of the 21
Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program. An additional $180 million is
appropriated for counseling intermediaries, with $30 million for the Neighborhood Reinvestment
Corporation, for a total appropriation of $4.1 billion.
By October 1, 2008—60 days from enactment of the law—HUD must develop a formula to
distribute the funds to state and local governments based on
• the number and percentage of foreclosed homes in each state or locality;
• the number and percentage of subprime mortgages in each state or locality; and
• the number and percentage of homes in default or delinquency in each state or
locality. (Section 2301)
HUD published the regulations in the Federal Register on October 6, 2008.22
Funds must be distributed to state and local governments by November 1, 2008, 30 days after
development of the formula. (Section 2305)
Each state and local government receiving funds is required to allocate funds within 18 months of
receipt of the funds and to give priority consideration to areas and metropolitan cities with
• the greatest percentage of home foreclosures;
• the highest percentage of subprime loans; and
• the greatest likelihood of facing a significant rise in the number of home
foreclosures.

19 Oscar R. Gonzales, analyst in Economic Development Policy, wrote this section.
20 See Section 102 of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5302).
21 Section. 2301, sub-part E stipulates: “Except as otherwise provided by this section, amounts appropriated, revenues
generated, or amounts otherwise made available to States and units of general local government under this section shall
be treated as though such funds were community development block grant funds under title I of the Housing and
Community Development Act of 1974 (42 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.).”
22 U.S. Department of Housing and Economic Development, “Notice of Allocations, Application Procedures,
Regulatory Waivers Granted to and Alternative Requirements for Emergency Assistance for Redevelopment of
Abandoned and Foreclosed Homes Grantees Under the Housing and Economic Recovery Act, 2008, 73 Federal
Register 58330-58349, October 6, 2008. Additional information is in U.S. Department of Housing and Economic
Development, Neighborhood Stabilization Program Grants at http://www.hud.gov/offices/cpd/
communitydevelopment/programs/neighborhoodspg/.





Although the legislation identifies the factors to be used by HUD to develop a formula, it does not
specify an actual formula other than requiring a minimum allocation for each state of 0.5%, $19
million. (Section 2302)
State and local governments can use funds to
• create financial instruments to finance the purchase and redevelopment of
foreclosed homes and residential properties;
• purchase and rehabilitate foreclosed homes and residential properties for sale,
rent, or redevelopment;
• establish land banks for foreclosed homes; and
• demolish blighted structures. (Section 2301)
The purchase price of a home or residential property must be less than the home’s current
appraised market value. The discounted value should be significant enough to ensure that when
the home is sold by the state or local government the purchaser (homebuyer) will pay below
market value for the home or property. Further, when a foreclosed home or property is to be
purchased as a primary residence by an eligible homebuyer, the resale price cannot exceed the
cost the state or local government paid to acquire and redevelop or rehabilitate the property.
(Section 2301)
During the first five years of the act, a community or state must reinvest all profits in additional
sales, rentals, redevelopment, and rehabilitation of foreclosed homes and properties. After the
five-year period, all profits are to be deposited in the U.S. Treasury unless HUD approves a
request to allow a community or state to continue to use funds to finance activities eligible for
assistance under the act. Other provisions of the bill subject funds and revenues generated by
activities under this act to the same requirements as funds appropriated under the regular CDBG
program. However, HUD may issue alternatives to CDBG requirements, except in the areas of
fair housing, nondiscrimination, labor standards, and environmental review, for the sole purpose
of expediting the use of funds under the act.
In addition, the legislation
• prohibits funds from being used in economic development projects involving the
use of eminent domain; (Section 2303)
• limits the income of individuals and families who may benefit from assistance
provided by the act to those whose incomes do not exceed 120% of the area’s
median income; (Section 2301)
• requires a state and local government to certify that at least 25% of the amount
allocated by the bill will be used to purchase and redevelop housing for
individuals and families whose incomes do not exceed 50% of the area’s median
income; (Section 2301) and





• requires that each state receives a minimum allocation of 0.5% of the amount
appropriated. (Section 2302)

The act authorizes VA to furnish home improvements and structural alterations for service
members hospitalized or receiving outpatient care, medical services, or treatment, and for service
members likely to be discharged or released from service due to a total and permanent injury
incurred or aggravated while on active duty. (Section 2601)
The act amends existing law to allow service members on active duty, as well as veterans (who
are currently eligible), to qualify for home improvements pursuant to the Specially Adapted
Housing program for veterans with severe disabilities. The act adds severe burn injuries to the
current categories of disabilities that qualify for assistance to modify homes to accommodate
disabilities.
Grants for veterans with service-connected disabilities to obtain specially adapted homes are
increased to a maximum of $60,000 from $50,000. These grants provide “wheelchair” homes to
veterans with loss, or loss of use of the upper or lower extremities and who need braces, canes,
crutches or wheelchairs for locomotion.
Maximum grants for veterans whose service-connected disabilities include blindness in both eyes
or loss, or loss of use, of both hands to make special housing adaptations are increased to $12,000
from $10,000. VA is to increase both of these maximum grant amounts annually based on the cost
of construction.
The act excludes lump sum disability payments to veterans from the definition of income for the
Section 8 and public housing programs. (Section 2608)

The act has provisions that apply to certain affordable housing projects. Specifically, the act
• makes certain provisions of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171)
relating to HUD’s ability to provide below-market sales of foreclosed properties
not applicable to a property in Michigan (Section 2801);
• makes a multifamily housing property in Massachusetts eligible for Section 8
enhanced voucher assistance (Section 2802);

23 Elizabeth Perl, analyst in housing policy, contributed this section.
24 Maggie McCarty, specialist in housing policy, contributed this section.





• Makes a multifamily housing property in California eligible for Section 8
voucher assistance and directs that the property be provided with such assistance
(Section 2805);
• permits the transfer of rental assistance contracts, use restrictions, and debt from
two properties in Ohio to other properties in Ohio, at the request of the owners
(Section 2803);
• strikes a provision in public housing law authorizing a set-aside of funds for
disaster recovery (Section 2804);
• allows grantees funded through HUD’s Shelter Plus Care program to enter into
15 year contracts with building owners or lessors of permanent supportive
housing for homeless individuals (Section 2835); and
• permits HUD to convert a rental assistance payment contract to a Section 8
project-based rental assistance contract for a multifamily housing property in
New York. This provision is in Division A, Title VI (Section 1603).
The act amends the public housing authority (PHA) annual plan requirement for certain small
PHAs. It includes language clarifying that exempted PHAs are still required to file certain civil
rights certifications, hold public hearings and supply information from such hearings, and
convene resident advisory boards. (Section 2701-2702)
This title may be cited as the Housing Tax Credit Coordination Act of 2008.
First time home buyers of a primary residence are eligible for a refundable, repayable tax credit
of 10% of purchase price, up to $7,500. This is the equivalent of an interest-free loan and also is
equivalent to reducing the purchase price of the home by an estimated one-half to one-third of the 25
credit amount. The credit applies to residences purchased on or after April 9, 2008 and before
July 1, 2009, in taxable years ending on or after such date. (Section 3011)
The act increases the 2008 and 2009 per capita credit allocation to states by $0.20 above 2008’s
$2.00 per capita, and also increases the minimum state credit allocation by 10%. The LIHTC is
used to subsidize new or substantially rehabilitated housing that low-income families can afford.
The act changes the LIHTC rate for non-federally subsidized new buildings to not less than 9%.
The LIHTC credit rate has varied monthly between 7.69% and 9.27% since the program was first

25 This is based on the net present value of the tax credit at a discount (mortgage) rate of 6.5%. The credit is claimed by
the first time homebuyer the year after the house is purchased. This assumes that the home is kept for 15 years. If the
homebuyer moves sooner, the net present value of the credit declines. For example, if the homebuyer moves in year
six, the credit is worth less than 25% of the face value.





introduced. The LIHTC rate for projects placed in service in August 2008 is 7.94%. State housing
credit agencies may treat a building as in a difficult to develop area in order to ensure the
project’s viability. (Section 3003)
This provision allows nonitemizers to take an additional standard deduction for state and local
property taxes not to exceed $500 (or $1000 on joint returns) in tax year 2008. There is no
restriction on jurisdictions that increase property taxes. (Section 3012)
This section of the act, actually included as a revenue raiser, reduces the ability of a homeowner
to exclude capital gains on a second home. This change will affect those who purchase a home
and do not initially use the house as their principal residence. It modifies the law that requires a
homeowner to live in the home for two of the last five years in the case of a home not initially
used as a principal residence. The modification reduces the $250,000 ($500,000) exclusion for
single (married) taxpayers by the amount of the gain that may be allocated to periods of non-
qualifying use. Therefore, the proportion of the capital gain that may be excluded is equal to the
ratio of qualifying use to time the taxpayer owned the house. (Section 3092)






August 4, 2007. On August 4, 2007, the House passed H.R. 3221 as an energy package.
Senate Passage April 10, 2008. The Senate’s amendment in the nature of a substitute to the
House-passed energy bill would have addressed foreclosures by reforming the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA); encouraging counseling; providing communities funds to acquire
foreclosed properties; and providing tax incentives to encourage house sales. The FHA provisions
would have enabled FHA to refinance some troubled loans if the lenders agreed to write-down the
value of the loans so that the outstanding balance was significantly below the current appraised
value of the house. The bill also would have provided $4 billion through the Community
Development Block Grant program to allow state and local governments to purchase and
rehabilitate foreclosed homes. Additional funds would have been provided for housing counseling
for at-risk borrowers. In addition, the bill would have provided a $7,000 tax credit for the
purchase of foreclosed homes and newly constructed homes and extends the carryback period for
net operating losses.
House Passage May 8, 2008. The House added several additional housing-related bills to the
Senate’s April 10 framework. In addition to FHA-refinances, community funds, borrower
counseling, and tax incentives, the House version incorporated bills for the FHA loan program
(H.R. 5830), Government Sponsored Enterprise (GSE) reform (H.R. 1427), FHA modernization
(H.R. 1852), liability protection for loan servicers who modified loans (H.R. 5579), foreclosure
protections for service members (H.R. 4883), changes to the Low Income Housing Tax Credit
program (H.R. 5720), a temporary first-time home-buyer tax credit, and clarified that the
provisions of H.R. 3221, as well as provisions of the National Bank Act and the Home Owner’s
Loan Act, does not preempt state laws regulating the foreclosure of residential real property or the
treatment of foreclosed property.
Senate Passage July 11, 2008. The Senate received the greatly expanded House-passed version
of H.R. 3221 and referred the bill to committee. The Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and
Urban Affairs again amended the bill with a manager’s amendment (S.Amdt. 4983). The Senate
then passed a new version addressing many of the bills rolled into H.R. 3221 by the House,
including GSE reform, an affordable housing fund, FHA modernization, first-time home buyer
tax credits, and protections for service members.
House Passage July 23, 2008. The House agreed with an amendment to the Senate amendment
to the House amendments to the Senate by a vote of 272-152.
Senate Passage July 26, 2008. The Senate agreed to the motion to concur in House amendment
to Senate amendment to House amendments to Senate amendment to the bill by vote of 72-13.
Enactment. President George W. Bush signed H.R. 3221, the Housing and Economic Recovery
Act, into law on July 30, 2008. It became P.L. 110-289.






Table B1 lists CRS experts in areas related to this report.
Table B-1. CRS Housing Experts
Name Expertise Telephone Email
N. Eric Weiss Government Sponsored Enterprises 7-6209 eweiss@crs.loc.gov

Eugene Boyd Economic Development 7-8689 eboyd@crs.loc.gov

David H. Carpenter Legal Aspects 7-9118 dcarpenter@crs.loc.gov

Bruce E. Foote FHA Modernization, Veterans Housing, Predatory 7-7805 bfoote@crs.loc.gov
Lending
Darryl E. Getter FHA Modernization 7-2834 dgetter@crs.loc.gov

Oscar R. Gonzales Economic Development 7-0764 ogonzales@crs.loc.gov

Mark Jickling Government Sponsored Enterprises 7-7784 mjickling@crs.loc.gov
Mark P. Keightley Housing Taxes 7-1049 mkeightley@crs.loc.gov

Maggie McCarty Public and Assisted Housing 7-2163 mmccarty@crs.loc.gov
Edward Vincent Government Sponsored Enterprises, Subprime and 7-6201 tmurphy@crs.loc.gov
Murphy Alt-A Mortgages
Libby Perl Housing for Special Populations, including 7-7806 eperl@crs.loc.gov
the Elderly, Disabled, Homeless






Table C-1. Housing Acronyms
CBO Congressional Budget Office
CDBG Community Development Block Grants
FHA Federal Housing Administration
FHFA Federal Housing Finance Agency
FHFB Federal Housing Finance Board
FHLB Federal Home Loan Bank
GSE Government-sponsored Enterprises
HECM Home Equity Conversion Mortgage
HUD Department of Housing and Urban Development
LIHTC Low Income Housing Tax Credit
MMI Mutual Mortgage Insurance
OFHEO Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight
PHA Public Housing Authority
SEC Securities and Exchange Commission
TILA Truth in Lending Act
VA Department of Veterans Affairs





N. Eric Weiss, Coordinator Mark Jickling
Specialist in Financial Economics Specialist in Financial Economics
eweiss@crs.loc.gov, 7-6209 mjickling@crs.loc.gov, 7-7784
Eugene Boyd Mark P. Keightley
Analyst in Federalism and Economic Development Analyst in Public Finance
Policy mkeightley@crs.loc.gov, 7-1049
eboyd@crs.loc.gov, 7-8689
Darryl E. Getter Edward V. Murphy
Specialist in Financial Economics Specialist in Financial Economics
dgetter@crs.loc.gov, 7-2834 tmurphy@crs.loc.gov, 7-6201
Oscar R. Gonzales Bruce E. Foote
Analyst in Economic Development Policy Analyst in Housing
ogonzales@crs.loc.gov, 7-0764 bfoote@crs.loc.gov, 7-7805