Proposition 123 Implementation
Several hundred million dollars for affordable housing will become available in the second half of 2023 due to the enactment of Proposition 123 by Colorado’s voters in 2022. This funding will be overseen by the Department of Local Affairs and the Governor's Office of Economic Development and International Trade, and may be granted or loaned to the following types of organizations:
- Non-profits
- Community land trusts
- Private entities
- Local governments
Organizations are only eligible for this funding if their project or program take place in municipalities, counties, or tribes that have committed to increasing their affordable housing stock above a baseline amount; jurisdictions that have accepted commitment filings. Stakeholders should regularly visit this site to find explanatory articles and resources, and to offer feedback that shapes future materials, policies, and procedures relating to affordable housing commitments, and funding programs overseen by the Department of Local Affairs.
Several hundred million dollars for affordable housing will become available in the second half of 2023 due to the enactment of Proposition 123 by Colorado’s voters in 2022. This funding will be overseen by the Department of Local Affairs and the Governor's Office of Economic Development and International Trade, and may be granted or loaned to the following types of organizations:
- Non-profits
- Community land trusts
- Private entities
- Local governments
Organizations are only eligible for this funding if their project or program take place in municipalities, counties, or tribes that have committed to increasing their affordable housing stock above a baseline amount; jurisdictions that have accepted commitment filings. Stakeholders should regularly visit this site to find explanatory articles and resources, and to offer feedback that shapes future materials, policies, and procedures relating to affordable housing commitments, and funding programs overseen by the Department of Local Affairs.
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Proposition 123 Website Launch
Share Proposition 123 Website Launch on Facebook Share Proposition 123 Website Launch on Twitter Share Proposition 123 Website Launch on Linkedin Email Proposition 123 Website Launch linkDOH is excited to announce the launch of the new Proposition 123 website! This platform is designed to provide you with the most up to date essential information about Proposition 123 – funding opportunities, compliance guidelines, and much more. Our goal is to make navigating Proposition 123 details as clear and user-friendly as possible.
We invite you to explore the site and share any feedback you may have to help us improve the experience. Please note, the Engage DOLA website for Proposition 123 will no longer be updated as of November 15, 2024.
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$2.6 Million Awarded to Support Affordable Housing Planning Efforts by Local Governments
Share $2.6 Million Awarded to Support Affordable Housing Planning Efforts by Local Governments on Facebook Share $2.6 Million Awarded to Support Affordable Housing Planning Efforts by Local Governments on Twitter Share $2.6 Million Awarded to Support Affordable Housing Planning Efforts by Local Governments on Linkedin Email $2.6 Million Awarded to Support Affordable Housing Planning Efforts by Local Governments linkThe Division of Local Governments has awarded $2.6 million in grant awards to 17 projects in the third round of Local Planning Capacity grants, with funding from DOLA’s Affordable Housing Support Fund. View a list of awardees, map and project descriptions.
The next funding cycle will be open February 14 - March 14, 2025 with an informational webinar for prospective applicants scheduled on Thursday, January 9, 2025 from 11:00 - 12:30. Interested applicants are encouraged to register for the webinar. All applicants must also schedule a pre-application meeting with the LPC Program Manager Robyn DiFalco in order to access the grant application online. The purpose of this meeting is to get feedback on the proposed project and technical assistance before submitting an application.
Grant application materials are available on the LPC program website.
Local Planning Capacity grants support local government efforts to implement systems that fast track or expedite the development review process for affordable housing. These funds can also support local government capacity to achieve local affordable housing goals and local governments’ Prop 123 commitments. Many grantees are exploring land use code amendments, implementing process improvements to streamline the development review process, or investing in permitting software as part of their strategy. Others will use grant funds to inventory potential properties for future affordable housing projects, designate a liaison to work with developers, implement a housing action plan, incentive programs for affordable housing, or efforts to achieve Prop 123 goals such as preservation of mobile home parks.
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Petition by Summit County to Increase Income Limits for AHFF Programs
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Summit County has submitted a petition to change income limit eligibility standards to the Division of Housing within the Department of Local Affairs to use different percentages of median income than those percentages specified in statute for the Land Banking Program, Affordable Housing Equity Program, and Concessionary Debt Program. These programs are administered by the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority and overseen by the Governor’s Office of Economic Development and International Trade. Though the Division is not responsible for these programs, it is charged by statute (C.R.S. 29-32-105.5 (2)) to review petitions by localities that eligible projects within them be subjected to different income limits from those explicated in statute.
Scope of Petition
The petitioner has requested an increase of income limits for projects sited in Summit County receiving funds through the Land Banking Program, Affordable Housing Equity Program, and Concessionary Debt Program to 100% of Area Median Income (AMI), either on a per-unit basis or on average for all units in a project as allowable by statute. If approved, the petition will remain in effect from its approval date through December 31, 2026.
Current Area Median Income limits for these programs are as follows:
- Land Banking Program - 60% max AMI for Rental, 100% max AMI for Homeownership
- Affordable Housing Equity Program - 90% average AMI or below
- Concessionary Debt Programs - 60% AMI at or below or 60% max for rental
Process
The Division of Housing must follow the following process required by statute (C.R.S. 29-32-105.5 (5)):
The Division may approve the petition to use different percentages of area median income, but only if:
- The submitted housing needs assessment:
- Is published by the state or is a local housing needs assessment that utilizes data from the state demographer or other publicly accessible sources, which in either case may be supported by other relevant and verifiable community data;
- Has been completed within the past three years of the petition date; and
- Is accompanied by a narrative description of why other funding sources cannot be utilized, are not sufficient, or are not accessible to meet the housing needs described within the petition; and
- The Division determines that the current eligibility standards would cause implementation of this article in a manner inconsistent with demonstrated housing and workforce needs within the jurisdiction, taking into consideration regional workforce commuting trends.
In the event that the petition is approved, the new income limits will be based on the average needs identified in the housing needs assessment (C.R.S. 29-32-105.5 (6)), and public comments will be considered in the review of the petition (C.R.S. 29-32-105.5 (4)). No recommendation will be made on approval or denial of the petition until the public comment period is complete and the comments are considered in the recommendation. If Division of Housing staff recommend the denial of the petition, then the petitioner may appeal the staff recommendation to the Division Director of the Division of Housing.
Implications
If the petition is approved then eligible affordable housing projects can make units available to households with higher incomes than would otherwise be possible.
If the petition is denied, then affordable housing projects currently under consideration may become financially infeasible in the event that they require higher revenues generated by higher income households. If demand for affordable housing is still present at lower income levels, they may be unable to afford the higher rents of these higher income units, potentially making less affordable housing units available for lower income households than would otherwise be required.
Basis of Petition
A housing needs assessment of the Summit County, produced in 2023. In describing why other funding sources cannot be utilized, are not sufficient, or are not accessible to meet the housing needs described within the petition, the petitioner wrote:
Summit County is using other funding sources to finance the USFS Housing Project. The majority of the funds for the $100 million project come from tax exempt government bonds. However, the funds from the bond issuance are not sufficient to cover the significant cost of construction. In addition to the bond proceeds, and through the rigorous application and procurement process, the project was awarded the following grants and loans: • $5 million grant from the Transformational Affordable Housing Grant program • $2 million grant from the More Housing Now Grant program for infrastructure • $2 million grant from the Strong Communities Grant program for roundabout construction • $7 million subordinate loan from the CHFA MIAP program Lastly, Summit County is providing a $3 million subsidy to be delivered at closing, and the USFS provided the land through a ground lease in exchange for in-kind consideration as well as a $1 million upfront subsidy for pre-development expenses. The costs of construction of the project continue to escalate and interest rates remain high. Additional funding through the Prop 123 programs would help to ensure that Summit County can keep the AMIs at the 100% average, and not be forced to raise those to close the gap on the financing. For the future conversion of the hotel and the development of the Lake Hill neighborhood, partnerships will be sought, as well as various sources of funding, as there will not likely be enough funding to realize those projects without support.
Public Comments
Public comments will be accepted for 30 days, starting on the date that the Division of Housing posts notice that a petition has been filed on its website. The petition and relevant attachments will be included in the notice, and available at this petition to change income limit eligibility standards.
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Proposition 123 Commitment Filing Now Open (2-Year 6%)
Share Proposition 123 Commitment Filing Now Open (2-Year 6%) on Facebook Share Proposition 123 Commitment Filing Now Open (2-Year 6%) on Twitter Share Proposition 123 Commitment Filing Now Open (2-Year 6%) on Linkedin Email Proposition 123 Commitment Filing Now Open (2-Year 6%) linkThe State Division of Housing / Department of Local Affairs is excited to announce that the Proposition 123 commitment filings are now open. Municipalities, counties, and tribes may submit a commitment to annual increases in affordable housing using our online form.
Filing a commitment makes a local government or tribe, along with entities operating within their jurisdiction, eligible to apply for funding through the programs implemented by the Colorado Department of Local Affairs (DOLA), the Office of Economic Development & International Trade (OEDIT), and/or the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority (CHFA). Local governments, non-profits, community land trusts, private entities, and developers are only eligible for this funding if their project or program takes place in a municipality, county, or tribe that has successfully filed a commitment to increasing their affordable housing stock above a baseline amount.
Programs from the Office of Homeless Initiatives are the only programs that can award funding to jurisdictions, or entities operating within them, that do not require a commitment on file.
Local governments that made an accepted commitment in 2023, do not need to submit an additional commitment until 2026. A list of jurisdictions that have previously made commitments is available online.
Passed by Colorado voters in 2022, Proposition 123 created the State Affordable Housing Fund, dedicating 40% of funds to the Affordable Housing Support Fund administered by DOLA and 60% to the Affordable Housing Financing Fund overseen by OEDIT to fund housing programs.
The three Affordable Housing Support administered by DOLA are:
- Affordable Home Ownership - up to 50% of the Support Fund and administered by DOH
- $32 million in Year 1 and estimated to be $63.6 million in Year 2
- Program Servicing Persons Experiencing Homelessness - up to 45% of the Support Fund and administered by DOH
- $28.8 million in Year 1 and estimated to be $57.24 in Year 2
- Local Planning Capacity Development Program - up to 5% of the Support Fund and administered by the Division of Local Government (DLG)
- $3.2 million in Year 1 and estimated to be $6.36 million in Year 2
Due Date: November 1, 2024
DOH and its partners will be working with any interested local government to file its commitment no later than the deadline established in Proposition 123, which is November 1, 2024. Funding programs may be available sooner than the November 1st deadline, so DOH encourages local governments to commit as soon as possible.
Eligibility
If your jurisdiction previously filed a commitment for the 3-year (9%) cycle in 2023, a new commitment is not needed at this time. Only authorized officials of county and municipal governments and tribes, or persons acting on their behalf, may submit a filing.
Filing Process
Once an interested local government has determined its baseline amount of affordable housing units, it can then plan its commitment to increase that number by 3% each year for a 2-year period ending on December 31, 2026. The dissemination of baseline data for a local government’s consideration is the first step toward achieving this important goal. The Baseline Assistance Tool can be used by any interested stakeholder to develop a baseline amount of affordable housing, so that it can be incorporated into a commitment to annual increases in affordable housing. Local governments may submit a commitment using our online form.
Compliance
Proposition 123 requires a local government to file a commitment specifying how it will increase a combination of its newly constructed affordable housing units and its existing units converted to affordable housing over its determined baseline number of affordable housing units by 3% each year. DOH interprets this to mean that ultimately a demonstration of a 6% increase over the baseline at the end of the 2-year commitment period ending on December 31, 2026, satisfies this requirement even if a 3% increase may not be accounted for in a particular year during that time frame.
If a commitment is not filed by November 1, 2024, then a local government and any development project in its jurisdiction are ineligible to receive any funding established by Proposition 123 during the 2025 calendar year. If this is to occur, a local government may file a commitment by November 1, 2025, for a 1-year commitment to increase its affordable housing stock by a total of 3% by December 31, 2026.
If a local government is unable to meet its 6% total commitment by December 31, 2026, then it and any development project in its jurisdiction are ineligible to receive any funding established by Proposition 123 for calendar year 2027. The good news is it may file a new commitment by November 1, 2027, for a 2-year commitment to increase its affordable housing stock by a total of 6% by December 31, 2029.
Beginning on January 1, 2027, expedited review (fast-track) is required for projects with 50% or more affordable housing units, as per statute. Local governments will need to demonstrate they have implemented a system to expedite the development approval process for affordable housing projects when filing their Proposition 123 commitments by November 1, 2026.
Detailed guidance on the expedited review (fast-track) requirements is available to provide strategies and examples on how local governments can create an expedited review process that takes into account their unique local context. Grant funding is available to support local governments with the implementation process.
- Affordable Home Ownership - up to 50% of the Support Fund and administered by DOH
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Prop 123 Homeownership Funding for FY2025
Share Prop 123 Homeownership Funding for FY2025 on Facebook Share Prop 123 Homeownership Funding for FY2025 on Twitter Share Prop 123 Homeownership Funding for FY2025 on Linkedin Email Prop 123 Homeownership Funding for FY2025 linkDOLA’s Division of Housing (DOH) is committed to transparency and keeping you apprised of our progress as we implement Proposition 123. We’re pleased to announce the publication of the Proposition 123 Homeownership guidelines for New Construction/Acquisition Rehabilitation, Mobile Home Programs, Down Payment Assistance Programs (DPA), and Single Family Owner Occupied Rehab Programs (SFOO).
Key highlights include:
- Increase to $70,000 per unit cap for developing homes;
- Possibility of bonus funding for State’s priorities;
- Up to 10% for projects addressing transit-oriented development, density, energy efficiency, mixed-use, early childhood education, or inclusion of income restricted ADUs as wealth-building device
- Up to 10% for projects utilizing modular construction
- Max subsidy bonus: 20%
- Pre-development grants may be made up to $25,000 for local governments, small nonprofits and housing authorities.
- Up to 20% of the purchase price of down payment assistance may be provided.
- For fiscal year FY 24-25, $60 million will be available for homeownership projects and programs. DOH will initially prioritize $45 million for homeownership development and $15 million for programs (DPA, SFOO) throughout the fiscal year. This is more than five times the amount DOH invested in homeownership from last fiscal year, excluding one-time stimulus funds. It is also important to note that additional funds will be available, but the funds will be included in competitive rounds and the funding source is eligible for both homeownership and rental.
Division of Housing Application Due Dates and Funding Available
The calendar for the rest of FY 24-25 will be released no later than November 1, 2024; this will include funding for both rental and homeownership development projects.
Due Date: July 15, 2024
- Letters of Intents (LOIs) due for August 1 application cycle
Due Date: August 1, 2024
- Application Type: Homeownership Programs (DPA & SFOO)
- Funds Available: $10 million
- Source of Funds: State Prop 123 Homeownership funds
Due Date: August 15, 2024
- Letters of Intents (LOIs) due for September 1 application cycle
Due Date: September 1, 2024
- Application Type: Homeownership Development
- Funds Available: $10 million
- Source of Funds: State Prop 123 Homeownership funds
Funding amounts are subject to change, as Vendor Fee proceeds are impacted by sales tax proceeds. DOH will announce how much funding will be made available with each application upon publication of LOIs.
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Petition by Town of Fraser to Increase Income Limits for AHFF Programs
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The Town of Fraser has submitted a petition to the Division of Housing within the Department of Local Affairs to use different percentages of median income than those percentages specified in statute for the following programs: the Equity Program. These programs are administered by the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority and overseen by the Governor’s Office of Economic Development and International Trade. Though the Division is not responsible for these programs, it is charged by statute (C.R.S. 29-32-105.5 (2)) to review petitions by localities that eligible projects within them be subjected to different income limits from those explicated in statute.
Scope of Petition
The increase of income limits for projects sited in the Town of Fraser receiving funds through the Equity Program to 100% of Area Median Income (AMI), either on a per-unit basis or on average for all units in a project as allowable by statute. If approved, the petition will remain in effect from its approval date through December 31, 2026.
Current Area Median Income limits for these programs are as follows:
- Land Banking Program - 60% max AMI for Rental, 100% max AMI for Homeownership
- Affordable Housing Equity Program - 90% average AMI or below
- Concessionary Debt Programs - 60% average AMI or below
Process
The Division of Housing must follow the following process required by statute (C.R.S. 29-32-105.5 (5)):
The Division may approve the petition to use different percentages of area median income, but only if:
- The submitted housing needs assessment:
- Is published by the state or is a local housing needs assessment that utilizes data from the state demographer or other publicly accessible sources, which in either case may be supported by other relevant and verifiable community data;
- Has been completed within the past three years of the petition date; and
- Is accompanied by a narrative description of why other funding sources cannot be utilized, are not sufficient, or are not accessible to meet the housing needs described within the petition; and
- The Division determines that the current eligibility standards would cause implementation of this article in a manner inconsistent with demonstrated housing and workforce needs within the jurisdiction, taking into consideration regional workforce commuting trends.
In the event that the petition is approved, the new income limits will be based on the average needs identified in the housing needs assessment (C.R.S. 29-32-105.5 (6)), and public comments will be considered in the review of the petition (C.R.S. 29-32-105.5 (4)). No recommendation will be made on approval or denial of the petition until the public comment period is complete and the comments are considered in the recommendation. If Division of Housing staff recommend the denial of the petition, then the petitioner may appeal the staff recommendation to the Division Director of the Division of Housing.
Implications
If the petition is approved then eligible affordable housing projects can make units available to households with higher incomes than would otherwise be possible.
If the petition is denied, then affordable housing projects currently under consideration may become financially infeasible in the event that they require higher revenues generated by higher income households. If demand for affordable housing is still present at lower income levels, they may be unable to afford the higher rents of these higher income units, potentially making less affordable housing units available for lower income households than would otherwise be required.
Basis of Petition
A housing needs assessment of the Town of Fraser, produced in 2022. In describing why other funding sources cannot be utilized, are not sufficient, or are not accessible to meet the housing needs described within the petition, the petitioner wrote:
The cost of construction and current interest rates both remain high, raising the cost of affordable housing projects. We are accessing a wide range of funding to make this project feasible and to serve the demonstrated need in our community. The planned capitol stack and financing for the project includes Town funding, multiple grants, including Strong Communities and More Housing Now funding through DOLA, and an Operation Turnkey Grant through Colorado DOH used to purchase the land, bonds, LIHTC, CHFA sub debt, developer deferred equity, and DOH gap financing. Without closing the gap that currently exists in the proforma, which the Prop 123 equity funding would allow us to do, we may need to look at other options such as raising AMIs across the project in order to make the project pencil out.
Public Comments
Public comments will be accepted for 30 days, starting on the date that the Division of Housing posts notice that a petition has been filed on its website. The petition and relevant attachments will be included in the notice, and available at this link.
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Announcing Latest Awards and September Funding Cycle
Share Announcing Latest Awards and September Funding Cycle on Facebook Share Announcing Latest Awards and September Funding Cycle on Twitter Share Announcing Latest Awards and September Funding Cycle on Linkedin Email Announcing Latest Awards and September Funding Cycle linkDLG has awarded $1.7 million in its latest round of Local Planning Capacity grants, a new program established by Proposition 123, the State Affordable Housing Fund. These awards support local governments implementing Prop 123 goals including fast tracking review of affordable housing and achieving Prop 123 commitments. Review a list of awardees and project descriptions.
The next round of funding opens September 1 - 30, 2024 with $4.8 million available. An informational webinar for prospective applicants is scheduled for Wednesday, July 31 at 2:00 PM. All application materials are available on the website, and interested applicants will need to schedule a pre-application meeting with Program Manager Robyn DiFalco to discuss your proposed project.
In order to remain eligible for Prop 123, local governments must demonstrate they have implemented an expedited review process for affordable housing by the end of 2026. This LPC grant program provides funding to support local governments with implementation of this requirement and can also support local government capacity to achieve local affordable housing goals and Prop 123 commitments.
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Proposition 123 Equity Awards Announced
Share Proposition 123 Equity Awards Announced on Facebook Share Proposition 123 Equity Awards Announced on Twitter Share Proposition 123 Equity Awards Announced on Linkedin Email Proposition 123 Equity Awards Announced linkToday, Gov. Jared Polis, the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade (OEDIT), and the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority (CHFA) announced the preliminary selection of the first six recipients of the voter-approved Proposition 123 Equity program. These funds will provide investment capital for low- and middle-income multifamily affordable rental housing projects, supporting the creation of an estimated 628 affordable housing units.
“We need more housing now, and the recipients announced today will help create 628 affordable housing units so more Coloradans can live where they want Today, Gov. Jared Polis, the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade (OEDIT), and the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority (CHFA) announced the preliminary selection of the first six recipients of the voter-approved Proposition 123 Equity program. These funds will provide investment capital for low- and middle-income multifamily affordable rental housing projects, supporting the creation of an estimated 628 affordable housing units.
For complete details, refer to the press release.
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New Guidance on Proposition 123 Fast Track Requirement Available Online
Share New Guidance on Proposition 123 Fast Track Requirement Available Online on Facebook Share New Guidance on Proposition 123 Fast Track Requirement Available Online on Twitter Share New Guidance on Proposition 123 Fast Track Requirement Available Online on Linkedin Email New Guidance on Proposition 123 Fast Track Requirement Available Online linkThe Department of Local Affairs has posted detailed guidance on the Proposition 123 expedited review (fast-track) requirements. These are provided to help local governments (municipalities, counties, and tribal governments) navigate the requirements.
Local governments that file a commitment by November 1, 2026 for the next funding cycle (2027-2029), must demonstrate they have implemented an expedited review process for housing projects where at least half of the units are affordable.
This guidance is intended to provide strategies and examples on how local governments can create an expedited review process that takes into account their unique local context.
Join Webinars
To learn more, you can also join upcoming webinars about the requirement.
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Proposition 123 Homeownership Forum Recap; Survey Still Open
Share Proposition 123 Homeownership Forum Recap; Survey Still Open on Facebook Share Proposition 123 Homeownership Forum Recap; Survey Still Open on Twitter Share Proposition 123 Homeownership Forum Recap; Survey Still Open on Linkedin Email Proposition 123 Homeownership Forum Recap; Survey Still Open linkCLOSED: This discussion has concluded.The Division of Housing was grateful to have about 60 community partners attend our Proposition 123 homeownership feedback forum on April 17.
Throughout the forum, stakeholders added helpful questions and insights about the proposed allocation and distribution of Proposition 123 funding to address homeownership, outlined in these four documents:
- Down Payment Assistance (DPA)
- New Construction and Acquisition Rehabilitation
- Mobile Home Programs
- Single Family Owner-Occupied (SFOO) Rehabilitation
You can review the session slides and session recording.
Feedback
You can submit additional feedback or ideas by taking the feedback survey, which will be open through April 26.
Custom
Commitment Filings
FAQs
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Baseline Amount of Affordable Housing
- What resources are available to determine a baseline?
- Should an affordable housing baseline include housing units that are not subsidized?
- Can an alternative source of data be used to develop a baseline such as data from a multiple listings service, rental listings, newspaper classifieds, local inventory of subsidized housing, or similar source?
- What factors should a local government consider in developing a baseline?
- Should a baseline only contain units at that can be rented or sold now?
- Why does a city or county have baseline reference estimates that differ, even if they are for a single jurisdiction?
- How accurate should a baseline amount of affordable housing be?
- Can a baseline be determined without the resources provided by the state?
- How should an inflation rate be selected in the Baseline Assistance Tool?
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Compliance
- What negative consequences will be faced by local governments and tribes that do not accomplish their goal to increase affordable housing?
- Does a grant or loan have to be repaid if a local government or tribe does not achieve its goal to increase affordable housing?
- Will an entity become ineligible for other state and federal funds if the local government it is operating within does not achieve its goal to increase affordable housing?
- When are affordable housing units counted towards an increase in affordable housing?
- Can a commitment cite the Local Government Affordable Housing Baseline Reference Data Table instead of the Baseline Assistance Tool?
- Does assistance for people experiencing homelessness count towards increases in affordable housing for localities and tribes?
- What units can a locality or tribe take credit for when calculating its annual increases in affordable housing?
- Can a jurisdiction take credit for affordable units that are permitted before their commitment is accepted?
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Funding and Programs
- What funding will a local government or tribe receive once a commitment has been filed?
- What programs are local governments, tribes, non-profit organizations, and private entities eligible for if a local government or tribe does not file a commitment to increase affordable housing?
- Can the affordable housing funding programs created by Proposition 123 serve households that have an income above of the limits described by the Division of Housing?
- Where can entities apply for funding from Proposition 123?
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Opting-in/Filing a Commitment
- What does filing a commitment mean?
- Does a city council member, city manager, county commissioner, department executive, or other role need to sign or submit a commitment filing for it to be accepted?
- How can a local government or tribe opt-in or make a commitment filing?
- Can a local government or tribe use different income limits for the purpose of baseline determination and compliance?
- Can a county file a commitment for all, or some, of its municipalities?
- Rural Resort Petition Process
Project Documents
Project Timeline
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July Through September 2023
Proposition 123 Implementation has finished this stageFunding Availability: Proposition 123 Funds Transferred to Executive Branch Administrators
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November 2023
Proposition 123 Implementation is currently at this stageDeadline: On-Time Local Government Affordable Housing Commitment Filings
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November 2024
this is an upcoming stage for Proposition 123 ImplementationDeadline: Late Local Government Affordable Housing Commitment Filings, Eligibility Starting 2025
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November 2025
this is an upcoming stage for Proposition 123 ImplementationDeadline: Late Local Government Affordable Housing Commitment Filings, Eligibility Starting 2025
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November 2026
this is an upcoming stage for Proposition 123 ImplementationDeadline: On-Time Local Government Affordable Housing Commitment Filings, Cycle 2
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January 2027
this is an upcoming stage for Proposition 123 ImplementationDeadline: Compliance with fast-track approval and annual increases in affordable housing
Key Dates
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July 01 → September 30 2023