The Spring Street Brief

The Trump administration's effort to eliminate HUD's Restore-Rebuild initiative is now a national story, following a Politico report that highlights the program's cancellation and its cascading effects on public housing authorities and affordable housing developers. The San Diego Housing Commission is walking back plans for 700 units; the Council of Large Public Housing Authorities says the move contradicts HUD's stated mission. For LIHTC investors, developers, and lenders with Restore-Rebuild exposure in their pipelines, the implications are immediate and concrete.

Show Notes

The Trump administration's effort to eliminate HUD's Restore-Rebuild initiative is now a national story, following a Politico report that highlights the program's cancellation and its cascading effects on public housing authorities and affordable housing developers. The San Diego Housing Commission is walking back plans for 700 units; the Council of Large Public Housing Authorities says the move contradicts HUD's stated mission. For LIHTC investors, developers, and lenders with Restore-Rebuild exposure in their pipelines, the implications are immediate and concrete.

Key Takeaways:

  • The Trump administration is moving to shut down HUD's Restore-Rebuild initiative, drawing national coverage from Politico.
  • The San Diego Housing Commission is walking back plans to build 700 new affordable units that were structured around Restore-Rebuild funding.
  • CLPHA CEO La Shelle Dozier called the move a direct contradiction of HUD's stated goal to expand affordable housing supply.
  • Restore-Rebuild was one of the few remaining federal tools capable of delivering deep affordability layering in markets where 9% credits alone cannot close the financing gap.
  • NH&RA led a letter-signing effort to HUD as recently as June 24 urging reconsideration — a sign that organized industry advocacy is underway but has not reversed course.
  • Deals with Restore-Rebuild assumptions in their financing stacks face repricing, restructuring, or collapse without a replacement mechanism.
  • State HFAs may face pressure to respond through QAP incentives or state-funded bridge programs as the federal gap widens.

With the fiscal year-end approaching and congressional appropriators still engaged on housing funding, there is a narrow window for legislative intervention. Developers and PHAs with active Restore-Rebuild pipelines should begin stress-testing their financing structures now and engaging state HFAs about potential gap-filling strategies. The program's elimination is not yet finalized in statute, but the administrative intent is clear — waiting is not a strategy.

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