SESSION OF
2001
SUPPLEMENTAL NOTE ON
HOUSE BILL NO. 2205
As Amended by House Committee on
New
Economy
Brief
(1)
HB 2205 would create the Kansas
Housing Development Corporation (KHDC) which would function as a
quasi-governmental housing finance agency. In addition, the KHDC
would administer the housing programs currently administered by the
Housing Division of the Department of Commerce and Housing (KDOCH).
The KHDC would assume all the duties and functions of the Housing
Division.
Purpose of the
Bill
The stated purpose of the bill is
to ensure that as businesses locate in Kansas and as existing
businesses continue to expand, to provide a sufficient supply of
adequate, safe, and sanitary residential housing in all geographic
locations within the state and to assist Kansas families of low,
very low, and moderate income in obtaining such housing.
Corporate
Structure
KHDC would have a seven-member
Board of Directors which would be appointed by the Governor with
the approval of the Senate. The Board would conduct a national
search to select a president. The president, who would not be a
Board member, would manage the operations of the
corporation.
Corporate
Powers
The corporation's responsibilities
would include administering the state housing program in accordance
with the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
and assisting in the development of affordable and accessible
housing in Kansas.
The bill sets out a variety of
powers and responsibilities to be conferred on KHDC relating to the
administration of the corporation and the corporation's housing
finance functions. Included in these enumerated powers are the
powers currently given to KDOCH relative to that agency's housing
functions as well as the power to:
- Make, amend, and repeal bylaws,
rules and regulations for the management of its
affairs.
- Sue and be sued.
- Make contracts and execute all
instruments necessary or convenient for carrying out its
business.
- Acquire, own, hold, dispose of,
and encumber real or personal property of any nature, both tangible
and intangible.
- Enter into agreements or other
transactions with any federal, state, county, or municipal agency
and with any individual, corporation, enterprise, association, or
any other entity involving housing development.
- Acquire real property or an
interest in real property, by purchase or foreclosure, where such
acquisition is necessary or appropriate to protect or secure any
investment or loan in which the corporation has an
interest.
- Sell, transfer, and convey real
property or an interest in real property to a buyer, or to lease
the property to a tenant in the event that sale, transfer, or
conveyance cannot be done with reasonable promptness or at a
reasonable price.
- Invest certain funds appropriated
by the state in investments that are lawful for fiduciaries in this
state, and invest funds received from gifts, grants, donations, and
other operations of the corporation in investments which would be
lawful for a private corporation having purposes similar to the
corporation.
- Borrow money to issue negotiable
bonds or notes as evidence of any such borrowing and to secure such
bonds or notes by the pledge of revenues, mortgages, or notes of
others.
- Appoint officers, consultants,
agents, and advisors, and prescribe their duties and
compensation.
- Appear in its own behalf before
boards, commissions, departments or other agencies of municipal,
county, state, or federal government.
- Procure insurance as may be
necessary to protect it against loss or liability.
- Accept any and all donations,
grants, bequests, and devises; accept moneys which are appropriated
by the Legislature for effectuating its corporate
purposes.
- Trade, buy, or sell qualified
securities.
- Make or participate in the making
of uninsured or federally insured construction loans to approved
mortgagors of residential housing for occupancy by persons and
families of low, very low, or moderate income or occupancy by
persons and families of any income level in distressed communities
as defined by the act; however, first priority mortgages for
single-family dwellings would not be permitted.
- Purchase or participate in the
purchase of uninsured, partially insured, or fully insured loans;
however, first priority mortgages for single-family dwellings would
not be permitted.
- Adopt bylaws for the regulation of
its affairs and the conduct of its business and define the terms
"low income," "very low income," and "moderate income" to conform
to federal guidelines.
- Make and execute contracts,
releases, compromises, and other instruments necessary or
convenient for the exercise of its powers, or to carry out its
purposes.
- Collect reasonable fees and
charges in connection with servicing its loans, notes, bonds,
obligations, commitments, and other evidences of indebtedness, and
in connection with providing technical, consultative and project
assistant services. These fees and charges would be limited to the
amounts required to pay the costs of the corporation, including
operating and administrative expenses, and reasonable allowances
for losses which may be incurred.
- Consent, when considered necessary
or desirable to the modification of financial terms governing loans
or contracts to which the corporation is a party.
- Issue renewal notes, to issue
bonds to pay notes, and whenever it deems refunding expedient, to
refund any bonds by the issuance of new bonds, whether the bonds to
be refunded have or have not matured.
- Apply the proceeds from the sale
of renewal notes or refunding bonds to the purchase, redemption, or
payment of the notes or bonds to be refunded.
- Provide technical services to
assist in the planning, processing, or rehabilitation of
residential housing for occupancy by qualified persons and
families.
- Provide consultative project
assistance services for residential housing and land development
for such housing to be occupied by persons and families of low and
moderate income or persons and families of any income level in
distressed communities. This assistance would include management,
training, and social services.
- Promote research and development
in scientific methods of constructing low cost residential housing
of high durability.
- Make, purchase, or participate in
the purchase of uninsured, partially insured, or fully insured
loans and home improvement loans to finance the weatherization of
single and multifamily dwellings, and issue its negotiable bonds or
notes for such purpose.
- Create a housing equity fund for
the purpose of purchasing low-income housing tax
credits.
- Exercise any other powers
necessary for the operation and functioning of the corporation
within the purposes authorized in this act.
Private Activity Bond
Allocation Authority
The corporation would be authorized
to issue qualified private activity bonds to the extent authorized
in other sections of the bill and to the extent that the
corporation is allocated a portion of the state ceiling ($225.5
million beginning in calendar year 2002) to that end.
Corporate
Prohibitions
The bill also sets out a variety of
activities in which the corporation would be prohibited from
engaging. The corporation would not be authorized to:
- Originate single family home
loans, except as specifically provided in this act.
- Purchase or participate in the
purchase of single-family home loans or make, purchase, or
participate in the purchase of home-improvement loans when the
mortgagor or borrower does not meet the definition of low-income,
very-low income, or moderate income.
- Originate multifamily first
mortgages, except when no other lender will provide financing as
evidenced by the submission of letters of denial by two financial
institutions.
- Participate in lending activities
for nonresidential purposes.
- Own real property for long periods
of time; such property that has been acquired for the purpose of
debt restructuring or otherwise providing financial stability
should be returned to private ownership within 18 months or as
quickly thereafter as possible.
- Participate in any housing related
function in a community which has not conducted a housing need
study.
- Participate in housing
construction as a general contractor or subcontractor.
- Participate in any housing
function which can be handled economically or efficiently by
private industry.
Corporate
Exemptions
Under the bill, the corporation
would be exempt from all franchise, corporate business, and income
taxes levied by the state. The corporation would also be exempt
from purchasing laws governing state agencies.
Background
The House Committee held a hearing on HB 2205, at
which time a number of conferees offered testimony regarding the
bill. The House Committee amended the bill to update implementation
dates contained in the bill as recommended by the Revisor of
Statutes.
The topic of housing as it relates
to economic development was studied by the Joint Committee on
Economic Development during the 1999 Interim. HB 2971 of 2000 was
patterned after one of the recommendations in the Governor's
Commission on Housing report from December, 1999. HB 2205 is
identical to Substitute for HB 2971, as amended by the House
Committee of the Whole, with the exception of the updated
implementation dates. Substitute for HB 2971 died in the Senate
Commerce Committee at the end of the 2000 Session.
The Budget Division reports that
HB 2205 would result in no fiscal impact to the state because
KDOCH's budget would be reduced by the same amount that would be
budgeted for the new corporation.
1. *Supplemental notes are prepared
by the Legislative Research Department and do not express
legislative intent. The supplemental note and fiscal note for this
bill may be accessed on the Internet at http://www.ink.org/public/legislative/fulltext.cgi