1 2 Councilmember Robert C. White, Jr. 3 4 5 6 A BILL 7 __________ 8 9 IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 10 ____________________ 11 12 To amend, on an emergency basis, due to congressional review, the District of Columbia 13 Housing Authority Act of 1999 to require the District of Columbia Housing Authority to 14 report certain financial and operating information, revise the training requirements for 15 commissioners, and establish training requirements for the executive director; and to 16 amend chapter 39 of Title 28 of the District of Columbia Official Code to confirm the 17 applicability of landlord-tenant consumer protections to the District of Columbia Housing 18 Authority. 19 20 BE IT ENACTED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this 21 Act may be cited as the “Housing Authority Accountability Congressional Review Emergency 22 Amendment Act of 2023”. 23 Sec. 2. The District of Columbia Housing Authority Act of 1999, effective May 9, 2000 24 (D.C. Law 13-105; D.C. Official Code § 6-201 et seq. ), is amended as follows: 25 (a) Section 3 (D.C. Official Code § 6-202) is amended by adding a new subsection (b-1) 26 to read as follows: 27 “(b-1)(1) No later than December 1, 2022, the Authority shall submit a report to the 28 Mayor, Attorney General, and each Councilmember that details: 29 “(A) The sum of all requested repayment amounts HUD has requested; 30 “(B) The sources of the funds the Authority intends to use in making the 31 repayments referenced in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph; 32 “(C) The total amount of security deposit interest owed to residents who 33 have moved out of Housing Properties in the 3 years preceding December 1, 2022; 34 “(D) The total amount of overcharging and undercharging rent and 35 housing assistance payments identified through HUD’s required review of tenant files and the 36 percentage of tenant files reviewed or corrected; and 37 “(E) A date certain by which the Authority will deliver a protocol for 38 assessing properties for rent reasonableness, as required by the HUD rules. 39 “(2)(A) Beginning on December 1, 2022, and monthly thereafter, the Authority 40 shall submit a report to the Mayor, Attorney General, and each Councilmember that details: 41 “(i) The amount of operating reserves, expressed in dollars and in 42 months of expenses, for its public housing program, Housing Choice Voucher Program, and the 43 Authority’s operations overall; 44 “(ii) The number of vacant public housing units classified by repair 45 status, such as move-in ready, repairs in progress, and offline due to major repair needs; 46 “(iii) The average length of time that Public-Housing- Assisted 47 Units have been vacant in the prior year, by repair status; and 48 “(iv) A detailed accounting of expenses paid for with District funds 49 in the prior month and the expenses budgeted for payment with District funds in the remainder of 50 the fiscal year. 51 “(B) In lieu of the monthly reports required by subparagraph (A) of this 52 paragraph (“reports”), the Authority may provide the Mayor, Attorney General, and each 53 Councilmember with access to an online database through which the reports can be generated. 54 “(3) If HUD designates the Authority as a Standard Performer or High Performer 55 in HUD’s Public Housing Assessment System or if the Authority demonstrates that the lack of 56 such a designation is solely due to the presence of HUD's Moving to Work agreement with the 57 Authority, the requirements of paragraph (2) of this subsection shall be waived for 12 months 58 from the date the designation was received from HUD or documented by the Authority.”. 59 (b) Section 12 (D.C. Official Code § 6- 211) is amended as follows: 60 (1) Subsection (h) is amended to read as follows: 61 “(h)(1) Within 60 days after a Commissioner's appointment and on an annual basis 62 thereafter, each Commissioner shall complete training offered by or in connection with HUD 63 covering the following topics: 64 “(A) The role of a public housing agency board; 65 “(B) Ethics for public housing agencies and board members or 66 commissioners; 67 “(C) Background on major housing authority programs, including public 68 housing, the Housing Choice Voucher Program, and the rental assistance demonstration; 69 “(D) Fair housing and reasonable accommodations; 70 “(E) Public housing authority budgets, financial oversight, and financial 71 reporting; and 72 “(F) Federal procurement requirements. 73 “(2) Within 90 days after a Commissioner’s appointment and on an annual basis 74 thereafter, each Commissioner shall complete training offered by or in connection with HUD 75 covering the following topics: 76 “(A) Public housing authority performance monitoring and risk 77 management; 78 “(B) HUD reporting requirements; 79 “(C) Public housing asset management, development, redevelopment, 80 disposition, and repositioning; 81 “(D) Objectives and requirements of HUD’s Moving to Work program; 82 and 83 “(E) Resident opportunity, including HUD’s Section 3 requirements for 84 economic and employment opportunities. 85 “(3) In addition to the training required in paragraphs (1) and (2) of this 86 subsection, each Commissioner shall spend at least 4 hours per quarter in training or educational 87 seminars on corporate governance, public housing law and regulations, federal or local language 88 access guidelines, labor and personnel, real estate and construction, or other subjects related to 89 public housing development, operation, and management, the maximum reimbursable cost of 90 which shall be established by the Board and paid by the Authority. 91 “(4) A Commissioner appointed or re-appointed before October 15, 2022, shall 92 complete training on federal procurement requirements within 30 days after the effective date of 93 the Housing Authority Accountability Emergency Amendment Act of 2022, passed on 94 emergency basis on October 18, 2022 (D.C. Act 24-629; 69 DCR 14026) (“Accountability Act”), 95 the remainder of the trainings required in paragraph (1) of this subsection within 60 days after 96 the effective date of the Accountability Act, and the trainings required in paragraph (2) of this 97 subsection within 90 days after the effective date of the Accountability Act. 98 “(5) The Board shall monitor Commissioners’ compliance with the training 99 requirements of this subsection and provide a Commissioner a warning notice if the 100 Commissioner is out of compliance with the requirements. 101 “(6) If a Commissioner has not completed the training requirements within 15 102 days after the conclusion of the timeline specified in the applicable paragraph in this subsection, 103 he or she shall be suspended from the Board until he or she is in compliance.”. 104 (c) Section 14 (D.C. Official Code § 6-213) is amended by adding a new subsection (d) to 105 read as follows: 106 “(d)(1) Within 30 days after the Executive Director's appointment and on an annual basis 107 thereafter, the Executive Director shall complete training offered by or in connection with HUD 108 covering the following topics: 109 “(A) Background on major housing authority programs, including public 110 housing, the Housing Choice Voucher Program, and the rental assistance demonstration; 111 “(B) Ethics for public housing agencies; 112 “(C) Fair housing and reasonable accommodations; 113 “(D) Housing authority budgets and financial reporting: 114 “(E) Federal procurement requirements; 115 “(F) Housing authority performance monitoring and risk management; 116 “(G) HUD reporting requirements; 117 “(H) Public housing asset management, development, redevelopment, 118 disposition, and repositioning; 119 “(I) Objectives and requirements of HUD’s Moving to Work program; and 120 “(J) Resident opportunity, including HUD’s Section 3 requirements for 121 economic and employment opportunities. 122 “(2) In addition to the training in paragraph (1) of this subsection, the Executive 123 Director shall complete other trainings that the Board requires, such as labor and personnel 124 management, language access, public housing law and regulations, real estate and construction, 125 or other subjects related to public housing development, operation, and management. 126 “(3) An Executive Director appointed or re-appointed before October 15, 2022, 127 shall complete the trainings required in paragraph (1) within 30 days after the effective date of 128 the Housing Authority Accountability Emergency Amendment Act of 2022, passed on 129 emergency basis on October 18, 2022 (D.C. Act 24-629; 69 DCR 14026).”. 130 Sec. 3. Section 28- 3901 of the District of Columbia Official Code is amended by adding 131 a new subsection (e) to read as follows: 132 “(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, this chapter’s application to 133 landlord-tenant relations shall include the District of Columbia Housing Authority's activities as 134 a landlord; provided, that this subsection shall not be construed to otherwise apply this chapter to 135 the District of Columbia or any agency thereof.”. 136 Sec. 4. Applicability. 137 (a) Section 2 shall apply as of February 1, 2023. 138 (b) Section 3 shall apply as of December 19, 2016. 139 Sec. 5. Fiscal impact statement. 140 The Council adopts the fiscal impact statement of the Budget Director as the fiscal impact 141 statement required by section 4aof the General Legislative Procedures Act of 1975, approved 142 October 16, 2006 (120 Stat. 2038; D.C. Official Code § 1- 301.47a). 143 Sec. 6. Effective date. 144 This act shall take effect following approval by the Mayor (or, in the event of veto by the 145 Mayor, action by the Council to override the veto) and shall remain in effect for no longer than 146 90 days, as provided for emergency acts of the Council of the District of Columbia in section 147 412(a) of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, approved December 24, 1973 (87 Stat. 788; 148 D.C. Official Code § 1- 204.12(a)). 149