The Township of Harmony shall comply with the following monitoring
and reporting requirements regarding the status of the implementation
of its Housing Element and Fair Share Plan:
A. Beginning on July 1, 2020, and
on every anniversary of that date through July 1, 2025, the Township
shall provide annual reporting of its Affordable Housing Trust Fund
activity to the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs, Council
on Affordable Housing, or Local Government Services, or other entity
designated by the State of New Jersey, with a copy provided to Fair
Share Housing Center (FSHC) and posted on the municipal website, using
forms developed for this purpose by the New Jersey Department of Community
Affairs (NJDCA), Council on Affordable Housing (COAH), or Local Government
Services (NJLGS). The reporting shall include an accounting of all
Affordable Housing Trust Fund activity, including the source and amount
of funds collected and the amount and purpose for which any funds
have been expended.
B. Beginning on July 1, 2020, and
on every anniversary of that date through July 1, 2025, the Township
shall provide annual reporting of the status of all affordable housing
activity within the municipality through posting on the municipal
website with a copy of such posting provided to FSHC, using forms
previously developed for this purpose by COAH or any other forms endorsed
by the Special Master and FSHC.
C. By July 1, 2020, as required
pursuant to N.J.S.A. 52:27D-313, the Township will post on its municipal
website, with a copy provided to FSHC, a status report as to its implementation
of its Plan and an analysis of whether any unbuilt sites or unfulfilled
mechanisms continue to present a realistic opportunity and whether
any mechanisms to meet unmet need should be revised or supplemented.
Such posting shall invite any interested party to submit comments
to the municipality, with a copy to FSHC, regarding whether any sites
no longer present a realistic opportunity and should be replaced and
whether any mechanisms to meet unmet need should be revised or supplemented.
Any interested party may by motion request a hearing before the Court
regarding these issues.
D. By July 1, 2020, and every third
year thereafter, as required by N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.1, the Township
will post on its municipal website, with a copy provided to FSHC,
a status report as to its satisfaction of its very-low-income requirements,
including its family very-low-income requirements. Such posting shall
invite any interested party to submit comments to the municipality
and FSHC on the issue of whether the municipality has complied with
its very-low-income and family very-low-income housing obligations.
In inclusionary developments, the following schedule for the
issuance of certificates of occupancy for the required affordable
housing units relative to the issuance of certificates of occupancy
for the permitted market units shall be as follows:
Maximum Percentage of Market-Rate Units Completed (COs Issued)
|
Minimum Percentage of Low- and Moderate-Income Units Completed
(COs Issued)
|
---|
25%
|
0%
|
25% + 1
|
10%
|
50%
|
50%
|
75%
|
75%
|
90%
|
100%
|
In referring certified households to specific restricted units,
the Administrative Agent shall, to the extent feasible and without
causing an undue delay in the occupancy of a unit, strive to:
A. Provide an occupant for each
bedroom;
B. Provide children of different
sexes with separate bedrooms;
C. Provide separate bedrooms for
parents and children; and
D. Prevent more than two persons
from occupying a single bedroom.
Price restrictions for restricted ownership units shall be in
accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1, as may be amended and supplemented,
including:
A. The initial purchase price for
a restricted ownership unit shall be approved by the Administrative
Agent.
B. The Administrative Agent shall
approve all resale prices, in writing and in advance of the resale,
to assure compliance with the foregoing standards.
C. The master deeds of inclusionary
developments shall provide no distinction between the condominium
or homeowner association fees and special assessments paid by very-low-,
low- and moderate-income purchasers and those paid by market purchasers.
D. The owners of restricted ownership units may apply to the Administrative Agent to increase the maximum sales price for the unit on the basis of approved capital improvements. Eligible capital improvements shall be those that render the unit suitable for a larger household or the addition of a bathroom. See §
120-22, Capital improvements to ownership units.
All 100% affordable projects, including projects funded through
low-income housing tax credits, shall comply with the Uniform Housing
Affordability Controls, N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1 et seq., except as modified
by the terms of the settlement agreement executed between the Township
of Harmony and Fair Share Housing Center (FSHC), as such settlement
agreement may be further amended and supplemented. All such projects
shall be required to have an initial thirty-year affordability control
period plus a fifteen-year extended use period.
An Administrative Agent may either be an independent entity
serving under contract to and reporting to the municipality, or the
municipality itself, through a designated municipal employee, department,
board, agency or committee, pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.14(c). The
fees of the Administrative Agent shall be paid by the owners of the
affordable units for which the services of the Administrative Agent
are required. The Administrative Agent shall be qualified through
a training program sponsored by the Affordable Housing Professionals
of New Jersey before assuming the duties. The Administrative Agent
shall perform the duties and responsibilities of an Administrative
Agent as set forth in UHAC, including those set forth in Sections
5:80-26.14, 16 and 18 thereof, which includes:
A. Affirmative marketing:
(1) Conducting an outreach process
to affirmatively market affordable housing units in accordance with
the Affirmative Marketing Plan of the Township of Harmony and the
provisions of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.15; and
(2) Providing counseling or contracting
to provide counseling services to very-low-, low- and moderate-income
applicants on subjects such as budgeting, credit issues, mortgage
qualification, rental lease requirements, and landlord/tenant law.
B. Household certification:
(1) Soliciting, scheduling, conducting
and following up on interviews with interested households;
(2) Conducting interviews and
obtaining sufficient documentation of gross income and assets upon
which to base a determination of income eligibility for a low- or
moderate-income unit;
(3) Providing written notification
to each applicant as to the determination of eligibility or noneligibility;
(4) Requiring that all certified
applicants for restricted units execute a certificate substantially
in the form, as applicable, of either the ownership or rental certificates
set forth in Appendices J and K of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1 et seq.;
(5) Creating and maintaining
a referral list of eligible applicant households living in the housing
region and eligible applicant households with members working in the
housing region where the units are located;
(6) Employing a random selection
process as provided in the Affirmative Marketing Plan of the Township
of Harmony when referring households for certification to affordable
units; and
(7) Notifying the following entities
of the availability of affordable housing units in the Township of
Harmony: Fair Share Housing Center, the New Jersey State Conference
of the NAACP, the New Brunswick, Plainfield Area, Perth Amboy, Warren/Sussex,
and Metuchen/Edison branches of the NAACP, the Latino Action Network,
NORWESCAP, the Supportive Housing Association, and the Central Jersey
Housing Resource Center.
C. Affordability controls:
(1) Furnishing to attorneys or
closing agents forms of deed restrictions and mortgages for recording
at the time of conveyance of title of each restricted unit;
(2) Creating and maintaining
a file on each restricted unit for its control period, including the
recorded deed with restrictions, recorded mortgage and note, as appropriate;
(3) Ensuring that the removal
of the deed restrictions and cancellation of the mortgage note are
effectuated and properly filed with the Warren County Register of
Deeds or Warren County Clerk's office after the termination of the
affordability controls for each restricted unit;
(4) Communicating with lenders
regarding foreclosures; and
(5) Ensuring the issuance of
continuing certificates of occupancy or certifications pursuant to
N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.10.
D. Resales and rerentals:
(1) Instituting and maintaining
an effective means of communicating information between owners and
the Administrative Agent regarding the availability of restricted
units for resale or rerental; and
(2) Instituting and maintaining
an effective means of communicating information to low- (or very-low-)
and moderate-income households regarding the availability of restricted
units for resale or rerental.
E. Processing requests from unit
owners:
(1) Reviewing and approving requests
for determination from owners of restricted units who wish to take
out home equity loans or refinance during the term of their ownership
that the amount of indebtedness to be incurred will not violate the
terms of this chapter;
(2) Reviewing and approving requests
to increase sales prices from owners of restricted units who wish
to make capital improvements to the units that would affect the selling
price, such authorizations to be limited to those improvements resulting
in additional bedrooms or bathrooms and the depreciated cost of central
air conditioning systems;
(3) Notifying the municipality
of an owner's intent to sell a restricted unit; and
(4) Making determinations on
requests by owners of restricted units for hardship waivers.
F. Enforcement:
(1) Securing annually from the
municipality a list of all affordable housing units for which tax
bills are mailed to absentee owners, and notifying all such owners
that they must either move back to their unit or sell it;
(2) Securing from all developers
and sponsors of restricted units, at the earliest point of contact
in the processing of the project or development, written acknowledgement
of the requirement that no restricted unit can be offered, or in any
other way committed, to any person, other than a household duly certified
to the unit by the Administrative Agent;
(3) Posting annually, in all
rental properties (including two-family homes), a notice as to the
maximum permitted rent together with the telephone number of the Administrative
Agent where complaints of excess rent or other charges can be made;
(4) Sending annual mailings to
all owners of affordable dwelling units, reminding them of the notices
and requirements outlined in N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.18(d)4;
(5) Establishing a program for
diverting unlawful rent payments to the municipality's Affordable
Housing Trust Fund; and
(6) Creating and publishing a
written operating manual for each affordable housing program administered
by the Administrative Agent, to be approved by the Township Committee
and the Court, setting forth procedures for administering the affordability
controls. The operating manual(s) shall be available for public inspection
in the office of the Township Clerk, in the office of the Municipal
Housing Liaison, and in the office(s) of the Administrative Agent(s).
G. Additional responsibilities:
(1) The Administrative Agent
shall have the authority to take all actions necessary and appropriate
to carry out its responsibilities hereunder.
(2) The Administrative Agent
shall prepare monitoring reports for submission to the Municipal Housing
Liaison in time to meet the Court-approved monitoring and reporting
requirements in accordance with the deadlines set forth in this chapter.
(3) The Administrative Agent
shall attend continuing education sessions on affordability controls,
compliance monitoring, and affirmative marketing at least annually
and more often as needed.
Appeals from all decisions of an Administrative Agent appointed
pursuant to this chapter shall be filed in writing with the Court.