The Borough of Rocky Hill 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, 2022, and on every anniversary of that date
through July 1, 2025, the Borough 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, 2022, and on every anniversary of that date
through July 1, 2025, the Borough 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 Fair Share Housing Center, using forms previously developed
for this purpose by COAH or any other forms endorsed by the Special
Master and FSHC.
C. By July 1, 2022, as required pursuant to N.J.S.A. 52:27D-313, the
Borough 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, 2022, and every third year thereafter, as required by
N.J.S.A. 52:27D-329.1, the Borough 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.
The following terms when used in this article shall have the
meanings given in this section:
ACT
The Fair Housing Act of 1985, P.L. 1985, c. 222 (N.J.S.A.
52:27D-301 et seq.)
ADAPTABLE
Constructed in compliance with the technical design standards
of the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C. 5:23-7.
ADMINISTRATIVE AGENT
The entity designated by the Borough to administer affordable
units in accordance with this article, N.J.A.C. 5:93, and UHAC (N.J.A.C. 5:80-26).
AFFIRMATIVE MARKETING
A regional marketing strategy designed to attract buyers
and/or renters of affordable units pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.15.
AFFORDABILITY AVERAGE
The average percentage of median income at which new restricted
units in an affordable housing development are affordable to very-low-,
low- and moderate-income households.
AFFORDABLE
A sales price or rent level that is within the means of a
low- or moderate-income household as defined within N.J.A.C. 5:93-7.4,
and, in the case of an ownership unit, that the sales price for the
unit conforms to the standards set forth in N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.6, as
may be amended and supplemented, and, in the case of a rental unit,
that the rent for the unit conforms to the standards set forth in
N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.12, as may be amended and supplemented.
AFFORDABLE HOUSING DEVELOPMENT
A development included in or approved pursuant to the Housing
Element and Fair Share Plan or otherwise intended to address the Borough's
fair share obligation, and includes, but is not limited to, an inclusionary
development, a municipal construction project or a 100% affordable
housing development.
AFFORDABLE HOUSING PROGRAM(S)
Any mechanism in a municipal fair share plan prepared or
implemented to address a municipality's fair share obligation.
AFFORDABLE UNIT
A housing unit proposed or created pursuant to the Act and
approved for crediting by the Court and/or funded through an affordable
housing trust fund.
AGE-RESTRICTED UNIT
A housing unit designed to meet the needs of, and exclusively
for, the residents of an age-restricted segment of the population
such that: 1) all the residents of the development wherein the unit
is situated are 62 years of age or older; or 2) at least 80% of the
units are occupied by one person who is 55 years of age or older;
or 3) the development has been designated by the Secretary of the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development as "housing for older
persons" as defined in Section 807(b)(2) of the Fair Housing Act,
42 U.S.C. § 3607.
AGENCY
The New Jersey Housing and Mortgage Finance Agency established
by P.L. 1983, c. 530 (N.J.S.A. 55:14K-1 et seq.).
ALTERNATIVE LIVING ARRANGEMENT
A structure in which households live in distinct bedrooms,
yet share kitchen and plumbing facilities, central heat and common
areas. Alternative living arrangements include, but are not limited
to: transitional facilities for the homeless; Class A, B, C, D and
E boarding homes as regulated by the State of New Jersey Department
of Community Affairs; residential health care facilities as regulated
by the New Jersey Department of Health; group homes for the developmentally
disabled and mentally ill as licensed and/or regulated by the New
Jersey Department of Human Services; and congregate living arrangements.
ASSISTED LIVING RESIDENCE
A facility that is licensed by the New Jersey Department
of Health and Senior Services to provide apartment-style housing and
congregate dining and to assure that assisted living services are
available when needed for four or more adult persons unrelated to
the proprietor and that offers units containing, at a minimum, one
unfurnished room, a private bathroom, a kitchenette and a lockable
door on the unit entrance.
CERTIFIED HOUSEHOLD
A household that has been certified by an administrative
agent as a very-low-income, low-income or moderate-income household.
COAH
The Council on Affordable Housing, as established by the
New Jersey Fair Housing Act (N.J.S.A. 52:27D-301 et seq.).
DCA
The State of New Jersey Department of Community Affairs.
DEFICIENT HOUSING UNIT
A housing unit with health and safety code violations that
requires the repair or replacement of a major system. A major system
includes weatherization, roofing, plumbing (including wells), heating,
electricity, sanitary plumbing (including septic systems), lead paint
abatement and/or load-bearing structural systems.
DEVELOPER
Any person, partnership, association, company or corporation
that is the legal or beneficial owner or owners of a lot or any land
included in a proposed development including the holder of an option
to contract to purchase, or other person having an enforceable proprietary
interest in such land.
DEVELOPMENT
The division of a parcel of land into two or more parcels,
the construction, reconstruction, conversion, structural alteration,
relocation, or enlargement of any use or change in the use of any
building or other structure, or of any mining, excavation or landfill,
and any use or change in the use of any building or other structure,
or land or extension of use of land, for which permission may be required
pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:55D-1 et seq.
INCLUSIONARY DEVELOPMENT
A development containing both affordable units and market-rate
units. This term includes, but is not limited to: new construction,
the conversion of a nonresidential structure to residential use and
the creation of new affordable units through the gut rehabilitation
or reconstruction of a vacant residential structure.
LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
A household with a total gross annual household income equal
to 50% or less of the regional median household income by household
size.
LOW-INCOME UNIT
A restricted unit that is affordable to a low-income household.
MAJOR SYSTEM
The primary structural, mechanical, plumbing, electrical,
fire protection, or occupant service components of a building which
include but are not limited to weatherization, roofing, plumbing (including
wells), heating, electricity, sanitary plumbing (including septic
systems), lead paint abatement and load-bearing structural systems.
MARKET-RATE UNITS
Housing not restricted to very-low-, low- and moderate-income
households that may sell or rent at any price.
MEDIAN INCOME
The median income by household size for the applicable housing
region, as adopted annually by COAH or a successor entity approved
by the Court.
MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
A household with a total gross annual household income in
excess of 50% but less than 80% of the regional median household income
by household size.
NONEXEMPT SALE
Any sale or transfer of ownership other than the transfer
of ownership between husband and wife; the transfer of ownership between
former spouses ordered as a result of a judicial decree of divorce
or judicial separation, but not including sales to third parties;
the transfer of ownership between family members as a result of inheritance;
the transfer of ownership through an executor's deed to a class
A beneficiary and the transfer of ownership by court order.
RANDOM SELECTION PROCESS
A process by which currently income-eligible households are
selected for placement in affordable housing units such that no preference
is given to one applicant over another except for purposes of matching
household income and size with an appropriately priced and sized affordable
unit (e.g., by lottery).
REGIONAL ASSET LIMIT
The maximum housing value in each housing region affordable
to a four-person household with an income at 80% of the regional median
as defined by duly adopted regional income limits published annually
by COAH or a successor entity.
REHABILITATION
The repair, renovation, alteration or reconstruction of any
building or structure, pursuant to the Rehabilitation Subcode, N.J.A.C.
5:23-6.
RENT
The gross monthly cost of a rental unit to the tenant, including
the rent paid to the landlord, as well as an allowance for tenant-paid
utilities computed in accordance with allowances published by DCA
for its Section 8 program. In assisted living residences, rent does
not include charges for food and services.
RESTRICTED UNIT
A dwelling unit, whether a rental unit or an ownership unit,
that is subject to the affordability controls of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1
et seq, as amended and supplemented, but does not include a financed
under UHORP or MONI.
UHAC
The Uniform Housing Affordability Controls set forth in N.J.A.C.
5:80-26-1 et seq.
VERY-LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
A household with a total gross annual household income equal
to or less than 30% of the regional median household income by household
size pursuant to the New Jersey Fair Housing Act of 1985, N.J.S.A.
52:27D-301 et seq.
VERY-LOW-INCOME UNIT
A restricted unit that is affordable to a very-low-income
household pursuant to the New Jersey Fair Housing Act of 1985, N.J.S.A.
52:27D-301 et seq.
WEATHERIZATION
Building insulation (for attic, exterior walls and crawl
space), siding to improve energy efficiency, replacement storm windows,
replacement storm doors, replacement windows and replacement doors,
and is considered a major system for purposes of a rehabilitation
program.
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 followed:
Maximum Percentage of Market-Rate Units Completed (COs Issued)
|
Minimum Percentage of Low- and Moderate-Income Units Completed
(Cos Issued)
|
---|
25
|
0
|
25 + 1 unit
|
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 §
80-97.13.
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, 5:80-26.16 and 5:80-26.18 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 Borough of Rocky Hill 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 Borough of Rocky Hill when referring households
for certification to affordable units; and
(7)
Notifying the following entities of the availability of affordable
housing units in the Borough of Rocky Hill: Fair Share Housing Center,
the New Jersey State conference 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 Somerset
County Register of Deeds or Somerset 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 re-rentals:
(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 re-rental; 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 re-rental.
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 article;
(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 Borough Council 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 Borough 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 article.
(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 article shall be filed in writing with the Court.