The following terms when used in this chapter shall have the
meanings given in this section:
ACCESSORY APARTMENT
A self-contained residential dwelling unit with a kitchen,
sanitary facilities, sleeping quarters and a private entrance, which
is created within an existing home, or through the conversion of an
existing accessory structure on the same site, or by an addition to
an existing home or accessory building, or by the construction of
a new accessory structure on the same site.
ACT
The Fair Housing Act of 1985, P.L. 1985, c. 222 (N.J.S.A.
52:27D-301 et seq.), as has been subsequently amended.
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 responsible for the administration of affordable
units in accordance with this chapter, applicable COAH regulations
and the Uniform Housing Affordability Controls (UHAC) (N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1
et seq.).
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 restricted
units in an affordable housing development are affordable to low-
and moderate-income households.
AFFORDABLE
A sales price or rent within the means of a low- or moderate-income
household as defined by COAH in its applicable regulations or an equivalent
controlling New Jersey state agency; 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 the Borough's Fair Share Plan,
and includes, but is not limited to, an inclusionary development,
a municipal construction project or a 100% affordable development.
AFFORDABLE HOUSING PROGRAM(S)
Any mechanism in the Borough's Fair Share Plan prepared
or implemented to address the Borough's fair share obligation.
AFFORDABLE UNIT
A housing unit proposed or created pursuant to the Act, credited pursuant to applicable COAH regulations, the
FSHC Settlement Agreement, or an order of the Court.
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:
A.
All the residents of the development where the unit is situated
are 62 years or older; or
B.
At least 80% of the units are occupied by one person that is
55 years or older; or
C.
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.).
ASSISTED LIVING RESIDENCE
A facility 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 low-income household or moderate-income household.
COAH
The New Jersey Council on Affordable Housing.
DCA
The State of New Jersey Department of Community Affairs.
DEFICIENT HOUSING UNIT
A housing unit with health and safety code violations that
require 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
proposed to be included in a proposed development including the holder
of an option to contract or 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. Inclusionary developments must have a 20% set aside of affordable
units if the development has five or more units and is a for-sale
project, or a 15% set-aside if the development is a rental project.
This term includes, but is not necessarily limited to: new construction,
the conversion of a nonresidential structure to residential and the
creation of new affordable units through the 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 median household income.
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 or load-bearing structural systems.
MARKET-RATE UNIT
Housing not restricted to low- and moderate-income households
that may sell or rent at any price.
MEDIAN INCOME
The median income by household size for the applicable county,
as adopted annually by the Department.
MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLD
A household with a total gross annual household income in
excess of 50% but less than 80% of the median household income.
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 the Department's adopted Regional Income Limits
published annually by the Department.
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 ownership unit,
that is subject to the affordability controls of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.1,
as may be amended and supplemented, but does not include a market-rate
unit financed under UHORP or MONI.
THE DEPARTMENT
The Department of Community Affairs of the State of New Jersey,
that was established under the New Jersey Fair Housing Act (N.J.S.A.
52:27D-301 et seq.).
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 30% or less of the median household income.
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 rehabilitation.
The Borough of Mendham will use the following mechanisms to
satisfy its affordable housing obligations:
A. A rehabilitation program.
(1) The Borough of Mendham and FSHC have agreed that the Borough's
indigenous need rehabilitation obligation is nine units. The Borough
shall continue to sponsor a local rehabilitation program sufficient
to satisfy its present need obligation of nine units and continue
to participate in Morris County's Rehabilitation Program. The
Borough shall establish a rehabilitation program manual. In the event
the Borough satisfies its rehabilitation obligation, it will continue
to implement its rehabilitation program, and any additional units
that are rehabilitated may be credited towards any future affordable
housing obligations, if permitted by applicable law and regulations.
The Borough will continue its rehabilitation program to update and
renovate deficient housing units occupied by low- and moderate-income
households such that, after rehabilitation, these units will comply
with the New Jersey State Housing Code pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:28.
The Borough will continue to rehabilitate housing units to improve
its housing stock and to continue to provide indigenous need affordable
units.
(2) All rehabilitated rental and owner-occupied units shall remain affordable
to low- and moderate-income households for a period of 10 years (the
control period). For owner-occupied units the control period will
be enforced with a lien, and for renter-occupied units the control
period will be enforced with a deed restriction.
(3) The Borough of Mendham shall dedicate an average of $10,000 for each
unit to be rehabilitated through this program, reflecting the minimum
hard cost of rehabilitation for each unit.
(4) The Borough of Mendham will continue to administer the Rehabilitation
Program in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:93 et seq.
(5) Units in a rehabilitation program shall be exempt from N.J.A.C. 5:93-9
and UHAC requirements, but shall be administered in accordance with
the following:
(a)
If a unit is vacant, upon initial rental subsequent to rehabilitation,
or if a renter-occupied unit is re-rented prior to the end of controls
on affordability, the deed restriction shall require the unit to be
rented to a low- or moderate-income household at an affordable rent
and affirmatively marketed pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:93-9 and UHAC.
(b)
If a unit is renter-occupied, upon completion of the rehabilitation,
the maximum rate of rent shall be the lesser of the current rent or
the maximum permitted rent pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:93-9 and UHAC.
(c)
Rents in rehabilitated units may increase annually based on
the standards in N.J.A.C. 5:93-9 or the standards issued by a New
Jersey administrative agency with proper authority to issue such standards.
(d)
Applicant and/or tenant households shall be certified as income-eligible
in accordance with N.J.A.C. 5:93-9 and UHAC, except that households
in owner-occupied units shall be exempt from the regional asset limit.
B. Percentage of mandatory set-asides for all future residential developments.
(1) If the Borough or a Borough Planning Board or Zoning Board of Adjustment
permits the construction of multifamily or single-family attached
residential development that is "approvable" and "developable," as
defined at N.J.A.C. 5:93-1.3, the Borough or the Borough's Planning
Board or Zoning Board of Adjustment shall require that 20% of the
residential units be set aside for low- and moderate-income households.
This requirement shall apply beginning with the effective date of
this chapter to any multifamily or single-family attached residential
development, including the residential portion of a mixed-use project,
which consists of five or more new residential units, whether permitted
by a zoning amendment, a variance granted by the Borough's Planning
Board or Zoning Board of Adjustment, or adoption of a redevelopment
plan or amended redevelopment plan in areas in need of redevelopment
or rehabilitation. For any such development for which the Borough's
land use ordinances (e.g., zoning or an adopted redevelopment plan)
already permitted residential development as of the effective date
of this chapter, this requirement shall only apply if the Borough
or the Borough's Zoning Board of Adjustment permits an increase
in approvable and developable gross residential density to at least
twice the permitted approvable and developable gross residential density
as of the effective date of this chapter. Nothing in this subsection
precludes the Borough or the Borough's Zoning Board of Adjustment
from imposing an affordable housing set-aside in a development not
required to have a set-aside pursuant to this subsection consistent
with N.J.S.A. 52:27D-311(h) and other applicable law. This requirement
does not create any entitlement for a property owner or applicant
for a zoning amendment, variance, or adoption of a redevelopment plan
or amended redevelopment plan in areas in need of redevelopment or
rehabilitation, or for approval of any particular proposed project.
This requirement does not apply to any sites or specific zones otherwise
identified in the Borough's Settlement Agreement with FSHC dated
December 28, 2019, or in the Borough's Housing Element and Fair
Share Plan, for which density and set-aside standards shall be governed
by the specific standards set forth therein.
(2) Furthermore, this section shall not apply to developments containing
four or less dwelling units. All subdivision and site plan approvals
of qualifying residential developments shall be conditioned upon compliance
with the provisions of this section. Where a developer demolishes
existing dwelling units and builds new dwelling units on the same
site, the provisions of this section shall apply only if the net number
of dwelling units is five or more.
C. Phasing. Inclusionary developments shall be subject to the following
schedule, except where an alternate phasing schedule has been incorporated
into a development or redevelopment agreement:
Minimum Percentage of Low- and Moderate-Income Units Completed
|
Maximum Percentage of Market-Rate Units Completed
|
---|
0%
|
25%
|
10%
|
25% + 1 unit
|
50%
|
50%
|
75%
|
75%
|
100%
|
90%
|
D. Fractional units. If 15% or 20% of the total number of units in a
development results in a fraction or decimal, the developer shall
be required to provide an additional affordable unit on site.
(1) Example: An eight-unit development requiring an affordable housing
set-aside of 1.6 units is proposed. The developer is required to provide
two on-site affordable units.
E. Integration of affordable units. In inclusionary developments, to
the extent possible, low- and moderate-income units shall be integrated
with the market-rate units.
F. Utilities. Affordable units shall utilize the same type of heating
source as market units within the affordable development.
G. Common elements and facilities. In inclusionary development, low-
and moderate-income units shall have access to all of the same common
elements and facilities as the market units.
H. Alternative living arrangements.
(1) The administration of an alternative living arrangement shall be
in compliance with N.J.A.C. 5:93-5.8 and UHAC, with the following
exceptions:
(a)
Affirmative marketing (N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.15); provided, however,
that the units or bedrooms may be affirmatively marketed by the provider
in accordance with an alternative plan approved by the Court;
(b)
Affordability average and bedroom distribution (N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.3).
(2) With the exception of units established with capital funding through
a twenty-year operating contract with the Department of Human Services,
Division of Developmental Disabilities, alternative living arrangements
shall have at least thirty-year controls on affordability in accordance
with UHAC, unless an alternative commitment is approved by the Court.
(3) The service provider for the alternative living arrangement shall
act as the Administrative Agent for the purposes of administering
the affirmative marketing and affordability requirements for the alternative
living arrangement.
The following general guidelines apply to all newly constructed
developments that contain low- and moderate-income housing units,
including any currently unanticipated future developments that will
provide low- and moderate-income housing units.
A. Low/moderate split and bedroom distribution of affordable housing
units:
(1) The fair share obligation shall be divided equally between low- and
moderate-income units, except that where there is an odd number of
affordable housing units the extra unit shall be a low-income unit.
(2) In each affordable development, at least 50% of the restricted units
within each bedroom distribution shall be low-income units. If there
is only one affordable unit it must be a low-income unit.
(3) Thirteen percent of all affordable units in the Borough, with the
exception of units constructed as of July 1, 2008, and units subject
to preliminary or final site plan approval as of July 1, 2008, shall
be designated as very-low-income households at 30% of the median income,
with at least 50% of all very-low-income units being available to
families. Very-low-income units shall be considered low-income units
for the purposes of evaluating compliance with the required low-/moderate-income
unit splits, bedroom distribution, and phasing requirements of this
chapter.
(4) Affordable developments that are not age-restricted shall be structured
in conjunction with realistic market demands such that:
(a)
The combined number of efficiency and one-bedroom units shall
be no greater than 20% of the total low- and moderate-income units;
(b)
At least 20% of all low- and moderate-income units shall be
three-bedroom units;
(c)
At least 30% of all low- and moderate-income units shall be
two-bedroom units;
(d)
The remaining units may be allocated among two- and three-bedroom
units at the discretion of the developer.
(5) Affordable developments that are age-restricted shall be structured
such that the number of bedrooms shall equal the number of age-restricted
low- and moderate-income units within the inclusionary development.
The standard may be met by having all one-bedroom units or by having
a two-bedroom unit for each efficiency unit.
B. Accessibility requirements:
(1) The first floor of all restricted townhouse dwelling units and all
restricted units in all other multistory buildings shall be subject
to the technical design standards of the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C.
5:23-7.
(2) All restricted townhouse dwelling units and all restricted units
in other multistory buildings in which a restricted dwelling unit
is attached to at least one other dwelling unit shall have the following
features:
(a)
An adaptable toilet and bathing facility on the first floor;
(b)
An adaptable kitchen on the first floor;
(c)
An interior accessible route of travel on the first floor;
(d)
An interior accessible route of travel shall not be required
between stories within an individual unit;
(e)
An adaptable room that can be used as a bedroom, with a door
or the casing for the installation of a door, on the first floor;
(f)
An accessible entranceway as set forth at P.L. 2005, c. 350
(N.J.S.A. 52:27D-311a et seq.), and the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C.
5:23-7, or evidence that the Borough of Mendham has collected
funds from the developer sufficient to make 10% of the adaptable entrances
in the development accessible:
[1]
Where a unit has been constructed with an adaptable entrance,
upon the request of a disabled person who is purchasing or will reside
in the dwelling unit, an accessible entrance shall be installed.
[2]
To this end, the builder of restricted units shall deposit funds
within the Borough's Affordable Housing Trust Fund sufficient
to install accessible entrances in 10% of the affordable units that
have been constructed with adaptable entrances.
[3]
The funds deposited under Subsection
B(2)(f)[2] above shall be used by the Borough of Mendham for the sole purpose of making the adaptable entrance of any affordable unit accessible when requested to do so by a person with a disability who occupies or intends to occupy the unit and requires an accessible entrance.
[4]
The developer of the restricted units shall submit a design
plan and cost estimate for the conversion from adaptable to accessible
entrances to the Construction Official of the Borough.
[5]
Once the Construction Official has determined that the design
plan to convert the unit entrances from adaptable to accessible meets
the requirements of the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C. 5:23-7, and that the cost estimate of such conversion is reasonable,
payment shall be made to the Borough's Affordable Housing Trust
Fund and appropriately earmarked.
[6]
Full compliance with the foregoing provisions shall not be required
where an entity can demonstrate that it is site impracticable to meet
the requirements. Determinations of site impracticability shall be
in compliance with the Barrier Free Subcode, N.J.A.C. 5:23-7.
C. Maximum rents and sales prices:
(1) In establishing rents and sales prices of affordable housing units,
the Administrative Agent shall follow the procedures set forth in
UHAC utilizing the regional income limits published by HUD which includes
the regional weighted average of uncapped Section 8 income limits
and using calculation procedures approved by the Court. Income limits
for all units that are part of the Borough's Housing Element
and Fair Share Plan and for which income limits are not already established
through a federal program exempted from the UHAC pursuant to N.J.A.C.
5:80-26.1 shall be updated by the Borough annually within 30 days
of the publication of determinations of median income by the Department
of Housing and Urban Development ("HUD") as follows:
(a)
Regional income limits shall be established for the region that
the Borough is located within based on the median income by household
size, which shall be established by a regional weighted average of
the uncapped Section 8 income limits published by HUD. To compute
this regional income limit, the HUD determination of median county
income for a family of four is multiplied by the estimated households
within the county according to the most recent decennial census. The
resulting product for each county within the housing region is summed.
The sum is divided by the estimated total households from the most
recent decennial census in the Borough's housing region. This
quotient represents the regional weighted average of median income
for a household of four. The income limit for a moderate-income unit
for a household of four shall be 80% of the regional weighted average
median income for a family of four. The income limit for a low-income
unit for a household of four shall be 50% of the HUD determination
of the regional weighted average median income for a family of four.
The income limit for a very-low-income unit for a household of four
shall be 30% of the regional weighted average median income for a
family of four. These income limits shall be adjusted by household
size based on multipliers used by HUD to adjust median income by household
size. In no event shall the income limits be less than those for the
previous year.
(b)
The income limits are the result of applying the percentages set forth in Subsection
C(1)(a) above to HUD's determination of median income for the fiscal year 2019, and shall be utilized until the Borough updates the income limits after HUD has published revised determinations of median income for the next fiscal year.
(c)
The Regional Asset Limit used in determining an applicant's eligibility for affordable housing pursuant to N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.16(b)(3) shall be calculated by the Borough annually by taking the percentage increase of the income limits calculated pursuant to Subsection
C(1)(a) above over the previous year's income limits, and applying the same percentage increase to the Regional Asset Limit from the prior year. In no event shall the Regional Asset Limit be less than that for the previous year.
(d)
In establishing sale prices and rents of affordable housing
units, the Borough's administrative agent shall follow the procedures
set forth in UHAC, utilizing the regional income limits established
pursuant to the process defined above:
[1]
The resale prices of owner-occupied low- and moderate-income
units may increase annually based on the percentage increase in the
regional median income limit for each housing region determined pursuant
to the above methodology. In no event shall the maximum resale price
established by the administrative agent be lower than the last recorded
purchase price.
[2]
The rent levels of very-low-, low- and moderate-income units
may be increased annually based on the percentage increase in the
Housing Consumer Price Index for the Northeast Urban Area, upon its
publication for the prior calendar year. This increase shall not exceed
9% in any one year. Rents for units constructed pursuant to low-income
housing tax credit regulations shall be indexed pursuant to the regulations
governing low-income housing tax credits.
(2) The maximum rent for restricted rental units within each affordable
development shall be affordable to households earning no more than
60% of median income, and the average rent for restricted low- and
moderate-income units shall be affordable to households earning no
more than 52% of median income.
(3) The developers and/or municipal sponsors of restricted rental units
shall establish at least one rent for each bedroom type for both low-income
and moderate-income units.
(a)
At least 13% of all low- and moderate-income dwelling units
shall be affordable to households earning no more than 30% of median
income.
(4) The maximum sales price of restricted ownership units within each
affordable development shall be affordable to households earning no
more than 70% of median income, and each affordable development must
achieve an affordability average of 55% for restricted ownership units;
in achieving this affordability average, moderate-income ownership
units must be available for at least three different prices for each
bedroom type, and low-income ownership units must be available for
at least two different prices for each bedroom type.
(5) In determining the initial sales prices and rents for compliance
with the affordability average requirements for restricted units other
than assisted living facilities, the following standards shall be
used:
(a)
A studio shall be affordable to a one-person household;
(b)
A one-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a one-and-one-half-person
household;
(c)
A two-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a three-person household;
(d)
A three-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a four-and-one-half-person
household;
(e)
A four-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a six-person household.
(6) In determining the initial rents for compliance with the affordability
average requirements for restricted units in assisted living facilities,
the following standards shall be used:
(a)
A studio shall be affordable to a one-person household;
(b)
A one-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a one-and-one-half-person
household;
(c)
A two-bedroom unit shall be affordable to a two-person household
or to two one-person households.
(7) The initial purchase price for all restricted ownership units shall
be calculated so that the monthly carrying cost of the unit, including
principal and interest (based on a mortgage loan equal to 95% of the
purchase price and the Federal Reserve H.15 rate of interest), taxes,
homeowner and private mortgage insurance and condominium or homeowners'
association fees do not exceed 28% of the eligible monthly income
of the appropriate size household as determined under N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.4,
as may be amended and supplemented; provided, however, that the price
shall be subject to the affordability average requirement of N.J.A.C.
5:80-26.3, as may be amended and supplemented.
(8) The initial rent for a restricted rental unit shall be calculated
so as not to exceed 30% of the eligible monthly income of the appropriate
household size as determined under N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.4, as may be amended
and supplemented; provided, however, that the rent shall be subject
to the affordability average requirement of N.J.A.C. 5:80-26.3, as
may be amended and supplemented.
(9) The price of owner-occupied low- and moderate-income units may increase
annually based on the percentage increase in the regional median income
limit for each housing region. In no event shall the maximum resale
price established by the administrative agent be lower than the last
recorded purchase price.
(10) The rent of very-low-, low- and moderate-income units may be increased
annually based on the percentage increase in the Housing Consumer
Price Index for the United States. This increase shall not exceed
9% in any one year. Rents for units constructed pursuant to low-income
housing tax credit regulations shall be indexed pursuant to the regulations
governing low-income housing tax credits.
(11) Utilities. Tenant-paid utilities that are included in the utility
allowance shall be so stated in the lease and shall be consistent
with the utility allowance approved by DCA for its Section 8 program.
(12) The costs of determining maximum rents and sales prices for affordable
units shall be the responsibility of the developer, sponsor, or owner,
unless otherwise determined or agreed to by the Borough.
[Added 4-26-2021 by Ord.
No. 05-2021]
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 method used to determine the condominium association fee amounts
and special assessments shall be indistinguishable between the low-
and moderate-income unit owners and the market unit owners. The master
deeds shall also not contain any distinction between the condominium
or homeowners' association fees and special assessments paid
by 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 capital improvements. Eligible capital improvements shall be those
that render the unit suitable for a larger household or the addition
of a bathroom.
Appeals from all decisions of an Administrative Agent designated
pursuant to this chapter shall be filed with the Superior Court of
New Jersey, Morris County.