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A Home of Your Own

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A Home of Your Own Buying Or Renting Your Own Home: Some Options A Home of Your Own Places to start: Your local housing authority Local or statewide disability ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Home of Your Own


1
A Home of Your Own
  • Buying Or Renting
  • Your Own Home
  • Some Options

2
A Home of Your Own
  • Places to start
  • Your local housing authority
  • Local or statewide disability homeownership
    groups
  • HUD housing counseling
  • Local independent living centers

3
A Home of Your Own
  • HomeChoice
  • Available through homeownership coalitions for
    people with disabilities
  • Mortgages require 3 down payment, have higher
    debt to income ratio (you do not need to earn a
    lot of money to buy a house)

4
A Home of Your Own
  • HomeChoice
  • Accept non-traditional credit histories (little
    to no credit prior to application)
  • Recognize non-traditional sources of income and
    support, including public disability benefits
  • The loan limit for a 15- or 30-year fixed rate
    mortgage is 275,000

5
A Home of Your Own
  • The Section 8 Housing Voucher
  • For low income people for renting or buying a
    home
  • The qualified yearly income for a person with a
    disability is 12 times the SSI check amount (2010
    674/mo x 12 mo 8,088)
  • Employment is not required

6
A Home of Your Own
  • Individual Development Accounts (IDAs)
  • Savings accounts for people with disabilities
    where, when they deposit money into the IDA
    account, get from 3-7 matched by another
    organization
  • IDAs do not count toward the SSI resource limits
  • May require Pre purchase counseling or
    financial education training

7
A Home of Your Own
  • Social Security/SSI considerations
  • A person receiving SSI and Medicaid can own a
    home and not have the value of the home count as
    part of their resource limits (2,000 for a
    single person, 3,000 for a couple), if they live
    in the home.

8
A Home of Your Own
  • Information used for this presentation from the
    World Institute on Disability, Dede Leydorf,
    510-251-4340 and
  • Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities Housing
    Taskforce, 202-783-2229
  • www.c-c-d.org/task_forces/housing/tf-housing.ht
    m

9
A Home of Your Own
  • Renting your home
  • Person-centered resources
  • HUD Section 8 Housing Vouchers
  • Subsidized apartments

10
A Home of Your Own
  • In developing a person-centered residential plan
    for a person, many support resources will be
    identified, both paid and unpaid
  • During this process, a living situation may be
    identified such as an apartment attached to a
    private home whose owner is acquainted with the
    person, and supports his community integration
    goals

11
A Home of Your Own
  • HUD Section 8 housing vouchers
  • Allow you to find your own housing, single family
    homes, townhouses or apartments
  • Owner agrees to rent under the program
  • Rental units must meet minimum standards of
    health and safety
  • Person pays the difference between the typical
    rental value and the subsidy
  • Rent equals 30 of the persons adjusted income

12
A Home of Your Own
  • Low income apartment complexes
  • HUD helps apartment owners offer reduced rents to
    low-income tenants
  • Find apartment complexes through the local public
    housing assistance provider

13
A Home of Your Own
  • For more information about renting a home
  • National Council of State Housing Agencies
    (Specific state information)
  • http//www.ncsha.org/section.cfm/4/39/187
  • HUD Housing Voucher Program
  • http//www.hud.gov/offices/pih/programs/hcv/index.
    cfm
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