Dayton Daily News

DAYTON FORFEITS $477,000 FOR MISSING DEADLINE

Housing funds reduced because of missed deadline, records show.

- By Cornelius Frolik

The city of Dayton forfeited nearly $477,000 in federal funds for housing developmen­t and assistance for failing to meet a key deadline.

The city failed to obtain signed and executed contracts within a federally mandated two-year time frame, according to records obtained by this newspaper.

As a result, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t (HUD) reduced the amount of federal grant money the city has to help low-income residents buy and rehab homes.

“We took it out because we had to — by law,” said Brian Sullivan, a HUD spokesman. “It’s a two-year statutory deadline they missed.”

We have reached out to the city of Dayton for comment, but they have not responded.

On April 30, 2014, the city approved agreements with HomeStart Inc. and the HomeOwners­hip Center of Greater Dayton that would give each $250,000 in federal HOME funds.

HomeStart committed to acquiring and renovating or constructi­ng at least three homes in the Wright Dunbar neighborho­od that would be sold to eligible, low-income buyers. The HomeOwners­hip Center agreed to provide down payment assistance to about 35 low-income households. The work and services were com- pleted and the city paid the two groups, according to the records.

But earlier this year, HUD notified the city of Dayton that it was “deobligati­ng” $476,624 from its HOME account because the city did not have signed and executed agreements with HomeStart and

the HomeOwners­hip Center by

the April 30, 2014, deadline.

HOME funds by law must be committed within two years of their appropriat­ion.

Funds are not considered committed until a legally binding agreement has been executed, which did not occur with HomeStart and the HomeOwners­hip Center until two to six weeks after the deadline, according to HUD.

The city received nearly $1.3 million in HOME funds in fiscal year 2012. Dayton was appropriat­ed less than $1.1 million in the present fiscal year.

In April, Aaron Sorrell, Dayton’s former director of planning and community developmen­t, told HUD that he had been involved with the HOME program since 2000 and the city always used the date of commission approval as the date of commitment.

“Based on nearly a decade of past practices for which I’ve been involved, I feel we met the 2014 commitment obligation,” he wrote in an email to HUD.

Sorrell was placed on administra­tive leave on May 24 and resigned less than two weeks later for reasons not made public.

Sorrell did not immediatel­y return a phone call on Monday seeking comment for this story.

Steve Naas, president of County Corp., told this newspaper the deobligati­on of federal funds had no negative impact on HomeStart or the HomeOwners­hip Center, which are under the organizati­on.

“The funding in question was drawn down according to the terms of the agreements without issue,” he said.

HUD does not dispute that the activities that the city wanted to fund were eligible.

This newspaper learned about the HUD funding issue after obtaining emails to and from the federal agency through a records request.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States