Source: http://affordablehousinginstitute.org/blogs/us/category/program-administration
Timestamp: 2015-05-30 16:26:16
Document Index: 746812745

Matched Legal Cases: ['art 3', 'art 1', 'art 2', 'art 2', 'art 1', 'art 1']

AHI: United States » Program administration
You don’t expect me to LOSE money, do you? Part 3, you want WHAT?
13 February, 2008 (10:19) | Economics, LIHTC, Program administration, Tax credits, Theory, US News | [Continued from the previous Part 1 and Part 2.] So far our exploration of Cornerstone Apartments in Haltom City, Texas, has covered rapes, shootings, backed-up sewers, dead rats, no heat over a weekend, enormous water bugs, and an astonishing flyer from the management agent demanding that residents repair defects that are the owner’s responsibility […]
You don’t expect me to LOSE money, do you? Part 2: who, me?
12 February, 2008 (11:31) | Economics, LIHTC, Program administration, Theory, US News | [Continued from yesterday’s Part 1.] Yesterday we saw that Cornerstone Apartments in Haltom City, TX, a mature and nearly post-mature LIHTC property rehabbed in 1994, is in deplorable condition, despite being owned by a partnership controlled by the esteemed Chancellor of Texas Tech University, Kent Hance. The maintenance staff is fully committed […]
You don’t expect me to LOSE money, do you? Part 1: what problems?
11 February, 2008 (10:31) | Economics, LIHTC, Program administration, Tax credits, Theory, US News | Kent Hance, Chancellor of Texas Tech University, is an unlikely owner of LIHTC properties, but back in 1994, he made a financially brave decision, to take over as controlling general partner of Cornerstone Apartments in Haltom City, Texas, a small town northeast of Fort Worth. As described in an article from the Fort […]
22 June, 2005 (09:23) | Affordable Housing, History, Primer posts, Program administration, Program design | When we design affordable housing programs, what assumptions should we make about the behavior of program participants? Back in the fourth century, a major theological debate erupted between two schools of thought about man’s nature: was man fundamentally good, or was he fundamentally a sinner? “God give me chastity — but not yet!” […]