Episode 87: HUD Trims Environmental Review for Large Projects cover art

Episode 87: HUD Trims Environmental Review for Large Projects

Episode 87: HUD Trims Environmental Review for Large Projects

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HUD has published an interim rule eliminating the final clearance-officer approval step in its environmental review process for large federally assisted multifamily projects — those with more than 200 units or a mortgage above $5 million. The rule takes effect June 22, with a public comment period open through July 21. For LIHTC developers, syndicators, and lenders navigating tight closing timelines, the change removes a late-stage regulatory bottleneck that HUD itself acknowledges can jeopardize deals.

Key Takeaways:

  • The interim rule removes the final HUD clearance-officer approval for multifamily projects with 200+ units or a mortgage above $5 million receiving federal assistance.
  • Effective date is June 22; public comments are due by July 21 — a real opportunity to shape whether the rule is finalized as written.
  • HUD argues the requirement — added by a single sentence in 1996 to a 1971 rule — is not statutorily required and duplicates earlier review steps.
  • The change is framed under Trump's Unleashing American Energy executive order, part of a broader agency-wide deregulatory push.
  • Secretary Turner has also rolled back eviction-related rules and energy-efficiency standards, establishing a consistent pattern of regulatory rollback on the production side.
  • Two March executive orders further direct agencies to eliminate development barriers and ease community bank mortgage underwriting restrictions.
  • Developers with deals currently in the HUD environmental review pipeline should confirm with counsel how the June 22 effective date applies to in-process transactions.

The administration is building a deregulatory posture on housing production that, for LIHTC professionals, has tangible deal-level implications. The comment period is open and data-driven submissions from developers and lenders who have experienced timeline disruptions from the current clearance-officer step could directly influence the final rule. Watch for further regulatory rollbacks as HUD continues reshaping its operating framework under Secretary Turner.

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