HUD Secretary Scott Turner faced bipartisan support for HUD programs during FY27 budget hearings before both the House and Senate Appropriations Committees last week — a notable signal amid broad discretionary spending pressure. At the same time, the House released an amended 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act on May 14, with a floor vote expected this week. For LIHTC investors, developers, syndicators, and lenders, the convergence of an active appropriations fight, a major housing supply bill, and early reconciliation maneuvering makes the next several weeks unusually high-stakes.
Key Takeaways:
- HUD Secretary Scott Turner testified before both the House and Senate Appropriations Committees in response to the Trump administration's FY27 budget request.
- Bipartisan committee support for HUD programs creates political cover for preserving Housing Choice Voucher and project-based rental assistance funding — both critical to LIHTC deal structures and compliance.
- The amended 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act text was released May 14; a House floor vote is expected the week of May 18.
- House Republicans held a closed-door meeting on May 12 to discuss a potential third reconciliation package — a vehicle that could carry tax title changes affecting LIHTC, depreciation, or bond financing.
- A separate $72 billion reconciliation bill focused on ICE and CBP funding is already in progress, signaling active use of the reconciliation process this Congress.
- NLIHC joined a national sign-on letter urging full inclusion of the Rural Housing Service Reform Act in the final housing supply package — a provision relevant to deals in rural markets and USDA-financed properties.
- HUD's proposed Equal Access Rule NPRM, which would scale back equal access protections in HUD programs, is drawing legal analysis from the National Housing Law Project, with a webinar scheduled for May 20.
Deals currently in predevelopment or financing are underwriting into a policy environment that could shift on multiple fronts at once. The ROAD Act's amended text deserves a close read for provisions touching private activity bond volume cap, zoning preemption, or federal land and financing tools. The third reconciliation conversation is early — but it is already happening behind closed doors, and the LIHTC community should be engaged before the vehicle takes shape.
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