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This file contains: Memo from Ken Khachigian to Key Issues Committee concerning housing. 5 pgs. [Memo], 10/22/1968 The Relocation and Assistance Act of 1968 in the Congressional Record- House. 2 pgs. [Report], 5/29/1968 A Plan for Urban Home Ownership from the Republican Coordinating Committee. 2 pgs. [Report], 12/11/1967 Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 in the Congressional Record-Senate. 19 pgs. [Report], 5/24/1968 The Omnibus Housing Bill Contains Many Proposals Sponsored by the Minority in the Congressional Record-House. 3 pgs. [Report], 7/1/1968 Here's the Issue Volume 7, Number 6. The Housing and Urban Development Act. 6 pgs. [Newsletter], 4/5/1968 Differences Between Rent Certificate Program (GOP) and Rent Supplemental Program (Dem.). 1 pg. [Report], n.d. Memo from Casey Ireland, Minority Staff Member, to William Widnall. RE: Presidential Instructions to HUD to More Than Double Production of Low Income (Public Housing) Units. 4 pgs. [Memo], 9/23/1968 Press conference transcript of Robert Weaver, Secretary, Housing and Urban Development and Joseph Califano, Assistant to the Pressident. 7 pgs. [Report], 9/12/1967 Tomorrow's Transportation. Department of Housing and Urban Development. 100 pgs. Only cover scanned. [Book], 1968 Airport Development Act of 1968 in the Congressional Record- Senate. 3 pgs. [Report], 6/13/1968 Lots of Luck in the Congressional Record-House. 2 pgs. [Report], 6/4/1968 Memo from Ernest Corrado, American Merchant Marine Institute to Lon Woodbury. Subject: Reasons for Mr. Nixon's Support of Positive and Creative Maritime Policy and Program. 4 pgs. [Memo], 6/4/1968

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This file contains: Memo from Ken Khachigian to Key Issues Committee concerning housing. 5 pgs. [Memo], 10/22/1968 The Relocation and Assistance Act of 1968 in the Congressional Record- House. 2 pgs. [Report], 5/29/1968 A Plan for Urban Home Ownership from the Republican Coordinating Committee. 2 pgs. [Report], 12/11/1967 Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 in the Congressional Record-Senate. 19 pgs. [Report], 5/24/1968 The Omnibus Housing Bill Contains Many Proposals Sponsored by the Minority in the Congressional Record-House. 3 pgs. [Report], 7/1/1968 Here's the Issue Volume 7, Number 6. The Housing and Urban Development Act. 6 pgs. [Newsletter], 4/5/1968 Differences Between Rent Certificate Program (GOP) and Rent Supplemental Program (Dem.). 1 pg. [Report], n.d. Memo from Casey Ireland, Minority Staff Member, to William Widnall. RE: Presidential Instructions to HUD to More Than Double Production of Low Income (Public Housing) Units. 4 pgs. [Memo], 9/23/1968 Press conference transcript of Robert Weaver, Secretary, Housing and Urban Development and Joseph Califano, Assistant to the Pressident. 7 pgs. [Report], 9/12/1967 Tomorrow's Transportation. Department of Housing and Urban Development. 100 pgs. Only cover scanned. [Book], 1968 Airport Development Act of 1968 in the Congressional Record- Senate. 3 pgs. [Report], 6/13/1968 Lots of Luck in the Congressional Record-House. 2 pgs. [Report], 6/4/1968 Memo from Ernest Corrado, American Merchant Marine Institute to Lon Woodbury. Subject: Reasons for Mr. Nixon's Support of Positive and Creative Maritime Policy and Program. 4 pgs. [Memo], 6/4/1968
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Richard M. Nixon's Returned Materials Collection
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Richard Nixon Presidential Library White House Special Files Collection Folder List Box Number Folder Number Document Date Document Type Document Description 17 10 10/22/1968 Memo Memo from Ken Khachigian to Key Issues Committee concerning housing. 5 pgs. 17 10 05/29/1968 Report The Relocation and Assistance Act of 1968 in the Congressional Record- House. 2 pgs. 17 10 12/11/1967 Report A Plan for Urban Home Ownership from the Republican Coordinating Committee. 2 pgs. 17 10 05/24/1968 Report Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 in the Congressional Record-Senate. 19 pgs. 17 10 07/01/1968 Report The Omnibus Housing Bill Contains Many Proposals Sponsored by the Minority in the Congressional Record-House. 3 pgs. 17 10 04/05/1968 Newsletter Here's the Issue Volume 7, Number 6. The Housing and Urban Development Act. 6 pgs. Friday, May 22, 2009 Page 1 of 2 Box Number Folder Number Document Date Document Type Document Description 17 10 n.d. Report Differences Between Rent Certificate Program (GOP) and Rent Supplemental Program (Dem.). 1 pg. 17 10 09/23/1968 Memo Memo from Casey Ireland, Minority Staff Member, to William Widnall. RE: Presidential Instructions to HUD to More Than Double Production of Low Income (Public Housing) Units. 4 pgs. 17 10 09/12/1967 Report Press conference transcript of Robert Weaver, Secretary, Housing and Urban Development and Joseph Califano, Assistant to the Pressident. 7 pgs. 17 10 1968 Book Tomorrow's Transportation. Department of Housing and Urban Development. 100 pgs. Only cover scanned. 17 10 06/13/1968 Report Airport Development Act of 1968 in the Congressional Record- Senate. 3 pgs. 17 10 06/04/1968 Report Lots of Luck in the Congressional Record- House. 2 pgs. 17 10 06/04/1968 Memo Memo from Ernest Corrado, American Merchant Marine Institute to Lon Woodbury. Subject: Reasons for Mr. Nixon's Support of Positive and Creative Maritime Policy and Program. 4 pgs. Friday, May 22, 2009 Page 2 of 2 1000: OUEX ONLY TO: KEY ISSUES COMMITTEE -- ATTENTION JERRY FRIEDHEIM AND CHUCK COLSON FROM: KEN KHACHIGIAN -- OCTOBER 22, 1968 HERE IS THE HOUSING STATEMENT. THERE IS A RUSH ORDER ON THIS, AND IT HAS ALREADY GONE OUT TO THE RN TOUR. I WOULD APPRE- CIATE IT IF KIC COULD GIVE IT QUICK SUBSTANTIVE REVIEW FOR ANY POSSIBLE ERRORS. IT HAS BEEN CLEARED THROUGH ALL PARTIES ON THIS END. EARLIER THIS YEAR, IN A NATIONWIDE RADIO ADDRESS, I TALKED ABOUT STEPS WHICH COULD BE TAKEN TO ATTACK THE PROBLEMS OF SLUM HOUSING. RATHER THAN SPENDING HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS TO CLEAR MORE SLUM ACHES, TO DISPLACE MORE FAMILIES, AND TO BUILD MORE PUBLIC HOUSING, I OUTLINED IMAGINATIVE ENLISTMENT OF THE PRIVATE AND THE INDEPENDENT SECTORS, ENCOURAGEMENT OF PRIVATE OWNERSHIP, AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PRIDE THAT CAN ONLY COME FROM INDEPENDENCE. TODAY, I WANT TO EXPAND UPON THAT DISCUSSION AND PROPOSE A PROC WHEREBY AE CAN, BEGIN THE TASK OF REBUILDING THE CENTER OF THE AMERI- CAN CITY THE CONTINUED DETERIORATION OF AMERICAN CITIES, THE ENTRAPMENT OF DISADVANTAGED AMERICANS IN UGLY GHETTOS AND THE CIVIL DISORDERS OF RECENT YEARS UNDERSCORE THE FAILURE OF THE OLD WAYS. THE JOHNSON- HUMPHREY ADMINISTRATION HAS MADE PROMISES WHICH HAVE NOT--AND IN MANY CASES COULD NOT--BE KEPT. MY ADMINISTRATION WILL END THE GAP BETWEEN PROMISE AND PERFORMANCE. DESPITE THE VOLUMINOUS AMOUNT OF HOUSING LEGISLATION ENACTED INTO LAW OVER THE YEARS, THERE HAS BEEN RELATIVELY LITTLE PROGRESS TOWARD A TRUE WORKING PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN THE GOVERNMENT AND PRIVATE INDUS- TRY IN THIS AREA. OUR PRESENT NEED, THEREFORE, IS FOR A GREATER VOLUME OF HOUSING PRODUCTION UNDER EXISTING LAWS RATHER THAN A VOLUME OF NEW LEGISLATION. THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT, THOUGH CHARGED WITH ENCOURAGING THE MAXIMUM CONTRIBUTION OF PRIVATE CONSTRUCTION AND FINANCE TOWARD URBAN PROBLEM-SOLVING, HAS BECOME ENTANGLED IN AD- MINISTRATIVE CHAOS. ITS POLICIES AND ATTITUDES HAVE DI SCOURAGED, RATHER THAN ENCOURAGED, THE FULL INVOLVEMENT OF PRIVATE ENTERPRISE IN OUR URBAN HOUSING PROGRAMS. MY ADMINISTRATION WILL APPROACH THIS PROBLEM ON TWO BROAD FRONTS. FIRST, WE WILL BEGIN BY REVIEWING AND EVALUATING EXISTING FROGRAMS AND THEN ALLOCATE PRIORITIES TO THOSE PROGRAMS WHICH HAVE THE GREAT- EST POTENTIAL FOR PRODUCING THE HOUSING THAT IS SO URGENTLY NEEDED IN TE BLIGHTED NEIGHBORHOODS OF OUR CITIES. AVAILABLE FUNDS MUST BE CONCENTRATED ON THE PROGRAMS THAT WILL PRODUCE THIS HOUSING. THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT WILL HAVE A MANDATE MY ADMINISTRATION TO ACHIEVE THIS GOAL. SECOND, MY ADMINISTRATION WILL ACT TO IMPROVE COMMUNICATION AND UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN THE PRIVATE HOMEBUILDING INDUSTRY AND HUD. INCENTIVE-DESTROYING RED TAPE AND THE PRESENT BOREAUCRATIC OBSESSION FOR MAKING EVERY DECISION AT THE FEDERAL LEVEL WILL BE ELIMINATIO. WILL 1" AMOUNT was COPY XERO OBEX [083X BE LOOKED TO TO DEMONSTRATE HOW THE JOB CAN BEST BE DONE. THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THESE PROGRAMS WILL REFLECT AN AWARENESS THAT THE GREAT MAJORITY OF LOCAL PROBLEMS ARE BEST APPROACHED THROUGH LOCAL INITIATIVE, WITH ONLY SUCH INVOLVEMENT OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IN THE FREE ENTERPRISE PROCESS AS PROVES ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY. 1 KNOW, ALSO, IF FREE ENTERPRISE IS TO REALIZE ITS FULL POTENTIAL, THERE MUST BE THE OPPORTUNITY FOR REASONABLE, HONEST PROFIT. TANSIBLE OINVOLVEMENT OF PRIVATE INVESTMENT AND PRIVATE INDUSTRY IN OUR ORBAN PROBLEMS WILL RESULT IF THE OPPORTUNITY FOR SUCH PROFIT IS MADE POSSIBLE BY AN UNDERSTANDING GOVERNMENT. MOREOVER, THE STRUCTURE OF HUD AND ITE REGULATORY PROCEDURES MUST BE SIMPLIFIED IF OUR ORMAN PROGRAMS ARE TO BE TRULY WORKABLE. THE OVERLAPPING OF AUTHORITY FOR PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION MUST BE CORRECTED THE ULTIMATE MEASURE OF SUCCESS IN OUR EFFORTS TO REBUILD OUR NATION'S DETERIORATED NEIGHBORHOODS AND TO PRODUCE THE HOUSING THAT SO MANY OF OUR CITIZENS URGENTLY NEED RESTS NOT ON LAWS ALONE. RATHER, IT DEPENDS HEAVILY ON THE EXTENT TO WHICH WE BRING ABOUT THE FULL INVOLVEMENT OF OUR NATION'S PRIVATE SECTOR AND ALL OF ITS PROVEN INITIATIVE AND MASSIVE RESOURCES IN SEEKING TO ACHIEVE OUR NATIONAL GOAL OF URBAN BETTERMENT. AS 1 HAVE INDICATED, THE FAILURE OF EXISTING PROGRAMS LIES IN THE LACK OF ALLOCATING PRIORITIES TO THOSE PROGRAMS WHICH HAVE THE GREATEST POTENTIAL FOR REBUILDING THE CENTER CITIS. ONE OF THE PRIORITIES OF A NIXON ADMINISTRATION WILL BE TO EMPHASIZE PRIVATE BOMEOWNERSHIP IN THE BLIGHTED AREAS OF OUR COUNTRY IT IS MY GOAL TO PROVIDE THE OPPORTUNITY THROUGH A COMBINATION OF PUBLIC AND PRIVATE EFFORT FOR MILLIONS OF DISADVANTAGED AMERICANS FOR THE FIRST TIME TO OWN THEIR OWN HOMES. SENATOR EDWARD BROOK HAS SUCCINCTLY STATED THE CASE FOR HOMEOWNER- SHIP: HOMEOWNERSHIP CAN BE OF FAR GREATER BENEFIT TO THE POUR THAN 4 MERE ROOF AND FOUR WALLS. HOMEOWNERSHIP CAN BE F SOURCE OF PRIDE AND STABILITY, INFLUENCES THAT WILL EXTEND TO THE HOME- OWNER'S JOB AND FAMILY LIFE.' YET, AMONG NON-WHITES, ONLY 38 PERCENT (15 ALL HOUSING UNITS ARE OWNER-OCCUPIED WHILE 62 PERCENT ARE RENTED. I AM PROUD TO NOTE THAT REPUBLICAN MEMBERS OF THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF HEPRESENTATIVES GAVE THE TRUE INITIATIVE TO THE HOMEOWNERSHIP PRINCIPLE IN OUR HOUSING LEGISLATION. AND IN MY ADMINI STRATION THAT INITIATIVE WILL BE CARRIED ON TO GIVE PRIVATE HOMEOWNERSHIP A GREAT IMPETUS. THE TECHNIQUE OF THE CURRENT ADMINISTRATION IS TO PROMISE MORE FEDERAL MONEY, MORE URBAN RENEWAL AND MORE PUBLIC HOUSING. BUT The NUMBER OF HOUSING UNITS DESTROYED BY URBAN RENEWAL IS ESTIMATED TO BE FOUR TIMES GREATER THAN THE NUMBER CREATED. FEDERAL CONSTRUC- TION PROGRAMS DISPLACE ABOUT 73,000 FAMILIES AND INDIVIDUALS PER YEAR, AND YET, IN URBAN AREAS, 14 PERCENT OF ALL HOUSING UNITS ARE STILL CONSIDERED SUBSTANDARD. AN ESTIMATED TWO-THIRDS OF THOSE DISPLACED BY URBAN RENEWAL PROJECTS ARE MINORITY GROUPS FOR WHOM THE PROBLEM OF RELOCATION IS OFTEN MOST DIFFICULT. EUSLIC HOUSTNA BY PTSKLE 11. 201 AN EFFECTIVE AWSWEN 10 THE WASSIVE PROPLEMS WHICH FACE OUR CITIES AND DEPRESSED RURAL AREAS. IT SIMPLY CANNOT BE BUILT FAST ENOUGH AND IN SUFFICIENT QUANTITIES TO MEET 008 NATIONAL NEEDS. MOREOVER, PUBLIC HOUSING ONLY UPGRADES THE MATERIAL SURROUNDINGS WITHOUT GIVING ITS RESIDENTS THE SAME SENSE OF RESPONSIBILITY WHICH COMES FROM PRIVATE HOMEOWNERSHIP. ONE EXPERT "DURING THE LAST THIRTY-ODD YEARS THAT THE NATION EXERO (083X) (083X XFRO. 3 INVOLVED IN THE HOUSING BUSINESS, IT HAS ONLY BUILT A LITTLE MORE THAN 600,000 UNITS. THAT MEANS JUST ONE PERCENT OF THE NATION'S HOUSING SUPPLY HAS BEEN BUILT FOR ACCOMMODATION BY LOW AND MODERATE INCOME FAMILIES. ONE SOLUTION TO THESE PROBLEMS -- AND SOMETHING TO WHICH I WILL GIVE PRIORITY IN MY ADMINISTRATION -- LIES IN TAKING THE HOMEOWNERSHIP PRINCIPLE AND EXTENDING IT INTO THE CENTER OF OUR URBAN AREAS. 17 GIVEN THE PRIORITY IT REQUIRES, IT WILL CONVERT TENANTS INTO HOME- OWNERS. IN THE MULTI-UNIT DWELLINGS WHICH DOMINATE THE HOUSING IN OUR CITIES, HOMEOWNERSHIP CAN BE BROUGHT ABOUT THROUGH THE USE OF AN AGE-OLD, BUT NEGLECTED, CONCEPT OF TENURE: THE CONDOMINIUM. THE MODERN CONDOMINIUM IS AN APARTMENT HOUSE WHOSE RESIDENTS ENJOY EXCLUSIVE OWNERSHIP OF THEIR INDIVIDUAL APARTMENTS MUCH IN THE SAME MANNER AS DOES THE OWNER OF A SINGLE FAMILY DWELLING. THE GOALS OF CONDOMINIUM, A FORM WHICH IS SAID TO PRE-DATE CAESAR, HAVE REMAINED CONSTANT: TO ENABLE PEOPLE IN APARTMENT HOUSES TO ACHIEVE THE ADVAN- TAGES NOW AVAILABLE TO HOMEOWNERS. THE CONDOMINIUM ALSO ENCOURAGES DEMOCRATIC PARTICIPATION IN PLANNING THE AFFAIRS OF THE COMMUNITY. IT PROVIDES, AS DID OUR TOWN MEETINGS IN THE EARLY DAYS OF THE REPUBLIC, THE FOUNDATION FOR BROADER PARTICIPATION IN THE COMMUNITY. THE CONDOMINIUM -- WHICH IS A "HIGH-RISE HOME" -- IS NOT ENTIRELY NFW AS A TOOL FOR LOW-INCOME ROMEOWNERSHIP. NOTABLE EXAMPLES OF THE USE OF CONDOMINIUM EXIST IN BOSTON, CHICAGO, AND LOS ANGELES AND OUR OTHER MAJOR CITIES. THE EXPERIENCE IN LOS ANGELES GOES FAR TO SHOW HOW WE CAN BEGIN TO BREAK THE POVERTY CYCLE. THERE, PRIVATE INDUSTRY, WITH ASSURED FINANCING, HAS INVOLVED THE CONSTRUCTION OF SO-CALLED "TOWNHOUSE CONDOMINIUMS" IN A MODEL 10-UNIT PILOT PROJECT. THE WORK AND SUCCESS OF MANY OF THESE PROJECTS SHOULD BE WIDELY COPIED WE DO NOT NEED GREATER VOLUMES OF NEW LEGISLATION; WE NEED MORE PRODUCTIVE USE OF THE LEGISLATION WE NOW HAVE. IT IS TIME WE SOUGHT TO EXTRICATE OURSELVES FROM A LOW-INCOME HOUSING POLICY WHICH CREATES AND MAINTAINS TENANTS, AND OVERLOOKS THE INTRINSIC BENEFITS WHICH FLOW FROM INDIVIDUAL HOMEOWNERSHIP. AS A COMMUNITY LEADER IN ONE NEIGHBORHOOD OF SUBSTANDARD HOUSING IN NEW YORK CITY HAS STATED: "PEOPLE MUST HAVE INCENTIVE. THEY MUST HAVE PRIDE. AND #ITHOUT THESE TWO THINGS, THERE IS NO REHABILITATION. I THINK THAT THE GOAL SHOULD BE TO MAKE THESE PEOPLE PROPERTY OWNERS RATHER THAN JUST TRANSIENT TENANTS MOVING AWAY EVERY FEW WEEKS." MY ANSWER TO THAT NEED IS A CONCERTED EMPHASIS ON THE "HIGH-RISE HOME" WH. CH WILL GO FAB TO PROVIDING THE SENSE OF PRIDE WHICH COMES FROM HOMEOWNER- SHIP. OVER 100 YEARS AGO, THE REPUBLICAN PARTY PIONEERED THE HOMESTEAD LAWS. THIS LEGISLATION OPENED AMERICAN FRONTIERS, NOT ONLY GEDGRAPHICALLY, BUT POLITICALLY AS WELL. PEOPLE MOVED WEST TO STAKE OUT THEIR HOMESTEAD. THEY ACQUIRED PRIVATE PROPERTY IMPROVED THE PROPERTY. THEY BUILT THEIR OWN COMMUNITIES--DEVELOPED THEIR 0%9 COMMITY FACILITIES, SCHOOLS, HOSPITALS--AND AS PRIVATE HOMED @NPRS, PASY JOINED THE WAINSTREAM OF THE GREAT AMERICAN PRIVATE ECOGOMIC SYSTEM I SAY THAT YEARS LATER-WA MUST DO THE SAMP 1.1 CPN DENS OF AMERICAN CITIES. WE MOST PROVICE "HOMESTEADS" FOR THONK AMERICAN FAMILIES PRESENTLY LIVING IN DEPLORABLE SUBSTANDARD CONDI- TIONS AND ALIENATED FROM SOCIETY. 10001 очзх (OUE) (OUJX XEDO: 4 AS PRIVATE HOMEOWNERS WITH A STAKE IN THEIR COMMUNITY, A PIECE OF THE ACTION AND A RESPONSIBLE VIEW TOWARD THE STATE OF THEIR COUNTRY, THEY WILL REBUILD THE CITIES--IT WILL BE THEIR SPIRIT. AND THEIR CONCERN, AS IT WAS WITH THE FRONTIERSMEN 100 YEARS AGO. THEY WILL REESTABLISH THE PRIDE AND THE DIGNITY OF OUR NATION'S CITIES. THOMAS JEFFERSON KNEW WHAT THIS SENSE OF PRIDE MEANS: "IT IS NOT TOO SOON TO PROVIDE BY EVERY POSSIBLE MEANS THAT AS FEW AS POSSIBLE SHALL BE WITHOUT A LITTLE PORTION OF LAND. THE SMALL LANDHOLDERS ARE THE MOST PRECIOUS PART OF THE STATE. THE CENTRAL PRINCIPLE OF A NEW FEDERAL HOUSING POLICY MUST BE TO HELP PEOPLE RATHER THAN JUST CONSTRUCT BUILDINGS. THE CONDOMINIUM IDEA EMBODIED IN "HIGH-RISE HOMES" CAN GO FAR TOWARD HELPING US ACHIEVE THAT END. END AJOJ OUJX 083X [OUDX Od Jx RN Y JGT WASH TO: ALAN GREENSPAN FROM: CHUCK COLSON RE: MY CONVERSATION WITH KHACHIGIAN ABOUT HOUSING STATEMENT. KHACHIGIAN SAID THAT HE ELIMINATED ALL OF THE DETAILS ON THE CONDOMINIUM PLAN BECAUSE HE THOUGHT THEY WERE TOO LONG AND DETAILED, BUT SUGGESTED THAT IF I COULD WRAP IT UP IN ONE PARAGRAPH AND ADD IT TO THE STATEMENT, I SHOULD DO SO. I THINK IT SHOULD BE DONE IN ORDER TO GIVE THE STATEMENT A LITTLE MORE MEAT AND SOMETHING NEW AND SUBSTANTIVE. ALSO IT IS IMPORTANT AS A WAY OF SHOWING THAT RN HAS THOUGHT THROUGH SPECIFICALLY HOW THIS PARTICULAR PROPOSAL MIGHT WORK. I SUGGEST THEREFORE THE FOLLOWING PARAGRAPH. THIS PARAGRAPH SHOULD COME RIGHT AFTER THE CONDOMINIUM PARAGRAPHS AND IMMEDIATELY BEFORE THE PARAGRAPH WITH BEGINS: "WE DO NOT NEEL GREATER VOLUMES OF NEW LEGISLATION "TO THIS END, I WILL PROPOSE THE CREATION OF A LOW COST PRIVATE HOMEOWNERSHIP INDEPENDENT GOVERNMENT CORPORATION TO WORK WITH PRIVATE BUILDERS AND DEVELOPERS AND TO ENCOURAGE THE FLOW OF PRIVATE CAPITAL. THE FUNCTION OF THIS CORPORATION WILL BE T) PROVIDE AN INTEREST DIFFERENTIAL SO THAT PRIVATE LENDERS MAY LOAN AT INTEREST RATES WHICH LOW INCOME FAMILIES CAN AFFORD AND T) GUARANTEE THE FULL AMOUNT OF LONG TERM MORTGAGES FOR ELIGIBLE PURCHASERS. UNDER THIS PLAN, THE PRINCIPAL REPAYMENT WOULD BE SPREAD OVER 25 YEARS WITH MORTGAGE PAYMENTS SPREAD OVER A FULL 30 YEARS SO THAT IN THE LAST 5 YEARS OF THE LIFE OF THE MORTGAGE, THE GOVERNMENT WOULD RECOVER A SUBSTANTIAL PORTION OF THE INTEREST SUBSIDY AND GUARANTEE COSTS. SUCH A PLAN WOULD PROVIDE THE OPP- ORTUNITY FOR HOMEOWNERSHIP TO HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF FAMILIES NOW UNABLE TO PURCHASE THEIR OWN HOMES; AND THIS COULD BE ACCOMPLISHED AT MINIMUM COST TO THE FEDERAL TREASURY. BEGINNING OF THE NEXT PARAGRAPH SHOULD START: THE SOLUTION TO OUR PROBLEMS LIES NOT ALONE IN NEW LEGISLATION BUT IN THE MORE PRODUCTIVE USE OF THE LEGISLATION VE NOW HAVE. 1101 THE WHILE. THE STATEMENT 15 A FIRST RATE JOB. FND.P May 29, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD HOUSE 4451 So at least it was with Louis Clifford who Two weeks ago Louie received from doc- streets. Such a situation is not civil lib- from 1943 until his death Saturday at 61 was tors the sad news that he had inoperable erty. city editor of The Press. heart disease. On Dec. 13 he had lost his As one who often expressed admiration for brother Robert, also a Press veteran, to All too often have we seen the rights such a flamboyant performer as the old heart disease, and the word about himself of the criminal upheld and ringed with Cleveland News, a man who boisterously shook him up. ironclad legal protections while the scolded his staff, Louie was unfailing quiet But he returned to work at the city desk, rights of the upright, the honest, and and considerate, even when pressures were to make up his inind what to do. The alter- the weak are trod upon with impunity. most intense. natives were varied. He could have retired Therefore, I question the wisdom and the Speaking in 1961 at the Indiana University to a life of ease, which he said was not at- propriety of statements of some Mem- Press Institute seminar, Louie paid his re- tractive. He could have taken a less de- bers of this body, as reported in the spects to Bergener in these words: manding assignment. "I was on the police and the criminal "I'll take next week off and decide what press, that the Omnibus Crime Control courts beats most of my four years of ap- I'm going to do," he told a close friend. and Safe Streets Act of 1968 will be prenticeship under Mr. Bergener. He was a He died as he was starting that vacation. killed or blocked unless certain provi- cussing, shouting, reporter-insulting, hard- sions are eliminated. If anyone ques- boiled individual for whom despite his tions those provisions, I can understand. cussedness, I bore a tremendous amount of OMNIBUS CRIME CONTROL AND Indeed, if anyone fights for the elimina- admiration and even a trace of affection." SAFE STREETS ACT OF 1968 tion of those provisions, I can under- It was not often that Louie revealed as much as that about himself, SO it is worth (Mrs. KELLY asked and was given stand. But for anyone to arrogantly state noting that he was almost the exact opposite permission to extend her remarks at this that the entire legislative package will of his mentor. And after four years of such point in the RECORD and to include ex- be sacrificed is, to me, unacceptable. driving, in spite of the nostalgia he expressed traneous matter.) I have stood in the well of the House more than three decades later, he came to Mrs. KELLY. Mr. Speaker, it is a dis- on many occasions to support this bill The Press for his career. grace to our country that crime has be- and other measures to provide a greater Very few of today's editorial staff at The Press have any recollection of Louie as a beat come a national concern and is con- degree of security to our citizens and the reporter or rewrite man. Those who do say stantly increasing. Public order should means of providing such security. I be- he performed in these fundamentals with be the first business of government. Law lieve that I speak for my constituents great skill and discrimination. He covered enforcement is essentially a local prob- when I say that I do not want to see both police and courts during the exciting lem and must be dealt with locally. How- all of our work go for naught. lawlessness of prohibition. ever, when lawlessness reaches into every have studied the Senate amendments When he talked at Indiana University, he spoke highly of the competitive days when section of the country, then it becomes to the safe streets bill, I have listened The Press and the old News were eyeball to a national problem. Congress must heed to many lawyers arguing the pros and eyeball every edition every day. Such compe- the cry of all our citizens by enacting an cons of them and I have taken note of tition, he said, sharpened the staff and its effective anticrime program. the fact that there are many distin- product by the hour. It is for this reason that I view as par- guished members of the bar in the other But he also said: ticularly unfortunate the House's failure body who supported those amendments. "For the tremendous improvement in to complete action today on the omnibus However, I cannot support any frustra- newspapers in the last 25 years I credit crime control and safe streets bill. I am tion of the will of this House on the largely two factors: The planning, prepara- tion and thinking ahead that go into the glad that the unanimous-consent request basis of one's own personal constitutional daily edition output, and the wide broaden- to send the bill to conference was re- views. Such action by those who oppose ing of the base of coverage." jected by my colleagues, because it has the Senate amendments are not in ac- Louie had a great deal to do with the been rumored in the press that such a cord with the democratic process. development of a more responsive and re- move would have killed this much- I wish to call to the attention of this sponsible press. His contributions to modern needed legislation. However, I had hoped body some of the programs which would journalism have been widely recognized. the House would have agreed to an im- Early in his city desk career he was a be eliminated by a preemptory rejection speaker at the American Press Institute mediate discussion of the Senate amend- of the bill, including, first, funds to State at Columbia University on the training of ments and final action before the Memo- and local governments for a variety of staff. He returned later to lead a three- rial Day recess. training, study, and other programs for week seminar on municipal affairs. An article in the New York Times of the improvement and strengthening of For all his intense interest in the affairs today, May 29, 1968, reemphasized the law enforcement at the local and State of Cleveland, he made only infrequent and immediate need for this legislation by levels; second, Federal control of wire- highly selective public appearances. But relating that the increase of crime in tapping: and third, firearms control. quietly he accepted civic responsibility, de- voting his own time and attention. April in New York City alone was 27 I think it foolhardy for this body not He was a member of the Euclid Charter percent, as reported by the New York to act merely because of the intransi- Commission, which a few years back re- City Police Department and the Federal gence of those who oppose certain amend- vamped and notably stabilized the govern- Bureau of Investigation. ments enacted by the other body. There- ment of that city. He was a member for The substance of the Omnibus Crime fore, I urge the House Judiciary Com- several years of the Euclid-Glenville Hos- Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 mittee to ponder anew the seriousness pital Board, during its time of greatest is long overdue. Although legislation is expansion. of the crime situation in this country and Louie also was a sentimentalist. On a not always perfect, this does not give to expedite House debate and action on vacation five years ago, Louie came upon any one Congressman or any one com- this bill. SO that the people of this coun- Rev. Fr. Albert Schmidt in his poverty parish mittee the right to delay or to sacrifice try can be reassured that we are interest- of 6000 hill people at Ponce, Puerto Rico. legislation because of possible objec- ed in their safety and security. Louie wrote a fistful of stories, raising sub- tionable features. Disregard of the will stantial sums for the people. of the people and of this body's previous Born in Wabash, Ill., Louie lived most of actions is, to me, unacceptable. THE RELOCATION AND ASSISTANCE his life in this community. In 1924 he gradu- I have long been a devoted and active ACT OF 1968 ated from Cathedral Latin High School and entered immediately upon his newspaper supporter of civil rights for all persons (Mr. RYAN asked and was given per- career. The family home is 22561 Edgecliff all minorities, and all groups. Support mission to extend his remarks at this Dr. Euclid. for civil rights has been and is my posi- point in the RECORD and to include ex- He was named 1965 Man of the Year by tion. I think, however, that in our zeal to traneous matter.) Cathedral Latin Alumni Assn., receiving a support individual rights, we have too Mr. RYAN. Mr. Speaker, I have intro- scroll that called attention to his devotion frequently confused the right of the duced H.R. 16953, the Relocation Assist- to church, family and The Press. criminal with the rights of the public. ance Act of 1968, in order to assist thou- His surviving family are his wife Pat and It is axiomatic that two of the most three children, Dr. John E., professor and sands of Americans who are displaced head of drama at Bradley University, Peoria, basic rights of any citizen are his right every year from their homes and places Ill.; Mrs. Eugene (Donna) O'Donnell, Euclid, to be secure in his home and to walk of business as a result of construction and Thomas S., a teacher of physics at the the street in safety. When those rights facilitated by Federal programs. These Grosse Pointe, Mich., High School. There are not enforced, innocent hard-working programs include urban renewal and are 8 grandchildren. A brother, Roland, also citizens quail behind barred doors and other housing programs, highway con- survives. only the denizens of the night stalk the struction, university expansion, hospital H 4452 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD May 29, 1968 construction, Federal facilities such as TIME FOR CONGRESS TO LOOK this point in the RECORD and to include post offices, and a host of other programs. INTO THE CONTENTION OF extraneous matter.) Only under the urban renewal program MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL OWN- are Federal funds provided for reloca- ERS THAT THEY OPERATE A [Mr. OTTINGER'S remarks will ap- tion payments. and these are rarely SPORT AND NOT A BUSINESS pear hereafter in the Extensions of Re- marks.] adequate. In previous years I have introduced (Mr. CABELL asked and was given legislation to improve the relocation ben- permission to extend his remarks at this PRESIDENT JOHN FITZGERALD efits under urban renewal standards and point in the RECORD and to include ex- KENNEDY SLIEVE COILETTE to require that construction may not be- traneous matter.) (MOUNTAIN OF THE WOODS) gin until adequate relocation has been Mr. CABELL. Mr. Speaker, once again DEDICATED TODAY BY PRESI- provided-H.R. 1225, H.R. 1226, H.R. the time has come for Congress to look DENT EAMON DEVALERA OF IRE- 1227. into the contention of major league base- LAND AT KENNEDY ANCESTRAL I have also introduced legislation to ball owners that they operate a sport HOME IN DUNGANSTOWN, provide that recipients of loans or grants and not a business. For it is becoming COUNTY WEXFORD, ON 51ST for construction under the Higher Edu- all too evident that what was once our BIRTHDAY OF LATE PRESIDENT cation Facilities Act of 1963-H.R. 1248- national game has now become the monopolistic province of a few profit- (Mr. BOLAND asked and was given or for hospital construction under the hungry, selfish men. permission to extend his remarks at this Public Health Service Act-H.R. 1246, I am referring particularly to the point in the RECORD and to include ex- H.R. 1247-be required to satisfy the Fed- eral Government that relocation bene- Monday decision by National League traneous matter.) clubowners in which two additional Mr. BOLAND. Mr. Speaker. I would fits, similar to those available under the Housing Act of 1949, be provided. cities, San Diego in California and like to call to the attention of my col- Montreal in Canada, were added in the leagues that at this moment on a beauti- H.R. 16953 would establish a uniform latest of several league expansion moves. ful green hillside in County Wexford, Federal relocation policy to be admin- istered by a central Relocation Assistance I have no prejudice against either of Ireland, President Eamon DeValera is Bureau, located in the Department of the two cities, though it is interesting to dedicating a national forest and arbore- note that one of them, San Diego, is in an tum in memory of a former Member of Housing and Urban Development. The area already supporting two other major this House and the late President of the basic standard of payment would be that league clubs, while Montreal is not only United States. President John Fitzgerald which is now provided for persons and business displayed by urban renewal ac- outside the boundaries of this country Kennedy, on the anniversary of his 51st tion in section 114 of the Housing Act of and has not supported professional base- birthday, May 29, 1917. 1949, amended as follows: the ceiling on ball of any sort in almost 8 years. Mrs. Eunice Kennedy Shriver, sister of compensated moving expenses would be On the other hand, the Dallas-Fort the late President and wife of U.S. Am- removed; tenants would be paid the dif- Worth area is the 12th largest radio-TV bassador to France Sargent Shriver, and market in the Nation and is a big league Mrs. Joan Kennedy, wife of Senator ED- ference between former rentals and the area as shown by its support of the Dallas WARD M. KENNEDY, of Massachusetts, are rental in new comparable housing for Cowboys in professional football, two representing the Kennedy family and I year; in the case of businesses, cer- major golf tournaments, and many other planting trees on the site during cere- tain losses of profit and goodwill would top sporting events. In the Texas League monies dedicating the President John be covered; businessmen who could not Fitzgerald Kennedy Slieve Coilette- find suitable relocation sites would be today the Dallas-Fort Worth Spurs are compensated for the fair market value consistently among the leaders in at- Mountain of the Woods-comprising 450 of their trade. tendance records, though Dallas and acres overlooking the Kennedy ancestral Payments would be made directly to Fort Worth would prefer to attend the farmhouse in Dunganstown, County big league contests they deserve. Wexford. the relocatees by the Bureau of Reloca- tion Assistance. In times past, baseball owners have President DeValera and Prime Minis- My bill also provides that no Federal met all charges of monopoly by protest- ter Jack Lynch were hosts at a reception agency shall approve an application for ing that they are operating a sport and for Mrs. Shriver and Mrs. Kennedy in St. not a business and that their prime Patrick's Hall, Dublin Castle, last night, loan or grant assistance, nor undertake motive is to expand only into those areas where they met with many of the Irish direct construction without first identify- ing persons to be relocated, informing where fans would be given an oppor- Government officials and members of the them of their rights, and providing the tunity to attend a sport they cannot diplomatic corps who welcomed Presi- easily see. dent Kennedy on his sentimental visit to Director of the Relocation Assistance Bu- Under this ruling, the National the land of his forebearers 5 years ago, reau with information sufficient to per- mit the computation of relocation bene- League's decision does not hold water. June 26-29, 1963. fits. All Federal grants, direct loan and Not only is a vast and untapped market Mr. Speaker, it was my privilege to in Dallas-Fort Worth still without major accompany President Kennedy during his direct construction programs are cov- league baseball, but the adverse decision visit to Ireland, and to the farmstead at ered. is to benefit only one man-Houston's Dunganstown, from which his great- H.R. 16953 charges the Director of Re- Judge Roy Hoffheinz-who makes little grandfather, Patrick Kennedy, had emi- location Assistance with the responsibil- effort to cover his fear that a club in grated to the United States over a cen- ity of keeping a current file on all Fed- eral assistance and construction pro- Dallas would cut into his badly needed tury ago. The President's boyish enthu- Astrodome revenue. siasm and obvious enjoyment was infec- grams and the need for relocation assis- tance. It also requires that he take ac- Baseball can exist only as it pleases a tious and an official occasion became a sports-loving public, not because it is a happy Kennedy family reunion as Mrs. tions to insure that individuals and busi- producer of revenue for an overextended Mary Kennedy Ryan and her family nessmen displaced as a result of feder- promoter. served tea on tables covered with linen ally aided activities be fully informed of their rights and given assistance in re- I do not believe it is the intention of cloths in the concrete farmyard between Congress to promote or to protect such the whitewashed cabin, which was Pat- locating. He is further required to coor- individuals and I feel it high time for rick Kennedy's home before his depar- dinate his activities with other Federal this Government to break up its partner- ture in 1848 to East Boston, and the agencies. ship with them. newer grey-painted farmhouse. This bill will finally provide a uniform, consistent Federal relocation policy, re- These recent actions raise anew the The former Irish Prime Minister, Sean gardless of the program. It will insure question of monopolistic practices among F. Lemass, who welcomed President Ken- that federally aided construction and big league owners and I shall ask the nedy to Ireland in June 1963, and was acquisition will proceed with a minimum House Judiciary Committee to reopen the President's guest at the White House its studies of this question. It is long in October 1963, said of President Ken- of injury and dislocation to citizens. overdue. nedy after the tragic assassination: I urge that hearings be held by the Naturally John Kennedy's Irish-American Committee on Banking and Currency, so background quickened our interest in his that we may act on this important legis- (Mr. OTTINGER asked and was given career and leadership. The rise to the august lation as soon as possible. permission to extend his remarks at position of President of the United States of The following statement was approved by the Republican Coordinating Committee meeting in Washington, D. C., December 11, 1967 A PLAN FOR URBAN HOME OWNERSHIP In America today, there is no challenge more vital, and more difficult than meeting the problems of our cities and their residents. We believe that any strategy designed to solve these problems must include, as key elements, programs to help realize the goal of "a decent home and suitable living environment for every American" -- the national goal enunciated by Congress in the landmark Housing Act of 1949. Republican leadership in the development and passage of this and numerous other important housing measures reflects our belief in the fundamental importance of housing to the well-being of our urban residents. This year a Republican plan for home ownership has been sponsored by Senator Charles H. Percy of Illinois and Congressman William B. Widnall of New Jersey, with wide endorsement of Republicans in both Houses of Congress. The purpose of this program is to upgrade the quality of the nation's housing, to make home owner- ship available to lower-income families who have or can develop the capacity to accept this responsibility, and to provide needed technical assistance to local community organizations. The central element of the plan is the establishment of a private non-profit National Home Ownership Foundation which would raise funds through the sale of Federally guaranteed bonds to private lenders. The Foundation would have two major functions: * It would provide mortgage funds to non-profit, community organizations equipped to undertake a program of rehabilitation or construction of single or multiple family housing units, to be sold in turn to individual lower-income families. In this way, private mortgage financing, private organizations, and local initiative would be mobilized to make home ownership a reality to many for whom the means are unavailable today. Federal funds would be used only to provide a partial interest subsidy to the homeowner, which would be repaid if later his income increases. For each million dollars of continuing Federal interest subsidy, private home purchases of approximately $33 million could be supported. * It would provide, when necessary, technical assistance to the community organizations to enable them to undertake and manage a sound home ownership program. In addition, it would offer to help these organizations participate in or develop programs such as basic education, job training, credit counseling and other support skills for the prospective home buyer. In helping to supply these tools of successful home ownership, at the same time, the Foundation could provide the service of aiding local organizations and individuals to find their way through the present maze of government agencies and aid programs. Another feature of the plan would provide for the establishment of a system of mortgage payment insurance through private companies, if possible, to protect home buyers from foreclosures due to temporary interruption of income for causes beyond their control. Also, should the owner decide to sell his property, any capital gain would be his profit, after repaying the Foundation for the interest support he has received. This should encourage home improvements and proper maintenance. (over) -2- This new plan of action is a most imaginative and constructive approach to improving the quality of our housing and the lives of lower-income families. Under this plan the enormous resources, imagination, and strength of private organizations would be brought to bear against the problems of housing, particu- larly in urban areas. The operations of the Foundation and community organizations would encourage involvement of business, labor, the professions, universities, churches, civic groups, and other non-profit organizations, whose talents and energies for assisting in the solution of public problems have not been adequately tapped. Government activity would be limited to risk bearing through a Federal guarantee of the National Home Ownership Foundation's bonds, and limited financial assistance for the interest subsidy. The emphasis of government would be on these supporting functions and away from direct operations and control. Also, the residents of our blighted city areas would be encouraged to involve themselves actively in self-help programs leading to better housing, improved skills, and economic advancement. Too often, present programs have failed to generate a sense of self-reliance and self-help which will permit a man to advance through his own efforts. Congressional hearings have evidenced a broadly based enthusiasm for this home ownership measure among community organizations and private enterprise groups who would be directly involved. We urge the Department of Housing and Urban Development to withdraw its opposition; for increased home ownership deserves bipartisan support and early action from Congress on a broadly acceptable measure. This home ownership plan typifies the innovative and imaginative approach of Republicans to problems of housing and the urban environment, and demonstrates the Republican Party's commitment to finding new solutions to the growing problems of our lower-income urban citizens. The States and cities can also demonstrate their initiative in this field. For example, the State of Pennsylvania has created a housing agency to promote home ownership and rehabilitation to benefit the underprivileged. These proposals are testimony to our belief that individual dignity, self-help and the involvement of private organizations are indispensable principles in shaping solutions to the complex problems facing urban America. 12/11/67 S 6386 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD Housing May 24, 1968 vantage, or risk the danger of being trampled The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there before us today. One might say, then, under the surge of unthinking feet-excited objection to the present consideration of that the committee has now spent some 8 forward by careless power manipulators, peo- the bill? months in bringing S. 3497 to the Senate. ple whom I call 'militants of the absurb.' The 47-year-old Negro leader said he was There being no objection, the Senate Mr. President, with the enactment of going to "talk openly about the main sub- proceeded to consider the bill. the National Housing Act of 1934, the ject of private conservations since the trou- Mr. SPARKMAN. Mr. President, before United States Housing Act of 1937, the ble in D.C. I refuse to be 'chicken' and keep we commence the debate on the Housing Housing Acts of 1949, of 1954, of 1961, my thoughts in secret half-whispered dis- and Urban Development Act of 1968, S. the Housing and Urban Development cussions. 3497, I wish to make a brief comment. "Let me tell it like it is. During the past Act of 1965, and the Demonstra- As chairman of the Banking and Cur- winter a young brown-skinned man (an ob- tion Cities and Metropolitan Develop- vious reference to militant Stokeley Car- rency Committee and also the Subcom- ment Act of 1966, plus other measures, michael), after a hate America trip around mittee on Housing and Urban Affairs, I the Congress has provided many tools the world, came to live in Washington, wish to express my appreciation to the with which the American people have D.C. and in only a short time has really members of the committee as well as to been able to obtain decent, safe, and ade- shown us oldsters how to take over a city. the members of the subcommittee for quate housing. These acts have also pro- "He 'jived' many black leaders of many their cooperation and help in bringing vided ways and means by which our responsible Negro organizations in this town, S. 3497 to the floor of the Senate. In this even some of the sweet old ladies at church. cities, towns, and communities have been connection, Mr. President, I express my "He's sympathized with our D.C. leaders' able and are now able to fight blight, frustrations, he inflamed their resentments— gratitude to the members of the commit- slums, and urban decay. but more importantly, he played up to their tee and the subcommittee for the won- It must be remembered, however, that egos. Then all were invited to a secret meet- derful cooperation they gave throughout these acts taken as a whole, were never ing. And publicly our leaders nodded agree- the weeks-literally, throughout the intended to be the complete answer-the ment to his plan to join forces and con- months-in considering this bill. I also sented to take titles of offices and to serve sole solution-to our national housing wish to express my appreciation and that on black only committees." problems nor to the multiplicity of prob- of the members of both the committee Dr. Alexander asked where the militant lems we now find facing our cities. At and subcommittee to the staffs of the full leaders were "when the time came." best, these acts were intended to encour- "None to my knowledge were seen doing committee and the subcommittee, as well age and contribute to private enterprise the violent acts that they had earlier urged as to the Senate legislative counsel's and public efforts and initiative toward on their poor black brothers." office; namely, Mr. John Reynolds-for helping our people to achieve the goal The D.C. disturbance was a criminal action the vast amount of work they did in the and not a riot, Dr. Alexander said, because expressed in the policy of the Housing preparation of S. 3497 as well as in the "the few percentage of blacks who took part Act of 1949, which is "a decent home and preparation of Senate Report No. 1123 to put their sights more on what they saw in suitable living environment for every accompany the bill. store windows than on what Dr. Martin L. American family." King Jr. taught, lived and died for." I believe I can truthfully say that S. Mr. President (Mr. GORE in the chair) Challenging the argument that only vio- 3497 is the most comprehensive housing I shall digress long enough to say that lence seems to frighten the power structure and urban development bill our commit- that housing policy was written into the into turning more attention to the poor, Dr. tee has ever presented to the Senate. The Alexander said: act of 1949. At the time it was known as bill has 15 titles, with numerous sections "This city or nation cannot allow the poor the Taft-Ellender-Wagner Act. It was and subsections, which, on the one hand, to believe that it is necessary to burn a slum under the guidance and leadership of establish several new housing and urban house, the corner grocery store or clothing those three distinguished pioneers in the store to make Congress and the American development programs and, on the other field of adequate housing that the goal public aware that existing hunger in rat and hand, contain provisions amending the I have just quoted was established- roach-infested quarters is hell." majority of housing and urban develop- that there should be the opportunity to Dr. Alexander spoke out against a racial ment laws on the statute books today. aspire to and hope for "a decent home split-"the only blacks that I know of who Mr. President, S. 3497 is not a bill and suitable living environment for every really want segregation are those who can't which the committee "dreamed up" over- cut the mustard in an integrated society"- American family." Of course, Senator night. Quite to the contrary, S. 3497 rep- but he urged that Negro men pool their Taft and Senator Wagner are no longer money to own stores, banks, hotels. resents a two-session effort on the part with us, but the distinguished Senator of the committee. Senators will recall "We have been dallying with the white from Louisiana [Mr. ELLENDER], who was man for years, but we can't fool him any that, after some 4½ months of delibera- the other member of that famous trio, is more because he has woke up and gone and tion during the first session of the 90th still one of our most active Senators and given us our civil rights. Now we must seek Congress, the committee reported on No- one of our most active supporters of safe, justice-not generosity, not benevolence, not vember 28, 1967, the proposed Housing sanitary, and decent housing. pity, not sympathy or handouts." and Urban Development Act 02 1967- Under these acts, a great deal has been that is, S. 2700. Congress, however, ad- achieved. Literally millions of families journed before S. 2700 could be consid- CONCLUSION OF MORNING have been able to obtain decent places in ered. As a matter of fact, S. 2700 is still BUSINESS which to live commensurate with their pending on the Senate Calendar, al- needs and at prices they are able to pay. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, is though it has now been outdated by S. In fact, the FHA and VA housing pro- there further morning business? 3497, the bill which we commence to de- grams alone have aided some 17 million The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there bate today. families to obtain decent housing. Sev- further morning business? If not, morn- Rather than proceeding to consider eral thousand cities, towns and commu- ing business is concluded S. 2700 early in the second session of the nities have been helped to rid themselves Congress, the decision was made that we of their worst slums and blight and have HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOP should hold that bill in abeyance until thus become better places in which to MENT ACT OF 1968 the administration submitted its pro- work, play, worship, and live. One of the posals for 1968 housing and urban de- most notable achievements has been the Mr. MANSFIELD Mr President, I ask velopment legislation. development of a mortgage insurance unanimous consent that the Senate pro- On February 26, 1968, the President system with a Government guarantee and ceed to the consideration of the un- submitted to the Congress a message on a backup secondary mortgage market fa- finished business. housing and cities. Accompanying the cility, the results of which have largely The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill message were the administration's legis- been responsible for the rising homeown- will be stated by title for the information lative proposals designed to implement ership among the American people so of the Senate. the President's message. that today more than two-thirds own The ASSISTANT LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A The administration's proposed Hous- their own homes. bill (S. 3497) to assist in the provision of ing and Urban Development Act of 1968 However, from time to time serious housing for low- and moderate-income contained a majority of the basic ideas gaps have been noted in these acts. As families, and to extend and amend laws that were included in S. 2700. Therefore, time went on, it was realized that many relating to housing and urban develop- the committee used S. 2700 as the basis programs provided by these measures ment. for drafting the committee bill we have have not reached down far enough to May 24, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD S6387 help those who need housing the most. TITLE I-LOWER INCOME HOUSING respectively, for a family with five or Also, urban døvelopment programs were One of the most important titles to more persons. sometimes found lacking in the type of this bill is title I which contains im- Authority to enter into assistance pay- Federal support and assistance that was portant new provisions to help lower ments contracts as approved in appropri- needed at the local level to meet the fast income families become homeowners. ation acts is limited to $75 million for fis- changing housing and urban develop- There are nine sections to this title, the cal year 1969, $100 million for fiscal year ment problems of the cities. Each time provisions of which are varied but all 1970 and $125 million for fiscal year 1971. these gaps have been found or recog- are aimed at meeting a real need in our This authority could result in contracts nized, steps have been taken to close economy, that is, making it possible for for assistance payments for a total of them with either new or amended legis- lower income families to obtain decent nearly 500,000 units during the 3-year lation. housing through homeownership. This period. Let me make it clear, however, that matter was first considered last year and Other sections of this title also repre- while much success has been achieved finally, after numerous conferences and sent significant proposals to make it over the last 35 years, this Nation still consultations, the committee has brought easier for the lower income families to has a long way to go in meeting total forth a package of legislative provisions become homeowners. One of the provi- housing and urban development needs. which we confidently believe, once they sions would authorize the FHA to qualify In the first place, our previous efforts are implemented, will represent another for assistance a lower income family have never been fully effective relative to milestone in Federal assistance toward who, under existing law, would be turned the needs of the lower income people and, helping lower income families of this down because of marginal credit ex- secondly, changing economic and social Nation. perience or irregular income patterns but conditions have aggravated and worsened Under existing law, the FHA and VA who, it is found, is a satisfactory credit the urban housing problem so that, de- programs are very effective in helping risk and would be capable of homeowner- spite existing programs, many inner city families of moderate income obtain de- ship with proper counseling. areas have deteriorated at a faster rate cent housing through homeownership. This title also contains a provision than ever before. In fact, over the years, the laws have to authorize FHA to insure mortgages The housing needs of the American been gradually liberalized SO that today for families in the rundown neighbor- people and the needs of the Nation's we can proudly say that we are truly a hoods of our cities without regard to cities, towns, and communities are not nation of homeowners, largely because of economic soundness requirements and something that can be defined, once and the contribution made by FHA and VA. other limiting restrictions having in for all time, at any given period. These However, as construction costs have mind the need for adequate housing for are ever-increasing needs of the low- gone up and interest rates have risen to families in these areas. This would meet and moderate-income American family unprecedented heights, it has become the criticism often levied at FHA on red- which must be faced almost on a day- more and more difficult for families of by-day basis. What appeared to be a lining areas and its refusing insurance low and moderate income to afford to buy satisfactory solution to yesterday's prob- a home of their own. only because of the area. lem will be unacceptable today. On the Section 101 of this title is intended to A special risk fund would be estab- reverse side of the coin, it must be remedy this difficulty. Under this section, lished, not necessarily actuarially sound, realized by all concerned that these are the Federal Government would help re- which would be used to meet probable needs that cannot be met on an over- duce the housing load on the family by higher losses in the more risky insurance night basis; fiscal and physical capabil- paying all but 1 percent of the interest cases that the Congress would be au- ities are just not at hand to bring about charges to finance the mortgage loan. To thorizing FHA to undertake. an immediate solution to all these prob- make it fair for all, only lower income Mr. President, I believe that it is about lems. families would be eligible and each fam- time the Congress realizes the dilemma Mr. President, the President's housing ily would pay 20 percent of its income for it has placed the FHA in under existing and cities message proposed a far-reach- housing costs. Lower income families are law. On the one hand, FHA is required ing goal to meet a massive national defined as those whose incomes do not to run an actuarially sound operation need-a program of Federal assistance exceed 70 percent of the income ceilings with a minimum of losses while, on the for the construction and rehabilitation established by the Secretary for a par- other hand, it gets criticized because it of 6 million housing units over a 10-year ticular area in administering the FHA shies away from the marginal risk cases period for the low- and moderate-income below market interest rate program un- and from neighborhoods where private families of this country. Such a program der section 221(d) (3). This income ceil- enterprise has indicated as "off limits." would replace the substandard units in ing would vary from area to area but, in Our committee has taken a firm stand which it is estimated more than 20 mil- general, it would be at the level of about on this, both in the pending legislation lion Americans still live. the lowest one-third of families on the and in the committee's report. We be- The President's 1968 proposals for income scale in any particular area. In lieve that FHA was established to take housing legislation called for an initial my home city of Huntsville, Ala., the in- risks and to bear the burden of helping 5-year program aimed at achieving the come ceiling for families of five and six to provide decent housing for all but 10-year goal of the message. The com- persons would be $4,900 per year. To per- the poorest of our people no matter mittee certainly agrees that the Presi- mit flexibility and to make the program where they live in. We believe that each dent's 10-year goals are very admirable more workable, some few families with case should be examined on its merits and are necessary and the committee incomes above this could qualify also but, and, if it qualifies as a satisfactory risk, believes that these goals can be attained. in no instance, could more than 20 per- the FHA should accept it. The Congress, In order to do this, the committee is cent of the contracted funds be used for by these provisions of the bill, will be recommending stepped-up activity under families above this basic ceiling. committing itself to stand back of FHA existing programs, as well as proposing The committee also recommended an and help it truly perform the task it was new programs to fill the gaps apparent allowance of $300 per minor child be created to do-that of providing the fi- under existing programs. These programs made in determining eligibility under the nancial backup needed to help lower would be funded at levels to get a good income ceilings and in determining the income families obtain decent housing. start toward the 10-year goal. However, minimum payment the family should pay This title contains provisions for as- the committee did not agree with the on its own before Federal subsidy. Con- sistance to nonprofit sponsors SO that administration's proposed 5-year pro- sidering the cost of raising a family these such sponsors can be effective in help- gram. It believes that another look days, this is nothing more than an effort ing lower income families obtain decent should be taken at the progress of the to be fair and equitable for families with housing. Also a Commission would be new programs and current conditions children. established by this title to study and re- after several years of experience and Another feature of the interest sub- port back to Congress on better ways and that a 3-year period would be more sidy provision for homeownership is the means to help house our lower income appropriate. limitation on the maximum mortgage families. And, finally, the title contains I would like now to describe in very amount. In general, it would be limited authority to establish a National Home general terms the major highlights and to $15,000 but, in high cost areas, it could Ownership Foundation which would pro- proposals contained in the committee go to $17,500. These ceiling amounts vide technical and limited financial as- bill. could be raised to $17,500 and $20,000, sistance to private and public organiza- S6388 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE May 24, 1968 tions desiring lower income families be- TITLE III-FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION plicated matter, and, sooner or later, come decently housed. INSURANCE OPERATIONS when local planning agencies get started TITLE II-RENTAL HOUSING FOR LOWER INCOME This title contains 19 sections amend- in the demolition process and finally re- FAMILIES ing existing law to improve and make move the buildings, there is a vast Title II, Mr. President, deals with more effective existing FHA insurance area with nothing on it, and before it rental housing for lower income families. programs. I said at the beginning that can be redeveloped, many years may Let me say that section 201 of the title the committee bill consisted of several have passed. The provision we have in- contains provisions similar to those titles, and many provisions amending cluded in the committee bill would per- which I described in title I for home existing law. That accounts in large part mit pursuing urban renewal undertak- ownership. In other words, what we are for the great volume of the bill we have ings by smaller areas which could be trying to do is to provide twin programs; reported. We are amending, by and large, designated as neighborhood develop- namely, one for homeownership and one existing legislation. Title III is one of the ment programs. These smaller areas are for rental opportunity for families of titles containing many amendments to a part of the whole which has been lower incomes, by having the houses existing law. planned but permits such areas to be built by private enterprise with a sub- Perhaps the most significant action of pursued with work and development in sidy going where necessary and to the the committee relative to this title is its a limited way rather than taking the extent necessary in order to make it pos- report language outlining FHA's re- whole. sible for the lower income families either sponsibility in providing housing for all That, Mr. President, I may add, the to buy a home or to rent a unit. eligible families of this Nation regardless neighborhood development programs would be undertaken on an annual This title is a companion title to title of the location of the property; also in I, but for rental housing rather than helping to meet the need for better basis. Let me cite an example right here homeownership. Section 201 of this title financing provisions in the rehabilitation in Washington-familiar to all of us in compares almost directly with section of existing housing in connection with days not SO long past-when one of the urban renewal. worst slums in the world was right in 101 in providing interest subsidy assist- ance to lower income families in rental TITLE IV-GUARANTEES FOR FINANCING NEW the shadow of the Capitol dome. COMMUNITY LAND DEVELOPMENT I referred, of course, to the Southwest projects. However, the renter would pay Washington area. I have been down 25 percent of his income for housing This title would establish a new Gov- costs before receiving a subsidy. It is be- there. I remember being in a little alley ernment bond insurance system to help lieved that the 20 percent for a home- and looking up, and there was the great, finance the acquisition and development magnificent Capitol dome. It seemed owner would be equivalent to 25 percent of new communities. Under existing law, for a renter because the homeowner has the most ironic thing in the world that FHA is authorized to insure mortgage other costs which the renter does not right in the shadow of the dome of the loans used for this purpose. This au- have, such as heat and maintenance. The Capitol of the mightiest nation in the thority was given in its present form in world we had slums that were absolutely authorization for assistance payments 1966 but no mortgage has yet been in- incredible. would be he same under this section as sured under it. The bond financing de- under the section 101 homeownership Finally, the slum clearance program vice would be a much superior method under old title I of the Act of 1949 was provision. It has been estimated that ap- and should produce the financing at set up. I guess the urban renewal pro- proximately 700,000 units would be con- reasonable terms and with considerable gram in Southwest Washington was one traced for under the moneys authorized flexibility to attract large private inves- of the earliest in the country. As I re- to be appropriated for this program- tors into this worthwhile endeavor. member, the total area covered was 555 $75 million for fiscal year 1969, $100 mil- TITLE V-URBAN RENEWAL acres. It took several years to get the lion for fiscal year 1970, and $125 million for fiscal year 1971. These units would be The most significant provision under buildings torn down. In fact, it seemed this title is section 501 establishing a like it was going to be forever before any both new construction and rehabilitated new neighborhood development program new buildings would be constructed in housing units. as part of urban renewal. Under this the area. Finally the buildings were Title II also includes authorizations to program, an annual grant would be made started. extend the public housing and rent sup- to a city to carry out small area redevel- I remember saying to the director of plement programs through fiscal year opment with the intent of speeding up our program, "When are we going to see 1971. These programs are of benefit to the urban renewal process and showing some brick-and-mortar activity in the the poorest families of our Nation whose visible accomplishments in short periods area?" There was always the same reply, incomes are so low that the new rent of time. This would replace much of the and it was logical: "We have got to wait subsidy program explained above would existing program whereby large areas until we get the redevelopment plan and be of little help. Under both the public are redeveloped over a 5- to 10-year pe- are ready to go." As we all know it took housing and rent supplement programs, riod with no visible results until the end years. Frankly, I do not know how many the tenants pay a certain portion of their of a long planning and redevelopment years passed before redevelopment was income for rent-the public housing per- process. started. But today, to look at it, one would centages determined locally and gen- Another section of this title would never dream that it was the area it was erally vary from 16 percent to 20 per- initiate a new system of applying Fed- several years ago. There are magnificent cent with allowance for children; the eral funds for interim assistance to an buildings there now-new homes and rent supplement percentage, as set by area scheduled for urban renewal or code new rental units replacing that old slum. Federal law, is 25 percent. Under each enforcement in the near future. By this As a matter of fact, it is not fully de- of these programs, the Federal subsidy device, much needed obvious work can veloped yet. I am not saying we should will make up the difference between what be done well in advance of the slow- have put the program into effect in 1949, the tenant pays and the economic rent. moving urban renewal process. because we were not ready for it, but However, the new rental program au- The committee also included provi- now we have had the experience to profit thorized by section 201 of this bill pro- sions in this title to insure that a ma- from. Under the provision of the com- vides only limited subsidy-the differ- jority of housing units built in urban mittee bill we could take the same tract ence between in amortization charges on renewal areas are made available to low- and redevelop it in increments on an a 63/4-percent mortgage and a 1-percent and moderate-income families; it also annual basis. This year we would rede- mortgage. Thus, it can reach and be of increased the rehabilitation grant ceil- velop a part of it. Next year we would help to a more narrow segment of lower ing from $1,500 to $2,500 to help lower redevelop more and SO on down the line. income families. Generally speaking, income families hold on to their homes We would make it progressive rather families below $3,000 annual income and make the improvements needed to than try to take the entire area all at would need rent supplement or public meet the rehabilitation standards. one time. housing assistance and thus the com- Mr. President, one of the great objec- TITLE VI-URBAN PLANNING FACILITIES mittee believed it must be essential that tions SO far to urban renewal has been The most important section in this adequate authority be made available to that the undertaking requires such a title is section 601, which would rewrite keep these programs operating at a good long period of time to complete. This is the 701 urban planning provision and level. true because urban renewal is a com- amend it to cover rural districts. This May 24, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE S 6389 would be a most significant step in our National Mortgage Association, and the TITLE XI-NATIONAL INSURANCE DEVELOPMENT Government's efforts to stabilize and, retention of the other functions of CORPORATION in fact, reinvigorate the life and econ- FNMA into a new Government National This title would establish the National omy of rural districts, from which there Mortgage Association-GNMA. This par- Insurance Development Corporation in has recently been such a high migration tition would take place gradually, but not the Department of HUD. The NIDC into our crowded cities. earlier than May 1, 1970, nor later than would provide reinsurance to insurance Section 607 of this title would also May 1, 1973. The Government-owned companies for losses paid by them result- encourage rural district development by preferred stock would be paid off ing from riots or civil disorders. By pro- providing for Federal incentive grants promptly by FNMA issuing subordinated viding this reinsurance, NIDC will en- to such districts similar to those grants obligations. Once the preferred stock is able the insurance industry to continue now available to metropolitan areas paid off and the interim board of direc- to provide the necessary property insur- around our large cities. tors is appointed, the FNMA Corporation ance it is now providing to property own- I want to throw this thought in right would no longer be considered a Govern- ers in urban areas. Reinsurance losses here, because I think it is something ment corporation and, thus, its financing would be shared among the insurance most people overlook. When we talk operation would be excluded from the companies-through a loss retention and about the slums and the rundown, de- regular Government budget. FNMA reinsurance premiums paid to NIDC- teriorated, unfit houses in city areas, we would continue to have Federal backup the States, and NIDC. :lose sight of the fact that the worst support to the extent of $2 billion bor- The NIDC would also encourage the slums are in rural areas. There are more rowing authority from the Treasury. private property insurance industry, in poor people living in the rural areas GNMA would continue its special as- cooperation with State insurance author- than in all the big cities combined. Over sistance and management and liquida- ities, to develop statewide plans to assure half of the poor people of this country tion functions, would continue to issue all property owners fair access to prop- live in rural areas. We are proposing in participation certificates secured by erty insurance. These would be known this bill provisions so that an attack mortgages, and would be given new au- as "Fair Access to Insurance Require- may be made on conditions in rural thority to guarantee mortgage-backed ments plans"-FAIR plans. Minimum areas, where there is a great demand securities issued by the new FNMA and criteria would be provided in the bill for for housing. other private-approved issuers. The se- the FAIR plans. Although minimum cri- We need not be afraid of building curity would be limited to FHA and VA teria would be established, the State in- houses in rural areas. We have had ex- mortgages. surance authority would have the respon- perience. In fact, in the act of 1949, 19 By making the FNMA private, it is sibility of determining the scope of the years ago, I offered an amendment and hoped to give it more strength and flex- plans beyond the established minimum, it was adopted. It became title V of the ibility to carry out its charter responsi- working out the details of the operation 1949 Housing Act. It was a simple pro- bilities, but, to safeguard it from failing of the plan, implementing the plan, and vision. The provision authorized loans to perform in the best public interest, overseeing its operation. An insurance to be made to rural families and persons the Federal Government would continue company obtaining reinsurance from who needed housing. Under title V of the to have a strong hand in the control of NIDC would have to agree to participate 1949 act hundreds of millions of dollars its management through the makeup of in the State plan. have been loaned to rural families for the Board and its charter provisions. NIDC and the State insurance author- housing. TITLE IX-NATIONAL HOUSING PARTNERSHIP ity would maintain surveillance over the I am sure the present Presiding Officer This title would authorize the creation effectiveness of the FAIR plans in in- [Mr. GORE in the chair], who is a farm of federally chartered, privately funded creasing insurance availability. If it is boy like I am, can do as I do. When we corporations to mobilize private invest- determined that the FAIR plan is not ride around the country we can pick out, ment and the application of business obtaining the desired results, additional as we ride along, the housing that has skills in the job of creating low- and programs may be required as a condition been built under the title V program. moderate-income housing in large vol- to continued NIDC reinsurance in the This housing is one of the most cheering ume. It would work like this: A federally State. sights one can see. The program has a chartered corporation would be organized TITLE XII-NATIONAL FLOOD INSURANCE ACT remarkable record of being financially with expert staff proficient in the devel- OF 1968 sound. An enviable record has been opment and financing of housing proj- The Secretary of Housing and Urban achieved. In fact, that is true in the ects. This corporation would get capital Development will establish a program of housing field in general. I think all hous- by forming a partnership with investors flood insurance, as a joint venture be- ing programs must have exceeded any who, in return for favorable tax depreci- tween the Federal Government and the expectations that those who pioneered ation allowances, would be attracted to private incurance industry. The bill per- many years ago could have dreamed of. invest substantial sums of equity capi- mits as an alternative, but only if neces- TITLE VII-URBAN MASS TRANSPORTATION tal. With the equity capital thus avail- sary, an all Federal program with or The most significant provision in this able, the partnership could join with lo- cal partners to build housing with 90 without participation by companies, title is section 704, which would authorize percent of the cost financed with FHA agents, or brokers as fiscal agents. that 50 percent of the local share of the assistance and 10 percent equity. With The facilities of the private insurance net project cost for mass transit projects industry would be fully utilized in carry- could be made by the public or private favorable refinancing terms, such as pro- transit systems rather than the local vided under the new section 236 of the ing out the program. Private insurance government. Also, in exceptional cases 1968 Act, the operation can be most at- companies could either assume a portion where the local government is fiscally tractive to investors in the upper income of the risk in carrying out the program unable to make the payment, the full brackets. Depreciation allowances are or could participate on a nonrisk basis. amount of the local share may be paid not new to housing investors, SO that all Risk sharing companies would commit by the local transit company. In making of this can be accomplished without risk capital to an industry pool of com- this payment, the funds could only come amendments to existing internal re- venue laws. This provision was recom- panies which would absorb a share of from undistributed cash surpluses, re- mended by the President's Committee the losses and expenses of the program. placement, or depreciation funds or re- on Urban Housing, chaired by Mr. Edgar The Federal Government would make serves available in cash or new capital. F. Kaiser, as a way of involving big busi- premium equilization payments to the TITLE VHI-SECONDARY MORTGAGE MARKET ness in solving the housing problems of pool to cover losses and also would pro- This is something that I think is of our cities. vide reinsurance coverage to the pool great interest. It relates to what we call TITLE X-RURAL HOUSING for excessively high losses. Insurance FNMA. This title would provide for rural fam- companies in the pool would pay a pre- This title would amend the FNMA ilies the same benefits made available mium to the Government for this rein- Charter Act of 1954 by providing for the under section 101 of this bill for urban surance coverage in years of low-flood spin-off of the secondary mortgage mar- families, that is, an interest subsidy pay- losses. Other non-risk-bearing insurance ket facility into a privately owned corpo- ment to help lower income families ac- companies would participate in the pro- ration which would be called the Federal quire homeownership. gram as fiscal agents of the pool. S6390 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE May 24, 1968 TITLE XIII-INTERSTATE LAND SALES Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, will the before this body, it is a bill that contains This title would give to the Secretary Senator yield to me at that point? provisions that will be supported by some of HUD authority to require full dis- Mr. SPARKMAN. Let me add one fur- and opposed by others. closure in the sale or lease of certain un- ther thought. The bill was not easy to arrive at in developed land in interstate commerce That was adopted, and, with changes our committee. The committee unani- or through the mails. All developers or that have taken place from time to time mously reported the measure, but many sellers of such land would be required to since then, one of the most remarkable of the provisions represent a compromise file with the Secretary a statement of jobs in the history of this country has view on the part of different members of record listing certain required informa- been done in building housing to house the committee. tion about the ownership of the land, its students and faculty members at our I can say very candidly that there are title, its physical nature, its access and overcrowded and overcrowding colleges some provisions in the bill which, if I egress by roads and utilities and related throughout this country. had been writing the bill, would not be in matters. Pertinent extracts of this report I do not know what the colleges would the bill. However, the bill represents the would have to be included in a property have done without it. I believe I am safe bringing together of the thinking of the report submitted to the purchaser before in saying that there is not a single col- members of the committee who worked the sale is consummated. lege in my State that has not benefited, long, hard, and earnestly on getting out TITLE XIV-10-YEAR HOUSING PROGRAM and benefited immeasurably, from this a bill. This title would require the President program. I call attention again to the fact that I cannot state exactly how much to make a report on or before January 15, this bill is not something new that has money has been loaned out SO far, but I 1969, setting forth a 10-year plan on the just been developed or that the commit- would say around $3 billion. There has construction and financing of housing, tee felt was forced upon it. never been one dime of deficiency. I think both Government and conventionally fi- We started working on this bill nearly it is a remarkable record. nanced, for each of the 10 years, together 2 years ago. We started working on hous- We are making, this year, a change with a statement of what reduction in ing and urban development legislation recommended by the distinguished Sena- substandard units is expected; also an nearly a year and a half ago, in the early tor from New York, to whom I now yield. estimate of cost of various Federal pro- part of the first session of this Congress. Mr. JAVITS. I merely wish to say grams for legislative action. Residential And we have worked over the months on briefly, Mr. President, that it is such a mortgage market needs would also be re- developing the committee bill. And the creative program because it does operate ported. Annual reports would subse- bill does represent the composite think- with practically no impact on the budget. quently be made for each of the 10 years ing of our committee. We struggled, if the Senator will recall, thereafter on progress of the projected I think that S. 3497 is by and large a with an amendment of mine to increase figures. good bill. In fact, I think it is one of the Mr. President, I said a few minutes ago the amount of college housing, and most comprehensive bills we have ever that the President's 10-year proposal is a found it extremely trying because of the had. I want to go further and say that good proposal. I believe the committee budgetary impact; and I was almost I think it is one of the best bills we have forced to this alternative as a means of will back me up in that statement. ever had, and that it is one that helds escaping the budgetary impact. I express Many people are not satisfied with this more promise for persons of low income my appreciation to the Senator from bill, thinking it does not go far enough. to get decent housing, either rented or Alabama and to the committee for hav- But, Mr. President, we have written a purchased. that we have ever had. ing now embraced it and included it in bill which we think goes just about as Mr. PERCY. Mr. President, will the the bill. far as our present resources will permit. Senator yield? Mr. SPARKMAN. It was a most wel- The organization of homebuilders in this Mr. SPARKMAN. I yield. come suggestion. country to do the job, the materials with Mr. PERCY. Mr. President, I should Mr. JAVITS. I thank the Senator. which to do it, the labor force with which like to comment that, having been a Mr. SPARKMAN. It was a happy solu- to do it, and all of that must necessarily member of the Housing Subcommittee, I tion of a problem that was becoming be brought together as fast as we can, as have gone back over the history of some difficult because we could not provide the we move into the program proposed by 30 years, and in my own comments this money in sufficient amounts to take care our bill. This is why the committee feels morning, which will follow those of the of all of the loans that the colleges the need for annual reports on the hous- distingushed Senator from Texas [Mr. needed. ing needs of the Nation. TOWER], I will comment more in detail We are not doing away with the direct on that. However, I think one point TITLE XV-MISCELLANEOUS loan program-we are merely setting up should be clearly made at this point. One of the most important provisions an alternative method of financing. I This has been truly a bipartisan effort. under this title is the new interest sub- think it will be of tremendous help. The bill has been developed under the sidy financing device for college housing As the Senator from New York has great leadership of the chairman, the construction. Under existing law, direct pointed out, it would have relatively little distinguished Senator from Alabama, Federal loans are made to colleges at 3- impact on the budget. with great resourcefulness. He has been percent interest rates. This program has Mr. JAVITS. I thank the Senator. assisted by such members of the com- worked well but, because of recent ex- Mr. SPARKMAN. Under another sec- mittee as the Senator from Minnesota pansion of colleges throughout the Na- tion of this title, new authority would be [Mr. MONDALE], and. on the minority tion, the funds needed to be appropriated given to the Secretary of HUD to increase side, the distinguished Senator from for this purpose have been far short of the planning funds for the model cities Texas [Mr. TOWER], the ranking mem- the need. program by $12 million. By this action, ber of the committe, and the distin- To overcome this dilemma, this bill the committee anticipates a third round guished Senator from Utah [Mr. would authorize the Federal Govern- of cities would apply for planning assist- BENNETT]. ment to pay interest subsidies amounting ance under this program. The bill would We have been working for 2 years in to the difference between a 3-percent also add $1 billion for operating for the committee on the bill. We now have loan and the market interest rate. The fiscal year 1970 for model cities. These in Washington the representatives of the Federal commitment is far reduced by funds are used as supplementary grants Poor People's Campaign. They have pre- this means and it is believed a satisfac- to cities carrying out model cities pro- sented to the Secretary of HUD the re- tory quantity of housing can be built granis and would be added to the $900 quests they are making in the housing with a minimum of Federal outlay. million authorized under existing law. field. I believe that the distinguished Mr. President, this is one of the most In conclusion, Mr. President, S. 3497. Senator from Alabama will be particu- successful programs we have had. It was is a bill like many others which we have larly interested in the fact that as we back in 1955 that I offered an amendment brought the Senate from the Banking go over the requests made by the Poor to the Housing Act of that year to provide and Currency Committee. It is a bill that People's Campaign to the Secretary of a formula for lending money to colleges continues our many past efforts toward HUD and look over in detail some of the in order that they might expand their helping the American people obtain the things they have talked about, we find facilities to help take care of the ever- goal declared in the Housing Act of 1949, that we have anticipated in the past 2 increasing load of GI's, veterans of World "a decent home and suitable living en- years in the course of our hearings and War II, and veterans who could be ex- vironment for every American family." in our response to the genuine need, pected back from the Korean war. And like any other measure which comes many of the requests that they have May 24, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE 6391 made of the Secretary. Anyone can Section 3.-Provides that in administering with the assistance of budget, debt manage- clearly see that there is no question programs authorized by sections 221(d) (3), ment, and related counseling provided by about our acceding to demands being 235, and 236 of the National Housing Act; the Secretary. Mortgage insurance under this the low-rent public housing program of the made upon us. program would have to meet the require- U.S. Housing Act of 1937; and section 101 of ments (other than credit and income re- We are sympathetic with the repre- the Housing and Urban Development Act of quirements) under certain existing FHA sentatives of the poor who present to 1965, the Secretary of the Housing and Urban single-family sales program, except that the us that we had seen as a great need in Development shall require, to the greatest principal obligation of the mortgage could this country. extent feasible, opportunities for employ- not exceed $15,000 ($17,500 in high-cost Our response is a response that has ment arising in connection with construction areas) and the mortgagor could not under- gone back several years now, in antici- or rehabilitation of housing assisted under take a mortgage which, in combination with pation of all of the things that have such programs be given to lower income per- local real estate taxes, required monthly pay- been presented in this bill that has been sons residing in the area of such housing. ments for principal and interest which ex- carefully worked on for many months TITLE I-LOWER INCOME HOUSING ceeds 25 percent of the mortgagor's income. The amount of insurance under this section now. Homeownership for Lower Income Families is limited to $200 million outstanding at any Every member of the committee has Section 101.-Adds a new section 235 to one time. participated and worked cooperatively title II of the National Housing Act to es- with representatives from HUD and with tablish a mortgage insurance program based Relaxation of mortgage insurance require- on an interest rate subsidy to provide home- ments in certain urban neighborhoods the Secretary of Housing and Urban ownership for lower income families. The in- Section 103.-Amends section 223 of the Development. terest rate subsidy payment which would be National Housing Act by adding a new sub- It has been a great honor and privi- paid by the Secretary of the Housing and section (e) to give FHA a more flexible au- lege for me to work under the leadership Urban Development to the mortgagee could thority in providing financing for the repair, of the Senator from Alabama. not exceed the lesser of: (a) The difference rehabilitation, construction, or purchase of I certainly support everything the between the monthly payment for principal, properties located in older, declining urban chairman has said this morning. interest, and mortgage insurance premium areas by authorizing FHA to accept for insur- Mr. SPARKMAN. Mr. President, I cer- for a market rate mortgage, and the amount ance mortgages on properties which may not, tainly thank the Senator from Illinois, the monthly payment would be for principal because of the areas in which they are lo- and interest with a 1-percent mortgage, or cated, be able to meet all the normal eligibil- and I share with him the feeling he has (b) the difference between 20 percent of the ity requirements for insurance. Permits such expressed that the bill represents the mortgagor's monthly income and the monthly mortgages to be accepted for insurance where handiwork of 14 members of the com- payment under the mortgage. The subsidy FHA is able to establish that the areas are mittee. payment would be available to a purchaser reasonably viable, giving consideration to the Mr. President, I have expressed my having an income not in excess of 70 percent need for providing adequate housing for of the limits prescribed for eligibility to OC- families of low and moderate income in such thanks to the members of the commit- tee and the subcommittee without men- cupy projects financed under the FHA sec- areas and that the properties are an accept- tion 221(d) (3) below-market interest rate able risk in view of such consideration. tioning their names. However, I believe program, except that 20 percent of the con- Special risk insurance fund I ought to say that the distinguished tract funds could be used to assist families Section 104.-Adds a new section 238 to Senator from Texas [Mr. TOWER], the with income above these limits. For each title II of the National Housing Act to estab- ranking minority member of the com- minor child in the household, $300 would be lish a "Special Risk Insurance Fund," which mittee, is always most helpful and CO- deducted from family income. The interest fund is not intended to be actuarially sound operative. subsidy payment would decrease as the and out of which claims would be paid on The same thing is true with respect homeowner's income rises. mortgages insured under sections 101 (home- to the Senator from Utah [Mr. BENNETT], The subsidy payment could only be made ownership assistance), 102 (credit assist- the Senator from Iowa [Mr. HICKEN- with respect to new or rehabilitated housing ance), 103 (properties in older, declining ur- LOOPER], the Senator from Illinois [Mr. meeting the requirements of the FHA sec- ban areas) and 201 (rental and cooperative tion 221(d) (2) sales housing program, the housing for lower income families) of the PERCY], and the Senator from Massa- 234 condominium program, the 213 coopera- bill. Payments on claims would be made in chusetts [Mr. BROOKE]. itve program, or section 221(h) as incor- cash or debentures. Income such as insur- I could go right down the list on the porated into the new section with some ance premiums and service charges in con- Democratic side also. modifications. However, during the first 3 nection with these programs would be de- Mr. President, perhaps I should just years after enactment assistance payments posited in the new fund. Authorizes $5 mil- list the Democratic members of the com- could be made with respect to existing hous- lion advance from general insurance fund mittee. The members are WILLIAM PROX- ing as follows: 25 percent of the contract to establish new fund, which is repayable MIRE, of Wisconsin; HARRISON A. WIL- funds authorized by appropriation acts in and authorizes appropriations when neces- the first year; 15 percent of the contract LIAMS, JR., of New Jersey; EDMUND S. sary to supplement and maintain adequacy funds authorized in the second year; 10 per- of the new fund. MUSKIE, of Maine; EDWARD V. LONG, of cent of the contract funds authorized in Condominium and cooperative ownership for Missouri; THOMAS J. MCINTYRE, of New the third year. In addition, payments could low and moderate income families Hampshire; WALTER F. MONDALE, of Min- be made with respect to existing housing for iesota; GALE McGEE, of Wyoming, WIL- displaced families, families with five or more Section 105.-Amends section 221 of the .IAM B. SPONG, JR., of Virginia. minors, or families living in public housing, National Housing Act by adding new sub- All of the members of the committee as well as for families who purchase dwelling sections (i) and (j) to permit section 221 units released from the project mortgage for (d) (3) below-market interest rate rental ave been helpful and almost without a 236 project or a rent supplement project. projects: (1) To be converted to condomi- exception suggestions have been adopted The maximum mortgage under the program nium ownership; or (2) to be converted to in the bill that have been made by each would be $15,000 ($17,500 in high-cost areas), cooperative ownership. Families purchasing member of the committee. I pay tribute but each limit would be increased by $2,500 condominium or cooperative units would to all members of the committee for the for families of five or more persons. The be generally required to meet income limits dedicated service they have rendered in section 221(d) (2) mortgage ceilings would established for occupancy under the (d) perfecting this piece of legislation. I feel be raised to the same level. Counseling serv- ices are authorized. (3) below-market interest rate program. somewhat safe in saying perfecting be- cause I think it is an excellent piece of This section also authorizes contract au- Assistance to nonprofit sponsors for low and egislation. thority subject to appropriations acts to fi- moderate income housing nance the program in the following manner: Section 106.-Establishes a new program Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- $75 million annually prior to July 1, 1969, within HUD under which the Secretary may ent to have printed at this point in the which amount may be increased by $100 mil- provide technical assistance to nonprofit RECORD a section-by-section analysis of lion on July 1, 1969, and by an additional sponsors of low and moderate income hous- he bill. $125 million on July 1, 1970. ing. Also authorizes the Secretary to make There being no objection, the section- Credit assistance non-interest-bearing loans to nonprofit or- y-section analysis of the bill was ordered Section 102.-Adds a new section 237 to ganizations for financing up to 80 percent of ) be printed in the RECORD, as follows: title II of the National Housing Act to au- preconstruction costs in connection with fed- OUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1968 thorize mortgage insurance for families of erally assisted low and moderate income .3497)-SECTION-BY-SECTION SUMMARY low and moderate income who cannot qualify housing projects. These loans could cover Section 1.-Provides that the bill shall be for mortgage insurance under existing FHA such preconstruction items as architectural ted as the "Housing and Urban Develop- programs because of their credit histories fees, land options, and engineering surveys. ent Act of 1968." or irregular income patterns, but who the A revolving fund would be established, with Section 2.-States the declaration of policy Secretary finds are "reasonably satisfactory" $7.5 million authorized the first year and $10 [ the bill. credit risks and capable of homeownership million the second year. 6392 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD May 24, 1968 Insurance protection for homeowners Contracts for interest reduction payments pursuant to regulations prescribed by him. Section 107.-Authorizes the Secretary of subject to approval in appropriations acts Under such regulations, the mortgagor would HUD, in cooperation with the private insur- would be authorized in the following have to agree to place in trust any income ance industry, to develop a plan for estab- amounts: $75 million annually prior to July or funds derived from the project in excess lishing an insurance program to enable 1, 1969, which amount may be increased by of what is required to meet actual and nec- homeowners to meet their monthly mortgage $100 million on July 1, 1969, and by $125 essary operating expenses. The Secretary payments in time of personal economic ad- million on July 1, 1970. could provide for granting such consent in versity. Also directs the Secretary to make a Rent supplement program any case or class of cases without regard to report on his actions along with his recom- Section 202.-Amends section 101 of the the requirements of the regulations where mendation for establishing such a program he determined such action would not jeop- Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 within 6 months following enactment of this ardize the interests of the United States. Any to increase the appropriation authority for act. knowing and willful misdistribution of the the rent supplement program by $40 million rents or other income received during the National advisory commission on low-income for fiscal year 1970 and $100 million for fiscal period of extension or modification would housing year 1971. Also authorizes State or locally subject the party to criminal penalty ($5,000 Section 108.-Establishes a National Ad- assisted rent supplement benefits. or 3-year imprisonment, or both). visory Commission on Low-Income Housing Part B-Low-Rent Public Housing Condominiums to undertake a comprehensive study and in- Increased low-rent public housing vestigation of the resources and capabilities Section 304.-Amends section 234(c) and authorization in the public and private sectors of the eco- (f) of the National Housing Act to: (1) Pro- nomy which may be used to fulfill more Section 203.-Amends section 10(e) of the vide the same downpayment and maximum completely the objectives of the national goal U.S. Housing Act of 1937 to increase the an- mortgage limitations for FHA condominium of "a decent home and suitable living en- nual contribution contract authority by $100 programs as are provided for the regular sin- vironment for every American family," par- million on enactment and by $150 million gle-family FHA section 203(b) program, (2) ticularly as such goal relates to low-income for each of fiscal years 1970 and 1971. permit blanket mortgages to cover four or families. The Commission is directed to sub- Upgrading management and services in more units instead of the present limitation mit to the President and the Congress an public housing projects of five or more units, and (3) permit FHA in- interim report with respect to its findings Section 204.-Amends section 15 of the U.S. surance for individual units in a condomini- and recommendations not later than July 1, Housing Act of 1937 to authorize the Secre- um project with two to 11 dwelling units 1969. and a final report not later than July 1, tary of HUD to enter into grant contracts without requiring that the project be first 1970. with local housing authorities to assist them covered by an FHA-insured project mort- National Homeownership Foundation in upgrading their management activities gage. and to provide tenant services to families OC- Insurance of loans for purchase of fee simple Section 109.-Creates a National Home- ownership Foundation, the purpose of which cupying public housing. Authorizes appro- title from lessors would be to provide technical and limited priation of $20 million in fiscal year 1969 and Section -Adds a new section 240 to financial assistance to public and private $40 million in fiscal year 1970 for such the National Housing Act to permit FHA to organizations which have as their purpose contracts. insure loans of homeowners financing the providing increased homeownership and Purchase of units by tenants purchase of fee simple title to property on housing opportunities for lower income fam- which their homes are located where the Section 205.-Amends section 15(9) of U.S. ilies. The Foundation, which would be a Gov- Housing Act of 1937 to broaden existing law homeowners have only leasehold interests to ernment-chartered nonprofit private corpora- the land. to permit local housing authorities to sell any tion, would be administered by a Board con- low-rent housing units to tenants if such Section -Amends 5(c) of the Home sisting of 18 members, 15 of whom would be units are suitable for individual ownership. Owners' Loan Act of 1933 to permit saving: appointed by the President with the advice and loan associations to invest in the loan (Existing law permits tenants to purchase and consent of the Senate. The remaining described above. only detached or semidetached units.) three members would be the Secretary of Public housing in Indian areas Extend section (2) sales housing pro Housing and Urban Development, Secretary grain for two-, three-, and four-family res of Agriculture, and the Director of the Office Section 206.-Amends section 1 of U.S. dences to all low and moderate incon of Economic Opportunity. The Foundation Housing Act of 1937 to permit public housing families would also be authorized an appropriation of assistance for Indian families living in rural Section 306.-Amends section (d) (2) ( $10 million to be used in carrying out its farm areas. (Existing law limits public hous- the National Housing Act to authorize mort prescribed functions. ing assistance to urban and rural nonfarm gage insurance for two-, three-, and four TITLE II-RENTAL HOUSING FOR LOWER INCOME areas.) family residences to all low and moderat FAMILIES TITLE III-FEDERAL HOUSING ADMINISTRATION income families. (Existing law limits mort INSURANCE OPERATIONS Part A-Private Housing gage insurance only to displaced low an Mortgage insurance premiums for servicemen moderate income families.) Rental and cooperative housing for lower and their widows income families Remove dividend restriction from nondwell Section 201.-Adds a new section 236 to Section 301.-Amends section 222 of the ing facilities in section 221 projects title II of the National Housing Act to pro- National Housing Act to permit payment of Section 307.-Amends section 221(f) of t1 vide rental and cooperative housing for low- FHA insurance premium by the Secretaries of National Housing Act to remove the require er income families. Mortgages insured under Defense and Transportation for servicemen ment that mortgagors of multifamily pro section 236 would carry a market interest who assume a mortgage previously insured ects insured under section 221 and locat rate, but the Secretary of HUD would pay to under any other provision of the National in urban renewal areas waive the rights the mortgagee on behalf of the mortgagor Housing Act. Also requires Secretaries to con- remove dividends on the equity investme an amount equal to the difference between tinue premium payment after serviceman's of the project devoted to community at the monthly payment for principal, interest, death on behalf of his widow for a 2-year shopping facilities where these facilities a and mortgage insurance premium at the mar- period or until she sells the house, whichever designed to serve the needs of others tha ket rate and the monthly payment for prin- is sooner. Also directs Secretaries to notify residents of the project. (The restrictio cipal and interest at 1 percent. Occupants, promptly the widow of the increase in costs would not be removed in the case of sec. 22 however, would pay 25 percent of their in- she must bear at end of 2-year period. (d) (3) BMIR projects.) come as rent up to the full market rental. Seasonal homes Supplemental loan program for project The sponsor would reimburse the Secretary Section 302.-Adds a new section 203 (m) financed with FHA insured mortgages for that part of rent receipts in excess of the to the National Housing Act to authorize Section 308-Adds a new section 223(f) t amount which would be required under 1- FHA to insure mortgages on seasonal homes the National Housing Act to permit the Sec percent financing, and this amount could be not exceeding $15,000 and 75 percent of the retary of HUD to insure supplemental loar used to make other interest reduction pay- appraised value on an acceptable risk basis, to finance improvements, repairs, and add ments. Occupancy of assisted projects would taking into consideration the economic tions to multifamily rental projects (include be available only to tenants whose incomes potential of the area and the effect the in- are not in excess of 70 percent of the limits ing nursing homes and housing for the e surance of such mortgages would have on the derly) and group practice facilities finance prescribed for eligibility under the section availability of mortgage credit in the area. with an FHA insured mortgage. Such finan 221 (3) below-niarket interest rate pro- Also requires proper steps to preserve natural ing would supplement existing insured mor gram, except that 20 percent of contract resources of the area. gages and would be available without r funds could be used with respect to families with incomes above these limits. For each Modification in terms of insured mortgages financing the existing mortgage. minor child in the household, $300 would be covering multifamily projects Home improvement loans-Increase in max deducted from family income. Section 221 Section 303.-Adds a new section 239 to the mum maturity, finance charge, and lo: (d) (3) BMIR mortgages (prior to final en- National Housing Act to require the Secre- amount dorsement) and section 202 housing for the tary of HUD to approve a request for the ex- Section 309.-Amends section 2(b) of t) elderly mortgages (up to, or a reasonable tension of time for curing a default on any National Housing Act containing the title time thereafter, project completion) could be FHA multifamily mortgage or for a modifica- home improvement program to: (1) Increa refinanced under this program. tion of the terms of such a mortgage only the maximum loan limitation from $3,500 May 24, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD S 6393 $5,000; (2) increase the maximum maturity sued by private new community developers which are scheduled for rehabilitation or from 5 years and 32 days to 7 years and 32 to help finance the development of new com- concentrated code enforcement within a days; and (3) increase the maximum financ- munity projects. This title would provide: reasonable period of time. ing charge from $5 to $5.50 per $100 on the Maximum guarantee: Cannot exceed: (a) Rehabilitation in urban renewal areas first $2,500 of the loan and from $4 to $4.50 The lesser of 80 percent of the Secretary's per $100 on the amount in excess of $2,500. estimate of the value of the property upon Section 504.-Amends section 110(c) (8) of Experimental housing program completion of the land development, or (b) the Housing Act of 1949 to remove the pres- the sum of 75 percent of the Secretary's esti- ent limitation on the acquisition and re- Section 310.-Amends section 223 of the mate of the value of the land before develop- habilitation of residential properties by a National Housing Act, the FHA experimental housing program, to make the program avail- ment and 90 percent of his estimate of the local urban renewal agency. (Existing law actual cost of the land development. permits the local agency to acquire and re- able for use in connection with all FHA Guaranteed ceilings: $50 million for any habilitate for demonstration purposes no programs. single new development; $500 million aggre- more than 100 units or 5 percent of the total Term of FHA mortgages for land gate outstanding principal obligation at any residential units in the urban renewal area, development one time. whichever is lesser.) Section 311.-Amends section 1002(d) (1) Revolving fund for guarantee: Fees and Disposition of property for low and moderate of the National Housing Act to increase the charges collected by the Secretary will be income housing maturity for FHA mortgages securing sub- deposited in a revolving fund to cover any Section 505.-Amends section 107 of the division development from 7 to 10 years with liabilities under the guarantees. In addition, Housing Act of 1949 to make it clear that further authority placed in the Secretary of the full faith and credit of the United States land may be disposed of for low as well as HUD to go beyond a 10-year maturity if he is pledged to payment of the guarantees and moderate income housing purposes and to deems such longer term is necessary. appropriations to cover program operations permit this disposition to be accomplished Rehabilitated multifamily projects in urban and nonadministrative expenses and, if nec- by lease as well as by sale. Would also permit renewal areas essary, any guarantee payments are author- land to be sold to a mortgagor qualified under ized. Section 312.-Amends section 220(d) (3) section 236 of the National Housing Act Small builders: Requires HUD to adopt re- (B) (ii) and (d) (3) (iii) of the National (added by sec. 201 of this bill) and to non- Housing Act to permit FHA insurance under quirements encouraging small builders to profit organizations eligible under section sections 220 (urban renewal housing) and participate in new community projects. 221 (h) or under 235(j) (1) of the National Supplementary grants: Authorizes supple- 221 (d) (3) (low and moderate income fami- Housing Act (added by sec. 101 of this bill) mental grants to States and localities as- lies) for multifamily properties in urban re- which rehabilitate property and sell it to newal areas which have been rehabilitated sisting new community development with low or moderate income families. basic water and sewer and open space proj- by local agencies. ects. The additional grant is limited to 20 Grants for low and moderate income housing Miscellaneous housing insurance percent of cost of the facility and a substan- in open land projects Section 313.-Amends section 223 of the tial number of housing units for low and Section 506.-Amends section 103(a (1) of National Housing Act to permit refinancing moderate income person must be made the Housing Act of 1949 to permit grants to of FHA mortgages insured under any of the available through such development project. be made with respect to urban renewal open sections or the titles of the National Hous- (Total Federal grant cannot exceed 80 per- land projects (which now only qualify for ing Act. In addition, this section would per- cent of facility cost.) Authorizes an appro- loans) in an amount not to exceed two-thirds mit FHA mortgages assigned to the Secretary priation of not to exceed $5 million for sup- of the difference between the proceeds from or executed in the sale of an acquired prop- plemental grants for fiscal year 1969 and not any land disposed of at its value for low or erty to be insured under any section or title to exceed $25 million for fiscal year 1970. moderate income housing (under sec. 107 of of that act. It also authorizes insurance of Sections of this title also require cost cer- such act) and the proceeds which would supplementary loans to cover excess of ex- tifications in connection with a land de- have been realized if the land had been penses over income for first 2 years of multi- velopment project and authorize the General disposed of at its fair value without regard family projects at the interest rate in effect Accounting Office to audit the transactions to the special provisions of section 107. at the time the supplementary loan is in- of developers whose obligations are guaran- Urban renewal. loan contracts sured. teed pursuant to this title. Section 507.-Amends section 102(c) of the Supplementary loans for coperative housing TITLE V-URBAN RENEWAL Housing Act of 1949 to permit a local public purchased from the Federal Government Section 501-Amend title I of the Housing agency to borrow funds to finance project Section 314.-Amends section 213(j) of the Act of 1949 by adding a new subtitle head- undertakings on the private market at an National Housing Act to authorize mortagage ing to read. "Part A-Urban Renewal Proj- interest rate in excess of the Federal lending rate set out in its loan contract with the insurance for supplementary loans to hous- ects, Demolition Programs and Code Enforce- ment Programs" and further amends that Government. The difference between the in- ing cooperatives which purchased wartime housing from the Federal Government. title by adding a new "Part B-Neighborhood terest cost on the private market and the interest cost at which the LPA could have Equipment in nursing homes Development Programs." This new part B added to title I authorizes the Secretary of borrowed from the Federal Government un- Section 315.-Amends section 232 of the HUD to provide financial assistance to local der its loan contract would be made up by a National Housing Act to permit the cost of public agencies on an annual basis to assist supplemental grant from the Government. major items of equipment necessary for the them in carrying out "neighborhood develop- Project completion prior to disposition of operation of a nursing home to be included ment programs." A neighborhood develop- certain property in the FHA insured mortgage. ment program would consist of urban re- Section 508.-Amends section 106 of the Flexible interest rates for certain FHA in- newal project undertakings and activities in Housing Act of 1949 to permit the Secretary surance programs one or more urban renewal areas that are of HUD to allow an urban renewal project Section 316.-Amends section 3(a) of Pub- planned and carried out on the basis of an- to be closed out where: (1) Not more than lic Law 90-301 to permit the Secretary of nual increments. The requirements govern- 5 percent of the total acquired land remains HUD, until October 1, 1969, to establish the ing such undertakings and activities would to be disposed; (2) the local public agency interest rate for new mortgage insurance be similar to those governing the provision of does not expect to be able, due to circum- programs authorized by new sections 223(f) Federal financial assistance for regular urban stance beyond its control, to dispose of that 235(j), and 240 of the National Housing Act renewal projects. land in the near future; (3) all other project (added by secs. 101, 314, and 305, respectively, Increased authorization activities are completed; and (4) the local of the bill) at such rate he believes neces- Section 502.-Amends section 103 (b) of public agency has agreed to dispose of or sary to meet the market. retain such land in the future for uses in the Housing Act of 1949 to increase the con- Sale of rehabilitated units in multifamily tract authority for urban renewal and other accordance with the urban renewal plan. structures title I activities by $1.4 billion on July 1, This section would also amend section 110(f) of such act to include in the amount of land Section 317.-Amends section 221(h) of 1969. This section also authorizes an increase proceeds, for the purpose of computing net the National Housing Act to: (1) Permit the of $350 million for urban renewal projects project cost, an amount equal to the value rehabilitation and sale of individual units in model city areas. of the land not yet disposed of. (with a 3-percent mortgage) in a multi- Rehabilitation-grants family structure; and (2) permit the blanket Demolition grants Section 503.-Amends section 115(a) of the mortgage to cover four or more units instead Housing Act of 1949 to increase the rehabili- Section 509.-Amends section 116(a) of the Housing Act of 1949 to authorize the Secre- of the present limitation of five or more tation grant that can be made to low-income tary of HUD to make grants for the demoli- units. homeowners from $1,500 to $2,500. This sec- tion of nonresidential structures that are TITLE IV-GUARANTEES FOR FINANCING NEW tion also makes a technical amendment to harborages or potential harborages of rats. COMMUNITY LAND DEVELOPMENT change the term "structure" to "real prop- erty" in order to permit the use of grant Air rights in urban renewal areas Sections 401-416.-Add a new title to be funds for rehabilitation relating to aspects Section 510.-Amends section 110(c) of the referred to as the "New Communities Act of of the property other than the dwelling struc- Housing Act of 1949 to permit the carrying 1968" to the housing laws to permit the ture itself. Finally, this section authorizes out of air rights urban renewal projects and Secretary of HUD to guarantee the bonds, rehabilitation grants in areas (other than the construction of necessary foundations debentures, notes, and other obligations is- urban renewal and code enforcement areas) and platforms to provide educational facil- 6394 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE May 24, 1968 ities. Under present law, these activities may thorizes grants under section for re- the water and sewer facilities program from be assisted only when they are for low and gional and district councils of government as July 1, 1968, to October 1, 1969. moderate income housing or for industrial well as those organized on a metropolitan Authorizations for water and sewer facilities, development where the area is not suitable basis and a broadening of the definition of neighborhood facilities, and advance ac- for low and moderate income housing. comprehensive planning for the provision of quisition of land programs Interim assistance for blighted areas governmental services and for the develop- ment and utilization of human and natural Section 605.-Amends section 708(a) of the Section 511.-Adds a new section 118 to resources. This section has added to the pre- Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 title I of the Housing Act of 1949 to author- amble of section 701 a statement to make it to provide that any funds authorized but not ize the Secretary of HUD to contract to make grants, in an aggregate amount not to exceed clear that the committee expects HUD to per- appropriated for the basic water and sewer mit the judicious use of private planning facilities, neighborhood facilities, and the ad- $20 million in any fiscal year, to cities and other municipalities or counties to assist in consultants by State and local governments vance acquisition of land programs will re- where these governments deem it appropri- main available for appropriation through taking interim steps to alleviate harmful con- ditions in any slum and blighted area of the ate in carrying out planning activities as- fiscal year 1970. (Present authorization for sisted under section 701. The section fur- these programs expires with fiscal year 1969.) community which is planned for substantial clearance, rehabilitation or federally assisted ther authorizes grants to official governmen- In addition, this section authorizes an appro- code enforcement in the near future but tal planning agencies for areas where rapid priation of $115 million for fiscal year 1970 which needs some immediate short-term urbanization is expected to result on land for grants for water and sewer projects. developed or to be developed as a new com- Open space land program public action until permanent action can take place. Such interim assistance grants munity under title IV of the bill and to re- Section 606.-Amends section 702(b) of the could not exceed two-thirds of the cost of gional commissions established pursuant to Housing Act of 1961 to convert the funding planning and carrying out the interim the Public Works and Economic Development provision for contracts under the open space Act of 1965. program except that a three-fourths grant land program from contract authority to reg- The bill also authorizes additional 701 could be made to any community with a ular authorization for appropriation and au- population of 50,000 or less. A workable pro- planning funds amounting to $35 million for thorizes the appropriation of the unused por- gram is a prerequisite of an interim assist- fiscal year 1969 and $125 million for fiscal tion of contract authority. This section ance program. Also, relocation assistance and year 1970. would also increase the appropriation au- payments would be available to those dis- Planned areawide development thority by $150 million in fiscal year 1970. Section 602.-Amends title II of the Dem- This section would further increase the placed as a result of the interim program. This section also requires the Secretary of onstration Cities and Metropolitan Develop- amount of grant funds which can be used HUD, wherever feasible, to encourage the em- ment Act of 1966 by changing the heading of annually for studies and publications from ployment of unemployed or underemployed such title to "Planned Areawide Develop- $50,000 to $125,000. residents of the area in carrying out activities ment" and in keeping with this change in Authorize the making of feasibility studies in under this section. title amends the sections and subsections the public works planning advances pro- Rehabilitation loans thereto to permit supplementary incentive gram Section 512.-Amends section 312 of the grants authorized for certain federally as- Section 607.-Amends section 702(a) of the Housing Act of 1964 to: (1) Extend the re- sisted projects in metropolitan areas to be Housing Act of 1954 to clarify the authority habilitation loan program from October 1, made for such projects being carried out in of the Secretary of HUD to make advances for 1969, to October 1, 1970, and (2) authorize any multijurisdictional area such as the the conduct of feasibility studies regarding such loans in areas, other than urban re- rural planning districts which are authorized specific public works, the planning of which newal and concentrated code enforcement by the amendments in section 601 of this bill. may be assisted under section 702. areas, which are scheduled for rehabilitation Also makes available for grant purposes TITLE VII-URBAN MASS TRANSPORTATION or concentrated code enforcement within a through fiscal year 1970 any of the funds Grant authorizations reasonable period of time where the property authorized for fiscal years 1967 and 1968, but is a owner-occupied residential structure and which have not been appropriated. Section 701.-Amends section 4(b) of the it is in violation of local housing or similar Advance acquisition of land Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964 to au- thorize an appropriation of $190 million for codes. Section 603.-Amends section 701 and re- fiscal year 1970. In addition, it would increase Low and moderate income housing in resi- writes section 704 of the Housing and Urban the amount of funds which may be usec dential urban renewal areas Development Act of 1965 to provide basic from the current authorization for research Section 513.-Rewrites section 105(f) of authority for a more efficient and effective development and demonstration programs by the Housing Act of 1949 to require that a ma- program of Federal assistance to localities $6 million for fiscal year 1969 and would au jority of the housing units provided in urban for the advance acquisition of land expected thorize the Secretary after fiscal year 1969 renewal projects which are to be redeveloped to be needed for public purposes. The amend- to use for research and demonstration ac- for predominantly residential uses and which ments and rewriting would: tivities such funds as he deems appropriate receive Federal recognition after the effective (1) Change the definition of eligible land; from those authorized in section 4(b) of the date of this bill be standard housing units (2) Require that the proposed use of the 1964 act. for low or moderate income families or land be undertaken within 5 years except individuals. the Secretary could go beyond the 5-year Definition of mass transportation period if, due to unusual circumstances, he Section 702.-Amends section 12(c) (5) O TITLE VI-URBAN PLANNING AND FACILITIES deems a longer period necessary and if he the Urban Mass Transportation Act of 196 Comprehensive planning advised the Banking and Currency Commit- to broaden the statutory definition of "mas Section 601.-Rewrites section 701 of the tees of the Congress of this action; transportation." The broadened definitio Housing Act of 1954 (urban planning assist- (3) Clarify the status of the land in the would permit greater flexibility in develop ance). The principal change authorizes the interim between acquisition and utilization ing and applying new concepts and system Secretary of HUD to make planning grants for the approved purpose; in urban mass transportation programs. to State planning agencies for assistance (4) Permit the Secretary to approve the Extension of emergency program under th to district planning agencies for rural and diversion of the land to another public pur- Urban Mass Transportation Act other non-metropolitan areas. A grant pose when in accord with comprehensive Section 703.-Amends section 5 of the authorization of $20 million would be pro- planning and give him discretion to require Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964 to vided for such planning grants, to be in- repayment of the grant or the substitution extend the emergency provisions of the mas creased by an additional $10 million on of land of equivalent value when the land transportation program from November 1 July 1, 1969, both to come out of the is diverted to a nonpublic purpose; 1968, to July 1, 1970. regular increase. The Secretary of Agriculture (5) Provide that assistance under this sec- would be given certain functions with respect Non-Federal share of net project cost tion will not render a project ineligible for to these district planning grants. The section other Federal assistance programs and that Section 704.-Amends sections 4(a) and also authorizes an additional $10 million of the ccst of land acquired with this assistance of the Urban Mass Transportation Act C the section 701 appropriations to be avail- will not be an ineligible project cost in such 1964 to permit private transit companies t able for study, research, and demonstration other programs; furnish up to 50 percent of the local share ( projects covering such matters as the plan- the net project cost of a mass transit projec ning for entire systems of public facilities (6) Provide for grant assistance for im- or in cases of an applicant's (State or loca and services within metropolitan areas and puted interest charges when an applicant uses other than borrowed funds to finance public body) financial inability to put U other multijurisdictional regions. Other changes would authorize the Secretary to the acquisition of the land; and any portion of the local share, private con make planning grants directly to tribal plan- (7) Clarify the authority of States to par- panies would be permitted to put up 10 ticipate in the program. percent of such share. ning councils or other bodies for planning on Indian reservations and would require that Extension of interim planning requirements TITLE VIII-SECONDARY MORTGAGE MARKET metropolitan, regional, and district planning in water and sewer facilities program Purposes agencies, to the greatest extent practical, be Section 604.-Amends section 702(c) of the Section 801.-States that the purpose composed of or responsible to elected officials Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 this title is to partition the Federal Nation of local governments. This section also au- to extend interim planning requirements in Mortgage Association into two corporation May 24, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 6395 (1) Government National Mortgage Associa- Savings provisions tions to the Secretary of Agriculture for the tion (GNMA); and (2) Federal National Section 809.-Preserves causes of action cost of carrying out his administrative func- Mortgage Association (FNMA). and legal proceedings existing or instituted tions under sections 235 and 236 of the Na- Amendments to the Federal National Mort- by or against the Federal National Mortgage tional Housing Act. gage Association Charter Act Association prior to the effective date SO Purchase of land for building sites Section 802.-Amends the Federal National that such actions and proceedings will not Section 1004.-Amends section 514(f) (2) Mortgage Association Charter Act (title III) abate. of the Housing Act of 1949 to broaden the of the National Housing Act to establish- Transitional provisions eligibility purposes of domestic farm labor (a) Government National Mortgage Asso- Section 810.-Provides that the transitional housing loans to include the purchase of ciation: period would begin on the "effective date" necessary land for building sites. Would operate existing special assistance and terminate when at least one-third of the TITLE XI-NATIONAL INSURANCE DEVELOPMENT and management and liquidating functions, stock is owned by private investors in the CORPORATION and homebuilding, mortgage lending, real estate, Would be administered by Secretary of and related industries but no sooner than Short title Housing and Urban Development (now un- May 1, 1970, or later than May 1, 1973. Dur- Section 1101.-Adds new title to be re- der FNMA Board of Directors and a Presi- ing this period the President of the Federal ferred to as "The National Insurance Devel- dent). National Mortgage Association will be ap- opment Corporation Act of 1968." (b) Federal National Mortgage Association: pointed by the President of the United States Findings and declaration of purpose Purpose.-Would operate a privately fi- with the advice and consent of the Senate and the Board of Directors would be limited Section 1102.-Includes a finding that the nanced secondary mortgage market for gov- to nine members. In the first year all nine unavailability of property insurance in ernment supported mortgages. Board of Directors.-Would consist of 15 members would be appointed by the Secre- inner-city areas is accelerating the deteriora- members of which five would be appointed tary of Housing and Urban Development, in tion and threatening the economic well-being annually by the Secretary of Housing and the second year seven would be appointed by of cities. States that the purpose of the bill Urban Development. The remaining mem- the Secretary and two would be elected by is to encourage the development of statewide bers would be elected by the stockholders. Of the stockholders, and in the third year and programs to increase the availability of prop- those members appointed by the Secretary, subsequent period, five members would be erty insurance and to provide Federal rein- one shall be from the homebuilding indus- appointed by the Secretary and the remainder surance with appropriate State sharing in try, one from the real estate industry, and elected by the stockholders. One of the Sec- reinsured losses due to civil disorders. one from the mortgage lending industry. retary's appointees would have to be the Amendment of the National Housing Act Powers of Secretary of Housing and Urban President of FNMA. Section 1103.-Adds a: new title XII to the Development.-Would have regulatory pow- TITLE IX-NATIONAL HOUSING PARTNERSHIPS National Housing Act to establish the Na- ers, including a requirement that a reason- Sections 901-911-Authorizes the creation tional Insurance Development Corporation. able portion of mortgage purchases relate to of National Housing Partnerships in order to The provisions of the proposed new title are low and moderate income housing; also is- encourage private invéstors to provide low summarized briefly below. suance of securities would be subject to his and moderate income housing in substantial Creation and dissolution of National Insur- approval. volume on a nationwide scale. Such a Na- and Development Treasury-held preferred stock.-Would be tional Partnership would form partnership Section 1201.-Creates the National In- retired as rapidly as possible after effective ventures with local investors for the con- surance Development Corporation within the date. struction of housing for low and moderate Department of Housing and Urban Develop- Common stock.-Would continue to re- income families. ment, under the authority of the Secretary. quire mortgage sellers to purchase common The title would authorize the creation of Executive director stock; also each mortgage servicer would be federally chartered privately funded corpo- required to hold up 2 percent of mortgages Section 1202.-Provides that, subject to rations to be organized under the District of serviced in common stock. Columbia Business Corporation Act. Such a section 1201 the management of the Corpora- tion shall be vested in an Executive Director Participations corporation in turn would form a partner- Section 803.-Amends section 302(c) of ship organized under this title and under the appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. the Federal National Mortgage Association District of Columbia Uniform Limited Part- Charter Act to permit GNMA, as trustee un- nership Act. The federally chartered Corpo- Advisory Board, meetings, duties, compensa- der trusts created for sales of participation ration would serve as the general partner and tion, and expenses certificates, to issue such certificates for re- managing agent of the National Partnership Section 1203.-Establishes a 19-member financing purposes without regard to the re- and each of the stockholders and others Advisory Board appointed by the Secretary. quirement of appropriation act authority. could be limited partners. The Corporation Definitions Any appropriation for insufficiencies accom- would provide the staff and expertise for the Section 1204.-Contains definitions in this panying the original authorization would ap- Partnership in connection with the organiza- title. ply as well to any "rollover" sale. tion and planning of specific local project undertakings in which the National Partner- Part A-Statewide Plans To Assure Fair Ac- Mortgage-backed securities ship would have an interest. cess to Insurance Requirements Section 804.-Amends section 304 of such TITLE X-RURAL HOUSING Fair plans act to authorize the new Federal National Mortgage Association to issue securities Housing for low and moderate income Section 1211.-Requires every insurer re- persons and families insured by the Corporation to cooperate with backed by an earmarked pool of portfolio Section 1001.-Adds a new section 521 to the State insurance authority, in each State mortgages. This section would also authorize the Government National Mortgage Associa- title V of the Housing Act to 1949 to author- in which it acquires reinsurance, in estab- tion to guarantee such securities as well as ize the Secretary of Agriculture to make lishing and carrying out statewide plans to those issued by approved private issuers. direct and insured loans with interest-rate assure fair access to insurance requirements subsidies in rural areas to low and moderate ("FAIR" Plans). These plans, which must be Subordinated and convertible obligations approved by the State insurance authority or Section 805.-Amends section 304 of such income persons and families and to provide authorized by State law, are to be admin- act to authorize the Federal National Mort- rental or cooperative housing for such per- istered under the supervision of the State in- gage Association to issue subordinated obli- sons and families where such persons and surance authority and designed to make es- gations up to twice its capital and surplus. families are unable to obtain housing under sential property insurance more readily sections 235 and 236 of the National Housing Special assistance authorization available in, but not limited to, urban areas. Act, proposed by sections 101 and 201 of this Section 806.-Amends section 305(c) of bill. All industry placement facility such act to authorize an additional $500 mil- Housing for rural trainees Section 1212.-Requires all plans to in- lion for the purchase of mortgages by the Section 1002.-Adds a new section 522 to clude an all-industry placement facility, Government National Mortgage Association title V of the Housing Act of 1949 to author- doing business with all participating insur- in its special assistance function. ize financial and technical assistance to ers, to help agents and brokers to place in- Amendments to other laws States or political subdivisions thereof, or surance up to the full insurable value of a any public or private nonprofit organization property. Section 807.-Makes numerous changes in other laws necessitated by the establishment to provide, in rural areas, housing and re- Industry cooperation of the new Federal National Mortgage Asso- lated facilities for rural trainees (and their Section 1213.-Requires every participating ciation and the new Government National families) enrolled in federally assisted train- insurer to pledge with the State insurance Mortgage Association. ing courses to improve their employment ca- authority its full participation and cooper- Effective date pabilities when the Secretary determines ation of the plan and the need to form a pool that such housing and facilities could not be Section 808.-Provides that the partition or to adopt other programs to make essential reasonably provided in any other way. of the existing Federal National Mortgage property insurance more readily available. Association would become effective no more Appropriations Plan evaluation than 120 days following the enactment of Section 1003.-Amends section 513 of the Section 1214.-Provides for transmission of this act. Housing Act of 1949 to authorize appropria- copies of plans and amendments by State S 6396 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD May 24, 1968 insurance authorities to the Corporation and izes the Corporation and the Comptroller Compensation of executive director for these authorities to advise the Corpora- General to conduct audits; and provides that Section 1106.-Provides for compensation tion with regard to the operation of the plan the Corporation is to make use of State in- of the Executive Director at the rate pre- and the need to form a pool or to adopt other surance authority examination reports and scribed for level IV of the Federal Executive programs to make essential property insur- facilities to the maximum extent feasible in Salary Schedule. ance more readily available. The Corpora- connection with these activities. tion may modify plan criteria as may be Clarifying amendments to acts referring to Study of reinsurance and other programs necessary or desirable and upon certification disasters by the State insurance authority waive com- Section 1235.Provides for the Corpora- Section 1107.-Would amend other acts to tion to study reinsurance and other means pliance with one or more of the plan criteria. include "riot or civil disaster" in the defini- of assuring an adequate supply of burglary Part B-Reinsurance Coverage tions of "disaster" or "catastrophe." and theft and other property insurance in Reinsurance of losses from riots or civil urban areas and the adequate availability of TITLE XII-NATIONAL FLOOD INSURANCE ACT OF disorders surety bonds for construction contractors 1968 Section 1221.-Authorizes the Corporation in urban areas and to report to the President Short title to offer riot or civil disorder property loss re- and the Congress within 1 year the results Section 1201.-Adds new title to be referred insurance to any insurer or pool of insurers of its study and its recommendations. to as "National Flood Insurance Act of 1968." in any one or more States. Reinsurance may Other studies Findings and declaration of purpose be provided immediately upon enactment of Section 1236.-Provides for the Corpora- Section 1202.States that a flood insur- the title for a 90-day period, but thereafter tion, in cooperation with State insurance ance program is feasible and can be initiated, only if the insurer is participating in the authorities and the private insurance indus- and should complement and encourage meas- State's plan under part A. try, to study the operation of the FAIR plans, ures to prevent flood damage; that if the Reinsurance agreements and premiums the extent of the unavailability of essential program is commenced on a gradual basis, Section 1222.-Authorizes the Corporation property insurance in urban areas, the time and experience will enable it to be re- to provide reinsurance, to reimburse the in- market for private reinsurance, loss-preven- appraised and expanded; that the program surer for losses in excess of the insurer's tion methods and procedures, insurance can be carried out most effectively through retention, at premium rates adequate to pro- marketing methods, and underwriting tech- a cooperative effort on the part of the Fed- vide premiums which will exceed in aggregate niques. eral Government and the private insurance amount the insured riot losses in 1967, and General powers of corporation industry; and that a critical ingredient of provides that thereafter the Corporation may Section 1237.-Authorizes the Corporation such a program will be the encouragement adjust reinsurance premium rates as may be to have a corporate seal, to sue and be sued of State and local governments to adopt land necessary or appropriate after consultation (with all civil actions in which the Corpora- use regulations to govern the development of with the Board and the National Association tion is a party deemed to arise under the land exposed to flood damage. Calls for the of Insurance Commissioners. laws of the United States), to enter into and President to submit to the Congress, within Conditions of reinsurance perform contracts, leases, and other agree- 2 years, a unified national program for flood Section 1223.Provides the conditions ments without competitive bidding; to em- plain management, including any further under which the Corporation will terminate ploy a staff; to make necessary or appropri- proposals for the allocation of costs among ate rules and regulations; and to exercise all beneficiaries of flood protection. existing reinsurance coverage and will not powers specifically granted by the title and Amendments to the Federal Flood Insurance offer new coverage for insurance written after the termination date, including such such incidental powers as are necessary to Act of 1956 carry out its purposes. conditions as State assumption of a share of Section 1203(a) -Amends section 15(e) of Service and facilities of other agencies— the Federal Flood Insurance Act of 1956. reinsured losses, the adoption of additional utilization of personnel, services, facilities, That section vested the Administrator of the programs such as pools, and insurer partic- ipation in State plans and programs. and information Housing and Home Finance Agency with au- thority to borrow $500 million in the aggre- Recovery of premiums: statute of Section 1238.-Authorizes the Corporation, limitations with the consent of the agency concerned, gate (or greater sums if authorized by the to utilize the personnel and information of President) from the Secretary of the Treas- Section 1224.-Authorizes the Corporation any agency of the Federal Government on a ury. The amendment in section 1203(a) re- to recover any unpaid premiums for reinsur- reimbursable basis and to obtain data rele- lates to the interest formula which is to ance; imposes a 5-year statute of limitations vant to matters within its jurisdiction from apply to borrowed funds. Under section 1210 on the recovery by an insurer of excess pre- any Federal agency on a nonreimbursable of the bill, the borrowing authority would miums paid to the Corporation or the re- basis to the extent permitted by law. be made specifically available to the Secre- covery by the Corporation of reinsurance tary of Housing and Urban Development to premiums due to it. Advance payments and finality of certain carry out resopnsibilities which would be financial transactions Part C-Provisions of General Applicability vested in him under the bill. Section 1239.-Provides that the Corpora- Section 1203(b) -Strikes out obsolete lan- Claims and judicial review tion's financial transactions relating to re- guage from section 15(e) of the Federal Flood Section 1231.-Authorizes the Corporation insurance shall be final and conclusive on Insurance Act of 1956. to adjust and pay claims for proved and ap- all officers of the United States and that the Section 1203(c).-Repeals all sections of proved losses, and allows a claimant to in- Corporation may make reinsurance payments the Federal Flood Insurance Act of 1956, ex- stittue any action in the U.S. district court in advance or by way of reimbursement and cept section 15(e), relating to Treasury bor- within 1 year after receipt of notice of dis- in such installments and on such conditions allowance of a claim. rowing authority. as it may determine. Definitions Fiscal intermediaries and servicing agents Taxation Section 1204.-Defines: (1) "flood" as hav- Section 1232Authorizes the Corporation Section 1240.-Exempts the Corporation ing such meaning as prescribed in regula- to contract with any insurer, pool, or other from local, State or Federal taxation and tions of the Secretary, and including inun- person or organization for estimating or provides that any State undertaking meas- dation from the overflow of streams, rivers, determining reinsurance claim payment ures in meeting its obligations for reinsured or other bodies of waters, and from tidal amounts, receiving, disbursing, and account- losses shall not be subject to retaliatory or surges, abnormally high tidal water, tidal ing for reinsurance claim payments, audit- fiscal imposition by any other State. waves, hurricanes, and other severe storms ing insurers' records to assure proper pay- Annual report or deluge; (2) "United States" and "State" ments, establishing the basis of reinsurance Section 1241.-Requires the Secretary to as including the several States, the District liability, and otherwise assisting in carrying out the purposes of the title. include a report on the operations of the of Columbia, the territories and possessions, Corporation in his annual report. and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; (3) National insurance development fund "insurance company," "other insurers," "in- Appropriations Section 1233.Provides for the establish- surance agents and brokers,' to include any ment of a national insurance development Section 1242.-Authorizes to be appropri- organizations or individuals authorized to fund to be available to the Corporation with- ated such sums as may be necessary to engage in the insurance business under the out fiscal year limitation to pay reinsurance carry out this title. laws of any State; (4) "insurance adjust- claims, to pay administrative expenses, and Financing ment organizations" to include any organi- to repay with interest amounts borrowed un- Section 1104.-Amends section 520(b) of zations or persons engaged in the business der section 520(b) of the National Hous- the National Housing Act to authorize the of adjusting loss claims arising under insur- ing Act. Secretary to borrow funds necessary to pay ance policies issued by licensed insurance Records, annual statements, and audits for reinsured losses under title XII of the act. companies or other insurers; (5) "person" as any individual, group of individuals, corpo- Section 1234.-Requires reinsured insurers Government Corporation Control Act ration, partnership, association, or other to furnish the Corporation with annual state- Section 1105.-Defines the National In- organized group, including State and local ments and such data as may be necessary in surance Development Corporation as a governments and agencies; and (6) "Secre- carrying out this program and to keep rec- wholly owned Government corporation under tary" as the Secretary of Housing and Urban ords to facilitate an effective audit; author- the Government Corporation Control Act. Development. May 24, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE S6397 Chapter I-The National Flood Insurance Estimates of premium rates tions to the Secretary of the Treasury) shall Program Section 1208(a) .-Authorizes the Secre- be vested in the Secretary. Basic authority tary, on the basis of studies and investiga- Section 1210(b) -Requires that borrowed Section 1205(a) -Authorizes the Secre- tions, to estimate on an area, subdivision, or Treasury funds must be deposited in the na- tary of Housing and Urban Development to other appropriate basis: (1) Risk premium tional flood insurance fund established under establish and carry out a program to facili- (full cost) rates for flood insurance, (2) the section 1211. tate the purchase of flood insurance to pro- rate (at below full cost, if necessary) which National flood insurance fund vide against physical damage to real or per- would be reasonable, would encourage the Section .-Authorizes the Secre- sonal property resulting from flood. purchase of flood insurance, and would be tary to establish in the U.S. Treasury a na- Section that this pro- consistent with the purposes of the act, and tional flood insurance fund. Premium equali- gram shall be implemented to the maximum (3) the extent to which federally assisted or zation payments to the insurance pool, rein- extent practicable, through arrangements for other flood protection measures initiated surance claims of the pool, and repayments financial participation and risk sharing by after the effective date of the act affect the of borrowed moneys to the Secretary of the companies in the private insurance industry, estimates of rates mentioned in (1) and (2). Treasury (available from appropriations or and by other appropriate participation on a The Secretary will base estimates of risk reinsurance premiums) will be charged to non-risk-sharing basis by insurance com- premium rates on a consideration of the risks the fund. Administrative expenses of carry- panies, agents, brokers, or adjustment orga- involved and accepted actuarial principles. ing out the program may also be paid out of nizations. The rates will reflect applicable operating the fund. Scope of program and priorities costs and allowances of participating private Section .-Requires the fund to be insurers, and, on a discretionary basis, non- Section 1206(a) .-Authorizes the Secretary developmental Federal administrative ex- credited with: (1) Borrowed Treasury funds, to make the flood insurance program avail- (2) reinsurance premiums payable by the in- penses which may be incurred in carrying out able initially for one- to four-family residen- the flood insurance program. surance pool, (3) amounts advanced to the tial properties. fund from appropriations in order to main- Section 1206(b) -Authorizes the Secretary Section 1208(b) -Provides that, in con- tain it on adequate levels, (4) interest on to extend coverage of the flood insurance ducting the necessary rate studies and in- the investment of surplus amounts in the program when, on the basis of studies and vestigations, the Secretary shall, to the ex- fund, (5) administrative expenses included other information, he determines that ex- tent feasible, utilize the services, or a re- in chargeable premium rates and which have tension would be feasible. Future coverage of imbursement basis, of the Army Corps of been paid to the Secretary, and (6) receipts the program could be extended to: (1) Other Engineers, the Geological Survey, the Soil from other operations incident to the insur- residential properties, (2) business proper- Conservation Service, the Environmental ance program; and, in the event the flood ties, (3) agricultural properties, (4) proper- Science Services Administration, the Ten- insurance program is carried out through ties occupied by private nonprofit organiza- nessee Valley Authority, and other appro- the facilities of the Federal Government, the tions, and (5) properties owned by State and priate Federal departments and agencies. insurance premiums paid. local governments and agencies thereof. Section -Requires the Secretary Section (211(c).-Authorizes the Secre- Section .-Provides that flood in- to give priority to those States or areas that tary of the Treasury to invest surplus moneys surance will be made available in only those have evidenced a positive interest in flood in the fund in obligations issued or guaran- States or areas (or subdivisions of areas) insurance, in making rate studies and teed by the United States, if: (1) All out- which the Secretary determines had evi- investigations. standing obligations have been liquidated, denced a positive interest in the flood insur- Establishment of chargeable premium rates and (2) any outstanding amounts that have ance program, and had given satisfactory as- Section 1209(a) -Authorizes the Secretary, been advanced to the fund from appropria- surances that by June 30, 1970, permanent after consultation with the flood insurance tions for reinsurance payments to the pool land use and control measures, consistent advisory committee and representatives of have been credited to that appropriation, with criteria prescribed in section 1261, or the State insurance authorities, to establish with interest accrued at a rate based on the for land management and use, have been chargeable premium rates and the areas, average current yield on outstanding market- adopted, and that application and enforce- terms and conditions for the application of able obligations of the United States of com- ment of these measures would commence as such rates. Rates will be determined on the parable maturities. soon as technical information on floodways basis of estimates made under section 1208 Section 1211(d).-Provides that the fund and on controlling flood elevations was and other necessary information. will be available to finance the operation of available. Section 1209(b) .-Provides that, in pre- the flood insurance program if the Secretary This would not require the same land scribing chargeable rates, the Secretary shall finds that it should, in whole or in part, be management and use measures for all areas, be guided by a number of factors, including carried out through the facilities of the Fed- since these measures must meet the particu- the consideration of the respective risks in- eral Government, including costs incurred in lar flood problems of each area. volved, the differences in risk due to land the adjustment and payment of loss claims Nature and limitation of insurance coverage use measures, floodproofing, flood forecasting and payment of applicable operating costs of Section 1207 -Authorizes the Secretary, and similar measures. The Secretary would private insurers if such companies are in- after consultation with the flood insurance be authorized to prescribe chargeable rates volved. Any premiums paid are to be de- advisory committee, and representatives of at reasonable levels, lower than those at full posited in the fund. the State insurance commissioners, to pro- cost where necessary, in order to encourage Operating costs and allowances vide by regulation for the general terms and the purchase of flood insurance. In low-risk Section -Directs the Secretary to conditions of insurability applicable to prop- areas the chargeable rate for existing prop- erties will be the same or close to the esti- negotiate with appropriate representatives of erties eligible for flood insurance. A repre- mated full cost rate. The higher the flood the insurance industry, from time to time, sentative organization of all State insurance authorities, such as the National Association risk for an area, the lower the chargeable rate for the purpose of prescribing a current would be, in relation to the estimated full- schedule of operating costs applicable to risk- of Insurance Commissioners, will be called upon for purposes of consulting State insur- cost rate. Under this section, all chargeable sharing and non-risk-sharing participants ance authorities. These terms and conditions rates will be stated so as to reflect their basis, in the flood insurance program, and a cur- including any differences from the estimated rent schedule of operating allowances will include the types and locations of eli- full-cost risk premium rates. (profits) applicable to risk-sharing insurers. gible properties; the nature and limits of in- These schedules will be prescribed in regula- surable losses; the classification, limitation, Section 1209(c) -Provides that after an tions. and rejection of risks; and appropriate mini- area has been identified as being flood-prone mum premiums and loss-deductibles. and this information was published in the Section 1212(b).-Specifies that operating Section 1207(b) .-Provides that insurance area, then newly constructed property or sub- costs include: (1) Expense reimbursements stantially improved property can be insured covering the expenses of selling and servic- coverage for one- to four-family residential only at rates which are not less than the ing the insurance, (2) reasonable compensa- properties will be limited to $15,000 aggregate estimated (full cost) risk premium rate. tion or commissions payable for selling and liability for any dwelling unit and $30,000 for any dwelling structure of from two to four Section 1209(d) -Provides that where any servicing the insurance, (3) loss adustment expenses, and (4) other expenses which the units. Liability for personal property will be chargeable premium rate is equal to the esti- Secretary finds were incurred in selling or limited to $5,000 for the contents of each mated risk premium rate (full cost) for the servicing the insurance. Operating allow- dwelling unit. Both real property and con- area, and if the rates include any amount for ances include amounts for profit and con- tents will be subject to an appropriate loss- administrative expenses of the Federal Gov- tingencies which the Secretary finds reason- deductible clause. For any other properties ernment in carrying out the flood insurance able and necessary. which will become eligible for flood insur- program (in the Secretary's discretion under section 1208), a sum equal to that amount is Payment of claims ance coverage in the future (such as small business properties), the aggregate liability to be paid to the Secretary to be deposited in Section 1213-Authorizes the Secretary to the insurance fund. for any single structure will be $30,000. These prescribe regulations establishing methods limits will apply to any insurance sold at Treasury borrowing authority for the adjustment and payment of claims premiums below full actuarial cost. Insurance for losses to property insured under the flood Section 1210(a) -Provides that the au- coverage could be doubled under this section, thority vested in the Housing and Home Fi- insurance program. but any excess over the limits specified will nance Administrator by section 15(e) of the Dissemination of flood insurance information require the payment of premium rates at full Federal Flood Insurance Act of 1956 (per- Section 1214.-Directs the Secretary to cost. taining to the issue of notes or other obliga- make information and data available to the S 6398 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE May 24, 1968 public and to any State and local agency re- Initial program limitations Premium equalization payments garding: (1) The coverage and objectives of Section 1220.-Provides that the face Section 1234(a).-Directs the Secretary, the flood insurance program, and (2) esti- amount of flood insurance coverage out- on such terms and conditions as he shall mated and chargeable flood insurance pre- standing and in force at any given time can- provide, to make periodic payments to the mium rates, and the basis for the difference not exceed $2.5 billion. pool in recognition of any reduction made in between such rates. Report to the President chargeable premium rates under estimated Prohibition against certain duplications of Section 1221.-Directs the Secretary to in- risk premium rates in order to provide flood benefits insurance on reasonable terms. clude a report on the operations of the flood Section 1215(a) -Contains provisions insurance program provided for under this Section that payments which will prevent Federal disaster assistance act in his annual report to the president for for a share of the claims paid in a given from being made available to compensate for submission to the Congress. period will be based on the aggregate amount any loss to the extent it is covered by flood of flood insurance retained by the pool after insurance. Also provides that no such assist- Chapter II-Organization and Administra- ceding reinsurance in accordance with sec- ance shall be made available to the extent tion of the Flood Insurance Program tion 1235. losses of real or personal property could have Organization and administration Subject to the limiting terms and condi- been covered (at the maximum limits) if Section 1230.-Directs the Secretary, after tions of the basic agreement between the flood insurance was actually available more such consultation with representatives of Secretary and the pool under section 1232, than 1 year prior to the loss. Authority is pro- the insurance industry as may be necessary, the Secretary is also authorized to make vided for the Secretary to prescribe, by regu- to implement the flood insurance program by payments to the pool for a proportionate lations, an exception to this latter provision providing for an industry program with Fed- amount of applicable operating costs (in- for low-income persons who might otherwise eral financial assistance. In the event this cluding only administrative expenses) and benefit from such assistance. program proves unworkable, the Secretary is allowances on the sanie ratio basis as used Section 1215(b) .-Provides that "Federal directed to provide for a Federal program to determine the sharing of claim payments. disaster assistance" includes any Federal fi- with industry assistance. Section -Authorizes the Secretary nancial assistance made available to any per- Part A-Industry Program With Federal to establish designated pay periods and the son as a result of (1) A major disaster, as Financial Assistance methods for determining the sum of prem- determined by the President pursuant to "An iums paid or payable during such periods. Act to authorize Federal Assistance to State Industry flood insurance pool Reinsurance coverage and local governments in major disasters, Section .-Authorizes the Secretary and for other purposes" (42 U.S.C. 1855- to encourage and assist private insurers to Section 1235(a) -Authorizes the Secre- 1855g); (2) a natural disaster, as determined join together in a pool to provide flood in- tary to take such action as may be necessary by the Secretary of Agriculture pursuant to surance coverage and to participate finan- to make available reinsurance coverage to section 321 of the Consolidated Farmers cially in underwriting the risk assumed and the insurance pool for excess losses. Home Administration Act of 1961; (3) a dis- in assuming responsibility for some propor- Section 1235(b) -Authorizes entering into aster with respect to which loans may be tion of claims for losses. contracts, agreements or other arrangements made under section 7(b) of the Small Busi- Section -Authorizes the Secre- to provide reinsurance, in consideration of ness Act. tary to prescribe rquirements for private in- premiums, fees, or other charges as the Sec- Section 1215(c) -Makes the term "finan- surers participating in the pool, including, retary finds necessary to cover anticipated cial assistance" as used in section 10 of the but not limited to, minimum requirements losses. Disaster Relief Act of 1966 (which directs for capital or surplus or assets. Section 1235(c) -Authorizes the Secre- that Federal assistance programs be admin- Agreements with flood insurance pool tary to negotiate an excess loss agreement istered to avoid duplication of benefits) in- with the insurance industry pool whereby clude flood insurance. Section 1232(a) -Authorizes the Secre- claims above a certain limit will be sub- State and local land use controls tary to enter into agreements with any in- mitted to the Secretary on a portfolio basis, surance pool as he deems necessary to carry Section 1216.-Provides that after June 30, and paid by the Federal Government. out the purposes of this act. 1970, no new flood insurance coverage (in- Section 1235(d) -Provides that reinsur- cluding renewals) will be provided in any Section 1232(b) -Provides that any agree- ance claims must be submitted on a port- ment with a pool shall specify the terms and area unless an appropriate public body had folio basis, in accordance with terms and adopted permanent land use and control conditions under which: (1) Risk capital conditions as may be established by the Sec- measures, with effective enforcement provi- will be available for the adjustment and pay- retary. sions, which the Secretary finds consistent ment of claims, (2) the pool and its par- Section 1235(e) -Provides that such pool with the comprehensive criteria for land ticipants will participate in premiums re- shall make no distribution of earnings for a management and use prescribed under sec- ceived and profits or losses, (3) the maxi- period of up to 5 years based on flood insur- tion 1261. mum amount of profit which may be re- ance premiums, unless the aggregate cumula- alized as established by the Secretary under Properties in violation of State and local law tive premiums, fees, or other charges estab- section 1212, (4) operating costs prescribed lished for excess loss reinsurance under sub- Section 1217.-Prohibits any new flood in- under section 1212 and allowances are to be section (b) and collected for deposit in the surance (including renewals) for property paid, and (5) premium equalization pay- national flood insurance fund exceeds the which violates State cr local laws, regulations, ments and reinsurance claims will be paid. aggregate cumulative expenses paid for re- or ordinances which are intended to dis- Section .-States that the agree- insurance claims by such fund. courage or otherwise restrict land develop- ments will also contain such provisions as ment or occupancy in flood-prone areas. Part B-Government Program the Secretary finds necessary to assure that: Coordination with other programs (1) No qualified insurer wishing to parti- Federal operation of the program Section 2118.-Directs the Secretary to con- cipate in the pool will be excluded, (2) in- Section 1240(a) -Authorizes the Secre- sult with Federal, State and local agencies surers participating in the pool will provide tary, after consultation with representatives having responsibilities for flood control, flood continuity of flood insurance coverage, and of the insurance industry if he makes a de- forecasting, and flood damage prevention, (3) other insurance companies, agents, and termination that the flood insurance program in order to assure mutual consistency between brokers will to the maximum extent prac- cannot be effectively carried on through the programs of such agencies and the flood ticable be permitted to cooperate with the the insurance pool, to take the necessary insurance program. pool as fiscal agents or otherwise on a non- steps to operate the program through the fa- risk-sharing basis. This section assures that cilities of the Federal Government, either Advisory committee no insurance companies shall be excluded by: (1) Utilizing insurance companies, other Section 1219(a) -Directs the Secretary to from the program on the basis of considera- insurers, agents, brokers, and adjustment appoint a flood insurance advisory commit- tions such as size. organizations as flscal agents of the United tee. The purpose of the committee is to ad- States, (2) by utilizing employees of the De- vise the Secretary with respect to the ad- Judicial Review partment of Housing and Urban Develop- ministration of this act and in the prepara- Section 1233.-Authorizes private insurers ment or other Government employees (by tion of the regulations prescribed in the act. participating in the pool to adjust and pay arrangement with the heads of other agen- Section 1219(b) -Provides that the com- claims for losses and permits any claimant, cies), or (3) by a combination of alternatives mittee shall consist of not more than 15 upon disallowance of a claim, or upon the (1) and (2) above. persons selected from: (1) The insurance claimant's refusal to accept the amount al- Section 1240(b) -Provides that at least industry, (2) State and local governments, (3) lending institutions, (4) the home-build- lowed on a claim, to institute an action, 90 days before an all-Federal program of in- within 1 year after notice of disallowance is surance is entered into by the Secretary, dur- ing industry, and (5) the general public. mailed, in the U.S. district court for the dis- ing all of which time Congress shall be in Section 1219(c) -Provides that committee members, while attending conferences or trict in which the insured property or the session, he shall make a report to the Con- gress which will: (1) State the reasons for meetings, will be compensated at a rate fixed major portion of it was situated. Jurisdiction his determinaton that a program under the by the Secretary not to exceed $100 a day would be conferred on the district court industry-Government option in part A can- and to also receive travel and living ex- without regard to the amount in controver- not be carried out, (2) support such deter- penses when serving away from their homes sy. Claimants could also avail themselves of mination by pertinent findings, (3) indicate or regular places of business. legal remedies in State courts. the extent to which he anticipates the in- May 24, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE $ 6399 dustry will be utilized in the all-Federal pro- of any claims arising from the financial chase of such property. The Secretary is then gram, and (4) make any other recommenda- transactions which he is authorized to carry authorized to transfer such property to those tions he deems advisable. out under the act. The Secretary may, how- State or local agencies agreeing to use the Adjustment and payment of claims ever, refer such disputes to arbitration. property for at least 40 years for those pur- Section 1241-Authorizes the Secretary to Section b).-Specifies that this arbi- poses as the Secretary may, by regulation, adjust and pay claims, and authorizes any tration would only be advisory in nature. determine to be consistent with sound land claimant, upon disallowance of a claim, or Records and audit use and management. This authority is vol- upon refusal of the claimant to accept an untary and no property owner would be re- Section -Provides that any flood amount allowed, to institute an action, with- quired to sell or lease his property to the insurance pool receiving financial assistance in 1 year after notice of disallowance or par- Secretary. under the program, and any pool, company, tial disallowance, is mailed, in the U.S. dis- or other private organization which has en- Chapter IV-Appropriations and miscel- trict court for the district in which the in- tered into any contract, agreement, or other laneous provisions sured property or the major portion of it was arrangement with the Secretary under parts Studies of other natural disasters situated. Jurisdiction would be conferred on B and C of chapter II, shall keep such records Section -Authorizes the Secretary the district court without regard to the as the Secretary prescribes. Such records are to make studies to determine the extent to amount in controversy. to fully disclose the total costs of the pro- which insurance protection against earth- Part C-Provisions of General Applicability grams undertaken or services rendered, SO as quakes or other natural disasters is not Services by insurance industry to facilitate an effective audit. available and the feasibility of making such Section 1245 -Provides legal authority Section 1248 -Provides that the Comp- protection available. for the Secretary to enter into the necessary troller General and the Secretary (or their Section 1270(b) .-Provides that studies arrangements with the insurance industry to duly authorized representatives shall have under this section be made in cooperation implement the flood insurance program set access to any books, documents, papers, and with other Federal, State, or local agencies, forth in the act, including provisions for pay- records of the pool, insurance company or and authorizes the Secretary to enter into ment of applicable operating costs and allow- other private organizations, which are perti- agreements for the conduct of such studies ances for such facilities and services. nent to the costs of the prograins set forth with other Federal agencies, on a reim- Section -Exempts any such ar- in this act. bursement basis, or with State and local rangements from any provisions of Federal Chapter III-Coordination of flood insurance agencies. law requiring competitive bids or requiring with land-management programs in flood- Payments that contracts or purchases of supplies or prone areas Section 1271.-Vests discretion in the Sec- services by the Federal Government be made Identification of flood-prone areas retary to make payments under this pro- only after advertisement is provided for a Section 1260.-Authorizes the Secretary, gram in advance of their actual need, or by sufficient time to allow competitive proposals utilizing the Army Corps of Engineers, the way of reimbursement. to be made. Geological Survey, the Soil Conservation Government Corporation Control Act Use of insurance pools, companies, or other Service, the Environmental Science Services Section 1272.-Makes the provisions of the private organizations for certain payments Administration, TVA, and other Federal de- Government Corporation Control Act ap- Section 1246(a) .-Authorizes the Secretary partments and agencies, to identify and pub- plicable in the administration of the flood to enter into contracts with any pool, insur- lish information within 5 years after the insurance program to the same extent as ance companies, or other private organiza- effective date of the act with respect to all applicable to wholly owned Government cor- tons he finds acceptable for use as fiscal in- flood plain areas, including coastal areas in porations. termediaries. Such intermediaries could (1) the United States, which have special flood Finality of certain financial transactions estimate and determine amounts of Federal hazards. The Secretary is also required to establish within 15 years, flood risk zones in Section 1273.-Provides that any financial payments, and (2) audit participating in- these areas and to make estimates with re- transaction under this act or payment re- surers, agents, brokers, or adjustment organi- ceived or made in connection therein shall zations, as may be necessary to assure that spect to the rates of probable flood-caused loss for the various flood risk zones for each be final and conclusive upon all officers of proper payments are made. the Government. Section -Provide that any con- area. tract may contain provisions necessary to Criteria for land management and use Administrative expenses carry out the Secretary's responsibilities, Section .--Authorizes the Secretary Section 1274.Provides that any admin- under the provisions of the act. to carry out studies or investigations with istrative expenses of the Federal Government Section -Provides that contracts regard to the adequacy of State and local in carrying out the fiood insurance program authorized by this section would be exempted from any provisions of Federal law requiring measures in flood-prone areas, as to land may be paid out of appropriated funds. competitive bidding or requiring that con- management and use, flood control, flood Appropriations tracts or purchases of supplies or services by zoning, and flood damage prevention. Section 1275(a) .-Authorizes the appro- the Federal Government be made only after Section --Provides that these priations necessary to carry out the flood advertisement is provided for a sufficient studies and investigations deal with laws, insurance program, including sums to cover time to allow competitive proposals to be regulations or ordinances relating to en- administrative expenses and to reimburse made. croachments and obstructions on stream the national flood insurance fund for pre- Section (d).-Requires a finding by channels and floodways, the orderly develop- mium equalization payments and reinsur- the Secretary that the contracting party can ment and use of flood plains of rivers or ance claims paid out of the fund. perform its obligations efficinetly and effec- streams, floodway encroachment lines or flood Section 1275(b) -Provides that these tively before a contract can be entered into. plain zoning, building codes, building per- funds shall be available without fiscal year Section 1246(e).-Provides that the Sec- mits, and subdivisions or other building limitation. retary is authorized to require a safety bond restrictions. Effective date from any organization performing responsi- Section -Provides that based on Section 1276.-Provides for the act to be- bilities under the authority granted and any his studies and investigation, the Secretary come effective 120 days following the date of its officers and employees. No individual is authorized to develop comprehensive cri- of enactment, except that the Secretary is designated to certify payments will be liable teria designed to encourage, where necessary, authorized to extend the effective date up with respect to payments certified by him the adoption of permanent State or local to 180 days afer enactment if he finds condi- in the absence of gross negligence or intent measures which will lessen the exposure of tions necessitate a long preparatory period. to defraud the United States. No officer dis- property and facilities to flood losses, im- TITLE XIII-INTERSTATE LAND SALES bursing funds in accordance with a proper prove the long-range management and use of flood-prone areas, and inhibit, to the maxi- Short title certification of payments would be liable with respect to such payments in the absence mum extent feasible, unplanned and eco- Section 1301.-Provides that this title may of gross negligence or intent to defraud the nomically unjustifiable future development be cited as "The Interstate Land Sales Full United States. in such areas. The Secretary is also author- Disclosure Act". Section ).-Specifies that contracts ized to work closely with and provide any Definitions will be automatically renewable from year to necessary technical assistance to State, inter- state, and local governmental agencies to en- Section 1302.-Defines the terms contained year in the absence of notice from either party as to termination, except that the courage the application of such criteria and in this title. Secretary may terminate a contract after rea- the adoption and enforcement of such meas- Exemptions sonable notice if he determines that the ures as may be necessary to help in reducing Section 1303 .-Provides for specific ex- other party has substantially failed in its ob- any unnecessary damages resulting from emptions from the provisions of the act. ligations or in carrying them out in a man- floods. Section 1303 -Provides that the Sec- ner inconsistent with the efficient and effec- Purchase of certain insured properties retary of HUD may make exemptions from tive administration of the flood insurance Section 1262.-Authorizes the Secretary to any of the provisions of the act if he finds program. negotiate with owners of real property cov- the coverage is not necessary in the public Settlement and arbitration ered by flood insurance which are located in interest and for the protection of purchasers Section 1247 .-Authorizes the Secretary any flood-risk area, and damaged substan- due to the small amount of the offering or to make final determination and settlement tially beyond repair by flood, for the pur- its limited character. S6400 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE May 24, 1968 Prohibitions relating to the sale or lease of books and papers of the developer, his agent, Section 1315(b) -Authorizes the Secretary lots in subdivisions or any other person when the matter is to initiate investigations to determine if any Section 1304(a).-Makes it unlawful for relevant to the examination. person has violated or is about to violate any developer or agent engaged in inter- Section any notice re- the act or rules or regulations prescribed pur- state commerce (1) to sell or lease any lot quired under section 1307 to be sent to or suant to it. unless a statement of record is in effect pur- served on the developer or his authorized Section 1315(c).-Empowers the Secretary suant to section 1307 and a printed property agent. or his designee to administer oaths and af- report is furnished to each purchaser in ac- Information required in property report firmations, subpena witnesses, compel their cordance with section 1308; (2) to employ attendance, take evidence, and require the any device, scheme, or artifice to defraud; Section 1308(a).-Provides that a property production of any books, papers, correspond- to obtain money or property by means of a report shall contain any information in the ence, memorandums, or other records rele- misrepresentation with respect to informa- statement of record that the Secretary deems vant or material to an investigation or pro- tion in the statement of record or the prop- necessary, as well as any other information ceeding under the act. erty report or any other information; or to prescribed under rules and regulations of the Sections 1315 (d) and (e) .-Provide for en- engage in any transaction, practice, or course Secretary as necessary or appropriate. forcement of subpenas issued by the Secre- of business which operates or would operate Section 1308(b) .-Requires that the prop- tary in the U.S. district courts and for pro- as a fraud or deceit on the purchaser. erty report not be used for any promotional cedures concerning attendance and testify- Section 1304(b).-Provides that a pur- purposes before the statement of record be- ing at hearings prescribed by the Secretary. chaser may revoke a contract or agreement of comes effective and then only if used in its Administration purchase if he is not given a copy of the entirety. States that no person may adver- property report before or at the time of his tise or represent that the Secretary approves Section 1316(a) authority and re- signing the contract. Where the purchaser or recommends the subdivision. sponsibility for administering the act in the does not receive the property report 48 hours Cooperation with State authorities Secretary of Housing and Urban Development before signing the contract, he may revoke and gives him authority to delegate any Section 1309(a) -Provides that the Secre- it within 48 hours, unless the purchaser read functions, duties, and powers under the act tary of Housing and Urban Development the property report, and inspected the lot to employees of the Department or to boards shall cooperate with State authorities re- to be purchased before signing the contract of such employees in accordance with the sponsible for regulating the sale of lots in and SO stipulates in writing. provisions of sections 3105, 3344, 3562, and subdivisions subject to the act. It permits 7521 of title 5 of the United States Code. Registration of subdivisions the Secretary to accept for filing under, and declare effective as a statement of record, Section 1316(b) -Requires that hearings Section 1305(a) -Provides that a subdivi- material filed with and found acceptable by be public and appropriate records be kept. sion may be registered by filing a statement of record with the Secretary meeting the re- such authorities. Unlawful representations quirements of the act and the rules and Section 1309(b) that nothing in Section 1317.-Provides that the fact that regulations prescribed by the Secretary. the act shall affect the jurisdiction of any a statement of record has been filed or is in Section 1305(b) for payment to State real estate commission. effect does not constitute a finding by the the Secretary by the developer of a registra- Civil liabilities Secretary of Housing and Urban Development tion fee not in excess of $1,000 in accordance Section 1310.-Provides for civil liabilities that it is true and accurate on its face or with a schedule to be fixed by regulations of the Secretary. against a developer or agent who sells or that the Secretary has passed on the merits leases lots in a subdivision in violation of the or approved a subdivision. Section 1305(c) -Provides that the filing of a statement of record or an amendment provisions of the act. Penalties takes place on its receipt accompanied by Court review of orders Section 1318.-Establishes penalties for any payment of the fe provided in subsection Section any person ag- person who violates the provisions of the act (b). grieved by an order or determination of the or any rules any regulations issued pursuant Section 1305(d).-Requires that informa- Secretary, which was issued after a hearing, to the provisions of the act. The maximum tion contained in or filed with a statement to obtain review in the U.S. court of ap- penalty is a fine of not more than $5,000 or of record be available to the public under peals for the circuit in which the person re- imprisonment for not more than 5 years, or regulations prescribed by the Secretary. sides or has his principal place of business both. Information required in statement of record or in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Dis- Rules, regulations, and orders trict of Columbia. Section 1306.Provides that the state- Section 1319.-Authorizes the Secretary of ment of record shall contain certain infor- Section Provides that com- Housing and Urban Development to make, mation and be accompanied by certain speci- mencement of proceedings under subsection issue, amend, and rescind rules, regulations, fied documents. (a) will not stay the Secretary's order unless and orders necessary or appropriate to the specifically ordered by the court. exercise of his functions and powers under Taking effect of statements of record or amendments thereto Limitation of actions the act. Jurisdiction of offenses and suits Section 1307(a).-Provides that a state- Section 1312.-Bars the bringing of an ment of record, or any amendment, shall take action to enforce any liability created under Section 1320.-Provides that the U.S. dis- effect on the 30th day after filing or at an section 1310 (a) or (b) (2) unless it is trict courts and the U.S. District Court for earlier date if the Secretary SO determines. brought within 1 year after discovery of the the District of Columbia shall have jurisdic- When additional lands are offered for dispo- untrue statement or the omission or after tion of offenses and violations under the act sition, a developer may consolidate the state- the discovery should have been made. If the and the rules and regulations prescribed pur- ment with any prior statement of record of- action is to enforce a liability established suant to it. It provides these courts con- fering subdivided land under the same pro- under section 1310(b) (1), it must be brought current jurisdiction with State courts for all motional plan. within 2 years after the violation upon which suits in equity or at law to enforce liabilities Section 1307 -Provides that the Secre- it is based. No action under the act may be or duties created by this act. tary advise the developer within a reason- brought more than 3 years after the sale or Appropriations able time if the statement is materially de- lease of the property. Section 1321.-Authorizes appropriation to fective. Such notification suspends the effec- Contrary stipulations void carry out the purposes of this act. tive date until 30 days after a corrective Section 1313.-Provides that any condition, filing is made. The developer may, however, Effective date stipulation, or provision requiring a person request a hearing which must be held within to waive compliance with the act, or rules Section 1322.-Provides that the act shall 20 days of the Secretary's receipt of the and regulations of the Secretary pursuant to be effective 180 days after enactment. request. it, shall be void. TITLE XIV-TEN-YEAR HOUSING PROGRAM Section .-Requires the developer to file an amendment to a statement if any Additional remedies Sections 1401-1404.-Adds new provisions change occurs subsequent to its effective date Section 1314.Provides that rights and to the housing laws requiring the President remedies under the act are in addition to to submit a report, not later than January which affects any material fact required to be contained in the statement. other rights and remedies at law or equity. 15, 1969, containing a 10-year plan for the national housing needs, along with legislative Section 1307(d) .-Permits the Secretary to Investigations, injunctions, and prosecution recommendations for fulfilling these needs. suspend a statement of record if it appears of offenses In addition, these sections require annual to him that it includes an untrue statement Section 1315(a) .-Authorizes the Secretary reports to be made by the President on Jan- of a material fact or omits to state a ma- to file suit to prohibit violations of the act or uary 15, 1970, and on each succeeding year terial fact required to be stated or necessary any rule or regulation promulgated pursuant through 1978 showing the progress made un- to make the statement not misleading. to the act in any U.S. district court or in der the plan and the reasons why, if any, the Section 1307 (e) -Empowers the Secretary the U.S. District Court for the District of goals set forth in the plan have not been to make an examination to determine Columbia. The Secretary is also authorized reached along with estimates of the need for whether an order should be issued under to transmit evidence concerning prohibited the following year. This title also requires a subsection (d) and allows him to have access acts or practices to the Attorney General who final report to be submitted by January 15, to and demand production of any relative may institute criminal proceedings. 1979. May 24, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE S6401 TITLE XV-MISCELLANEOUS Additional assistant Secretary for Housing to the same extent that such work could Model cities and Urban Development now be done with project funds. Section 1507.-Amends the first sentence Section section 110(e) Section 1501.-Amends section 111(a) of of section 4(a) of the Department of Hous- of the Housing Act of 1949 to make it clear the Demonstration Cities and Metropolitan Development Act of 1966 to authorize an ing and Urban Development Act to increase that the restoration of historic properties appropriation of $1 billion for the model the number of assistant secretaries for can be carried out as an urban renewal proj- such department from five to six. ect cost for those projects approved for three- cities program for fiscal year 1970. In addi- fourths Federal grant assistance on a limited tion, this section adds an authorization of International housing project cost basis. $12 million for planning assistance and ad- Section 1508.-Rewrites section 604 of the Section (d).-Amends section 1101(c) ministrative expenses for the demonstration Housing Act of 1957 to clarify authority of (3) of the National Housing Act to permit cities program to be made available for fiscal HUD to: (1) Exchange data on housing and amortization of the mortgage term under the year 1969. urban development with foreign countries; medical group practice facilities program to Urban renewal demonstration grant program (2) employ private citizens to participate in commence after completion of construction Section 1502.-Amends section 314(a) of intergovernmental and international meet- of the facility rather than at the time the the Housing Act of 1954 to permit demon- ings sponsored or attended by HUD; and mortgage is executed. stration grants to be made to nonprofit (3) accept funds and other donations from Section -Amends section 213(o) organizations for carrying on demonstration international organizations, foreign coun- of the National Housing Act to clarify the projects and other activities for the preven- tries, and private foundations in connection authority of the Secretary to invest all tion of slum and blight. (Existing law per- with activities carried on under interna- moneys, not currently needed for the opera- mits grants to public bodies only.) This sec- tional housing programs. tion of the cooperative management housing tion provides that such demonstration un- Low-rent public housing-corporate status insurance fund, in Government bonds or dertakings by nonprofit organizations must Section 1509 (Technical).-Amends sec- obligations, or in the purchase on the open be consistent with any plans of a local pub- market of debentures which are the obli- tions 3 and 17 of the United States Housing lic agency. This section also increases the Act of 1937 to repeal language which is now gation of the fund. percentage of the Federal grant from two- obsolete. Section section 810(e) thirds of project cost to 90-percent of project of the National Housing Act to permit an cost. This section further increases the Eligibility for rent supplement payments individual, who is approved by the Secre- amount of capital grant funds available for Section 1510.-Extend eligibility to par- tary, to be a mortgagor under the FHA sec- demonstration projects from $10 million to ticipate in rent supplement program to two tion 810 housing program for military per- $20 million. projects in New York City. sonnel or employees or personnel of NASA Authorization for urban information and Consolidation of the low-rent public housing or AEC research or development installations. technical assistance services program in Washington, D.C. Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933 Section 1503.-Amends section 906 of the Section 1511.-Allows the National Capital Section section 5(c) of Demonstration Cities and Metropolitan De- Housing Authority in Washington, D.C., to the Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933 to au- velopment Act of 1966 to authorize an appro- consolidate, pursuant to section 15(6) of the thorize Federal savings and loan associations priation of $5 million for fiscal year 1969 and United States Housing Act of 1937, into its to invest in time deposits or certificates of $15 million for fiscal year 1970 to carry out annual contributions contract for its 8,423 deposit in banks insured by the FDIC under the purposes of the "Title IX Program" un- units of low-rent housing under title II of regulations issued by the Federal Home Loan der which matching grants are made to States the District of Columbia Alley Dwelling Act, Bank Board and also amends section 5(c) to help them provide urban information and the operating income and operating expense to broaden the authority of a Federal savings technical assistance services to communities accounts for its 72 units of low-rent housing and loan association to invest up to 1 percent of less than 100,000 population. under title I of such act. of its assets in loans guaranteed by the Advances in technology in housing and urban Urban renewal project in Garden City, Mich. Agency for International Development to development help finance housing projects or home finan- Section 1512.-Makes local expenditures in Section 1504.-Amends section 1010(d) of cing institutions in developing nations out- construction of the Florence Primary School side of Latin America. the Demonstration Cities and Metropolitan in Garden City, Mich., eligible as a local Act of 1966 to authorize the appropriation of Section section 5(c) of grant-in-aid to the Cherry Hill urban renewal such money as may be necessary to continue the Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933 to per- project in Garden City, Mich. the advances in technology in housing and mit a Federal savings and loan association to urban development programs authorized un- Urban renewal project in Sacramento, Calif. make loans for the construction of new der section 1010. This section would also per- Section 1513.-Makes local expenditures in structures related to residential use of the mit the letting of research contracts for pe- connection with the construction of a storm property under the existing exception appli- riods of up to 4 years instead of the present drainage stem eligible as a local grant-in-aid cable to property improvement loans. authorized 2-year period. to the Capitol Mall Riverfront urban renewal Section 1517(c) .--Amends section 5(c) of project in Sacramento, Calif. the Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933 to au- College housing Section 1505.-Amends title IV of the Self-help studies thorize a Federal savings and loan associa- tion to invest in loans to federally supervised Housing Act of 1950 by adding to the exist- Section 1514.-Amends section 207 of the financial institutions secured by investments ing college housing 3-percent direct loan pro- Housing Act of 1961 to permit the Secretary in which the association has statutory au- gram a new program of annual grants to of HUD to include the study of self-help thority to invest directly. cover the difference between the average in construction, rehabilitation, and main- tenance of housing for low-income persons Federal Home Loan Bank Act annual debt service an educational institu- tion is required to pay on borrowings from and families in the low-income housing Section 1518.-Amends section 12 of the private sources and the average annual debt demonstration program. Also directs Secre- Federal Home Loan Bank Act to authorize service it would be required to pay under the tary of HUD to make a report to Congress Federal home loan banks, subject to regula- 3-percent rate presently available under the within 1 year after date of enactment of this tions by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, direct-loan program. Annual grants with re- act, setting forth the results of the self-help to purchase AID-guaranteed housing loans spect to any project could be contracted to studies and demonstrations carried out un- and to sell participations therein to any be made for periods up to 40 years. The total der section 207 with such recommendations blank member. amount of annual contracts contracted to as he deems appropriate. Federal Reserve Act be made for this interest rate subsidy could Earthquake study Section 1519.-Amends section 24 of the not exceed $10 million and this amount Section 1515.-Amends section 5 of the Federal Reserve Act to authorize construc- would be increased by an additional $10 Southeast Hurricane Disaster Relief Act of tion loans up to 36 months in length as an million on July 1, 1969. 1965 to extend the time the Secretary of exception to the limitation on real estate Federal-State training programs HUD is required to report his findings and loans. (Under existing law, such construc- Section 1506.-Amends sections 801, 802, recommendations on earthquake insurance tion loans may not exceed 24 months.) and 805 of title VIII of the Housing Act of from October 31, 1968 to June 30, 1969. PRIVILEGE OF THE FLOOR 1964 to expand the program to permit grants Technical amendments Mr. SPARKMAN. Mr. President, I ask to States for the training of subprofessional Section 1516(a) .-Amends section 110(c) unanimous consent that staff members as well as professional persons who will be of the Housing Act of 1949 to make it clear employed by nonprofit organizations as well of the Committee on Banking and Cur- that urban renewal project funds can be as public organizations in the field of hous- rency, including the Housing Subcom- used for "the restoration of acquired prop- ing and community development. This sec- perties of historical or architectural value." mittee thereof, be authorized to be on tion would also allow grant assistance to be the floor during the consideration of the Section 1516(b).-Amends section 110(d) extended to Guam, American Samoa and the of the Housing Act of 1949 to make it clear bill. Trust Territory of the Pacific in order to that grant-in-aid credit can be given for The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without meet the needs of these areas for training expenditures by a public body for the con- objection, it is so ordered. capable housing and community develop- struction of foundations and platforms on Mr. SPARKMAN. Mr. President, on ment technical and professional personnel. air rights sites in urban renewal projects yesterday afternoon, the distinguished S 6402 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE May 24, 1968 senior from Maine [Mrs. SMITH] asked thority to give assistance for training guished Senator has fully answered the a question and asked that it be answered and other types of services and counsel- question. I am happy to respond to the in the course of the debate. I should like ing that would help lower income fami- request of Senator SMITH. I was particu- to answer the question of the Senator lies be more responsible homeowners. larly pleased to have her cosponsor the from Maine at this time. And if I omit As the Senator from Maine knows, National Home Ownership Foundation anything, I should like the Senator from several other bills, in addition to S. 1592, Act inasmuch as she is my senior col- Illinois [Mr. PERCY] to feel free to prompt were introduced during the first session league on the Aeronautical and Space me. of the 90th Congress to provide assist- Committee as well as chairman of the Mr. President, the senior Senator from ance toward helping lower income fami- Republican conference. Her support of Maine [Mrs. SMITH] asked in the CON- lies become homeowners. The bills, like the principles enbodied in S. 1592 has GRESSIONAL RECORD of yesterday, at page S. 1592, contained a variety of ways in meant a great deal to me. S6293, that I list the portions in the com- which such housing would be financed. The spirit of the committee has been mittee bill, S. 3497, which were adopted The committee considered all of these to embrace the principles of S. 1592. In from S. 1592, a bill introduced by the matters and developed a committee bill only one point did we actually fail to Senator from Illinois [Mr. PERCY], of which encompasses the best ideas for achieve one important objective of the which the Senator from Maine was a co- homeownership from all the bills sub- original bill, and this was in the ability sponsor, as well as list those portions of mitted. The committee bill uses the es- of the National Home Ownership Foun- S. 1592 which were not included in the tablished FHA mortgage insurance pro- dation to issue debentures that would be committee bill. grams to proniote homeownership guaranteed by the Federal Government. Mr. President, I will ask the Senator rather than giving a nonprofit private Mr. SPARKMAN. The Senator is cor- from Illinois to check me on my state- foundation Federal guarantee backup rect. The Senator knows that there was ment if I am incorrect. I said that Mrs. for obtaining funds with which to pro- considerable question about it in the SMITH was a cosponsor of the measure. mote housing as was proposed in S. 1592. committee as a whole and downtown- I believe that every Member on the Re- That is, we did not authorize the is- the idea of the Treasury guaranteeing publican side was a cosponsor, and suance of debentures guaranteed by the bonds issued by a private corporation. there were three Democrats in addi- United States, backed up by the Treas- Yet, we said that the program we worked tion to that. Furthermore, the bill was ury. out would give us a chance to try it out, introduced by 112 Members of the In considering S. 1592, the committee and then we could chart the course in House of Representatives. So it had was mainly concerned about giving a the future. very broad representation. Much of completely private nonprofit foundation Mr. PERCY. May I say at that point S. 1592 is in the committee bill, S. 3497. a $2 billion bonding authority where the that no Senator, particularly a freshman Some Senators on the minority side of Federal Government would have very Senator from the minority party, could the aisle have spoken to me about the little jurisdiction and supervision over have been given more time and attention committee bill, and I said, "Oh, sure, any of the activities of the Foundation. on this particular point. you certainly ought to support it, be- The committee, did, however, accept the I recall one afternoon last year in a cause you are one of the cosponsors." idea of creating a National Home Owner- Capitol conference room, when we felt And that is just about what it amounts ship Foundation with certain functions that the whole process of government to. for the purpose of providing technical would slow up because we had SO many Does the Senator from Illinois wish to assistance and encouraging local non- people from downtown tied up-from be recognized? profit groups to sponsor housing pro- HUD, the Federal Reserve, the Treasury, Mr. PERCY. Mr. President, I should grams for lower income families. The and other agencies-to try to work out like to comment that not only was the committee bill authorizes an appropria- this principle. Senator from New York [Mr. JAVITS] tion of $10 million for the Foundation to The committee itself has directed that exceedingly gracious in working very carry on its activities. 6 months after the enactment of this bill, closely with me on this bill, but also I Since S. 1592 and the several other we take another look to see whether suf- believe it very important that the Sen- proposals before the committee were ficient money is flowing into the de- ator from Washington [Mr. MAGNUSON] aimed toward providing homeownership pressed rural and slum areas of our be recognized. He was an original co- for lower income families, it would be cities. If we find that mortgage credit is sponsor, and, of course, is chairman of very difficult to list all of those portions not sufficient to do the job then the com- the Independent Offices Subcommittee which were included, or not included, mittee will come back to take another of the Senate Appropriations Commit- from S. 1592 and the other bills in the look, to see how greater capital can be tee. committee bill. created. Mr. SPARKMAN. The Senator is cor- Since S. 1592 was introduced by Sen- rect. I did not name the Democratic ator PERCY, who is a member of the But in the meanwhile, I was very Senators, but I do know that there were Banking and Currency Committee and pleased that the principle of partnership three Democrats. I do recall that Sena- who supports the committee bill, I invite and government reinforcement was in- cluded in the administration request this tor MAGNUSON was one. him to elaborate on these remarks, if he wishes, for the benefit of the Senator year. As the Senator from Maine knows, S. from Maine. Mr. SPARKMAN. The Senator is cor- 1592 proposes the creation of a National Personally, I feel that a very refresh- rect. S. 2700 did not contain that provi- Home Ownership Foundation which ing idea was brought to the committee sion, but the new bill does. would have the authority to issue $2 bil- Mr. PERCY. At some point in the fu- lion worth of federally guaranteed de- by the proposal of the Senator from Illi- bentures. The funds raised by the issu- nois, as embodied in S. 1592. Much of ture, the need may be SO great and the ance of these debentures would be the essence of it was first contained in S. impact on the budget so great that if loaned to local "eligible borrowers"- 2700, which the committee reported last we move ahead with the type of job that year, and now is contained probably to must be done we may come back-after that is, nonprofit corporations and orga- nizations. In turn, these local organiza- a greater extent-certainly, the interest we have had experience with the bill tions would construct or rehabilitate subsidy is more in line with what he ad- and the National Home Ownership Foun- housing units and sell them to families vocated-in the present bill. dation-and give this bonding power to Again, I am glad to pay tribute to the the National Home Ownership Founda- needing housing. When appropriate, an distinguished Senator and to all those tion SO that it can issue debentures back- interest rate subsidy would be given to the purchaser. who joined in sponsoring that bill. It is ed up by the Federal Government. Funds necessary to provide debt serv- largely included in the present bill. I believe we have proceeded in a cau- ice for the debentures when not paid Mr. PERCY. Mr. President, will the tious, prudent manner, and I am fully back to the National Home Ownership Senator yield? satisfied that every consideration has been given to S. 1592. I believe we could Foundation by the homeowner receiving Mr. SPARKMAN. I yield. have moved ahead faster by giving bond- the loan and subsidy would be made up Mr. PERCY. I will be very happy to ing authority to the Foundation now, by direct appropriations from the U.S. study carefully the distinguished Sen- but I am willing to wait and see whether Treasury. ator's statement. or not we have fulfilled the need in the S. 1592 also proposed that the Foun- In quick analysis, from what I have committee bill and to reassess the situa- dation would be given very broad au- heard, it seems to me that the distin- tion in the future. Housing May 24, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE S 6403 Mr. SPARKMAN. I thank the Senator. EXCERPTS FROM REMARKS OF SENATOR FUL- mittee on Housing, April 15, 1960, read in I appreciate the patience of the Sena- BRIGHT TO THE SENATE, AUGUST 11, 1966 part, as follows: tor from New York in waiting for us to Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I congratu- "The subcommittee recommends an conclude these remarks. late the Senator from Alabama and his col- amendment of existing law to require the fol- Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, first I leagues on the Banking and Currency Com- lowing annual report from the President: should like to state to the Senator from mittee for their continuing attention to the At the beginning of each session of the Con- housing needs of the Nation. For several years gress, the President shall transmit to the Alabama that it is I who am indebted to during my chairmanship of the Banking and Senate and the House of Representatives a him. I missed the time allocated to me Currency Committee, it was my privilege to report stating, among other things, (1) the because of a plane difficulty, and hence, serve under the capable leadership of the minimum number of housing units which quite properly, was called on to await my Senator in his capacity as chairman of the should be started during the calendar year, turn. He has been very gracious, and SO Housing Subcommittee-a position which he or 2 calendar years following submission of have Senator PERCY and Senator TOWER still holds. the report, in order to be consistent with the Through these years and through many program of the President, (2) the manner in for allowing me to proceed. prior years, the committee was periodically which discretion contained in law will be faced with crises in the homebuilding indus- used by Federal agencies to achieve this ECONOMIC POLICIES WHICH AF- try, because our economy was allocating an minimum number of starts, and (3) recom- inadequate quantity of savings to home mendations for changes in law which may be FECT THE HOMEBUILDING IN- mortgage credit. Time after time, the com- required to enable the achievement of this DUSTRY mittee recommended and the Senate passed minimum number of starts." bills designed to relieve critical shortages of This reconmendation was subsequently Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I am pleased to note that title XIV of S. 3497 mortgage money. Today we are in the midst expressed in bill form-S. 3379 of 1960-and, of another such crisis. in modified form was included in the requires the President to submit to Con- I intend to support the committee recom- omnibus housing bill of 1960-S. 3670, Senate gress annual reports upon progress in mendations, and I urge other Senators to do Report No. 1575. During debate on S. 3670, on achieving our national goal of "a decent likewise. I believe that the time has come, June 16, 1960, the provision to require an home and a suitable living environment however, to treat the cause of this recurring annual housing goal was deleted from the bill for every American family." This has ailment rather than to continue ministering by a vote of 44 to 37. It is interesting to note, been our goal since the enactment of doses of aspirin and antihistamines, which Mr. President, that the proposal for an an- the Housing Act of 1949. merely relieve the unpleasant symptoms. nual housing goal was supported by the late Mr. President, the drastic curtailment of President Kennedy, by President Johnson, The requirements of title XIV are quite homebuilding-described in the committee and by Vice President HUMPHREY. In fact, a similar to a bill which I introduced on report-is a result of national fiscal and total of 50 Senators voted for or were an- August 11, 1966. The purpose of my bill- monetary policies. But the effects of these nounced in favor of the proposal, and only S. 3714, 89th Congress, second session- policies on homebuilding are never publicly 47 Senators voted or were announced in was to require public debate of economic debated until they have been implemented opposition. policies which affect the homebuilding and their damaging effects have begun to Mr. President, I submit that if section 101 industry. reverberate throughout the economy. We of S. 3670 had been enacted into law in 1960, can no longer afford the waste and sacrifice we would not today be debating emergency I support title XIV wholeheartedly, inevitable in a cycle of boom and bust in measures to relieve a critical depression in and I hope that it may result in a na- homebuilding. Roller coasters are for amuse- homebuilding. If section 101 had been en- tional effort to achieve stability and ex- ment parks and should not be characteristic acted, the Congress would have deliberated pansion in the production of housing by of an economic system capable of relative the economic plans of the President in 1961, the thousands of private businessmen stability. 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, and 1966 as they spe- engaged in homebuilding. Even a cursory review of the effects of fis- cifically related to the supply of home mort- Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- cal and monetary policies over the last 20 gage credit, and there would have been ap- sent to have printed in the RECORD: First, years will reveal the circumstances under propriate action to maintain stability in this which home mortgage credit will be plentiful vital economic commodity. the text of my bill, S. 3714; second, ex- or will be scarce. Decisions made by the So far as I know, the need for better plan- cerpts from my remarks in the Senate Federal Reserve Board, by the Treasury De- ning has not attracted attention since 1960. on August 11, 1966; third, a letter which partment, by the Bureau of the Budget, by This is because 1966 is the first crisis year I wrote to the President of the National the Department of Housing and Urban De- since that time-but it will not be the last Association of Home Builders on Octo- velopment, and by the Federal Home Loan such crisis, if we continue to let homebuild- ber 19, 1966; fourth, an excerpt from the Bank Board, turn the volume of homebuild- ing be the primary deflator of an overheated NAHB statement of policy for 1967; and, ing up or down like water from a faucet. economy. But these policies are never discussed or fifth, an excerpt from pages 119 and 120 Mr. President, it has been our practice to debated in specific terms until the home- rely upon economic policies which periodi- of the report (No. 1123) of the Senate building industry is drowning in a sea of cally victimize the homebuilding industry. I Committee on Banking and Currency on tight money and going down for the third propose that we devise economic policies S. 3497. time. The present crisis has been foreseeable which promise greater stability in allocating There being no objection, the items for many months. Each time that the dis- public and private savings to satisfy the were ordered to be printed in the REC- count rate is raised, each time that com- growing shelter needs of the Nation. ORD, as follows: petition for savings causes a rise in yields of- I considered offering an amendment to the S. 3714 fered to investors, each time that rates to pending bill, but have decided instead to in- borrowers are raised, the ultimate effect upon Be it enacted by the Senate and House of troduce a separate bill which may be studied the supply and price of home mortgage cred- Representatives of the United States of prior to the next session of Congress. If it becomes clearer and more certain. But America in Congress assembled, That the there is no evidence of improvement in our this effect of monetary and fiscal policies is program of the President as expressed in his national economic planning in the Economic never discussed specifically in terms of the annual message to the Congress shall include Report of the President next January, the homebuilding industry. statements and recommendations concerning Congress should give prompt attention to the This unhealthy state of affairs was re- a residential construction goal. In further- enactment of appropriate legislation. cognized by the Committee on Banking and ance of the realization of this goal the Presi- dent shall transmit to the Senate and the Currency in 1960. In that year the commit- OCTOBER 19, 1966. tee concluded a 2-year study of home mort- House of Representatives, after the beginning Mr. LARRY BLACKMON, gage credit needs anticipated for the present of each session of the Congress, but not later President, National Association of Home decade. The first recommendation made by than January 20, a report which shall include Builders, Washington, D.C. the following: (1) a statement indicating the the committee was addressed to the problem DEAR MR. BLACKMON: Thank you for your I am discussing. The committee recognized minimum number of housing units which letter of October 13 and for your kind re- should be started during the then current that fluctuations in home building do not occur by accident. marks concerning my support of housing calendar year, or such year and the next fol- legislation. I agree with you that action lowing calendar year, in order to be consist- The committee realized that these fluctua- should be taken to relieve the alarming re- ent with the program of the President, (2) an tions are foreseeable and are a result of duction in residential construction, but I am indication of the manner in which the law planned monetary and fiscal policies. To not very hopeful about the prospect for will be administered by the executive agen- oversimplify, these policies require home meaningful action in the near future. cies to achieve the number of housing units building to quickly take up the slack when It seems clear to me that decisions made specified under clause (1), and (3) any rec- the economy is sagging, and to take it in by the Treasury, the Bureau of the Budget, ommendations for legislative action that the the neck when the economy is booming. and the Federal Reserve Board, throughout President determines are necessary or desira- Mr. President, we can plan better than we 1966, have been made with knowledge that ble in order that the construction of such have been doing, and the time has come for a reduced volume of homebuilding would specified number of housing units may be the Congress to insist upon better planning. be an inevitable result. In other words, ef- started. Recommendations No. 1 of the Subcom- forts to defiate an overheated economy have S 6404 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE May 24, 1968 affected homebuilding in greater proportion This statement and finding by Congress it stand in adjournment until 12 noon than other segments of the economy, and would be in furtherance of the policy de- on Monday next. this consequence was foreseeable. clared in 1949 and would bring it more into The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without Unfortunately, these decisions were made current focus by stressing the need for hous- without any public debate of their effect ing goals in the immediate future as well as objection, it is so ordered. upon homebuilding, and without any public for a plan by which they may be brought to discussion of alternative deflationary ac- public realization. Such a legislative pro- tions. The tremendous cost of the war in nouncement would also be in line with the THE VIETNAMESE PEACE NEGOTI- Vietnam-now engaging U.S. forces in a recent proposal by the President to construct ATIONS dimension exceeded in our history only by 6 million federally assisted housing units for Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, I speak to- WW I and WW II-demands reduced eco- low and moderate income families over the nomic activity in non-war related pursuits. next 10 years. day because I feel a conscientious duty Otherwise, the value of the dollar would toward our two Ambassadors in Paris, Report outlining plan erode at a faster rate than we are now ex- Ambassadors Harriman and Vance, with periencing. Section 1402 of the bill would require the Perhaps it would have been wiser to have President to make a report to Congress on whom I talked at some length in Paris or before January 15, 1969, setting forth a Tuesday night. I promised them I would imposed general wage and price controls, or 10-year plan covering the period June 30, make some observations in the Senate restricted auto production, or deferred high- 1968, to June 30, 1978. This plan would con- based on our talks. way construction, the space program, and public works projects, or to have chosen a tain the number of units anticipated in both I have just returned from presiding combination of these and other alterna- the Government-assisted and the conven- over a meeting of the Political Commit- tives. The fact of the matter is, however, tional markets for each of the 10 years, to- tee of the North Atlantic Assembly in that none of these alternatives were chosen, gether with a statement of what reduction and homebuilding is bearing a greater bur- in substandard units is expected, an estimate Brussels, and from conferring in Paris of costs in the various Federal programs for with Ambassadors Harriman and Vance den as a result. I suggest, therfore, that it would be more legislative action. The report would also in- about Vietnam negotiations. Also, I had prudent, and certainly more democratic, to clude an estimate of residential mortgage the great privilege of an audience with discus and debate national economic policies market needs, including availability and flow His Holiness Pope Paul who has been prior to their adoption and implementation. of mortgage funds, for the coming year, and such a respected and persuasive advocate It is for this reason that I introduced S. such other data and recommendations as are of peace in Vietnam. 3714, about which we corresponded several deemed pertinent. There are certain observations and months ago. Periodic reports recommendations on Vietnam which Based upon present estimates of the course Section 1403 of the bill would require an- these experiences have induced me to of the war in Vietnam, its demand upon our nual reports by the President on January 15 economy will not diminish in 1967. Con- make, and I hope they will be of use to of each year, which reports would compare sequently, some hard decisions must be the results for the previous year with the my colleagues and to our Nation. made with respect to continuing efforts to goals set forth in the plan for that year. I found a somewhat more sympathetic maintain national economic stability next These annual reports would be required to attitude in Europe regarding the Viet- year. give reasons for not meeting objectives, if nam war. While we were being roundly If the annual Economic Report to the that be the case, and would also set forth condemned before by many, European Congress were to address itself specifically any revised objectives as would be necessary, to prospects for homebuilding as estimated criticism is being muted. However, I see together with an estimate of the availability to be affected by Federal fiscal and monetary and flow of mortgage funds. The annual re- no real prospect of material support for policies, it is possible that courses of action ports would also provide an analysis of the our efforts in the war. might be chosen which would lessen the monetary and fiscal policies for the coming There is, however, relief and a sense of burden upon your industry. If not, oppor- calendar year required to carry out the ob- confidence in Europe that a beginning tunity would have been afforded to face the jectives of the plan, and could contain such has been made to attain the peace. In issue squarely prior to adoption and imple- further legislative recommendations as short, there is an attitude of sympathy mentation of policies predictably depressing deemed appropriate by the President. to homebuilding. in Europe as we carry on the negotia- Final report If you are reluctant to support S. 3714 in tions. its present form, I would be pleased to re- Section 1404 of the bill would provide for a As to the negotiations themselves, our ceive your recommendations for modifica- final report by the President on January 15, negotiators are Ambassadors of the tion. 1979 showing in detail the success or fail- highest character and proven skill. They With best wishes, I am, ure of the plan and an analysis of the rea- sons therefor. are, of course, bound by their brief from Sincerely yours, J. W. FULBRIGHT. The committee believes that there should Washington and their efforts are sub- be unification toward national housing ob- ject to what is happening in the war it- [Excerpt from NAHB statement of policy jectives among the several departments and self so long as it continues. It is about for 1967] agencies of the Federal Government. While this especially that I wish to speak. the Department of Housing and Urban De- IV. NATIONAL HOUSING GOALS For, we must have a clear idea of velopment is primarily involved in this sub- what we want to attain to be able to The events of the past year emphasize the ject, both the Department of Agriculture and need for a statement of specific National the Veterans' Administration have direct con- attain it. Also, we must be prepared to Housing Goals to minimize the danger of tact with the public regarding it. The opera- hear the other side uttering the abrasive constant change in the direction of housing tions of the Federal Reserve Board respecting words so typical of the Communists. All without the kind of orderly national debate the flow of credit and the volume of borrow- the while, the threat of a walkout hangs which should precede any major shift in ings permitted through the Federal Home over the heads of all, as well as the use important public policy. Loan Bank Board, as well as the marketing of the talks for propaganda purposes. NAHB will take the lead to establish such and purchasing prices and policies of the This is standard operating procedure for goals and to obtain recognition of them by Federal National Mortgage Association should all appropriate Federal, state, and local gov- not be determined or conducted without a the Communists. Therefore, we must view toward achieving some minimum vol- have a basic concept from which we can- ernments. We will seek the cooperation of all groups in home building and residential fi- ume of housing production consistent with not depart even though there is always nance and all others concerned with hous- the need for both housing and general eco- the risk that negotiations may break ing opportunity for all. nomic stability. off for a time as a result. At the same It is the view of the committee that the time, this concept must be of such a [Excerpt from S. Rept. 1123 on S. 3497] stating in definite terms of annual minimum basic nature that we are prepared to TITLE XIV-10-YEAR HOUSING PROGRAM housing goals with this added requirement face a "moment of truth" with the Gov- of giving specific reasons in case they are Declaration of purpose not met, can do much toward achievement ernment of South Vietnam when we may Section 1401 of the bill declares that the of the volume and stability of housing pro- feel that we are willing to make peace on national commitment made in the Housing duction that is so essential to the orderly a set of agreed negotiated terms and Act of 1949 to the goal of "a decent home and growth of the country. they may not. That may happen. a suitable living environment for every Amer- What we seek, as I understand it, is to ican family" can best be attained through a definite plan providing for the effective uti- ORDER FOR ADJOURNMENT end the war by transferring the struggle lization of available resources and capabili- to the political forum. Also, that we in- ties existing in both the public and private Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Presi- tend that the political resolution be on sectors of the economy over a fixed period dent, I ask unanimous consent that when a one-man, one-vote basis. In other of 10 years. the Senate completes its business today, words, the political forum must be gen- 5856 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE July 1, 1968 Mr. ROGERS of Colorado. Mr. Speak- gress will toss this $3.5 billion subsidy I do believe, however, that the bill con- er, Secretary of Interior Stewart Udall bill in the "legislative wastebasket." tains a great deal that is good and use- was recently scheduled to speak at the A month ago, the Rules Committee ful, and that it has benefited greatly June commencement of my alma mater, failed to report the legislation to the from the ideas of the minority. There is the University of Denver. Senator Ken- floor of the House, but on June 18 it was a new emphasis on homeownership for nedy's tragic death prevented Mr. Udall reported for consideration on the floor of lower-income families, improvement in from going to Denver. He sent, by wire, the House. Evidently the sponsors are the rent certificate or leased public hous- the following eloquent remarks, which planning on passing this bill in the clos- ing program, a tightening of provisions Chancellor Maurice B. Mitchell read to ing days of the session when, by reason of requiring residential urban renewal to the graduates. absentees and confusion in the final serve the housing needs of low- and I include these inspiring words in the hours they might succeed in passing the moderate-income Americans, increased RECORD, as I think they have value for same and extending the farm subsidy authorizations for the water and sewer us all during these difficult times: through 1970. Every Member should be program which is of benefit to every con- MESSAGE FROM STEWART UDALL on the alert against this contingency. gressional district in the country, and (Read by Chancellor Maurice B. Mitchell of I am herewith enclosing with my re- renewed efforts at establishing an effec- University of Denver at Commencement on marks a letter received from Mr. Charles tive flood insurance program. All of these June 7, 1968) B. Shuman, president of the American provisions reflect original efforts on the If ever there was a time I would like to Farm Bureau Federation. The same party of the minority, as does the rec- be with young people, it is now. If ever there speaks for itself. ognition by the committee of the need to was a moment when youth-in a world it did AMERICAN FARMER BUREAU FEDERATION, cut through the redtape and bureau- not make-requires an encouragement of its Washington, D.C., June 25, 1968. energies and talents and capacities to remake cratic delays that so often accompany Hon. RAY J. MADDEN, the world, it is now. If ever there was a time attempts to utilize existing programs. U.S. House of Representatives, when tragedy must yield to hope and rea- To describe some of these efforts, I Washington, D.C. son, instead of despair and frustration, it DEAR CONGRESSMAN MADDEN: The House of would like to include at this point my is now. I can not be with you because Robert F. Representatives will soon consider H.R. 17126, supplemental views to the committee re- Kennedy was a man I loved and whose pro- a bill to extend the Food and Agriculture Act port. I would also urge every Member of fessional and personal life I shared. I had of 1965 for one year-to December 31, 1970. this body to carefully study the majority to be with his family. Passage of this bill would be unnecessary and minority views in House Report No. and unwise. One searches for words on an occasion 1585. The bill, H.R. 17989, as well as the when rhetoric itself is totally inadequate. It is unnecessary to act in 1968. The pres- report, is of considerable size. It repre- The opening words of Dickens' A Tale of Two ent legislation does not expire until Decem- sents a major undertaking and, despite Cities have more appropriateness and poig- ber 31, 1969. Rejection of this bill would per- nancy than any I could frame: "It was the mit Congress to develop an alternative pro- its length and complexity, should have best of times, it was the worst of time, it was gram next year. the fullest consideration that can be the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolish- It is unwise to act because the Act of 1965 achieved in an informed debate. ness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the is a failure. It has failed: My supplemental views follow: epoch of incredulity, it was the season of To stabilize the food costs of consumers. SUPPLEMENTAL VIEWS OF REPRESENTATIVE Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was To expand farmers' export and domestic WILLIAM B. WIDNALL TO BANKING AND markets. the spring of Hope, it was the winter of CURRENCY COMMITTEE REPORT ON HOUSING Despair; we had everything before us, we To improve-or even maintain-the in- ACT OF 1968 had nothing before us, we were all going di- comes of farm families. In supporting H.R. 17989, I am not unmind- rect to Heaven, we were all going direct the The farm parity ratio stood at 81 when the other way." Act of 1965 became effective. Now when we ful of the fact that reasonable men may differ But these words-as any words-can only are less than half-way through the third year over certain provisions, or that new programs frame a question. The answer which must be of the program, it stands at 73. Farmers want authorized or old ones extended by the meas- something better than to be locked into the ure are open to constructive criticism relat- the ultimate victory of reason over madness is for you-and all youth-to provide. This is present low-price situation. And, while farm- ing to conception and execution. On balance, increasingly your world-both by the ers have suffered a drop in their prices, the however, I believe the bill is both necessary strength of your numbers and the power of federal government's costs for wheat, feed and worthwhile. It has benefited from ideas grain, and cotton programs have steadily in- and proposals offered by the minority, and I your concern and commtiment. creased and now total over $3 billion annu- think it is appropriate to call particular at- There is an end to a man's life; there need to be no end to the things he stood for and ally. tention to this fact. aspired for all men, everywhere. Those With Congress having passed a 10-percent Foremost among these minority sugges- things-to which John F. Kennedy and Mar- tax increase and a requirement that the tions has been the concept of fostering on a tin Luther King and Robert F. Kennedy dedi- President reduce budgeted expenditures $6 major scale homeownership among low- and cated their careers, and for which they gave billion in the next fiscal year, it is incredible moderate-income citizens. Homeownership their lives, are in your hands. The power to that Congress would even consider extend- as a desirable goal is an idea deeply rooted ing legislation which has proved to be so in American tradition. For the low- and mod- create is greater than the power to destroy. Indeed, that power is in your hands-and costly and ineffective. erate-income citizen, particularly the minor- hearts. We respectfully urge you to vote against ity group citizen, this has become increas- H.R. 17126. ingly the impossible dream. Statistics show Sincerely yours, that the percentage of existing one-family FARM SUBSIDY RAID ON U.S. CHARLES B. SHUMAN, homes insured by FHA for families with in- TAXPAYER comes less than $4,000 fell from 42.8 percent President. of the total in 1950 to 1.3 percent in 1966. (Mr. MADDEN asked and was given For new homes, the drop was from 56 percent permission to address the House for 1 to 1 percent in the same period. minute, to revise and extend his remarks, THE OMNIBUS HOUSING BILL CON- In order to reverse this trend, I introduced and to include extraneous matter.) TAINS MANY PROPOSALS SPON- H.R. 8820, the National Home Ownership Mr. MADDEN. Mr. Speaker, the Agri- SORED BY THE MINORITY Foundation Act on April 20, 1967. One hun- culture Committee of the House of dred thirteen other House Members, includ- (Mr. WIDNALL asked and was given ing eight members of the minority of the Representatives presented H.R. 17126, a permission to address the House for 1 Banking and Currency Committee, joined in bill to extend the Food and Agriculture minute, to revise and extend his remarks, offering a similar bill at that time. Act of 1965 for 1 year. and to include extraneous matter.) The proposal had as its basic goals the Although the pending bill has a year Mr. WIDNALL. Mr. Speaker, the enlargement of housing opportunities and and a half before it expires on December Housing and Urban Development Act of choice for our lower income families, both 31, 1969, the recipients of annual sub- rural and urban. We proposed to tap private 1968 has been voted out of the House caiptal, private management and technical sidies to thousands of farmers and farm Banking and Currency Committee and experience, and private, community-oriented corporations all over the Nation are granted a rule for floor action in the near initiative. The Government role was to be pressuring the Congress for another year future. As I stated in my supplemental limited to one of stimulus and reinforce- continuance of this "boondoggle," SO that views to the committee report, I am not ment, rather than execution and control. it can carry through the year 1970. unaware that reasonable men may differ FEATURES OF THE NHOF BILL Evidently these recipients of a "guar- over certain provisions, or that new or The National Home Ownership Foundation anteed annual income" from the Ameri- old programs deserve careful scrutiny Act proposal, besides its basic change in can taxpayers are afraid the next Con- and constructive criticism. policy advocating homeownership in contrast July 1, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE 5857 to traditional federally assisted renter- within the American public appear to have The Secretary is directed to report back oriented projects, contained a number of changed the administration's mind. The within 6 months on his actions. This provi- innovative features. In summary they were cumulative result can be seen in H.R. 17989. sion was secured in the bill despite the ob- as follows: In summary, the similarities between the jections of the Department of Housing and 1. The establishment of the National Home committee bill and the proposal outlined Urban Development, objections which, in Ownership Foundation, a congressionally au- above are as follows: turn, persisted, despite the evidence that thorized nonprofit corporation, with a board 1. The committee bill establishes, In title such a plan was necessary and capable of directors drawn from the private sector. I, section 107, a National Home Ownership of being established, and despite a favorable Besides making mortgage capital available, Foundation. Its purposes follow those sug- report in the early 1960's, commissioned by the Foundation was to conduct a technical gested for the technical assistance service the Housing and Home Finance Agency, fore- assistance service to aid in the development under the minority's NHOF bill of last year. runner of HUD. and formation of low- and moderate-income The Foundation is directed to encourage and 6. The committee bill, in section 405, homeownership program, including interim assist public and private bodies at the na- amends the urban renewal law to permit planning loans, and the conduct of support- tional, community, and neighborhood levels land to be sold to qualified low-income mort- ing programs in such fields as training, em- in initiating, developing, and conducting gagors and nonprofit sponsors of homeown- ployment, credit counseling, and budget programs to expand low-income homeowner- ership program and, by an amendment I of- management to enable lower income families ship and housing opportunities. This in- fered, private homebuilders acquiring land to assume the privileges and responsibilities cludes arrangements for technical and man- for subsequent resale to low- and moderate- of homeownership. agerial assistance and training, aid in find- income home buyers. 2. Authority to the Foundation to raise ing mortgage financing, insurance, and the 7. By an amendment which I offered, sec- $2 billion in mortgage loan funds through the like, encouraging research and innovation, tion 3 was added to H.R. 17989 which re- sale of its debentures, guaranteed by the collecting and distributing information, and quires, to the greatest extent feasible, the Federal Government to supplement available assistance in expanding job opportunities. employment of lower income residents from moneys from existing mortgage lending in- The Foundation may make loans or grants the area served not only by homeownership stitutions. The object was to bring together to cover organizational or administrative ex- activity but other federally assisted housing in one coordinated effort, and one pool of penses for homeownership programs, neces- projects as well, in jobs created by these funds, sufficient capital to carry out a major sary preconstruction costs including land op- projects. The possibility of the home buyer lower income homeownership program. It was tions, architectural fees, and similar items, contributing his own labor toward the cost expected that the federally guaranteed bonds, and the costs of providing counseling to of his housing has also been recognized in carrying a market rate of return, would at- lower income families in budget manage- section 2 and in title I. tract new capital, for the mortgage market, ment, home maintenance, and home man- CAN HUD CARRY OUT THE PROGRAM? from such sources as union pension funds. agement. The bill authorizes $10 million in 3. A market-interest rate mortgage, with a appropriations. One of the purposes behind establishing direct subsidy paid by the Treasury to the 2. The committee bill, in title VII, au- the National Home Ownership Foundation holder of the mortgage, thus lowering the in- thorizes the new Government National Mort- in the minds of its cosponsors last year, was terest rate and monthly payments for the gage Association to guarantee securities is- to provide a quasi-public alternative to direct home buyer. The purpose was to avoid the sued by FNMA or other private issuers, Federal bureaucratic control by the Depart- major budget impact that accompanies the backed by a pool of FHA and VA loans or ment of Housing and Urban Development. use of the below-market-interest rate mort- mortgages. The purpose is the same as that The sponsors of the NHOF bill were not gage program involving Federal National of the NHOF-guaranteed debentures sug- alone in questioning the capacity or will of Mortgage Association purchase of these gested by the minority; namely, to increase the Department to carry out an expanded mortgages utilizing special assistance funds. the supply of mortgage funds and tap new program of housing for low-in.come citizens. Thus, each Federal dollar would have a mul- sources such as pension funds. It is permis- This presents a considerable challenge to tiplier effect many times greater than the sive only, limited in scope, the funds raised the Department, in carrying out the proposals authorized in H.R. 17989. BMIR mortgage purchase dollar, a major ac- would not be limited to use for lower in- complishment in a time of expenditure cur- come homeownership. The Department, in While the Department's testimony before tailment. The interest subsidy would be re- the hearings, admitted to not knowing what our committee has been reassuring. the con- paid into a revolving fund, if and as the buy- amount of additional funds this approach tinued opposition of HUD to my 1966 amend- er reached an adequate income level, pre- might attract. ment requiring a substantial number of low- scribed as 70 percent of existing 221 (d) (3) As a result, it is unlikely that the massive and moderate-income housing in each pre- program income limits. attraction of new funds for lower income dominently residential urban renewal project 4. Maximum utilization of community- homeownership envisioned by the sponsors has had the opposite effect. As the committee based or neighborhood non profit corpora- of the National Home Ownership Foundation report notes, the definition of substantial as tions, including technical assistance for their Act last year will occur under this bill. The only 20 percent of the project units is hardly development and operation of lower income FHA insurance provisions in title I also in keeping with the dramatic need for more homeownership programs. This would also depend upon existing lenders and mortgage and better housing for our underprivileged provide an opportunity for the prospective money supply. This makes all the more im- citizens. The change contemplated by sec- home buyers in the area to have a voice in portant the direction in section 107(f) (2) to tion 413 of this bill increases this percentage the conduct of the program. It would also the Foundation to report to the Congress to 51 or better for the aggregate number of enlist the aid, expertise, and financial back- whenever insufficient funding is available for units in approved projects within a com- ing of local community leaders in Govern- lower income homeownership purposes. The munity; that is, projects which have had ment, business, labor, civic organizations, Foundation is also directed to make recom- their plans approved by the Department, not the professions and the like, to build a part- mendations for alternate means of securing those which are only in the planning stage. nership within the private sector at the na- adequate financing. The new amendment, worked out in conjunc- tional and local levels. 3. The committee bill, in title VIII, au- tion with Representative Henry Reuss, of 5. Authority to develop a program of mort- thorizes the establishment of a private cor- Wisconsin, as a bipartisan statement of con- gage equity payment insurance, to protect poration for profit which is designed to gressional intent, also contains a 20-percent the home buyer from losses of income due to encourage a partnership approach among minimum aggregate for low-income housing illness, death, unemployment, and other interests in the private sector at the na- suggested by Representative William Brock, causes not within the home buyer's control. tional and local level, in order to encourage of Tennessee. It is perhaps the best example I To the greatest extend possible, the Founda- low-income housing. Part of the purpose of know of in the bill of bipartisan. congres- tion was directed to work out the program the National Home Ownership Foundation sional initiative in the legislative field. Cer- with the private insurance industry, and re- authorized by the bill is also to encourage tainly, all of the other low-cost housing pro- port back to Congress. private involvement, including the develop- grams will come to naught if land or struc- 6. Utilization of the urban renewal pro- ment of neighborhood organizations inter- tures are not assembled and made available gram as a means of obtaining land and build- ested in homeownership programs, which at low cost, which is is the major benefit of ings at reasonable prices to lower the cost of would involve the citizens themselves from urban renewal use. construction, rehabilitation, or the use of the area. Maximum utilization of area resi- Two other amendments which I offered existing housing for the homeownership pro- dents or the lower income families to be and which have been accepted in title I de- gram. served by the program is not pronounced as serve mention, if only because of the opposi- 7. Increase employment opportunities and a major goal in the committee bill, however, tion by HUD to their inclusion. The first the use of self-help for area low-income resi- in contrast to the NHOF proposal last year. opens the homeownership sections up to dents and prospective home buyers. 5. By amendment to title I (sec. 109) utilization of existing housing, as well as offered by Representative Garry Brown, of housing involving new construction or sub- SIMILARITIES WITH THE PRESENT BILL Michigan, the minority obtained inclusion stantial rehabilitation. A survey made by my Although the Department of Housing and in the bill of an authorization to the Sec- office among District of Columbia real estate Urban Development greeted the NHOF pro- retary of HUD to develop, in cooperation with agencies indicated the availability of houses posal last year with skepticism both for its the private insurance industry, a plan of selling for under $18,000 and needing little technical provisions and its goal of lower insurance to help homeowners meet mort- repair, if any. It also uncovered the poten- income homeownership, sufficient support gage payments in times of personal economic tial availability of many more renter-oc- from a variety of groups and individuals adversity. cupied houses, which would come on the mar- 5858 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD HOUSE July 1, 1968 ket if these very same renters had access to Committee. This in the face of applications The promise it holds for the future of mortgage funds. Negro real estate brokers from needy communities which numbered human association is due in no small were particularly conscious of this opportu- over $4 billion. There is to my knowledge not a single congressional district that does measure to President Johnson, whose nity. The use of existing housing will also mean, as the U.S. Civil Rights Commission not have an application for water-and-sewer faith in such an agreement never fal- has pointed out, the immediate implementa- funds and many are most desperate. Under tered and whose encouragement and tion of the new homeownership program. the circumstances, I think the increase I support provided a constant stimulus Certainly in this time of tension and trouble have suggested is most modest and I know and inspiration over 4 long years of ar- within our cities, any tool that can provide it is badly needed. duous negotiations. an immediate impact, and thus new hope NATIONAL FLOOD INSURANCE The importance of the treaty lies not to the less fortunate, should be welcomed. It was with a deep sense of personal satis- only in the hopeful pause it offers in the Will the Department of Housing and Urban faction to me that the Committee on Bank- reckless race toward nuclear armament. Development heed this opportunity? Only ing and Currency adopted my amendment, time will tell. It lies equally in its significance as an Another amendment makes nonprofit in the form of a proposed title XI, National example of the ability of humankind to Flood Insurance. groups eligible for inclusion in the pro- Members of the House will recall that the agree on major issues affecting its wel- gram for homeownership financing that wish to use existing housing instead of tak- proposed national flood insurance legisla- fare. It is a tribute to reason which SO tion passed the House-H.R. 11197-and the often founders when the passions and ing on the task of rehabilitation in a multi- Senate in 1967 but because of far-reaching the ambitions of men are stirred. unit project. It is my expectation that as these nonprofit groups, whether church or changes made by a House floor amendment The world looks brighter today, despite labor union, or civic association sponsors, in the financing mechanism in the House the turmoil and the turbulence that be- bill efforts to resolve the differences between gain in confidence and experience, they will sets it. The Treaty for the Nonprolifera- the House and Senate versions in conference move on to the more demanding but no less tion of Nuclear Weapons has already important task of increasing the supply of have been abandoned. In short, prior to in- standard housing for homeownership pur- clusion of title XI in H.R. 17989, most ob- opened the way to further progress in servers conceded that flood insurance legis- the stated willingness of the United poses. THE RENT CERTIFICATE PROGRAM lation had little if any chance of enactment States and the U.S.S.R. to examine the in the 90th Congress. possibility of limitations on strategic nu- In 1964, I, with other members of the Re- As an original cosponsor of a national clear delivery vehicles. publican minority introduced the rent cer- flood insurance program, the events leading tificate plan. It became legislation in 1965, There is indeed reason to rejoice. up to the current legislative statement are and has since made a great record for some- My congratulations go out to this ad- indeed regrettable. Within the past month, thing that was opposed by the administra- ministration and to the men whose the State of New Jersey experienced its worst tion and generally not promoted by them. natural disaster of the 20th century, sus- abundant good will, skill, and patience To date, it has far outstripped its companion taining more than $150 million in flood dam- produced this splendid new hope for the legislation, rent supplements, in terms of age to private and public property. Having future of mankind. people housed, having provided shelter for personally witnessed the human tragedy and over 16,000 families while the rent supple- widescale property damage in the wake of ment total is just over 2,500. This means these devastating floods, my belief in the THE TAX-EXEMPT FOUNDATION: A that the rent certificate program is respon- urgency of a national flood insurance pro- sible for placing over 60,000 people in de- NEW MAJOR THREAT TO CLEAN gram was further sustained. cent, safe, and sanitary housing that they POLITICS When the House last November rejected did not have previously. the proposed financing through Treasury The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. PAT- In the present bill there are three sec- borrowing authority contained in the flood TEN). Under previous order of the House tions, 208, 209, and 210 which are perfect- insurance bill, the circumstances surround- ing amendments that I introduced to facili- the gentleman from New York [Mr. ing that action were far different than those tate the operation of the program. ROONEY] is recognized for 60 minutes. Where the Secretary had previously re- which prevail today. I refer to title X of the Mr. ROONEY of New York. Mr. stricted the program in certain localities to proposed housing bill where the Congress is rehabilitated housing, on the completely being asked to approve Treasury borrowing Speaker, I want to address you briefly authority in order to finance a national pro- on what I consider to be a grave and unjustified claim that it would cause rents to rise, section 208 makes clear that he can gram of riot reinsurance. While I support largely unnoticed peril to the election title X, I think it would be uncharacteris- process in this country. It has to do with no longer impose such regulations unless it is specifically SO provided in the act. tically inconsistent for a majority of the one of the most delicately sensitive Where HUD had taken the position that House of Representatives to support Treasury areas; namely, the financing of elections. 1t could not use the program unless in quan- borrowing authority for riot insurance, Although some Members of the Con- tities of 10 or more units, section 209 makes while rejecting this form of financing for a gress have an income from business or clear that it can. national flood insurance program of far more In section 210, we have acted to enable modest proportions. some other profession, most of us think In this regard, we should keep in mind of ourselves primarily as politicians. All tenants to become purchasers of the homes they occupy through the medium of the that flood insurance proposals have been of us are proud to be SO designated. Like local housing authority. This innovation was before the Congress for more than 10 years, medicine and law, politics is a profes- prompted by spontaneous offers from build- long before any thought whatsoever was sion with a sacred trust. ers in all parts of the country, attracted by being given to the need for a Federal pro- I think virtually all Members of the the economics of the operation, to build for gram of riot insurance. Congress want fervently to keep their leasing purposes. Stated in its most candid terms, if the profession clean, to keep it ethical, to Now where the housing authority deems Congress of the United States can see its way clear to underwrite insurance protection keep it closely responsive to the people, it advisable, it may include in its lease an option to purchase to be exercised when de- against lawlessness in our cities, it can ill and to keep it operating within certain sirable in behalf of the tenant. afford to turn a cold shoulder on the personal statutory boundaries. This latter provision could be used even grief and tragedy of those of our law-abiding, And that is why I think it important in multi-family structures where tenants, so taxpaying citizens who experience huge prop- to call to your attention what I have desiring to act, occupy units having more erty losses caused by floods, or by what are had to overcome in winning the Demo- than 80 percent of the total value of the said to be "acts of God." cratic renomination in my district. The structure. fact that I did win does not lessen my WATER AND SEWER GRANTS TREATY FOR NONPROLIFERATION duty to tell you about a device that was Section 505 ups the matching sewer and OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS used by one of my opponents. For, if the water grants from $200 million annually to same device is used extensievly over the $500 million annually. I do not particularly (Mr. MORGAN asked and was given country, I think it will truly endanger like to increase authorizations beyond de- permission to address the House for 1 the democratic process by destroying the partmental recommendations. In the case of minute and to revise and extend his re- rules that now govern the financing of this program, however, I am quite ready to marks and include extraneous matter.) elections. make an exception. This is a vital program. Mr. MORGAN. Mr. Speaker, this ad- To put it bluntly-and I address my- Upon it have depended at times, the question ministration may well congratulate itself self personally to every Member of this of whether or not a city would have to im- port water for drinking purposes. upon the tremendous achievement rep- Congress-unless you are a wealthy per- The administration has not only given this resented by the Treaty for the Non- son or unless you have wealthy support- program a low priority. It has asked for only proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. It is ers who can help you fight back, you half the funds which Congress authorized indeed the most significant development may find yourself in some future elec- when appearing before the Appropriations since the advent of nuclear power itself. tion being overwhelmed by a deluge of APRIL 5, 1968 / VOLUME 7, NUMBER 6 HERE'S THE ISSUE Published every other week while Congress is in session by the Legislative Department, Chamber of Commerce of the United States, Washington, D. C. Subscriptions: $2.50 per year to members of the National Chamber; $3.50 per year to non-members. Rates for multiple subscriptions or bulk orders available on request. Material in this bulletin may be reproduced with or without credit. Editor: Wallace Davies The Housing and Urban Development Act President Johnson, in a Special Message to Congress, requested in the bill for programs running for one to four outlined plans for achieving a formidable housing goal- years beyond fiscal year 1969 are about $10 billion. the construction of 26.2 million new housing units in the But bigger Federal spending is only part of the proposal. next 10 years. Also included are: Some perspective on the dimensions of this goal is gained from the fact that we built only 14.4 million in the last 10 New approaches to the way in which housing-subsidies are provided for low and moderate income families. years. The President's plans were embodied in the Housing and Additional efforts to tap the resources and skills of Urban Development Act of 1968 (S. 3029, H. R. 15624). private industry. As Congressional hearings opened on this proposal, Robert In essence, these new approaches and additional efforts C. Weaver, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, are designed to result in 300,000 publicly-financed housing said: starts in fiscal 1969-triple the present rate-through (1) The specific housing and community development pro- a new program of homeownership; (2) modifications and gram which we are presenting has many unique features. extensions of existing Federal programs in rental and co- But most significant, I believe, is the fact that this total new operative housing; and (3) the authorization of a National effort is aimed primarily at achieving a single, specific and Housing Partnership program, as recommended by the unified national goal-the building and rebuilding in 10 President's Committee on Urban Housing, chaired by Edgar years of enough good housing to permit the replacement of substantially all substandard dwellings. F. Kaiser. These partnerships, operating on a national scale, would combine private capital with business and organiza- As befits such a formidable goal, the bill embodying the tion skills to construct and operate housing for low and plans for achieving it is also a formidable document. In- moderate income families. cluded in its 154 pages are 11 major titles and 90 sections, ranging from grants for model cities to urban mass trans- Homeownership portation grants to urban planning. Until now, Federal housing assistance for low and mod- Important proposals would make changes in the oper- erate income families has been directed almost entirely to ations of the Federal National Mortgage Association rental housing. A limited, experimental program was au- (FNMA), and remove the statutory six-percent ceiling on thorized in 1966, which authorizes insured mortgages at FHA-insured mortgages. Recognition of a market-rate in- 3 percent interest to non-profit organizations for the pur- terest principle is expected to have beneficial effects chase and rehabilitation of substandard homes for sub- throughout the housing industry. sequent resale, with 3 percent mortgages, to low-income Much of the bill, however, deals specifically with pro- families. posals to stimulate construction and rehabilitation of hous- This experimental program would be incorporated in a ing for moderate and low income families. new section, which, essentially, is designed to promote Out of the 26 million new housing units envisioned, homeownership by providing a Federal subsidy for inter- it is proposed that public assistance be provided for the est payments. construction of 4,000,000, compared to 500,000 in the It is patterned after provisions approved last year by the last decade. Senate Banking and Currency Committee, but opposed by It is also proposed that public assistance be provided the Administration. This year, the Administration has en- for the rehabilitation of 2,000,000 existing units in the dorsed the principle. It would work, this way: next decade, compared to 25,000 in the past decade. A family would pay 20 percent of its monthly income As usual, part of the stimulation to the new construction to principal repayment, interest, taxes, insurance and mort- and rehabilitation of publicly-assisted units is to come from gage insurance premiums. (In computing the monthly in- the appropriations of bigger sums. come, $200 could be deducted for each dependent child.) It is estimated that appropriations and authorizations If the 20 percent did not cover the cost of the mortgage payment, the subsidy would cover enough of the interest tary of HUD to provide technical assistance 80 percent cost to result in the home purchaser paying the equivalent interest free loans for pre-construction costs of non-profit of one percent interest. sponsors of low or moderate income housing undertakings. A mortgage limit of $15,000 ($17,500 in high cost In explaining the provision, HUD spokesmen said: areas) would be imposed, except for a family of five or Much of the Federal housing policy for low and moderate more persons where the limits could be $17,500 and family income families has been geared to the use of the $20,000 respectively. nonprofit sponsor. However, the experience so far has not What this could mean specifically is that the average been satisfactory. Except in rare instances, nonprofit spon- cost of $125 to $130 a month on a $15,000 mortgage sors have been lacking in experience and technical capacity could be brought down to $71 a month. to develop housing. The provision of loans to cover certain preconstruction costs is essential if nonprofit orga- Unlike the experimental plan, which depends on direct nizations are to have a significant role in the expanded low Federal lending from the special assistance funds of Fed- and moderate income housing program. eral National Mortgage Association (FNMA) to support its three percent mortgages, this program will rely on the Rental Housing private mortgage market to finance it. The bill establishes a new program of interest subsidies, Because the base figure is 20 percent of income, obvious- similar to the home ownership proposal, which is designed ly the amount of subsidy will vary according to the income to aid low and moderate income families in rented or co- of the homeowner, and could decrease as income rises. The operative housing. bill provides that the family's income be recertified every Under this plan, a non-profit organization or cooperative two years and appropriate changes be made in the assist- which operates rental housing would receive subsidies from ance payment. the Federal Government for the difference between a one Assistance under this program will generally be limited percent interest rate on the money which was borrowed to to new or substantially rehabilitated housing, although a construct or rehabilitate housing and the actual interest it family displaced, for example, as the result of an urban had to pay to borrow the funds. renewal project could buy an existing home. Also author- The subsidy would permit the nonprofit operator to ized for assistance are those families purchasing their dwell- charge lower rents. Tenants would pay either a basic rental ing unit in a rental project. charge or 25 percent of their average monthly income un- Liberalization of FHA Requirements. Homeownership der the plan. would also be facilitated by making FHA mortgage insur- The program is intended to replace a present three- ance available for families who have heretofore been un- percent loan program, as well as the program of direct able to meet requirements because of their credit histories three percent loans for the elderly and the handicapped. or irregular family income patterns, and by extending FHA To provide authorization to assist in the construction or insurance to properties in older declining areas that do not rehabilitation of about 1.4 million units of rental housing meet the standards of more stable areas. for low and moderate income families, $75 million in au- The HUD Secretary would be authorized to provide thority is asked prior to July 1, 1969, $125 million, for counseling services on such things as budgets, debt man- 1970, $150 million for 1971, and $150 million for 1972. agement to persons who had been turned down previously Rent Supplements. The bill would make available an as bad credit risks. additional $40 million in contract authority for rent supple- A new "special risk insurance fund," not intended to be ment payments in fiscal 1970, plus an additional $100 mil- actuarily sound, would be established to cover the Home- lion in contract authority in each of the fiscal years 1971, ownership program, and the credit assistance above, as 1972, and 1973. well as some parts of the rental and cooperative housing Under the rent supplement program, the Government program. pays the difference between 25 percent of a family's in- Condominium and Cooperative Ownership. Another come and the actual cost of rent in a privately-owned mechanism to permit low and moderate income families to dwelling. attain an ownership interest in their dwellings is also pro- The $340 million in new contract authority, HUD offi- posed. This plan would allow them to purchase an individ- cials say, will start the construction or rehabilitation of 2.35 ual family unit in a multi-unit project which has been million units through fiscal 1973. constructed with Federal funds at below-market-rate in- Public Housing. The bill proposes a sharp increase in terest-if the project is converted into a cooperative or public housing,over the next five years-to 775,000 units. condominium. At least a 3 percent down-payment would Presently, there are now in operation 680,000 units, with be required, and the purchase could be financed by a 40- another 55,000 units under construction. year mortgage, at below-market interest rates. HUD officials say this authorization is "a key element Interest-Free Loans. The bill would authorize the Secre- in the President's program of providing six million low and moderate income housing units over the next 10 years." Other changes include: grants to local housing authori- They say that major emphasis will be placed on produc- ties to assist them in upgrading their management activities tion under the Turnkey method, with about half of the and providing additional tenant services, as well as the units expected to be so provided. broadening of existing law to permit local authorities to Under the Turnkey method, private developers can con- sell low-rent housing units to tenants in public housing tract to build housing or rehabilitate property for eventual developments. sale to a local housing agency. Under Turnkey, which cuts red-tape, a low-rent project National Housing Partnerships can be constructed in less than half the time traditionally Administration experts have concluded that one reason required for public housing. The Turnkey concept is also why big firms and institutional investors, such as insurance being extended to permit private industry to manage public companies and pension funds have shied away from invest- housing developments, as well as build them. ment in low and moderate income housing projects is that The authorization will also be used to lease or buy exist- a single project is too big a risk. ing housing, and to provide funds for the extensive mod- To spread the risk, the President asked Congress to au- ernization of older, existing public housing. thorize National Housing Partnerships. Other Proposals The bill would authorize an additional $350 million In addition to the proposals for expanding home to be earmarked for model cities programs and an addi- ownership (Title I); rental housing (Title II); and tional $1.4 billion for fiscal 1970, including funds for the creation of a National Housing Partnership (Title future model cities programs. IX), discussed in this publication, the bill would make The maximum rehabilitation grant to a low income many other changes in present housing and urban homeowner in an urban renewal or code enforcement development programs. For example: area would be increased from the present $1,500 to FHA Insurance Operations. The statutory ceiling on $2,500, and the three-percent direct loans to rehabilitate FHA insured mortgages would be removed, and the Sec- property in such areas would be extended to June 30, retary of HUD would be authorized to set rates as he 1973. (Title V.) finds necessary to meet the mortgage market. Urban Planning and Facilities. The program of supple- Among other things, the maximum FHA-insured prop- mental grants for public areas which currently are made erty improvement loan would be raised from $3,500 to only in metropolitan areas would be extended to rural $5,000 and the maximum maturity would be increased areas and the existing program of comprehensive plan- from five years to seven years. (Title III.) ning grants would be extended to State agencies for rural New Communities. The Secretary of HUD would be and other non-metropolitan areas. (Title VI.) authorized to guarantee up to $50 million in bonds, notes, Mass Transportation. $190 million would be author- debentures, and other obligations issued by the developer ized for all mass transportation grants in fiscal 1970 and who is building an entirely new community. The total the definition of urban mass transportation would be authorized amount of the loan guarantees would be $500 broadened to permit grants for a greater variety of ex- million. (Title IV.) perimental programs. (Title VII.) Urban Renewal. Under a new approach, projects, in FNMA. The Federal National Mortgage Association's effect, would be divided into annual increments and the secondary market operations would be transferred to a Federal commitment at any given time would be limited Government-chartered private corporation. Two other to the net costs in the coming year. Under a "Neighbor- functions of the FNMA-special assistance, and man- hood Development Program," a community could re- agement of liquidation, would be reconstituted as the ceive assistance to carry out urban renewal activities in Government National Mortgage Association within one or more urban renewal areas through annual grants HUD. (Title VIII.) for two-thirds (or three-fourths in smaller communities Rural Housing. Direct and indirect insured loans to and economic redevelopment areas) of the net cost of low and moderate income families in rural areas which the year's activities. The principal difference from the could not otherwise qualify for Federal housing assist- present system would be that each year the community ance would be authorized. (Title X.) would request assistance for specific activities it pro- Demonstration Projects. Federal payment of the full posed to carry out that year, rather than having all the cost of urban renewal demonstration projects is among funds tied up for a number of years as now happens in a number of miscellaneous changes in housing law pro- large projects. posed in Title XI. Under the plan, a Federally chartered corporation would It appears, too, that the annual income eligibility scale be set up as a limited partnership. Big companies would be of about $3,800 to $7,200 per family, as approved in encouraged to invest in the partnership and buy stock in S. 2700 last year, will prevail, at least in the Senate Com- the national corporations. mittee, as compared to the Administration's proposed scale The National partnership would then become partners that would subsidize housing for families of five or six with builders in a "whole host of housing developments" with annual incomes as high as $10,000. for low and moderate income families. The eligibility income scale for homeownership and The National Partnership would be limited to providing rental programs continues, in fact, to be one of contro- 25 percent of the equity in any individual project, with the versy. Despite strong political pressures to include as many rest coming from the local areas. people as possible, there is a strong case for concentrat- Presidential Assistant Joseph Califano has estimated that ing such Federal programs on the truly low-income seg- as the depreciation on these projects for income tax pur- ments of our society, rather than dissipating funds through poses "passed through" the national partnership back to a larger range. the investors, the after-tax return could be from 13 to 20 The Republican members of the Senate Subcommittee percent on equity. believe firmly that the upper level of the income scale Generally Approved should be lowered as much as possible so that families with Although there are criticisms of details and mecha- annual incomes in the $3,000-$5,000 range will benefit nisms, the principles of home ownership, a bigger role the most from the rental and home ownership program. for private industry, and more realistic interest rates are In a recent speech, Senator Tower of Texas, pointed being generally approved. out that subsidizing families with incomes up to $10,000 Especially important is the shift from the principle of annually would encompass 70 percent of all families. He direct Federal lending to private enterprise markets. added: Harvey G. Hallenbeck, Jr., Secretary of the Chamber's We should reach out to assist those who but for such Urban Affairs Committee, reminded the House Housing assistance could not decently house themselves. We should Subcommittee that "in the past, Federal efforts to foster resist the philosophy which urges us to reach out and sub- better housing frequently took the course of attempting to sidize higher incomes, and we should demand that hous- reduce housing prices (monthly mortgages or rentals) by ing produced with direct Government assistance be de- establishing artificial interest rates that were below market voted to true low-income housing. There is no such em- rates." As a result, the Government had to lend the money phasis in the Administration's proposals. directly and then raise it either by taxing or borrowing. Mr. Hallenbeck also attacked the public housing pro- He said: gram on the grounds that the "families whose incomes are In this way, an elaborate apparatus of transactions and the very lowest, and who have the least potential for in- administrative devices is erected through which Govern- creasing their incomes are being largely ignored. ment subsidizes housing by, in effect, losing money on its "The low-rent public housing program, with the changes lending-and-borrowing and by incurring Government ad- contemplated in this bill will not meet the housing needs ministrative costs in developing and managing a mortgage of the poorest people. It never has met those needs." portfolio and floating its own issues. Not only does this system of direct government lending He recommended that the program be re-directed to tend "to produce disrupting effects in capital markets," meeting these needs. he emphasized, "it also results in the irregular, off-again, In a recent talk, Chairman John Sparkman (D-Ala.), on-again flow of funds that makes planning for the future of the Senate Banking and Currency Committee, declared: difficult for builders who want to provide shelter and for Some people believe the only answer to slums and city families of modest means who would like to buy or rent problems is money. They point the finger at Washington adequate homes." and the Congress and denounce them for failing to appro- Problems priate huge sums of money to save our cities. Those of you who are familiar with my stand on hous- General approval of the new approaches does not mean, ing know how persistently I work for Federal assistance of course, that there are no problems. for housing. However, I disagree strongly with the attitude For one thing, there is the problem of cost at a time of some who constantly look to the mote in the eyes of of extreme financial urgency. Congress rather than to the beam in their own eyes. As a result, it is considered likely that Congress will All of the money in the Federal Treasury would not cut down the proposed five-year authorization to a two- solve the problems of our cities. I believe that these prob- or possibly three-year authorization. lems will only be solved when our nation and all of us It is also considered likely that the proposed subsidy are willing to utilize to the fullest extent possible all of our to bring the interest rate down to one percent for both available resources. homeowners and rental housing programs may be limited One of our biggest resources, he said, is the efficiency to a two percent rate. of our private enterprise system. IN CONGRESS CONGRESS including provisions imposing a 10 percent Members of Congress generally agree tax surcharge and a mandatory $6 billion that the President's decision not to seek reduction in Federal spending. re-election will have substantial repercus- Included were changes in Social Security sions in Congress, but there is less agree- welfare payments, a two-year extension of the ment on how it will affect specific bills. time in which States could decide whether Although Chairman Wilbur D. Mills (D- to permit welfare recipients to participate Ark.) is non-committal, most Members seem to in the voluntary part of Medicare, a freeze believe that the President's action coupled on Federal employment, quotas on certain with his renewal request for a tax boost may textile imports, the restoration of a tax have brightened prospects for that legisla- exemption for advertising revenues of publi- tion. cations issued by non-profit groups, and House Appropriations Committee Chairman revocation of a tax exemption for State and Mahon (D-Tex.), for example, said that a local industrial bonds, and others. break in the tax-spending deadlock was prob- How many, if any, of these amendments ably in the works anyway and might now come will survive the conference is debatable; soon. He, and others, apparently reason that the House has always proved to be jealous of as a non-candidate, the President will find its tax-initiating authority. it easier to abandon some of his spending ANNUAL RATE CREDIT requests, and thus meet Congressional demands for spending cuts before a tax boost is en- After months of delay, the acted. first meetings of conferees on the Annual Rate Credit bill (S.5) are now scheduled for House Speaker McCormack refused to com- ment on the effect of the President's April 9-10. The Conference Committee seems to be somewhat weighted in favor of the more announcement on specific legislative propos- severe House version of the bill. als, but many of the lawmakers obviously agree with the views of Rep. Patman (D-Tex.), ANTI-CRIME who doubts that any further significant act- The Senate Judiciary Committee is ions will be taken by the 90th Congress. expected to order reported the Safe Streets "Congress is practically over for this ses- and Crime Control Act (S. 917) within the sion," he said, "in the belief that the next few days. The Senate bill includes legislators will now want to wait and hear many features not contained in the House- the views of the new President-elect." passed bill (H.R. 5037), such as provisions Senate Majority Leader Mansfield (D- permitting wiretapping under court orders. Mont.) said the President's speech opens up An amendment, offered in Committee by Sen. the possibility that"we may clean up our Roman L. Hruska (R-Neb.), to approve a House program and adjourn around August 1." provision, which would allocate 90 percent Most experienced observers believe that of the funds in block grants to the States, the net over-all impact will be the passage was defeated 8-7. of "must" legislation, such as appropria- TRAVEL TAX tions, but that most new proposals involv- A travel tax proposal (H.R. 16241), ing large expenditures will remain on the which is sharply curtailed from the Adminis- shelf. tration's request, has been overwhelmingly TAXES approved by the House. After debate in which Although conferees started work immed- no opposition was voiced, the House voted to iately, few people were willing to predict put a 5 percent ticket tax on all overseas how long it would take them to resolve the airline flights, similar to the one now substantial differences in the Senate and imposed on domestic flights. The bill also House versions of H.R. 15414. The bill was reduces from $100 to $10 the amount of duty- approved by the House as a comparatively free goods that travelers abroad can bring simple extension of present excise taxes on home. automobiles and telephone services and a Not included was the Administration's speedup in corporate income tax payments. original, and highly-controversial, request The Senate added more than a dozen tax changes, that a graduated tax be placed on virtually all overseas tourists outside the Western hemisphere who spend more than $7 a day. OTHER DEVELOPMENTS A new bill (H.R. 16363) governing in- The House Judiciary Committee has filed spection of poultry processing plants has its. report on a new holiday measure (H.R. been agreed to by the House Agriculture Com- 15951, McClory, R-I11.). The bill would mittee. The bill generally follows the establish Monday observance of four holidays: principles of the meat inspection law passed Washington's Birthday, to be observed on the last year. It would give States two years third Monday in February; Memorial Day, the to implement their own inspection systems last Monday in May; Columbus Day, the second and exempts intra-state plants doing less Monday in October; and Veterans' Day, the than $15,000 business annually. *** fourth Monday in October. *** A spokesmen for the National Chamber, The House Select Subcommittee on Labor testifying in support of S. 3065, has asked that the bill be clarified before enactment. now tentatively plans to start markup sessions The measure authorizes the Federal Trade Com- of the Occupational Safety and Health Act (H.R. 14816) the week of April 8. It is mission to seek preliminary injunctions a- reliably reported that the bill will be ex- gainst any person it believes to be engaged tensively revised. in unfair practices against a consumer. The *** Chamber urged that the bill make clear the The Agriculture Fair Practices Act (S. court has unquestioned authority to exercise 109) has gone to the White. House for signa- "sound discretion" before granting the in- ture, following approval by the Senate of junction. *** House amendments. The bill is designed to Sen. Ellender (D-La.), Chairman of the prôtect the right of an agricultural producer House Agriculture Committee, has taken the to decide, free from improper pressures, whether he wishes to belong to a marketing or unusual step of asking the House to defeat or modify a bill approved by his Committee. bargaining association. *** The bill, S. 1975, forbids the import. of The Senate Banking and Currency Committee long-staple cotton from any nation severing hopes to order reported its omnibus housing diplomatic relations with the U.S.; i.e. bill (S. 3029) by the Easter recess, and is Egypt and the Sudan. Senator Ellender says scheduled to hold executive sessions on the the bill is unnecessary. *** measure on April 8,9, and 10. Observers doubt that work on the complicated measure The House Commerce Committee has approv- can be completed in three days. ed H. J. Res. 958, providing a $2 million *** study of the Nation's automobile insurance A new vocational education bill (H.R. system. The Senate Commerce Committee has 16460) has been introduced in the House by also approved a similar bill.... Meanwhile, the Communications and Power Subcommittee of Rep. Meeds (D-Wash.) and 35 other House mem- bers. The bill would boost the Administra- the House Commerce Committee, has approved tion's request for $290 million in fiscal an amended version of the Senate-passed bill, 1969 to $785 million, and provide annual in- S. 1166, which provides Federal safety regu- creases to a level of $2 billion by 1972. lation of natural gas pipelines. The Sub- The bill contemplates a major overhaul of committee excluded some 63,000 miles of dis- vocational education in the Nation's schools, tribution lines and lessened the proposed so that every high school graduate would be penalties for offenses. *** equipped with a skill. *** A close battle is expected in the House Rules Committee over granting a rule for H.R. 16014, which would bring farm laborers under coverage of the National Labor Relations Act. *** HERE'S THE ISSUE The Housing and Urban Development Act APRIL 5, 1968 DIFFERENCES BETWEEN RENT CERTIFICATE PROGRAM (GOP) & RENT SUPPLEMENT PROGRAM (DEM.) There has been considerable confusion between the Rent Supplement Program sponsored by the Administration and the Republican-sponsored Rent Certificate Program. The Rent Certificate Program (which makes use of privately-owned, privately-operated, housing units paying full taxes) is a part of the Public Housing program and is not only fully funded but already in operation. The Rent Supplement Program has taken some time to get into operation. Current figures (8/31/68) as to people housed are: Rent Certificates - 26,000 units (100,000+ people) Rent Supplements - 3,000 units (10,000+ people). Basically, the differences between the two programs which point up the advantages which the Rent Certificate Program has are listed below: 1. The Rent Certificate Program can and is immediately available because it uses existing housing that is "decent, safe, and sanitary." The Rent Supplement Program, on the other hand, is one to two years away from full operation if it achieves that. Even though it is now funded, it cannot be used to house people now chiefly because its program is restricted to newly constructed or major rehabilitated housing. It cannot use existing housing except for the 231 and 202 elderly housing programs which by law split 5 percent of the authorization although at present (9/1/68) they account for 60 percent plus of the units that are rent supplemented, all of which could have been utilized under the Rent Certificate Program at less cost to both the government and the tenant. 2. The Rent Certificate Program will cost less than either Rent Supplements or present public housing. Subsidy payments for Rent Certificates are restricted to that which can be paid for comparable units in the regular public housing program. Such a limitation was included in the original Rent Supplement Program, but stricken by Democratic action, because they knew they could not stay within the bounds set. Also, the Rent Certifi- cate Program will not carry many of the administrative and construction costs of the regular public housing program. 3. The Rent Certificate Program will not require the creation of a parallel bureaucracy as it is specifically tied to the present housing program and the officials managing it. Rent Supplements will be paid out through the Federal Housing Administration, which is not set up to screen ap- plicants and has neither the personnel nor the offices (76 FHA offices as against over 1,700 local housing authority offices) to operate an efficient, large program. 4. The Rent Certificate program has a high measure of local control in- herently and also must be approved by the local governing body of its area. The Administration is continuously seeking to avoid this control for Rent Supplements and succeeded in avoiding it in the basic legis- lation. The Appropriations Committee attached the control as a con- dition precedent to granting the program funds. 5. Rent Certificate units must be voluntarily offered. Tenant selection is centered in the owner of the privately operated units. Rent Sup- plements have something of this, but Lent Supplement tenants will OC- cupy 90 to 100 percent of their structures. In the Rent Certificate Program only 10 percent of the available units in all but the smaller buildings can be used by Rent Certificate tenants, without specific waiver. 6. The Rent Certificate Program is limited to one to five year leases that can be renewed. The Rent Supplement Program contracts run ir- revocably for 40 years. Thus, the Rent Certificates permits a con- siderable amount of flexibility with which to deal with whatever experience is encountered. Rent Supplements do not. You contract for 40 years. Both the Rent Certificate and the Rent Supplement programs will be paying full taxes on the quarters subsidized. In either case, this would be more than public housing pays through its system of Payments In Lieu of Taxes (Pilot). WILLIAM A. BARRETT, PA., CHAIRMAN WILLIAM B. WIDNALL, N.J. LEONOR K. SULLIVAN, MO. PAUL A. FINO, N.Y. THOMAS L. ASHLEY, OHIO FLORENCE P. DWYER, N.J. WILLIAM S. MOORHEAD, PA. DEL CLAWSON, CALIF. ROBERT G. STEPHENS, JR., GA. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES GARRY BROWN, MICH. FERNAND J. ST GERMAIN, R.I. HENRY B. GONZALEZ, TEX. J. J. MCEWAN, JR., STAFF DIRECTOR HENRY S. REUSS, WIS. KENNETH W. BURROWS SUBCOMMITTEE ON HOUSING DEPUTY STAFF DIRECTOR OF THE CASEY IRELAND MINORITY STAFF MEMBER COMMITTEE ON BANKING AND CURRENCY NINETIETH CONGRESS WASHINGTON, D.C. 23 September 1968 CONFIDENTIAL TO: The Honorable William B. Widnall FROM: Casey Ireland, Minority Staff Member RE: Presidential Instructions to HUD to More Than Double Production of Low Income (Public Housing) Units. In 1964, Congress raised the annual subsidy level at which public housing could be supported from $336 million to $366 mil- lion, authorising an additional 37,500 housing starts. In 1965, it increased the support level by $188 million to $554 million, supposedly providing the HAA with an additional capability of 60,000 more units annually for the ensuing four years. Despite this, the annual number of units placed under manage- ment rocked along at approximately 30,000. It has been at this figure - a little above it or a little below - for years. Present support payments have only recently gone above $200 million. so despite the Administration's citation of figures proving the need for the program, their production to meet this need remained at just about what it had been during the Eisenhover years. Then.... On September 12, 1967, Secretary Robert C. Neaver of HUD and Presi- dential Special Assistant Joseph A. Califano held a press confer- ence in the press secretary's office in the White House. Mr. Califano opened the conference by saying: "Early in August the President asked Secretary Neaver to see if he could double the number of low income housing units that would be available for occupancy in the next year. Secre- tary Weaver has been working on this for the past several weeks. He reported to the President that he would be able to achieve this." -continued- - 2 - Secretary Weaver continued, saying: "That means whereas currently we are producing some 35,000 such units annually, we will be able to produce 70,000 units for the next 12 months. Translated into people, that means increas- ing the mumber of low income families housed from 150,000 to about 300,000." I am attaching a full copy of the published transcript of that conference which centains the above quotes. Further on, on page two, you will note a passing reference to "our leasing program" which you first proposed as legislation in 1964 and which was adopted by the Congress in 1965 despite HUD's bitter opposition. (The latter can be found together with your rebuttal on pages 210-211, and 217 of the 1964 Housing hearings of the House of Representatives.) The Housing Acts of 1964 and 1965 increased the authorise- tion subsidy for public housing sufficiently so that HUD esti- mated that the Department would be able to preduce 277,500 more units for addition to the program. (The authorisation is expressed in dollars in the law, but the Department publicly speaks of units.) The dollar increases were $30,250,000 by the Housing Act of 1964 and $188,000,000 by the Housing Act of 1965. Despite these large contract authorizations in the two years mentioned, the units placed under management-those available for occupancy-still hovered,aprevioualy stated, at around the 30,000 figure annually. The new contract authority, HUD said, would - able the Department to produce at twice the level previously. It never came cless. I believe the MID press conference of a year age was called to cover up the Department's failure to raise production after being authorized to do so. Not having reached their announced goals, and no longer being able to blame Congress for refusing to increase an authorization they had been unable to implement, HUD used publicity to cover up their production failure and to propare the way for its 1968 request for even a greater authorization. -continued - 3 - Since they had to strain mightily to produce 35,000 units in the 12 month period prior to the press conference, the question arose as to just how in a year's time they expected to double to an annual production of 70,000. The following quote from page 7 of the transcript of the press conference indicates their publicised thinking: "Secretary Neaver: No. we don't know. I can tell you that the vast majority will be in new construction. Maybe 10 or 15 per- cent will be rehabilitation and about 10 percent leasing, roughly. 'Q. And the new construction will be mostly Turnkey? 'Secretary Weaver: Yes." Stange as it some, the Administration, although it is a little past a year in time from the announcement of its press conference, is close to realizing its goal. Its "turnkey" opera- tion has not, however, been the answer as the Secretary predicted it would be. What has turned the trick for them - they have presently bagged about 62,500 of the 70,000 unit goal - has been the scerned (because it was a GOP proposed innovation) rent certificate leas- ing program. Their normal annual preduction has rocked along as usual, roughly the 30,000 unit level. The leasing program, how- ever, has shot up into the high 20 thousand level and continues to grow in popularity. The balance is accounted for by acquisi- tions of existing structures and projects, an implementation of the leasing program's principle of using existing housing. I am bringing this to your attention because of my consider- able suspicion that the Administration intends to call public at- tention to its "momentous" achievement as soon as the goal of 70,000 units is reached. I further suspect that they will at- tempt to make use of it in the campaign. The foregoing facts are made available for you for such rebuttal as you may wish to make. -continued- - 4 - The point simply is that the Administration was able to reach the goal it did, not through redoubling its efforts, but through the use of a program which you and the GOP minority originally proposed, which they fought in 1964, add which was enacted in 1965 at the same time as the much touted rent supple- ment program. Today, the rent certificate-leasing program is sheltering over 100,000 people in its 26,000+ units, and is mere than eight times as large as the rent supplements' 3,000+ units. It is also giving about ten times as many people decent, safe, and sanitary homes. I am sending a copy of this memorandum to Don Webster, who is on the staff of former Vice President Mixon's Key Issues Com- mittee, operating here in Washington, against the possibility that the matter may enter into the National Campaign. As a final note, the level of subsidy at which public hous- ing can now be supported has been raised by the 1968 Housing Act from $554 million 250 thousand, to $954 million 250 thousand - a $400 million increase. Present payment amounts to $350 million annually. At present rates of progress, it could be a long time before HUD needs to come back for additional authorisation, even though most of the authorization is eaten up by inflation and the inability of the agency to really produce. The $400 million in- crease referred to above should produce-at present costa-150,000 homes. BUT WHEN? FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE SEPTEMBER 12, 1967 OFFICE OF THE WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY THE WHITE HOUSE PRESS CONFERENCE OF HON. ROBERT p50mg C. WEAVER, SECRETARY, HOUSING AND cut URBAN DEVELOPMENT; AND JOSEPH A. CALIFANO, JR., SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT THE PRESS SECRETARY'S OFFICE AT 12:35 P.M. EDT MR. CALIFANO: The President met this morning for about 30 minutes with Secretary of Housing and Urban Develop- ment Weaver. Early in August the President asked Secretary Weaver to see if he could double the number of low income housing units that would be available for occupancy in the next year. Secretary Weaver has been working on this for the past several weeks. He reported to the President that he would be able to achieve this. I will let the Secretary take over and tell you what he is going to do. SECRETARY WEAVER: By revising our procedures, we will be able -- as the President requested -- to double the number of low rent housing units that will be occupied by families over the next 12 months. That means whereas currently we are producing some 35,000 such units annually, we will be able to produce 70,000 units for the next 12 months. Translated into people, that means increasing the number of low income families housed from 150,000 to about 300,000. This is a continuation of the effort which we started some time ago -- again at the President's request -- in order to make changes, to upgrade, and to make more effective and efficient the public housing program. First, there was the Turnkey approach to construc- tion. As you know, this is the approach which involves a private bidder who acquires a site, and does the planning in accordance with the requirements of the local housing authority. He hires the architect, completes the building, and turns the key over to the local housing authority when the building is complete. This effects great savings in time -- cutting time sometimes over more than a half and also gives significant economies in cost. Second, a fortnight ago we announced --- at the President's request -- the utilization of private management in operation of the projects which are being built under the Turnkey method in public housing. MORE - 2 - Finally, we have a revision of priorities in the processing of these projects. Briefly, what we are going to do is this: First, we are having every local housing authority look at its inventory of projects that it has in the pipeline. These may be in planning. They may be in just preliminary planning. We are asking them to identify every one of these projects which can be put under construction in the next 9 months. We will then give priority to those projects which can then be started within the next 9 months. As a result of the utilization of our leasing program and the rehabilitation program, we will be able to double the number of units that will be in occupancy in the next 12 months. Briefly, this is what we are going to do and how we are going to do it. If you have any questions, I will take them. 2 Mr. Weaver, you cited an increase in the number of low income families that could be housed? SECRETARY WEAVER: Yes. Q You mean an increase in the number of additional ones to be housed? SECRETARY WEAVER: Yes. 2 Were 35,000 units a year the number you would need to house 150,000 people, not families? SECRETARY WEAVER: Yes. The figures that I gave, 35,000 and 70,000, are dwelling units. 150,000 and 300,000 are individuals. I Mr. Secretary, how will this affect the cash out- flow from HUD? Will this increase the costs of the various programs? SECRETARY WEAVER: This will be done under our present authorizations. It will simply accelerate the program which we already have authority for. Q Can you tell us what that present authorization is, Mr. Secretary? SECRETARY WEAVER: We have an authorization which goes back over many years, but have 240,000 units of public housing in the last omnibus bill. This will be within that authoriza- tion. You see in this program, you authorize a number of units rather than a dollar amount. Q 240,000 is not an annual figure, is it? SECRETARY WEAVER: No. MORE - 3 - I A figure since the Housing Act of '58, or whatever? SECRETARY WEAVER: Over a period of four years. 2 Mr. Secretary, will this cost the Government any additional money? SECRETARY WEAVER: No. The only difference here will be the time when the annual contributions -- which is the cost to the Government -- will be paid may be somewhat more rapid than it would otherwise have been, but there will be no additional authorization or appropriations needed to carry out this program. Q Will it cost more money in fiscal year 1968 than it otherwise would have cost? SECRETARY WEAVER: Not in '68, no. a How about '69? SECRETARY WEAVER: In '69, it will accelerate the time it begins so your outlay will be greater in that year. a Mr. Secretary, what kind of programs will have to be delayed in order to give priority to these? SECRETARY WEAVER: The programs that would be delayed will be those developments which are now not sufficiently advanced so that they can be put into construction quickly. They will be pushed back in the pipeline. Those that can be will be pushed up in the pipeline. Q Mr. Secretary, will this in effect be a one-shot effort, or will you be able to sustain this double pace in future years? SECRETARY WEAVER: We will be able to sustain it for a couple of years. By that time, we will have caught up with the pipeline. You cannot continue to do this. What you are really doing is pushing up in the processing in time those things which would normally be perhaps two years from now -- putting it up in a year's time. When you do that a couple of years, you about run out. Q The yardstick for pushing things up is the impact of speeding up processing, not the social need of one project against another? SECRETARY WEAVER: The social needs are about equal. They all are for low income people, displaced and in need of housing. All of them have a high incidence of social need to be included in the first place. As between one degree of social need which is high, and another a little higher, the answer would be yes. But they all qualify so far as social need is concerned. - 4 - I There is no idea the Federal Government is going to target those cities where there have been civil disorders? SECRETARY WEAVER: No, there is no connection between that and this program. 2 Mr. Secretary, we have been dealing with this figure of 35,000. Has that been a limit, a congressional limit, or an informally set goal? Where has this figure come from? SECRETARY WEAVER: There are two figures that set a limit on us. First is the amount of annual contributions, which is the subsidy with which we can enter the contracts. That is around 60,000 units a year. The second is the number of units that are produced within that limitation. That has been running around 35,000. We are now going to exceed both because we have a backlog. So we will double 35,000 and come up with the 70,000. We can do this for a couple of years under the existing authorization until we catch up with the backlog. 2 Is this Turnkey method of construction more expensive? SECRETARY WEAVER: No. It is less expensive. Q Why is that, sir? SECRETARY WEAVER: In the first place, time is money in building. Where a project is in development and planning for two or three years, you have extremely great expenses of overhead, of operations, of tax estimates if it isn't purchased, and of upkeep and maintenance, and so forth. Secondly, by the Turnkey method because you don't go out and advertise for bids, because the developer himself has his own planning and architects -- the architectural paper work and amount of plans necessary is much smaller than it would be otherwise. Under a government-owned-and-operated construction, you have to have a great deal of inspection which would be done by the architect for a private builder. He would be inspecting for himself because he has to get the product in order so that it meets the specifications to get it accepted. Therefore, you get these economies. But, I think time is the greatest of the economies. Q Mr. Secretary, how many families now live in low rent, federally subsidized housing? SECRETARY WEAVER: Over 600,000. MORE - 5 - 0 So this is an increment to that figure? SECRETARY WEAVER: Yes. 0 Six hundred thousand families or individuals? SECRETARY WEAVER: Families. 0 When you talked about going from 150,000 to 300,000, you are talking about individuals? SECRETARY WEAVER: Yes. But when I talked about units, I went from 35,000 to 70,000. 0 What would be the impact of delaying projects not as far along in the pipeline? Will work stop in architects and engineers offices? Will contracts not be let that might otherwise be let? SECRETARY WEAVER: No. By and large, where you have architects and engineers that have progressed to the point where they have made a significant contribution, there will be a tendency to continue that and bring it to fruition. Where they have not progressed very far and the amount of expenditure is minimal, we will cut it off and save money and time. 0 Mr. Secretary, do you have the names of cities where you have projects that are far enough along so they can be identified? SECRETARY WEAVER: We sent the instructions out on this yesterday. We had a meeting of our regional people on Friday. We have worked pretty fast, but not that fast. 0 Mr. Secretary, why couldn't this have been done before? SECRETARY WEAVER: It couldn't have been done before last year, because we didn't have the Turnkey method before last year. It took some time to get the new method understood by the local housing authorities and to where they can use it. It has taken about a year's experience for many of them to become convinced that it is workable and to accept it. Remember, this is done by local authorities and not directly by us. Secondly, it took us about 12 months to revise our regulations under Turnkey to make it most effective and efficient. 0 Mr. Secretary, do you think most of these 70,000 units will be built under Turnkey? SECRETARY WEAVER: I would say not all, but the vast majority. C Can you put any dollar figure on this? MORE - 6 - SECRETARY WEAVER: What sort of dollar figure? a Can you tell us what they would have otherwise been in '68, but there will be an increase in payout during '69? SECRETARY WEAVER: No, I can't, because it depends on the nature of the project. I couldn't give you an exact figure. 0 Generally speaking, what is the value of the low-rent housing? SECRETARY WEAVER: If you mean the value as far as construction is concerned, these average around about probably $14,000 or $15,000 a unit. This is including the land and the construction costs. C How much of that will be Federal money? All of it? SECRETARY WEAVER: None of it. O Where does the subsidy come in? SECRETARY WEAVER: That has nothing to do with that. That is the construction cost. The way public housing is financed is that there are local bonds issued by the local public agency which is the local authority. These are guaranteed by the Federal Govern- ment and they are sold as tax-exempt local bonds. Therefore, you get a very relatively -- low rate of interest. The cost to the government on this is not there, be- cause the bonds are paid back out of annual contributions. The annual contributions are the figures which cost the government. Each unit of housing, in public housing, now averages around $700 a unit in subsidy. 0 Your annual costs, Mr. Secretary, your annual contributions, are the difference between the revenue that the local people get from the project and the costs of retiring bonds? The government makes up that difference through annual contributions? SECRETARY WEAVER: No. There are two costs involved, of course. There are the costs of the operation of the pro- ject, management, repair, upkeep, etcetera. Then there are the costs of the retirement of the bonds and the interest on the bonds. Annual contributions are used to retire and to pay the interest on the bonds. 0 For the entire retirement and interest of the bonds from the Federal Government? SECRETARY WEAVER: Except sometimes there are residual receipts. Q By and large, the receipts cover only the operating costs of the project? MORE - 7 - SECRETARY WEAVER: That is right. Q Will this, in effect, double the construction work, the brick and mortar construction work, that would have been done under this program; and when will that impact begin to be felt, from the contractors' point of view? SECRETARY WEAVER: within the next month and it will certainly achieve that purpose during the year. All of it will not be doubled construction, because in some instances the leasing program is utilized. But most of it is new construction or rehabilitation of existing units. Q Can you give us a breakdown of the 70,000 units? SECRETARY WEAVER: No, we don't know. I can tell you that the vast majority will be in new construction. Maybe 10 or 15 percent will be rehabilitation and about 10 percent leasing, roughly. Q And the new construction will be mostly Turnkey? SECRETARY WEAVER: Yes. 0 Mr. Secretary, can you tell us how long the regional commissioners have to sort out this program? Do they have a deadline? SECRETARY WEAVER: We expect to get the information in within 30 days. 0 Will the various projects be announced locally or in Washington? SECRETARY WEAVER: Locally. a You will then have to speed up your processing? SECRETARY WEAVER: We have already done that. We did that before we announced the program, before we got our people in, SO we would be prepared to meet the new program. O If an authority in the mid-West sends a new list to Chicago, theoretically they should be able to get approval right away: no time lag? SECRETARY WEAVER: Nothing happens right away, but they should get it with a minimum of delay. Obviously, we are going to have to process real quickly in order to meet this goal. 0 Mr. Secretary, did the possibility of doing all this come to the President and then he suggested that you go ahead and do it, or did you just pick out of the air, "Let's see if you can double it"? SECRETARY WEAVER: This evolved as we went along in this. The President has been pressing on this, as I said, over the last year. Fach new step has come out of the others and each time he set a higher goal for us to meet. So far, we have been able to meet them. THE PRESS: Thank you, sir. END AT 12:50 P.M. EDT tomorrow's transportation air 7150 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE June 13, 1968 S. 3641-AIRPORT DEVELOPMENT As was done when highway user taxes FEDERAL AIRPORT DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1968 ACT OF 1968 INTRODUCED were imposed, we should provide that OUTLINE OF PROVISIONS URGENT NEED FOR TRUST FUND aviation user taxes be deposited in and 1. Establishes an Airport Development CITED administered under the trust fund ar- Trust Fund administered by the Secretary Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, on rangement to serve the purposes for of Transportation. behalf of myself and Mr. Moss, I have which levied and collected. 2. Fund would be supported by special taxes of 2% on domestic passenger tickets introduced for appropriate reference a The administration has proposed a and $2 per passenger in foreign air trans- bill, the Federal Airport Development program predicated on user taxes for portation. While the trust-funded program Act of 1968. airport and airways development, but would function without general tax revenues, The dominant features of the measure without a trust fund arrangement. That it does not preclude such appropriations. would establish an airport development proposal is in legislative form and is 3. Fund would be used: trust fund which would be supported by scheduled for consideration in hearings (a) primarily for contracts of up to 40 special taxes of 2 percent on domestic beginning June 18 in the Commerce years in length by the Secretary of Trans- portation with local airport sponsors to pay air passenger tickets and $2 per passenger Committee's Aviation Subcommittee, up to 75% of the principal and interest of in foreign air transportation on flights under the chairmanship of the distin- local airport bonds for airfield and terminal originating at U.S. airports. Although guished senior Senator from Oklahoma projects; and/or, the trust-funded program would func- [Mr. MONRONEY]: That subcommittee (b) to guarantee the full amount of such held hearings last fall on the airports local bonds; and/or, tion without general tax revenues, the and airways problems and issued tenta- (c) to purchase local airport bonds for re- legislation does not preclude such ap- propriations. in fact, the measure con- tive recommendations that a system of sale; and, user taxes and a trust fund arrange- (d) to make short-term loans for advance templates continuation of the existing planning and land acquisition. Federal-aid airport program with some ment be established by law as the core 4. Funds would be available to: expenditure authorizations. But I visu- of a program for solution of the critical (a) all airports served by air carriers; alize the FAAP-general treasury fi- airports and airways situation. (b) general aviation airports designed to nanced-as being limited essentially to I believe in the validity of that tenta- relieve congestion at major airports. aid for small economic development air- tive report issued by the Aviation Sub- 5. Contemplates continuation and exten- sion of authorization of FAAP program con- ports. The proposed trust-funded pro- committee earlier this year on the basis tinuance for small economic development air- gram® would be for the development of of its findings during the 1967 hearings. ports and for general aviation airports. a better air carrier and general purpose The air carrier industry is almost unani- 6. Tax revenues of $109 million could be airport system. mous, I am told in endorsing most of realized in FY 1969 and would support issu- Congress has been asked to recognize the recommendations of the subcom- ance of $1,950,000,000 in local airport bonds that the existing system of air carrier mittee. Through the Air Transport As- the first year, if enacted promptly. and public use airports and airport sociation, the scheduled carriers are on 7. Congress each year, through appropria- tion acts covering FY 1969 and the four suc- terminal and access facilities within the the record with their views, as are most ceeding fiscal years, would authorize the Sec- United States is rapidly becoming inade- other segments of the aviation industry. retary of Transportation to make the ex- quate to meet the present and future Spokesmen for the administration like- penditures to meet the obligations incurred. needs for civil aviation operations. wise are on the record of the general The program is proposed as a means of Congress also should declare that the hearings. But now there is to be a round generating large amounts of capital to meet Federal Government has a responsibility of hearings on specific legislation. the nation's most immediate major airport to plan, encourage, and assist in the de- construction requirements without any bur- Frankly, Mr. President, I believe the den on the general taxpayer and without velopment of a system of airports ade- best specific recommendations for a pro- unduly burdening airline passengers. The quate to meet our civil aviation, postal gram of airport development through provision in Sec. 3(b) for federal contracts service, and national defense needs. the user tax-trust fund arrangement to pay a portion of local debt service costs is There seems to us to be ample evidence have been those proposed on behalf of based on Sec. 10 of the U.S. Housing Act of that Congress should realize that finan- the air carrier industry by Stuart G. Tip- 1937, as amended (42 U.S.C. 1410). The trust cial assistance beyond that provided un- ton, president of the Air Transport As- fund feature is patterned in part on the der existing laws is necessary to assure an Highway Trust Fund. (see 23 U.S.C. 120, sociation. Those recommendations are note) adequate system of air carrier and public well represented in the provisions of the use airports and air terminals and related measure introduced today, but include Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President, will the facilities. provisions also recommended by numer- Senate yield for a question? To those ends, we propose that the ous other competent sources. Mr. RANDOLPH. I yield. costs of providing and maintaining such It is our feeling that the ideas for Mr. LAUSCHE. Do I correctly under- airports and facilities should, insofar as legislation embraced in this measure stand that the bill just submitted by the is practicable, be borne in the main by should be available to the Aviation Sub- Senator from West Virginia contem- airport operators and the users of such plates establishing a trust fund, similar committee and the full Commerce Com- airports. Thus, the base of financing to the trust fund under which highways mittee at the time of the hearings. They would shift from Treasury general funds are built, for the construction of airport merit consideration, as do the admin- to reliance principally on user tax in- expansion and new facilities? istration proposals and numerous cogent come and trust fund management. Mr. RANDOLPH. The understanding and pertinent concepts espoused by the I emphasize that the term "air car- of the Senator from Ohio is correct. chairmen and members of both the sub- rier airport," as used in our proposed Mr. LAUSCHE. And what is the tax committee and the full committee. legislation, means any air traffic hub or that would be imposed upon the cost of nonhub receiving scheduled service by I have confidence that there will the ticket? an air carrier or air carriers certificated emerge from the subcommittee chaired Mr. RANDOLPH. Two percent on by the Civil Aeronautics Board. The term by the able Senator from Oklahoma [Mr. domestic passenger tickets and $2 per does not contemplate or imply segrega- MONRONEY] and the parent Commerce passenger on foreign air transportation tion of any public use. Federal-aided Committee headed by the distinguished at airports where the passenger would airport for air carrier utilization only. senior Senator from Washington [Mr. originate his trip in the United States. Mr. President, I do not believe in total MAGNUSON] a comprehensive legislative Mr. LAUSCHE. I assume that the reliance on annual appropriations from solution to the serious airports and air- Senator anticipates that the future will the Treasury general fund for Federal ways system problems. demand larger airports and more air- aid to airport development, other than Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- ports, and that instead of paying for for the small so-called community eco- sent to have printed in the RECORD at their construction out of the general nomic development airfields. And, cer- this point a brief outline of the provisions fund, the users of the airports should tainly, I am opposed to levying new of the proposed Federal Airport Devel- share the major part of the cost. aviation user taxes predicated on their opment Act of 1968, introduced today. Mr. RANDOLPH. The Senator from use for airports and airways develop- There being no objection, the outline Ohio is correct. ment purposes, only to have them com- was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, In the earlier days of our highway pro- mingled in the Treasury general funds. as follows: gram in this country, we had no trust June 13, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD S7151 fund. We came, of course, to 1956, when ful purposes. Conceivably an individual Boyd to the Vice President transmitting we needed an interstate system, and we could even acquire a nuclear weapon this proposed bill, together with a sec- went to the trust fund for our road de- under SO broad a provision. tion-by-section analysis of the provisions velopment. Mr. President, I fail to see any con- contained in the bill. The same situation now exists with re- vincing reason for permitting the sale of The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- spect to airports. Our airports are inade- such weapons to private parties. pore. The bill will be received and ap- quate and antiquated, and we need a very Destructive devices have no reasonable propriately referred; and, without ob- dynamic program; and I believe the users use for sport or recreation. They are en- jection, the letter and section-by-section should pay the major portion of it. tirely inappropriate to household protec- analysis will be printed in the RECORD. Mr. LAUSCHE. Will the Senator al- tion. They should simply be removed from The bill (S. 3645) to authorize the Sec- low me to become a cosponsor of the the market. Therefore, in anticipation retary of Transportation to plan and measure? that the recently passed title IV will be- provide financial assistance for airport Mr. RANDOLPH. I am gratified to come law, I introduce again today a bill development, and other purposes, intro- have the cosponsorship of the Senator to prohibit the sale of destructive devices duced by Mr. MONRONEY, by request, was from Ohio. to individuals. I hope and believe that received, read twice by its title, and The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- when the Senate has had a fuller oppor- referred to the Committee on Commerce. pore. The bill will be received and ap- tunity to consider the merits of this pro- The letter and section-by-section propriately referred. posal it will receive the strong endorse- analysis, presented by Mr. MONRONEY, The bill (S. 3641) to provide additional ment of this body and the House of are as follows: Federal assistance in connection with the Representatives. THE SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION, construction, alteration, or improvement I sent the bill to the desk and ask that Washington, D.C. of air carrier and general purpose air- it be printed in full at this point in the Hon. HUBERT H. HUMPHREY, ports, airport terminals, and related fac- RECORD. President of the Senate, ilities, and for other purposes, introduced Washington, D.C. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill DEAR MR. PRESIDENT: There is transmitted by Mr. RANDOLPH (for himself and other will be received and appropriately re- herewith a proposed bill "To authorize the Senators), was received, read twice by ferred; and, without objection, the bill Secretary of Transportation to plan and pro- its title, and referred to the Committee will be printed in the RECORD. vide financial assistance for airport develop- on Commerce. The bill (S. 3643) to amend title 18, ment, and other purposes", together with a United States Code, to prohibit the sale section-by-section analysis. This proposed bill would chart a new S. 3643-INTRODUCTION OF BILL and delivery of destructive devices, course for Federal assistance to airport de- TO PROHIBIT THE SALE AND machineguns, short-barreled shotguns, velopment. It would authorize direct loans DELIVERY OF DESTRUCTIVE DE- and short-barreled rifles, introduced by for development of airports which are po- VICES, MACHINEGUNS, SHORT- Mr. BROOKE, for himself and Mr. HART, tentially viable but for which loans in the BARRELED SHOTGUNS, AND was received, read twice by its title, re- private market cannot be obtained on reason- SHORT-BARRELED RIFLES ferred to the Committee on the Judici- able terms. The loans outstanding at any one ary, and ordered to be printed in the time would be limited to $1,000,000,000. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, yester- To assist development of airports served RECORD. day I introduced a bill to provide for na- by local service carriers receiving operating S. 3643 tional registration of firearms. The subsidy from the Civil Aeronautics Board, Be it enacted by the Senate and House of the bill would authorize grants up to 50 per- measure was designed to supplement and Representatives of the United States of cent of the cost of projects attributable to strengthen both our existing gun control America in Congress assembled, That the service by the subsidized carrier. As a condi- laws and the recently passed legislation Congress hereby finds that destructive de- tion to a grant, the Secretary would have to awaiting the signature of the President, vices (as defined in title 18, United States find, after consultation with the Board, that as well as the additional legislation I hope Code), machineguns, short-barreled shot- the cost of the project did not exceed the we will soon approve. guns, and short-barreled riffes are primarily value of the service to be provided. With the same sense of urgency, I rise weapons of war which have no appropriate All of the proposed Federal assistance use as instruments of sport, recreation or today to offer on behalf of myself and would be available only for development personal defense; that intrastate commerce Senator HART a bill to prohibit the sale projects related to landing areas and safety in such devices and weapons affects the flow facilities. It would not be available for ter- to private parties of destructive devices, of interstate and foreign commerce in such minal, hangar, parking, and other passenger machineguns, short-barreled shotguns, devices and weapons; and that therefore it service or industrial purposes. and short-barreled rifles. There is no is necessary to regulate all commerce in such The bill would require the Secretary to pre- conceivable reason why such weapons devices and weapons. pare, within two years, and revise at least should be sold to private parties. Destruc- SEC. 2. (a) section 922(b) (4) of title 18, every two years thereafter, a plan for the Na- tive devices have been defined to include Unted States Code, is amended to read as tional Airport System. The plan must set follows: "any explosive, incendiary, or poison gas forth for at least a ten-year period the type "(4) to any person any destructive device, bombs, grenade, mine, rocket, or similar and estimated cost of all airport development machinegun (as defined in section 5848 of device; and any type of weapon which required to meet the needs for airport facil- the Internal Revenue Code of 1954), short- ities in locations served by air carriers, for will or is designed to or may readily be barreled shotgun, or short-barreled rifle." the national defense and postal service, and converted to expel a projectile by the ac- (b) Section 922(b) of such title is amend- for the economic development objectives of tion of any explosive and having any ed by adding at the end thereof the follow- the States and their subdivisions. barrel with a bore of one-half inch or ing new sentence: "Paragraph (4) of this The growth in aviation activity, both air more in diameter." They are obviously subsection shall not apply to any research carrier and general aviation, will continue organization designated by the Secretary." weapons of war, not suitable for personal to create a demand for expanded -airport SEC. 3. The amendments made by this Act facilities. The Federal Government has a use. shall become effective 30 days after the date At the present time, weapons of this substantial interest in the orderly develop- of its enactment. ment of our Nation's airports, but this Fed- description can be purchased by a private eral interest should not be considered over- citizen with no significant controls what- riding. Our civil airports are owned and soever, and with no effective provision S. 3645-INTRODUCTION OF BILL TO operated by State and local governments or that the purchase be reported to the ap- BE KNOWN AS THE AIRPORT DE- by private individuals. They are used by pri- propriate law-enforcement officers. VELOPMENT ACT OF 1968-NOTICE vately-owned common carriers, by private The omnibus crime control bill, which OF HEARINGS corporations, and by private individuals. They are financed largely by these users and was recently considered by this body and Mr. MONRONEY. Mr. President, I by the communities served. The interests and which is now awaiting the President's introduce, by request and for appropriate responsibilities of these groups must be signature, provides that destructive de- reference, a bill to authorize the Secre- recognized in our policies and our planning. vices can be sold to anyone who obtains tary of Transportation to plan and pro- The aviation industry has reached a new a sworn statement from his local law- vide financial assistance for airport de- stage of maturity. The evidence is clear that enforcement officer that there is no law velopment and other purposes. I ask Federal grant assistance is no longer re- against his possession of such weapons, unanimous consent that there be printed quired at most airports. With few excep- and that there is no reason to believe tions, the direct users of an airport are finan- in the RECORD at this point a letter from cially capable of bearing the full costs of that the weapon will be used for unlaw- Secretary of Transportation Alan S. development and operation. Certainly, the S7152 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE June 13, 1968 unsubsidized airlines are capable as a regu- tein which extends for at least ten years; in- authority, because the authorizing pro- lated industry, of bearing the full costs of cludes all types of development required for their operations. Today, less than 2 per- visions contained the geographical de- cargo, passenger, and aircraft handling; and cent of the expenses of the scheduled airlines covers all airport development needed in lo- scription of "a Territory or possession of are attributable to airport landing fees. cations served by air carriers, for the special the United States," and, therefore, ex- Very few general aviation airports charge needs of national defense and the postal cluded Alaska and Hawaii when they any landing fee at all. The impact of a service, and to carry out the economic de- became States. The purpose of this pro- inodest fee sufficient to develop and support velopment objectives of State and local gov- posed legislation is to restore applicabil- these airports would be negligible in most ernments. ity to employees dying in those two cases. Section 7. Separate Fund. This section es- States. A reasonable system of charges should pro- tablishes a separate fund in the Treasury for I ask unanimous consent that the let- vide communities sufficient revenues to at- the purpose of financing the loan program tract private financing of needed airport de- authorized by section 3. The initial capitali- ter dated May 13, 1968, to the President velopment. There are, however, special cases zation of the fund will be made by appropri- of the Senate from the Secretary of where Federal financial assistance must be ations. The Federal National Mortgage As- Transportation be printed in the RECORD continued and the proposed bill would do sociation Charter Act is ainended to author- at this point, as a part of my remarks. this. ize the Secretary to establish trusts with the The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill The Bureau of the Budget has advised FNMA for the resale of obligations acquired will be received and appropriately re- that enactment of this proposed legislation under the loan program. All expenses associ- ferred; and, without objection the letter would be in accord with the President's ated with the administration of section 3 will will be printed in the RECORD. program. be paid from the fund. Sincerely, Section 8. Definitions. This section defines The bill (S. 3648) to authorize the ALAN S. BOYD. the terms "landing areas", "public agency", payment of the expense of preparing and "Secretary" for the purpose of their and transporting to his home or place of SECTION-BY-SECTION ANALYSIS OF A BILL To use in the Act. interment the remains of a Federal em- AUTHORIZE THE SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTA- Section 9. Appropriations. This section au- ployee who dies while performing official TION To PLAN AND PROVIDE FINANCIAL As- thorizes appropriations necessary to carry out duties in Alaska or Hawaii, and for other SISTANCE FOR AIRPORT DEVELOPMENT, AND the Act. purposes introduced by Mr. GRUENING, OTHER PURPOSES Section 10. Effective Date. The Act is to be- Section 1. Short Title. This section cites come effective July 1, 1969. was received, read twice by its title and referred to the Committee on Govern- the Act as the "Airport Development Act of Mr. MONRONEY. Mr. President, the ment Operations. 1968". bill would authorize direct loans for Section 2. Declaration of Purpose. This sec- The letter, presented by Mr. GRUENING, tion sets forth the finding of Congress that, landing area and safety facility develop- is as follows: while most airport development can be ac- ment in an amount not to exceed $1 bil- THE SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION, complished through private financing, there lion. In addition there would be author- Washington, D.C., May 13, 1968. is a need for more extensive planning for ized $100 million for 50-percent match- Hon. HUBERT H. HUMPHREY, future airport facilities and the provision of ing grants at those airports served ex- President of the Senate, Federal financial assistance where private clusively by local service carriers. Washington, D.C. capital is not available on reasonable terms. DEAR MR. PRESIDENT: Enclosed is a draft The need for a new Federal airport as- Section 3. Airport Loans. This section au- of a bill "To authorize the payment of the thorizes the Secretary to purchase securities sistance program is unquestioned and is expenses of preparing and transporting to or make loans for projects for the construc- amply documented not only by the Sec- his home or place of interment the remains tion of landing areas and other facilities and retary's letter, but also by the interim of a Federal employee who dies while per- interests in land necessary to the operation report issued by the Aviation Subcom- forming official duties in Alaska or Hawaii, of aircraft. The loans are subject to certain mittee of the Committee on Commerce and for other purposes." findings, the most important of which, is last January. I introduce this bill SO that It is recommended that it be enacted by that the project cannot be financed on rea- it can be considered, along with other the Congress. sonable terms without Federal assistance. It Up until the time that Alaska and Hawaii proposals for airport development dur- is contemplated that loans would be made for became States, the Act of July 8, 1940 (now all or part of the project costs, depending ing the hearings I have scheduled for codified in Title 5 of the United States Code upon whether private financing or grants Tuesday, June 18. as section 5742) authorized payment of the were available for any part of the costs. Se- expenses of preparing and transporting to curities purchased or loans made could not his former home or place of interment the exceed 30 years maturity, and would bear in- S. 3648-INTRODUCTION OF BILL TO remains of a Federal employee who died terest at current Treasury rates. Total loans AUTHORIZE THE PAYMENT OF while performing official duties in Alaska outstanding could not exceed $1 billion. EXPENSES OF TRANSPORTING and Hawaii, and the expenses of transport- Section 4. Grants to Airports Served by BODIES OF FEDERAL EMPLOYEES ing his family and household effects to his Local Service Carriers. This section author- FROM ALASKA AND HAWAII TO former home. However, the change in po- izes the Secretary to make grants for air- litical status of Alaska and Hawaii from Ter- THEIR FORMER HOMES port development at those airports at which ritories to States had the effect of canceling the only certificated service is provided by Mr. GRUENING. Mr. President, I in- the authority, because the authorizing pro- airlines receiving operating subsidy from the troduce, for appropriate reference, a bill visions contained the geographical descrip- Civil Aeronautics Board. Grants may be made tion of "a Territory or possession of the to authorize the payment of the expenses only for projects attributable to the opera- United States", and, therefore, excluded of preparing and transporting to his tions of the certificated carrier, and only Alaska and Hawaii when they became States. home or place of interment the remains where the Secretary finds, after consultation The purpose of this proposal is to restore ap- with the Board, that the cost of the project of a Federal employee who dies while plicability to employees dying in those two does no substantially exceed the value of performing official duties in Alaska or States. the service to be provided by the carrier. The Hawaii, and for other purposes. The authority to pay a third category of Federal share may not exceed 50 percent of This bill is introduced at the request expenses, transportation of the remains of the project cost. The total grant authoriza- of the Secretary of Transportation. The dependents of employees stationed in Alaska tion is $100 million. If the demand exceeds or Hawaii to their former home, was added to Secretary has indicated in his request funds available, the Secretary must appor- the 1940 Act by section 7(b) of the Act of to the President of the Senate that up tion funds, taking into consideration the July 15, 1954. This authority was not affected until the time that Alaska and Hawaii relative effect of each project on the air when Alaska and Hawaii became States, be- transportation service available to the locality became States, the act of July 8, 1940- cause the 1954 amendment contained the served, and the need to develop a balanced now codified in title 5 of the United geographical description of "a place outside airport system. States Code at section 5742-authorized the continental United States or in Alaska". Section 5. Advances of Funds. This section payment of the expenses of preparing Thus, since enactment of the Act of July 15, authorizes the Secretary to advance funds 1954, we have had the inconsistent situation and transporting to his former home or to an airport eligible for assistance under where the remains of a dependent of an em- place of interment the remains of a Fed- ployee stationed in Alaska or Hawaii can be sections 3 or 4 for the purpose of preparing eral employee who died while performing plans and specifications, and taking other ac- returned at Government expense, but the re- official duties in Alaska or Hawaii, and mains of the employee cannot be. tions preliminary to construction, including the acquisition of land and interests therein. the expenses of transporting his family This bill is motivated by geography not Section 6. National Airport System Plan- and household effects to his former home. political status. It does not involve special ning. This section directs the Secretary to However, the change in political status legislative treatment for Alaska and Hawaii. of Alaska and Hawaii from territories to It does involve recognition of geographical prepare, periodically revise, and report prog- factors which the conferring of political ress on a plan for the National Airport Sys- States had the effect of canceling the status could not change and which pose Transportation I4520 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD MARITIME June cal jackals smelling the blood of the old lion 2. Informing one's self on issues and chairman, contends the latest report is- in the presidential palace. candidates. sued by the Department of Agriculture The union leaders, especially communists, 3. Contributing to the party of your shows our farmers sinking further into started out after bread-and-butter issues choice. while many young workers wanted a new 4. Voting in political elections. the economic quicksand with each pass- society. Now it appears the leaders have Moreover, employees are free to express ing year. The April farm income situa- learned from their troops and also seek to their opinions regardless of where they stand tion as published by the Economic Re- overthrow the government. on political issues. In instances where an search Service of the Department shows employee is asked to speak for the Corpora- specifically farm production expenses on tion on a matter on which he personally the increase. In fact the report tells us GENERAL ACCEPTANCE CORP. holds views contrary to the company posi- that farm production expenses this year AND GOVERNMENT tion, he is free to decline to speak. The Corporation believes that if all em- may run up to $11/2 billion higher than (Mr. ROONEY of Pennsylvania asked ployees inform themselves of the major pub- last year's Agriculture Department esti- and was given permission to address the lic issues and problems at the National, mate. This only reflects the effect of in- House for 1 minute and to revise and ex- State, and local levels, they will be able to creasing inflation on the American tend his remarks and include extraneous participate more effectively as individuals farmer. matter.) in civic, business and political affairs. PER ACRE STATISTICS ALARMING Mr. ROONEY of Pennsylvania. Mr. STATEMENT OF S. H. WILLS, PRESIDENT AND The task force was particularly Speaker, ever since I first entered public CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD alarmed at the rise in capital expendi- life I have tried to encourage maximum There has long been a need for business tures, taxes and interest payments as participation in the many facets of pub- people to speak out and act in support of calculated by the Department on a per- lic policymaking from the private costors their convictions. By the same token, sound acre basis. Capital expenditures, includ- of our Nation. business policies for this Corporation can ing farm buildings, vehicles and other Tt is my conviction every franchised be developed only with a full understanding machinery and equipment, have risen 55 citizen should exercise his voice and his of the influence that various other interests percent since 1960, according to the re- vote in the best interests of his Nation, exert at the Federal, State, and local levels. port. This same situation report shows his State, his community, and himself. With these realities in mind, we recognize Not only does he have the right to be one of the basic requirements of a true that taxes payable per acre also rose 110 democracy is that all of its components be percent during the same period. Com- heard in the affairs of the public, but articulate in their own best interests, con- pare such increases with the much also he has a very definite responsibility sistent with the best interests of our society smaller 5.7 percent increase in the per to participate. as a whole. acre index on prices received for all com- In the past, I have observed with dis- Therefore, with a strong desire for GAC modities as reported in USDA's agricul- tubing regularity efforts by some em- to portray a positive business image, dedi- ture statistics publication, and you can ployers in the private sector to discour- cated to fostering the principles of the free age their employees from engaging in enterprise system and Constitutional gov- readily understand why our farmers feel ernment. the Corporation intends to partici- the ever-increasing pressures of the cur- community, civic, or governmental af- pate actively in significant public relations rent pinch. There is a limit on how much fairs. Whenever possible, I have urged and civic affairs programs. The Corporation a farmer can squeeze out of an acre of reevaluation of such policies because has an obligation to respond to unfavorable land in income, but there seems to be no they are totally inconsistent with the and unsound political, social, and economic limit on where his per-acre expenses can basic principles of our democratic so- stimuli on behalf of its owner-shareholders, go under current administration policies. ciety. its employees, its customers and its This week, a statement of policy is- neighbors. It is evident that the policies developed sued by the General Acceptance Corp., In the following policy statement we urge during the past 7 years in Washington based in my congressional district, came each employee, as a private citizen, to as- need a transfusion of new ideas that will sume this essential role, as GAC intends as a be responsive to the economic needs of to my attention. Because it is an extraor- corporate citizen. our farmers and rural America. We must dinarily positive policy which recog- nizes fully the importance of responsible not forget these polices led to a drop of $1.9 billion in realized net farm income citizen participaton in public affairs, I (Mr. SIKES asked and was given per- am pleased to be able to bring this policy this past year and threatens to perpet- mission to extend his remarks at this uate the condition. to the attention of my colleagues. point in the RECORD and to include ex- It includes both a statement of GAC's traneous matter.) We need a change in Washington that will result in the immediate reversal of resolve to fulfill its role as a corporate [Mr. SIKES' remarks will appear here- citizen, by Mr. S. H. Wills, president and these deplorable conditions and I would after in the Extensions of Remarks.] chairman of the board, and a policy be less than candid to suggest any other statement encouraging employee ac- course than to get to the root of the tivity: problem by changing the leadership that (Mr. EDMONDSON asked and was PUBLIC RELATIONS POLICY has brought rural America so far down given permission to extend his remarks The lives and future welfare of GAC em- the road to ruin. at this point in the RECORD and to in- ployees and their families have been and clude extraneous matter.) will continue to be greatly influenced by public affairs. Public policy as developed by [Mr. EDMONDSON'S remarks will ap- LOTS OF LUCK community, civic and governmental activi- pear hereafter in the Extensions of Re- MAILLIARD asked an was ties covers a wide area, bearing directly on marks.] the future status of free competitive enter- given permission to extend his remarks prise in this complex society. If we are to at this point in the RECORD and to in- have a voice in the formation of that policy, (Mr. EDMONDSON asked and was clude extraneous matter.) we must take an active interest. given permission to extend his remarks Mr. MAILLIARD. Mr. Speaker, on The employees of the GAC Corporation at this point in the RECORD and to in- May 22-National Maritime Day, 1968- and its subsidiaries should express informed clude extraneous matter.) the distinguished chairman of our Com- interest and actively participate in public affairs. In doing so, they will assist in ful- [Mr. EDMONDSON'S remarks will ap- mittee on Merchant Marine and Fish- filling the objectives of keeping our Nation pear hereafter in the Extensions of Re- eries wrote to the President pointing up strong and our social and our economic in- marks.] the needs of the American maritime in- stitutions viable. GAC employees are urged dustry and concluding that only he, the to seek out those cultural, governmental, or President of the United States, could community service activities suited to their NEW STATISTICS SHOW FARMER right the neglect and wrong our Mer- particular talents, interests, and preferences. SINKING FURTHER INTO ECO- chant Marine has felt for so many years. In addition, the Corporation encourages NOMIC QUICKSAND To the gentleman from Maryland, I all employees to support the political parties (Mr. LANGEN asked and was given say, "Lots of luck." Two years ago on a of their choice with their time and talents permission to extend his remarks at this similar occasion-National Maritime and whenever possible, to take an active part in the bi-partisan processes of government point in the RECORD and to include ex- Day, 1966-I addressed an open letter in the communities where they live. This traneous matter.) to the President, expressing a similar should include: Mr. LANGEN. Mr. Speaker, the House alarm over the deterioration of our mari- 1. Registering with a lawful political Republican Agriculture Task Force, of time posture and suggesting certain party. which I have the privilege of being areas for immediate action. Unfortu- June 4, 1968 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE 4521 nately, my expression of concern appar- present decrepit state. You recognized mari- may be taken to revitalize the industry. With ently fell upon deaf ears. For the sake of time industry's vital trade and defense role more than 80% of our present merchant fleet the American Merchant Marine, I only which will continue to be demanded of it reaching the end of its economic life within and which demands it has always met in the hope my colleague fares better than I. the next five years, we can no longer afford past. further pursuit of this dilatory and most un- The full text of my open letter to That need continues at this very moment profitable course. L. B. J. on Maritime Day, 1966 and the but no progress is as yet in sight. Instead, "We had hoped that the 'new' maritime letter of the chairman of our Merchant we are treated to a few examples of lack of policy which you promised in your State of Marine and Fisheries Committee to the concern-perhaps even worse. the Union Message in January 1965 would President follows: In these critical times, it is essential that resolve this conflict. However, more than six- COMMITTEE ON positive and constructive declarations on our teen months have now elapsed, and we still MERCHANT MARINE AND FISHERIES, merchant marine come from you as our na- have no new maritime policy. Instead, we Washington, D.C., May 22, 1968. tional leader. This is a pressing need. We in have two additional and conflicting reports The PRESIDENT, Congress can then seek to legislate your on what should be done. We have received maritime wishes. We must not, however, be The White House, also a bill to create a new Department of Washington, D.C. placed in a position of being both slighted Transportation, in which the Maritime Ad- DEAR MR. PRESIDENT: Only as a last resort and ignored. The Administration's spokesman ministration will be submerged much in the at the departmental level must not be the do I write you, knowing full well your pre- same manner it now is within the Depart- head of an agency who has been denied this ment of Commerce. None of these events has occupation with many vital matters of na- authority by the Congress itself. tional concern. Few can appreciate more served to abate the conflict. Rather they have Hopefully, it is not already too late, but I than you the responsibilities of the Congress served to increase its severity, raising fur- in effectuating and/or initiating programs fear only you can right the neglect and wrong ther doubt over the role of the government our merchant marine has felt for too many in maritime affairs and the future course of and policies of our government. Certainly, I cannot add to your knowledge anything on years. the American Merchant Marine. Sincerely, "So confused has this matter become that the essentiality of creating ocoperative atti- EDWARD A. GARMATZ, tudes and relationship. between the White today we are unable even to get agreement Chairman. House and the Congress. on the existing condition of the merchant In recent days, I personally, as Chairman marine, much less on a new policy. We have, AN OPEN LETTER TO L. B. J. ON MARITIME DAY of the House Committee on Merchant Marine for example, the Maritime Administrator and Fisheries, and my colleagues, have been For more than a year now, I have been stating that, and I quote: 'Our present fleet prodding agencies of the Executive, attempt- is, for the most part, physically obsolete.' treated to a rare indignity which we col- lectively feel hs been most offensive. ing to stir them into taking constructive ac- The Deputy Maritime Administrator states, tion on the problems of the American Mer- and I quote: I, for one, fail to find that On April 23, 1968, our Committee com- menced hearings on legislation to formulate, chant Marine. I have made public speeches. our merchant marine is in a disastrous situ- I have spoken on the floor of the House. I ation.' Finally, we have the Secretary of modify and improve our merchant marine through a national policy. We recognized have appeared before Congressional Commit- Defense, to whom a considerable amount of tees. I have communicated with the Mari- responsibility for the industry appears to that it was impossible to delay much longer initiating mechanisms to rectify the many time Administrator, the Under-Secretary of have been abdicated contrary to existing law, Commerce for Transportation, the Secretary stating that the American Merchant Marine things wrong with our maritime industry. We invited the Secretary of Commerce, in of Commerce, various members of the De- is 'adequate.' Yet high-ranking professional whose department the Maritime Administra- partment of Defense, and yes, even the Sec- Naval officers frequently have stated that it tion operates, to appear. In response, I was retary of Defense himself. I stand before you. is not adequate. this evening, feeling like a 20th Century Paul "Mr. President, this current confusion is advised that all transportation functions Revere whose cries of alarm have fallen upon simply a manifestation of my worst fears were placed by you in charge of the Secre- deaf ears. entertained in 1961 when the Maritime Ad- tary of Transportation. This, in spite of the fact that the Congress in approving the crea- Let us not, therefore, delude ourselves any ministration was placed within the Depart- ment of Coinmerce. In a word. we are bank- tion of the Department of Transportation, further. You know and I know there is but specifically excluded from that department one man today who can remedy the current rupt-bankrupt in federal maritime leader- maritime functions. inadequacies of the government's role in ship; and because of it we find ourselves in Moreover, this year the House agreed to maritime affairs. That one man is the Presi- this present deplorable state of affairs. Only dent of the United States. For no matter how you, Mr. President, can bring some sem- establish an independent Maritime Admin- blance of order out of this chaos. istration outside of any specific established arduously Congress may labor to bring about government department. a constructive maritime program, success or "I respectfully suggest that there are For the Secretary of Commerce, with mari- failure is wholly dependent upon Executive answers to the current problems facing the American Merchant Marine. The situation is time authority under him, to decline our in- implementation. Therefore, this evening I not incapable of solution, but we must get vitation and, in fact, delegate it to the Sec- will make my presentation to you in the retary of Transportation who has been denied form of an open letter to the President of on with a realistic ship construction pro- such custody, creates confusion for all of us the United States. gram. "In your proclamation setting aside this and, even worse, denotes a total rejection of "DEAR MR. PRESIDENT: It seems appropriate day as National Maritime Day, you stated the expressed will of Congress. that, since you have set aside this day, May that, and I quote: we will continue to We all realize that our merchant marine 23, 1966, for the 34th annual celebration of need ships-fast, modern descendants of the program is largely contingent upon the scope National Maritime Day, I should address you famous "Clippers"-to carry our products to of Federal appropriations therefor. While we on this occasion, expressing my sincere and the far corners of the earth.' I fear that are in the midst of prolonged and basic hear- prefound personal concern over the ever- under existing conditions these ships will ings on this vital subject, we were kept un- deepening crisis developing in the American never be constructed. The subsidized ship aware of the Administration's thinking on Merchant Marine. I unfortunately find little replacement program today is more than 90 the amount of appropriations that might cause for celebration on this festive occasion, ships behind schedule. Yet the Congress has be requested in the future. Instead, we since it is my personal belief as a private before it your budget request for fiscal year learned of the Administration's point of view citizen, as a Naval officer, and as a Member 1967, which will allow the construction of in this regard from the public press on May 9. of Congress that, because of the present atti- only 9 to 11 ships. I respectfully suggest On that day, the Baltimore Sun reported, and tude of the federal government, the American that this level of federal expenditures for Secretary Boyd has confirmed the reliability merchant marine today is being steered along ship construction is totally inadequate. We of that report, to the effect that if the Ad- a course to disaster. If we hope to preserve are, for example, scrapping ships from our ministration is required to seek reductions the American merchant marine as a useful National Defense Reserve Fleet at ten times in Federal expenditures, one of the vehicles and effective national asset, we must come to the rate of construction provided for under chosen would in effect decimate even the very grips with its problems without further de- this current request. limited appropriations earlier requested. lay. Conditions have been allowed. to dete- "I believe you will find upon examination This, Mr. President, is the equivalent of riorate to such an extent that now, Mr. Pres- of budget requests over the last several years ending new merchant construction for at ident, you and you alone can rescue the that the allocation of our national resources least a full year, perhaps longer. This step American Merchant Marine from the arena to maritime affairs is becoming progres- was apparently taken within the Adminis- of endless academic debate. sively smaller, while the problems of the in- tration without prior consultation with re- "We have endured patiently at least five dustry are getting progressively larger and sponsible Congressional leaders of your own years of extensive study of the ills of the larger. Even compared with last year's in- Party. You can, I am sure, appreciate my American Merchant Marine by various groups adequate federal budget for ship construc- shock, not only at the substantive sugges- sponsored by the Executive. Each group has tion, this year's request represents a sub- tion but at being advised thereof by the published its respective recommendations. stantial reduction, a cut of about one-third press. None have been disposed of, either through in both dollars and numbers of ships. It is Last fall, Mr. President, you indicated to Congressional or Administrative action. To one-half the amount of federal funds re- me and others of the House and Senate your the contrary, each and every study has served quested for ship construction in fiscal 1959 desire to move forward with an improved only to provide additional material for de- at a time when the total federal budget was modernized merchant marine in light of its bate over alternative courses of action which only about 60% of that being requested Transportation June 4, 1968 TO: MR. LON WOODBURY FROM: ERNEST J. CORRADO, LEGISLATIVE ASSISTANT, AMERICAN MERCHANT MARINE INSTITUTE, INC. SUBJECT: REASONS FOR MR. NIXON'S SUPPORT OF A POSITIVE AND CREATIVE MARITIME POLICY AND PROGRAM I. Because such a policy and program are in the national interest A. Our merchant fleet is declining both in quality and quantity. 1. We have declined from first to sixth place in fleet size, and from first to sixteenth in ship- building output. 2. Of the 965 (as against 1300 fifteen years ago) privately-owned vessels in the fleet today, 682, or about 70%, are 20 years old or older. Even the subsidized operators currently have 158 vessels, or 49% of their fleet in the over-age category. 3. On the other hand, 80% of the ships in the Russian fleet are less than 10 years of age. 4. Russia will become a dominant maritime power by 1970. She is producing approximately 125 ships per year or one million deadweight tons. By the end of 1970 she will have a fleet of some 15 million dead- weight tons. 5. Russia had 556 large me rchant vessels under construction in 1966 totaling 4.5 million deadweight tons. 6. In 1965 she spent over $600 million for construction of merchant ships while the United States spent under $150 million. 7. Deliveries of new ships are running about 8 to 1 in Russia's favor. Ships under construction are running 11 to 1 in tonnage. Mr. Lon Woodbury - 2. 8. Over the past 16 year period Russia gained approximately 1,000 in total number of ships, while the United States decreased by 900 ships. 9. She transports 75 percent of her own foreign commerce in Russian bottoms while the United States carries only 5.7 percent in U.S. flag merchant ships. 10. The Russian shipbuilding program expends between $600 million to $700 million annually against approximately $100 million in the United States. 11. The real danger in this Russian fleet build-up will be their capacity to disrupt and control international trade. B. In spite of its deterioration, the American-flag merchant fleet contributes significantly to the nation's commerce and is the fourth arm of defense. 1. The private fleet's value to the military and its performance in World Wars I and II, Korea, and Vietnam are well known. 2. Despite the statements of Secretary of Defense McNamara in 1962 to the effect that almost all military personnel would be in the future transported by air, the merchant fleet with its overage ships has carried approximately 65% of the military personnel and 96% of the materiel to Vietnam. 3. The American-flag merchant fleet contributes approximately $900 million annually toward the improvement of our national balance-of-payments account. 4. This impressive contribution is amassed on the carriage of only about 5.7% of our trade in American bottoms. 5. If the American-flag fleet were to carry about 30% of our foreign trade there would not be any balance- of-payments problem. II. There is great potential political benefit to be gained from such support. A. The large number of voters involved. Mr. Lon Woodbury - 3. 1. The SIU (AFL-CIO Maritime Trade Department) has a six million man membership. 2. The NMU (AFL-CIO Maritime Committee - NMEBA, ARA, ILA, MM&P, I.U. of Marine and Shipbuilding Workers) numbers about 350-400 thousand voters. 3. Numerous other unionized employees connected with supplying components to ships such as the steel workers, the iron workers and the electricians. 4. The large numbers of employees connected with the management side of the maritime industry. B. Considerable industry political activity on Capitol Hill and elsewhere, 1. Paul Hall's Maritime Trades Department is a powerful lobby. Apparently they delivered the deciding vote to break the Senate filibuster on P.L. 90-284, the Civil Rights Act. 2. These unions mentioned above make heavy political contributions. III. The maritime industry is particularly susceptible at this time to a change. 1. The Administration promised a new maritime program in the 1965 State of the Union Message. 2. For three years the Administration reneged on this promise. 3. The antagonism between the industry and Secretary of Transportation Boyd. 4. The Administration's long-awaited Maritime Program presented by Secretary Boyd on May 20, 1968, which is completely unacceptable to the industry. 5. Congressman Gerald Ford's suggestion at a Maritime Trades Department luncheon in December 1967 to the effect that if the Republicans win in November 1968 the maritime industry can expect better things. Mr. Lon Woodbury - 4. 6. Congressman Pelly's (R-Calif) recent statement that the Republican Platform would have a plank devoted to an improved maritime policy and program. 7. The Democrats are particularly vulnerable on this issue. 8. It is inconceivable that the Government, in the last analysis, will allow the American merchant fleet to disappear. Thus, Mr. Nixon may as well get the credit for its salvation.