Description
This session provides a foundational, big-picture understanding of how HUD programs function from the top down. It walks through who HUD is, how rules are created and implemented, the hierarchy of laws and guidance, and how funding flows through the system to individual properties. Participants will gain clarity on the roles of various HUD offices, the difference between policy and operational tools, and how requirements translate into day-to-day property operations, compliance responsibilities, and financial transactions.
Areas Covered in the Session:-
- HUD Structure
- How Rules are Made
- How HUD Implements Them
- What HUD housing is
- Who is involved
- How money works
- How Your Property Implements Them
- Why compliance matters
- Compliance Requirements
- Hierarchy of rules and laws.
Background:-
HUD compliance is often treated as a checklist driven by handbooks and forms, but in reality, it operates within a much larger federal framework involving Congress, regulations, funding structures, and multiple HUD offices. Many professionals working in affordable housing are trained on “how to do the task” without fully understanding the system that drives those requirements, which leads to confusion, inconsistent application, and increased compliance risk.
Why Should You Attend:-
This training connects the dots between regulations, handbooks, and real-world operations, helping participants stop memorizing rules and start understanding them. By learning how and why HUD requirements exist, attendees will be better equipped to make compliant decisions, avoid common mistakes, respond confidently during audits or MORs, and apply rules consistently across their properties. It is especially valuable for reducing errors caused by misinterpreting guidance or applying the wrong program rules.
Who Should Attend?
- Anyone working at or overseeing HUD Multifamily funded properties
- Property Managers and Assistant Property Managers
- Compliance Specialists and Occupancy Specialists
- Regional Managers and Regional Compliance Managers
- Asset Managers
- Owners and Owner Representatives
- Leasing Staff working at HUD-assisted properties
- New hires in affordable housing roles
- Anyone responsible for tenant files, certifications, or subsidy compliance.