Laserfiche WebLink
Approve Affordable Housing Loans for the Rehabilitation of Cornerstone Apartments <br />September 17, 2019 <br />Page 2 <br />Housing Successor Agency Loan Agreement with Cornerstone Housing Partners LP (c/o <br />Jamboree Housing Corporation), subject to non -substantive changes approved by the <br />Executive Director and Authority General Counsel. <br />On November 20, 2018, the City Council and Housing Authority authorized the City Manager and <br />Executive Director of the Housing Authority to execute a commitment letter to resubordinate the <br />current affordable housing loans for the Cornerstone Apartments at 805, 810, 815, 816, 825, 828, <br />835, and 904 S. Minnie Street, Santa Ana, California, to tax-exempt multifamily housing bonds <br />(tax exempt bonds) in an amount not to exceed $8,700,000 in order to substantially rehabilitate <br />Cornerstone Apartments. The City Council and Housing Authority also authorized the City <br />Manager and Executive Director of the Housing Authority to execute the necessary documents to <br />level all rents onsite at the 50% Tax Credit Allocation Committee (TCAC) rents instead of the <br />existing Health and Safety Code rents. Following this approval, staff executed and provided a <br />commitment letter to Cornerstone Housing Partners LP c/o Jamboree Housing Corporation <br />(Exhibit 1). <br />Using the commitment letter as the City and Housing Authority's enforceable commitment, <br />Jamboree Housing Corporation (Jamboree) submitted an application on January 18, 2019 for <br />non-competitive 4% tax credits (tax-exempt bonds) to rehabilitate the Cornerstone Apartments. <br />Specifically, the Cornerstone Apartments at 805, 810, 815, 816, 825, 828, 835, and 904 S. <br />Minnie Street, in Santa Ana, California is collectively a 126-unit affordable housing project that <br />requires substantial repair and rehabilitation (Project). The Project was originally built in 1961. <br />For a single-family homeowner, when their home gets older and in need of repair, typically the <br />homeowner will refinance their mortgage to take out a loan to pay for the rehabilitation work on <br />their home. On the other hand, for a multi -family affordable housing project owner, when their <br />project gets older and in need of repair typically the owner will do something called "resyndicate" <br />by applying for additional 4% tax credits and obtaining tax-exempt bond proceeds to complete <br />the rehabilitation work on their rental units. The term "resyndication" is used to describe an <br />existing Low -Income Housing Tax Credit project that receives a new allocation of tax credits. This <br />can only happen after the property completes the initial 15-year compliance period for their <br />original tax credits. This resyndication involving the City and Housing Authority's existing <br />affordable housing loans is much more complicated than simply refinancing a single-family home. <br />The resyndication required approval by the City and Housing Authority to resubordinate existing <br />affordable housing loans to a new senior loan in order for the senior lender to provide their loan. <br />The City's existing affordable housing loans consists of ten (10) different HOME Investment <br />Partnerships Program (HOME) Loan Agreements and the Housing Authority's existing affordable <br />housing loans consists of thirty-three (33) different Housing Successor Agency Loan <br />Agreements. For the resyndication and rehabilitation of the project, Jamboree did not receive <br />any additional funds from the City or Housing Authority. Instead, Jamboree is actually paying off <br />$2,204,000 of the principle balance of the Housing Authority's loans. The original loan terms were <br />all relatively the same: 30 or 55 year term with 3% simple interest repaid through residual <br />80A-2 <br />