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80A - JOINT - AMEND NSP
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80A - JOINT - AMEND NSP
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Last modified
9/16/2013 8:54:33 AM
Creation date
9/12/2013 5:48:44 PM
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Template:
City Clerk
Doc Type
Agenda Packet
Agency
Community Development
Item #
80A
Date
9/16/2013
Destruction Year
2018
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Neighborhood ID: 1104095 <br />NSP3 Planning Data <br />Grantee ID: 0633420E <br />Grantee State: CA <br />Grantee Name: SANTA ANA <br />Grantee Address: 20 Civic Center Plaza, M-37 Santa Ana CA 92702 <br />Grantee Email: SKutner@santa-ana.org <br />Neighborhood Name: NSP2 and 3 w/o hole <br />Date:2012.09.06 00:00:00 <br />NSP3 Score <br />The neighborhoods identified by the NSP3 grantee as being the areas of greatest need must have an <br />individual or average combined index score for the grantee's identified target geography that is not less than <br />the lesser of 17 or the twentieth percentile most needy score in an individual state. For example, if a state's <br />twentieth percentile most needy census tract is 18, the requirement will be a minimum need of 17. If, <br />however, a state's twentieth percentile most needy census tract is 15, the requirement will be a minimum <br />need of 15. If more than one neighborhood is identified in the Action Plan, HUD will average the <br />Neighborhood Scores, weighting the scores by the estimated number of housing units in each identified <br />neighborhood. <br />Neighborhood NSP3 Score: 18.7 <br />State Minimum Threshold NSP3 Score: 17 <br />Total Housing Units in Neighborhood: 27480 <br />Area Benefit Eligibility <br />Percent Persons Less than 120% AMI: 91.62 <br />Percent Persons Less than 80% AMI: 76.38 <br />Neighborhood Attributes (Estimates) <br />Vacancy Estimate <br />USPS data on addresses not receiving mail in the last 90 days or "NoStat" can be a useful measure of <br />whether or not a target area has a serious vacancy problem. For urban neighborhoods. HUD has found that <br />neighborhoods with a very high number vacant addresses relative to the total addresses in an area to be a <br />very good indicator of a current for potentially serious blight problem. <br />The USPS "NoStat" indicator can mean different things. In rural areas, it is an indicator of vacancy. However, <br />it can also be an address that has been issued but not ever used, it can indicate units under development, <br />and it can be a very distressed property (most of the still flood damaged properties in New Orleans are <br />NoStat). When using this variable, users need to understand the target area identified. <br />In addition, the housing unit counts HUD gets from the US Census indicated above are usually close to the <br />residential address counts from the USPS below. However, if the Census and USPS counts are substantially <br />different for your identified target area, users are advised to use the information below with caution. For <br />example if there are many NoStats in an area for units never built, the USPS residential address count may <br />be larger than the Census number; if the area is a rural area largely served by PO boxes it may have fewer <br />addresses than housing units. <br />USPS Residential Addresses in Neighborhood: 27821 <br />Residential Addresses Vacant 9D or more days (LISPS, March 2010): 391 <br />Residential Addresses NoStat (USPS, March 2010): 364 <br />117 <br />80A-29
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