
(The Center Square) ā Though state housing agencies have seen failure, malfeasance, and money gone missing across the nation, itās been ages since Pennsylvaniaās has been audited.
If some legislators get their way, though, the situation could change.
House Bill 2387, sponsored by Rep. Kristin Marcell, R-Richboro, would require the auditor general to conduct an annual audit of the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency. Current law requires an audit āfrom time to time,ā but has effectively meant āonce in a generationā at best.
āItās come to our attention that the PHFA has not undergone a thorough audit in recent memory, a situation that raises concerns about the transparency and effectiveness of its operations, especially given its failures during the COVID-19 pandemic,ā Marcell said during an April press conference.
When Marcell reached out to the auditorās office, their best guess was the last PHFA audit happened in the 1980s ā but couldnāt find a copy of the report.
āWe cannot in good faith authorize an increase for PHFA until we ensure the proper safeguards are put in place,ā she said.
Republicans raised concerns about the PHFA since the agency only disbursed $54 million of a possible $175 million for rental and mortgage assistance in 2020. In 2021, it received $350 million from the American Rescue Plan for a homeowners assistance grant program, but the program was shut down for more than a year due to technical issues.
The agency blamed the contractor it chose for botching its mortgage relief program.
āWhen we allocate critical funds to support Pennsylvanians in crisis, we must have confidence that PHFA is distributing those funds appropriately and timely,ā Marcell said.
Pennsylvania isnāt the only state to have some trouble with its housing agency.
A report from the Government Accountability Office in 2023 found that the risk of fraud was high in the nationās largest federal housing program due to a lack of audits and āweak control mechanisms.ā
The Washington D.C. Housing Authority has faced allegations of conflicts of interest and voucher fraud in recent years and is years behind on turning in audits to the federal government. In North Carolina, authorities discovered that $3 million was stolen from the state housing agency. And in Oregon, the state had sent out almost $500 million in emergency rental aid, but the housing agency couldnāt verify the money was used properly.
Other city housing agencies have had a tendency to spend too much and end up in debt.
Whether the bill will come up for a vote, though, remains to be seen. Marcellās bill awaits action in the House Commerce Committee.