Oversight of Federal Debt Collection Practices
November 12, 1997
TESTIMONY
Richard Keevey
Chief Financial Officer,
Department of Housing and Urban Development
Good Morning, Mr. Chairman and Members of the Subcommittee on Government Management,
Information and Technology. I am Richard F. Keevey, Chief Financial Officer of the
Department of Housing and Urban Development. On behalf of Secretary Cuomo and the
Department, I appreciate this opportunity to come before you and the Subcommittee to report on
HUD's implementation of the Debt Collection Improvement Act (DCIA).
In order to give you a better perspective of the Department's debt collection initiatives and its
implementation of the DCIA, I would like to first present a description of the Department's debt
portfolio. As of September 30, 1996, there was approximately $2,282 billion in delinquent debt
due the Department (a decrease of $443 million from the balance of September 30, 1995). Of
this amount, approximately $1,764 billion pertained to FHA receivables that resulted from
defaulted insured loans. Because of this, our major debt collection initiatives (including asset
sales) center around ways to service and dispose of these FHA receivables. I have attached
charts that summarize the nature of HUD's delinquent debt (Exhibit "A") and the nature of
HUD's delinquent debt in excess of 180 days old (Exhibit "B").
Before addressing the specific issues that were included as part of your invitation to the Secretary
to participate in these hearings, let me first say that HUD is in substantial compliance with the
major provisions of DCIA.
$ we have addressed the administrative offset provision of the Act by
referring FHA Title I debt (debt related to our manufactured housing and
home improvement loan guarantee program) to Treasury for offset. This
is the majority of the debt that could be referred.
$ we are addressing the cross-servicing provisions of the Act by working
with Treasury to transfer responsibility and staff of HUD's FHA existing
Seattle Asset Recovery Center (ARC) to the jurisdiction of Treasury (this
will be explained in more detail later).
$ we have a successful asset sales program that has made us the leader in the
federal government in this area.
$ we pioneered the use of the Credit Alert Interactive Voice Response
System (CAIVRS) as a pre-screening tool to bar individuals who owe the
government money from obtaining new government loans or loan
guarantees. A more detailed discussion of this system is included later in
this text.
Now to address the specific issues raised by the Committee.
1. Completion of chart. - The chart included with your request has been
completed and is included as our Exhibit "C". Highlights are:
$ The adjusted debt over 180 days delinquent includes Single Family ($477
million) and Multifamily ($545 million) debt which is part of our asset
sales program and will not be referred to Treasury for offset.
$ The amount to be collected by internal offset is GNMA debt ($308
million), associated with our Mortgage Backed Securities Program, that
will be collected from the FHA insurance or VA guarantees.
$ We have participated in the Tax Refund Offset program since its inception
in 1986.
$ A statutory impediment currently exists which will prevent the
Department from selling subsidized multifamily notes with an unpaid
balance of $1.232 billion. The Department has sent language to the
Committee of jurisdiction to permit the sale of subsidized Multifamily
notes.
2. Implementation of Administrative Offset Program.
$ HUD has referred $135 million to Treasury for inclusion in the offset
program; as shown below:
Program Cases Referred Dollars
FHA Title I 15,518 $134.5 million
Admin Debt 103 $400 thousand
$ The cases that were referred to Treasury for the administrative offset
program are essentially the same cases that were sent to the Internal
Revenue Service for the Tax Refund Offset Program.
$ In addition to the debt that has already been referred to the offset program,
we are currently clarifying the eligibility of delinquent debt associated
with the Section 312 program for referral to the offset program: 2,700
Cases with a value of $23.5 million.
3. The status of regulations to implement DCIA is as follows:
$ The Department's existing regulations governing debt collection and
interagency agreements for the routine use of records under the Privacy
Act of 1974, are adequate to permit our participation in the Treasury
Offset Program.
$ We have published an amendment to the Civil Monetary Penalties
regulations, and published new inflation adjustment factors for these
penalties, as required by DCIA.
4. Cross-Agency System issues.
The Department participates in government-wide system user groups that provide input to
Treasury concerning systems changes or enhancements that are needed to implement the
provisions of DCIA. While we currently have no major systems issues regarding
implementing DCIA, we are awaiting some technical guidance from Treasury (file
formats, particular indicators or values to be used in a given situation) concerning
Treasury's proposed rule on mandatory tax identification numbers. However, our
understanding is that Treasury will address the concerns of all agencies after receiving all
comments to this proposed rule.
5. Legislative Proposals pending before the subcommittee.
HUD and the Administration is studying the merits of these bills but is not prepared to
take a formal position at this time. As always, the Administration is willing to work with
the Committee on legislation for the purpose of creating management tools needed to
ensure program integrity, effective debt collection, and the protection of individual
privacy issues.
I would like to use this opportunity to further discuss areas of debt collection where we
believe the Department has an innovative and positive story to tell.
SEATTLE ASSET RECOVERY CENTER
To conform with the cross-servicing provisions of DCIA, HUD has proposed to the
Treasury Department a unique approach to the collection of debt. Under this proposal,
HUD would join Treasury in a pilot project in which one of HUD's debt management
facilities, the Seattle ARC, would operate as a Treasury Debt Collection Center and
collect delinquent Title I and, eventually, all HUD debts would fall under the jurisdiction
of the DCIA. The Seattle ARC will carry out Treasury responsibilities under the DCIA
and take program direction from Treasury's Debt Management Service staff. HUD would
turn over the total operation -- staff, equipment and space -- to Treasury. The pilot would
run for less than a year and conclude with an evaluation of the Seattle ARC's success as a
reimbursable debt collection center for Treasury.
This pilot was sent to the National Performance Review (NPR) for designation as a
reinvention laboratory. This pilot program would promote one of the overall goals of
NPR's reinvention laboratory effort: building models of interagency cooperation that
promote savings and work efficiencies in the federal sector. Through the use of such a
pilot, and the ultimate transfer of HUD staff to Treasury, strategic objectives are
accomplished for both HUD and Treasury. HUD's Business Process Redesign of its Title
I debt collection activities identified opportunities to gain efficiencies and free up staff by
streamlining business processes and leveraging the provisions of the DCIA, such as
cross-servicing. Further, DCIA requires Treasury to establish Debt Collection Centers to
service debt referred to Treasury by the various agencies. This potential transfer matches
the skills in debt collection of current HUD staff in its Seattle ARC with the need for
Treasury to establish Debt Collection Centers as required by DCIA.
ASSET SALES
HUD's asset sales program is a significant element of our compliance with DCIA. This
program was started in 1994 and was designed to dispose of up to $11 billion of notes
that resulted from defaulted loan guarantees. The mortgage loan sales program includes
both single family and multifamily mortgages and is designed to:
(1) transfer the mortgages back to the private sector, where they can be more
efficiently serviced and
(2) allow more of FHA's resources to be assigned to monitor the more than $400
billion worth of single family and multifamily mortgages the agency currently
insures. More proactive monitoring of the FHA insured portfolio lowers the
likelihood of defaults and claims in this critical inventory and, in the long run,
reduces taxpayer exposure. Since 1994, HUD has sold over 115 thousand
defaulted loans and received gross proceeds of over $7.5 billion.
CAIVRS
The DCIA states that "delinquent Federal debtors will be barred from obtaining Federal
loans or loan insurance guarantees." HUD has addressed this provision of DCIA through
its use of the Credit Alert Interactive Voice Response System (CAIVRS). CAIVRS is a
Federal government interagency shared database, whose participants are users from
HUD, USDA, VA, SBA, FDIC and the Department of Education. The purpose of the
system is to alert participating Federal lending agencies when an applicant for
benefits/loans has a Federal loan which is currently in default or foreclosure, or has had a
claim paid by the reporting agency. CAIVRS was initially developed by FHA in 1987 to
screen loan applicants for the Single Family Mortgage Insurance Program. It was later
expanded to support the Title I Property Improvement/Manufactured Homes Insurance
Programs and the Section 312 Rehabilitation Loan Program. Since 1987, over 24 million
borrowers have been pre-screened through CAIVRS. Starting in 1993, the scope of
CAIVRS was expanded to include the other agencies indicated above. As a result of this
process, we understand participating Agencies have realized cash collections of
delinquent debts.
In conclusion, let me emphasize:
$ HUD is in substantial compliance with the provisions of DCIA;
$ HUD has used its asset sales program as our primary method of disposing
of FHA debt that resulted from defaulted loan guarantees in our
multifamily and single family programs; and
$ HUD will pursue the formal move of the Seattle ARC to Treasury.
I would welcome any questions at this time.
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