Yes in God's Backyard Act
Summary
What This Bill Does
The Yes in God's Backyard Act amends the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act to create a new HUD subtitle for affordable rental housing on property owned by faith-based organizations and institutions of higher education. It defines affordable rental housing as rent no more than 30 percent of household income for households at or below 100 percent of area median income, and includes homeless, at-risk, extremely low-income, disability, intergenerational, and special-needs housing categories. HUD must establish a technical assistance program for faith-based organizations, colleges and universities, and local governments covering use of excess property, preservation of existing affordable housing, resident services, development partners, land lease or sale issues, equitable access, and local barrier removal. HUD must consult the Center for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships plus USDA, Treasury, HHS, and other housing-related agencies. The bill authorizes $25 million for fiscal year 2026 and $10 million per year for fiscal years 2027 through 2031 for technical assistance. It also creates a $50 million annual competitive challenge-grant program for States, local governments, metropolitan planning organizations, and multi-jurisdiction entities with policies designed to remove barriers to affordable housing on faith-owned and higher-education-owned property. Applicants must publish proposed plans, solicit public comments, address those comments in final plans, and report data to HUD for monitoring and evaluation.
Who Benefits and How
Faith-based organizations and colleges benefit because HUD technical assistance helps them convert excess land or preserve affordable housing while navigating development partners, leases, ownership, resident services, and federal assistance. Local governments, States, metropolitan planning organizations, and multi-jurisdiction entities benefit from challenge grants when they remove zoning, procedural, or policy barriers. Low-income families, homeless veterans, people with disabilities, intergenerational families, and other special-needs households benefit if the program creates housing in well-resourced areas of opportunity.
Who Bears the Burden and How
HUD program staff must design technical assistance, consult other federal agencies, run competitive grants, monitor grantee performance, evaluate outcomes, and enforce the 10 percent administrative cap. Grant applicants must demonstrate barrier-removal policies, prepare applications, publish plans, solicit public comments, address comments in final plans, comply with HUD reporting, and manage oversight costs. Faith-based property owners and universities may face legal, financing, community-engagement, land-use, and long-term affordability compliance work if they participate. Federal taxpayers fund the appropriations.
Key Provisions
- Establishes a HUD technical assistance program for affordable rental housing on faith-owned and higher-education-owned property.
- Authorizes $25 million for fiscal year 2026 and $10 million per year from fiscal years 2027 through 2031 for technical assistance.
- Creates a $50 million annual challenge-grant program for eligible State, local, metropolitan, and multi-jurisdiction applicants.
- Requires challenge-grant applicants to publish plans, solicit public comments, and address those comments in final applications.
- Directs grant preferences toward housing for families below 60 percent of area median income, extremely low-income families, homeless households, veterans, people with disabilities, intergenerational families, and special-needs populations.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Adds HUD technical assistance and challenge-grant programs to help faith-based organizations, higher education institutions, and local governments remove barriers and produce or preserve affordable rental housing on faith-owned or campus-owned property, with $25 million for technical assistance in fiscal year 2026, $10 million annually through 2031, and $50 million annually for challenge grants from 2026 through 2031.
Key Policy Areas
Housing, Real Estate, Non-Profit Institutions, Education
Primary Purpose
Adds HUD technical assistance and challenge-grant programs to help faith-based organizations, higher education institutions, and local governments remove barriers and produce or preserve affordable rental housing on faith-owned or campus-owned property, with $25 million for technical assistance in fiscal year 2026, $10 million annually through 2031, and $50 million annually for challenge grants from 2026 through 2031.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Faith-based organizations
- Colleges
- Universities
- Local governments
- Low-income families
- Homeless veterans
- People with disabilities
- Intergenerational families
Identified Costs
- HUD program staff
- State housing agencies
- Local housing departments
- Metropolitan planning organizations
- Faith-based property owners
- University real estate offices
- Federal taxpayers
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
In CommitteeMs. Barragán (for herself and Mr. Obernolte) introduced the following …
Referred to the House Committee on Financial Services.
Introduced in House
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Faith-based organizations and institutions of higher education seeking to convert property into affordable housing, Faith-based organizations, institutions of higher education, and local governments using technical assistance to develop affordable rental housing
States and local governments with qualifying barrier-removal housing policies
Low-income and special-needs households needing affordable rental housing
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
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