Skip to main content

Oregon State Flag An official website of the State of Oregon »

PRICE Grant Meeting Notes: Feb. 4, 2026

As part of HUD Preservation and Reinvestment Initiative for Community Enhancement (PRICE) Main grant requirements, OHCS conducted two public hearings in June 2024 and one in February 2026, where the public was invited to provide public comment on the applications materials. Below are the Feb. 4, 2026, meeting notes.


Stakeholder meeting notes

  • Presenter: Talia Kahn-Kravis 
  • Program: Preservation and Reinvestment Initiative for Community Enhancement (PRICE) 
  • Funder: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) 
  • Total Grant: $13.75 million 
  • Administered by: OHCS (Oregon Housing and Community Services)

List of attendees

  • Talia Kahn-Kravis, OHCS 
  • Rachel Pallatin, OHCS 
  • Rick Abrego, OHCS 
  • Emily Arnold, OHCS 
  • Nathan Clark, OHCS 
  • Shauna McDonough, OHCS 
  • Brit McLean, OHCS 
  • Liz H, OHCS 
  • Kari Hodai, OHCS 
  • Bill Van Vliet, NOAH 
  • Alex Annand, CASA 
  • Ann Remmers, NOAH 
  • Gloria LeFleur, Housing Authority of Clackamas County 
  • John Trinh, City of Portland Housing Bureau 
  • Sergio Garcia, Mid Columbia Housing Authority, The Dalles

  • Matthew Van Dyk, ODHS 
  • Jessica Taylor, NeighborImpact 
  • Sam Humphreys, Construction Project Manager, Sisters Habitat 
  • Scott Hunter, ORCCA 
  • Mark Wyman, Energy Trust of Oregon 
  • Zack Fappiano, ACCESS 
  • Kazia Nowina-Sapinski, Office of Senator Ron Wyden 
  • Judy Annin, OSTA 
  • Nate Trombley, ICF 
  • Loulie Brown, Sabin CDC 
  • Erica Mills, NeighborWorks Umpqua 
  • Meagan Bakker 
  •  Andrea Crampton


Purpose of meeting

  • Review PRICE program goals. 
  • Describe grant timeline and key dates. 
  • Explain delays due to changing federal landscape. 
  • Present proposed amendment to the original plan. 
  • Gather stakeholder feedback before submitting amendment to HUD.

PRICE program goals (HUD)

  • Support manufactured housing for households with low and moderate incomes. 
  • Preserve and revitalize manufactured housing communities. 
  • Protect resident health and safety. 
  • Promote manufactured housing as a homeownership pathway. 
  • Encourage resident-owned community models. Support repair and rehabilitation of manufactured housing.

Timeline and status

  • Grant awarded: February 2024 
  • On hold: February-December 2024 
  • Green light to proceed: January 2026 
  • Performance period ends: September 2032 
  • Projects must be completed by: about 2030 
  • Amendment timing: 
    • Stakeholder meeting now 
    • 15-day public comment period (through Feb. 19) 
    • HUD amendment submission after comment period

Legal context (key point)

  • HUD amendment redefining federal funds as a “public benefit,” triggering citizenship verification requirements. 
  • State response: Oregon joined federal litigation challenging HUD requirements. 
  • Status: Preliminary injunction prevents enforcement of new HUD rules. 
  • No citizenship verification required unless HUD ultimately prevails in court. 
  • OHCS will: 
    • Proceed under current rules. 
    • Include contingency language in contracts. 
    • Not retroactively apply new requirements if funds are spent before a court decision. 
  • Expected court resolution: late 2026 (not guaranteed)

Original PRICE plan (two-pronged)

1. Home repair and replacement

  • Repairs: Homes built after 1976 in preserved parks 
  • Replacements: Homes built before 1976 
  • Administered via community action agencies (CAAs) 
  • Referrals to OHCS for replacements 

2. Park preservation

  • Acquisition of privately owned parks at risk of sale 
  • 60-year affordability covenant 
  • At least 60% of residents are less than or equal to 80% of area median income. 
  • Grants to nonprofits and resident-owned cooperatives 
  • Includes infrastructure upgrades 
  • Requires environmental review 
  • Matched with Oregon Affordable Housing Tax Credits 

Original budget: Roughly split between repair/replacement and preservation.

Proposed amendment (main change)

Shift 100% of PRICE funds to park preservation only. 

  • Eliminate repair and replacement components. 
  • Use full $13.75M for preservation activities.

Reasons for proposed shift

  • High and urgent number of parks at risk of sale 
  • Risk of entire community displacement vs. individual home issues 
  • Limited preservation funding statewide 
    • Only $2.5M appropriated in 2025 Legislative Session (roughly 10% of requested amount). 
  • Parks currently stuck in expiring bridge financing. 
  • Preservation delivers long-term affordability (60 years). 
  • Faster and simpler deployment of funds 
  • Reduced exposure to HUD citizenship verification risks (arm’s-length beneficiaries) 
  • Repair/replacement needs remain important, but preservation stabilizes communities first.

Stakeholder feedback highlights

  • CASA: Strong support; multiple communities at risk of default without preservation funding. 
    • 18 inquiries representing 1,000-plus units
  • Energy Trust of Oregon: 
    • Neutral on amendment 
    • Concern that manufactured home replacement rebates (up to $16K/unit) may go unused without paired replacement funding. 
  • Additional comments: 
    • Suggestion to prioritize preservation now but consider reallocating later if other funding (e.g., bonds) becomes available. 
    • OSTA: supportive of the amendment 
    • Bill Van Vliet (NOAH): supportive. Commented that because there is a preservation ask in session right now, depending on that outcome, it might make sense for OHCS to remain open to using some PRICE funds for replacement.

Important clarifications

  • Amendment is not final and is shaped by public input. 
  • HUD may reject the amendment. 
    • If so, OHCS will revert to original approved plan. 
    • Funds will not be lost.

Public comment


OHCS wants to ensure that everyone has access to its information and programs. If you would like this information in a different language, please email Language.Access@hcs.oregon.gov.