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Property Stabilization Investments - FAQs

Property Stabilization Investments (PSIs) help address urgent threats to the financial viability of properties in the OHCS portfolio. These investments are to be employed only when other resources and strategies have been exhausted.

Below are answers to common questions. Still need help? Please contact us through our ORCA Questions and Feedback help portal.


PSI Frequently Asked Questions

​For such projects without debt post intervention, OHCS will evaluate applications based on the expense-to-income (E/I) ratio.  The PSI subsidy requested should bring the properties without remaining debt to an E/I of no less than 77% for the first five years post-award. Where the E/I for a property without debt is higher than 87% (equivalent to a 1.15 DCR) and under 100%, they may proceed but are required to incorporate efforts within their Property Improvement Plan to reduce project operating costs and increase project revenue within 12 months of funding reservation. 

​Once you have submitted an intake and gotten a Procorem WorkCenter, upload the lender letter of interest (LOI) for OAHTCs as part of your initial submission. Note that using OAHTCs will likely reduce the amount of PSI for debt buydown that is needed, and the PSI amount will be adjusted during the underwriting process. OHCS has issued temporary Oregon Administrative Rules that allow OAHTCs to be used with PSI, however per HB 2087 (2025) this is only available to loans made or modified on or after January 1, 2026. This will delay your PSI closing until after that date. This will not affect the applicant's place in the queue for PSI funds. ​

Yes. You should fill in the current lender information and all terms in the application workbook. Additionally, if you have already been in discussion with the new lender, please upload the letter of interest (LOI) and leave a comment indicating that there will be a change in lenders, in your Procorem WorkCenter. OHCS staff will review and gather more information during underwriting. If the project is funded with bonds, then the refinancing of the debt with a new lender and new tax-exempt debt will likely involve a refunding instead of a reissuance and will add several weeks to the process, but this will not affect the applicant’s place in the queue for PSI funds. The sponsor would need to reach out to bond counsel to determine next steps with regard to either a refunding or reissuance transaction, including any taxable refinancing.   

No. OHCS works with tax reissuance on a regular basis. Sponsors need to reach out to OHCS’s Bond Counsel to modify the terms, interest rate, and principal adjustments occurring as part of the PSI award and confirm that the modifications trigger a “reissuance” for federal tax purposes. If so, Bond Counsel can assist to ensure appropriate documentation and that necessary steps (including the Tax Equity and Responsibility Act (TEFRA) hearing and approval) are taken to ensure continuing tax compliance. Sponsors can use PSI administrative fees to cover costs associated with bond reissuance, if desired (maximum is 3% of the total PSI funding request). In connection with a tax reissuance a new TEFRA hearing will likely be required, and the State Treasurer’s Office will need to approve the reissuance. The TEFRA hearing and approval will take 4-6 weeks, so sponsors should initiate the process as soon as possible as they have indication of a PSI award. This will not affect the applicant’s place in the queue for PSI funds.  

​No. PSI is intended to stabilize financially distressed properties through debt buydown. Debt buydown is not optional, and all applications must ask for at least some amount of debt buydown. Optional items that applicants can choose to request (or not) include repairs and an administrative fee. ​

​No. Operating funds are not an eligible use of the PSI funding source, which is lottery revenue bonds. ​

​If the project is already considered to be a scattered site project within the OHCS portfolio, then you should submit one project application as a scattered site. Otherwise, you should generally submit the applications separately and each property would need to meet the eligibility criteria. Once you submit two or more applications for separate sites, an OHCS production analyst would be available to work with you and your lender to determine whether and how to combine the sites into one project, and potentially recapitalize as a 4% LIHTC project, if desired.​

​OHCS has sufficient capacity for OAHTC, including all the PSI loans that may be made in the funding allocated in the 2025-27 biennium. As such, there is no need for a PSI set-aside.​

​The loan amount is based on a pro rata formula, meaning that only affordable units are counted to determine the maximum funding level of $25,000 per unit (or $2 million, whichever is less). For repairs, only affordable units can be counted and funded under the $50,000 plus $5,000 per unit maximum.  

​PSI funds will be subordinate to primary debt and can be subordinate to other existing soft debt if the need is demonstrated. Individual project financial structures will be evaluated for need, and OHCS would seek participation by other subordinate lenders especially where OHCS is asked to subordinate. For example, if interest has accrued on that soft debt, OHCS would seek to have debt increases reduced or reamortized wherever possible in support of the overall project financial operational budget adjustment in alignment with the primary lender and OHCS investments.​

​There are no specific criteria that determine the interest rate on the PSI loan. A 1% loan is considered standard. If a lower rate is requested, your OHCS production analyst will discuss the barriers with you and your lender and determine whether a 0% rate may be justified. Please note that OHCS does not collect interest payments annually during the loan term.  ​

​No. If there is not currently an investor, the LIHTC letter is not applicable.​

​No. If you have been working on a PIP with your OHCS asset manager (AM), you are welcome to continue that work, but a completed, signed PIP is not required for PSI funding. Note that if your application is funded and you requested funds for repairs, your assigned AM will work with you to demonstrate that those items are complete. ​If your project cannot meet the success metrics defined above, you will be required to complete a PIP with your asset manager within 12 months of award.​

​Yes, if the amount is >120 days and >$25,000). OHCS reviewers will be able to see on your financial statements whether outside subsidy has supported the property, and whether paying those funds back to the source is needed.​

​No. If this is your situation, you should fill out the application workbook as if you had not been subsidizing it. You should also provide either an attachment or make a comment in Procorem indicating where on the property's financial statements those support payments are shown.   ​

​No. Placing the loan into forbearance is highly desirable, but not something that will exclude the application from consideration. Once the application review is underway, the OHCS production analyst will be happy to discuss this with the lender, as needed.​

​If this is your situation, you should fill out the application workbook as if the property did not have a loan(s) in forbearance. That means you will include the lender information, as well as all principal and interest payments that you would have normally made, showing them in the application proformas. This will give OHCS reviewers a true picture of how the property would be performing without forbearance and without stabilization. ​

​No, loans in forbearance do not make the property ineligible.​

​Check with your lender, but they should be aware that due to a regulatory change, so long as the maturity date and interest rate stay the same, accepting the PSI buy-down should not trigger the loan to be labeled as troubled debt.  ​

​No, this is an ineligible use of funds. The funding source must be used for items considered capital expenses and cannot be used for operating or other non-capital expenses.​

​PSI can fully pay off a loan if your balance is less than the funding amount requested. In this situation, however, a lender payoff letter detailing the specific amount of funding needed to pay off the loan would be needed as part of the application. Upload this in Procorem where you are prompted for the lender letter of commitment. ​

If the project is eligible and approved for funding, the PSI loan will be the amount needed to achieve 1.15. In line with OHCS's standard proforma guidelines, fluctuation up to 1.30 within the first five years is allowed. If the DCR floats below 1.15, then the proposed funding is not enough to stabilize. If the DCR goes over 1.30, the OHCS production analyst will look at whether less funding is needed to stabilize.​


Yes. OHCS will consider other must-pay debt to be bought down with PSI funds if the lender is also willing to participate in the loan reamortization process as is outlined in the PSI Instruction Guide for buydown of senior debt.

No. PSI is focused on the debt that is senior to OHCS (or in the case of LIFT, shared first position). Unless the request is to buy down more than one loan (and that can be achieved within the $2 million cap) PSI funds would only be used to buy down senior lender debt.​

No. A primary eligibility criterion for PSI is a DCR <1.0 for at least 12 months. However, if there is an issue with conversion, please reach out to your OHCS Asset Manager to explore options.

No. The two-project limit was lifted for preservation projects, and OHCS considers stabilization to be within the realm of preservation.

Yes, public housing authorities are eligible. In addition, see the OHCS General Policy and Guideline Manual, page 5, that indicates that 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) organizations are considered nonprofits.