(a) Subject to the requirements of this section and of Article 5 (commencing with Section 34350), an authority may do any of the following: (1) Issue revenue bonds for the purpose of financing the acquisition, construction, rehabilitation, refinancing, or development of multifamily rental housing and for the provision of capital improvements in connection with and determined necessary to the multifamily rental housing. (2) Make or undertake commitments to make construction loans and mortgage loans to finance the acquisition, construction, rehabilitation, refinancing, or development of multifamily rental housing. (3) Purchase or undertake, directly or indirectly through lending institutions, commitments to purchase, construction loans, and mortgage loans originated in accordance with a financing agreement with the authority to finance the acquisition, construction, rehabilitation, refinancing, or development of multifamily rental housing or make loans to lending institutions under terms and conditions which, in addition to other provisions determined by the authority, shall require the lending institutions to use the net proceeds of the loans for the making, directly or indirectly, of construction loans or mortgage loans to finance the acquisition, construction, rehabilitation, refinancing, or development of multifamily rental housing. (b) An authority may develop, rehabilitate, or finance housing projects or participate in the development, rehabilitation, or financing of housing projects; or purchase, sell, lease, own, operate, or manage housing projects so assisted, subject to all of the requirements of this section. So long as the proceeds of any sale, lease, or other disposition of real property, net of the cost of sale, are to be used directly to assist a housing project pursuant to this section for persons of low income, and the funds in any trust fund established pursuant to subdivision (f) are used directly to assist housing units for persons of very low income, an authority may, after a public hearing, sell, lease, or otherwise dispose of the real property without complying with any provision of law concerning disposition of surplus property, including, but not limited to, Sections 34315.5 and 34315.7. An authority may convey surplus lands it acquires from another public agency to a nonprofit or private developer for development of single-family homes where the development will provide for home ownership for persons and families of low or moderate income, as defined in Section 50093. This conveyance shall be after a public hearing. With the exception of subdivisions (b), (c), and (d) of Section 34315.7, the conveyance need not comply with any law concerning the disposition of surplus properties, including, but not limited to, Section 34315.5 or subdivision (a) of Section 34315.7. The proceeds of any sale or other disposition of surplus land, net of the cost of sale, shall be used to assist a housing project pursuant to this section for persons of low income. (c) (1) (A) Not less than 20 percent of all units in housing projects assisted by an authority pursuant to this section shall be available for occupancy on a priority basis to persons of low income. In the case of housing projects located within a targeted area, as defined by Section 103(b)(12)(A) of Title 26 of the United States Code, not less than 15 percent of all units in those housing projects assisted pursuant to this section shall be for occupancy on a priority basis by persons of low income. (B) If the sponsor elects to establish a base rent for units reserved for lower income households, the base rents shall be adjusted for household size. In adjusting rents for household size, the sponsor shall either assume, pursuant to Section 8 of the United States Housing Act of 1937 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1437f), or its successor, that a family of one person will occupy a studio unit, two persons will occupy a one-bedroom unit, three persons will occupy a two-bedroom unit,
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