Taking a wild guess here:
Is the "loan" something that you have the ability to repay?
My guess is they believe the money is actually not a loan, but some form of income disguised as a loan.
Loaned against inherited money - Left by 'will' to person loaning me the money - As it stands if I die soon that person
may come out ahead.
HUD housing managed by Housing Authority does not count resources {supposedly} when it comes to qualifying ]
for low income housing - only income. I have always been honest with them and they were told about the loan
arrangement before I moved in - They accepted it and did not count the money {received monthly} into the calculation
of rent cost, which was very low because of very low social security check - Other benefits such as SSI {supplemental security income} and Medicaid were lost because of inherited money.
The lease signed and approved last year ends at the end of this month and they had me sign another lease with the same low rent several month ahead of time - supposedly to allow time for processing. Get a letter a couple of weeks
ago saying rent would be going up from about 50 dollars to about 5 times the amount - True, this is still cheap by
modern standards - But I still wonder about the legality of what they are doing?
The manager of Apt., while not disputing that it is a loan, says it is the way you are receiving it {I suppose she means
monthly} - Regular payments can be counted as calculable income. The Housing Authority case worker though, says
what you are saying that it is not really a loan ??? - Then why didn't they question it in the first place last year???
The thing that bothers me though, as I did some research into the resources they use to calculate rental costs, and I came up with this:
Attachment B U.S. Census Definition of Income ...........
"The Census Bureau does not count the following receipts as income: (1) capital gains people received (or losses they incur) from the sale of property, including stocks, bonds, a house, or a car (unless the person was engaged in the business of selling such property, in which case the CPS counts the net proceeds as income from self-employment); (2) withdrawals of bank deposits; (3) money borrowed; (4) tax refunds; (5) gifts; and (6) lump-sum payments such as inheritances or insurance payments."
https://www.hud.gov/sites/documents/CALCULATINGATTACHMENT.PDF
Notice that borrowed money is specifically exempt - And even if they counted the money as a gift, that too is
exempt.
The final question might be is weather they are obligated to follow those guidelines, or, as they appear to be
doing to me, change the calculation to suit their needs ???
Thanks for your advice
- Rekall