Affordable Senior Housing News 2026June26

Kierstin Reed • June 25, 2026

LeadingAge to Co-Host GRRP Webinar

Please join LeadingAge, the Housing Partnership Network, Stewards of Affordable Housing for the Future, Community Preservation Corporation, and NeighborWorks America for an informative presentation and peer exchange on building a scope of work for projects with Comprehensive awards through the Green and Resilient Retrofit Program (GRRP). The webinar is part of a series featuring guest speakers and peer exchange through open discussion. The webinar will be held on Thursday, July 9, 1:30 p.m. - 3 p.m. ET. Register here. 

Congress Passes Major Housing Reform Legislation, President's Signature Uncertain. 

Following the landmark passage of the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act by both chambers of Congress, the President cancelled the signing of the bill, demanding Congressional action instead on an unrelated pieced of legislation. In a statement from Katie Smith Sloan, president and CEO of LeadingAge, Sloan stated: "We urgently call on President Trump to reverse course on cancelling his signing of this legislation into law. Nothing, and certainly not an unrelated debate, should stand in the way of making momentous and bipartisan progress on housing in America." The statement goes on to say that LeadingAge welcomes the final bill's "balanced approach to improving affordable housing, community investment, disaster recovery, housing preservation, and much more." Because the legislation does not include new funding for direly-needed housing programs, LeadingAge is calling on lawmakers to continue the work to address the nation's housing crisis, including for older adults and the workforce that serves them. "Building on this legislation, policymakers at the federal, state, and local levels must continue working to expand housing supply and ensure that middle-income households and those with the lowest incomes alike can access affordable, accessible homes," said Sloan. 

Harvard Report Shows “Profoundly Underfunded” Affordable Housing Nationwide. 

On June 17, the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University released its annual “State of the Nation’s Housing Report” showing severe housing shortages nationwide, particularly for households with low incomes. The report describes the fragile state of the current affordable housing portfolio: More than half a million homes finances through the Low Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) could lose rent protections in the coming decade. For older adults, the stakes are “especially high,” says LeadingAge president and CEO Katie Smith Sloan in her response to the report. “The report reinforces that America’s most serious and intractable shortage is for homes affordable to households with low incomes. It also makes clear that while increasing housing supply is important, it is not enough: public subsidy is necessary. The reality is that today’s development costs make it impossible to produce and operate affordable housing for low-income older adults as well as many of the professionals who care for older adults without public investment. At the same time, housing assistance remains profoundly underfunded, reaching only a fraction of those who qualify, while federal support continues to fall far short of need,” according to LeadingAge. The report also underscores a clear path forward that involves a federal commitment to expanding housing supply and strengthening public funding behind it. Read the report here, and read LeadingAge’s statement here.


LeadingAge Urges HUD to Delay, Clarify Immigration Reverification Directive

In response to the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) directive that certain Multifamily Housing providers reverify the immigration status of certain HUD-assisted tenants, LeadingAge has urged the agency to delay and clarify compliance requirements. In May, HUD stated that properties participating in certain HUD-assisted Multifamily Housing programs (excluding the PRAC programs) were to comply with the reverification directive within 30 days utilizing a new EIV/SAVE report. However, the report has not been operational and HUD has not communicated with housing providers about next steps. In our advocacy with HUD, LeadingAge requested that the agency delay compliance, clarify the expected actions owners are to take, support owners with access to the report, clarify which properties need to take action, protect tenant privacy, and more.


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By Kierstin Reed June 25, 2026
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By Kierstin Reed June 25, 2026
PBJ System Transitioning to iQIES in August: The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) announced on June 12, that the Payroll-Based Journal (PBJ) system will transition to internet Quality Improvement and Evaluation System (iQIES) on August 17, 2026. The PBJ system is the only system remaining in the previous QIES system while all other programs have transitioned to iQIES. iQIES is a secure, cloud-based system that CMS uses to collect and manage quality and compliance information. Effective on August 17, 2026, long-term care providers must submit all PBJ staffing data in iQIES. CMS will provide additional information before the launch through various email notifications regarding onboarding, training, details on what to expect, and more. Until then, please ensure that you complete the following (if you haven’t done so already): Create a HCQIS Access Roles and Profile System (HARP) account. Skip this step if you already have a HARP account. If you don’t have an account register here. Request access to iQIES – submit your request early so your access is ready before launch. Although you may request your PBJ role before August 17 (CMS strongly recommends you do so), PBJ functionality will not be available before August 17, 2026. Choose the correct PBJ role within iQIES – Provider Security Official (PSO) – Can view, upload, edit PBJ data and run PBJ reports. This role also approves user access. PBJ Submitter (Provider or Vendor): Can view, upload, edit PBJ data and run PBJ reports. Provider Administrator: View – only access and run PBJ reports. PBJ Viewer: View-only access and run PBJ reports. Additional information on roles can be found in the iQIES Onboarding Process – Provider User Roles Manual posted on the iQIES Reference and Manuals on the QTSO under iQIES Onboarding Guides. 4. Get approval from your facility’s PSO – Your access will not become active until they approve it. Each facility must have at least one PSO to manage access for additional users. Once you register for an iQIES account, be sure to log in regularly. If you don’t log in for 60 days, you’ll lose access to iQIES. Additional information on the iQIES Inactive User Policy can be found on QTSO. Vendors must request access for each facility they represent and get approval from a PSO at each facility, using the facility’s CMS Certification Number (CCN). Policy questions should be emailed to nhstaffing@cms.hhs.gov Technical questions: Contact the iQIES Service Center at 800.339.9313 Monday – Friday 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. ET (7 a.m. – 7 p.m. CT) You may also request assistance via secure chat or schedule a call through CCSQ Support Central. Please note that Chat Support is currently limited to 8 a.m. – 4 p.m. CT Monday – Friday.
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**Thank You for Attending!** LeadingAge RAD for PRAC Peer-Sharing and Policy Discussion.
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