The technology posture of the federal government’s housing apparatus has been a hot topic of discussion for years. Advocates have advised — and sometimes warned — of the need to modernize the tech infrastructure at government housing agencies.
With the dawn of artificial intelligence (AI) and its increasing dominance in the tech landscape, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) announced on Tuesday that it has rooted out inactive policy documents from online department archives while detailing the advancements in AI technology for “locating and extracting” the information.
FHA’s “Office of Single Family Housing (OSFH) is announcing that it has officially archived nearly 600 policy documents that are no longer active, and whose web location and availability have caused confusion and challenges for lenders and others trying to obtain accurate FHA Single Family policy information,” the agency announced. “This effort supports the Trump administration’s goal of increasing government efficiency.”
The effort follows what FHA calls a recently completed review of single-family “artifacts” that were previously available on the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)’s Client Information Policy System (HUDCLIPS) webpages. The agency said that the active policy directory still featured inactive policy documents, including Mortgagee Letters (MLs) dating back to 1978.
“These MLs were expired and/or superseded by the Single Family Housing Policy Handbook 4000.1 or other policy documents but not moved to the archives for various reasons,” the notice explained. “With that review completed, those MLs have been archived in the inactive or superseded MLs webpages on HUDCLIPS.”
The notice also alluded to the usefulness of AI tools in identifying outdated or inaccurate policy guidance.
“Today’s [AI] tools are more efficient at locating and extracting information from vast sources of web content, including information from HUD’s active ML policy directory and its Handbook 4000.1,” the announcement said. “This streamlining effort will help improve the accuracy of information received from manual and AI-generated web searches about FHA Single Family policy, programs, and technology modernization efforts.”
This marks the Trump administration’s second major publicly announced effort to streamline its technology posture for the government’s housing arm.
Last month, HUD unveiled a redesigned website, explaining that as much as 90% of the material from the former site was cut to eliminate redundancies and to “streamline” the user experience.
But some pre-existing functions have also been affected, including a regular cadence of data releases that many housing organizations and businesses rely on.
Some of these features are starting to come back online, including FHA Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) data that reverse mortgage professionals use to track industry and program performance.
A reverse industry vendor recently told HousingWire that while this data is seemingly impacted by the website redesign and continues to lag, newer data has started to be posted again.
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