Housing authorities across New York manage confidential resident information including social security numbers, income documentation, and housing assistance data requiring rigorous protection. When systems fail or breaches occur, operations halt while HUD compliance obligations trigger mandatory reporting threatening funding.
NetConnect delivers IT services ensuring resident management systems stay online, tenant information remains protected, and technology satisfies HUD requirements supporting affordable housing programs.
Protect tenant records against the privacy rules HUD and the state both set.
Run Yardi or AppFolio on a network that survives a quarter-end close.
Answer the MEL cybersecurity questionnaire with documented controls in place.
Patch and monitor the office network the resident services team relies on.
Our housing authority IT methodology emphasizes resident privacy, HUD compliance, system reliability, and secure communication rather than commercial property approaches. These focus areas ensure technology protects vulnerable populations while satisfying the federal requirements that public housing operations demand.
Federal regulations require specific protections for resident personal information, income documentation, and assistance eligibility data. We implement encryption, access controls, audit logging, and security measures satisfying HUD privacy requirements.
Resident management platforms processing applications, recertifications, and rent calculations cannot fail during peak periods. We monitor systems continuously, maintain optimal performance, and respond immediately when issues occur..
Staff communicate about resident circumstances, eligibility determinations, and assistance programs requiring confidentiality protection. We implement secure email, configure appropriate access controls, and ensure communications are protected.
Housing authorities face regular compliance reviews examining data security, reporting accuracy, and technology practices. We implement controls satisfying HUD expectations, maintain required documentation, and keep you prepared.

When property management systems crash during recertification deadlines or fail during application processing periods, your housing authority and its staff can't determine eligibility, calculate rents, or get other work done on the timeline you need to.
Data breaches exposing resident information trigger mandatory HUD notification, potential Office of Inspector General investigations, and damage to resident trust in organizations managing their most sensitive personal and financial information.
Since 1992 our operations team has been running IT for tri-state small offices and housing authorities, which means HUD audits and MEL questionnaires have never been a new surprise. The housing-authority practice was built the same way we built the rest of the book, not as a separate department.
When a call from your authority comes in to NetConnect, the ticket joins the Staten Island operations queue alongside a private school’s LMS issue or a construction firm’s ransomware alert. A Yardi outage gets the same named crew, the same documented runbook, and the same plain-English status update.

Housing authorities answer to HUD, to the state housing agency, to the MEL joint insurance fund on the New Jersey side, and to the auditor who arrives at fiscal year end. Our arrangement starts with a current inventory of every system that holds tenant, financial, and HR data, and maps that inventory against the controls the HUD auditor and the MEL carrier expect to see documented. The questionnaire answer gets pulled from that map, not invented on deadline week.
A compliance control is only as useful as the paperwork sitting underneath it. The documentation we keep on file for your housing authority is written once and then updated as systems change, not rewritten in a panic the week before the audit. Here is what that looks like when the HUD inspector walks in during audit week and the MEL questionnaire lands in your Executive Director’s inbox the same quarter.
A current inventory of every system that touches tenant data.
Control evidence written as the work happens, not the night before.
One place to pull answers for HUD, MEL, and the state auditor.
Rent collection, waiting-list management, HUD-50058 transmissions, and the tenant portal all live on the same property management platform, and when that platform stops responding on a Monday morning, your front desk goes idle. Our team supports the Yardi or AppFolio deployment behind every housing authority on our book, from the server where it runs to the Internet circuit carrying it, and the resident-facing portal sitting in front. Outages and upgrades run on our tickets, not yours.
The property management system is the spine of a housing authority. Every resident file, every rent payment, every HUD-50058 transmission passes through it. When a question or an outage hits, the ticket has to land somewhere that knows both the network and the software. That is the integration gap we fill for housing authority clients. Here is what coverage looks like in a typical work week.
Yardi and AppFolio deployments supported at the server and network layer.
Tenant-portal uptime monitored alongside the management platform itself.
HUD-50058 transmission runs logged and retried on the same ticket line.
A housing authority cannot afford a week offline during the middle of a rent cycle, and a ransomware incident on tenant records is not a recoverable press release. Our arrangement covers encrypted onsite backup, offsite replication, and a written recovery runbook your Executive Director can read. We test the runbook on a schedule you approve at kickoff, so the first time we run the recovery is not the morning after a real incident hits.
Continuity at a housing authority looks different from continuity at a law firm or a construction office. A ransomware incident that locks the tenant records the week rent is due is not the same kind of outage as one that locks an insurance broker mid-quote. Our recovery runbook treats the HUD reporting deadline and the rent cycle as real deadlines, not guidelines. Here is what that side of the service looks like.
Encrypted backup that survives the deletion of a working file.
Offsite replication so a building outage does not take the office with it.
A recovery runbook tested on a schedule your leadership approves.
IT services for housing authorities help organizations throughout New York protect resident information, maintain HUD compliance, and support affordable housing programs. With NetConnect, you gain public housing technology specialists understanding federal requirements instead of treating you like commercial property managers.
Public Housing Knowledge
We understand resident management platforms, HUD reporting requirements, federal privacy regulations, and the compliance obligations differentiating housing authorities from commercial property operations across the region. This knowledge ensures appropriate system configuration and federal requirement satisfaction preventing compliance issues.
Resident Protection
Vulnerable populations require extra privacy protections beyond commercial standards that typical properties follow. We implement security safeguarding resident information, prevent unauthorized access, and maintain confidentiality meeting both federal requirements and ethical obligations consistently.
Compliance Focus
HUD compliance reviews examine data security, reporting accuracy, and technology practices during regular monitoring visits. We implement controls satisfying federal expectations, maintain required documentation, and prepare organizations for reviews ensuring technology doesn't create compliance findings threatening funding.
Operational Reliability
Resident services cannot wait for slow technology responses during critical processing periods. We prioritize housing authority issues appropriately, respond immediately when systems threaten operations, and maintain reliability supporting the affordable housing programs that communities depend upon daily.
Yes. The MEL cybersecurity questionnaire is not an outside-scope form. Our engineers pull the answers from the same control inventory we keep on file for the authority, and your Executive Director signs the completed document with the evidence attached. If the carrier calls back with follow-up questions on a calibration call, our team sits in on the call with you.
Yes. Yardi and AppFolio are common on our book of housing authority clients, and our engineers have walked the back-end configuration on both. We support the platforms at the infrastructure layer, meaning the server the software runs on, the network it traverses, and the backup that protects the database, and we coordinate with the Yardi or AppFolio reseller when a functional ticket crosses into software configuration work.
HUD audit documentation is written as the work happens, not in a panic the week before the auditor walks in. The controls that protect tenant records, rent-roll data, and personnel files are each documented on the same ticket line where the work gets done, so the evidence attached to a finding is the evidence the auditor would see anyway.
Cleanly is the only way we run a takeover. The handoff begins with a current-state inventory pulled together with your existing vendor in the room, or with your HR and finance staff when the prior vendor will not sit in on the call. We document every account, license, and password before cutover, and the first weeks run in parallel so nothing drops.