HUD No. 04-603RIN (312) 353-6236 ext. 2666 |
For
Release Thursday June 3, 2004 |
HUD AWARDS $16,778,288 HOPE VI GRANT TO INDIANAPOLIS TO TRANSFORM PUBLIC HOUSING, HELP RESIDENTS
CHICAGO - The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development today awarded a $16,778,288 HOPE VI Revitalization grant to the Indianapolis Housing Authority that will be used to replace aging public housing with new housing for 217 families.
In Indianapolis, the grant for Brokenburr Trails will replace 250 older public housing units with 58 public housing units. It will also develop 107 other rental units and 52 homes for sale. The new community will blend seamlessly into the surrounding neighborhood with the construction of new streets linked to the existing street grid. Supporting the new development will be a new 10,000 square foot Community Center that will serve as the hub for community programs, and a new 2.5-acre neighborhood park will be programmed with activities and equipment. Following a competitive procurement process, the Indianapolis Housing Authority has selected BRIndy, LLC - a joint venture among Brinshore Development, LLC, The Richman Group of the Midwest, LLC, and HG Partners, LLC - to be its development partner. The new community will be privately managed by Flaherty & Collins, an Accredited Management Organization located in Indianapolis.
"I was part of the Congressionally-appointed commission that created the HOPE VI program a little more than 10
years ago," said HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson. "I'm pleased that Indianapolis is one of the 24 cities that will get funding this year to revitalize this community and improve the lives of its residents."
Indianapolis was selected from a pool of 56 applications HUD received from public housing authorities (PHAs) for the 2003 funding. This is the first HOPE VI Revitalization grant for the Indianapolis Housing Authority.
These PHAs were competitively selected with an emphasis on the effectiveness and project readiness of their public housing revitalization plans. HUD policy provides local housing authorities the flexibility to develop revitalization plans that meet their local needs. A team of HUD public housing and revitalization specialists score applications based on several revitalization rating factors, including:
Capacity: The ability of the housing authority or developer to administer and manage completion of the revitalization effort.
Need for Revitalization: The severity of physical distress of the development.
Match/Leveraging: The ability of the housing authority to supplement the HOPE VI grant with funding from other sources - private, state or local government.
As part of today's award, HUD will pay relocation costs for residents being displaced by this revitalization effort. Relocated residents who meet program requirements will be given the opportunity to move back to the newly constructed units at the site. Alternatively, if residents choose not to return to public housing, they will be given Section 8 vouchers to subsidize their rents in privately owned housing. In addition, relocated residents receiving vouchers will be provided with the same job training and services offered to people living in the revitalized development.
Including this round of grants, HUD has awarded 217 Revitalization grants to 118 cities that total $5.5 billion. With
$5 billion already awarded and $2.3 billion, but not yet spent, HOPE VI funding will continue to impact communities well into the future.
The HOPE VI program, also known as the Urban Revitalization Demonstration, was created in 1992 as a result of a report by the National Commission on Severely Distressed Public Housing, which found approximately 86,000 public housing units in the U.S. needed revitalization. The first HOPE VI Revitalization grants were awarded in 1993.
To date, approximately 112,000 aging public housing units have already been demolished. Of that number, HOPE VI Revitalization grants are responsible for demolishing 65,000 of those units. HOPE VI Revitalization funding will also demolish an additional 17,000 units. Over all, there are 145,300 aging public housing units that have been or are slated for demolition using HOPE VI funding and other HUD programs.
When the first HOPE VI grants were awarded 10 years ago, it was the only significant means of leveraging private capital to revitalize public housing properties. Today new financial tools are available to public housing authorities.
For example, HUD has approved bond and loan transactions that have leveraged approximately $1.5 billion in the last two years. By using HUD's Capital Fund Financing program, PHAs borrow large amounts of cash to do major capital improvements or construct new units. They pay the debt using a portion of their annual Capital Fund allocation from HUD.
HUD is the nation's
housing agency committed to increasing homeownership, particularly among minorities,
creating affordable housing opportunities for low-income Americans, supporting
the homeless, elderly, people with disabilities and people living with AIDS. The
Department also promotes economic and community development as well as
enforces
the nation's fair housing laws. More information about HUD and its programs is
available on the Internet and espanol.
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