HUD Archives: News Releases


William Shaw
(317) 226-6303 ext. 6322
For Release
Tuesday
January 12, 2010

HUD AWARDS $282,080 THOUSAND DOLLARS IN GRANTS TO HOUSING AUTHORITIES IN INDIANA TO HELP PUBLIC HOUSING RESIDENTS OBTAIN JOBS AND ECONOMIC INDEPENDENCE

WASHINGTON - The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development today awarded $282,080 thousand dollars
to six Indiana housing authorities to help public housing residents find jobs that lead them toward economic independence. The six Indiana housing authorities are:

Housing Authority of the City of Elkhart
$39,788
Housing Authority of the City of Fort Wayne, Indiana
$42,600
Housing Authority of the City of Terre Haute
$63,553
Housing Authority of the County of Delaware, Indiana
$49,764
Indianapolis Housing Agency
$45,000
The Housing Authority of the City of Michigan City, Indiana
$41,375

For more information on state funding, visit HUD's website.

The grants are provided through HUD's Public Housing Family Self-Sufficiency Program, which enables public housing authorities (PHA) to hire program coordinators who work directly with residents to connect them with local education and training opportunities; job placement organizations and local employers. The purpose of the program is to encourage local innovative strategies that link public housing assistance with public and private resources to enable participating families to increase earned income; reduce or eliminate the need for welfare assistance; and make progress toward achieving economic independence and housing self-sufficiency.

"Families who complete this program accomplish the milestones that improve an individual's quality of life - a new job or professional certification," said HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan, who announced the grants today. "Most importantly, these families get the courage and confidence to succeed."

Participating public housing residents sign a contract to participate, which outlines their responsibilities towards completion of training and employment objectives over a five-year period. For those families receiving welfare assistance, the PHA must establish an interim goal that the participating family be independent from welfare assistance prior to the expiration of the contract. During their participation, residents may create an escrow
account funded with their increasing income, which they may use in a variety of ways, including continuing their education or making major purchase. A HUD study found low-income families who participated in this program saw their in comes increase at a higher rate than non-participants. According to the study, between 1996 and 2000,
FSS participants experienced a 72 percent increase in their median income, from $6,936 to $11,960. Among non-FSS participants, the increase was half as large, at 36 percent.

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Content Archived: March 15, 2012