HUD Archives: News Releases


Donna White
(202) 708-0685
For Release
Friday
February 10, 2012

HUD AWARDS KANSAS PUBLIC HOUSING AUTHORITIES NEARLY $10 MILLION TO IMPROVE, PRESERVE PUBLIC HOUSING STOCK
Congress gives approval to test HUD comprehensive affordable housing preservation program

WASHINGTON - U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan awarded today $9,880,896 to public housing authorities in Kansas that will be used to make major large-scale improvements to their public housing units. See detailed list below.

Today's grants are provided through HUD's Capital Fund Program, which provides annual funding to all public housing authorities to build, repair, renovate and/or modernize the public housing in their communities. This funding can be used to make large-scale improvements such as new roofs and to make energy-efficient upgrades to replace old plumbing and electrical systems.

"This funding will help housing authorities address long-standing capital improvements, but it only scratches the surface in addressing the deep backlog we're seeing across the country," said Donovan. "Today, we are closer to helping housing authorities and our private sector partners undertake their capital needs over the long haul. With the passage of HUD's 2012 budget, Congress gave HUD the go-ahead for a new, comprehensive and critical demonstration tool that we believe will help preserve and enhance America's affordable housing, including public housing."

HUD's Great Plains Regional Administrator Derrith Watchman-Moore added, "HUD is committed to improving public housing and creating communities that thrive. These funds help fill the gap for public housing agencies throughout the Great Plains to make enhancements or create more affordable housing."

In November 2011, Congress gave HUD the approval to test a comprehensive tool to preserve public housing and other HUD-assistant housing. Congress authorized HUD to begin a Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD) as part of the Obama Administration's comprehensive strategy to keep these public and other HUD affordable homes on firm financial footing. Public housing authorities need nearly $26 billion to keep these homes safe and decent for families. But given our budget realities, HUD proposed this innovative way to confront the decline of the nation's public and affordable housing stock.

In FY 2012, RAD will enable public housing authorities and owners to continue to make standard life-cycle improvements to their inventory and modernize or replace obsolete units to stem the loss of stock from private sector partners choosing to opt-out of affordable housing programs. The demonstration will bring more than 60,000 properties into a reliable, long term, project-based rental assistance contract - and allow public housing authorities to raise more than $6.1 billion in private financing to reduce the large backlog of capital repair needs and in the process, support significant job creation in communities across the country.

Sandra B. Henriquez, HUD Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian Housing, added, "We see Congress' decision to allow this demonstration to begin as a victory, not only for HUD, but for countless communities that desperately want to improve their public housing and other affordable housing, as well as a victory for families who need quality housing they can afford and who want more options on where they might choose to live."

Last year, HUD released Capital Needs in the Public Housing Program, a study that updated the national estimate of capital needs in the public housing stock in the U.S. The study found the nation's 1.2 million public housing units are facing an estimated $25.6 billion in much-needed large scale repairs. Unlike routine maintenance, capital needs are the large-scale improvements required to make the housing decent and economically sustainable, such as replacing roofs or updating plumbing and electrical systems to increase energy efficiency. This study updates a 1998 analysis and includes costs to address overdue repairs, accessibility improvements for disabled residents, lead abatement, and water and energy conservation that would make the homes more cost effective and energy efficient.

Over the last 75 years, the federal government has invested billions in the development and maintenance of public and multifamily housing - including providing critical support through HUD's Capital Fund, the grants announced today. Still, the nation continues to lose thousands of public housing units annually, primarily due to disrepair. To protect the considerable federal investment and respond to the growing demand for affordable rental housing, the Obama Administration proposed RAD. The details of the demonstration's timeline and application are being prepared and HUD expects to issue a notice for public comment in the coming months.

The following housing authorities in Kansas will receive this funding:

Kansas
Kansas City, KS Housing Authority $2,555,880
Topeka Housing Authority $780,404
Bird City Housing Authority $18,331
Wichita Housing Authority $771,150
Housing Authority of the City of Colby $120,417
Dodge City Housing Authority $331,504
Washington Housing Authority $44,855
Holton Housing Authority $55,006
Bonner Springs Housing Authority $48,112
Seneca Housing Authority $60,793
Horton Housing Authority $61,557
Oberlin Housing Authority $25,733
Hanover Housing Authority $15,126
Linn Housing Authority $16,358
North Newton Housing Authority $52,553
South Hutchinson Housing Authority $140,746
Atchison Housing Authority $205,340
Anthony Housing Authority $42,388
Beloit Housing Authority $34,125
Osborne Housing Authority $33,914
Oakley Housing Authority $37,958
Atwood Housing Authority $20,704
Kinsley Housing Authority $30,717
Lyons Housing Authority $79,432
Luray Housing Authority $9,353
Russell Housing Authority $71,862
Sterling Housing Authority $47,403
Augusta Housing Authority $61,107
Blue Rapids Housing Authority $17,352
City of Clay Center $107,351
Marion Housing Authority $25,509
Minneapolis Housing Authority $73,136
Norton Housing Authority $32,358
Phillipsburg Housing Authority $35,215
Wellington Housing Authority $78,192
Salina Housing Authority $206,817
Paola Housing Authority $82,509
Fort Scott Housing Authority $211,411
Great Bend Housing Authority $76,390
Wamego Housing Authority $61,948
Olathe Housing Authority $130,783
Parsons Housing Authority $128,900
Galena Housing Authority $41,364
Jetmore Housing Authority $19,122
Iola Housing Authority $180,208
Agra Housing Authority $12,323
Gaylord Housing Authority $10,647
Pleasanton Housing Authority $47,683
Lawrence/Douglas County Housing Authority $485,662
Sabetha Housing Authority $15,209
Housing Authority of the City of Goodland $77,281
Valley Falls Housing Authority $19,701
Housing Authority of Medicine Lodge $36,113
Ulysses Housing Authority $50,633
Moundridge Housing Authority $45,848
Waterville Housing Authority $14,000
Humboldt Housing Authority $48,020
Chanute Housing Authority $133,087
Manhattan Housing Authority $232,068
Lindsborg Housing Authority $67,517
Sedgwick Housing Authority $19,122
Leavenworth Housing Authority $83,206
Neodesha Housing Authority $61,849
Strong City Housing Authority $20,302
Garden City Housing Authority $93,299
Liberal Housing Authority $86,167
Newton Housing Authority $129,322
St. Francis Housing Authority $17,838
Girard Housing Authority $22,008
Burrton Housing Authority $15,676
Howard Housing Authority $46,524
Housing Authority of the City of Hoxie $28,978
Nicodemus Housing Authority $7,580
Hill City Housing Authority $24,788
Greenleaf Housing Authority $17,942
Downs Housing Authority $33,403
Hays Housing Authority $32,223
Florence Housing Authority $24,694
Belleville Housing Authority $19,902
Hillsboro Housing Authority $20,755
Housing Authority of the City of Herington KS $37,857
Junction City Housing Authority $132,289
Halstead Housing Authority $35,738
Cawker City Housing Authority $26,899
Lincoln Housing Authority $21,073
Frontenac Housing Authority $23,983
Winfield Housing Authority $55,702
Mankato Housing Authority $21,946
Stafford Housing Authority $32,085
Columbus Housing Authority $26,116
Chapman Housing Authority $27,155
Solomon Housing Authority $18,695
Cherryvale Housing Authority $23,581
Victoria Housing Authority $15,014

The FY2012 Public Housing Capital Funding by state:

State
Amount
State
Amount
Alabama $54,411,568 Nevada $5,253,929
Alaska $2,215,118 New Hampshire $4,805,462
Arizona $7,516,272 New Jersey $61,937,486
Arkansas $17,504,267 New Mexico $5,567,987
California $72,252,584 New York $321,476,119
Colorado $10,307,643 North Carolina $48,137,960
Connecticut $20,964,829 North Dakota $2,073,197
Delaware $3,986,200 Ohio $77,937,803
Florida $49,658,600 Oklahoma $14,538,344
Georgia $64,067,418 Oregon $8,533,410
Hawaii $9,454,397 Pennsylvania $120,206,473
Idaho $887,959 Rhode Island $12,081,706
Illinois $128,103,330 South Carolina $20,297,831
Indiana $21,570,606 South Dakota $1,653,882
Iowa $4,672,512 Tennessee $50,216,600
Kansas $9,880,896 Texas $72,552,552
Kentucky $31,838,124 Utah $2,394,123
Louisiana $43,544,357 Vermont $1,948,080
Maine $5,056,956 Virginia $28,687,138
Maryland $26,848,339 Washington $26,602,619
Massachusetts $52,240,068 West Virginia $7,978,504
Michigan $31,099,543 Wisconsin $15,089,333
Minnesota $28,166,333 Wyoming $821,802
Mississippi $20,313,957 District of Columbia $14,193,015
Missouri $27,595,445 Guam $1,174,617
Montana $2,574,655 Puerto Rico $105,751,592
Nebraska $8,023,289 US Virgin Islands $5,389,187
    TOTAL: $1,792,056,016

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Content Archived: February 27, 2014