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HUD No. 09-002 Dale Gray (913) 551-5542 |
For Release Friday January 9, 2009 |
HUD AWARDS NEARLY $1 MILLION IN GRANTS TO HELP LOW-INCOME FAMILIES IN MISSOURI GET JOB TRAINING AND EMPLOYMENT
KANSAS CITY - U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Steve Preston today announced that 14 public housing agencies in Missouri would receive $904,910 to provide low-income people with the necessary job training
to put them on a path toward self-sufficiency (see below for list of agencies that will receive funding). The grants
are part of nearly $49 million awarded nationally to 48 states, the District of Columbia, Guam and Puerto Rico.
Funded through HUD's Housing Choice Voucher Family Self-Sufficiency Program (HCV/FSS), the grants allow public housing agencies (PHAs) to work with welfare agencies, schools, businesses, and other local partners to develop a comprehensive program to help participating individuals develop the skills and experience to enable them to obtain jobs that pay a living wage.
"This program has proven its effectiveness in helping families develop the skills that lead to stable employment,"
said Preston. "Getting a decent job and increasing a person's potential for higher paying employment is the first
step to becoming economically independent."
PHAs use the funding to hire family self-sufficiency coordinators to link adults in the Housing Choice Voucher
program (formerly Section 8) to local organizations that provide job training, childcare, counseling, transportation
and job placement. PHAs can also hire homeownership coordinators to help families get homeownership counseling.
Participants in the HCV/FSS program sign a contract that stipulates the head of the household will get a job and
the family will no longer receive welfare assistance at the end of the five-year term. As the family's income rises, a portion of that increased income is deposited in an interest-bearing escrow account. If the family completes its FSS contract, the family receives the escrow funds that it can use for any purpose, including a down payment on a
home, paying educational expenses, starting a business or paying back debts.
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HUD is the nation's housing agency committed to increasing homeownership, particularly among minorities;
creating affordable housing opportunities for low-income Americans; and supporting the homeless, elderly, people with disabilities and people living with AIDS. The Department also promotes economic and community development and enforces the nation's fair housing laws. More information about HUD and its programs is available on the
Internet and espanol.hud.gov.
The following public housing agencies in Missouri will receive funding:
| Housing Authority of Kansas City, Missouri | $157,144 |
| Housing Authority of the City of Springfield | 26,296 |
| St. Clair County Public Housing Agency | 122,448 |
| Housing Authority of the City of Liberty | 43,765 |
| Jasper County Public Housing Agency | 27,636 |
| St. Louis Housing Authority | 60,581 |
| Housing Authority of St. Louis County | 100,901 |
| The Housing Authority of the City of St. Charles | 46,589 |
| Housing Authority of the City of Columbia | 49,389 |
| North East Community Action Corporation, Lincoln Cnty | 109,689 |
| St. Francois County Public Housing Agency | 30,909 |
| Franklin County Public Housing Authority | 42,565 |
| Phelps County Public Housing Agency | 53,458 |
| Ripley County Public Housing Agency | 33,540 |
| State Total | $904,910 |



