Donna White (202) 708-0685 |
For
Release Friday February 10, 2012 |
HUD AWARDS NEBRASKA PUBLIC HOUSING AUTHORITIES $8 MILLION TO IMPROVE, PRESERVE NATION'S 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 $8,023,289 to public housing authorities in Nebraska 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 Rocky Mountain Region's Administrator Rick Garcia 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 Rocky Mountain region to make enhancements and 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 Nebraska will receive this funding:
Nebraska | Omaha Housing Authority | $3,235,507 |
Lincoln Housing Authority | $394,829 | |
Hall County Housing Authority | $410,349 | |
Kearney Housing Authority | $176,286 | |
Ord Housing Authority | $124,289 | |
Red Cloud Housing Authority | $46,257 | |
Loup City Housing Authority | $31,838 | |
Lexington Housing Authority | $87,061 | |
Gresham Housing Authority | $11,378 | |
Nebraska City Housing Authority | $64,295 | |
Humboldt Housing Authority | $24,403 | |
Syracuse Housing Authority | $18,438 | |
Benkelman Housing Authority | $39,192 | |
Stromsburg Housing Authority | $31,955 | |
Wymore Housing Authority | $22,707 | |
Clay Center Housing Authority | $27,396 | |
Grant Housing Authority | $17,653 | |
Imperial Housing Authority | $19,490 | |
Neligh Housing Authority | $31,654 | |
Schuyler Housing Authority | $57,101 | |
Alma Housing Authority | $15,351 | |
David City Housing Authority | $51,211 | |
Burwell Housing Authority | $68,607 | |
Clarkson Housing Authority | $23,766 | |
Pawnee City Housing Authority | $47,830 | |
Stanton Housing Authority | $28,352 | |
Fairbury Housing Authority | $52,056 | |
Blue Hill Housing Authority | $38,549 | |
Verdigre Housing Authority | $14,359 | |
Edgar Housing Authority | $19,282 | |
Creighton Housing Authority | $31,035 | |
Ainsworth Housing Authority | $28,657 | |
Deshler Housing Authority | $27,770 | |
Newman Grove Housing Authority | $16,755 | |
Henderson Housing Authority | $16,762 | |
Coleridge Housing Authority | $21,922 | |
Albion Housing Authority | $40,913 | |
Crete Housing Authority | $31,724 | |
Greeley Housing Authority | $13,215 | |
Lynch Housing Authority | $10,119 | |
Hay Springs Housing Authority | $16,983 | |
Wilber Housing Authority | $25,859 | |
Hooper Housing Authority | $22,526 | |
St. Paul Housing Authority | $37,586 | |
Minden Housing Authority | $27,490 | |
Sargent Housing Authority | $18,341 | |
Shelton Housing Authority | $16,993 | |
St. Edward Housing Authority | $14,716 | |
Friend Housing Authority | $25,480 | |
Fairmont Housing Authority | $14,852 | |
Auburn Housing Authority | $38,717 | |
Tilden Housing Authority | $17,231 | |
Harvard Housing Authority | $19,327 | |
Oxford Housing Authority | $19,402 | |
Cambridge Housing Authority | $16,393 | |
Bassett Housing Authority | $20,243 | |
Tekamah Housing Authority | $23,980 | |
Emerson Housing Authority | $18,879 | |
Plattsmouth Housing Authority | $51,761 | |
Indianola Housing Authority | $23,551 | |
Oshkosh Housing Authority | $18,108 | |
Niobrara Housing Authority | $17,347 | |
Scotts Bluff County Housing Authority | $187,542 | |
Nelson Housing Authority | $13,986 | |
Cozad Housing Authority | $34,650 | |
Weeping Water Housing Authority | $16,547 | |
Bayard Housing Authority | $19,416 | |
Lyons Housing Authority | $15,117 | |
Aurora Housing Authority | $35,557 | |
Wood River Housing Authority | $18,406 | |
Blair Housing Authority | $85,619 | |
Genoa Housing Authority | $20,384 | |
York Housing Authority | $64,746 | |
Falls City Housing Authority | $80,501 | |
Sutherland Housing Authority | $18,863 | |
Curtis Housing Authority | $23,596 | |
Tecumseh Housing Authority | $19,374 | |
Beemer Housing Authority | $16,326 | |
Fremont Housing Authority | $257,725 | |
Cairo Housing Authority | $16,349 | |
Hemingford Housing Authority | $15,162 | |
Oakland Housing Authority | $22,357 | |
Columbus Housing Authority | $82,086 | |
Bridgeport Housing Authority | $16,939 | |
Gordon Housing Authority | $23,558 | |
Ravenna Housing Authority | $18,228 | |
Wayne Housing Authority | $33,153 | |
Gibbon Housing Authority | $37,642 | |
Ansley Housing Authority | $18,594 | |
Chappell Housing Authority | $34,288 | |
Broken Bow Housing Authority | $91,485 | |
Gothenburg Housing Authority | $78,223 | |
McCook Housing Authority | $30,595 | |
North Platte Housing Authority | $361,558 | |
North Loup Housing Authority | $17,526 | |
Alliance Housing Authority | $75,060 | |
Douglas County Housing Authority | $84,890 | |
Bellevue Housing Authority | $61,163 |
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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