HUD Archives: News Releases


HUD No. 13-31
Agatha Gutierrez
(913) 551-6803
For Release
Thursday
August 8, 2013

HUD AWARDS NEBRASKA HOUSING AUTHORITIES $7,550,240 TO IMPROVE, PRESERVE NATION'S PUBLIC HOUSING STOCK
Housing authorities across the U.S., territories use funding to maintain housing for families, seniors

KANSAS CITY, KS - U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan today awarded public housing authorities in Nebraska $7,550,240 that will be used to make major large-scale improvements to their public housing units.

The following housing authorities in Nebraska will receive this funding.

State Public Housing Authority 2013 Capital Funding
Nebraska Ainsworth Housing Authority $27,280
  Albion Housing Authority $39,150
  Alliance Housing Authority $72,120
  Alma Housing Authority $13,552
  Ansley Housing Authority $16,315
  Auburn Housing Authority $37,200
  Aurora Housing Authority $33,660
  Bassett Housing Authority $17,963
  Bayard Housing Authority $17,219
  Beemer Housing Authority $15,686
  Bellevue Housing Authority $58,767
  Benkelman Housing Authority $35,165
  Blair Housing Authority $82,265
  Blue Hill Housing Authority $34,631
  Bridgeport Housing Authority $16,309
  Broken Bow Housing Authority $86,582
  Burwell Housing Authority $61,388
  Cairo Housing Authority $15,479
  Cambridge Housing Authority $14,500
  Chappell Housing Authority $33,066
  Clarkson Housing Authority $22,623
  Clay Center Housing Authority $28,411
  Coleridge Housing Authority $21,156
  Columbus Housing Authority $84,941
  Cozad Housing Authority $35,243
  Creighton Housing Authority $27,516
  Crete Housing Authority $32,899
  Curtis Housing Authority $21,038
  David City Housing Authority $53,684
  Deshler Housing Authority $26,682
  Douglas County Housing Authority $88,034
  Edgar Housing Authority $17,021
  Emerson Housing Authority $19,578
  Fairbury Housing Authority $46,512
  Fairmont Housing Authority $14,270
  Falls City Housing Authority $69,875
  Fremont Housing Authority $234,641
  Friend Housing Authority $22,264
  Genoa Housing Authority $19,512
  Gibbon Housing Authority $35,575
  Gordon Housing Authority $22,502
  Gothenburg Housing Authority $74,341
  Grant Housing Authority $16,651
  Greeley Housing Authority $12,516
  Gresham Housing Authority $10,932
  Hall County Housing Authority $410,963
  Harvard Housing Authority $18,410
  Hay Springs Housing Authority $16,332
  Hemingford Housing Authority $13,551
  Henderson Housing Authority $16,165
  Hooper Housing Authority $21,565
  Humboldt Housing Authority $21,717
  Imperial Housing Authority $18,652
  Indianola Housing Authority $20,915
  Kearney Housing Authority $184,699
  Lexington Housing Authority $78,668
  Lincoln Housing Authority $382,899
  Loup City Housing Authority $30,603
  Lynch Housing Authority $9,800
  Lyons Housing Authority $14,535
  McCook Housing Authority $29,255
  Minden Housing Authority $26,262
  Nebraska City Housing Authority $62,004
  Neligh Housing Authority $30,312
  Nelson Housing Authority $13,393
  Newman Grove Housing Authority $14,909
  Niobrara Housing Authority $16,614
  North Loup Housing Authority $16,540
  North Platte Housing Authority $326,482
  Oakland Housing Authority $19,465
  Omaha Housing Authority $2,988,418
  Ord Housing Authority $115,227
  Oshkosh Housing Authority $17,147
  Oxford Housing Authority $18,487
  Pawnee City Housing Authority $46,837
  Plattsmouth Housing Authority $49,917
  Ravenna Housing Authority $17,447
  Red Cloud Housing Authority $48,524
  Sargent Housing Authority $17,367
  Schuyler Housing Authority $54,398
  Scotts Bluff County Housing Authority $176,277
  Shelton Housing Authority $15,940
  St. Edward Housing Authority $14,079
  St. Paul Housing Authority $35,579
  Stanton Housing Authority $27,147
  Stromsburg Housing Authority $30,468
  Sutherland Housing Authority $16,884
  Syracuse Housing Authority $17,781
  Tecumseh Housing Authority $18,488
  Tekamah Housing Authority $22,966
  Tilden Housing Authority $16,501
  Verdigre Housing Authority $13,800
  Wayne Housing Authority $31,815
  Weeping Water Housing Authority $15,957
  Wilber Housing Authority $24,760
  Wood River Housing Authority $17,429
  Wymore Housing Authority $21,841
  York Housing Authority $57,335
  Nebraska Total $7,550,240

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

"This funding is critical for housing authorities to maintain and improve public housing conditions for their residents," said Donovan. "However, with a significant repair backlog, I am encouraged by new, innovative long-term solutions HUD is exploring that can be combined with this funding to not only protect and preserve this housing for the next generation, but to also build the quality infrastructure necessary for families to thrive."

"Housing authorities in Nebraska count on this funding to maintain and improve their public housing for many families, especially the most vulnerable - our seniors," said Deputy Regional Administrator, Theresa Porter. "HUD is currently taking bold steps to preserve this affordable housing."

Capital Fund grants are awarded each year to the nation's approximately 3,100 public housing agencies through a formula that considers number, type and age of units in a community. Eligible uses for this funding include development, financing and modernization of the public housing units as well as management improvements at the public housing authority.

Over the past 75 years, the federal government has been working and investing billions of dollars in developing and maintaining public and multifamily housing - including providing critical support through the Capital Fund grants announced today. Still, the nation continues to lose approximately 10,000 public housing units annually, primarily due to disrepair. In 2011, HUD released Capital Needs in the Public Housing Program, a study that estimated the 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 large-scale repairs. Unlike routine maintenance, capital needs are extensive improvements required to make the housing decent and economically sustainable, such as replacing roofs or updating plumbing and electrical systems to increase energy efficiency.

To help protect the considerable federal investment and respond to the growing demand for affordable rental housing, the Obama Administration proposed the Rental Assistance Demonstration (RAD), a comprehensive strategy that complements the Capital Fund Program and offers a long-term solution to preserve and enhance the country's affordable housing stock, including leveraging public and private funding to make critically needed improvements.

Since Congress approved the demonstration, early results show it is already generating additional capital for public and assisted housing. After opening RAD application periods last summer, HUD has approved or given initial approval to nearly 20,000 public and assisted housing units in 180 different projects across the country. Through these awards, housing authorities have proposed to generate close to $816 million in private debt and equity investments to reduce the capital backlog in public housing properties, which will preserve or replace distressed units and support local jobs in their communities - all without additional federal resources.

HUD also recently issued new RAD guidance that expands the program's flexibility that will benefit current and future applicants and participants.

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HUD's mission is to create strong, sustainable, inclusive communities and quality affordable homes for all. HUD is working to strengthen the housing market to bolster the economy and protect consumers; meet the need for quality affordable rental homes: utilize housing as a platform for improving quality of life; build inclusive and sustainable communities free from discrimination; and transform the way HUD does business. More information about HUD and its programs is available on the Internet at www.hud.gov and espanol.hud.gov. You can also follow HUD on Twitter at @HUDgov or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/HUD, or sign up for news alerts on HUD's News Listserv.

 

Content Archived: August 20, 2015