HUD Archives: News Releases


HUD No. 16-009
Olga Alvarez (212) 542-7142
Charles McNally (212) 542-7647
For Release
Monday
July 18, 2016

HUD AWARDS $75 MILLION TO HELP LOW-INCOME RESIDENTS RECEIVE JOB TRAINING AND EMPLOYMENT
Over $2 Million for New Jersey - See funding details below

NEW JERSEY - The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) today awarded $75 million to help families living in public housing and those participating in HUD's Housing Choice Voucher Program connect with services to further their education, find good jobs, and to set them on a path to self-sufficiency. Read more about the local impact of the grants announced today.

Funded through HUD's Family Self-Sufficiency Program (FSS), these grants allow public housing agencies (PHAs) to work with social service agencies, community colleges, businesses, and other local partners to help public housing residents and individuals participating in HUD's Housing Choice Voucher Program advance their education or gain marketable skills that will help them get a job or advance in their current workplace. As of Fiscal Year 2015, recipients of Project-Based Rental Assistance are also eligible to participate in the program.

"Connecting folks to jobs is an important part of HUD's mission as the Department of Opportunity," said HUD Secretary Julián Castro. "By linking people to computer access, job training, childcare, and ultimately financial empowerment, these grants help people who are ready to compete and succeed in the workplace. HUD is proud to give them these tools for self-sufficiency."

HUD's FSS Program helps local public housing authorities hire service coordinators who work directly with residents to connect them with programs and services that already exist in the local community. These Service Coordinators build relationships with the network of local service providers so as to more effectively serve the residents. The program encourages innovative strategies that link public housing and Housing Choice Voucher assistance with other resources. This broad spectrum of services will enable participating families to find jobs, increase earned income, reduce or eliminate the need for rental and/or welfare assistance, and make progress toward achieving economic independence and housing self-sufficiency.

Participants in the program sign a five-year contract that requires the head of the household to obtain employment and that no member of the FSS family is receiving cash welfare assistance at the end of the five-year term. Families in the FSS program have an interest-bearing escrow account established for them. The amount credited to the family's escrow account is based on increases in the family's earned income during the term of the FSS contract. If the family successfully completes its FSS contract, the family receives the escrow funds that it can use for any purpose, including improving credit scores, paying educational expenses, or a down-payment on a home.

The Family Self Sufficiency (FSS) Program is a long-standing resource for increasing economic security and self-sufficiency among participants. HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research issued Evaluation of FSS Program: Prospective Study (www.huduser.org/portal/publications/affhsg/eval_fssp.html) in 2011 that evaluated the effectiveness of the FSS Program. Conducted from 2005 to 2009, the study showed that financial benefits are substantial for participants who remain in and complete the program. An earlier study (www.huduser.org/portal/publications/econdev/selfsufficiency.html) found that individuals who participated in the FSS program fared better financially than those who did not enroll in the program. HUD is currently conducting a longitudinal study on the program, with the first set of results expected in 2018.

List of New Jersey recipients:

The Newark Housing Authority
$134,897
Housing Authority of the City of Perth Amboy
$191,458
Housing Authority of the City of Jersey City
$243,635
Housing Authority of the City of Camden
$46,683
Atlantic City Housing Authority & Urban Redevelopment Agency
$58,065
Housing Authority of the City of Orange
$68,000
Woodbridge Housing Authority
$22,286
Irvington Housing Authority
$68,680
The Housing Authority of Plainfield
$69,000
Housing Authority of the City of East Orange
$69,000
Housing Authority of the Town of Boonton
$69,000
Lakewood Housing Authority
$66,214
Pleasantville Housing Authority
$137,680
Housing Authority of the City of Vineland
$69,000
Housing Authority Town of Dover
$31,777
Housing Authority of the Borough of Fort Lee
$51,000
Passaic County Public Housing Agency
$123,244
Housing Authority County of Morris
$68,587
County Treas., County of Monmouth,NJ
$69,000
Housing Authority of the Borough of Madison
$69,000
Housing Authority of Gloucester County
$43,400
Lakewood TWP Residential Assistance Program
$51,140
NJ Department of Community Affairs
$207,000

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HUD's mission is to create strong, sustainable, inclusive communities and quality affordable homes for all. More information about HUD and its programs is available on the Internet at www.hud.gov and http://espanol.hud.gov.

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Content Archived: December 27, 2017