HUD Archives: News Releases


HUD No. VI No. 05-04
Patricia Campbell
(817) 978-5974
For Release
Tuesday
January 25, 2004

BUSH ADMINISTRATION ANNOUNCES RECORD $1.4 BILLION TO HELP HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF HOMELESS INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES
Oklahoma Receives $6.5 Million

OKLAHOMA CITY - Housing and Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson today announced Oklahoma would receive $6,569,959.00 to provide shelter and care for persons and families without a home of their own. The funding to Oklahoma is part of more than $1.4 billion announced nationwide-the largest single commitment of federal funds supporting an unprecedented number of local projects on the front lines of caring for people who might otherwise be living on the streets.

Jackson announced the funding at a local homeless center in Los Angeles with California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.

"President Bush is deeply committed to supporting our most vulnerable neighbors and today I am pleased to reconfirm that commitment," said Jackson. "This unprecedented level of funds will go directly to those on the front lines, who work tirelessly everyday to bring an end to chronic homelessness, and who provide services to the many individuals and families without a home of their own."

This is the fourth consecutive year HUD is providing record funding for homeless assistance and is part of a larger federal strategy being embraced by a growing number of state and local communities to end long-term or chronic homelessness.

HUD's funding is provided in two ways:

  • Continuum of Care grants provide permanent and transitional housing to homeless persons. In addition, Continuum grants fund important services including job training, health care, mental health counseling, substance abuse treatment and child care.


  • Emergency Shelter Grants convert buildings into homeless shelters, assist in the operation of local shelters
    and fund related social service and homeless prevention programs.

Combined, HUD's Continuum of Care and Emergency Shelter Grant programs will provide critically needed funding to more than 4,400 local programs in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. As a result, more than a quarter-million persons will receive the housing and services they need to become self-sufficient. For a more detailed local summary of the funding announced today, visit www.hud.gov/offices/cpd/homeless/budget/2004/index.cfm.

More than $1.2 billion in Continuum of Care grants are awarded competitively to local programs to meet the needs
of their homeless clients. Continuum grants fund a wide variety of programs-from street outreach and assessment programs to transitional and permanent housing for homeless persons and families. Oklahoma Continuum grantees
and amounts follow:

North Central Oklahoma CoC
United Way of Ponca City
$27,417.00
Domestic Violence Program of North Central Oklahoma, Inc.
$29,946.00
The Salvation Army, A Georgia Corporation
$71,400.00
United Community Action Program, Inc.
$41,275.00
Total
$170,038.00
Tulsa City & County/Broken Arrow CoC
Mental Health Association in Tulsa, Inc.
$549,070.00
The Salvation Army, A Georgia Corporation
$673,358.00
12 &12, Inc.
$244,916.00
DVIS
$298,739.00
Legal Aid Services of Oklahoma, Inc. Tulsa Law Office
$111,920.00
Community Service Council of Greater Tulsa
$129,113.00
Total

$2,007,116.00

Oklahoma CoC
City Care Inc.
$599,999.00
Community Health Centers, Inc.
$146,002.00
YWCA of Oklahoma City
$83,018.00
Communities Foundation Oklahoma, Inc.
$120,000.00
Red Rock Behavioral Health Services
$199,271.00
Red Rock Behavioral Health Services
$265,721.00
Red Rock Behavioral Health Services
$209,225.00
CarePoint
$133,386.00
HOPE Community Services, Inc.
$195,000.00
City of Oklahoma City
$142,800.00
City of Oklahoma City
$57,120.00
City of Oklahoma City
$13,944.00
Total
$2,165,486.00
Oklahoma Balance of State CoC
Great Plains Improvement Foundation, Inc, Community Action Agency
$77,386.00
East Main Place, Inc.
$73,468.00
Waynoka Mental Health Authority
$224,440.00
State of Oklahoma
$149,376.00
Total
$524,670.00
Northeast Oklahoma CoC
Northeast Oklahoma Community Action Agency, Inc.
$226,227.00
Community Crisis Center Inc.
$171,327.00
Total
$397,554.00
State CoC Total
$5,264,864.00

Emergency Shelter Grants are allocated based on a formula to state and local governments to create, improve and operate emergency shelters for homeless persons. These funds may also support essential services including job training, health care, drug/alcohol treatment, childcare and homelessness prevention activities. By helping to support emergency shelter, transitional housing and needed support services, Emergency Shelter Grants are designed to
move homeless persons toward permanent housing. Oklahoma's Emergency Shelter Grants follow.

Oklahoma Oklahoma City
$232,440
  Tulsa
$165,024
  State of Oklahoma
$907,631
  State Total
$1,305,095

For nearly four years, HUD has increasingly emphasized the Bush Administration’s goal of ending chronic
homelessness in its assistance programs. Research indicates that approximately 10 percent of all homeless persons experience long-term or chronic homelessness or 150,000 people. These studies also find that this hardest-to-serve population utilizes over half of all emergency shelter resources designed to assist homeless individuals and families.
By shifting the federal emphasis toward meeting the needs of the most vulnerable homeless persons, more resources become available for those who experience homelessness as a temporary condition.

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 as well as enforces the nation's fair housing laws. More information about HUD and its programs is available on the Internet and espanol.hud.gov.


HIGHLIGHTS OF HUD'S HOMELESS ASSISTANCE

  • Largest total award of Federal funds for homeless assistance in history - more than $1.4 billion is being
    awarded to an unprecedented number of projects nationally, more than 4,400. This is also the fourth consecutive year funding for homeless assistance has increased to record levels.


  • 1,089 of the project awards being announced today target individuals experiencing chronic homelessness.
    Total funding to these projects will exceed $370 million, a commitment that directly supports the national goal of ending chronic homelessness by 2010.


  • Approximately half of all funding announced today, totaling $628 million, is being awarded to more than 1,100 projects that provide permanent housing solutions for homeless persons.


  • More than 900 local projects that primarily serve mothers and their children will receive $220 million.


  • Approximately 400 shelters that primarily serve victims of domestic violence will receive $92.6 million.


  • Nearly $33.8 million is being awarded to 133 projects that primarily target homeless veterans among those
    they serve.


  • Nearly 1,200 of the projects funded today are dedicated to providing housing and support services to severely mentally ill clients. These persons are at high risk of experiencing long-term or chronic homelessness.


  • Nearly $372 million will support 1,193 local programs that primarily help homeless individuals with substance abuse problems.


  • More than $9 million to provide job training and other employment services for homeless individuals.

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Content Archived: August 09, 2011