HUD Archives: News Releases


HUD Reg. VI -07-118
Patricia Campbell
(817) 978-5974
For Release
Thursday
December 20, 2007

HUD AWARDS $2.6 MILLION TO HELP INDIVIDUALS FIND JOBS IN TEXAS
Funding to make families in public housing employable, self-sufficient

FORT WORTH - The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development today awarded $2,693,435 to 26 public housing authorities (PHAs) in Texas to help low-income individuals get job training and employment placement. Nationally, $59 million in grants was awarded. The list of Texas grantees and amounts follows.

"Thousands of people will get the assistance they need to help them find jobs that will get them on their road to financial independence," said HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson who announced the funding. "Some families have become homeowners or debt-free as a result of this program, thanks to their commitment and determination to thrive."

The funding is provided through HUD's Family Self-Sufficiency (FSS) Program, which encourages communities to develop local strategies to help families who live in public housing or who participate in HUD's Housing Choice
Voucher (HCV) program obtain employment that will lead to economic independence and self-sufficiency. PHAs work with welfare agencies, schools, businesses, and other local partners to develop a comprehensive program that gives participating FSS family members the skills and experience to enable them to obtain employment. Nine of the grantees, the housing authorities of Austin, Beaumont, Cameron County, Fort Worth, Hidalgo County, Houston, Mission, San Antonio and Waco, received both Public Housing and Housing Choice Voucher FSS grants.

The funding is distributed to public housing authorities, which allows them to hire or retain FSS coordinators on staff to assist adult residents to find employment. The coordinators link participants to resources in the community that can help with their job search, such as job training opportunities, employment placement programs or local
employers. The coordinators also help individuals locate childcare, counseling services, and transportation, which are often times impediments to employment.

Participants, some of whom are on welfare, sign a contract that stipulates the head of the household will find
suitable employment and the family will be off of welfare assistance within five years. Because public housing and voucher rents are tied to income, when income rises, rent rises. With the FSS program, the rent increase is paid to the PHA, but goes into an interest-bearing escrow account. If the participant successfully graduates from the program, he or she can use the escrow account for a variety of goals, including the down payment on a home, starting a business, paying back debts or paying educational expenses.

The Texas grantees are:

Texas Housing Choice Voucher FSS Grantees
  Housing Authority of the City of El Paso
$77,519
  Housing Authority of the City of Fort Worth
$43,511
  The Housing Authority of Dallas, Texas (DHA)
$364,997
  Housing Authority of the City of Waco
$71,748
  Housing Authority of the City of Beaumont
$79,745
  Housing Authority of the City of Arlington, Texas
$105,278
  City of Garland Housing Agency
$49,856
  Housing Authority of the City of San Angelo
$48,380
  City of Amarillo
$34,951
  Deep East Texas Council of Governments
$70,300
  Midland County Housing Authority
$41,217
  Texoma Council of Governments
$60,226
  Houston Housing Authority
$78,850
  Galveston Housing Authority
$105,781
  Walker County Housing Authority
$45,000
  Montgomery County Housing Authority
$37,669
  Housing Authority of the City of Austin
$127,430
  San Antonio Housing Authority
$96,884
  Laredo Housing Authority
$44,608
  Mission Housing Authority
$61,409
  Housing Authority of the City of Pharr
$59,010
  San Marcos Housing Authority
$49,753
  Housing Authority of the City of Kingsville
$53,212
  Housing Authority of the City of Port Isabel
$25,502
  Housing Authority of the County of Hidalgo
$36,724
  Cameron County Housing Authority
$42,685
State Total
$1,912,245

Texas

Public Housing FSS Grantees
  Housing Authority of the City of Fort Worth
$65,500
  The Housing Authority of the City of Dallas, Texas (DHA)
$53,200
  Housing Authority of the City of Waco
$49,729
  Beaumont Housing Authority
$28,598
  Houston Housing Authority
$50,989
  Housing Authority of the City of Austin
$100,102
  Housing Authority of the City of San Antonio (SAHA)
$272,286
  Housing Authority of The City of Mission
$35,000
  San Marcos Housing Authority
$38,501
  Housing Authority of the County of Hidalgo
$38,192
  Cameron County Housing Authority
$49,093
State Total
$781,190

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.

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Content Archived: March 15, 2011