![]() |
Home | En Español | Contact Us | A to Z |
![]() |
![]() | |||||||||
![]() |
HUD Archives: News Releases
CUOMO ANNOUNCES $7.5 MILLION GRANT TO NEW BRUNSWICK TO TRANSFORM PUBLIC HOUSING AND HELP RESIDENTS GET JOBS Comments From New Jersey Elected Officials WASHINGTON – Housing and Urban Development Secretary Andrew Cuomo today awarded a $7.5 million grant to New Brunswick as part of a nationwide program that is replacing decaying public housing with new housing and helping residents get education, training and jobs to become self-sufficient. "This program is about much more than rebuilding housing," Cuomo said. "It’s about giving public housing residents the chance to rebuild their lives. We’re creating a new vision for public housing. We will replace slums that trapped families in poverty and dependence with attractive new communities that will be gateways to jobs, opportunity and self-sufficiency." Cuomo made the announcement of the grant to New Brunswick in a telephone conference call with Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg, Sen. Robert Torricelli, Mayor James Cahill, and local housing and community leaders. Harold Lucas, Senior Advisor to the Secretary, represented Secretary Cuomo at the grant announcement. Cuomo said the grant to New Brunswick will be used to revitalize the New Brunswick Homes public housing development. The funds will help create 198 new housing units at the sites and demolish 246 deteriorated units of public housing. In addition, the grant to New Brunswick will help 222 families living at New Brunswick Homes get jobs and become self-sufficient by providing them with job training, education, child care, transportation and counseling services. Nationally, HUD funds will be used to help about 10,000 families get jobs and become self-sufficient. HUD is awarding a total of $507 million in highly competitive grants to 22 cities under the public housing transformation program known as HOPE VI, Cuomo said, and is replacing more occupied units of low-income housing in the 22 cities than are being demolished. The 22 cities will demolish about 7,000 units of severely distressed public housing that are occupied, and another 3,400 units that are vacant because of their extremely poor condition. Rehabilitating the substandard units would cost more than tearing them down. The 7,000 occupied and 3,400 vacant units of public housing being demolished in the 22 cities will be replaced by about 12,100 units of housing - including about 6,800 units of new public housing, 3,300 units of new privately owned low-income rental housing, and about 2,000 units that will be sold for homeownership. In New Brunswick, the new units being built will be made up of 86 units of rental public housing on and off-site, 12 lease-purchase units, 57 units of privately-owned low-income housing financed with the help of the federal Low-Income Housing Tax Credit, 31 market-rate rental units on and off-site, and 12 homes for sale to people with limited incomes. One of the goals of the HUD assistance is to create new mixed-income neighborhoods where public housing residents live alongside residents of unsubsidized housing. HUD will help public housing residents who get jobs in New Brunswick to buy 12 of the new public housing units. Nationally, about 1,200 public housing units will be made available for homeownership by public housing residents. Development will take place in partnership with the New Brunswick Resident Council. Housing authorities receiving the HUD grants plan to use $108 million of the assistance to hire public housing residents to work on the revitalization of their own developments. These jobs will provide paychecks and teach valuable job skills to public housing residents. On top of this, housing authorities will use HUD funds to make loans and provide other assistance to public housing residents to help them start small businesses - such as lawn care, catering and cleaning services - that are expected to create another 400 jobs for public housing residents. HUD and housing authorities will also partner with schools near public housing to help children from public housing families do better in school to prepare them for self-sufficiency as adults. In addition to the grant to New Brunswick, HUD today announced a grant to Albany, NY for $28.8 million. Yesterday, grants were announced to Roanoke for $15.1 million and Cincinnati for $31.1 million. Last week HUD announced HOPE VI grants to Atlanta for $34.7 million, Lexington, KY for $19.3 million, Chicago for $35 million, Tulsa for $28.6 million, Milwaukee for $34.2 million, Los Angeles for $23 million, Denver for $25.7 million, and Oakland, CA for $12.7 million. HUD's investment of $507 million in public housing transformation grants this year is expected to help generate a record $1.15 billion in additional investment in housing and jobs programs at public housing developments - including $854.1 million in private funds and $300.2 million in other government funds. This year, every dollar HUD is investing in public housing transformation is generating a record high average of $2.28 in other investment - far more than the 31 cents in other investment the transformation program generated when it began in 1993. HUD will pay temporary relocation costs for residents whose apartments are being demolished. Relocated residents of a development will be given the first opportunity to move back to the newly constructed units at the site, or will be given rental assistance vouchers that will subsidize their rents in privately owned apartments if they choose not to return to public housing. In addition, relocated residents receiving rental assistance vouchers will be given the same job training and other services that will be offered to people living in the replacement public housing, to help them get jobs and become self-sufficient. All new units being built will conform to guidelines of HUD's Healthy Homes Initiative, which will ensure that homes incorporate safeguards to protect residents against hazards such as lead poisoning, fire, carbon monoxide and radon. The 22 cities receiving grants were selected in a competition involving 101 cities that submitted applications requesting a total of $1.95 billion in grants. Cities were selected based on a checklist of criteria measuring the effectiveness of their public housing revitalization plans. Under the Clinton Administration, HUD is carrying out the most dramatic transformation of public housing since the public housing program was created in 1937 by President Franklin Roosevelt, Cuomo said. HUD has approved the construction of 33,000 units of new public housing since 1993 and has demolished about 28,000 units of the worst public housing in the nation under HOPE VI. Residents of demolished housing have moved into new public housing or received rental assistance vouchers under the Section 8 program to subsidize their rents in privately owned apartments. HUD's assistance to New Brunswick will be tailored to carry out plans developed locally. Each of the 22 local communities receiving grants developed its own revitalization program under a HUD policy that gives them great flexibility to come up with plans to meet their own special needs. The HOPE VI program has five key objectives:
There are about 1.2 million units of public housing around the nation, where about 2.8 million people live. The median annual income of households in public housing is $6,939. A total of 46 percent of households are made up of families with children, another 30 percent house senior citizens, and 11 percent are home to people with disabilities. COMMENTS FROM NEW JERSEY ELECTED OFFICIALS ON HUD’S PUBLIC HOUSING REVITALIZATION GRANT TO NEW BRUNSWICK Senator Frank R. Lautenberg: "This grant will change the face of public housing in New Brunswick. It is the result of the hard work of Mayor Cahill and Executive Director Quince, and many other city officials, business leaders, and volunteers who worked so hard to put together this successful plan. I commend then for their leadership and look forward to visiting a revitalized New Brunswick Homes." Congressman Frank Pallone: "The fact that New Brunswick was one of only 22 cities nationwide chosen for a HOPE VI grant demonstrates a recognition by the federal government of the great potential for revitalization in this City. The City is committed to providing modern housing and an improved quality of life for its public housing residents and to giving lower and moderate-income people greater options for self-sufficiency. This partnership between the federal and local levels of government is helping to change our view of public housing and our approach to serving our residents." Mayor James Cahill: "Today’s notification from Secretary Cuomo is the final piece of funding needed to start the real work of the HOPE VI plan at New Brunswick Homes. Now that all of the necessary funding is met, City, NBHA officials and the New Brunswick Homes Resident Council together with the entire New Brunswick Homes community, can revitalize a neighborhood whose success is key to New Brunswick’s future growth." Content Archived: January 20, 2009 |
![]() |
||||||||||||||
![]() |
||||||||||||||
![]() |
| ![]() |
||||||||||||
![]() |