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HUD No. 98-515
Further Information:For Release
In the Washington, DC area: 202/708-068510:30 A.M. Thursday
Or contact your local HUD officeOctober 22, 1998

CUOMO AWARDS $633,524 IN GRANTS TO FIGHT DRUGS AND CRIME IN PUBLIC HOUSING IN CHAPEL HILL AND DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA

Housing and Urban Development Secretary Andrew Cuomo today awarded $633,524 in grants to fight drug abuse and other crimes in public housing in Chapel Hill and Durham, NC.

The communities received the following grants: Chapel Hill, $100,504; and Durham, $533,020.

The announcement was made at a news conference in Durham by Rep. David Price, who represents the two cities, and Deborah Vincent, HUD's General Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian Housing.

"These grants are good news for some of the poorest families in North Carolina and bad news for drug dealers who terrorize them," Cuomo said. "We will fight drug abuse with prevention and treatment programs and with a crackdown on drug dealers and other criminals. We are telling drug dealers in HUD housing to find another line of work or be sent to another type of subsidized housing - a prison cell."

Congressman Price said: "The Drug Elimination Grants we are announcing today are going to help get drugs out of these communities by increasing bike patrols, improving resident-law enforcement liaisons, and providing effective drug prevention and intervention programs. The result of these actions will make it known to drug dealers that they have no home in public housing."

Cuomo said the Department's $24.5 billion budget for the 1999 fiscal year, which he called "the best HUD budget in 10 years," will speed the transformation of public and assisted housing.

"HUD is transforming public housing from isolated ghettos of poverty, drugs, despair and crime into safe and economically integrated communities of opportunity," Cuomo said.

Nationwide, HUD is awarding $305.2 million in Drug Elimination Grants this year - more than in any previous year. The grants will be distributed in the next several weeks in this way: $280.6 million to 749 public housing authorities; $8 million to 39 Indian Tribes; and $16.6 million to 143 privately owned housing developments that receive HUD assistance.

Vice President Al Gore, Cuomo and Attorney General Janet Reno announced a four-part enforcement and prevention strategy to fight crime and drugs in public housing in June 1997. The grants announced today are one element of that strategy.

The Drug Elimination Grants are awarded on a competitive basis, based on the seriousness of the drug and crime problem facing a housing authority or assisted housing development, and the strength of local plans to address the problem. About 900 housing authorities, 60 Indian tribes and 500 privately owned housing developments applied for the grants being awarded this year.

HUD has awarded more than $1.6 billion in Drug Elimination Grants since 1989, including the grants being awarded this year.

In public housing, the Drug Elimination Grants are used for: drug prevention, intervention and treatment programs; reimbursing law enforcement agencies for providing additional security; hiring security guards and investigators; resident anti-crime patrols; and physical improvements to housing developments to enhance security - such as fencing, lighting and improved locks.

HUD's budget for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1 increases funding for HUD's key programs and renewals of Section 8 rental assistance by a total of more than $2 billion in the budget over 1998 levels. Spending was increased on most HUD programs and wasn't cut in any programs.

Legislation passed in the same bill as HUD's budget will:

  • Transform public housing by reducing segregation by race and income, encouraging and rewarding work, bringing more working families into public housing, and increasing the availability of subsidized housing for very poor families. In addition, the bill improves living conditions in public housing, gives the poorest families neighbors who will be role models of working families, and reduces crime. The bill also allows HUD to continue to tear down the largest failed public housing projects and replace them with new townhouse-style developments.

  • Expand the supply of affordable housing by enabling 90,000 more families to get Section 8 rental assistance vouchers that will subsidize their rents in privately owned apartments - the first increase in vouchers in four years.

  • Increase homeownership by raising the limit on home mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration from the current range of $86,317 in low-cost housing areas to $170,362 in high-cost areas. The bill increases the loan limits to a range of $109,032 in low-cost areas to $197,621 in high-cost areas. The higher ceiling on FHA-insured home mortgages opens the door of homeownership to thousands of families needing FHA insurance to get mortgages, but locked out now because the current loan limits have not kept pace with rising home prices.

HUD ANTI-DRUG ASSISTANCE FOR COMMUNITIES IN NORTH CAROLINA

  • CHAPEL HILL: $100,504 in Drug Elimination Grants will go to the Chapel Hill Department of Housing and Community Development to hire an investigator and for programs to fight drugs and provide employment services.

  • DURHAM: $533,020 in Drug Elimination Grants will go to the Housing Authority of the City of Durham for programs to provide job and business preparation coupled with appropriate education and family services.

Content Archived: January 20, 2009

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