The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is making $23,612,108 in grants to Arkansas through its Community Development Block Grant, Emergency Solutions Grant, and Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS programs, according to a news release.
Funds are coming from the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) signed into law March 27.
ARKANSAS FUNDING
The following Arkansas municipalities received HUD’s Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) grants:
Pine Bluff – $411,412; Conway – $269,734; Fayetteville – $436,285; Fort Smith – $530,840; Hot Springs – $254,743; Jacksonville – $123,984; Jonesboro – $362,524; North Little Rock – $406,388; Rogers – $270,024; Springdale – $478,318; Texarkana – $165,006; West Memphis – $186,531; and Little Rock – $879,049, along with an additional $81,216 from the Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS (HOPWA) program.
Independent reporting for Pine Bluff & Jefferson County since 1879.
Funding for Arkansas includes:
• $15.5 million through HUD’s Community Development Block Grant Program to help states, communities, and non-profits.
Funds can be used to:
– Construct medical facilities for testing and treatment.
– Acquire a motel or hotel building to expand capacity of hospitals to accommodate isolation of patients during recovery.
– Replace HVAC systems to temporarily transform commercial buildings or closed school buildings into clinics or treatment centers.
– Support businesses manufacturing medical supplies.
– Construct a group living facility to centralize patients undergoing treatment.
– Carry out job training of health care workers and technicians who are available to treat disease within a community.
• $7.8 million through HUD’s Emergency Solutions Grant Program to keep America’s homeless citizens safe.
Funds can be used to:
– Build more emergency shelters for homeless individuals and families.
– Operate emergency shelters by providing maintenance, rent, repair, security, fuel, equipment, insurance, utilities, food, furnishings, and supplies necessary for the operation.
– Provide Hotel/Motel Vouchers for homeless families or individuals.
– Provide essential services to people experiencing homelessness including childcare, education services, outreach, employment assistance, outpatient
health services, legal services, mental health services, substance abuse treatment services, and transportation.
– Prevent individuals from becoming homeless and rapidly rehouse homeless individuals.
• $214,836 through HUD’s Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS program to help American’s with compromised immune systems.
Funds can be used to:
– Increase the level of safe, stable housing for Persons Living with HIV/AIDS and their household members, by providing rental and utility assistance
and other short-term lodging assistance to address isolation and self-quarantine needs.
– Ensure access to HIV medical care and treatment, chemical dependency treatment, and mental health treatment.
– Provide persons with compromised immune systems with nutritional services and assistance with daily living.
– Assist in job training and placement assistance.
• Cuts Red Tape to Allow for Targeting of COVID-19 Response:
– The authority to provide housing assistance payments for rent, mortgage, and utilities for up to 24 months.
– The authority to use funds to self-isolate, quarantine, or provide other CDC- recommended infection control services for household members not living
with HIV/AIDS.
– The authority to use funds to provide relocation services (including lodging at hotels, motels, or other locations) for persons living with HIV/AIDS and
household members not living with HIV/AIDS.
Additional funds will follow. The CARES Act allows HUD to broaden the reach of its existing grant programs for the remaining $9.136 billion in relief funding to meet the country’s unique needs during this time, according to the news release.
New grant formulas must be written. HUD began writing new formulas immediately and will continue to work quickly to address communities’ needs and ensure these funds go to people and do not get delayed by bureaucratic red tape, according to the release.