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Affordable housing projects in limbo amid Trump tumult

Writer: CANA of Wilton ManorsCANA of Wilton Manors

By Jesse Bedayn Associated Press

The Trump administration has stalled at least $60 million in funding intended largely for affordable housing developments nationwide, throwing hundreds of projects into a precarious limbo, according to information and documents obtained by The Associated Press.

The move is part of a flurry of funding freezes, staffing cuts and contract cancellations by the Trump administration at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, changes that have instilled uncertainty in the affordable housing industry.

The some $60 million is intended to go to small community development nonprofits in small grants. The money is often used as seed funding for affordable housing projects, turning a concept into a viable development and consequently drawing in more public and private investment.

Congress chose three nonprofits to distribute the grants, but HUD said in letters that it was canceling contracts with two of the organizations, which together were to distribute the $60 million. That’s pushed millions in funding already promised to small nonprofits, or yet to be awarded, into doubt.

“Many of those organizations have already committed funds to pay workers, such as HVAC technicians, local contractors, homeownership counselors,” said Shaun Donovan, CEO of Enterprise Community Partners and former HUD secretary under President Barack Obama. Enterprise is one of the two groups whose contracts were canceled.

“They will have to stop that work immediately. That will cost local jobs, hobble the creation of affordable homes and stall opportunity in hundreds of communities.”

A spokesperson for HUD said the program, called Section 4, will continue and is not being cut, but that “the department is consolidating some grants, while others remain.”

It’s unclear how or when the funding will arrive to the small nonprofits, thrown into disarray.

“Not knowing for me means we assume that the money is not coming, and that means that I have to pivot,” said Jonathan Green, executive director of a nonprofit in Mississippi that’s building a 36-unit affordable housing development in Biloxi.

Green said about $20,000 in grant dollars are in limbo, money meant to pay for an environmental review that could cost upward of $10,000, and licenses and permits. That threatens discussions that Green is having with potential investors who want to see all the upfront work done first.

“My fear is that, if the project stops altogether, we may never get it started again,” he said.

The development is supposed to be in East Biloxi, where lots still remain empty after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Before a shovel of dirt has been moved on the project, Green’s organization has received enough calls from people eager to become tenants that they’ve started a waiting list.

That’s the position that hundreds of other small nonprofits have found themselves in, with not just their grant funds in question but investments on the line.

 
 
 

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