[Logo: Homes and Communities: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development] Local information
[Vea la versión en español de esta página] [Contact Us] [Display the text version of this page] [Search/Index]
 

New Jersey
Local Newsroom
Homeownership
Rental Help
Homeless
Local HUD Offices
Library
Complaints
Common Questions
Calendar

HUD news

Homes

Resources

Communities

Working with HUD

Tools
Webcasts
Mailing lists
RSS Feeds
Help

[The U.S. government's official web portal]  

News Release

- -
 Information by State
 Print version
 

HUD No. 09-17
Alan Gelfand
(973) 776-7205

www.hud.gov/news/
For Release
Thursday
September 29, 2009

----------

HUD ANNOUNCES OVER $27 MILLION UNDER THE RECOVERY ACT TO SEVEN NEW JERSEY PUBLIC HOUSING AUTHORITIES
Grants will increase energy efficiency, upgrade public housing and create jobs

NEWARK - U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan awarded over $27 million in competitive grants to seven public housing authorities across New Jersey. (See below for a listing of grantees and awards). The funding, part of $500 million recently awarded nationwide, allows public housing authorities to build or renovate affordable rental apartments and make existing public housing units more energy efficient. The Public Housing Capital Funds being awarded today are provided through The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act).

Most of the New Jersey housing authorities will receive funds to create energy efficient communities by rehabilitating existing public housing units. The agencies will have resources to install new energy efficient technologies to conserve energy, such as Energy Star appliances, high-efficiency boilers/furnaces and programmable thermostats or controls. However, the Camden Housing Authority will receive funds that will allow it to proceed with redevelopment of a housing complex that was stalled because of a lack of private financing. This funding essentially fills the gap in private capital to allow work to continue. The Camden Housing Authority will also receive funding to address the needs of the elderly and/or persons with disabilities.

"The grants being awarded should give hope to families across the country that more affordable housing opportunities are on the way," said Donovan. "This Recovery Act funding will not only give housing authorities the resources they need to jump start production of affordable housing, but it will also reduce energy costs and mitigate negative environmental impacts, while creating much-needed 'green' jobs across the country."

In February, just eight days after President Obama signed the Recovery Act into law, HUD allocated nearly $3 billion in Recovery Act funding to more than 3,100 public housing authorities across the U.S. Distributed by formula, that funding is already being put to work to improve public housing and create safer, more livable environments for lower income residents.

The funding that was announced last week is part of an additional $1 billion in Public Housing Capital Funds designated by the Recovery Act to be awarded competitively. HUD accepted applications under this program from public housing authorities between June 22 and August 18. Grants under the program are now being awarded to public housing authorities that effectively addressed the requirements in the Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) under the following four funding categories:

Category 1 - Improvements Addressing the Needs of the Elderly and/or Persons with Disabilities: $95 million is being awarded to improve public housing units and create community facilities for the delivery of supportive services to this vulnerable population.

Category 2 - Public Housing Transformation: $96 million out of $100 million was awarded on September 3 to transform public housing developments that are distressed and a blighting influence on the surrounding community into newly built or renovated developments.

Category 3 - Gap Financing for Projects that are Stalled Due to Financing: $200 million of the $500 million recently awarded fall into this category, which allows PHAs to develop or renovate public housing projects stalled due to lack of resources.

Category 4 - Creation of Energy Efficient, Green Communities: $600 million is being awarded for public housing authorities to create more energy efficient public housing units. Within this category, applicants could apply under Option 1 for substantial rehabilitation or new construction, or under Option 2 for moderate rehabilitation.

New Jersey Public Housing Authority Grantees 
PHA Name Project Name Funding
Bayonne Back Bay Gardens $82,500
Bayonne Hook Village/KVK Annex $94,000
Bayonne Hook Village/KVK Annex $78,000
Brick George Conway Apartments $173,315
Camden Kennedy Towers $1,000,000
Camden Roosevelt Manor $10,000,000
Elizabeth 205 First Street Senior Housing $500,000
Elizabeth Mravlag Manor $1,888,000
Jersey City Holland Gardens $1,469,266
Newark Baxter Terrace $11,171,981
Vineland Parkview & D'Orazio Terrace $656,000
TOTAL $27,113,062

###

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 at www.hud.gov and espanol.hud.gov.

 
    Follow this link to go  Back to top   
----------
FOIA Privacy Web Policies and Important Links  Home [logo: Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity]
[Logo: HUD seal] U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
451 7th Street S.W., Washington, DC 20410
Telephone: (202) 708-1112   TTY: (202) 708-1455
Find the address of a HUD office near you