BUSH ADMINISTRATION AWARDS $7.5 MILLION IN GRANTS TO HISPANIC-SERVING UNIVERSITIES
FOR COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
WASHINGTON - Housing and Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson
today announced more than $7.5 million in competitive grants to 12 Hispanic-serving
colleges and universities to help rehabilitate low-income neighborhoods near
their campuses and bring new opportunities to students and working families
living there.
"The Bush Administration is deeply committed to Hispanic colleges and
universities and their efforts to open the doors of opportunity to every citizen
who seeks higher knowledge," said Jackson. "These grants will help
ensure these institutions continue to educate many of the nation's Hispanic
physicians, lawyers and business leaders while also being able to revitalize
the communities that surround them."
The grants were awarded under HUD's Hispanic-Serving Institutions Assisting
Communities (HSIAC) program. Grantees use the funds for a wide range of housing
and community development projects that improve the quality of life in their
communities. Projects include: purchasing local property for community development
purposes; clearance and demolition; rehabilitating neighborhood housing for
low- and moderate-income people; homeownership assistance for low- and moderate-income
residents; lead-based paint hazard reduction; economic development assistance;
developing public facilities such as day care; and, job and career-counseling.
HSIAC applicants must be accredited, nonprofit 2- and 4-year institutions
of higher learning that have at least 25 percent Hispanic full-time undergraduate
enrollment, with at least 50 percent of these Hispanic students being low-income
individuals. Approximately 219 HSI-designated schools are eligible to apply
for the HUD grants, which were first awarded in 1999.
# # #
The 12 recipients in HSIAC grants are:
| AZ
- |
Central
Arizona College |
$600,000
|
| CA
- |
Allan
Hancock College |
$600,000
|
|
Imperial
Valley College |
$600,000
|
|
Santa
Ana College |
$600,000
|
|
West
Hills Community College District |
$365,303
|
| CO
- |
Adams
State College |
$600,000
|
|
Otero
Junior College |
$596,709
|
| NM
- |
New
Mexico State University-
Dona Ana Campus |
$600,000
|
|
Northern
New Mexico Community College |
$600,000
|
|
University
of New Mexico-Taos |
$600,000
|
| TX
- |
Houston
Community College |
$597,149
|
|
The
University of Texas at El Paso |
$599,539
|
Additional information about HUD's Hispanic-Serving Institutions Assisting
Communities program, administered through HUD's Office of University Partnerships,
can be obtained at www.oup.org/about/hsiac.html.
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 as
well as 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.
Hispanic Serving Institutions Assisting Communities
Program Summaries
Arizona
Project Name: Central Arizona College
Grant Amount: $600,000
Central Arizona College will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions Assisting
Communities (HSIAC) grant to serve the residents of the four colonias located
in western Pinal County, Arizona. The colonias are Coolidge, Eloy, the West
Side Neighborhood of Casa Grande, and Colonia Del Sol in Casa Grande. The colonias'
total population is approximately 24,000. The grant will provide the following
activities: 1) establish a career and business development center, 2) skill
assessment programs, 3) job training programs and placement services, 4) business
and industry development training, and 5) technical assistance to women and
minority owned (start up or expansion) businesses. The target population is
comprised of unemployed and underemployed residents, Temporary Aid to Needy
Family (TANF) recipients, and low- to moderate-income workers.
California
Project Name: Allan Hancock College
Grant Amount: $600,000
Allan Hancock College will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions Assisting
Communities (HSIAC) grant to build an addition onto a 5000 square foot community
center located in the northwest quadrant of the city adjacent to the Boys and
Girls Club, two elementary schools and the Santa Maria Bonita School District
neighborhood resource. The resulting complex will provide space for the following:
1) adult education classes to meet the identified needs of the community for
advanced ESL skills, civic education, keyboarding, business skills and job readiness
skills; 2) a permanent location for a community education technology center
that encompasses a basic skills laboratory of the welfare-to-work job training
program, college resources, exchange and no cost email links for neighborhood
residents to promote lifelong learning; 3) a location for the needed expansion
of the City of Santa Maria's CARES, Inc. program; and 4) an expanded sports
field to provide space for community fitness, community meetings, and enhanced
opportunities for community cultural and special events.
Project Name: Imperial Valley College
Grant Amount: $600,000
Imperial Valley College will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions Assisting
Communities (HSIAC) grant to foster empowerment and self -sufficiency opportunities
exclusively for countywide Colonia residents. The grant will provide the following
interventions: 1) workforce development, 2) vocational training, 3) case management,
4) job development and placement and 5) supportive services.
Project Name: Santa Ana College
Grant Amount: $600,000
Santa Ana College will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions Assisting Communities
(HSIAC) grant to build a two-story, six-room building to centralize classes
and services specifically associated with children and families. The proposed
complex and activities are anticipated to produce the following: a) adult education,
childcare provider, business, computer skills, parenting, child development
and family literacy classes; b) a childcare provider and parenting resource
center; c) space for meeting and counseling; and d) additional space for subsidized
childcare with a kitchen that will allow delivery of cooking and nutrition classes.
Project Name: West Hills College Lemoore
Grant Amount: $365,303
West Hills College Lemoore will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions Assisting
Communities (HSIAC) grant to expand their Early Childhood Education Center.
The goal of this expansion is to server approximately 45 additional infants
and ten children with Special Needs of which 70% are from low-income families.
This expansion responds to the dramatically increasing community needs for daycare.
In addition, 85 students will be trained annually for employment as early educators,
teacher's aide, tutors or future elementary school teachers.
Colorado
Project Name: Adams State College
Grant Amount: $600,000
Adam State College will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions Assisting Communities
(HSIAC) grant to renovate a vacant, historical building on the east side of
ASC's campus to be used as a community & business development center. The
Spanish style adobe building was build in 1932 and is in need of floor plan
renovations in order to be a functional and safe. Services provided at the center
will include: business counseling, community business Internet access, referrals,
volunteering mentoring services, business and community promotion and non-profit
organizational assistance. The target area for this project is Alamosa, Colorado.
Project Name: Otero Junior College
Grant Amount: $596,709
Otero Junior College will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions Assisting Communities
(HSIAC) grant to open a center within the community that will become a one-stop
resource center for residents. The Center's three main areas of focus will be:
consolidated economic development, a satellite office for Tri-County Housing,
Inc., and grant resources. The proposed 3, 000 square foot facility will be
located in the downtown La Junta. The facility will also house office space,
conference rooms, and a computer lab. The population being targeted through
this project includes the residents of three southeastern Colorado counties,
including non-profit and faith-based organizations, residents seeking assistance
in finding affordable housing and those who are looking to open or relocate
businesses.
New Mexico
Project Name: New Mexico State University-Dona Ana Campus
Grant Amount: $600,000
The regents of New Mexico State University - Dona Ana campus will use its Hispanic
Serving Institutions Assisting Communities (HSIAC) grant to allow the community
Learning Center in the Mesquite District to continue providing educational activities
and job-training workshop, as well as social services. This Center was constructed
with an initial HUD-HSIAC grant. However, additional components are needed.
This funding will allow for additional services under three basic components:
a Micro-enterprise Program, a Work Readiness Program, and a Service Learning
Component. The current classes and activities will also be continued due to
the efforts of the community partners and the continued community demand.
Project Name: Northern New Mexico Community College
Grant Amount: $600,000
Northern New Mexico Community College will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions
Assisting Communities (HSIAC) grant to develop educational and ancillary services
for the Rio Arriba County Detention Center and neighboring rural communities
of Tierra Amarilla, Los Ojos, Cebolla, Chama and Dulce. This project is a three-prong
approach aimed at supporting the economic vitality of rural communities in northern
New Mexico through 1) education, 2) workforce development, job placement and
micro-enterprise development, and 3) collaboration with community-based organizations
to create a safety net for individuals disenfranchised from access to education
and jobs. The target population for this project is the inmates and staff of
the Detention Center located in the rural village of Tierra Amarilla, New Mexico.
Project Name: University of New Mexico-Taos
Grant Amount: $600,000
The regents of the University of New Mexico-Taos will use its Hispanic Serving
Institutions Assisting Communities (HSIAC) grant to establish a Center for Early
Care, Education, and Family Support. The funds will be used for the construction
of this Center. It will provide childcare, promote parenting skills, and serve
as a training center for early childhood education students. The target area
for this project will include communities in and surrounding Taos County.
Texas
Project Name: Houston Community College System
Grant Amount: $597,149
Houston Community College System will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions
Assisting Communities (HSIAC) grant to address two main goals; 1) offer assistance
and training in small business services to entrepreneurs interested in starting
up small businesses and to entrepreneurs of existing small businesses wishing
to improve their business practices; and 2) provide residents with home ownership
training and counseling services. Local government, faith-based organizations
and community-based organizations will be involved in this effort. The target
population for this program is Hispanic residents of the Houston Federal Enhanced
Enterprise Community.
Project Name: The University of Texas at El Paso
Grant Amount: $599,539
The University of Texas at El Paso will use its Hispanic Serving Institutions
Assisting Communities (HSIAC) grant to provide technology access with the goal
of accelerating the development and use of technologies that radically improve
the quality, durability, energy efficiency, environmental performance and affordability
of housing specifically for colonia residents. Colonia residents will be assisted
in acquiring the best housing technology identified in the local market. Housing
providers will also receive assistance to build Energy Star Homes for colonia
residents. In addition, the program will include revolving loans, hardship grants,
materials for new homes, and publications to the target audience.