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HUD News Release 09-135
HUD No. 09-135
Andrea Mead
(202) 708-0980

www.hud.gov/news/
For Release
Tuesday
July 28, 2009

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SECRETARY DONOVAN ANNOUNCES $100 MILLION IN RECOVERY ACT FUNDS TO IMPROVE NATIVE AMERICAN HOUSING, SPUR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Grants will boost energy efficiency, create jobs in Native American communities

WASHINGTON - U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan announced today that HUD is awarding 50 grants, totaling $100 million, to Native American communities across the country to improve housing and stimulate community development (see attached).

The Indian Community Development Block Grant (ICDBG) and Native American Housing Block Grant (NAHBG)funds being awarded today are provided through The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act). These grants will help Native American tribes improve the quality of their housing stock, develop viable communities, promote energy efficiency and create jobs.

"Today we make another investment in the economic recovery of our communities and neighborhoods, specifically those of our nation's first Americans," said Secretary Donovan. "I am proud to announce these Recovery Act grants today, which will help to improve housing conditions and create jobs in Native American communities across the country."

Earlier this year, HUD allocated an additional $255 million in Recovery Act funding to nearly 600 eligible tribes and tribal housing entities. That funding is already being put to work to improve Indian housing. The total Recovery Act investment for housing and community development in Indian Country is nearly $510 million, which includes the formula and competitive awards and funding for administrative activities.

The grants announced today were awarded competitively from two programs, which are awarding grants on a rolling basis:

The Native American Housing Block Grant (NAHBG): $242,250,000 is available for Indian tribes or tribal organizations representing tribes that are eligible to receive Native American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act (NAHASDA) funds. These funds can be used to build new housing and purchase land to support new housing construction. They also can be used to rehabilitate existing housing, including large-scale improvements such as new roofs, plumbing and electrical systems to increase energy efficiency. The funding can build infrastructure, including roads and water and sewers facilities, to create suitable living environments. Priority is given to applicants that demonstrate an ability to obligate and expend the funds quickly.

Indian Community Development Block Grant (ICDBG): $10 million is available for Indian tribes or tribal organizations representing tribes that received an ICDBG grant in Fiscal Year 2008. These funds can be used to encourage economic development, including establishing a wide variety of commercial, industrial and agricultural projects. Priority is given to applicants that create job opportunities that will bring economic recovery to tribal communities; and to promote energy efficiency in their projects.

The Recovery Act includes $13.61 billion for projects and programs administered by HUD, nearly 75 percent of which was allocated to state and local recipients only eight days after President Obama signed the Act into law. The remaining 25 percent of funds, including the grants announced today, are being awarded through a competitive grant process in the coming months. HUD is committed to implementing Recovery Act investments swiftly and effectively as they generate tens of thousands of jobs, modernize homes to make them energy efficient, and help the families and communities hardest hit by the economic crisis.

In addition, Secretary Donovan and the Department are committed to providing the highest level of transparency possible as Recovery Act funds are administered. It is vitally important that the American people are fully aware of how their tax dollars are being spent and can hold their federal leaders accountable. Every dollar of Recovery Act funds HUD spends can be reviewed and tracked at HUD's Recovery Act website. The full text of HUD's funding notices and tracking of future performance of these grants is also available at HUD's Recovery Act website.

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HUD is the nation's housing agency committed to sustaining homeownership; 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.

 

Native American Housing Block Grant (NAHBG) Program
State Grantee Community Amount
Alaska Chilkoot Indian Association Haines $1,906,866
  Cook Inlet Housing Authority Anchorage $5,000,000
California Greenville Rancheria Greenville $2,000,000
  Modoc-Lassen Indian HA Lake Almanor $2,000,000
  Bear River Band of Rohnerville Rancheria Loleta $2,000,000
  Karuk Tribe Housing Happy Camp $2,936,850
Idaho Coeur d Alene Tribal Housing Authority Plummer $2,000,000
Maine Houlton Band of Maliseet HA Houlton $2,000,000
Michigan Hannahville Potawatomie HA Wilson $1,516,850
  Sault Ste Marie HA Kincheloe $3,000,000
  Keweenaw Bay Ojibwa Hau Baraga $1,974,968
Minnesota Red Lake Reservation HA Red Lake $3,000,000
Montana Salish & Kootenai H.A. Pablo $3,000,000
  Northern Cheyenn Housing Authority Lame Deer $3,000,000
North Carolina Lumbee Tribe of NC Pembroke $4,000,000
New Mexico Laguna Housing Dev. & Mgmt. Enterprise Laguna $2,000,000
  Nambe Pueblo Housing Entity Santa Fe $2,000,000
  San Felipe Pueblo HA San Felipe Pueblo $2,000,000
New York Akwesasne HA Hogansburg $3,000,000
Oklahoma Cherokee Nation Tahlequah $5,000,000
  Cheyenne Arapaho Tribe HA Clinton $3,000,000
  Citizen Potawatomi Nation Shawnee $2,745,831
  Muscogee Creek Nation Okmulgee $5,000,000
  Peoria Housing Authority Miami $2,000,000
  Seminole Nation HA Wewoka $2,000,000
Oregon Coos, Lower Umpqua & Siuslaw Tribe Coos Bay $1,998,800
South Dakota Oglala Lakota Sioux H.A. Pine Ridge $4,000,000
  SWA Corp. (Rosebud) Rosebud $4,000,000
Utah Utah Paiute Housing Authority Cedar City $2,000,000
Washington Kalispel Tribe Usk $1,034,542
  Cowlitz Tribal  Housing Authority Chehalis $2,624,865
  Suquamish Tribe Suquamish $1,902,448
Wisconsin Lac Courte Oreilles HA Hayward $3,000,000
  Ho-Chunk Housing and Community Development Agency Tomah $3,000,000
Wyoming Northern Arapaho H.A. Ethete $1,596,000
    Total $93,238,020


INDIAN COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (ICDBG) PROGRAM
State Grantee Community Amount
Alaska Akiachak Native Community Akiachak $299,215
  Chikoot Indian Association Haines $432,587
  Yakutat Tlingit Tribe Yakatat $600,000
California Bear River Band of Rohnerville Rancheria Loleta $600,000
Michigan Hannahville Indian Community Wilson $434,456
  Keweenaw Bay Indian Community Baraga $600,000
Minnesota White Earth Band of Chippewa White Earth $396,429
Montana Northern Cheyenne HA Lame Deer $600,000
Oklahoma Ottawa Tribe Miami $600,000
  Pawnee Nation Pawnee $600,000
  Seneca Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma Grove $538,957
Oregon Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon Grand Ronde $600,000
Utah Utah Paiute Housing Authority Cedar City $600,000
    Total $6,901,644

 

 
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