HUD Awards $17.6 Million in Fair Housing Grants
|
|
The Department of Housing and Urban Development has awarded $17.6 million in grants to fair housing groups in 39 states and the District of Columbia as part of the Bush administration?s efforts to curb housing discrimination. ?Today?s announcement is another step toward ensuring that Americans have equal access to safe and affordable housing,? said HUD Acting Secretary Alphonso Jackson. ?We will not allow discrimination to stop families across this nation from living in any home, apartment or neighborhood they can afford.? The grants were awarded today by HUD’s Fair Housing Initiatives Program to groups that will use the funds to investigate allegations of housing discrimination, educate the public and housing industry about housing discrimination laws, and work to promote fair housing. Three types of grants were awarded to groups in 96 cities: Private Enforcement Initiative grants - About $10.2 million was awarded to assist private, tax-exempt fair housing enforcement organizations in the investigation and enforcement of alleged violations of the Fair Housing Act and State and local fair housing laws. Education and Outreach Initiative grants - About $5.3 million was allocated to groups to educate the public about the rights and obligations under federal, state and local fair housing laws. Nearly $800,000 went to ten groups that focus on the needs of persons with disabilities. Fair Housing Organizations Initiative grants - About $2.1 million was awarded for projects that serve rural and immigrant populations in underserved areas or where there currently is no existing fair housing organization. In 2002, HUD released a study titled Discrimination in Metropolitan Housing Markets: Phase I, which documented that despite a decline during the last decade, housing discrimination still exists at unacceptable levels. Last year, HUD, in partnership with The Advertising Council and the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund, recently released an award-winning, edgy multimedia campaign designed to fight housing discrimination by showing the many faces of those persons protected by the nation’s 35-year-old Fair Housing Act. HUD received applications from 215 groups seeking grants for the fiscal year 2003 assistance. Grants were awarded to 121 projects in the following locations: More : rismedia.com |