| Homelessness
Prevention and Re-Housing Program
Illinois
to Receive $70 million to help prevent homelessness
In February 2009, President
Barack Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act into law. The Act authorized $1.5 billion in homelessness prevention
and re-housing funding under the Emergency Shelter Grant Program
(ESG). On March 19, HUD issued guidelines for use of the ESG homelessness
prevention funds.
State and local governments in
Illinois will be receiving over $70 million dollars of
this funding. Funding for this program, now called the Homelessness
Prevention and Re-Housing Program (HPRP), will be distributed via
the ESG program funding formula, but will not be used for the traditional
ESG purpose of operating emergency shelters.
Program Overview
The funding will provide financial
assistance and services to prevent individuals and families from
becoming homeless and help those who are experiencing homelessness
to be quickly re-housed and stabilized. The funds under this program
are intended to target individuals and families who would be homeless
but for this assistance. The funds will provide for a variety of
assistance, including: short-term or medium-term rental assistance
and housing relocation and stabilization services, including such
activities as mediation, credit counseling, security or utility deposits,
utility payments, moving cost assistance, and case management.
Who are
eligible grantees for the funds?
Eligible grantees include metropolitan
cities, urban counties and states (for distribution to local governments
and private nonprofit organizations). Illinois allocations are as
follows. Links to draft plans and public comment period start and
end dates are also presented.
| RECIPIENT |
AMOUNT |
LINK TO DRAFT PLAN |
Public Comment Start |
Public Comment End |
| IL STATE PROGRAM |
$20,286,504 |
http://www.commerce.state.il.us/dceo/ |
4/16/09 |
5/4/09 |
| AURORA |
$506,883 |
http://www.aurora-il.org/documents/neighborhoodredevelopment/HUD%2040119%20-%20HPRP%20Amendment%20Form.pdf |
4/14/09 |
5/11/09 |
| BERWYN |
$559,545 |
http://calendar.berwyn-il.gov/news_view.aspx?articleid=115 |
4/29/09 |
5/11/09 |
| CHICAGO |
$34,356,259 |
http://egov.cityofchicago.org:80/webportal/COCWebPortal/COC_EDITORIAL/HPRP%20
Substantial%20Amendment,%204-27-09.pdf |
4/27/09 |
5/09/09 |
| CICERO |
$581,065 |
http://www.thetownofcicero.com/content/img/f215769/final-hprpsubamendform1.pdf |
5/1/09 |
5/14/09 |
| COOK COUNTY |
$4,121,046 |
http://cookcountygov.com/taxonomy/Planning%20and%20Development/General%20Information/
HPRP_SubstantialAmendment.pdf |
5/1/09 |
5/12/09 |
| DECATUR |
$623,309 |
|
|
|
| DU PAGE COUNTY |
$1,443,723 |
http://www.dupageco.org/cdc/ |
4/15/09 |
4/27/09 |
| EAST ST LOUIS |
$750,339 |
|
|
|
| EVANSTON |
$801,460 |
http://www.cityofevanston.org/departments/health/pdf/HHSHUDHPRP
SubstantialAmendment.pdf |
4/23/09 |
5/05/09 |
| KANE COUNTY |
$517,394 |
http://www.countyofkane.org/Homeless%20Prevention%20and%20Rapid%20Rehousing
%20Documents/Forms/AllItems.aspx |
4/23/09 |
5/04/09 |
| LAKE COUNTY |
$1,057,106 |
http://www.lakecountyil.gov/Planning/CommunityDevelopment/Default.htm |
4/22/09 |
5/04/09 |
| MADISON COUNTY |
$566,987 |
|
|
|
| MCHENRY COUNTY |
$540,732 |
http://www.co.mchenry.il.us/common/CountyDpt/PlanDev/pdCDBG.asp |
4/08/09 |
4/21/09 |
| OAK PARK |
$796,581 |
|
|
|
| PEORIA |
$790,404 |
http://www.ci.peoria.il.us/officials/clerk/Agenda/MG65949/
AS65953/AS65958/AI66014/DO66020/DO_66020.pdf |
4/24/09 |
5/05/09 |
| ROCKFORD |
$861,073 |
http://rockfordil.gov/government/human/index.cfm?section=csbg&id=234 |
5/1/09 |
5/14/09 |
| SPRINGFIELD |
$516,191 |
http://www.springfield.il.us/legalnotice/Draft%202%20HUD-40119.pdf |
4/16/09 |
4/28/09 |
| ST CLAIR COUNTY |
$586,413 |
http://www.co.st-clair.il.us/NewsHighlights/Con+Plan.htm |
4/27/09 |
5/08/09 |
| WILL COUNTY |
$602,271 |
|
|
|
| TOTAL |
$70,865,285 |
|
|
|
What are the
eligible uses for the funds?
Funding cannot be used for traditional
ESG activities of operating emergency shelter; instead funds can
be used to prevent homelessness, divert people from shelter and rapidly
re-house those who become homeless.
There are four categories of
eligible activities for the HPRP: financial assistance, housing relocation
and stabilization services, data collection and evaluation, and administrative
costs. Financial assistance is limited to the following activities:
short-term rental assistance, medium-term rental assistance, security
deposits, utility deposits, utility payments, moving cost assistance,
and motel and hotel vouchers.
What is the timeline for the program
to be implemented and funds spent?
Communities must submit an action
plan for funding to HUD by May 18, 2009. HUD must approve of the
plans within 45 days of submission, and agreements between grantees
and sub-grantees must be signed by September 30, 2009.
The Recovery Act requires grantees
to spend 60 percent of HPRP grant funds within two years of the date
that funds become available to the grantees for obligation (the date
that HUD signs the grant agreement), and 100 percent of funds within
three years of that date.
For more information
HUD's
page on the HPRP program is available by clicking this link here.
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