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HUD No. 23-174
HUD Public Affairs
(202) 708-0685
FOR RELEASE
Thursday
August 17, 2023

HUD Awards Nearly $140 Million to Protect Families from Lead and Other Home Health and Safety Hazards

Funding to make low-income families’ homes safer and healthier.


WASHINGTON - The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) awarded today nearly $140 million to 36 state and local government agencies in 19 states to protect children and families from lead-based paint hazards and other home health hazards.

HUD is providing these grants through its Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction grant program and its new Lead Hazard Reduction Capacity Building grant program to identify and clean up dangerous lead hazards and other health hazards in low-income families’ homes. These grants include more than $10 million from HUD’s Healthy Homes Supplemental funding to help communities with housing-related health and safety hazards in addition to lead-based paint hazards.

These investments will protect families and children by controlling significant lead and health hazards in over 3,400 low-income homes for which other resources are not available. The Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction grant program has two categories of competitive grants – awarding seven Lead-Based Paint Hazard Control grants open to local governments and most states, and 21 Lead Hazard Reduction Demonstration grants open to local governments with large numbers of older homes, which are more likely to have lead-based paint hazards, and most states. The Lead Hazard Reduction Capacity Building grant program is awarding eight smaller competitive grants to state and local governments that have not had Lead Hazard Reduction grants, to help them develop the necessary infrastructure and capacity to undertake the larger programs in future years.

“Today, we are renewing our steadfast commitment to improving the lives of children and their families,” said HUD Secretary Marcia L. Fudge. “The funding provided today will enable communities to make the homes of families of limited means healthier, and improve their children’s school attendance rate, learning, and, eventually, job prospects.”

Matthew Ammon, Director of HUD’s Office of Lead Hazard Control and Healthy Homes, added that, “These grants continue HUD’s commitment to sustainable communities and providing healthy and safe homes for all. We are committed to protecting families from lead-based paint hazards and other hazards in their home.”

Awarding these grants contributes to HUD’s achieving its strategic objective to strengthen environmental justice by reducing exposure to health risks, environmental hazards, and substandard housing, especially for low-income households and communities of color. You can read the Fiscal Year 2022-2026 HUD Strategic Plan on HUD’s website.

Read a complete project-by-project summary of the programs awarded grants today here.

The following is a state-by-state breakdown of the funding announced today:

 

Grant Program
State
Organization Name
Lead Hazard
Reduction Amount
Healthy Homes
Supplement Amount
LBPHC
AL
City of Florence
$1,500,000
$0
LHRCB
AL
City of Montgomery
$716,650
$0
LHRCB
AL
Town of Fort Deposit
$2,499,134
$0
LHRD
AL
City of Selma
$2,215,500
$0
LBPHC
CA
Alameda County Healthy Homes
$5,000,000
$700,000
LHRCB
CA
County of Ventura
$2,500,000
$0
LHRD
CA
City of Fontana
$4,000,000
$400,000
LHRD
CT
City of New Haven
$7,765,930
$0
LHRCB
FL
City of Saint Petersburg
$2,500,000
$0
LBPHC
IA
County of Cerro Gordo
$1,881,445
$312,220
LBPHC
IA
City of Council Bluffs
$1,654,303
$0
LHRD
IA
City of Sioux City
$4,487,989
$700,000
LHRD
IA
City of Muscatine
$2,556,932
$400,000
LHRD
IA
City of Marshalltown
$4,326,330
$700,000
LHRD
IL
County of McHenry
$1,862,320
$170,100
LBPHC
LA
City of Monroe
$4,096,699
$400,000
LHRD
LA
Jefferson Parrish
$5,000,000
$700,000
LHRCB
MA
Massachusetts Department of Public Health
$2,500,000
$0
LHRD
MA
City of Worcester
$4,100,000
$0
LHRD
ME
Maine State Housing Authority
$5,000,000
$700,000
LHRCB
MI
County of Kent
$2,493,629
$0
LHRD
MI
Michigan Department of Health & Human Services
$7,997,798
$0
LHRD
MI
City of Grand Rapids
$6,000,000
$600,000
LBPHC
MN
Minnesota Department of Health
$3,621,869
$225,000
LHRCB
NC
Triangle J Council of Governments
$654,507
$0
LHRD
NC
City of Charlotte
$2,907,037
$666,000
LBPHC
NE
Two Rivers Public Health Department
$1,196,395
$148,800
LHRD
NJ
City of East Orange
$4,501,958
$300,000
LHRCB
NY
Cattaraugus County Health Department
$2,500,000
$0
LHRD
NY
Broome County
$5,600,000
$700,000
LHRD
NY
City of Utica
$3,314,989
$660,000
LHRD
NY
County of Niagara
$3,000,000
$300,000
LHRD
PR
Puerto Rico public Housing Administration
$3,520,080
$0
LHRD
TN
City of Memphis
$5,000,000
$700,000
LHRD
UT
Salt Lake County
$5,116,785
$700,000
LHRD
WI
City of Milwaukee
$5,000,000
$700,000
 

Key: LBPHC = Lead-Based Paint Hazard Control grant; LHRCB = Lead Hazard Reduction

Capacity Building grant; LHRD = Lead Hazard Reduction Demonstration grant.

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