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HUD AWARDS $40 MILLION IN HOUSING COUNSELING GRANTS
HUD funding critical to support hundreds of counseling agencies nationwide
June 18, 2013
WASHINGTON – As part of its continuing effort to assist families and
individuals with their housing needs and to prevent future foreclosures, the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) today announced more
than $40 million in housing counseling grants to 334 national, regional and
local organizations. As a result of these grants and the additional
funding they help leverage, more than 1.6 million households will have a
greater opportunity to find housing, make more informed housing choices or keep
their current homes. See
list of all counseling agencies awarded funding today.
“Make no mistake: these grants will do a lot of good,” said HUD Secretary
Shaun Donovan. “The HUD-approved counseling agencies this funding
supports are crucial in helping families manage their money, navigate the
homebuying process, and secure their financial futures. The evidence is
clear that housing counseling works. These grants are a smart investment
to help families and individuals find and keep housing which helps promote
neighborhood stability in the long term.”
More than $38 million in grant funds will directly support the housing
counseling services provided by 27 national and regional organizations, 8
multi-state organizations, 22 State Housing Finance Agencies (SHFAs) and 277
local housing counseling agencies. In addition, HUD is awarding $2
million to two national organizations to train housing counselors who will
receive the instruction and certification necessary to effectively assist
families with their housing needs.
Working in consultation with housing counseling industry stakeholders, HUD’s
new Office of Housing Counseling substantially streamlined the application
process for these grants. A number of procedural improvements were made
to the application process and program requirements, which encourage the
development of efficient and effective counseling programs and reduce the
administrative burden on applicants. HUD awards annual grants under the
housing counseling program through a competitive process. Organizations that
apply for grants must be HUD-approved and are subject to monitoring and
oversight to maintain their HUD-approved status.
National and regional agencies distribute much of HUD’s housing counseling
grant funding to community-based organizations that assist low- and
moderate-income families to improve their housing conditions. In addition,
these larger organizations help improve the quality of housing counseling
services and enhance coordination among counseling providers. Read
a summary of each grant, organized by state.
HUD
studies show the effectiveness of housing counseling. Last year,
HUDreleased two reports on the impact of HUD-approved housing counseling for
families who purchase their first homes and those struggling to prevent foreclosure.
In both studies, HUD found housing counseling significantly improved the
likelihood homeowners remained in their homes.
Grant recipients utilize funding to address the full range of families’
housing counseling needs. This includes helping homebuyers and homeowners
realistically evaluate their readiness for a home purchase, understand their
financing and downpayment options, and navigate what can be an extremely
confusing and difficult process. Grantees also help households find affordable
rental housing and offer financial literacy training to individuals and
families struggling to repair credit problems that restrict their housing
options. In addition to providing counseling to homebuyers and renters,
these organizations assist homeless persons in finding the transitional housing
they need to move toward a permanent place to live. Finally, grantees also
assist senior citizens seeking reverse mortgages or Home
Equity Conversion Mortgages (HECM). These agencies provide
counseling for the rapidly growing number of elderly homeowners who seek to
convert equity in their homes into income that can be used to pay for home
improvements, medical costs, and other living expenses.
Housing counseling agencies support fair housing by assisting borrowers in
reviewing their loan documentation, to avoid potential mortgage scams,
unreasonably high interest rates, inflated appraisals, unaffordable repayment
terms, and other conditions that can result in a loss of equity, increased
debt, default, and even foreclosure. Likewise, foreclosure prevention
counseling helps homeowners facing delinquency or default employ strategies,
including expense reduction, negotiation with lenders and loan servicers, and
loss mitigation, to avoid foreclosure.
HUD’s
new mobile app allows smartphone and tablet users to locate housing
counselors in their own area.
--
Bruce Dorpalen
National Housing Resource Center
846 N. Broad St., 2nd Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19130
215 765-0048
bdorpalen@hsgcenter.org
www.hsgcenter.org
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