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HUD   >   State Information   >   North Carolina   >   News   >   2011-04-28
HUD No. 4-28-2011
Joseph J. Phillips
(678) 732-2943
FOR RELEASE
Thursday
April 28, 2011

HUD SECRETARY DONOVAN ANNOUNCES $5,854,919 IN NEW GRANTS FOR TWENTY FIVE HOMELESS PROGRAMS IN NORTH CAROLINA

GREENSBORO – U.S. Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan today awarded $5,854,919 to twenty five new homeless programs in North Carolina.   The grants announced today are an investment in local projects which have never received HUD homeless funds in the past, providing critically needed housing and support services to homeless individuals and families.  The grants announced today are in addition to $15,865,468 HUD awarded in January to renew funding to 130 existing North Carolina homeless housing and service programs.

HUD is awarding new grants to the following North Carolina local homeless programs:

State

City

Recipient

Program*

Awarded Amount

North Carolina

Gastonia

As One Ministries, Inc.

SHP

$54,255

 

Charlotte

Charlotte Center for Urban Ministry, Inc

SHP

$150,060

 

Winston-Salem

City of Winston-Salem

S+C

$100,620

 

Raleigh

Community Alternatives for Supportive Abodes

SHP

$425,004

 

Raleigh

Community Alternatives for Supportive Abodes

SHP

$102,616

 

New Bern

East Carolina Behavioral Health

S+C

$765,000

 

Henderson

five county mental health authority

S+C

$665,040

 

Asheville

Homeward Bound of Asheville, Inc.

SHP

$44,320

 

Wilmington

Housing Authority of the City of Wilmington/Hopewood

SHP

$43,318

 

Shelby

Inter-faith Alliance

SHP

$31,998

 

Jacksonville

Onslow Carteret Behavioral Healthcare Services

S+C

$415,380

 

Chapel Hill

OPC Mental Health, Developmental Disabilities and Substance Abuse Area Authority

S+C

$215,520

 

Raleigh

Passage Home, Inc.

SHP

$22,967

 

Concord

Piedmont Behavioral Healthcare (PBH)

S+C

$691,320

 

Madison

Rockingham County Help For Homeless, Inc.

SHP

$454,503

 

West End

Sandhills Center LME

S+C

$250,500

 

Lenoir

Smoky Mountain Center LME

S+C

$373,140

 

Sylva

Smoky Mountain Center LME

S+C

$269,880

 

Fayetteville

Step & Stages Disabled Veterans Resource Agency Inc.

SHP

$47,844

 

Reidsville

The New Reidsville Housing Authority

SHP

$14,976

 

Greensboro

The Servant Center

SHP

$125,413

 

Raleigh

Wake County Human Services

S+C

$333,600

 

Raleigh

Wake County Human Services

S+C

$210,900

 

Pittsboro

XDS Inc

SHP

$28,047

 

Pittsboro

XDS Inc

SHP

$18,698

 

 

North Carolina Total

 

$5,854,919


“Today, we build on this Administration’s goal to prevent and end homelessness in America,” said Donovan. “This funding will make a significant impact in the lives of thousands of people and provide resources to put them on the road of independence.”

“It is hard to find encouragement when living where there are no walls but all doors seem closed to you. This funding provides a pivotal service to families and individuals in dire circumstances, so they can count on shelter and basic services to start over, recover hope and find their way again,” said Ed Jennings Jr., HUD Southeast Regional Administrator.

HUD’s Continuum of Care grants fund a wide range of transitional and permanent housing programs as well as supportive services such as job training, case management, mental health counseling, substance abuse treatment and child care. Street outreach and assessment programs to transitional and permanent housing for homeless persons and families are also funded through these grants.  Continuum of Care programs include:

  • Shelter Plus Care (S+C) provides housing and supportive services on a long-term basis for homeless persons with disabilities, (primarily those with serious mental illness, chronic problems with alcohol and/or drugs, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or related diseases) and their families who were living in places not intended for human habitation (e.g., streets) or in emergency shelters.

Last year, 19 federal agencies in the Obama Administration announced a plan to end all homelessness through, Opening Doors, an unprecedented federal strategy to end veteran and chronic homelessness by 2015, and to end homelessness among children, families, and youth by 2020. In addition to the Continuum of Care grant program, HUD’s new Homelessness Prevention and Rapid Re-housing (HPRP) Program made possible through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 is making a major contribution to the Opening Doors strategy. To date, HPRP has allocated $1.5 billion to prevent more than 875,000 people from falling into homelessness or to rapidly re-house them if they do.

HUD’s homelessness grants are reducing long-term or chronic homelessness in America. Based on the Department’s latest Annual Homeless Assessment Report (AHAR), chronic homelessness has declined by 30 percent since 2006.  This decline is directly attributed to HUD’s homeless grants helping to create significantly more permanent housing for those who might otherwise be living on the streets.  It was also reported in the AHAR that the number of homeless families increased for the second consecutive year, almost certainly due to the ongoing effects of the recession.

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