Spotlight On...
Today, May 6, the Senate unanimously passed S.
896, the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act.
The approved legislation included an
amendment put forth by Senators Reed (D-RI) and
Bond (R-MO) to attach the Homeless Emergency
Assistance and Rapid Transition to Housing
(HEARTH) Act, which would reauthorize McKinney-
Vento Homeless Assistance programs. The House
has already passed H.R. 1106, its version of S.896,
without the HEARTH Act attached, so the bill will
proceed to the conference stage in the coming weeks,
where the conference committee will decide
whether or not to include the HEARTH Act in the final
compromised version of the bill. Then, the
full House and Senate must approve the final version
of S.896 and send it to the President for his signature
before it becomes law.
The HEARTH Act would reauthorize McKinney-Vento
Homeless Assistance programs, substantially
improving communities' ability to prevent and end
homelessness. The legislation:
- Allows up to 20 percent of funds to be used to
prevent homelessness or rapidly re-house people
who become homeless through the new "Emergency
Solutions Grants" (formerly Emergency Shelter
Grants);
- Consolidates the Supportive Housing Program,
Shelter Plus Care, and the Moderate
Rehabilitation/Single Room Occupancy Program into
a single Continuum of Care program;
- Increases the emphasis on performance by
measuring applicants' progress at reducing
homelessness;
- Requires that HUD provide incentives for proven
solutions, including rapid re-
housing programs for homeless families and
permanent supportive housing for chronically
homeless individuals and families;
- Designates 30 percent of total funds for new
permanent housing for families and individuals with a
disability;
- Simplifies the requirement for matching funds;
Modestly expands the definition of homelessness;
Allows grantees to use up to an additional 10 percent
of competitive funds to serve families defined as
homeless under the Department of Education (but not
HUD);
- Creates the Rural Housing Stability Assistance
Program, which would grant rural communities
greater flexibility in utilizing Homeless Assistance
Grants and allow them to use more funding for
capacity building; and
- Authorizes $2.2 billion for fiscal year (FY) 2010,
and such sums as necessary for
FY2011.
Senator Kerry (D-MA) submitted another amendment
to S. 896, which was also approved. It would require
90 days' notice prior to eviction for renters living in
properties that have been foreclosed upon. Please
watch Alliance Online News over the coming weeks
for updates as a final,
compromise version of the legislation is
created.
More Information about
the HEARTH Act