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House Panel Approves HUD Funding
The House Transportation, Treasury, Housing and Urban Development, Judiciary and District of Columbia Appropriations Subcommittee on June 15 approved the fiscal 2006 appropriations bill. Under the legislation, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) was allotted $37.5 billion, $1.5 billion above last year's funding level and $4.3 billion more than the administration had requested. Of particular importance to NAHB were several programs:
Community Development Block Grants (CDBG): The subcommittee soundly rejected a White House proposal to move the CDBG program to the Department of Commerce. NAHB had strongly opposed the proposal, and had asked appropriators to reject the idea. Appropriators funded CDBG at $4.2 billion, with $3.86 billion going to formula grants. This represents an approximate 4.2% cut versus last year's funding levels.
Section 8: Section 8 was split into two distinct categories, with Tenant-Based Vouchers funded at $15.53 billion, and Project-Based vouchers at $5.10 billion. The total Section 8 funding is a small increase over fiscal 2005 levels.
HOME program: The HOME program received $1.9 billion in overall funding, the same as last year’s level.
PATH program: The Partnership for Advancing Technology in Housing (PATH) program received $5 million in funding, a decrease from its $7 million fiscal 2005 level. The administration had proposed eliminating the program altogether. House appropriators did include language requested by NAHB to allow cooperative agreements to continue under the program. The PATH program is used to fund several projects conducted by the NAHB Research Center.
YouthBuild program: YouthBuild is a small program within HUD that encourages young people to pursue careers in home building. The subcommittee failed to approve any funding for the program in fiscal 2006. The administration had proposed that the program be moved to the Department of Labor (DOL), a move which NAHB supports. However, lacking authorizing legislation to complete the move, appropriators instead zeroed out funding for this year. NAHB has urged the DOL to promptly send authorizing legislation to Congress and the agency is currently crafting such legislation.
HOPE VI//Brownfields Redevelopment: At the request of the administration, both of these programs were zeroed out by appropriators. The programs were cited by appropriators as having fulfilled their original mission, and funding that had historically been allotted to them was moved to cover additional Section 8 expenses.
The Senate is expected to markup its version of the HUD appropriations bill next month.
Additionally, the full House last week approved the fiscal 2006 Science, State, Justice and Commerce (SSJC) Appropriations bill. This legislation funds two programs of particular interest to NAHB. The Edward Byrne discretionary grant program under the Department of Justice, which has previously helped to fund HBI Project CRAFT programs, received $348 million, down from $634 million in fiscal 2005. The administration had attempted to eliminate this program altogether, a move that NAHB opposed.
Funding for the fiscal 2006 American Communities Survey (ACS), which studies community development and demographics as part of the U.S. Census Bureau, received an appropriation of $160 million from the House. This is $10 million less than the allocation it received in fiscal 2005. NAHB had supported level funding for the ACS in fiscal 2006. The Senate is expected to consider its version of the SSJC bill on June 23. For more information, contact Jenna Morgan Hamilton at x8470.
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