The funding will provide legal assistance at no cost to low-income tenants.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) announced the availability of $40 million in grant funds for eligible non-profit or governmental entities to provide no cost legal assistance to low-income tenants at risk of or subject to eviction from their homes. President Biden and Vice President Harris believe everyone deserves to live in a safe and affordable home. To ensure households have access to stable housing, HUD launched the Eviction Protection Grant Program (EPGP), a first-of-its-kind federal program to stabilize housing and prevent housing evictions through legal assistance, in 2021. HUD funded 21 grantees serving tenants across 19 states with $40 million during the first phase of the program in FY 2021 and 2022. Current grantees, as well as new applicants, will be considered for awards with this new round of funding.
“This program exemplifies HUD’s focus on helping renters,” said HUD Acting Secretary Adrianne Todman. “We are releasing $40 million to support our local partners, who are providing a crucial lifeline to people who risk losing their homes, particularly people of color, who disproportionately face eviction.”
As of March 2024, this program has helped over 35,000 households avoid eviction. HUD funding has helped these organizations rapidly improve and scale up their services and respond to emerging tenant needs. Most tenants served through the program are people of color and nearly half are from Black households. Nearly 2 in 3 tenants served have extremely low incomes, these are often living below the poverty line. The program continues to grow in impact as grantees expand their programs.
“Each year 7.6 million tenants face the threat of eviction. Black households, especially women and children, are more likely to experience the lasting harms of eviction. Research shows that evictions contribute to increases in homelessness, unemployment and hospital use. And the rippling harms of eviction reach beyond affected households – destabilizing and straining neighborhoods, schools, municipal social services, and regional economies” said Solomon Greene, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research. “We are excited for the opportunity to expand the program given the tremendous demand for these services. and we commit to sharing what we learn from grantee successes to provide models for communities across the United States.”
The goal of the Eviction Protection Grant Program is to increase housing stability for low-income tenants through:
- Prevention: helping tenants avert eviction and prevent eviction filings and prevent displacement and risk of homelessness.
- Justice: helping tenants exercise and enforce their housing and civil rights and ensure the legal process during eviction is fair.
- Diversion: increasing tenant access to, and participation in, non-adversarial and more less costly resolutions with housing owners and landlords, outside of the court system.
- Relief: helping tenants avoid the harmful consequences of eviction and gain access to stabilizing resources like housing counseling.
Grantees will also participate in research conducted by HUD’s Office of Policy Development and Research (PD&R) and will be expected to collect and submit data on services provided and associated outcomes.
HUD is anticipating making approximately 25 awards of $500,000 to $2,500,000 each, with a total of $40,000,000 in grant funds available. The deadline to submit an application is August 20, 2024. For more information about how to submit an application, please visit: HUD Funding Opportunities/FY24 EPGP and Grants.gov.