WASHINGTON
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development announced today that
the transition of the Disaster Housing Assistance Program (DHAP) rental
assistance program from FEMA to HUD will be as seamless as possible for
the approximately 30,000 FEMA-assisted families displaced by Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita currently living in private rental units. HUD also
announced it has established a toll free call center number,
1-866-373-9509, to answer questions about the transition. The call
center will field calls from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. EST weekdays, and from 9
a.m. until 1 p.m. on the weekends.
"We are trying to make every effort to ease the concerns of these families and assure them there will be no break in payments," explained HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson. "Some families recently received correspondence indicating the current contractor would not be making payments after August. I would like to clarify thatFEMA's contractor, Corporate Lodging Consultants (CLC), will continue to make payments to landlords through October 2007. Those families who receive rental assistance directly from FEMA also will continue to receive these rent payments for September and October from FEMA. Starting November 1, 2007, HUD will assume responsibility through local Public Housing Agencies for all future payments."
HUD will use its extensive national network of public housing agencies (PHAs) to provide housing assistance and case management services to eligible families. The program will also assist families in continuing to move toward self-sufficiency.
All families currently receiving rental housing assistance through FEMA and living in private rental units are eligible for and will be transitioned into this program. There is nothing these families need to do at this point to qualify. Families are expected to experience a seamless transition into DHAP and will be contacted by the PHA administering DHAP in the jurisdiction in which the family resides.
The Department will post final operating procedures on its website on or about August 17, 2007 and will conduct a satellite broadcast on August 23, 2007 at 10:00 a.m. The broadcast can be accessed through:
AM-1(C-Band)
Transponder 9, Channel 9
(3880 MHz Horizontal)
103 Degrees W. Longitude
DHAP will be implemented as follows:
- Beginning September 1, 2007, PHAs will begin
outreach and intensive case management services to help displaced
families rebuild their lives and return to self-sufficiency.
- FEMA's
existing contractor (CLC) will continue to make rental assistance
payments on behalf of these families through October 2007 to assure
that there is no interruption in rental subsidy payments to landlords.
PHAs will assume this responsibility effective November 1, 2007.
- FEMA
will continue to make rental assistance payments directly to those
families who have been paying their own landlords through October 2007
to assure there is no interruption in assistance. PHAs will also assume
responsibility for these rent payments effective November 1, 2007 but
such payments will be made directly to landlords.
- Prior
to November 1, 2007, PHAs will contact the landlords and ensure the
necessary documents are in place so that those families will continue
to receive uninterrupted assistance payments through DHAP. The families
do not have to take any action. PHAs will provide search assistance to
those families that need to move as a result of the transition.
- Beginning
January 2008, HUD will begin working with FEMA to transition eligible
families out of travel trailers and into rental housing in the private
market.
- On March 1, 2008, the level of
subsidy will begin to be reduced, which will gradually lead families
toward independence. Program participants will pay a portion of the
cost, which will begin at $50 per month and incrementally increase each
month thereafter until the program concludes on March 1, 2009.
- Seniors
and the disabled whose primary source of income is Supplemental
Security Income or other fixed income that make them eligible to
receive assistance under existing HUD programs will be protected. HUD,
through its network of PHAs, will actively work to transition these
individuals into its existing programs.
- Residents
in the program will also receive case management services coordinated
by PHAs to help them get back on their feet, including financial
education, job training or other social services.
- Families and individuals in the program will be given complete information, supportive services, resources and ample time to prepare themselves for the end of temporary, subsidized housing.
HUD is the nation's housing agency committed to increasing homeownership, particularly among minorities; creating affordable housing opportunities for low-income Americans; and supporting the homeless, elderly, people with disabilities and people living with AIDS. The Department also promotes economic and community development, and enforces the nation's fair housing laws. More information about HUD and its programs is available on the Internet at www.hud.gov and espanol.hud.gov.