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By The Skanner News | The Skanner News
Published: 14 March 2022

SEATTLE – The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) today announced over $2.6 billion in 2021 Continuum of Care (CoC) Competition Awards for roughly 7,000 local homeless housing and service programs across the United States, including $46,017,563 to 132 projects in Oregon. The awards, announced by Secretary Marcia L. Fudge in Houston, Texas, will provide funding to communities to help individuals and families experiencing homelessness move into permanent housing with access to supportive services, with the overarching goal of long-term stability.

“HUD is proud to support our partners in the Northwest who are making an impact to end homelessness in our communities,” said HUD Regional Administrator Margaret Solle Salazar. “These resources will open the doors to long-term housing stability for thousands of families in our region and will help build an equitable recovery from this time of crisis.”

The CoC program is designed to promote a community-wide commitment to the goal of ending homelessness. The program is the largest source of federal grant funding for homeless services and housing programs servicing people experiencing homelessness. The 2021 awards include approximately $102 million for new domestic violence support projects. The awards also fund new projects that focus on adding permanent housing to communities including new permanent supportive housing, new rapid rehousing, and projects that provide transitional housing to households and then shift them to rapid rehousing.

The funding will be used to address these areas:

  • End homelessness for all persons experiencing homelessness;
  • Use a Housing First approach;
  • Reduce unsheltered homelessness and reduce the criminalization of homelessness;
  • Improve system performance;
  • Partner with housing and health agencies, including to leverage and coordinate American Rescue Plan resources;
  • Advance racial equity and addressing racial disparities in homelessness; and
  • Engage people with lived experience of homelessness in decision-making.

Multnomah County Awards (Total $28,599,693) 

  • 19th Ave Apartments - $400,410 
  • A Home for Everyone Coordinated Access - $68,898 
  • Alcohol and Drug Free Housing - $163,661 
  • Andrea Lee/Healing Roots Consolidation - $366,812 
  • Clifford Apartments - $259,504 
  • Collaboration - $469,115 
  • Domestic Violence Coordinated Access Coordinator - $78,000 
  • Domestic Violence Supportive Housing Combined - $1,339,393 
  • Family Futures - $1,482,297 
  • HMIS - $245,666 
  • HOPE - $2,808,665 
  • Horizons - $218,161 
  • Horizons Homesafe Consolidation - $793,004 
  • Housing Integration for Healthier Outcomes - $536,219 
  • IRCO Housing Services for Survivors FY 2021 - $382,323 
  • Madrona Studios - $338,125 
  • Moving to Permanent Housing - $454,866 
  • NowHOME - $317,452 
  • Old Town Collaborative Homeless Housing Program - $527,649 
  • OR-501 CoC Planning Application FY2021 - $816,159 
  • OTIS Project - $463,698 
  • Pathways Rent Assistance - $229,755 
  • Project HAVEN Permanent Supportive Housing - $1,184,621 
  • Project HAVEN: Rapid Rehousing - $2,025,524 
  • Rapid Rehousing Bonus - $92,336 
  • Rapid Re-Housing Initiative - $572,480 
  • Roads to Housing - $131,147 
  • Royal Palm 2 PSH Consolidated - $1,326,391 
  • Safe Home - $174,439 
  • Safe Home Partnership - $589,561 
  • SPC Home Forward Amalgamate - $7,037,001 
  • Special Needs Services - $127,974 
  • Spectrum Housing Relief: PSH - $296,488 
  • Sunrise Place - $106,767 
  • The Women's Housing Collaborative Consolidation - $674,363 
  • Winter Housing: Targeted Permanent Supportive Housing for Women's Shelter Residents - $373,995 
  • Women's Housing Program - $343,214 
  • YWCA Transitional and Rapid Re-Housing Program - $783,560 

View the complete breakdown of the awards on the HUD website.

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