Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (from the IRS e-File system), Tax Year 2024
Total Revenue
▼$1.2M
Program Spending
7%
of total expenses go to program services
Total Contributions
$24K
Total Expenses
▼$976.4K
Total Assets
$1.7M
Total Liabilities
▼$51.3K
Net Assets
$1.6M
Officer Compensation
→N/A
Other Salaries
$325.9K
Investment Income
$28.2K
Fundraising
▼$35.5K
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
Total Federal Funding
$240.9M
Awards Found
86
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $50.2M | FY2021 | Feb 2021 – Feb 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $44.9M | FY2015 | Mar 2015 – Feb 2021 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | PROJECT HEAD START | $43.7M | — | — – Feb 2015 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | DISASTER ASISTANCE | $16.8M | FY2021 | Feb 2021 – Jan 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $10M | FY2026 | Feb 2026 – Jan 2031 |
| Department of the Interior | ARRA 14 0681 SOUTHEAST WATER RELIABILITY PROJECT, PHASE 1 | $5.5M | FY2010 | Dec 2009 – Mar 2011 |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS APPLICATION IS TO REPLACE TRANSIT VEHICLES CONTINUE TRANSIT MAINTENANCE AND OPERATIONS AND IMPROVE SERVICE.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: THIS APPLICATION INVOLVES THE FOLLOWING ACTIVITIES:SECTION 5307PROJECT 1 REPLACEMENT OF BUSES FLEET PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE PURCHASE OF PERSONAL SAFETY EQUIPMENT AND OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCEUNDER SPECIAL RULE1.A. I. PURCHASE OF UP TO 4 BUSES TO REPLACE 35 LONG BUSES IN THE AMOUNT OF $2000000 ($2000000 FEDERAL + $300000 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS) ; 1.A.II. PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE OF TRANSPORTATION FLEET IN THE AMOUNT OF $333239 ($333239 FEDERAL + $66648 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS);1.A.III. PURCHASE OF PERSONAL SAFETY EQUIPMENT FOR DRIVERS IN THE AMOUNT OF $22132 ($22132 FEDERAL + $4427TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS); 1.A.IV. OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR FIXED ROUTE TRANSIT UNDER SPECIAL RULE IN THE AMOUNT OF $282285 ($282285 FEDERAL + $141143 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS).PROJECT 2. OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICE IN THE AMOUNT OF $93726 ($93726 FEDERAL + $18745 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS).SECTION 5339PROJECT 3. REPLACEMENT OF UP TO 3 BUSES AND INSTALLATION OF CAMERA SYSTEM ON BUSES3.A.I PURCHASE OF UP TO 3 BUSES TO REPLACE 35 LONG BUSES IN THE AMOUNT OF $1260000 ($1260000 FEDERAL + $189000 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS)..3.A.II. INSTALLATION OF CAMERA SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM ON 25 TRANSIT VEHICLES IN THE AMOUNT OF $100000 ($100000 FEDERAL + $20000 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS). .; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THIS APPLICATION WILL HELP IMPROVE TRANSIT SERVICE IN GUAYNABO BY REPALCING VEHICLES PAST THEIR USEFUL LIFE AND PROVIDING FUNDS FOR OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE OF TRANSIT AND PARATRANSIT VEHICLES.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE MAIN BENEFICIARIES OF THIS APPLICATION ARE THE PASSENGERS SINCE THEY WILL HAVE MORE CONSISTENT TRANSIT SERVICE BECAUSE NEW VEHICLES WILL NOT HAVE THE DOWNTIME THAT THE CURRENT FLEET EXPERIENCES.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NONE | $4.1M | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Mar 2031 |
| Department of Transportation | ARRA 14 EXPANSION BUSES, SIGNAGE, A | $4M | FY2010 | Mar 2010 – Dec 2010 |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: REBUILD TRANSIT TERMINAL AND COVER PART OF OPERATING EXPENSES; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: FUNDS TO COMPLETE REBUILDING TRANSIT TERMINAL AND COVER PART OF TRANSIT SERVICE OPERATING EXPENSES.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: COMPLETION OF TRANSIT TERMINAL AND CONTINUE TRANSIT SERVICE IN GUAYNABO.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ALL RESIDENTS AND VISITORS WHO USE PUBLIC TRANSIT IN GUAYNABO.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NONE | $3.6M | FY2025 | Sep 2025 – Mar 2033 |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: REPLACE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARA.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: THIS GRANT IS REQUESTED TO BEGIN THE RECONSTRUCTION OF THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL OF GUAYNABO.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE REPLACEMENT OF THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL THAT WILL BE DEMOLISHED SHORTLY DUE TO GRAVE STRUCTURAL DEFICIENCIES WITH A TRANSIT TERMINAL DESIGNED FOR MID SIZE BUSES AND INCLUDING PARK AND RIDE OVER THE TERMINAL AREA.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE MAIN BENEFICIARIES OF THIS GRANT WILL BE THE RESIDENTS OF THE MUNICIPALITY THAT WILL SEE THEIR URBAN ENVIRONMENT RENOVATED WITH A MODERN TRANSIT FACILITY AND BETTER ACCESS TO NEIGHBORHOOD AMENITIES.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS | $3M | FY2025 | Jun 2025 – Mar 2033 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START ARRA EXPANSION | $2.3M | FY2009 | Sep 2009 – Sep 2011 |
| Department of Justice | CHP | $2M | FY2020 | Jul 2020 – Jun 2023 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | DISASTER RECOVERY | $1.9M | FY2021 | Jul 2021 – Jun 2025 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | ENTITLED CITIES | $1.9M | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Aug 2009 |
| Department of Transportation | 5307 CARES ACT FUNDS FOR OPERATIONS PPE COMMUNICATION EQUIPMENT SUPPORT VEHICLE AND MAINTENANCE OF VEHICLES AND FACILITIES IN GUAYNABO PR | $1.9M | FY2021 | Jan 2021 – Feb 2022 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | ENTITLED CITIES | $1.9M | FY2008 | Oct 2007 – Sep 2008 |
| Department of Transportation | REPLACEMENT OF 3 VEHICLES PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE AND SPECIAL RULE OPERATIONS UNDER PROGRAM 5307 | $1.9M | — | — – Mar 2028 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | ENTITLED CITIES | $1.7M | FY2011 | Aug 2011 – — |
| Department of Transportation | THIS GRANT APPLICATION IS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019 AND FY 2020 SECTION 5307 FUNDS FOR A TOTAL OF $1998749 ($1661487 FEDERAL WITH $337262 LOCAL MATCH AND $232595 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS)). PURPOSE: THE INTENT OF THIS GRANT APPLICATION IS TO MAINTAIN THE LEVEL OF TRANSIT SERVICE AT A HIGH LEVEL SAFE AND FREE TO PASSENGERS IN ORDER TO ENCOURAGE RIDERSHIP AND REDUCE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS.ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED:ACTIVITIES INCLUDE THE TRANSIT FLEET MAINTENANCE OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE OF FIXED ROUTE SERVICE UNDER THE SPECIAL RULE MAINTENANCE OF THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL AND OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT (ADA) COMPLEMENTARY PARATRANSIT SERVICE. FUNDING IS DIVIDED INTO TWO (2) PROJECTS AS SUMMARIZED BELOW:PROJECT 1: TRANSIT SYSTEM MAINTENANCE AND SPECIAL RULE OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FUNDS1.A.I. PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE FOR THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF $328064 ($328064 FEDERAL + $65613 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS);1.A.I.1. TRANSIT FLEET PM IN THE AMOUNT OF $270000 ($270000 FEDERAL + $54000 TDCS);1.A.I.2. TRANSIT TERMINAL PM IN THE AMOUNT OF $58064 ($58064 FEDERAL + $11613. TDCS);1.A.II. OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR FIXED ROUTES UNDER SPECIAL RULE FOR THE AMOUNT OF $674524 ($337262 FEDERAL + $337262 LOCAL MATCH);1.A.III. ACQUISITION AND INSTALLATION OF GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM (GPS) TRACKING AND AUTOMATIC PASSENGER COUNTER (APC) SYSTEMS ON 25 TRANSIT VEHICLES FOR THE AMOUNT OF $146000 ($146000 FEDERAL + $29200 TDCS);1.A.IV. ACQUISITION OF TWO SUPPORT VEHICLES FOR TRANSIT SYSTEM FOR THE AMOUNT OF $75000 ($75000 FEDERAL + $15000 TDCS);1.A.V. ACQUISITION OF TWO (2) REPLACEMENT BUS DIESEL ENGINES FOR THE AMOUNT OF $17000 ($17000 FEDERAL + $3400 TDCS);1.A.VI. TRAINING FOR TRANSIT SYSTEM SUPERVISORS FOR THE AMOUNT OF $19435 ($19435 FEDERAL + $3887.00 TDCS)1.A.VII REPLACEMENT OF 3 PARATRANSIT SMALL BUSES IN THE AMOUNT OF $270000 ($270000 FEDERAL + $40500 TDCS)1.A.VIII PURCHASE OF 3 SMALL BUSES FOR EXPANSION OF SERVICE TO SOUTH WARDS IN THE AMOUNT OF $375000 ($375000 FEDERAL + $56250 TDCS)PROJECT 2. SECTION 5307 OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICE FOR THE AMOUNT OF $93726 ($93726 FTA + $18745 TRANSPORTATION CREDITS)EXPECTED OUTCOMES:THE MUNICIPALITY EXPECTS THAT AS A RESULT OF THESE PROJECTS TRANSIT RIDERSHIP WILL CONTINUE TO RISE AND THAT SERVICE WILL BE EASILY AVAILABLE THROUGHOUT ALL MUNICIPAL WARDS TO REGULAR PASSENGERS AND THOSE PARTICIPATING IN THE ADA PARATRANSIT PROGRAM.INTENDED BENEFICIARIES:ALL GUAYNABO RESIDENTS AND VISITORS WILL BENEFIT FROM THESE ACTIVITIES THROUGH FREQUENT SAFE AND RELIABLE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION AT NO COST TO THEM.GUAYNABO DOES NOT HAVE SUBRECIPIENTS.RELEVANT 2019-2022 STIP PAGES TDCS APPROVAL LETTER AND TABLE 3A: FY2019 SECTION 5307 OPERATING ASSISTANCE SPECIAL RULE OPERATOR CAPS HAVE BEEN UPLOADED TO THE APPLICATION DOCUMENTS. THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO STATES THE FOLLOWING:1. THE MUNICIPALITY IS A DIRECT RECIPIENT OF FTA FUNDS;2. THE ORGANIZATION DOES NOT HAVE DELINQUENT FEDERAL DEBT;3. THIRD PARTY CONTRACTORS WILL BE USED TO FULFILL SOME OF THESE ACTIVITIES. THE MUNICIPALITY WILL FOLLOW THIRD PARTY PROCUREMENT POLICIES AS DEFINED IN C4220.1F THIRD PARTY PROCUREMENT GUIDANCE IN THE PROCUREMENT PROCESS. THE MUNICIPALITY WILL ENSURE CONTRACTORS PROCURED ARE NOT ON THE FTA SUSPENSION AND DEPARTMENT LIST;4. THIS GRANT DOES NOT REQUEST FUNDS FOR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT;5. THIS GRANT DOES NOT APPLY INDIRECT COST ACTIVITIES. | $1.7M | FY2022 | Jul 2022 – Mar 2029 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | DISASTER ASSISTANCE | $1.5M | FY2019 | Dec 2018 – Nov 2020 |
| Department of Justice | COPS HIRING RECOVERY PROGRAM | $1.4M | FY2009 | Jul 2009 – Mar 2014 |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: NA; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: NA; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: NA; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: NA; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NA | $1.3M | FY2020 | Nov 2019 – Mar 2030 |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: REPLACEMENT OF BUS FLEET.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: THIS PROJECT IS FOR THE REPLACEMENT OF THREE 35 LONG BUSES .; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE OUTCOME OF THIS GRANT IS TO START REPLACING A FLEET OF 8 BUSES FOR THE MAIN TRANSIT ROUTES WITH NEW LOW-FLOOR BUSES .; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROJECT WILL REPLACE THE TRANSIT VEHICLES WHICH ARE PAST THEIR USEFUL LIFE WITH NEW MORE CONFORTABLE AND EASILY ACCESSIBLE LOW FLOOR AND LOW EMISSION BUSES THUS ENHANCING THE TRANSIT EXPERIENCE THIS WILL HELP GROW TRANSIT RIDERSHIP.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS. | $1.3M | FY2023 | Aug 2023 – Apr 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | WASTE DISPOSAL GRANTS - 09/10 STIMULUS | $1.2M | FY2009 | May 2009 – May 2009 |
| Department of Transportation | THIS IS AN FFY 2022 EMERGENCY RELIEF SECTION 5324 APPLICATION IN THE AMOUNT OF $482000 ALLOCATED ON FFY 2018 AS PART OF THE EMERGENCY RELIEF FUNDS PROGRAM IN RESPONSE TO HURRICANE MARIA SECTION OF STATUTE 49 USC 5324 (D2018EMER029). ALL FUNDS ARE BEING REQUESTED FOR THE REPAIR OF PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL DUE TO HURRICANE MARIA.PURPOSE:THE PURPOSE OF THIS PROJECT IS TO BEGIN THE REHABILITATION OF GUAYNABO TRANSIT TERMINAL FACILITIES DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA.ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED:THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL ROOF WILL BE REMOVED UNDER THIS GRANT AT A TOTAL COST OF $482000 WITH 90% FTA /10% TRANSPORTATION CREDITS SHARES OF THIS COST. A STRUCTURAL ASSESSMENT OF THE MAIN TRANSIT BUILDING WAS PERFORMED AS A FIRST STEP TO DETERMINE THE STRUCTURAL CONDITION OF THE STEEL AND CONCRETE BUILDING COMPRISING APPROXIMATELY 74000 SQ. FT. ALL OF THE ROOF WILL HAVE TO BE DEMOLISHED AND TOTALLY REBUILT AND NOT JUST REPAIRED GIVEN ITS POOR CONDITION. THE TERMINAL BUILDING ROOF SUPERSTRUCTURE WAS FOUND TO BE STRUCTURALLY UNSAFE FOR THE MOST PART. ADDITIONAL REPAIRS OR REPLACEMENTS POINTED OUT IN THE FTA DAMAGE ASSESSMENT REPORT INVOLVE THE MAIN TRANSIT BUILDING DECKS AND PERIMETER FENCES BUT ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THIS REQUEST. SPECIFIC ACTIVITIES RELATED TO THIS GRANT INCLUDE DEMOLITION OF THE ROOF SUPERSTRUCTURE (ALI 11.34.02 - $464000 INCLUDING $46400 TRANSPORTATION CREDITS); AND ENGINEERING SUPERVISION OF THE DEMOLITION PROCESS TO ASSURE SAFE CONDITIONS AND DISPOSAL ARE KEPT (ALI 11.71.11- $18000 INCLUDING $1800 TRANSPORTATION CREDITS). THE ESTIMATED COST OF THE ROOF DEMOLITION IS $1287447.25 ( PLEASE SEE INDEPENDENT COST ESTIMATE (ICE) IN APPLICATION DOCUMENTS. SINCE THE FUNDS ASSIGNED SO FAR UNDER SECTION 5324 COVER ONLY PART OF THE DEMOLITION COST AND THE MUNICIPALITY WILL ALSO USE SECTION 5307 REMAINING FUNDS THROUGH BUDGET REVISIONS FROM GRANTS PR-90-X352 ($254752 FTA + $63688 LOCAL FUNDS) PR-2018-003-01 ($242640 FTA + $60660 LOCAL FUNDS) AND PR-2019-039 ($156308 FTA + $39077 LOCAL FUNDS). THE ATTACHED ICE REFLECTS THE USE OF FUNDS ASSUMING A TWO STEP AWARD AS FUNDS BECOME AVAILABLE. THE MUNICIPALITY NEEDS TO REBUILD THIS TERMINAL FOR WHICH IT HAS REQUESTED THE SAN JUAN MPO TO PROGRAM FUNDS UNDER THE STIP FOR THIS PURPOSE FOR 2022 AND 2023. THE PART OF THIS TERMINAL BUILDING THAT WAS FTA FUNDED WAS COMPLETED IN 1984 AND HAS EXCEEDED ITS USEFUL LIFE OF 25 YEARS SPECIFIED IN CIRCULAR FTA 5010 AT TE TIME IT WAS BUILT. THE MUNICIPALITY EXPANDED THE TERMINAL BUILDING IN 2003 WITH MUNICIPAL FUNDS ONLY. ADDITIONAL FUNDS MAY BE REQUESTED FROM THE SECTIONS 5324 OR 5307 TO CARRY OUT REHABILITATION WORK AT THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL NOT CONSIDERED IN THIS GRANT APPLICATION AND FOR WHICH FUNDS WERE INSUFFICIENT TO COMPLETE REPAIRS POINTED OUT IN THE FTA DAMAGE ASSESSMENT REPORT. BIDS FOR THE ROOF DEMOLITION WILL BE PUBLISHED WITHIN 30 DAYS UPON APPROVAL OF THIS GRANT AND THE AFOREMENTIONED BUDGET REVISIONS . THE RECEIPT OF BIDS AND AWARD OF THE SAME SHOULD TAKE 60 TO 90 DAYS. THE DEMOLITION PROCESS SHOULD TAKE APPROXIMATELY SIX MONTHS. THIS PROJECT WILL BE COMPLETED WITH OR WITHOUT ADDITIONAL ER FUNDING AND THE TERMINAL FACILITY WILL BE OPERATIONAL AFTER DEMOLITION AND BEFORE REHABILITATION.EXPECTED OUTCOMES:AS THIS IS ONLY AN INITIAL PHASE OF THE REHABILITATION OF THE TERMINAL ITS OUTCOME WILL BE LIMITED TO REMOVE IMMINENTLY DANGEROUS CONDITIONS THAT THE ROOF POSES BY DEMOLISHING THE SAME. EVENTUALLY THE TERMINAL WILL BE SUBSTANTIALLY REBUILT AS IT IS BROUGHT TO CURRENT BUILDING CODES AND PROVIDED WITH ADDITIONAL IMPROVEMENTS FOR SUSTAINABILITY INCLUDING SOLAR PANELS ON THE ROOF AND ALL THE EQUIPMENT REQUIRED TO CHARGE ELECTRIC BUSES TO BE ACQUIRED IN THE NEAR FUTURE.THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS.DAMAGES TO NINE TRANSIT BUSES AND ONE PARATRANSIT CUTAWAY BUS ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THIS APPLICATION WHICH WERE REPAIRED WITH INSURANCE PROCEEDS.IN ADDITION THE MUNICIPALITY HAS OBTAINED FTA FUNDS IN THE AMOUNT OF $488000 FROM AWARD PR-2018-003-01FOR THE REMODELING OF THE ENTRANCE AND ADA ACCESS IMPROVEMENTS TO THIS TERMINAL. THIS REMODELING WILL TAKE PLACE ONCE THE TERMINAL ROOF HAS BEEN DEMOLISHED.THIS PROJECT ONLY INCLUDES EMERGENCY OPERATIONS EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE MEASURES AND EMERGENCY REPAIRS/PERMANENT REPAIRS WITH NO FUNCTIONAL LOCATION OR CAPACITY CHANGE AND IT IS WITHIN ONE YEAR OF THE DECLARED DISASTER. THEREFORE NO TIP/STIP DOCUMENTATION IS NEEDED PER EMERGENCY RELIEF PROGRAM REQUIREMENTSINSURANCE CLAIM TO COLLECT FUNDS FOR THE REPAIR OF THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL HAS BEEN FILED BUT PROCEEDS HAVE NOT BEEN GRANTED.A COPY OF THE INSURANCE POLICY COVERING ALL MUNICIPAL PROPERTY IS ENCLOSED IN THE APPLICATION DOCUMENTS AND THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL IS LISTED AT THE END OF PAGE 84 OF SAID DOCUMENT.ALL WORK TO BE PERFORMED BY THIRD PARTY CONTRACTORS WILL BE SUBJECT TO PROCUREMENT GUIDELINES SET OUT IN FTA CIRCULAR 4220.1F.ALL POSSIBLE WINNING BIDDERS WILL BE CHECKED IN THE SAM DATABASE TO VERIFY THEY ARE NOT BARRED FROM CONTRACTING FOR FEDERALLY FUNDED PROJECTS.THE MUNICIPALITY CERTIFIES THAT EXPENSES THAT INCLUDE EMERGENCY REPAIRS ANY PERMANENT REPAIR RECONSTRUCTION RESTORATION RETROFITTING OR REPLACEMENT OF TRANSIT FACILITIES AND ASSETS WERE IN OPERATION AT THE TIME OF THE STORM AND USED FOR TRANSIT-RELATED PURPOSES.THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO CERTIFIES THAT THE EMERGENCY RELIEF PROJECT DOES NOT INVOLVE SUBSTANTIAL FUNCTIONAL LOCATIONAL OR CAPACITY CHANGES OF THE TRANSIT ASSET AND THAT THE LOCAL SHARE IS AVAILABLE.THE MUNICIPALITY HAS NOT APPLIED FOR NOR RECEIVED FUNDING FROM FEMA FOR THIS PROJECT.THE PROJECT SITE IS NO WITHIN A FLOOD HAZARD AREA. | $1.2M | FY2022 | Apr 2022 – Mar 2033 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START | $1.2M | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN | $1.1M | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Jun 2023 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | ENTITLED CITIES | $1.1M | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | ENTITLED CITIES | $1.1M | FY2012 | Jul 2012 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM | $1.1M | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2030 |
| Department of Justice | CHP | $1M | FY2011 | Sep 2011 – Aug 2014 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | ENTITLED CITIES | $1M | FY2014 | Jul 2014 – — |
| Department of Energy | TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY ACT BLOCK GRANT FOR ARRA FUNDING. NEW AWARD FOR THE MUNCIPALITY OF GUAYNABO, PR. | $1M | FY2010 | Dec 2009 – Jun 2014 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS | $981.5K | FY2020 | Jun 2020 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | ENTITLED CITIES | $946.4K | FY2015 | Jul 2015 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS | $919.7K | — | — – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS | $909.1K | — | — – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS | $908.4K | FY2019 | Jul 2019 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS | $898.2K | FY2020 | Jun 2020 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS | $882K | FY2021 | Aug 2021 – Sep 2028 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG) PROGRAM PROVIDES ANNUAL GRANTS ON A FORMULA BASIS TO STATES, CITIES, AND COUNTIES TO DEVELOP VIABLE URBAN COMMUNITIES BY PROVIDING DECENT HOUSING AND A SUITABLE LIVING ENVIRONMENT, AND BY EXPANDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, PRINCIPALLY FOR LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. THE PROGRAM IS AUTHORIZED UNDER TITLE 1 OF THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974, PUBLIC LAW 93-383, AS AMENDED 42 U.S.C. 5301 ET SEQ. THE CDBG PROGRAM COVERS FOUR DISTINCT PROGRAMS, EACH WITH THEIR OWN SET OF GOVERNING REGULATIONS: CDBG ENTITLEMENT, CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII, CDBG INSULAR AREAS, AND STATE CDBG. IN THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM, HUD AWARDS GRANTS TO ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITY GRANTEES TO CARRY OUT A WIDE RANGE OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES. ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITIES DEVELOP THEIR OWN PROGRAMS AND FUNDING PRIORITIES. IN THE CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII PROGRAM, THREE COUNTIES QUALIFY: HAWAII, KAUAI, AND MAUI. THE FY 2004 APPROPRIATIONS ACT REQUIRED THE GOVERNOR OF HAWAII TO DECIDE IF THE STATE WISHED TO PARTICIPATE IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM BY JULY 31, 2004. THE STATE MADE THE DECISION NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE PROGRAM. AS A RESULT OF THIS DECISION HUD'S HONOLULU FIELD OFFICE ADMINISTERS THE NON-ENTITLED GRANTS IN HAWAII. FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED USING A FORMULA BASED ON POPULATION, POVERTY, AND HOUSING OVERCROWDING, WITH THE POVERTY FACTOR CARRYING A DOUBLE WEIGHT. FOR THE CDBG INSULAR AREAS PROGRAM, HUD ANNUALLY ALLOCATES CDBG GRANTS TO FOUR DESIGNATED AREAS: AMERICAN SAMOA; GUAM; NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS; AND THE U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS. THE FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED IN PROPORTION TO THE POPULATIONS OF THE ELIGIBLE TERRITORIES. THE PROGRAM IS ADMINISTERED BY HUD'S FIELD OFFICES IN PUERTO RICO AND HAWAII. UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES PASS THROUGH CDBG GRANTS TO UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT. ANNUALLY, EACH STATE DEVELOPS FUNDING PRIORITIES AND CRITERIA FOR SELECTING PROJECTS. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS. NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS INCLUDE THOSE UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT WHICH DO NOT RECEIVE CDBG FUNDS DIRECTLY FROM HUD. GENERALLY, NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS ARE CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 50,000 (EXCEPT CITIES THAT ARE DESIGNATED PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS), AND COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 200,000. CURRENT CDBG AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: CDBG FUNDS MAY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES WHICH INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO: ACQUISITION OF REAL PROPERTY; RELOCATION AND DEMOLITION; REHABILITATION OF RESIDENTIAL AND NON-RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES; CONSTRUCTION OF PUBLIC FACILITIES AND IMPROVEMENTS, SUCH AS WATER AND SEWER FACILITIES, STREETS, NEIGHBORHOOD CENTERS, AND THE CONVERSION OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS FOR ELIGIBLE PURPOSES; PUBLIC SERVICES, WITHIN CERTAIN LIMITS; ACTIVITIES RELATING TO ENERGY CONSERVATION AND RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES; PROVISION OF ASSISTANCE TO PROFIT-MOTIVATED BUSINESSES TO CARRY OUT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND JOB CREATION/RETENTION ACTIVITIES. EACH ACTIVITY MUST MEET ONE OF THE FOLLOWING NATIONAL OBJECTIVES FOR THE PROGRAM: BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS, PREVENTION OR ELIMINATION OF SLUMS OR BLIGHT, OR ADDRESS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT NEEDS HAVING A PARTICULAR URGENCY BECAUSE EXISTING CONDITIONS POSE A SERIOUS AND IMMEDIATE THREAT TO THE HEALTH OR WELFARE OF THE COMMUNITY FOR WHICH OTHER FUNDING IS NOT AVAILABLE. GENERALLY, THE FOLLOWING TYPES OF ACTIVITIES ARE INELIGIBLE: ACQUISITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR RECONSTRUCTION OF BUILDINGS FOR THE GENERAL CONDUCT OF GOVERNMENT; POLITICAL ACTIVITIES; CERTAIN INCOME PAYMENTS; CONSTRUCTION OF NEW HOUSING (WITH SOME EXCEPTIONS). UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES MAY USE $100,000 PLUS UP TO A MAXIMUM OF THREE PERCENT OF ITS CDBG ALLOCATION. AMOUNTS EXPENDED ON ADMINISTRATION IN EXCESS OF $100,000 MUST BE MATCHED. STATES MAY EXPEND UP TO THREE PERCENT OF THEIR CDBG ALLOCATION ON TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES. HOWEVER, THE TOTAL A STATE SPENDS ON BOTH ADMINISTRATIVE AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE EXPENSES MAY NOT EXCEED $100,000 PLUS THREE PERCENT OF THE STATE'S ALLOCATION. CPD HAS DEVELOPED PROFILES THAT DISPLAY GRANTEE-REPORTED ACCOMPLISHMENTS FOR SELECTED HOUSING, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT, AND PUBLIC SERVICE ACTIVITIES. PROFILES FOR GRANTEES WILL VARY, AS GRANTEES HAVE FLEXIBILITY IN DETERMINING THE HOUSING, ECONOMIC, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES THEY CARRY OUT WITH CDBG FUNDS. THE MOST RECENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS CAN BE VIEWED WITHIN THE NATIONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT REPORTS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/CDBG/CDBG-ACCOMPLISHMENT-REPORTS/; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE CDBG PROGRAM REINFORCES SEVERAL IMPORTANT VALUES AND PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT: PROGRAM FLEXIBILITY TO EMPOWER PEOPLE AND COMMUNITIES TO DESIGN AND IMPLEMENT STRATEGIES TAILORED TO THEIR OWN NEEDS AND PRIORITIES; AN EMPHASIS ON CONSOLIDATED PLANNING THAT EXPANDS AND STRENGTHENS PARTNERSHIPS AMONG ALL LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN ENHANCING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT; TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES AND SET-ASIDE FOR GRANTEES TO BUILD THE CAPACITY OF THESE PARTNERS. EACH CDBG GRANTEE’S EXPECTED OUTCOMES ARE DESCRIBED AS GOALS IN THEIR CONSOLIDATED PLAN. THE MOST RECENT CONSOLIDATED PLANS CAN BE VIEWED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/REPORTS/#CONSOLIDATED-PLANS-ANNUAL-ACTION-PLANS-AND-CAPERS; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: OVER A 1, 2, OR 3-YEAR PERIOD, AS SELECTED BY THE GRANTEE, NOT LESS THAN 70 PERCENT OF CDBG FUNDS MUST BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. HUD DOES NOT PROVIDE CDBG ASSISTANCE DIRECTLY TO INDIVIDUALS, BUSINESSES, NONPROFIT OR ORGANIZATIONS OR OTHER NON-GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES. INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN PARTICIPATING IN THIS PROGRAM, SHOULD CONTACT THEIR LOCAL MUNICIPAL OR COUNTY OFFICIALS TO FIND OUT HOW THE PROGRAM OPERATES IN THEIR COMMUNITY. PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS MAY DIFFER FROM ONE GRANTEE TO ANOTHER. WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT GRANTEE ADMINISTERS THE CDBG PROGRAM AND DETERMINES WHICH LOCAL PROJECTS RECEIVE FUNDING. ELIGIBLE GRANTEES ARE AS FOLLOWS: PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS (MSAS); OTHER METROPOLITAN CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 50,000; QUALIFIED URBAN COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 200,000 (EXCLUDING THE POPULATION OF ENTITLED CITIES); STATES AND INSULAR AREAS. THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA IS FUNDED UNDER THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM. THE STATE OF HAWAII DOES NOT PARTICIPATE, AND HUD ALLOCATES THE STATE'S SHARE OF FUNDS TO THE THREE HAWAII NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES. THE STATES ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD. | $881.5K | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Sep 2033 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG) PROGRAM PROVIDES ANNUAL GRANTS ON A FORMULA BASIS TO STATES, CITIES, AND COUNTIES TO DEVELOP VIABLE URBAN COMMUNITIES BY PROVIDING DECENT HOUSING AND A SUITABLE LIVING ENVIRONMENT, AND BY EXPANDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, PRINCIPALLY FOR LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. THE PROGRAM IS AUTHORIZED UNDER TITLE 1 OF THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974, PUBLIC LAW 93-383, AS AMENDED 42 U.S.C. 5301 ET SEQ. THE CDBG PROGRAM COVERS FOUR DISTINCT PROGRAMS, EACH WITH THEIR OWN SET OF GOVERNING REGULATIONS: CDBG ENTITLEMENT, CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII, CDBG INSULAR AREAS, AND STATE CDBG. IN THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM, HUD AWARDS GRANTS TO ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITY GRANTEES TO CARRY OUT A WIDE RANGE OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES. ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITIES DEVELOP THEIR OWN PROGRAMS AND FUNDING PRIORITIES. IN THE CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII PROGRAM, THREE COUNTIES QUALIFY: HAWAII, KAUAI, AND MAUI. THE FY 2004 APPROPRIATIONS ACT REQUIRED THE GOVERNOR OF HAWAII TO DECIDE IF THE STATE WISHED TO PARTICIPATE IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM BY JULY 31, 2004. THE STATE MADE THE DECISION NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE PROGRAM. AS A RESULT OF THIS DECISION HUD'S HONOLULU FIELD OFFICE ADMINISTERS THE NON-ENTITLED GRANTS IN HAWAII. FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED USING A FORMULA BASED ON POPULATION, POVERTY, AND HOUSING OVERCROWDING, WITH THE POVERTY FACTOR CARRYING A DOUBLE WEIGHT. FOR THE CDBG INSULAR AREAS PROGRAM, HUD ANNUALLY ALLOCATES CDBG GRANTS TO FOUR DESIGNATED AREAS: AMERICAN SAMOA; GUAM; NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS; AND THE U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS. THE FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED IN PROPORTION TO THE POPULATIONS OF THE ELIGIBLE TERRITORIES. THE PROGRAM IS ADMINISTERED BY HUD'S FIELD OFFICES IN PUERTO RICO AND HAWAII. UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES PASS THROUGH CDBG GRANTS TO UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT. ANNUALLY, EACH STATE DEVELOPS FUNDING PRIORITIES AND CRITERIA FOR SELECTING PROJECTS. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS. NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS INCLUDE THOSE UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT WHICH DO NOT RECEIVE CDBG FUNDS DIRECTLY FROM HUD. GENERALLY, NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS ARE CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 50,000 (EXCEPT CITIES THAT ARE DESIGNATED PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS), AND COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 200,000. CURRENT CDBG AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: CDBG FUNDS MAY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES WHICH INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO: ACQUISITION OF REAL PROPERTY; RELOCATION AND DEMOLITION; REHABILITATION OF RESIDENTIAL AND NON-RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES; CONSTRUCTION OF PUBLIC FACILITIES AND IMPROVEMENTS, SUCH AS WATER AND SEWER FACILITIES, STREETS, NEIGHBORHOOD CENTERS, AND THE CONVERSION OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS FOR ELIGIBLE PURPOSES; PUBLIC SERVICES, WITHIN CERTAIN LIMITS; ACTIVITIES RELATING TO ENERGY CONSERVATION AND RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES; PROVISION OF ASSISTANCE TO PROFIT-MOTIVATED BUSINESSES TO CARRY OUT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND JOB CREATION/RETENTION ACTIVITIES. EACH ACTIVITY MUST MEET ONE OF THE FOLLOWING NATIONAL OBJECTIVES FOR THE PROGRAM: BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS, PREVENTION OR ELIMINATION OF SLUMS OR BLIGHT, OR ADDRESS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT NEEDS HAVING A PARTICULAR URGENCY BECAUSE EXISTING CONDITIONS POSE A SERIOUS AND IMMEDIATE THREAT TO THE HEALTH OR WELFARE OF THE COMMUNITY FOR WHICH OTHER FUNDING IS NOT AVAILABLE. GENERALLY, THE FOLLOWING TYPES OF ACTIVITIES ARE INELIGIBLE: ACQUISITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR RECONSTRUCTION OF BUILDINGS FOR THE GENERAL CONDUCT OF GOVERNMENT; POLITICAL ACTIVITIES; CERTAIN INCOME PAYMENTS; CONSTRUCTION OF NEW HOUSING (WITH SOME EXCEPTIONS). UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES MAY USE $100,000 PLUS UP TO A MAXIMUM OF THREE PERCENT OF ITS CDBG ALLOCATION. AMOUNTS EXPENDED ON ADMINISTRATION IN EXCESS OF $100,000 MUST BE MATCHED. STATES MAY EXPEND UP TO THREE PERCENT OF THEIR CDBG ALLOCATION ON TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES. HOWEVER, THE TOTAL A STATE SPENDS ON BOTH ADMINISTRATIVE AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE EXPENSES MAY NOT EXCEED $100,000 PLUS THREE PERCENT OF THE STATE'S ALLOCATION. CPD HAS DEVELOPED PROFILES THAT DISPLAY GRANTEE-REPORTED ACCOMPLISHMENTS FOR SELECTED HOUSING, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT, AND PUBLIC SERVICE ACTIVITIES. PROFILES FOR GRANTEES WILL VARY, AS GRANTEES HAVE FLEXIBILITY IN DETERMINING THE HOUSING, ECONOMIC, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES THEY CARRY OUT WITH CDBG FUNDS. THE MOST RECENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS CAN BE VIEWED WITHIN THE NATIONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT REPORTS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/CDBG/CDBG-ACCOMPLISHMENT-REPORTS/; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE CDBG PROGRAM REINFORCES SEVERAL IMPORTANT VALUES AND PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT: PROGRAM FLEXIBILITY TO EMPOWER PEOPLE AND COMMUNITIES TO DESIGN AND IMPLEMENT STRATEGIES TAILORED TO THEIR OWN NEEDS AND PRIORITIES; AN EMPHASIS ON CONSOLIDATED PLANNING THAT EXPANDS AND STRENGTHENS PARTNERSHIPS AMONG ALL LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN ENHANCING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT; TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES AND SET-ASIDE FOR GRANTEES TO BUILD THE CAPACITY OF THESE PARTNERS. EACH CDBG GRANTEE’S EXPECTED OUTCOMES ARE DESCRIBED AS GOALS IN THEIR CONSOLIDATED PLAN. THE MOST RECENT CONSOLIDATED PLANS CAN BE VIEWED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/REPORTS/#CONSOLIDATED-PLANS-ANNUAL-ACTION-PLANS-AND-CAPERS; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: OVER A 1, 2, OR 3-YEAR PERIOD, AS SELECTED BY THE GRANTEE, NOT LESS THAN 70 PERCENT OF CDBG FUNDS MUST BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. HUD DOES NOT PROVIDE CDBG ASSISTANCE DIRECTLY TO INDIVIDUALS, BUSINESSES, NONPROFIT OR ORGANIZATIONS OR OTHER NON-GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES. INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN PARTICIPATING IN THIS PROGRAM, SHOULD CONTACT THEIR LOCAL MUNICIPAL OR COUNTY OFFICIALS TO FIND OUT HOW THE PROGRAM OPERATES IN THEIR COMMUNITY. PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS MAY DIFFER FROM ONE GRANTEE TO ANOTHER. WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT GRANTEE ADMINISTERS THE CDBG PROGRAM AND DETERMINES WHICH LOCAL PROJECTS RECEIVE FUNDING. ELIGIBLE GRANTEES ARE AS FOLLOWS: PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS (MSAS); OTHER METROPOLITAN CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 50,000; QUALIFIED URBAN COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 200,000 (EXCLUDING THE POPULATION OF ENTITLED CITIES); STATES AND INSULAR AREAS. THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA IS FUNDED UNDER THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM. THE STATE OF HAWAII DOES NOT PARTICIPATE, AND HUD ALLOCATES THE STATE'S SHARE OF FUNDS TO THE THREE HAWAII NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES. THE STATES ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD. | $865.7K | FY2024 | Jul 2024 – Sep 2031 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG) PROGRAM PROVIDES ANNUAL GRANTS ON A FORMULA BASIS TO STATES, CITIES, AND COUNTIES TO DEVELOP VIABLE URBAN COMMUNITIES BY PROVIDING DECENT HOUSING AND A SUITABLE LIVING ENVIRONMENT, AND BY EXPANDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, PRINCIPALLY FOR LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. THE PROGRAM IS AUTHORIZED UNDER TITLE 1 OF THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974, PUBLIC LAW 93-383, AS AMENDED 42 U.S.C. 5301 ET SEQ. THE CDBG PROGRAM COVERS FOUR DISTINCT PROGRAMS, EACH WITH THEIR OWN SET OF GOVERNING REGULATIONS: CDBG ENTITLEMENT, CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII, CDBG INSULAR AREAS, AND STATE CDBG. IN THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM, HUD AWARDS GRANTS TO ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITY GRANTEES TO CARRY OUT A WIDE RANGE OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES. ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITIES DEVELOP THEIR OWN PROGRAMS AND FUNDING PRIORITIES. IN THE CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII PROGRAM, THREE COUNTIES QUALIFY: HAWAII, KAUAI, AND MAUI. THE FY 2004 APPROPRIATIONS ACT REQUIRED THE GOVERNOR OF HAWAII TO DECIDE IF THE STATE WISHED TO PARTICIPATE IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM BY JULY 31, 2004. THE STATE MADE THE DECISION NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE PROGRAM. AS A RESULT OF THIS DECISION HUD'S HONOLULU FIELD OFFICE ADMINISTERS THE NON-ENTITLED GRANTS IN HAWAII. FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED USING A FORMULA BASED ON POPULATION, POVERTY, AND HOUSING OVERCROWDING, WITH THE POVERTY FACTOR CARRYING A DOUBLE WEIGHT. FOR THE CDBG INSULAR AREAS PROGRAM, HUD ANNUALLY ALLOCATES CDBG GRANTS TO FOUR DESIGNATED AREAS: AMERICAN SAMOA; GUAM; NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS; AND THE U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS. THE FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED IN PROPORTION TO THE POPULATIONS OF THE ELIGIBLE TERRITORIES. THE PROGRAM IS ADMINISTERED BY HUD'S FIELD OFFICES IN PUERTO RICO AND HAWAII. UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES PASS THROUGH CDBG GRANTS TO UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT. ANNUALLY, EACH STATE DEVELOPS FUNDING PRIORITIES AND CRITERIA FOR SELECTING PROJECTS. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS. NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS INCLUDE THOSE UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT WHICH DO NOT RECEIVE CDBG FUNDS DIRECTLY FROM HUD. GENERALLY, NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS ARE CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 50,000 (EXCEPT CITIES THAT ARE DESIGNATED PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS), AND COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 200,000. CURRENT CDBG AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: CDBG FUNDS MAY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES WHICH INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO: ACQUISITION OF REAL PROPERTY; RELOCATION AND DEMOLITION; REHABILITATION OF RESIDENTIAL AND NON-RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES; CONSTRUCTION OF PUBLIC FACILITIES AND IMPROVEMENTS, SUCH AS WATER AND SEWER FACILITIES, STREETS, NEIGHBORHOOD CENTERS, AND THE CONVERSION OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS FOR ELIGIBLE PURPOSES; PUBLIC SERVICES, WITHIN CERTAIN LIMITS; ACTIVITIES RELATING TO ENERGY CONSERVATION AND RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES; PROVISION OF ASSISTANCE TO PROFIT-MOTIVATED BUSINESSES TO CARRY OUT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND JOB CREATION/RETENTION ACTIVITIES. EACH ACTIVITY MUST MEET ONE OF THE FOLLOWING NATIONAL OBJECTIVES FOR THE PROGRAM: BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS, PREVENTION OR ELIMINATION OF SLUMS OR BLIGHT, OR ADDRESS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT NEEDS HAVING A PARTICULAR URGENCY BECAUSE EXISTING CONDITIONS POSE A SERIOUS AND IMMEDIATE THREAT TO THE HEALTH OR WELFARE OF THE COMMUNITY FOR WHICH OTHER FUNDING IS NOT AVAILABLE. GENERALLY, THE FOLLOWING TYPES OF ACTIVITIES ARE INELIGIBLE: ACQUISITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR RECONSTRUCTION OF BUILDINGS FOR THE GENERAL CONDUCT OF GOVERNMENT; POLITICAL ACTIVITIES; CERTAIN INCOME PAYMENTS; CONSTRUCTION OF NEW HOUSING (WITH SOME EXCEPTIONS). UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES MAY USE $100,000 PLUS UP TO A MAXIMUM OF THREE PERCENT OF ITS CDBG ALLOCATION. AMOUNTS EXPENDED ON ADMINISTRATION IN EXCESS OF $100,000 MUST BE MATCHED. STATES MAY EXPEND UP TO THREE PERCENT OF THEIR CDBG ALLOCATION ON TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES. HOWEVER, THE TOTAL A STATE SPENDS ON BOTH ADMINISTRATIVE AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE EXPENSES MAY NOT EXCEED $100,000 PLUS THREE PERCENT OF THE STATE'S ALLOCATION. CPD HAS DEVELOPED PROFILES THAT DISPLAY GRANTEE-REPORTED ACCOMPLISHMENTS FOR SELECTED HOUSING, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT, AND PUBLIC SERVICE ACTIVITIES. PROFILES FOR GRANTEES WILL VARY, AS GRANTEES HAVE FLEXIBILITY IN DETERMINING THE HOUSING, ECONOMIC, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES THEY CARRY OUT WITH CDBG FUNDS. THE MOST RECENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS CAN BE VIEWED WITHIN THE NATIONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT REPORTS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/CDBG/CDBG-ACCOMPLISHMENT-REPORTS/; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE CDBG PROGRAM REINFORCES SEVERAL IMPORTANT VALUES AND PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT: PROGRAM FLEXIBILITY TO EMPOWER PEOPLE AND COMMUNITIES TO DESIGN AND IMPLEMENT STRATEGIES TAILORED TO THEIR OWN NEEDS AND PRIORITIES; AN EMPHASIS ON CONSOLIDATED PLANNING THAT EXPANDS AND STRENGTHENS PARTNERSHIPS AMONG ALL LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN ENHANCING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT; TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES AND SET-ASIDE FOR GRANTEES TO BUILD THE CAPACITY OF THESE PARTNERS. EACH CDBG GRANTEE’S EXPECTED OUTCOMES ARE DESCRIBED AS GOALS IN THEIR CONSOLIDATED PLAN. THE MOST RECENT CONSOLIDATED PLANS CAN BE VIEWED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/REPORTS/#CONSOLIDATED-PLANS-ANNUAL-ACTION-PLANS-AND-CAPERS; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: OVER A 1, 2, OR 3-YEAR PERIOD, AS SELECTED BY THE GRANTEE, NOT LESS THAN 70 PERCENT OF CDBG FUNDS MUST BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. HUD DOES NOT PROVIDE CDBG ASSISTANCE DIRECTLY TO INDIVIDUALS, BUSINESSES, NONPROFIT OR ORGANIZATIONS OR OTHER NON-GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES. INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN PARTICIPATING IN THIS PROGRAM, SHOULD CONTACT THEIR LOCAL MUNICIPAL OR COUNTY OFFICIALS TO FIND OUT HOW THE PROGRAM OPERATES IN THEIR COMMUNITY. PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS MAY DIFFER FROM ONE GRANTEE TO ANOTHER. WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT GRANTEE ADMINISTERS THE CDBG PROGRAM AND DETERMINES WHICH LOCAL PROJECTS RECEIVE FUNDING. ELIGIBLE GRANTEES ARE AS FOLLOWS: PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS (MSAS); OTHER METROPOLITAN CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 50,000; QUALIFIED URBAN COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 200,000 (EXCLUDING THE POPULATION OF ENTITLED CITIES); STATES AND INSULAR AREAS. THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA IS FUNDED UNDER THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM. THE STATE OF HAWAII DOES NOT PARTICIPATE, AND HUD ALLOCATES THE STATE'S SHARE OF FUNDS TO THE THREE HAWAII NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES. THE STATES ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD. | $857K | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Sep 2030 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS | $842.2K | FY2022 | Jul 2022 – Sep 2029 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOMELESS PREVENTION & REHSNG | $786.5K | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – — |
| Department of Transportation | THIS IS AN FFY 2021 SECTION 5307 ARP FUNDING APPLICATION OF THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO IN THE AMOUNT OF $770000 REPRESENTING 100% FEDERAL SHARE OF THE TOTAL ELIGIBLE AMOUNT. THIS APPLICATION UTILIZES ARP FUNDING TO PREVENT PREPARE FOR AND RESPOND TO CORONAVIRUS. PURPOSE:THE PURPOSE OF THIS PROJECT IS TO PROVIDE OPERATING ASSISTANCE TO THE GUAYNABO TRANSIT SYSTEM IN ORDER TO MAINTAIN TRANSIT SERVICE AT NORMAL LEVELS DURING THE COVID 19 EPIDEMIC. ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED:FUNDS REQUESTED WILL COVER THE SALARIES OF 40 TRANSIT DRIVERS AND SUPERVISORS INCLUDING RISK INCENTIVES AND PPE AND FUEL FOR TRANSIT VEHICLES UNTIL DECEMBER 31 2021. THE TOTAL COST OF THESE ACTIVITIES TO BE FUNDED BY FTA IS $770000.ALL COSTS HAVE BEEN INCURRED AND WILL BE REIMBURSED TO THE MUNICIPALITY UPON GRANT AWARD.EXPECTED OUTCOMES:THIS GRANT AWARD WILL GUARANTEE THE TRANSIT SERVICE LEVEL IS KEPT ACCORDING TO SCHEDULE DESPITE THE COVID 19 CONTAMINATION RISKS TO DRIVERS AND PASSENGERS AND THE DROP IN MUNICIPAL COFFERS DUE TO THE ECONOMIC SHRINK THE PANDEMIC HAS CAUSED.INTENDED BENEFICIARIES:THE BENEFICIARIES OF THIS GRANT AWARD WILL BE THE TRANSIT DRIVERS SUPERVISORS AND RIDERS WHO WILL CONTINUE TO USE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION AT A CONSISTENT AND SAFE LEVEL.SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES:THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS INVOLVED IN THIS GRANT AWARD.THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO AGREES THAT IF IT RECEIVES FEDERAL FUNDING FROM THE FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY (FEMA) OR THROUGH A PASS-THROUGH ENTITY THROUGH THE ROBERT T. STAFFORD DISASTER RELIEF AND EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE ACT A DIFFERENT FEDERAL AGENCY OR INSURANCE PROCEEDS FOR ANY PORTION OF A PROJECT ACTIVITY APPROVED FOR FTA FUNDING UNDER THIS GRANT AGREEMENT IT WILL PROVIDE WRITTEN NOTIFICATION TO FTA AND REIMBURSE FTA FOR ANY FEDERAL SHARE THAT DUPLICATES FUNDING PROVIDED BY FEMA ANOTHER FEDERAL AGENCY OR AN INSURANCE COMPANY.THERE WAS NO FEDERAL FUNDING PREVIOUSLY RECEIVED FOR THIS PROJECT OR OBLIGATED IN ANOTHER GRANT APPLICATION.THE OPERATIONAL EXPENSES REQUESTED IN THIS APPLICATION WERE DETERMINED BY THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO USING ACTUAL MUNICIPAL PAYROLL COST AND PPES DISINFECTION SUPPLIES. THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO UNDERSTANDS THAT THE EXPENSES REQUESTED IN THIS APPLICATION ARE SUBJECT TO REVIEW FOR THEIR REASONABLENESS AS PART OF THE MUNICIPALITYS NEXT TRIENNIAL/STATE MANAGEMENT REVIEW.NO INSURANCE CLAIM HAS BEEN FILED FOR THIS PROJECT AND THEREFORE NO INSURANCE PROCEEDS HAVE BEEN RECEIVED. INSURANCE IS NOT APPLICABLE FOR THIS PROJECT. THE PUERTO RICO HIGHWAY AND TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY HAS ALLOCATED THESE ARPA ACT FUNDS TO THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO AND THE MUNICIPALITY HAS ATTACHED THE DESIGNATED RECIPIENT SUB-ALLOCATION LETTER SPLIT LETTER OR STATE / GOVERNOR DISTRIBUTION LETTER IN THE RECIPIENT DOCUMENTS.THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO WILL FOLLOW ALL 3RD PARTY PROCUREMENT POLICIES AS DEFINED IN FTA CIRCULAR C4220.1F (THIRD PARTY CONTRACTING GUIDANCE). THE MUNICIPALITY WILL VERIFY CONTRACTORS PROCURED ARE NOT ON THE FTA SUSPENSION AND DEBARMENT LIST.PER ARP THE PROJECT(S) IN THIS APPLICATION IS/ARE NOT REQUIRED TO BE PROGRAMMED IN THE LONG-RANGE TRANSPORTATION PLAN STATEWIDE TRANSPORTATION PLAN OR STATEWIDE TRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.THESE FUNDS REQUIRE THE EXPENDITURE OF 1% ON SECURITY RELATED PROJECTS WHICH THE MUNICIPALITY WILL MEET THROUGH LOCAL FUNDS TO PROVIDE SECURITY TO TRANSIT VEHICLES AND INFRASTRUCTURE. | $770K | FY2022 | May 2022 – Jan 2024 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS | $754.5K | — | — – — |
| Department of Transportation | BUY 3 TROLLEYS AND PREV. MAINTENANC | $680K | FY2015 | Feb 2015 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT CPD | $646.4K | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Aug 2009 |
| Department of Justice | CHP | $626.9K | FY2014 | Sep 2014 – Apr 2016 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT CPD | $617.6K | FY2008 | Oct 2007 – Sep 2008 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT CPD | $604.9K | FY2011 | Jul 2011 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | CITIES RECOVERY | $512.4K | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – — |
| Department of Health and Human Services | FY2009 ARRA COLA / QI. | $449.9K | FY2009 | Jul 2009 – Sep 2010 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | DISASTER ASSISTANCE | $374.2K | FY2020 | Jul 2020 – Jun 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | ARP ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT GRANT FOR RURAL HEALTH CARE FACILITIES | $365.4K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM (HOME) PROVIDES NEED-BASED FORMULA GRANTS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT ARE USED TO FUND ACTIVITIES INCLUDING BUILDING, BUYING, AND/OR REHABILITATING AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR RENT OR HOMEOWNERSHIP OR PROVIDING DIRECT RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME PEOPLE. THE HOME PROGRAM WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1990 THROUGH TITLE II OF THE CRANSTON-GONZALEZ NATIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACT (NAHA). SINCE ITS INCEPTION, THE HOME PROGRAM HAS DISTRIBUTED MORE THAN $39 BILLION TO CREATE OVER 1,350,000 UNITS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO MORE THAN 375,000 HOUSEHOLDS THROUGHOUT THE NATION. HOME FUNDS ARE APPROPRIATED ANNUALLY TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD), WHICH IN TURN DISTRIBUTES THE FUNDS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT QUALIFY AS PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS. FORTY PERCENT OF HOME FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED TO STATES AND 60 PERCENT ARE ALLOCATED TO LOCALITIES. CURRENT HOME AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: HOME FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE A WIDE VARIETY OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING REHABILITATION OF OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING; ASSISTANCE TO HOMEBUYERS; ACQUISITION, REHABILITATION, OR CONSTRUCTION OF RENTAL HOUSING; AND TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE. PROJECTS THAT USE HOME FUNDING MUST MEET CERTAIN INCOME TARGETING AND AFFORDABILITY REQUIREMENTS. HOME ASSISTED HOUSING MUST ALSO MEET CERTAIN DEFINITIONS OF AFFORDABILITY AND MUST CONTINUE TO REMAIN AFFORDABLE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS FOR 5, 10, 15, OR 20 YEARS DEPENDING ON THE TYPE OF ACTIVITY FOR WHICH FUNDS ARE USED AND THE AMOUNT OF HOME FUNDING CONTRIBUTED TO THE PROJECT. PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS (PJS) CAN UNDERTAKE HOME PROJECTS DIRECTLY OR PROVIDE HOME FUNDS TO DEVELOPERS OR OWNERS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING OR OTHER PARTNERS. HOME FUNDS ARE TYPICALLY PROVIDED AS GRANTS, VARIOUS TYPES OF LOANS, LOAN GUARANTEES TO LENDING ORGANIZATIONS, INTEREST RATE SUBSIDIES, OR EQUITY INVESTMENTS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: BASED ON THE PRIORITIES IDENTIFIED IN A FIVE-YEAR CONSOLIDATED PLAN AND ANNUAL ACTION PLAN SUBMITTED TO HUD, PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS USE HOME FUNDS TO ACQUIRE OWNER OR RENTER OCCUPIED HOUSING IN STANDARD CONDITION TO BE OCCUPIED BY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS; NEWLY CONSTRUCT OR REHABILITATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL OR OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING, PROVIDE HOMEOWNERSHIP ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOMEBUYERS, AND/OR PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS. BY STATUTE, EACH PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MUST RESERVE AT LEAST 15 PERCENT OF ITS HOME FUNDING FOR PROJECTS OWNED, DEVELOPED, OR SPONSORED BY COMMUNITY HOUSING DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS (CHDOS). ADDITIONALLY, A PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MAY USE UP TO 10 PERCENT OF ITS HOME ALLOCATION FOR PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION. THE QUANTIFIABLE RESULTS OF THIS PROGRAM CHANGE ON A CONSTANT BASIS. HOWEVER, THEY CAN BE TRACKED VIA THE HOME NATIONAL PRODUCTION REPORT. THIS MONTHLY CUMULATIVE SUMMARY REPORT OF HOME DATA BY FEDERAL FISCAL YEAR (FY) INCLUDES: ALLOCATIONS, COMMITMENTS, DISBURSEMENTS, LEVERAGING RATIOS, LOW-INCOME BENEFIT, COMMITTED FUNDS BY ACTIVITY TYPE, AND HOME COST PER UNIT BY TENURE AND ACTIVITY TYPE. THE MONTHLY REPORT CAN BE REVIEWED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/HOME/HOME-NATIONAL-PRODUCTION-REPORTS/; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ALL HOME ASSISTED HOUSING UNITS MUST BENEFIT HOUSEHOLDS WITH INCOMES AT OR BELOW 80 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. ADDITIONALLY, 90 PERCENT OF OCCUPANTS OF HOME ASSISTED RENTAL UNITS AND HOUSEHOLDS THAT RECEIVE TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE MUST HAVE INCOMES AT OR BELOW 60 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. HOME FUNDS ARE OFTEN USED TO ASSIST PERSONS OR HOUSEHOLDS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD. | $351.9K | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Sep 2032 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM | $332.6K | FY2019 | Jul 2019 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM | $331.1K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2030 |
| Department of Agriculture | ARP ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT GRANT FOR RURAL HEALTH CARE FACILITIES | $323.8K | FY2022 | Feb 2022 – Feb 2024 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM (HOME) PROVIDES NEED-BASED FORMULA GRANTS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT ARE USED TO FUND ACTIVITIES INCLUDING BUILDING, BUYING, AND/OR REHABILITATING AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR RENT OR HOMEOWNERSHIP OR PROVIDING DIRECT RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME PEOPLE. THE HOME PROGRAM WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1990 THROUGH TITLE II OF THE CRANSTON-GONZALEZ NATIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACT (NAHA). SINCE ITS INCEPTION, THE HOME PROGRAM HAS DISTRIBUTED MORE THAN $41BILLION TO CREATE OVER 1,388,000 UNITS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO MORE THAN 422,000 HOUSEHOLDS THROUGHOUT THE NATION. HOME FUNDS ARE APPROPRIATED ANNUALLY TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD), WHICH IN TURN DISTRIBUTES THE FUNDS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT QUALIFY AS PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS. FORTY PERCENT OF HOME FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED TO STATES AND 60 PERCENT ARE ALLOCATED TO LOCALITIES. CURRENT HOME AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: HOME FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE A WIDE VARIETY OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING REHABILITATION OF OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING; ASSISTANCE TO HOMEBUYERS; ACQUISITION, REHABILITATION, OR CONSTRUCTION OF RENTAL HOUSING; AND TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE. PROJECTS THAT USE HOME FUNDING MUST MEET CERTAIN INCOME TARGETING AND AFFORDABILITY REQUIREMENTS. HOME ASSISTED HOUSING MUST ALSO MEET CERTAIN DEFINITIONS OF AFFORDABILITY AND MUST CONTINUE TO REMAIN AFFORDABLE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS FOR 5, 10, 15, OR 20 YEARS DEPENDING ON THE TYPE OF ACTIVITY FOR WHICH FUNDS ARE USED AND THE AMOUNT OF HOME FUNDING CONTRIBUTED TO THE PROJECT. PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS (PJS) CAN UNDERTAKE HOME PROJECTS DIRECTLY OR PROVIDE HOME FUNDS TO DEVELOPERS OR OWNERS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING OR OTHER PARTNERS. HOME FUNDS ARE TYPICALLY PROVIDED AS GRANTS, VARIOUS TYPES OF LOANS, LOAN GUARANTEES TO LENDING ORGANIZATIONS, INTEREST RATE SUBSIDIES, OR EQUITY INVESTMENTS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: BASED ON THE PRIORITIES IDENTIFIED IN A FIVE-YEAR CONSOLIDATED PLAN AND ANNUAL ACTION PLAN SUBMITTED TO HUD, PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS USE HOME FUNDS TO ACQUIRE OWNER OR RENTER OCCUPIED HOUSING IN STANDARD CONDITION TO BE OCCUPIED BY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS; NEWLY CONSTRUCT OR REHABILITATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL OR OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING, PROVIDE HOMEOWNERSHIP ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOMEBUYERS, AND/OR PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS. BY STATUTE, EACH PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MUST RESERVE AT LEAST 15 PERCENT OF ITS HOME FUNDING FOR PROJECTS OWNED, DEVELOPED, OR SPONSORED BY COMMUNITY HOUSING DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS (CHDOS). ADDITIONALLY, A PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MAY USE UP TO 10 PERCENT OF ITS HOME ALLOCATION FOR PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION. THE QUANTIFIABLE RESULTS OF THIS PROGRAM CHANGE ON A CONSTANT BASIS. HOWEVER, THEY CAN BE TRACKED VIA THE HOME NATIONAL PRODUCTION REPORT. THIS MONTHLY CUMULATIVE SUMMARY REPORT OF HOME DATA BY FEDERAL FISCAL YEAR (FY) INCLUDES: ALLOCATIONS, COMMITMENTS, DISBURSEMENTS, LEVERAGING RATIOS, LOW-INCOME BENEFIT, COMMITTED FUNDS BY ACTIVITY TYPE, AND HOME COST PER UNIT BY TENURE AND ACTIVITY TYPE. THE MONTHLY REPORT CAN BE REVIEWED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/HOME/HOME-NATIONAL-PRODUCTION-REPORTS/; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ALL HOME ASSISTED HOUSING UNITS MUST BENEFIT HOUSEHOLDS WITH INCOMES AT OR BELOW 80 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. ADDITIONALLY, 90 PERCENT OF OCCUPANTS OF HOME ASSISTED RENTAL UNITS AND HOUSEHOLDS THAT RECEIVE TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE MUST HAVE INCOMES AT OR BELOW 60 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. HOME FUNDS ARE OFTEN USED TO ASSIST PERSONS OR HOUSEHOLDS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD. | $321.1K | FY2025 | Sep 2025 – Sep 2034 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM | $320.2K | FY2020 | Jun 2020 – Sep 2028 |
| Appalachian Regional Commission | SEWER SYSTEM (UPGRADE) | $300K | FY2009 | Jun 2009 – Dec 2009 |
| Environmental Protection Agency | THIS AGREEMENT WILL PROVIDE FUNDING FOR THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO TO INVENTORY, CHARACTERIZE, ASSESS, AND CONDUCT CLEANUP PLANNING AND COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT RELATED ACTIVITIES FOR BROWNFIELD SITES IN MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO, PUERTO RICO. THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO WILL RETAIN THE SERVICES OF A QUALIFIED ENVIRONMENTAL PROFESSIONAL TO CONDUCT MULTIPLE ENVIRONMENTAL SITE ASSESSMENTS (ESAS) AT BROWNFIELD SITES, AS WELL AS DEVELOP A QUALITY ASSURANCE PROJECT PLAN. THE COMMUNITY-WIDE BROWNFIELDS ASSESSMENTS GRANT WILL BENEFIT LOW INCOME AND MINORITY COMMUNITIES BY IDENTIFYING AND ELIMINATING CONTAMINANT EXPOSURE PATHWAYS, IMPROVING ECONOMIC COMPETITIVENESS OF THE TARGET AREAS (AND PROMOTING BOTH NEW AND RETAIN EXISTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING). BROWNFIELDS ARE REAL PROPERTY, THE EXPANSION, DEVELOPMENT, OR REUSE OF WHICH MAY BE COMPLICATED BY THE PRESENCE OR POTENTIAL PRESENCE OF A HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE, POLLUTANT, OR CONTAMINANT. | $300K | FY2022 | Oct 2021 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM | $295.2K | FY2021 | Aug 2021 – Sep 2029 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM | $281.7K | — | — – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: THE HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM (HOME) PROVIDES NEED-BASED FORMULA GRANTS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT ARE USED TO FUND ACTIVITIES INCLUDING BUILDING, BUYING, AND/OR REHABILITATING AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR RENT OR HOMEOWNERSHIP OR PROVIDING DIRECT RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME PEOPLE. THE HOME PROGRAM WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1990 THROUGH TITLE II OF THE CRANSTON-GONZALEZ NATIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACT (NAHA). SINCE ITS INCEPTION, THE HOME PROGRAM HAS DISTRIBUTED MORE THAN $40 BILLION TO CREATE OVER 1,374,000 UNITS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO MORE THAN 405,000 HOUSEHOLDS THROUGHOUT THE NATION. HOME FUNDS ARE APPROPRIATED ANNUALLY TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD), WHICH IN TURN DISTRIBUTES THE FUNDS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT QUALIFY AS PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS. FORTY PERCENT OF HOME FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED TO STATES AND 60 PERCENT ARE ALLOCATED TO LOCALITIES. CURRENT HOME AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: HOME FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE A WIDE VARIETY OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING REHABILITATION OF OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING; ASSISTANCE TO HOMEBUYERS; ACQUISITION, REHABILITATION, OR CONSTRUCTION OF RENTAL HOUSING; AND TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE. PROJECTS THAT USE HOME FUNDING MUST MEET CERTAIN INCOME TARGETING AND AFFORDABILITY REQUIREMENTS. HOME ASSISTED HOUSING MUST ALSO MEET CERTAIN DEFINITIONS OF AFFORDABILITY AND MUST CONTINUE TO REMAIN AFFORDABLE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS FOR 5, 10, 15, OR 20 YEARS DEPENDING ON THE TYPE OF ACTIVITY FOR WHICH FUNDS ARE USED AND THE AMOUNT OF HOME FUNDING CONTRIBUTED TO THE PROJECT. PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS (PJS) CAN UNDERTAKE HOME PROJECTS DIRECTLY OR PROVIDE HOME FUNDS TO DEVELOPERS OR OWNERS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING OR OTHER PARTNERS. HOME FUNDS ARE TYPICALLY PROVIDED AS GRANTS, VARIOUS TYPES OF LOANS, LOAN GUARANTEES TO LENDING ORGANIZATIONS, INTEREST RATE SUBSIDIES, OR EQUITY INVESTMENTS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: BASED ON THE PRIORITIES IDENTIFIED IN A FIVE-YEAR CONSOLIDATED PLAN AND ANNUAL ACTION PLAN SUBMITTED TO HUD, PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS USE HOME FUNDS TO ACQUIRE OWNER OR RENTER OCCUPIED HOUSING IN STANDARD CONDITION TO BE OCCUPIED BY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS; NEWLY CONSTRUCT OR REHABILITATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL OR OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING, PROVIDE HOMEOWNERSHIP ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOMEBUYERS, AND/OR PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS. BY STATUTE, EACH PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MUST RESERVE AT LEAST 15 PERCENT OF ITS HOME FUNDING FOR PROJECTS OWNED, DEVELOPED, OR SPONSORED BY COMMUNITY HOUSING DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS (CHDOS). ADDITIONALLY, A PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MAY USE UP TO 10 PERCENT OF ITS HOME ALLOCATION FOR PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION. THE QUANTIFIABLE RESULTS OF THIS PROGRAM CHANGE ON A CONSTANT BASIS. HOWEVER, THEY CAN BE TRACKED VIA THE HOME NATIONAL PRODUCTION REPORT. THIS MONTHLY CUMULATIVE SUMMARY REPORT OF HOME DATA BY FEDERAL FISCAL YEAR (FY) INCLUDES: ALLOCATIONS, COMMITMENTS, DISBURSEMENTS, LEVERAGING RATIOS, LOW-INCOME BENEFIT, COMMITTED FUNDS BY ACTIVITY TYPE, AND HOME COST PER UNIT BY TENURE AND ACTIVITY TYPE. THE MONTHLY REPORT CAN BE REVIEWED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/HOME/HOME-NATIONAL-PRODUCTION-REPORTS/; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ALL HOME ASSISTED HOUSING UNITS MUST BENEFIT HOUSEHOLDS WITH INCOMES AT OR BELOW 80 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. ADDITIONALLY, 90 PERCENT OF OCCUPANTS OF HOME ASSISTED RENTAL UNITS AND HOUSEHOLDS THAT RECEIVE TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE MUST HAVE INCOMES AT OR BELOW 60 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. HOME FUNDS ARE OFTEN USED TO ASSIST PERSONS OR HOUSEHOLDS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD. | $275.1K | FY2025 | Oct 2024 – Sep 2033 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT CPD | $264.8K | FY2014 | Jul 2014 – Sep 2021 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT CPD | $264.1K | FY2013 | Jul 2013 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT PARTNER PLAN | $235.9K | FY2015 | Jul 2015 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM | $197.9K | — | — – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | EMERG SHELTER GRANTS | $84.7K | FY2008 | Oct 2007 – Sep 2008 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM | $51.4K | — | — – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | EMERGENCY SOLUTONS GRANTS | $50.9K | FY2012 | Aug 2012 – — |
| Department of Transportation | FUEL PROVISION | $16K | FY2012 | Sep 2012 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | SECTION 8 HOUSING CHOICE VOUCHERS | $13K | FY2016 | Jan 2016 – Dec 2016 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | FAMILY SELF-SUFFICIENCY PROGRAM | $12.9K | FY2015 | Jan 2015 – Dec 2015 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | EMERG SHELTER GRANTS | $10.2K | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | EMERG SHELTER GRANTS | $4,207.1 | FY2010 | Jul 2010 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | EMERG SHELTER GRANTS | $0 | FY2012 | Aug 2012 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | EMERG SHELTER GRANTS | $0 | FY2011 | Sep 2011 – — |
| Department of Transportation | APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS GRANT IS TO PURCHASE TRANSIT VEHICLE S AND PROVIDE PREVENTIVE MAINTENACE TO KEEP THE SAME IN STATE OF GOOD REPAIR.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: THE BUDGET REVISION WIL PROVIDE FOR TRAINING OF TRANSIT EMPLOYEES PAINTING AND BODY REPAIR OF BUSES AND PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE OF TRANSIT FLEET DURING FY 2023.THE ORIGINAL GRANT PROVIDED FOR PURCHASE OF 3 TRANSIT BUSES TO EXPAND FLEET AND PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE OF FLEET AND TRANSIT FACILITIES.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THIS GRANT WILL EXPAND THE TRANSIT FLEET KEEP VEHICLES IN GOOD CONDITION AND IMPROVE SECURITY THROGH EMPLOYEE TRAINING.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THIS AWARD AND BUDGET REVISION WILL BENEFIT TRANSIT USERS AND OPERATORS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS. | $0 | FY2015 | Feb 2015 – Dec 2015 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | FAMILY SELF-SUFFICIENCY PROGRAM | $0 | — | — – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | EMERGENCY SOLUTONS GRANTS | $0 | FY2011 | Aug 2011 – — |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | HOME INVESTMENT CPD | -$0.5 | FY2012 | Jul 2012 – — |
| Department of Transportation | CAPARRA INTERCHANGE SYSTEM | -$172.51 | — | — – — |
Department of Health and Human Services
$50.2M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$44.9M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$43.7M
PROJECT HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$16.8M
DISASTER ASISTANCE
Department of Health and Human Services
$10M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of the Interior
$5.5M
ARRA 14 0681 SOUTHEAST WATER RELIABILITY PROJECT, PHASE 1
Department of Transportation
$4.1M
APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS APPLICATION IS TO REPLACE TRANSIT VEHICLES CONTINUE TRANSIT MAINTENANCE AND OPERATIONS AND IMPROVE SERVICE.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: THIS APPLICATION INVOLVES THE FOLLOWING ACTIVITIES:SECTION 5307PROJECT 1 REPLACEMENT OF BUSES FLEET PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE PURCHASE OF PERSONAL SAFETY EQUIPMENT AND OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCEUNDER SPECIAL RULE1.A. I. PURCHASE OF UP TO 4 BUSES TO REPLACE 35 LONG BUSES IN THE AMOUNT OF $2000000 ($2000000 FEDERAL + $300000 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS) ; 1.A.II. PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE OF TRANSPORTATION FLEET IN THE AMOUNT OF $333239 ($333239 FEDERAL + $66648 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS);1.A.III. PURCHASE OF PERSONAL SAFETY EQUIPMENT FOR DRIVERS IN THE AMOUNT OF $22132 ($22132 FEDERAL + $4427TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS); 1.A.IV. OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR FIXED ROUTE TRANSIT UNDER SPECIAL RULE IN THE AMOUNT OF $282285 ($282285 FEDERAL + $141143 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS).PROJECT 2. OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICE IN THE AMOUNT OF $93726 ($93726 FEDERAL + $18745 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS).SECTION 5339PROJECT 3. REPLACEMENT OF UP TO 3 BUSES AND INSTALLATION OF CAMERA SYSTEM ON BUSES3.A.I PURCHASE OF UP TO 3 BUSES TO REPLACE 35 LONG BUSES IN THE AMOUNT OF $1260000 ($1260000 FEDERAL + $189000 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS)..3.A.II. INSTALLATION OF CAMERA SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM ON 25 TRANSIT VEHICLES IN THE AMOUNT OF $100000 ($100000 FEDERAL + $20000 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS). .; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THIS APPLICATION WILL HELP IMPROVE TRANSIT SERVICE IN GUAYNABO BY REPALCING VEHICLES PAST THEIR USEFUL LIFE AND PROVIDING FUNDS FOR OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE OF TRANSIT AND PARATRANSIT VEHICLES.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE MAIN BENEFICIARIES OF THIS APPLICATION ARE THE PASSENGERS SINCE THEY WILL HAVE MORE CONSISTENT TRANSIT SERVICE BECAUSE NEW VEHICLES WILL NOT HAVE THE DOWNTIME THAT THE CURRENT FLEET EXPERIENCES.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NONE
Department of Transportation
$4M
ARRA 14 EXPANSION BUSES, SIGNAGE, A
Department of Transportation
$3.6M
APPLICATION PURPOSE: REBUILD TRANSIT TERMINAL AND COVER PART OF OPERATING EXPENSES; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: FUNDS TO COMPLETE REBUILDING TRANSIT TERMINAL AND COVER PART OF TRANSIT SERVICE OPERATING EXPENSES.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: COMPLETION OF TRANSIT TERMINAL AND CONTINUE TRANSIT SERVICE IN GUAYNABO.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ALL RESIDENTS AND VISITORS WHO USE PUBLIC TRANSIT IN GUAYNABO.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NONE
Department of Transportation
$3M
APPLICATION PURPOSE: REPLACE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARA.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: THIS GRANT IS REQUESTED TO BEGIN THE RECONSTRUCTION OF THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL OF GUAYNABO.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE REPLACEMENT OF THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL THAT WILL BE DEMOLISHED SHORTLY DUE TO GRAVE STRUCTURAL DEFICIENCIES WITH A TRANSIT TERMINAL DESIGNED FOR MID SIZE BUSES AND INCLUDING PARK AND RIDE OVER THE TERMINAL AREA.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE MAIN BENEFICIARIES OF THIS GRANT WILL BE THE RESIDENTS OF THE MUNICIPALITY THAT WILL SEE THEIR URBAN ENVIRONMENT RENOVATED WITH A MODERN TRANSIT FACILITY AND BETTER ACCESS TO NEIGHBORHOOD AMENITIES.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS
Department of Health and Human Services
$2.3M
HEAD START ARRA EXPANSION
Department of Justice
$2M
CHP
Department of Health and Human Services
$1.9M
DISASTER RECOVERY
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$1.9M
ENTITLED CITIES
Department of Transportation
$1.9M
5307 CARES ACT FUNDS FOR OPERATIONS PPE COMMUNICATION EQUIPMENT SUPPORT VEHICLE AND MAINTENANCE OF VEHICLES AND FACILITIES IN GUAYNABO PR
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$1.9M
ENTITLED CITIES
Department of Transportation
$1.9M
REPLACEMENT OF 3 VEHICLES PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE AND SPECIAL RULE OPERATIONS UNDER PROGRAM 5307
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$1.7M
ENTITLED CITIES
Department of Transportation
$1.7M
THIS GRANT APPLICATION IS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019 AND FY 2020 SECTION 5307 FUNDS FOR A TOTAL OF $1998749 ($1661487 FEDERAL WITH $337262 LOCAL MATCH AND $232595 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS)). PURPOSE: THE INTENT OF THIS GRANT APPLICATION IS TO MAINTAIN THE LEVEL OF TRANSIT SERVICE AT A HIGH LEVEL SAFE AND FREE TO PASSENGERS IN ORDER TO ENCOURAGE RIDERSHIP AND REDUCE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS.ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED:ACTIVITIES INCLUDE THE TRANSIT FLEET MAINTENANCE OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE OF FIXED ROUTE SERVICE UNDER THE SPECIAL RULE MAINTENANCE OF THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL AND OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR THE AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT (ADA) COMPLEMENTARY PARATRANSIT SERVICE. FUNDING IS DIVIDED INTO TWO (2) PROJECTS AS SUMMARIZED BELOW:PROJECT 1: TRANSIT SYSTEM MAINTENANCE AND SPECIAL RULE OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FUNDS1.A.I. PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE FOR THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF $328064 ($328064 FEDERAL + $65613 TRANSPORTATION DEVELOPMENT CREDITS (TDCS);1.A.I.1. TRANSIT FLEET PM IN THE AMOUNT OF $270000 ($270000 FEDERAL + $54000 TDCS);1.A.I.2. TRANSIT TERMINAL PM IN THE AMOUNT OF $58064 ($58064 FEDERAL + $11613. TDCS);1.A.II. OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR FIXED ROUTES UNDER SPECIAL RULE FOR THE AMOUNT OF $674524 ($337262 FEDERAL + $337262 LOCAL MATCH);1.A.III. ACQUISITION AND INSTALLATION OF GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM (GPS) TRACKING AND AUTOMATIC PASSENGER COUNTER (APC) SYSTEMS ON 25 TRANSIT VEHICLES FOR THE AMOUNT OF $146000 ($146000 FEDERAL + $29200 TDCS);1.A.IV. ACQUISITION OF TWO SUPPORT VEHICLES FOR TRANSIT SYSTEM FOR THE AMOUNT OF $75000 ($75000 FEDERAL + $15000 TDCS);1.A.V. ACQUISITION OF TWO (2) REPLACEMENT BUS DIESEL ENGINES FOR THE AMOUNT OF $17000 ($17000 FEDERAL + $3400 TDCS);1.A.VI. TRAINING FOR TRANSIT SYSTEM SUPERVISORS FOR THE AMOUNT OF $19435 ($19435 FEDERAL + $3887.00 TDCS)1.A.VII REPLACEMENT OF 3 PARATRANSIT SMALL BUSES IN THE AMOUNT OF $270000 ($270000 FEDERAL + $40500 TDCS)1.A.VIII PURCHASE OF 3 SMALL BUSES FOR EXPANSION OF SERVICE TO SOUTH WARDS IN THE AMOUNT OF $375000 ($375000 FEDERAL + $56250 TDCS)PROJECT 2. SECTION 5307 OPERATIONAL ASSISTANCE FOR ADA PARATRANSIT SERVICE FOR THE AMOUNT OF $93726 ($93726 FTA + $18745 TRANSPORTATION CREDITS)EXPECTED OUTCOMES:THE MUNICIPALITY EXPECTS THAT AS A RESULT OF THESE PROJECTS TRANSIT RIDERSHIP WILL CONTINUE TO RISE AND THAT SERVICE WILL BE EASILY AVAILABLE THROUGHOUT ALL MUNICIPAL WARDS TO REGULAR PASSENGERS AND THOSE PARTICIPATING IN THE ADA PARATRANSIT PROGRAM.INTENDED BENEFICIARIES:ALL GUAYNABO RESIDENTS AND VISITORS WILL BENEFIT FROM THESE ACTIVITIES THROUGH FREQUENT SAFE AND RELIABLE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION AT NO COST TO THEM.GUAYNABO DOES NOT HAVE SUBRECIPIENTS.RELEVANT 2019-2022 STIP PAGES TDCS APPROVAL LETTER AND TABLE 3A: FY2019 SECTION 5307 OPERATING ASSISTANCE SPECIAL RULE OPERATOR CAPS HAVE BEEN UPLOADED TO THE APPLICATION DOCUMENTS. THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO STATES THE FOLLOWING:1. THE MUNICIPALITY IS A DIRECT RECIPIENT OF FTA FUNDS;2. THE ORGANIZATION DOES NOT HAVE DELINQUENT FEDERAL DEBT;3. THIRD PARTY CONTRACTORS WILL BE USED TO FULFILL SOME OF THESE ACTIVITIES. THE MUNICIPALITY WILL FOLLOW THIRD PARTY PROCUREMENT POLICIES AS DEFINED IN C4220.1F THIRD PARTY PROCUREMENT GUIDANCE IN THE PROCUREMENT PROCESS. THE MUNICIPALITY WILL ENSURE CONTRACTORS PROCURED ARE NOT ON THE FTA SUSPENSION AND DEPARTMENT LIST;4. THIS GRANT DOES NOT REQUEST FUNDS FOR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT;5. THIS GRANT DOES NOT APPLY INDIRECT COST ACTIVITIES.
Department of Health and Human Services
$1.5M
DISASTER ASSISTANCE
Department of Justice
$1.4M
COPS HIRING RECOVERY PROGRAM
Department of Transportation
$1.3M
APPLICATION PURPOSE: NA; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: NA; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: NA; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: NA; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: NA
Department of Transportation
$1.3M
APPLICATION PURPOSE: REPLACEMENT OF BUS FLEET.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: THIS PROJECT IS FOR THE REPLACEMENT OF THREE 35 LONG BUSES .; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE OUTCOME OF THIS GRANT IS TO START REPLACING A FLEET OF 8 BUSES FOR THE MAIN TRANSIT ROUTES WITH NEW LOW-FLOOR BUSES .; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROJECT WILL REPLACE THE TRANSIT VEHICLES WHICH ARE PAST THEIR USEFUL LIFE WITH NEW MORE CONFORTABLE AND EASILY ACCESSIBLE LOW FLOOR AND LOW EMISSION BUSES THUS ENHANCING THE TRANSIT EXPERIENCE THIS WILL HELP GROW TRANSIT RIDERSHIP.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS.
Department of Agriculture
$1.2M
WASTE DISPOSAL GRANTS - 09/10 STIMULUS
Department of Transportation
$1.2M
THIS IS AN FFY 2022 EMERGENCY RELIEF SECTION 5324 APPLICATION IN THE AMOUNT OF $482000 ALLOCATED ON FFY 2018 AS PART OF THE EMERGENCY RELIEF FUNDS PROGRAM IN RESPONSE TO HURRICANE MARIA SECTION OF STATUTE 49 USC 5324 (D2018EMER029). ALL FUNDS ARE BEING REQUESTED FOR THE REPAIR OF PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL DUE TO HURRICANE MARIA.PURPOSE:THE PURPOSE OF THIS PROJECT IS TO BEGIN THE REHABILITATION OF GUAYNABO TRANSIT TERMINAL FACILITIES DAMAGED BY HURRICANE MARIA.ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED:THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL ROOF WILL BE REMOVED UNDER THIS GRANT AT A TOTAL COST OF $482000 WITH 90% FTA /10% TRANSPORTATION CREDITS SHARES OF THIS COST. A STRUCTURAL ASSESSMENT OF THE MAIN TRANSIT BUILDING WAS PERFORMED AS A FIRST STEP TO DETERMINE THE STRUCTURAL CONDITION OF THE STEEL AND CONCRETE BUILDING COMPRISING APPROXIMATELY 74000 SQ. FT. ALL OF THE ROOF WILL HAVE TO BE DEMOLISHED AND TOTALLY REBUILT AND NOT JUST REPAIRED GIVEN ITS POOR CONDITION. THE TERMINAL BUILDING ROOF SUPERSTRUCTURE WAS FOUND TO BE STRUCTURALLY UNSAFE FOR THE MOST PART. ADDITIONAL REPAIRS OR REPLACEMENTS POINTED OUT IN THE FTA DAMAGE ASSESSMENT REPORT INVOLVE THE MAIN TRANSIT BUILDING DECKS AND PERIMETER FENCES BUT ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THIS REQUEST. SPECIFIC ACTIVITIES RELATED TO THIS GRANT INCLUDE DEMOLITION OF THE ROOF SUPERSTRUCTURE (ALI 11.34.02 - $464000 INCLUDING $46400 TRANSPORTATION CREDITS); AND ENGINEERING SUPERVISION OF THE DEMOLITION PROCESS TO ASSURE SAFE CONDITIONS AND DISPOSAL ARE KEPT (ALI 11.71.11- $18000 INCLUDING $1800 TRANSPORTATION CREDITS). THE ESTIMATED COST OF THE ROOF DEMOLITION IS $1287447.25 ( PLEASE SEE INDEPENDENT COST ESTIMATE (ICE) IN APPLICATION DOCUMENTS. SINCE THE FUNDS ASSIGNED SO FAR UNDER SECTION 5324 COVER ONLY PART OF THE DEMOLITION COST AND THE MUNICIPALITY WILL ALSO USE SECTION 5307 REMAINING FUNDS THROUGH BUDGET REVISIONS FROM GRANTS PR-90-X352 ($254752 FTA + $63688 LOCAL FUNDS) PR-2018-003-01 ($242640 FTA + $60660 LOCAL FUNDS) AND PR-2019-039 ($156308 FTA + $39077 LOCAL FUNDS). THE ATTACHED ICE REFLECTS THE USE OF FUNDS ASSUMING A TWO STEP AWARD AS FUNDS BECOME AVAILABLE. THE MUNICIPALITY NEEDS TO REBUILD THIS TERMINAL FOR WHICH IT HAS REQUESTED THE SAN JUAN MPO TO PROGRAM FUNDS UNDER THE STIP FOR THIS PURPOSE FOR 2022 AND 2023. THE PART OF THIS TERMINAL BUILDING THAT WAS FTA FUNDED WAS COMPLETED IN 1984 AND HAS EXCEEDED ITS USEFUL LIFE OF 25 YEARS SPECIFIED IN CIRCULAR FTA 5010 AT TE TIME IT WAS BUILT. THE MUNICIPALITY EXPANDED THE TERMINAL BUILDING IN 2003 WITH MUNICIPAL FUNDS ONLY. ADDITIONAL FUNDS MAY BE REQUESTED FROM THE SECTIONS 5324 OR 5307 TO CARRY OUT REHABILITATION WORK AT THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL NOT CONSIDERED IN THIS GRANT APPLICATION AND FOR WHICH FUNDS WERE INSUFFICIENT TO COMPLETE REPAIRS POINTED OUT IN THE FTA DAMAGE ASSESSMENT REPORT. BIDS FOR THE ROOF DEMOLITION WILL BE PUBLISHED WITHIN 30 DAYS UPON APPROVAL OF THIS GRANT AND THE AFOREMENTIONED BUDGET REVISIONS . THE RECEIPT OF BIDS AND AWARD OF THE SAME SHOULD TAKE 60 TO 90 DAYS. THE DEMOLITION PROCESS SHOULD TAKE APPROXIMATELY SIX MONTHS. THIS PROJECT WILL BE COMPLETED WITH OR WITHOUT ADDITIONAL ER FUNDING AND THE TERMINAL FACILITY WILL BE OPERATIONAL AFTER DEMOLITION AND BEFORE REHABILITATION.EXPECTED OUTCOMES:AS THIS IS ONLY AN INITIAL PHASE OF THE REHABILITATION OF THE TERMINAL ITS OUTCOME WILL BE LIMITED TO REMOVE IMMINENTLY DANGEROUS CONDITIONS THAT THE ROOF POSES BY DEMOLISHING THE SAME. EVENTUALLY THE TERMINAL WILL BE SUBSTANTIALLY REBUILT AS IT IS BROUGHT TO CURRENT BUILDING CODES AND PROVIDED WITH ADDITIONAL IMPROVEMENTS FOR SUSTAINABILITY INCLUDING SOLAR PANELS ON THE ROOF AND ALL THE EQUIPMENT REQUIRED TO CHARGE ELECTRIC BUSES TO BE ACQUIRED IN THE NEAR FUTURE.THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS.DAMAGES TO NINE TRANSIT BUSES AND ONE PARATRANSIT CUTAWAY BUS ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THIS APPLICATION WHICH WERE REPAIRED WITH INSURANCE PROCEEDS.IN ADDITION THE MUNICIPALITY HAS OBTAINED FTA FUNDS IN THE AMOUNT OF $488000 FROM AWARD PR-2018-003-01FOR THE REMODELING OF THE ENTRANCE AND ADA ACCESS IMPROVEMENTS TO THIS TERMINAL. THIS REMODELING WILL TAKE PLACE ONCE THE TERMINAL ROOF HAS BEEN DEMOLISHED.THIS PROJECT ONLY INCLUDES EMERGENCY OPERATIONS EMERGENCY PROTECTIVE MEASURES AND EMERGENCY REPAIRS/PERMANENT REPAIRS WITH NO FUNCTIONAL LOCATION OR CAPACITY CHANGE AND IT IS WITHIN ONE YEAR OF THE DECLARED DISASTER. THEREFORE NO TIP/STIP DOCUMENTATION IS NEEDED PER EMERGENCY RELIEF PROGRAM REQUIREMENTSINSURANCE CLAIM TO COLLECT FUNDS FOR THE REPAIR OF THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL HAS BEEN FILED BUT PROCEEDS HAVE NOT BEEN GRANTED.A COPY OF THE INSURANCE POLICY COVERING ALL MUNICIPAL PROPERTY IS ENCLOSED IN THE APPLICATION DOCUMENTS AND THE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION TERMINAL IS LISTED AT THE END OF PAGE 84 OF SAID DOCUMENT.ALL WORK TO BE PERFORMED BY THIRD PARTY CONTRACTORS WILL BE SUBJECT TO PROCUREMENT GUIDELINES SET OUT IN FTA CIRCULAR 4220.1F.ALL POSSIBLE WINNING BIDDERS WILL BE CHECKED IN THE SAM DATABASE TO VERIFY THEY ARE NOT BARRED FROM CONTRACTING FOR FEDERALLY FUNDED PROJECTS.THE MUNICIPALITY CERTIFIES THAT EXPENSES THAT INCLUDE EMERGENCY REPAIRS ANY PERMANENT REPAIR RECONSTRUCTION RESTORATION RETROFITTING OR REPLACEMENT OF TRANSIT FACILITIES AND ASSETS WERE IN OPERATION AT THE TIME OF THE STORM AND USED FOR TRANSIT-RELATED PURPOSES.THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO CERTIFIES THAT THE EMERGENCY RELIEF PROJECT DOES NOT INVOLVE SUBSTANTIAL FUNCTIONAL LOCATIONAL OR CAPACITY CHANGES OF THE TRANSIT ASSET AND THAT THE LOCAL SHARE IS AVAILABLE.THE MUNICIPALITY HAS NOT APPLIED FOR NOR RECEIVED FUNDING FROM FEMA FOR THIS PROJECT.THE PROJECT SITE IS NO WITHIN A FLOOD HAZARD AREA.
Department of Health and Human Services
$1.2M
HEAD START AND EARLY HEAD START
Department of Health and Human Services
$1.1M
AMERICAN RESCUE PLAN
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$1.1M
ENTITLED CITIES
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$1.1M
ENTITLED CITIES
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$1.1M
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
Department of Justice
$1M
CHP
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$1M
ENTITLED CITIES
Department of Energy
$1M
TAS::89 0331::TAS RECOVERY ACT BLOCK GRANT FOR ARRA FUNDING. NEW AWARD FOR THE MUNCIPALITY OF GUAYNABO, PR.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$981.5K
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$946.4K
ENTITLED CITIES
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$919.7K
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$909.1K
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$908.4K
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$898.2K
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$882K
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$881.5K
PURPOSE: THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG) PROGRAM PROVIDES ANNUAL GRANTS ON A FORMULA BASIS TO STATES, CITIES, AND COUNTIES TO DEVELOP VIABLE URBAN COMMUNITIES BY PROVIDING DECENT HOUSING AND A SUITABLE LIVING ENVIRONMENT, AND BY EXPANDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, PRINCIPALLY FOR LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. THE PROGRAM IS AUTHORIZED UNDER TITLE 1 OF THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974, PUBLIC LAW 93-383, AS AMENDED 42 U.S.C. 5301 ET SEQ. THE CDBG PROGRAM COVERS FOUR DISTINCT PROGRAMS, EACH WITH THEIR OWN SET OF GOVERNING REGULATIONS: CDBG ENTITLEMENT, CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII, CDBG INSULAR AREAS, AND STATE CDBG. IN THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM, HUD AWARDS GRANTS TO ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITY GRANTEES TO CARRY OUT A WIDE RANGE OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES. ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITIES DEVELOP THEIR OWN PROGRAMS AND FUNDING PRIORITIES. IN THE CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII PROGRAM, THREE COUNTIES QUALIFY: HAWAII, KAUAI, AND MAUI. THE FY 2004 APPROPRIATIONS ACT REQUIRED THE GOVERNOR OF HAWAII TO DECIDE IF THE STATE WISHED TO PARTICIPATE IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM BY JULY 31, 2004. THE STATE MADE THE DECISION NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE PROGRAM. AS A RESULT OF THIS DECISION HUD'S HONOLULU FIELD OFFICE ADMINISTERS THE NON-ENTITLED GRANTS IN HAWAII. FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED USING A FORMULA BASED ON POPULATION, POVERTY, AND HOUSING OVERCROWDING, WITH THE POVERTY FACTOR CARRYING A DOUBLE WEIGHT. FOR THE CDBG INSULAR AREAS PROGRAM, HUD ANNUALLY ALLOCATES CDBG GRANTS TO FOUR DESIGNATED AREAS: AMERICAN SAMOA; GUAM; NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS; AND THE U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS. THE FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED IN PROPORTION TO THE POPULATIONS OF THE ELIGIBLE TERRITORIES. THE PROGRAM IS ADMINISTERED BY HUD'S FIELD OFFICES IN PUERTO RICO AND HAWAII. UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES PASS THROUGH CDBG GRANTS TO UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT. ANNUALLY, EACH STATE DEVELOPS FUNDING PRIORITIES AND CRITERIA FOR SELECTING PROJECTS. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS. NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS INCLUDE THOSE UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT WHICH DO NOT RECEIVE CDBG FUNDS DIRECTLY FROM HUD. GENERALLY, NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS ARE CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 50,000 (EXCEPT CITIES THAT ARE DESIGNATED PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS), AND COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 200,000. CURRENT CDBG AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: CDBG FUNDS MAY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES WHICH INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO: ACQUISITION OF REAL PROPERTY; RELOCATION AND DEMOLITION; REHABILITATION OF RESIDENTIAL AND NON-RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES; CONSTRUCTION OF PUBLIC FACILITIES AND IMPROVEMENTS, SUCH AS WATER AND SEWER FACILITIES, STREETS, NEIGHBORHOOD CENTERS, AND THE CONVERSION OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS FOR ELIGIBLE PURPOSES; PUBLIC SERVICES, WITHIN CERTAIN LIMITS; ACTIVITIES RELATING TO ENERGY CONSERVATION AND RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES; PROVISION OF ASSISTANCE TO PROFIT-MOTIVATED BUSINESSES TO CARRY OUT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND JOB CREATION/RETENTION ACTIVITIES. EACH ACTIVITY MUST MEET ONE OF THE FOLLOWING NATIONAL OBJECTIVES FOR THE PROGRAM: BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS, PREVENTION OR ELIMINATION OF SLUMS OR BLIGHT, OR ADDRESS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT NEEDS HAVING A PARTICULAR URGENCY BECAUSE EXISTING CONDITIONS POSE A SERIOUS AND IMMEDIATE THREAT TO THE HEALTH OR WELFARE OF THE COMMUNITY FOR WHICH OTHER FUNDING IS NOT AVAILABLE. GENERALLY, THE FOLLOWING TYPES OF ACTIVITIES ARE INELIGIBLE: ACQUISITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR RECONSTRUCTION OF BUILDINGS FOR THE GENERAL CONDUCT OF GOVERNMENT; POLITICAL ACTIVITIES; CERTAIN INCOME PAYMENTS; CONSTRUCTION OF NEW HOUSING (WITH SOME EXCEPTIONS). UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES MAY USE $100,000 PLUS UP TO A MAXIMUM OF THREE PERCENT OF ITS CDBG ALLOCATION. AMOUNTS EXPENDED ON ADMINISTRATION IN EXCESS OF $100,000 MUST BE MATCHED. STATES MAY EXPEND UP TO THREE PERCENT OF THEIR CDBG ALLOCATION ON TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES. HOWEVER, THE TOTAL A STATE SPENDS ON BOTH ADMINISTRATIVE AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE EXPENSES MAY NOT EXCEED $100,000 PLUS THREE PERCENT OF THE STATE'S ALLOCATION. CPD HAS DEVELOPED PROFILES THAT DISPLAY GRANTEE-REPORTED ACCOMPLISHMENTS FOR SELECTED HOUSING, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT, AND PUBLIC SERVICE ACTIVITIES. PROFILES FOR GRANTEES WILL VARY, AS GRANTEES HAVE FLEXIBILITY IN DETERMINING THE HOUSING, ECONOMIC, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES THEY CARRY OUT WITH CDBG FUNDS. THE MOST RECENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS CAN BE VIEWED WITHIN THE NATIONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT REPORTS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/CDBG/CDBG-ACCOMPLISHMENT-REPORTS/; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE CDBG PROGRAM REINFORCES SEVERAL IMPORTANT VALUES AND PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT: PROGRAM FLEXIBILITY TO EMPOWER PEOPLE AND COMMUNITIES TO DESIGN AND IMPLEMENT STRATEGIES TAILORED TO THEIR OWN NEEDS AND PRIORITIES; AN EMPHASIS ON CONSOLIDATED PLANNING THAT EXPANDS AND STRENGTHENS PARTNERSHIPS AMONG ALL LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN ENHANCING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT; TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES AND SET-ASIDE FOR GRANTEES TO BUILD THE CAPACITY OF THESE PARTNERS. EACH CDBG GRANTEE’S EXPECTED OUTCOMES ARE DESCRIBED AS GOALS IN THEIR CONSOLIDATED PLAN. THE MOST RECENT CONSOLIDATED PLANS CAN BE VIEWED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/REPORTS/#CONSOLIDATED-PLANS-ANNUAL-ACTION-PLANS-AND-CAPERS; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: OVER A 1, 2, OR 3-YEAR PERIOD, AS SELECTED BY THE GRANTEE, NOT LESS THAN 70 PERCENT OF CDBG FUNDS MUST BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. HUD DOES NOT PROVIDE CDBG ASSISTANCE DIRECTLY TO INDIVIDUALS, BUSINESSES, NONPROFIT OR ORGANIZATIONS OR OTHER NON-GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES. INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN PARTICIPATING IN THIS PROGRAM, SHOULD CONTACT THEIR LOCAL MUNICIPAL OR COUNTY OFFICIALS TO FIND OUT HOW THE PROGRAM OPERATES IN THEIR COMMUNITY. PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS MAY DIFFER FROM ONE GRANTEE TO ANOTHER. WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT GRANTEE ADMINISTERS THE CDBG PROGRAM AND DETERMINES WHICH LOCAL PROJECTS RECEIVE FUNDING. ELIGIBLE GRANTEES ARE AS FOLLOWS: PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS (MSAS); OTHER METROPOLITAN CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 50,000; QUALIFIED URBAN COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 200,000 (EXCLUDING THE POPULATION OF ENTITLED CITIES); STATES AND INSULAR AREAS. THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA IS FUNDED UNDER THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM. THE STATE OF HAWAII DOES NOT PARTICIPATE, AND HUD ALLOCATES THE STATE'S SHARE OF FUNDS TO THE THREE HAWAII NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES. THE STATES ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$865.7K
PURPOSE: THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG) PROGRAM PROVIDES ANNUAL GRANTS ON A FORMULA BASIS TO STATES, CITIES, AND COUNTIES TO DEVELOP VIABLE URBAN COMMUNITIES BY PROVIDING DECENT HOUSING AND A SUITABLE LIVING ENVIRONMENT, AND BY EXPANDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, PRINCIPALLY FOR LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. THE PROGRAM IS AUTHORIZED UNDER TITLE 1 OF THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974, PUBLIC LAW 93-383, AS AMENDED 42 U.S.C. 5301 ET SEQ. THE CDBG PROGRAM COVERS FOUR DISTINCT PROGRAMS, EACH WITH THEIR OWN SET OF GOVERNING REGULATIONS: CDBG ENTITLEMENT, CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII, CDBG INSULAR AREAS, AND STATE CDBG. IN THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM, HUD AWARDS GRANTS TO ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITY GRANTEES TO CARRY OUT A WIDE RANGE OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES. ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITIES DEVELOP THEIR OWN PROGRAMS AND FUNDING PRIORITIES. IN THE CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII PROGRAM, THREE COUNTIES QUALIFY: HAWAII, KAUAI, AND MAUI. THE FY 2004 APPROPRIATIONS ACT REQUIRED THE GOVERNOR OF HAWAII TO DECIDE IF THE STATE WISHED TO PARTICIPATE IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM BY JULY 31, 2004. THE STATE MADE THE DECISION NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE PROGRAM. AS A RESULT OF THIS DECISION HUD'S HONOLULU FIELD OFFICE ADMINISTERS THE NON-ENTITLED GRANTS IN HAWAII. FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED USING A FORMULA BASED ON POPULATION, POVERTY, AND HOUSING OVERCROWDING, WITH THE POVERTY FACTOR CARRYING A DOUBLE WEIGHT. FOR THE CDBG INSULAR AREAS PROGRAM, HUD ANNUALLY ALLOCATES CDBG GRANTS TO FOUR DESIGNATED AREAS: AMERICAN SAMOA; GUAM; NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS; AND THE U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS. THE FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED IN PROPORTION TO THE POPULATIONS OF THE ELIGIBLE TERRITORIES. THE PROGRAM IS ADMINISTERED BY HUD'S FIELD OFFICES IN PUERTO RICO AND HAWAII. UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES PASS THROUGH CDBG GRANTS TO UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT. ANNUALLY, EACH STATE DEVELOPS FUNDING PRIORITIES AND CRITERIA FOR SELECTING PROJECTS. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS. NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS INCLUDE THOSE UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT WHICH DO NOT RECEIVE CDBG FUNDS DIRECTLY FROM HUD. GENERALLY, NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS ARE CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 50,000 (EXCEPT CITIES THAT ARE DESIGNATED PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS), AND COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 200,000. CURRENT CDBG AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: CDBG FUNDS MAY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES WHICH INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO: ACQUISITION OF REAL PROPERTY; RELOCATION AND DEMOLITION; REHABILITATION OF RESIDENTIAL AND NON-RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES; CONSTRUCTION OF PUBLIC FACILITIES AND IMPROVEMENTS, SUCH AS WATER AND SEWER FACILITIES, STREETS, NEIGHBORHOOD CENTERS, AND THE CONVERSION OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS FOR ELIGIBLE PURPOSES; PUBLIC SERVICES, WITHIN CERTAIN LIMITS; ACTIVITIES RELATING TO ENERGY CONSERVATION AND RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES; PROVISION OF ASSISTANCE TO PROFIT-MOTIVATED BUSINESSES TO CARRY OUT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND JOB CREATION/RETENTION ACTIVITIES. EACH ACTIVITY MUST MEET ONE OF THE FOLLOWING NATIONAL OBJECTIVES FOR THE PROGRAM: BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS, PREVENTION OR ELIMINATION OF SLUMS OR BLIGHT, OR ADDRESS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT NEEDS HAVING A PARTICULAR URGENCY BECAUSE EXISTING CONDITIONS POSE A SERIOUS AND IMMEDIATE THREAT TO THE HEALTH OR WELFARE OF THE COMMUNITY FOR WHICH OTHER FUNDING IS NOT AVAILABLE. GENERALLY, THE FOLLOWING TYPES OF ACTIVITIES ARE INELIGIBLE: ACQUISITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR RECONSTRUCTION OF BUILDINGS FOR THE GENERAL CONDUCT OF GOVERNMENT; POLITICAL ACTIVITIES; CERTAIN INCOME PAYMENTS; CONSTRUCTION OF NEW HOUSING (WITH SOME EXCEPTIONS). UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES MAY USE $100,000 PLUS UP TO A MAXIMUM OF THREE PERCENT OF ITS CDBG ALLOCATION. AMOUNTS EXPENDED ON ADMINISTRATION IN EXCESS OF $100,000 MUST BE MATCHED. STATES MAY EXPEND UP TO THREE PERCENT OF THEIR CDBG ALLOCATION ON TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES. HOWEVER, THE TOTAL A STATE SPENDS ON BOTH ADMINISTRATIVE AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE EXPENSES MAY NOT EXCEED $100,000 PLUS THREE PERCENT OF THE STATE'S ALLOCATION. CPD HAS DEVELOPED PROFILES THAT DISPLAY GRANTEE-REPORTED ACCOMPLISHMENTS FOR SELECTED HOUSING, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT, AND PUBLIC SERVICE ACTIVITIES. PROFILES FOR GRANTEES WILL VARY, AS GRANTEES HAVE FLEXIBILITY IN DETERMINING THE HOUSING, ECONOMIC, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES THEY CARRY OUT WITH CDBG FUNDS. THE MOST RECENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS CAN BE VIEWED WITHIN THE NATIONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT REPORTS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/CDBG/CDBG-ACCOMPLISHMENT-REPORTS/; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE CDBG PROGRAM REINFORCES SEVERAL IMPORTANT VALUES AND PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT: PROGRAM FLEXIBILITY TO EMPOWER PEOPLE AND COMMUNITIES TO DESIGN AND IMPLEMENT STRATEGIES TAILORED TO THEIR OWN NEEDS AND PRIORITIES; AN EMPHASIS ON CONSOLIDATED PLANNING THAT EXPANDS AND STRENGTHENS PARTNERSHIPS AMONG ALL LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN ENHANCING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT; TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES AND SET-ASIDE FOR GRANTEES TO BUILD THE CAPACITY OF THESE PARTNERS. EACH CDBG GRANTEE’S EXPECTED OUTCOMES ARE DESCRIBED AS GOALS IN THEIR CONSOLIDATED PLAN. THE MOST RECENT CONSOLIDATED PLANS CAN BE VIEWED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/REPORTS/#CONSOLIDATED-PLANS-ANNUAL-ACTION-PLANS-AND-CAPERS; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: OVER A 1, 2, OR 3-YEAR PERIOD, AS SELECTED BY THE GRANTEE, NOT LESS THAN 70 PERCENT OF CDBG FUNDS MUST BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. HUD DOES NOT PROVIDE CDBG ASSISTANCE DIRECTLY TO INDIVIDUALS, BUSINESSES, NONPROFIT OR ORGANIZATIONS OR OTHER NON-GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES. INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN PARTICIPATING IN THIS PROGRAM, SHOULD CONTACT THEIR LOCAL MUNICIPAL OR COUNTY OFFICIALS TO FIND OUT HOW THE PROGRAM OPERATES IN THEIR COMMUNITY. PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS MAY DIFFER FROM ONE GRANTEE TO ANOTHER. WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT GRANTEE ADMINISTERS THE CDBG PROGRAM AND DETERMINES WHICH LOCAL PROJECTS RECEIVE FUNDING. ELIGIBLE GRANTEES ARE AS FOLLOWS: PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS (MSAS); OTHER METROPOLITAN CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 50,000; QUALIFIED URBAN COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 200,000 (EXCLUDING THE POPULATION OF ENTITLED CITIES); STATES AND INSULAR AREAS. THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA IS FUNDED UNDER THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM. THE STATE OF HAWAII DOES NOT PARTICIPATE, AND HUD ALLOCATES THE STATE'S SHARE OF FUNDS TO THE THREE HAWAII NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES. THE STATES ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$857K
PURPOSE: THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANT (CDBG) PROGRAM PROVIDES ANNUAL GRANTS ON A FORMULA BASIS TO STATES, CITIES, AND COUNTIES TO DEVELOP VIABLE URBAN COMMUNITIES BY PROVIDING DECENT HOUSING AND A SUITABLE LIVING ENVIRONMENT, AND BY EXPANDING ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES, PRINCIPALLY FOR LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. THE PROGRAM IS AUTHORIZED UNDER TITLE 1 OF THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974, PUBLIC LAW 93-383, AS AMENDED 42 U.S.C. 5301 ET SEQ. THE CDBG PROGRAM COVERS FOUR DISTINCT PROGRAMS, EACH WITH THEIR OWN SET OF GOVERNING REGULATIONS: CDBG ENTITLEMENT, CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII, CDBG INSULAR AREAS, AND STATE CDBG. IN THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM, HUD AWARDS GRANTS TO ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITY GRANTEES TO CARRY OUT A WIDE RANGE OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES. ENTITLEMENT COMMUNITIES DEVELOP THEIR OWN PROGRAMS AND FUNDING PRIORITIES. IN THE CDBG NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES IN HAWAII PROGRAM, THREE COUNTIES QUALIFY: HAWAII, KAUAI, AND MAUI. THE FY 2004 APPROPRIATIONS ACT REQUIRED THE GOVERNOR OF HAWAII TO DECIDE IF THE STATE WISHED TO PARTICIPATE IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM BY JULY 31, 2004. THE STATE MADE THE DECISION NOT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE PROGRAM. AS A RESULT OF THIS DECISION HUD'S HONOLULU FIELD OFFICE ADMINISTERS THE NON-ENTITLED GRANTS IN HAWAII. FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED USING A FORMULA BASED ON POPULATION, POVERTY, AND HOUSING OVERCROWDING, WITH THE POVERTY FACTOR CARRYING A DOUBLE WEIGHT. FOR THE CDBG INSULAR AREAS PROGRAM, HUD ANNUALLY ALLOCATES CDBG GRANTS TO FOUR DESIGNATED AREAS: AMERICAN SAMOA; GUAM; NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS; AND THE U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS. THE FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED IN PROPORTION TO THE POPULATIONS OF THE ELIGIBLE TERRITORIES. THE PROGRAM IS ADMINISTERED BY HUD'S FIELD OFFICES IN PUERTO RICO AND HAWAII. UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES PASS THROUGH CDBG GRANTS TO UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT. ANNUALLY, EACH STATE DEVELOPS FUNDING PRIORITIES AND CRITERIA FOR SELECTING PROJECTS. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS. NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS INCLUDE THOSE UNITS OF GENERAL LOCAL GOVERNMENT WHICH DO NOT RECEIVE CDBG FUNDS DIRECTLY FROM HUD. GENERALLY, NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS ARE CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 50,000 (EXCEPT CITIES THAT ARE DESIGNATED PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS), AND COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF LESS THAN 200,000. CURRENT CDBG AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: CDBG FUNDS MAY BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES WHICH INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO: ACQUISITION OF REAL PROPERTY; RELOCATION AND DEMOLITION; REHABILITATION OF RESIDENTIAL AND NON-RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES; CONSTRUCTION OF PUBLIC FACILITIES AND IMPROVEMENTS, SUCH AS WATER AND SEWER FACILITIES, STREETS, NEIGHBORHOOD CENTERS, AND THE CONVERSION OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS FOR ELIGIBLE PURPOSES; PUBLIC SERVICES, WITHIN CERTAIN LIMITS; ACTIVITIES RELATING TO ENERGY CONSERVATION AND RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCES; PROVISION OF ASSISTANCE TO PROFIT-MOTIVATED BUSINESSES TO CARRY OUT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND JOB CREATION/RETENTION ACTIVITIES. EACH ACTIVITY MUST MEET ONE OF THE FOLLOWING NATIONAL OBJECTIVES FOR THE PROGRAM: BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS, PREVENTION OR ELIMINATION OF SLUMS OR BLIGHT, OR ADDRESS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT NEEDS HAVING A PARTICULAR URGENCY BECAUSE EXISTING CONDITIONS POSE A SERIOUS AND IMMEDIATE THREAT TO THE HEALTH OR WELFARE OF THE COMMUNITY FOR WHICH OTHER FUNDING IS NOT AVAILABLE. GENERALLY, THE FOLLOWING TYPES OF ACTIVITIES ARE INELIGIBLE: ACQUISITION, CONSTRUCTION, OR RECONSTRUCTION OF BUILDINGS FOR THE GENERAL CONDUCT OF GOVERNMENT; POLITICAL ACTIVITIES; CERTAIN INCOME PAYMENTS; CONSTRUCTION OF NEW HOUSING (WITH SOME EXCEPTIONS). UNDER THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, STATES MAY USE $100,000 PLUS UP TO A MAXIMUM OF THREE PERCENT OF ITS CDBG ALLOCATION. AMOUNTS EXPENDED ON ADMINISTRATION IN EXCESS OF $100,000 MUST BE MATCHED. STATES MAY EXPEND UP TO THREE PERCENT OF THEIR CDBG ALLOCATION ON TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES. HOWEVER, THE TOTAL A STATE SPENDS ON BOTH ADMINISTRATIVE AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE EXPENSES MAY NOT EXCEED $100,000 PLUS THREE PERCENT OF THE STATE'S ALLOCATION. CPD HAS DEVELOPED PROFILES THAT DISPLAY GRANTEE-REPORTED ACCOMPLISHMENTS FOR SELECTED HOUSING, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, PUBLIC IMPROVEMENT, AND PUBLIC SERVICE ACTIVITIES. PROFILES FOR GRANTEES WILL VARY, AS GRANTEES HAVE FLEXIBILITY IN DETERMINING THE HOUSING, ECONOMIC, AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES THEY CARRY OUT WITH CDBG FUNDS. THE MOST RECENT ACCOMPLISHMENTS CAN BE VIEWED WITHIN THE NATIONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT REPORTS LOCATED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/CDBG/CDBG-ACCOMPLISHMENT-REPORTS/; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THE CDBG PROGRAM REINFORCES SEVERAL IMPORTANT VALUES AND PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT: PROGRAM FLEXIBILITY TO EMPOWER PEOPLE AND COMMUNITIES TO DESIGN AND IMPLEMENT STRATEGIES TAILORED TO THEIR OWN NEEDS AND PRIORITIES; AN EMPHASIS ON CONSOLIDATED PLANNING THAT EXPANDS AND STRENGTHENS PARTNERSHIPS AMONG ALL LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN ENHANCING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT; TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ACTIVITIES AND SET-ASIDE FOR GRANTEES TO BUILD THE CAPACITY OF THESE PARTNERS. EACH CDBG GRANTEE’S EXPECTED OUTCOMES ARE DESCRIBED AS GOALS IN THEIR CONSOLIDATED PLAN. THE MOST RECENT CONSOLIDATED PLANS CAN BE VIEWED AT: HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/REPORTS/#CONSOLIDATED-PLANS-ANNUAL-ACTION-PLANS-AND-CAPERS; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: OVER A 1, 2, OR 3-YEAR PERIOD, AS SELECTED BY THE GRANTEE, NOT LESS THAN 70 PERCENT OF CDBG FUNDS MUST BE USED FOR ACTIVITIES THAT BENEFIT LOW- AND MODERATE-INCOME PERSONS. HUD DOES NOT PROVIDE CDBG ASSISTANCE DIRECTLY TO INDIVIDUALS, BUSINESSES, NONPROFIT OR ORGANIZATIONS OR OTHER NON-GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES. INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE INTERESTED IN PARTICIPATING IN THIS PROGRAM, SHOULD CONTACT THEIR LOCAL MUNICIPAL OR COUNTY OFFICIALS TO FIND OUT HOW THE PROGRAM OPERATES IN THEIR COMMUNITY. PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS MAY DIFFER FROM ONE GRANTEE TO ANOTHER. WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM, THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT GRANTEE ADMINISTERS THE CDBG PROGRAM AND DETERMINES WHICH LOCAL PROJECTS RECEIVE FUNDING. ELIGIBLE GRANTEES ARE AS FOLLOWS: PRINCIPAL CITIES OF METROPOLITAN STATISTICAL AREAS (MSAS); OTHER METROPOLITAN CITIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 50,000; QUALIFIED URBAN COUNTIES WITH POPULATIONS OF AT LEAST 200,000 (EXCLUDING THE POPULATION OF ENTITLED CITIES); STATES AND INSULAR AREAS. THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA IS FUNDED UNDER THE CDBG ENTITLEMENT PROGRAM. THE STATE OF HAWAII DOES NOT PARTICIPATE, AND HUD ALLOCATES THE STATE'S SHARE OF FUNDS TO THE THREE HAWAII NON-ENTITLED COUNTIES. THE STATES ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS IN THE STATE CDBG PROGRAM. SINCE STATES ARE IN THE BEST POSITION TO KNOW, AND TO RESPOND TO, THE NEEDS OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, CONGRESS AMENDED THE HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 1974 (HCD ACT) IN 1981 TO GIVE EACH STATE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ADMINISTER CDBG FUNDS FOR NON-ENTITLEMENT AREAS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$842.2K
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$786.5K
HOMELESS PREVENTION & REHSNG
Department of Transportation
$770K
THIS IS AN FFY 2021 SECTION 5307 ARP FUNDING APPLICATION OF THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO IN THE AMOUNT OF $770000 REPRESENTING 100% FEDERAL SHARE OF THE TOTAL ELIGIBLE AMOUNT. THIS APPLICATION UTILIZES ARP FUNDING TO PREVENT PREPARE FOR AND RESPOND TO CORONAVIRUS. PURPOSE:THE PURPOSE OF THIS PROJECT IS TO PROVIDE OPERATING ASSISTANCE TO THE GUAYNABO TRANSIT SYSTEM IN ORDER TO MAINTAIN TRANSIT SERVICE AT NORMAL LEVELS DURING THE COVID 19 EPIDEMIC. ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED:FUNDS REQUESTED WILL COVER THE SALARIES OF 40 TRANSIT DRIVERS AND SUPERVISORS INCLUDING RISK INCENTIVES AND PPE AND FUEL FOR TRANSIT VEHICLES UNTIL DECEMBER 31 2021. THE TOTAL COST OF THESE ACTIVITIES TO BE FUNDED BY FTA IS $770000.ALL COSTS HAVE BEEN INCURRED AND WILL BE REIMBURSED TO THE MUNICIPALITY UPON GRANT AWARD.EXPECTED OUTCOMES:THIS GRANT AWARD WILL GUARANTEE THE TRANSIT SERVICE LEVEL IS KEPT ACCORDING TO SCHEDULE DESPITE THE COVID 19 CONTAMINATION RISKS TO DRIVERS AND PASSENGERS AND THE DROP IN MUNICIPAL COFFERS DUE TO THE ECONOMIC SHRINK THE PANDEMIC HAS CAUSED.INTENDED BENEFICIARIES:THE BENEFICIARIES OF THIS GRANT AWARD WILL BE THE TRANSIT DRIVERS SUPERVISORS AND RIDERS WHO WILL CONTINUE TO USE PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION AT A CONSISTENT AND SAFE LEVEL.SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES:THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS INVOLVED IN THIS GRANT AWARD.THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO AGREES THAT IF IT RECEIVES FEDERAL FUNDING FROM THE FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY (FEMA) OR THROUGH A PASS-THROUGH ENTITY THROUGH THE ROBERT T. STAFFORD DISASTER RELIEF AND EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE ACT A DIFFERENT FEDERAL AGENCY OR INSURANCE PROCEEDS FOR ANY PORTION OF A PROJECT ACTIVITY APPROVED FOR FTA FUNDING UNDER THIS GRANT AGREEMENT IT WILL PROVIDE WRITTEN NOTIFICATION TO FTA AND REIMBURSE FTA FOR ANY FEDERAL SHARE THAT DUPLICATES FUNDING PROVIDED BY FEMA ANOTHER FEDERAL AGENCY OR AN INSURANCE COMPANY.THERE WAS NO FEDERAL FUNDING PREVIOUSLY RECEIVED FOR THIS PROJECT OR OBLIGATED IN ANOTHER GRANT APPLICATION.THE OPERATIONAL EXPENSES REQUESTED IN THIS APPLICATION WERE DETERMINED BY THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO USING ACTUAL MUNICIPAL PAYROLL COST AND PPES DISINFECTION SUPPLIES. THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO UNDERSTANDS THAT THE EXPENSES REQUESTED IN THIS APPLICATION ARE SUBJECT TO REVIEW FOR THEIR REASONABLENESS AS PART OF THE MUNICIPALITYS NEXT TRIENNIAL/STATE MANAGEMENT REVIEW.NO INSURANCE CLAIM HAS BEEN FILED FOR THIS PROJECT AND THEREFORE NO INSURANCE PROCEEDS HAVE BEEN RECEIVED. INSURANCE IS NOT APPLICABLE FOR THIS PROJECT. THE PUERTO RICO HIGHWAY AND TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY HAS ALLOCATED THESE ARPA ACT FUNDS TO THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO AND THE MUNICIPALITY HAS ATTACHED THE DESIGNATED RECIPIENT SUB-ALLOCATION LETTER SPLIT LETTER OR STATE / GOVERNOR DISTRIBUTION LETTER IN THE RECIPIENT DOCUMENTS.THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO WILL FOLLOW ALL 3RD PARTY PROCUREMENT POLICIES AS DEFINED IN FTA CIRCULAR C4220.1F (THIRD PARTY CONTRACTING GUIDANCE). THE MUNICIPALITY WILL VERIFY CONTRACTORS PROCURED ARE NOT ON THE FTA SUSPENSION AND DEBARMENT LIST.PER ARP THE PROJECT(S) IN THIS APPLICATION IS/ARE NOT REQUIRED TO BE PROGRAMMED IN THE LONG-RANGE TRANSPORTATION PLAN STATEWIDE TRANSPORTATION PLAN OR STATEWIDE TRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM.THESE FUNDS REQUIRE THE EXPENDITURE OF 1% ON SECURITY RELATED PROJECTS WHICH THE MUNICIPALITY WILL MEET THROUGH LOCAL FUNDS TO PROVIDE SECURITY TO TRANSIT VEHICLES AND INFRASTRUCTURE.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$754.5K
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT BLOCK GRANTS/ENTITLEMENT GRANTS
Department of Transportation
$680K
BUY 3 TROLLEYS AND PREV. MAINTENANC
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$646.4K
HOME INVESTMENT CPD
Department of Justice
$626.9K
CHP
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$617.6K
HOME INVESTMENT CPD
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$604.9K
HOME INVESTMENT CPD
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$512.4K
CITIES RECOVERY
Department of Health and Human Services
$449.9K
FY2009 ARRA COLA / QI.
Department of Health and Human Services
$374.2K
DISASTER ASSISTANCE
Department of Agriculture
$365.4K
ARP ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT GRANT FOR RURAL HEALTH CARE FACILITIES
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$351.9K
PURPOSE: THE HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM (HOME) PROVIDES NEED-BASED FORMULA GRANTS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT ARE USED TO FUND ACTIVITIES INCLUDING BUILDING, BUYING, AND/OR REHABILITATING AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR RENT OR HOMEOWNERSHIP OR PROVIDING DIRECT RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME PEOPLE. THE HOME PROGRAM WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1990 THROUGH TITLE II OF THE CRANSTON-GONZALEZ NATIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACT (NAHA). SINCE ITS INCEPTION, THE HOME PROGRAM HAS DISTRIBUTED MORE THAN $39 BILLION TO CREATE OVER 1,350,000 UNITS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO MORE THAN 375,000 HOUSEHOLDS THROUGHOUT THE NATION. HOME FUNDS ARE APPROPRIATED ANNUALLY TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD), WHICH IN TURN DISTRIBUTES THE FUNDS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT QUALIFY AS PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS. FORTY PERCENT OF HOME FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED TO STATES AND 60 PERCENT ARE ALLOCATED TO LOCALITIES. CURRENT HOME AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: HOME FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE A WIDE VARIETY OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING REHABILITATION OF OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING; ASSISTANCE TO HOMEBUYERS; ACQUISITION, REHABILITATION, OR CONSTRUCTION OF RENTAL HOUSING; AND TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE. PROJECTS THAT USE HOME FUNDING MUST MEET CERTAIN INCOME TARGETING AND AFFORDABILITY REQUIREMENTS. HOME ASSISTED HOUSING MUST ALSO MEET CERTAIN DEFINITIONS OF AFFORDABILITY AND MUST CONTINUE TO REMAIN AFFORDABLE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS FOR 5, 10, 15, OR 20 YEARS DEPENDING ON THE TYPE OF ACTIVITY FOR WHICH FUNDS ARE USED AND THE AMOUNT OF HOME FUNDING CONTRIBUTED TO THE PROJECT. PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS (PJS) CAN UNDERTAKE HOME PROJECTS DIRECTLY OR PROVIDE HOME FUNDS TO DEVELOPERS OR OWNERS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING OR OTHER PARTNERS. HOME FUNDS ARE TYPICALLY PROVIDED AS GRANTS, VARIOUS TYPES OF LOANS, LOAN GUARANTEES TO LENDING ORGANIZATIONS, INTEREST RATE SUBSIDIES, OR EQUITY INVESTMENTS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: BASED ON THE PRIORITIES IDENTIFIED IN A FIVE-YEAR CONSOLIDATED PLAN AND ANNUAL ACTION PLAN SUBMITTED TO HUD, PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS USE HOME FUNDS TO ACQUIRE OWNER OR RENTER OCCUPIED HOUSING IN STANDARD CONDITION TO BE OCCUPIED BY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS; NEWLY CONSTRUCT OR REHABILITATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL OR OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING, PROVIDE HOMEOWNERSHIP ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOMEBUYERS, AND/OR PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS. BY STATUTE, EACH PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MUST RESERVE AT LEAST 15 PERCENT OF ITS HOME FUNDING FOR PROJECTS OWNED, DEVELOPED, OR SPONSORED BY COMMUNITY HOUSING DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS (CHDOS). ADDITIONALLY, A PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MAY USE UP TO 10 PERCENT OF ITS HOME ALLOCATION FOR PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION. THE QUANTIFIABLE RESULTS OF THIS PROGRAM CHANGE ON A CONSTANT BASIS. HOWEVER, THEY CAN BE TRACKED VIA THE HOME NATIONAL PRODUCTION REPORT. THIS MONTHLY CUMULATIVE SUMMARY REPORT OF HOME DATA BY FEDERAL FISCAL YEAR (FY) INCLUDES: ALLOCATIONS, COMMITMENTS, DISBURSEMENTS, LEVERAGING RATIOS, LOW-INCOME BENEFIT, COMMITTED FUNDS BY ACTIVITY TYPE, AND HOME COST PER UNIT BY TENURE AND ACTIVITY TYPE. THE MONTHLY REPORT CAN BE REVIEWED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/HOME/HOME-NATIONAL-PRODUCTION-REPORTS/; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ALL HOME ASSISTED HOUSING UNITS MUST BENEFIT HOUSEHOLDS WITH INCOMES AT OR BELOW 80 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. ADDITIONALLY, 90 PERCENT OF OCCUPANTS OF HOME ASSISTED RENTAL UNITS AND HOUSEHOLDS THAT RECEIVE TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE MUST HAVE INCOMES AT OR BELOW 60 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. HOME FUNDS ARE OFTEN USED TO ASSIST PERSONS OR HOUSEHOLDS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$332.6K
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$331.1K
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
Department of Agriculture
$323.8K
ARP ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT GRANT FOR RURAL HEALTH CARE FACILITIES
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$321.1K
PURPOSE: THE HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM (HOME) PROVIDES NEED-BASED FORMULA GRANTS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT ARE USED TO FUND ACTIVITIES INCLUDING BUILDING, BUYING, AND/OR REHABILITATING AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR RENT OR HOMEOWNERSHIP OR PROVIDING DIRECT RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME PEOPLE. THE HOME PROGRAM WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1990 THROUGH TITLE II OF THE CRANSTON-GONZALEZ NATIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACT (NAHA). SINCE ITS INCEPTION, THE HOME PROGRAM HAS DISTRIBUTED MORE THAN $41BILLION TO CREATE OVER 1,388,000 UNITS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO MORE THAN 422,000 HOUSEHOLDS THROUGHOUT THE NATION. HOME FUNDS ARE APPROPRIATED ANNUALLY TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD), WHICH IN TURN DISTRIBUTES THE FUNDS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT QUALIFY AS PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS. FORTY PERCENT OF HOME FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED TO STATES AND 60 PERCENT ARE ALLOCATED TO LOCALITIES. CURRENT HOME AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: HOME FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE A WIDE VARIETY OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING REHABILITATION OF OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING; ASSISTANCE TO HOMEBUYERS; ACQUISITION, REHABILITATION, OR CONSTRUCTION OF RENTAL HOUSING; AND TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE. PROJECTS THAT USE HOME FUNDING MUST MEET CERTAIN INCOME TARGETING AND AFFORDABILITY REQUIREMENTS. HOME ASSISTED HOUSING MUST ALSO MEET CERTAIN DEFINITIONS OF AFFORDABILITY AND MUST CONTINUE TO REMAIN AFFORDABLE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS FOR 5, 10, 15, OR 20 YEARS DEPENDING ON THE TYPE OF ACTIVITY FOR WHICH FUNDS ARE USED AND THE AMOUNT OF HOME FUNDING CONTRIBUTED TO THE PROJECT. PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS (PJS) CAN UNDERTAKE HOME PROJECTS DIRECTLY OR PROVIDE HOME FUNDS TO DEVELOPERS OR OWNERS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING OR OTHER PARTNERS. HOME FUNDS ARE TYPICALLY PROVIDED AS GRANTS, VARIOUS TYPES OF LOANS, LOAN GUARANTEES TO LENDING ORGANIZATIONS, INTEREST RATE SUBSIDIES, OR EQUITY INVESTMENTS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: BASED ON THE PRIORITIES IDENTIFIED IN A FIVE-YEAR CONSOLIDATED PLAN AND ANNUAL ACTION PLAN SUBMITTED TO HUD, PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS USE HOME FUNDS TO ACQUIRE OWNER OR RENTER OCCUPIED HOUSING IN STANDARD CONDITION TO BE OCCUPIED BY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS; NEWLY CONSTRUCT OR REHABILITATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL OR OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING, PROVIDE HOMEOWNERSHIP ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOMEBUYERS, AND/OR PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS. BY STATUTE, EACH PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MUST RESERVE AT LEAST 15 PERCENT OF ITS HOME FUNDING FOR PROJECTS OWNED, DEVELOPED, OR SPONSORED BY COMMUNITY HOUSING DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS (CHDOS). ADDITIONALLY, A PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MAY USE UP TO 10 PERCENT OF ITS HOME ALLOCATION FOR PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION. THE QUANTIFIABLE RESULTS OF THIS PROGRAM CHANGE ON A CONSTANT BASIS. HOWEVER, THEY CAN BE TRACKED VIA THE HOME NATIONAL PRODUCTION REPORT. THIS MONTHLY CUMULATIVE SUMMARY REPORT OF HOME DATA BY FEDERAL FISCAL YEAR (FY) INCLUDES: ALLOCATIONS, COMMITMENTS, DISBURSEMENTS, LEVERAGING RATIOS, LOW-INCOME BENEFIT, COMMITTED FUNDS BY ACTIVITY TYPE, AND HOME COST PER UNIT BY TENURE AND ACTIVITY TYPE. THE MONTHLY REPORT CAN BE REVIEWED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/HOME/HOME-NATIONAL-PRODUCTION-REPORTS/; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ALL HOME ASSISTED HOUSING UNITS MUST BENEFIT HOUSEHOLDS WITH INCOMES AT OR BELOW 80 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. ADDITIONALLY, 90 PERCENT OF OCCUPANTS OF HOME ASSISTED RENTAL UNITS AND HOUSEHOLDS THAT RECEIVE TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE MUST HAVE INCOMES AT OR BELOW 60 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. HOME FUNDS ARE OFTEN USED TO ASSIST PERSONS OR HOUSEHOLDS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$320.2K
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
Appalachian Regional Commission
$300K
SEWER SYSTEM (UPGRADE)
Environmental Protection Agency
$300K
THIS AGREEMENT WILL PROVIDE FUNDING FOR THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO TO INVENTORY, CHARACTERIZE, ASSESS, AND CONDUCT CLEANUP PLANNING AND COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT RELATED ACTIVITIES FOR BROWNFIELD SITES IN MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO, PUERTO RICO. THE MUNICIPALITY OF GUAYNABO WILL RETAIN THE SERVICES OF A QUALIFIED ENVIRONMENTAL PROFESSIONAL TO CONDUCT MULTIPLE ENVIRONMENTAL SITE ASSESSMENTS (ESAS) AT BROWNFIELD SITES, AS WELL AS DEVELOP A QUALITY ASSURANCE PROJECT PLAN. THE COMMUNITY-WIDE BROWNFIELDS ASSESSMENTS GRANT WILL BENEFIT LOW INCOME AND MINORITY COMMUNITIES BY IDENTIFYING AND ELIMINATING CONTAMINANT EXPOSURE PATHWAYS, IMPROVING ECONOMIC COMPETITIVENESS OF THE TARGET AREAS (AND PROMOTING BOTH NEW AND RETAIN EXISTING AFFORDABLE HOUSING). BROWNFIELDS ARE REAL PROPERTY, THE EXPANSION, DEVELOPMENT, OR REUSE OF WHICH MAY BE COMPLICATED BY THE PRESENCE OR POTENTIAL PRESENCE OF A HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE, POLLUTANT, OR CONTAMINANT.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$295.2K
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$281.7K
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$275.1K
PURPOSE: THE HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM (HOME) PROVIDES NEED-BASED FORMULA GRANTS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT ARE USED TO FUND ACTIVITIES INCLUDING BUILDING, BUYING, AND/OR REHABILITATING AFFORDABLE HOUSING FOR RENT OR HOMEOWNERSHIP OR PROVIDING DIRECT RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME PEOPLE. THE HOME PROGRAM WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1990 THROUGH TITLE II OF THE CRANSTON-GONZALEZ NATIONAL AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACT (NAHA). SINCE ITS INCEPTION, THE HOME PROGRAM HAS DISTRIBUTED MORE THAN $40 BILLION TO CREATE OVER 1,374,000 UNITS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING AND PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO MORE THAN 405,000 HOUSEHOLDS THROUGHOUT THE NATION. HOME FUNDS ARE APPROPRIATED ANNUALLY TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT (HUD), WHICH IN TURN DISTRIBUTES THE FUNDS TO STATES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS THAT QUALIFY AS PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS. FORTY PERCENT OF HOME FUNDS ARE ALLOCATED TO STATES AND 60 PERCENT ARE ALLOCATED TO LOCALITIES. CURRENT HOME AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS ARE INCLUDED IN THIS LIST OF HUD COMMUNITY PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (CPD) AWARDS AND ALLOCATIONS LOCATED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/GRANTEES/ALLOCATIONS-AWARDS/; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: HOME FUNDS ARE USED TO FINANCE A WIDE VARIETY OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING ACTIVITIES INCLUDING REHABILITATION OF OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING; ASSISTANCE TO HOMEBUYERS; ACQUISITION, REHABILITATION, OR CONSTRUCTION OF RENTAL HOUSING; AND TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE. PROJECTS THAT USE HOME FUNDING MUST MEET CERTAIN INCOME TARGETING AND AFFORDABILITY REQUIREMENTS. HOME ASSISTED HOUSING MUST ALSO MEET CERTAIN DEFINITIONS OF AFFORDABILITY AND MUST CONTINUE TO REMAIN AFFORDABLE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS FOR 5, 10, 15, OR 20 YEARS DEPENDING ON THE TYPE OF ACTIVITY FOR WHICH FUNDS ARE USED AND THE AMOUNT OF HOME FUNDING CONTRIBUTED TO THE PROJECT. PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS (PJS) CAN UNDERTAKE HOME PROJECTS DIRECTLY OR PROVIDE HOME FUNDS TO DEVELOPERS OR OWNERS OF AFFORDABLE HOUSING OR OTHER PARTNERS. HOME FUNDS ARE TYPICALLY PROVIDED AS GRANTS, VARIOUS TYPES OF LOANS, LOAN GUARANTEES TO LENDING ORGANIZATIONS, INTEREST RATE SUBSIDIES, OR EQUITY INVESTMENTS.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: BASED ON THE PRIORITIES IDENTIFIED IN A FIVE-YEAR CONSOLIDATED PLAN AND ANNUAL ACTION PLAN SUBMITTED TO HUD, PARTICIPATING JURISDICTIONS USE HOME FUNDS TO ACQUIRE OWNER OR RENTER OCCUPIED HOUSING IN STANDARD CONDITION TO BE OCCUPIED BY LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS; NEWLY CONSTRUCT OR REHABILITATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL OR OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING, PROVIDE HOMEOWNERSHIP ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOMEBUYERS, AND/OR PROVIDE TENANT BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE TO LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS. BY STATUTE, EACH PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MUST RESERVE AT LEAST 15 PERCENT OF ITS HOME FUNDING FOR PROJECTS OWNED, DEVELOPED, OR SPONSORED BY COMMUNITY HOUSING DEVELOPMENT ORGANIZATIONS (CHDOS). ADDITIONALLY, A PARTICIPATING JURISDICTION MAY USE UP TO 10 PERCENT OF ITS HOME ALLOCATION FOR PROGRAM ADMINISTRATION. THE QUANTIFIABLE RESULTS OF THIS PROGRAM CHANGE ON A CONSTANT BASIS. HOWEVER, THEY CAN BE TRACKED VIA THE HOME NATIONAL PRODUCTION REPORT. THIS MONTHLY CUMULATIVE SUMMARY REPORT OF HOME DATA BY FEDERAL FISCAL YEAR (FY) INCLUDES: ALLOCATIONS, COMMITMENTS, DISBURSEMENTS, LEVERAGING RATIOS, LOW-INCOME BENEFIT, COMMITTED FUNDS BY ACTIVITY TYPE, AND HOME COST PER UNIT BY TENURE AND ACTIVITY TYPE. THE MONTHLY REPORT CAN BE REVIEWED AT HTTPS://WWW.HUDEXCHANGE.INFO/PROGRAMS/HOME/HOME-NATIONAL-PRODUCTION-REPORTS/; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: ALL HOME ASSISTED HOUSING UNITS MUST BENEFIT HOUSEHOLDS WITH INCOMES AT OR BELOW 80 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. ADDITIONALLY, 90 PERCENT OF OCCUPANTS OF HOME ASSISTED RENTAL UNITS AND HOUSEHOLDS THAT RECEIVE TENANT-BASED RENTAL ASSISTANCE MUST HAVE INCOMES AT OR BELOW 60 PERCENT OF AREA MEDIAN INCOME. HOME FUNDS ARE OFTEN USED TO ASSIST PERSONS OR HOUSEHOLDS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$264.8K
HOME INVESTMENT CPD
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$264.1K
HOME INVESTMENT CPD
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$235.9K
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNER PLAN
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$197.9K
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$84.7K
EMERG SHELTER GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$51.4K
HOME INVESTMENT PARTNERSHIPS PROGRAM
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$50.9K
EMERGENCY SOLUTONS GRANTS
Department of Transportation
$16K
FUEL PROVISION
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$13K
SECTION 8 HOUSING CHOICE VOUCHERS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$12.9K
FAMILY SELF-SUFFICIENCY PROGRAM
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$10.2K
EMERG SHELTER GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$4,207.1
EMERG SHELTER GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$0
EMERG SHELTER GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$0
EMERG SHELTER GRANTS
Department of Transportation
$0
APPLICATION PURPOSE: THE PURPOSE OF THIS GRANT IS TO PURCHASE TRANSIT VEHICLE S AND PROVIDE PREVENTIVE MAINTENACE TO KEEP THE SAME IN STATE OF GOOD REPAIR.; ACTIVITIES PERFORMED: THE BUDGET REVISION WIL PROVIDE FOR TRAINING OF TRANSIT EMPLOYEES PAINTING AND BODY REPAIR OF BUSES AND PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE OF TRANSIT FLEET DURING FY 2023.THE ORIGINAL GRANT PROVIDED FOR PURCHASE OF 3 TRANSIT BUSES TO EXPAND FLEET AND PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE OF FLEET AND TRANSIT FACILITIES.; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: THIS GRANT WILL EXPAND THE TRANSIT FLEET KEEP VEHICLES IN GOOD CONDITION AND IMPROVE SECURITY THROGH EMPLOYEE TRAINING.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THIS AWARD AND BUDGET REVISION WILL BENEFIT TRANSIT USERS AND OPERATORS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THERE ARE NO SUBRECIPIENTS.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$0
FAMILY SELF-SUFFICIENCY PROGRAM
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$0
EMERGENCY SOLUTONS GRANTS
Department of Housing and Urban Development
-$0.5
HOME INVESTMENT CPD
Department of Transportation
-$172.51
CAPARRA INTERCHANGE SYSTEM
Source: Federal Audit Clearinghouse (fac.gov)
No federal single audit records found for this organization.
Single audits are required for entities expending $750,000+ in federal awards annually.
Tax Year 2024 · Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990
Individuals serving as officers, directors, or trustees of the organization.
| Name | Title | Hrs/Wk | Compensation | Related Orgs | Other |
|---|
Source: IRS Publication 78, Auto-Revocation List & e-Postcard Data
Tax-deductible contributions: Not confirmed
No additional tax-exempt status records found in ReconForce's database.
Sources: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (XML) & ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Scroll →
| Year | Revenue | Contributions | Expenses | Assets | Net Assets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024IRS e-File | $1.2M | $24K | $976.4K | $1.7M | $1.6M |
| 2023 | $1M | $23.5K | $921K | $1.5M | $1.4M |
| 2022 | $884.4K | $27.5K | $936.7K | $1.5M | $1.3M |
| 2021 | $1.1M | $28.1K | $759K |
Sources: ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer & IRS e-File Index
| Tax Year | Form Type | Source | Documents |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 990 | IRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2023 | 990 | DataIRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2022 | 990 | DataIRS e-File |
Financial data: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (Tax Year 2024)
Leadership & compensation: IRS e-Filed Form 990, Part VII (Tax Year 2024)
Federal grants: USAspending.gov (live)
Organization info: IRS Business Master File
| Total |
|---|
| Christian A Herb | President | 40 | $165.8K | $0 | $25.5K | $191.3K |
| Stephen H Sack Jr | Chair | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Michael Matarese | Vice Chair | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Fred Lord | Treasurer / Secretary | 4 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Kate Childs | Immediate Past President | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
Christian A Herb
President
$191.3K
Hrs/Wk
40
Compensation
$165.8K
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$25.5K
Stephen H Sack Jr
Chair
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Michael Matarese
Vice Chair
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Fred Lord
Treasurer / Secretary
$0
Hrs/Wk
4
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Kate Childs
Immediate Past President
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Members of the governing board. Board members often serve without compensation.
| Name | Title | Hrs/Wk | Compensation | Related Orgs | Other | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Catherine Erasmus | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| David Daniels | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| David Foster | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| David Sousa | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Eric Gottier | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Frank Troiano | Director | 2 |
Catherine Erasmus
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
David Daniels
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
David Foster
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
| $1.5M |
| $1.3M |
| 2020 | $698.3K | $18.2K | $653.5K | $1.1M | $1M |
| 2019 | $773.3K | $18.6K | $716.9K | $1.1M | $977.9K |
| 2018 | $875.3K | $20.9K | $820.3K | $1M | $921.5K |
| 2017 | $825.6K | $17.5K | $764.8K | $932.5K | $866.5K |
| 2016 | $731.6K | $15.2K | $730.4K | $867.3K | $805.7K |
| 2015 | $811.9K | $19.4K | $772.9K | $834K | $804.5K |
| 2014 | $751.4K | $19K | $704.9K | $852.5K | $765.5K |
| 2013 | $765.5K | $18.6K | $812.8K | $751.9K | $719K |
| 2012 | $734.7K | $15K | $708.4K | $804.2K | $766.3K |
| 2011 | $751K | $19.4K | $700.2K | $773.6K | $740K |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data | PDF not yet published by IRS |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990 | Data |
| 2017 | 990 | Data |
| 2016 | 990 | Data |
| 2015 | 990 | Data |
| 2014 | 990 | Data |
| 2013 | 990 | Data |
| 2012 | 990 | Data |
| 2011 | 990 | Data |
| 2010 | 990 | — |
| 2009 | 990 | — |
| 2008 | 990 | — |
| 2007 | 990 | — |
| 2006 | 990 | — |
| 2005 | 990 | — |
| 2004 | 990 | — |
| $0 |
| $0 |
| $0 |
| $0 |
| Gary Sippin | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| George Perrelli | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Greg Stafstrom | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Howard Peterson | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Jamie Densmore | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Jeff Jennings | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Jennifer Tracey-Carlo | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| John Bowman | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| John Mccusker | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Matthew Mitchell | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Paula Ryan | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Peter Aziz | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Peter Russell | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Richard Gada Sr | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Richard Johnson | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Rick Bologna | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Roy Friedman | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Samuel Gault | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Sharon Peterson | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Stephen Rosentel | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Susan Santopietro | Director | 2 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
David Sousa
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Eric Gottier
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Frank Troiano
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Gary Sippin
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
George Perrelli
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Greg Stafstrom
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Howard Peterson
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Jamie Densmore
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Jeff Jennings
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Jennifer Tracey-Carlo
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
John Bowman
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
John Mccusker
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Matthew Mitchell
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Paula Ryan
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Peter Aziz
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Peter Russell
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Richard Gada Sr
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Richard Johnson
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Rick Bologna
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Roy Friedman
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Samuel Gault
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Sharon Peterson
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Stephen Rosentel
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Susan Santopietro
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
2
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0