Inman

HUD approves Mississippi grant program for Katrina victims

Housing and Urban Development Department Secretary Alphonso Jackson today announced he is approving a $3.4 billion plan to assist Mississippi victims of Hurricane Katrina.

Two months ago, Jackson allocated $5 billion in Community Development Block Grant funding to assist Mississippi’s long-term recovery efforts, and the latest plan will provide up to $150,000 in assistance for each qualified homeowner.

On Friday, Mississippi submitted a partial plan for $3.4 billion of that money that focuses on one-time grants to eligible homeowners whose primary residences were flooded in the Hurricane Katrina disaster. The remaining $1.6 billion in CDBG funding will be made available to Mississippi once the State submits another action plan for HUD’s review, according to the announcement.

“It’s critical that we move quickly to help Mississippi homeowners to recover and rebuild not only their homes, but their lives,” Jackson said. “This funding is part of President Bush’s commitment to help the Gulf Coast recover, and for HUD’s part we stand ready to help in any way we can as we move along that long road toward making Mississippi whole again.”

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour said, “I am grateful for HUD’s assistance in working with us to get this desperately needed aid to homeowners as quickly as possible. HUD’s approval means the program can officially open on April 17, getting essential money into the hands of coastal homeowners who desperately need the help to rebuild and repair.”

U.S. Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., said, “I’m pleased that Secretary Jackson and the staff at HUD have approved Mississippi’s partial action plan. Sen. (Thad) Cochran (R-Miss.) and I worked very hard to secure this funding through the legislative process specifically to help homeowners who, even though they were outside the flood plain, saw their homes washed away. Now, thousands of these Mississippians who’re stuck with a slab and a mortgage can truly begin the process of rebuilding and recovery.”

Mississippi’s grant-funded plan includes: