HUD announces disaster assistance for area
Published 12:00 am Wednesday, June 20, 2001
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Working closely with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the department of Housing and Urban Development recently announced it would expedite federal assistance to flood-damaged communities in Louisiana and provide support to homeowners and low-income renters who live in 10 affected parishes hit by Tropical Storm Allison. “This storm has caused a tremendous amount of human suffering in terms of families being dislocated from the security of their homes,” HUD Secretary Mel Martinez said. “Together with our partners on the federal, state and local levels we will do everything we can to help the people of Louisiana rebuild and get through these difficult times.” President George W. Bush declared Ascension, Assumption, East Baton Rouge, Iberville, Lafayette, Lafourche, Livingston, St. Martin, Terrebonne and Vermillion parishes as federal disaster areas. The declaration covers damage to private and public property from the storm. Following the President’s action, HUD will provide staff to Disaster Field Offices set up by FEMA to provide information on programs designed to meet the immediate housing needs of those whose homes have been damaged or destroyed. HUD will provide temporary housing and shelter and HUD will work with FEMA to identify vacant public housing and HUD-owned homes that can be used as temporary housing for those forced from their homes; grant immediate foreclosure relief. HUD will grant a 90-day moratorium on foreclosures and forbearance on foreclosures of Federal Housing Administration-insured homes; redirect and accelerate federal block grants. HUD will permit communities to divert Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) and home funds for disaster recovery efforts; provide Section 108 loan guarantees. HUD will permit state and local governments participating in the CDBG program to obtain federally guaranteed loans for housing rehabilitation, economic development and repair of public infrastructure; provide public housing reserve for disasters and emergencies. HUD will provide funding to public housing authorities to rehabilitate flood-damaged properties after insurance proceeds have been exhausted; make available single-family home mortgage insurance. HUD’s Section 203(h) program enables the FHA to insure mortgages of disaster victims who have lost their homes and are in the process of rebuilding or buying another home. Borrowers are eligible for 100 percent financing, including closing costs; and make available programs for damaged or destroyed properties. HUD’s Section 203(k) loan program enables homebuyers and homeowners who have lost their homes to finance both the purchase and/or refinancing of a house and the cost of its rehabilitation through a single mortgage. It also allows homeowners who have damaged houses to finance the rehabilitation of their existing single-family home. This program encourages lenders to make mortgages available to borrowers who would not otherwise qualify for conventional loans on affordable terms and to residents of disadvantaged neighborhoods. For more information about these and other HUD programs, visit HUD’s web site at www.hud.gov/disarelf.cfm.