HUD: HUD Announces $2.8 Billion in Annual Funding to Help People Experiencing Homelessness

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

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WASHINGTON – To help individuals and families experiencing homelessness move into permanent housing, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) today announced $2.8 billion in Continuum of Care (CoC) Competition Awards for thousands of local homeless service and housing programs across the United States. The awards, previewed by HUD Secretary Marcia L. Fudge at the National League of Cities, reflects the Biden-Harris Administration’s continued commitment to addressing the nation’s homelessness crisis using equity and evidence-based solutions, as reflected in All In: The Federal Strategic Plan to Prevent and End Homelessness. The Biden-Harris Administration plan sets a goal of reducing homelessness by 25% by 2025 and ultimately ending it.

“Helping people move into stable housing from temporary shelters and encampments on the streets is essential to ending homelessness,” said HUD Secretary Marcia L. Fudge. “Working with our local partners, these Continuum of Care program grants, deliver communities the resources they need. Together we can work toward a world where homelessness is a brief and rare occurrence, and every person has access to a safe, affordable and stable home so that they and their families can thrive.”

The CoC program is designed to promote a community-wide commitment to the goal of ending homelessness. The program is the largest source of federal grant funding for homeless services and housing programs servicing people experiencing homelessness.

Today’s annual funding builds on a $315 million first-of-its-kind package of resources that HUD awarded in January 2023 to help communities provide housing and supportive services to people in unsheltered settings and people experiencing homelessness in rural areas. As a part of the January funding, communities were asked to develop a comprehensive approach to addressing unsheltered and rural homelessness that involves coordination with health care providers, other housing agencies such as public housing authorities, and people with lived experience of homelessness.

In August 2022, HUD issued the Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) for the fiscal year 2022 CoC competition awards. Included in the $2.8 billion of total awards, approximately $80 million was made available for non-competitive Youth Homelessness Demonstration Program (YHDP) renewal and replacement grants. The 2022 awards also include over $52 million for new projects that will support housing and service needs for survivors of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking.

Specifically, HUD sought projects that:

  • End homelessness for all persons experiencing homelessness;
  • Place emphasis on racial equity and anti-discrimination policies for LGTBQ+ individuals;
  • Use a Housing First approach;
  • Reduce unsheltered homelessness and reduce the criminalization of homelessness;
  • Improve system performance;
  • Partner with housing agencies to leverage access to mainstream housing programs;
  • Partner with health agencies to coordinate health and supportive services, including to prevent and respond to future infectious disease outbreaks;
  • Advance racial equity and addressing racial disparities in homelessness;
  • Engage people with lived experience of homelessness in decision-making; and
  • Support local engagement to increase the supply of affordable housing.

Below is a chart of awards per state. View a breakdown of the CoC and project awards on the HUD website.

2022 Continuum of Care Program Grants
StateNumber of ProjectsAward Amount
Alabama46$16,316,728
Alaska38$5,779,138
Arizona80$53,597,059
Arkansas21$3,911,243
California773$525,839,973
Colorado52$37,141,703
Connecticut149$70,582,793
Delaware27$8,901,293
District of Columbia44$27,933,554
Florida313$115,822,733
Georgia167$49,860,265
Guam8$1,371,107
Hawaii44$17,400,867
Idaho28$5,387,876
Illinois382$143,772,673
Indiana93$29,982,137
Iowa48$12,141,038
Kansas41$8,699,549
Kentucky114$31,298,318
Louisiana140$66,387,990
Maine35$19,013,800
Maryland173$61,794,130
Massachusetts226$110,496,896
Michigan281$89,810,287
Minnesota208$38,355,825
Mississippi34$6,512,419
Missouri153$43,689,722
Montana30$4,731,872
Nebraska62$12,945,245
Nevada54$19,692,215
New Hampshire51$9,502,752
New Jersey226$54,689,915
New Mexico61$14,533,641
New York563$268,337,527
North Carolina145$37,105,325
North Dakota16$2,109,161
Ohio308$135,250,056
Oklahoma62$11,186,307
Oregon128$49,970,799
Pennsylvania459$132,510,492
Puerto Rico73$24,283,478
Rhode Island40$11,463,583
South Carolina59$13,457,637
South Dakota9$1,433,360
Tennessee127$27,094,890
Texas230$133,898,634
Utah47$13,854,170
Vermont25$6,201,820
Virgin Islands3$168,758
Virginia138$35,123,652
Washington201$96,990,354
West Virginia53$9,755,284
Wisconsin87$32,410,685
Wyoming7$816,329


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SOURCE: https://www.hud.gov/press/press_releases_media_advisories/HUD_No_23_062

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