The Trump administration wants to cut the Department of Housing and Urban Development's budget by 43.6%, a reduction that would require eliminating some programs.
The
"Importantly, it furthers our mission-minded approach at HUD of taking inventory of our programs and processes to address the size and scope of the federal government, which has become too bloated and bureaucratic to efficiently function," he said.
The budget suggestions follow moves by President Trump's cost-cutting task force to eliminate over 100 vendor contracts at HUD
HUD in a separate statement Friday touted its work with the Department of Government Efficiency to cut fraud, waste and abuse. That acknowledgement came in response to an inquiry regarding
See the full list proposed housing changes in the table at the end of this story.
Proposed changes at HUD
The largest cut suggested in the Trump budget proposal is a $26.7 billion reduction to HUD's "State Rental Assistance Block Grant," which provides funding for rental assistance, public housing, elderly and disability housing. The proposed budget would use a state-based formula grant in lieu of a "dysfunctional" federal system. The budget would also place a new 2-year cap on rental assistance for able-bodied adults.
HUD is also looking to eliminate its $3.3 billion Community Development Block Grant, suggesting funds have been poorly targeted. The budget cites improper funding for improvement projects for a brewery, a concert plaza and skatepark. The government is also proposing to eliminate the
Other nine-figure cuts include slashes to Native American Programs and a cost-cutting consolidation of Homeless Assistance Programs. A $100 million Pathways to Removing Obstacles program is on the chopping block for advancing "'equity' under the guise of an affordable housing development program."
HUD emphasized that it is maintaining support for its Fair Housing Assistance Program, which funds state and local agencies responsible for processing 80% of the nation's fair housing complaints. At the onset of the Trump administration, HUD's fair housing enforcement operations were
CDFI Fund changes
The Trump administration is also calling for changes to the Community Development Financial Institutions Fund, a collection of
The budget calls for a $100 million increase for a new Rural Financial Award Program, which would require 60% of CDFI Fund loans and investment to go to rural areas. At the same time, the Trump administration calls for a $291 million reduction to CDFI Fund discretionary awards, citing past awards' focus on racial equity and climate resiliency.
"The CDFI industry has matured beyond the need for "seed" money and should at this point be financially self-sustaining," the budget said.