Texas is shutting the door on a massive program to help struggling households make rent and keep the lights on during the COVID-19 pandemic — months before it was expected to run out of money, according to one lawmaker.
At 5 p.m. Friday, the state agency that runs the Texas Rent Relief Program — citing overwhelming demand for the federally funded program — will stop taking applications from residents who need help paying rent and utilities.
There isn’t enough money left in the till to help everyone who has applied for assistance, the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs told lawmakers this week.
Texas has received more than $1.7 billion in federal dollars to help needy residents pay rent and utility bills since December, according to the U.S. Treasury Department. TDHCA, however, says the rent relief program’s total funding sits at more than $1.9 billion — and it’s asking Treasury for more, which would allow the agency to reopen applications.
So far, Texas has spent nearly $1.2 billion on rent relief for 209,000 households and committed another $108 million for another 19,000. TDHCA has about $680 million to deploy for applications filed before the deadline Friday.
“This action will be to ensure that all of those applications which have been fully submitted will be reviewed and funded if they meet criteria,” the agency wrote Tuesday to the state House Urban Affairs Committee.
That came as a surprise to state Rep. Philip Cortez, a San Antonio Democrat who chairs the committee. Agency head Bobby Wilkinson told Cortez last week he anticipated the funds to help needy households wouldn’t run out until March, Cortez said.
“It seems that they underestimated demand,” Cortez said.
Now, housing advocates worry thousands of households in need of assistance will have one less avenue to get the help they need.
John Henneberger, who leads the nonprofit Texas Housers, called on state lawmakers Thursday to use $3 billion in federal stimulus funds they set aside for potential property tax relief to instead shore up the rent relief program so it “does not end prematurely while we still have all these people who need help.”
“There’s a crisis right now,” Henneberger said.
Separately, the feds have sent $961 million to local governments since December to provide rental relief to residents — but the amount still available depends on where people live.
Some cities and counties — including Dallas, El Paso, Cameron, and Hidalgo counties — are at risk of having millions of federal rental relief dollars seized by Treasury because they haven’t spent enough of them, according to an analysis by Texas Housers.
Texas has been lauded in some circles for how many federal rent relief dollars it has distributed, compared with blue states like New York that were slow to disburse the money. The White House has held Texas up as an example of how to get relief into people’s hands.
But the state has also drawn criticism for the slow speed at which it processes relief applications. It takes first-time applicants more than two months, on average, for their applications to be processed, TDHCA told lawmakers Tuesday. For those facing eviction or utility cutoffs, that can take a little more than a month.
The agency has fixed a software issue it believes contributed to the delays, an agency spokesperson said Thursday.
“This program is critical for Texans in need, and we cannot have any more delays, or issues plaguing it, especially leading into the holiday months,” Cortez said.
This story originally published by the Texas Tribune.
The San Marcos City Council received a presentation on the Sidewalk Maintenance and Gap Infill…
The San Marcos River Rollers have skated through obstacles after taking a two-year break during…
San Marcos Corridor News has been reporting on the incredible communities in the Hays County…
Visitors won't be able to swim in the crystal clear waters of the Jacobs Well Natural…
Looking to adopt or foster animals from the local shelter? Here are the San Marcos…
The Lone Star State leads the nation in labor-related accidents and especially workplace deaths and…
This website uses cookies.