New York State HOME
Program
NYS Housing Trust Fund Corporation
The HOME Program funds a variety of activities through partnerships with
counties, towns, cities, villages, private developers, and community-based
non-profit housing organizations. The program provides funds to acquire,
rehabilitate, or construct housing, or to provide assistance to low-income
homebuyers and renters.
HOME Program funds may only be used to assist households with incomes at
or below 80 percent of area median income. Rental projects must primarily
serve households with income at or below 60 percent of area median income.
Assisted rental units must remain affordable for a period of between five
and 20 years, depending on the initial amount of subsidy provided for the
project.
HOME Program funds may be used to pay for acquisition, rehabilitation,
construction, and certain related soft costs. Funds may also be used for
relocation costs, tenant-based rental assistance, down-payment and closing
costs, and some administration and planning costs. Funds may only be used
with respect to residential housing.
ELIGIBILITY: Any private for-profit or not-for-profit entity that
can demonstrate the capacity to develop and operate a qualifying project
is eligible to apply. Units of general local government that have not been
designated by HUD as participating jurisdictions and not-for-profit
corporations that meet certain administrative tests may also apply as local
program administrators. Jurisdictions that receive HOME Program funding
directly from the federal government may not apply for New York State HOME
Program funds.
FUNDING: Approximately $33 million. Seed money loans of up to
$45,000 per project are also available and may be requested at any time.
DEADLINE: Applications for locally administered programs must be
received by 5 p.m. February 10, 2003 and site-specific project funding must
be received by 5 p.m. March 24, 2003.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact your nearest Regional Office: Capital
District: Vernita King, Regional Director, Hampton Plaza, 9th Floor, 38-40
State Street, Albany, NY 12207; (518) 486-5012. Buffalo: Thomas Van Nortwick,
Regional Director, Statler Towers, 107 Delaware Avenue, Suite 600, Buffalo,
NY 14202; (716) 842-2244. New York City: Deborah Boatright, Regional
Director, 25 Beaver Street, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10004; (212) 480-7644.
Syracuse: Vernita King, Regional Director, 800 South Wilbur Avenue, Syracuse,
NY 13204; mailing address: P.O. Box 1127, Syracuse, NY 13201; (315)
473-6930.
Low-Income Housing Trust
Fund Program (HTF)
NYS Housing Trust Fund Corporation
HTF was established to help meet the critical need for decent, affordable
housing for people of low-income. Specifically, HTF provides funding to
construct low-income housing, to rehabilitate vacant or under-utilized
residential property, or to convert vacant non-residential property to
residential use for occupancy by low-income homesteaders, tenants,
tenant-cooperators or condominium owners. HTF can also provide seed money to
eligible non-profit applicants who need financial assistance in developing
a full HTF application.
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be not-for-profit corporations or
charitable organizations or their wholly-owned subsidiaries; housing
development fund companies; municipalities; counties; housing authorities;
private developers who limit their profits or rate of return of investors;
or partnerships in which the non-profit partner has at least a 50 percent
controlling interest. Low-income persons may not be direct recipients of
payments, grants or loans from the corporation, but may receive such funds
from another eligible applicant. Non-profits, charitable organizations,
and housing development fund companies must have been in existence for at
least one year prior to application and have as one of their primary
purposes the improvement or provision of housing for low-income persons.
FUNDING: Approximately $29 million. Seed money loans of up to
$45,000 per project are available and may be requested at any time.
DEADLINE: 5 p.m. March 24, 2003.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact your nearest Regional Office: Capital
District: Vernita King, Regional Director, Hampton Plaza, 9th Floor, 38-40
State Street, Albany, NY 12207; (518) 486-5012. Buffalo: Thomas Van
Nortwick, Regional Director, Statler Towers, 107 Delaware Avenue, Suite
600, Buffalo, NY 14202; (716) 842-2244. New York City: Deborah Boatright,
Regional Director, 25 Beaver Street, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10004; (212)
480-7644. Syracuse: Vernita King, Regional Director, 800 South Wilbur Avenue,
Syracuse, NY 13204; mailing address: P.O. Box 1127, Syracuse, NY 13201;
(315) 473-6930.
Homes for Working Families
Program (HWF)
NYS Division of Housing and Community Renewal
HWF provides funding assistance of up to $25,000 per unit ($35,000 in
New York City) for the substantial rehabilitation or new construction of
affordable rental housing for families and/or senior citizens. The entire
project’s rents must meet restricted rent requirements under Section 42
of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), serving households at 60% or less of
area median income. More than 50% of the project cost must be financed
by tax-exempt bonds issued by a public authority and allocated from the
State’s Private Activity Bond Volume Cap.
ELIGIBILITY: Applicants must be not-for-profit corporations or
charitable organizations or their wholly-owned subsidiaries; housing
development fund companies; municipalities; counties; housing authorities;
private developers who limit their profits or rate of return of investors;
or partnerships in which the non-profit partner has at least a 50 percent
controlling interest. Low-income persons may not be direct recipients of
payments, grants or loans from the corporation, but may receive such
funds from another eligible applicant. Non-profits, charitable
organizations, and housing development fund companies must have been in
existence for at least one year prior to application and have as one of
their primary purposes the improvement or provision of housing for
low-income persons.
FUNDING: Approximately $7 million.
DEADLINE: 5 p.m. March 24, 2003.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact your nearest Regional Office:
Capital District: Vernita King, Regional Director, Hampton Plaza, 9th
Floor, 38-40 State Street, Albany, NY 12207; (518) 486-5012. Buffalo:
Thomas Van Nortwick, Regional Director, Statler Towers, 107 Delaware
Avenue, Suite 600, Buffalo, NY 14202; (716) 842-2244. New York City:
Deborah Boatright, Regional Director, 25 Beaver Street, 7th Floor,
New York, NY 10004; (212) 480-7644. Syracuse: Vernita King, Regional
Director, 800 South Wilbur Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13204; mailing
address: P.O. Box 1127, Syracuse, NY 13201; (315) 473-6930.
Local Government
Records Management Improvement Fund
NYS Education Department (SED)
SED has announced the availability of grants from the Local Government
Records Management Improvement Fund to improve records management and
archival administration in New York State’s local governments. Grants
are available for inventory and planning, active records, inactive
records, microfilm, historical records, and educational uses of local
government records projects.
ELIGIBILITY: Local governments, including but not limited to
boards of cooperative educational services, cities, counties, fire
districts, school districts, towns and villages..
FUNDING: Up to $50,000 for individual projects involving a
single government; up to $75,000 for cooperative projects involving
two or more local governments acting on one activity; up to $100,000
for complex projects involving a single local government addressing
extremely complex records management issues.
DEADLINE: February 3, 2003.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact the New York State Archives,
Grants Administration and Program Support Unit, Room 9A81, Cultural
Education Center, Albany, NY 12230; (518) 474-6926;
archgrants@mail.nysed.gov. Application and reference materials are
also available at www.archives.nysed.gov.
...Foundations
Relatives as Parents
Program
The Brookdale Foundation Group
The Brookdale Foundation Group has announced the Relatives as Parents
Program (RAPP) Local Seed Grant Initiative for 2003. RAPP is designed
to encourage and promote the creation or expansion of services for
grandparents and other relatives who have taken on the responsibility
of surrogate parenting, when the biological parents are unwilling or
unable to do so. The program is intended to award seed grants to local
agencies to private support groups and at least two other supportive
services to relative caregivers and their families; encourage cooperation
and collaboration among various services systems; ensure the development,
expansion and future continuity of local services; and create replicable
models of service.
FUNDING: Selected agencies will receive a $10,000 grant over a
two-year period ($6,000 in the first year and $4,000 in the second year
if all grant requirements have been met) as well as training and technical
assistance. Matching support in case or in-kind will be required of all
selected agencies.
ELIGIBILITY: Community based agencies.
DEADLINE: January 15, 2003.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Copies of the RFP guidelines and application
form can be found at the Brookdale Foundation Web site. Requests for
the RFP packets, written on agency letterhead, may also be submitted to
RAPP, The Brookdale Foundation Group, 126 East 56th Street, New York, NY
10022-3668. You may also contact Melinda Perez-Porter at (212) 308-7355
for more information.
...Grant Writing
Grantsmanship Training
Program
The Grantsmanship Training Program is coming to New York: Painted Post
(Corning), March 3-7, 2003 hosted by Watson Homestead and Conference and
Retreat Center; New York City, March 10-14, 2003, hosted by the Harlem
Partnership Center; and Buffalo, March 24-28, 2003, hosted by the American
Red Cross, Greater Buffalo Chapter.
The five-day programs will be conducted by The Grantsmanship Center
(TGCI), the world's oldest and largest training organization for the
nonprofit sector. Classes are kept at a maximum of 27 participants. The
cost is $775, which includes a one-year enrollment in the TGCI Membership
Program. A limited number of half-tuition scholarships are available to
agencies with annual budgets of less than $300,000.
To register, contact The Grantsmanship Center at (800) 421-9512 or visit
the Center’s Web site. For local information and arrangements: for
Painted Post, call Donna Cummings at (607) 962-0541; for New York City,
call Stephanie Penceal at (212) 283-7122; and for Buffalo, call Loren
Smith at (716) 878-2374.
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