The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mayor open to state running HIV grant

Bottoms administra­tion has mismanaged funds, critics say.

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms says that she wouldn’t be opposed to a state takeover of the city’s management of a $23 million federal grant that subsidizes housing payments for people living with HIV/AIDS.

“If the state has a better process for how we deal with this program, I will not be opposed to anyone assisting or taking over,” Bottoms told the City Council during a teleconfer­ence update on COVID-19 on Thursday.

Bottoms’ statement follows a letter that five leading advocates for people living with HIV/AIDS in Georgia sent the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t accusing Bottoms’ administra­tion of malfeasanc­e, negligence and unethical behavior resulting in potentiall­y lost lives.

The letter asked HUD to take the extraordin­ary step of terminatin­g the city’s grant and have those funds administer­ed through the state’s Department of Community Affairs.

The grant, formally known as Housing Opportunit­ies to Persons With AIDS, serves as a lifeline to low-income people with the disease.

The driving theory of the program is that providing stable homes to a vulnerable population helps prevent the transmissi­on of the disease. Without the stress of finding a place to sleep each night, people living with HIV/ AIDS can better focus on obtaining jobs that offer health care, visiting the doctor and having a place to store their medication.

Under the HOPWA grant, the city is supposed to disburse $23 million a year to agencies that coordinate housing for 2,300 house

holds in 29 metro Atlanta counties.

But for years, the city has severely delayed disburseme­nts to the nonprofits that coordinate housing arrangemen­ts and other care for patients and their families, and tens of millions of the dollars have gone unspent.

HUD has already threatened to terminate Atlanta’s award after an investigat­ion last year revealed chronic mismanagem­ent, a persistent lack of financial controls and an inability to adhere to the federal grant guidelines, according to a February letter from HUD to the city.

A spokespers­on for the Department of Community Affairs declined to answer a question about whether the department would be willing to administer the city’s award. HUD already awards roughly $3.4 million annually in HOPWA funds to 12 regional service providers in a 125-county area.

 ??  ?? Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms says she’s fine with state taking over HOPWA.
Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms says she’s fine with state taking over HOPWA.

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