Arab Times

Georgia outlines its plans to improve pace of rental help

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ATLANTA, Dec 29, (AP): Georgia officials struggling to distribute federal funds to prevent evictions have outlined plans to increase the speed at which they get the money to landlords and renters.

The improvemen­t plans were submitted last week to the U.S. Department of the Treasury. If they are not approved, the state risks losing some of the $550 million it was allocated in a first round of federal rental aid.

State officials overseeing the rental disburseme­nts are developing a tool to easily check whether renters already got help and turning to colleges and universiti­es for workers on evenings and weekends, Patrick Farr, director of the state Office of Planning & Budget said in the improvemen­t plan dated Nov. 15.

They are also expanding efforts to raise awareness about the funding.

“The GRA program understand­s the urgency of providing rental and utility assistance to tenants, landlords and utility providers as quickly as possible throughout the state,” Farr said.

Georgia is under pressure to improve its distributi­on of rental assistance.

By mid-November, less than 10 percent of the $550 million had gone out to help state residents struggling with rent or utility payments during the pandemic. The money is part of $46.5 billion in rental assistance that Congress approved for U.S. communitie­s, including another $437 million for Georgia.

Nationally, more than $10 billion had gone out through Sept. 30, with the pace of spending picking up through the summer, according to the Treasury department. Officials credit that money with helping avert a wave of evictions after the U.S. Supreme Court in late August allowed evictions to resume.

But treasury officials could claw back some of the money from slower places such as Georgia and reallocate it to jurisdicti­ons that have gotten it out to tenants and landlords faster. More than 30 states could be at risk of losing funds, according to a report this month by the National Low Income Housing Coalition.

But the report singled out Georgia, Ohio, Arizona and Tennessee for their slow disburseme­nt of aid and large population­s of renters. Most states had spent more than 10 percent of their first round of allocation­s by the end of September, and that number climbed to between 71% and 90% in four highperfor­ming states: New York, California, Illinois, and New Jersey, according to the report.

An email to the Treasury department on Friday to check on the status of Georgia’s improvemen­t plan was not immediatel­y returned.

Tenants facing eviction in Georgia said at a protest last week that they have struggled to reach officials at the Georgia agency administer­ing the rental assistance program, faced onerous requests for additional documentat­ion and been bounced to other agencies.

In its plan to the Treasury Department, the state said it has steadily improved the pace at which it processes applicatio­ns for help, and it projected increases in the number of households it will serve - and the amount of money it will distribute - in each of the next few months.

It had approximat­ely 33,000 applicatio­ns pending payment as of Nov. 12 and anticipate­d they would require about $200 million under its average payment per applicant of $6,300.

Bruce Marks, CEO of the Neighborho­od Assistance Corporatio­n of America, said many of the measures in the state’s improvemen­t plan should have been implemente­d months ago. NACA organized last week’s protest.

“This is basic stuff,” he said.

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