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Taking Action To Distribute The Necessary Resources For The Rebuilding Process

What New  Jersey Residents Need To Know About The Christie Administration’s  Proposed First Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery Action  Plan

“This    plan puts into motion the specific actions we’ve been designing to    get relief out as quickly as possible to our Sandy-impacted homeowners and    businesses – to reconstruct, rehabilitate and elevate homes, and to    get over hurdles for our small businesses to get up and running again.    These programs have been carefully, but quickly designed to fill the unmet    needs faced by our residents to rebuild in a safer, more enduring way, to    strengthen our impacted local economies going into this summer, and to help    preserve the unique character of our shore communities as we’ve known    them.  With this first round of funding, we will also begin an    aggressive marketing effort to let people both in the region and across the    country know that New Jersey is rebounding and that the Jersey Shore will    be open for business this summer.”

–    Governor Chris Christie

 

 

The  Christie Administration today unveiled its proposed Community Development  Block Grant Disaster Recovery Action Plan, which outlines how the State plans  to utilize $1,829,520,000 in federal funding. This is the first phase of  Community Development Block Grant funds provided to New Jersey by the U.S.  Department of Housing and Urban Development. Additional CDBG recovery funds  are expected in the coming months. With this first phase of funding, the  Christie Administration is focusing primarily on helping homeowners, renters,  businesses and communities impacted by Superstorm Sandy.

 

  • The proposed Action Plan incorporates input from  Sandy-impacted communities and stakeholder groups whose engagement will  continue throughout the State’s recovery, rebuilding and restoration  process.
  • CDBG Disaster Recovery funds are intended to  address unmet needs not satisfied by private insurance, the Federal Emergency  Management Agency, the U.S. Small Business Administration, or other sources.
  • The Christie Administration will dedicate over  50% of funding for low-to-moderate-income households, in accordance with HUD  guidelines.
    • Additionally,  per HUD guidelines, 80 percent of the funds will be dedicated to the nine  most heavily impacted counties in the state: Atlantic, Bergen, Cape May,  Essex, Hudson, Middlesex, Monmouth, Ocean and Union.
  • If approved by HUD, the Christie Administration  expects that more than 20,000 homeowners, more than 5,000 renters and more  than 10,000 businesses will be helped, as well as dozens of local governmental  units.

 

Today’s  announcement represents an important step in distributing the federal  resources necessary to aid New Jersey’s rebuilding by developing the  state’s specific plan for how those resources will be spent. Following  a seven day period for public comment, the Christie Administration will  submit the Action Plan to HUD for approval. Following HUD approval, the  Christie administration will have in place a specific, detailed outline to  guide spending.

 

To  view the Action Plan, visit the NJ Department of Community Affairs’  website at www.nj.gov/dca.

 

Helping  Families Return To Their Homes:

 

Assisting  homeowners in the reconstruction, rehabilitation, and elevation of their homes  and helping them prepare for future storms is a top priority of the Christie  Administration’s rebuilding efforts. Superstorm Sandy caused an  estimated $3.837 billion in damage to houses and apartments throughout the  state, with over 86,700 units impacted. The Administration’s Plan  proposes a variety of programs to meet the needs of displaced homeowners and  renters whose primary residences were damaged by the storm, which include:

 

  • Reconstruction, Rehabilitation, Elevation and  Mitigation (RREM) Program: This $600 million program will provide  eligible homeowners up to $150,000 to aid reconstruction, rehabilitation,  elevation and mitigation of damaged homes. Seventy percent of the funds will  be reserved for low-to-moderate-income households.

 

  • Housing Resettlement Program: This  program is aimed at Sandy-impacted homeowners who sustained storm damage and  who are considering selling or abandoning their property. Funded at $200  million, this program will provide $10,000 grants to eligible homeowners to  remain part of the fabric of their communities as they continue the recovery  process. Sixty percent of the funds will be reserved for  low-to-moderate-income households.

 

  • Blight Reduction Pilot Program: This $30 million  program will provide zero-interest forgivable loans to nonprofit and  for-profit developers to purchase and rehabilitate foreclosed, vacant or  abandoned properties throughout the state. The program will encourage  development of affordable homes and rental housing.

 

  • Sandy Home Buyer Assistance Program: Funded at  $25 million, this program will provide financial assistance of up to $50,000  to low-and-moderate-income households to purchase a home. Housing created  under this program would be affordable to households earning up to 80% area  median income.

 

Supporting  Economic Recovery and Revitalization:

 

Economic  recovery and revitalization is also a top priority of the Action Plan to  restore communities and promote job growth. Businesses in the 113 municipalities  most impacted by Superstorm Sandy incurred $382 million in commercial  property loss and another $63.9 million in business interruption  losses. To help New Jersey businesses, the Christie Administration is  setting aside $500 million in funding for the New Jersey Economic Development  Authority to administer the following activities:

 

  • Small Business Grants of up to  $50,000 to eligible businesses that sustained physical damage. A $300 million  allocation will fund grants that can be used for purposes including  rehabilitation, new construction, equipment, inventory, mitigation,  refinancing and working capital among other uses.

 

  • No-Interest Loans for Storm-Impacted Small  Businesses  ranging from $100,000 to $5 million for documented physical damage not covered  by other sources. These loans are intended to assist eligible businesses that  suffered physical damage, as well as spur economic revitalization by  providing funding for expansion and new businesses in storm-impacted  areas.

 

  • Neighborhood And Community Revitalization  Programs  to provide funding of up to $10 million to help communities rebuild  commercial areas with public facility improvements such as streetscapes,  lighting, and sidewalks and undertake other activities critical to restoring  and strengthening local economies, including micro-loans for storm-related  damage and loan guarantees as well as façade and code-related improvements.

 

  • A Tourism Marketing Campaign to promote  storm-impacted businesses and shore communities by letting the nation know  that New Jersey is recovering and that communities are open for business. The  campaign funded at $25 million would also encourage New Jerseyans and  tourists to shop local, thereby supporting companies that are  operational.

 

In  November 2012, the first full month after the storm, approximately 138,000  New Jerseyans filed unemployment claims. The economic development funding in  the Action Plan will help to create thousands of jobs and help struggling New  Jerseyans get back to work.

 

Assisting  Local Governments And Property Taxpayers:

 

While  the housing and economic sectors are the central focus of this first  allocation of CDBG Disaster Recovery funding, the Christie Administration  also proposes to use funds to help local governments provide essential services  after incurring unanticipated expenses caused by the storm that are not  reimbursed by FEMA. The Action Plan proposes to allocate $116 million in  funds as follows:

 

  • Public Assistance Program: An  allocation of $50 million would be used to provide critical funding support  to municipalities by helping to subsidize the “local match” for  FEMA Public Assistance projects. This will ensure local governments have  sufficient resources to continue providing essential services without  resorting to tax increases or other measures that may cause further hardship  and distress in Sandy-impacted communities.

 

  • Protecting Essential Services For Long-Term  Recovery:   $60 million would be used to close gaps in funding in FEMA’s Community  Disaster Loan Program so that local governments can continue to pay essential  personnel in critically important service areas including police and fire  services, education, and public works.

 

  • Code Enforcement Grant Program: $6 million  in funding would supplement local code enforcement offices with additional  personnel, provide an online plan review and permitting process, and enhance  the NJ Department of Community Affairs’ continuing education curriculum  for code officials to include training in flood hazard mitigation practices  and other storm-related code issues.

 

Providing  For New Jersey’s Most Vulnerable Citizens And Protecting Shore  Communities:

 

Governor  Christie is committed to helping low-to-moderate income families as well as  vulnerable populations recover from Sandy. The Christie Administration is  proposing a range of rental housing activities designed to replenish rental  housing stock lost to Sandy, rehabilitate affordable rental units left  uninhabitable by Sandy, and provide affordable housing for special needs  populations.

 

  • Restoration of Multi-Family Housing: $104.5  million will be utilized to provide zero and low-interest loans of up to  $120,000 per unit to qualified developers and public housing authorities to  facilitate the creation of new permanent housing units. A significant portion  of the fund will be used to assist in the development of new permanent,  supportive housing for people with special needs.

 

  • Fund for Rehabilitation of Small Rental  Properties:Through an allocation of $70 million, the Christie Administration will  provide zero-interest, forgivable loans of up to $50,000 per unit to eligible  owners of rental buildings with 25 or fewer units that received significant  damage from Superstorm Sandy and are partially or completely uninhabitable.

 

  • Predevelopment Fund for Affordable Rental  Housing:  Provide financing of up to $500,000 to help nonprofit housing developers  cover the predevelopment costs of properties that are unsafe, underutilized, or  in foreclosure. Projects must help to revitalize communities by facilitating  the acquisition, clearance, and preparation of difficult to develop sites.  Allocation for the program would be $10 million.

 

  • Affordable Housing Incentives: Through  $40 million in funding, this program will provide incentive payments to  eligible rental property owners who agree to lease their units to low and  moderate income households at affordable rents.

 

The  New Jersey Housing and Mortgage Finance Agency will administer rental housing  and homebuyer assistance programs, which would be funded by at least $154  million. It is estimated the Action Plan’s rental development and  rehabilitation programs will create 3,000 jobs and $500 million in economic  activity.

Posted: March 12th, 2013 | Author: | Filed under: Chris Christie, Christie Administration, Hurricane Sandy, Press Release, Superstorm Sandy | Tags: , , , | Comments Off on Taking Action To Distribute The Necessary Resources For The Rebuilding Process

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