#145 Spring 2006 — After Katrina

More Budget Follies

President Bush issued another round of proposed cuts to housing and social service programs in February as he sent his latest budget to Congress. Having failed in 2005 to move […]

President Bush issued another round of proposed cuts to housing and social service programs in February as he sent his latest budget to Congress. Having failed in 2005 to move the community development block grant program (CDBG) from HUD to the Commerce Department, which would have included a 35 percent cut, Bush proposed a more modest 20 percent slash this year. Some of his other proposals are as bad or worse than last year’s. He once again calls for a 50 percent cut to Section 811, which provides housing for low-income people with disabilities, and for eliminating the community services block grant. Section 202 housing for the low-income elderly, which Bush proposed funding in 2006 at the same level as the previous year, is now targeted for a 26 percent reduction. The president would also defund Section 515, which provides direct loans for preserving rental housing for low-income people in rural areas. As compensation, the USDA, which funds rural housing programs, would double the size of a loan guarantee program that can be used to refinance Section 515 properties. (www.nlihc.org, www.cbpp.org)

OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE

  • Frank Wilkinson’s Legacy

    April 23, 2006

    His was a life devoted to the preservation of our civil liberties. But it all began with a belief in decent, affordable housing.

  • Designing a Socially Just Downtown

    April 23, 2006

    Mayor Brown's plan for a new downtown in Oakland was stymied by a resurgence of grassroots housing advocacy

  • Monkey See, Monkey Do

    April 23, 2006

    The people who staff antipoverty programs hardly ever get interviewed, although they’re primary sources of non-ideological information about the grassroots problems of the poor.