Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 119— - HOMELESS ASSISTANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - HOUSING ASSISTANCE › Part Part D— - Rural Housing Stability Assistance Program › § 11408
The Secretary of Housing and Urban Development must create and run a rural housing stability grant program. The program can give grants to eligible groups instead of grants under part C to help rehouse people who are homeless or in the worst housing situations, keep people from losing housing when they are about to, and help the poorest residents afford stable homes. Grants can pay for things like rent, mortgage, or utility help after 2 months of nonpayment to stop eviction or utility shutoff; security deposits, first-month rent, and moving costs; short-term motel or shelter stays; building, buying, leasing, or fixing housing for transitional or permanent use (not emergency shelters); tenant- or project-based rental assistance; operating costs and repairs to make units habitable; and a range of support services (for example outreach, case management, housing counseling, job training, health and mental‑health care, substance‑abuse treatment, child care, transportation, food, legal and veterans referrals). Up to 20 percent of transferred funds in a year may be used for capacity building like operating costs and staff retention. At least 50 percent of the funds for a year must go to communities with populations under 10,000, with priority for those under 5,000. The Secretary must favor places not already getting major Federal help and may not give more than 10 percent of the year’s transferred funds to organizations inside any one State. Eligible applicants are private nonprofits and county or local governments. Applications must describe the people and area to be served, the help to be offered, how it meets local needs and coordinates with other programs, data collection plans, how low‑income and homeless people will be involved, community consultations, and the local extent of homelessness. Recipients must provide matching contributions equal to at least 25 percent of the project cost (leasing grants are exempt); documented in‑kind services may count. The Secretary will set selection rules, offer technical help, evaluate the program within 18 months of first funding and report to Congress within 24 months, allow termination of assistance for violations with due process, and transfer funds from the Community Homeless Assistance Program (at least 5 percent of part C) to run the grants, with unused or unobligated funds handled as required. Definitions: “program” = this grant program; “rural area/community” = areas meeting the law’s rural tests; “Secretary” = HUD Secretary.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 11408
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73