Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 89— - CONGREGATE HOUSING SERVICES › § 8012
Creates a 5-year test program to see if giving frail elderly people housing help plus supportive services helps them keep living on their own. HUD can work with public housing agencies to add up to 1,500 extra housing vouchers or certificates. Agencies cannot force a person to live in a specific unit but may limit the program to a local area so services can be delivered. At the end of the 5 years, each person may choose to keep getting help from the agency’s normal housing program. Supportive services can also be tied to existing housing contracts. Money for services must come from three places: HUD will pay 40% from funds set aside for this demo, the housing agency must get at least 50% from other sources, and each frail elderly person must pay 10% of their service costs (but never more than 20% of their adjusted income, and HUD must waive payments if the person can’t afford any). If payments collected from participants add up to less than 10% of total service costs, the shortfall is split 50/50 between the housing agency and HUD. Agencies must provide appropriate services during the demo, may use up to 20% of the federal housing assistance each year for services (and carry over unused amounts), and may count certain in‑kind items as part of their contribution. Public housing agencies apply to HUD using an approved form and must show things like the number and needs of frail elderly people, how eligibility and selection will work, plans for assessments and personalized service plans, identities and qualifications of service providers, cost estimates and funding sources, and confirmation they consulted the local area agency on aging. HUD will run a national competition and pick winners based on ability to run the program, local need, quality of proposed services, available funding, and related factors, and will consult HHS about services. No more than 10% of the demo help may go to programs inside any one local government. HUD must report to Congress each year on who was served, what services were provided, and costs. Specific funding increases and grants were authorized for FY1993 and FY1994, and HUD must issue program rules within 180 days after the demo funds first become available. Definitions: elderly = age 62+, frail elderly = unable to do at least three daily living tasks, professional assessment committee = at least three experts including one medical professional, supportive services = nonmedical help like personal care, case management, transport, meals, counseling, and supervision.
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 8012
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73