Title 42 › Chapter 131— HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES FOR PERSONS WITH AIDS › § 12903
The Secretary must give grant money, when Congress approves it, to States, local governments, and nonprofits. Grantees must carry out the work through project sponsors. If a State hires a nonprofit to do work in a town or city, the State must get that local government’s OK first. Ninety percent of the approved money is split among States and metropolitan areas: 75 percent goes to big cities that are the largest city in a metro area with more than 500,000 people and to States that each have more than 2,000 people living with HIV/AIDS outside of metro areas. The count of people living with HIV/AIDS is the number the CDC confirms as of December 31 of the most recent year available. The other 25 percent is shared using a method the Secretary creates that adjusts for differences in housing costs (such as fair market rent) and poverty rates. The Secretary can give a grantee’s funds to an approved alternative grantee if they have a written agreement the Secretary accepts and the agreement lasts no more than 10 years. If a State or metro area turns down money or can’t manage it, the Secretary reassigns the funds to eligible metro areas in the State, or to eligible cities and urban counties, or back into the general allocation. Ten percent of the money is held back for places that don’t qualify for the main split and for national special projects. The Secretary picks special projects by looking at AIDS case numbers, housing need, local planning, likely continuation of efforts, innovation, and whether a project can be used elsewhere. Applications must follow the Secretary’s rules and explain the planned activities, who will be served, what public and private resources will be used, and how property bought or fixed with the money will be used for at least 10 years. Applicants must show the work meets urgent unmet needs and give any other information the Secretary requires. For metro-area grants, the main city, any urban county, and any city with 50,000 or more people must set up or name an agency to get and run the funds and include a plan. Cities getting funds under the main split must promise to share money across the whole metro area and coordinate with other local governments.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 12903
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60