Federal Funding Webinar Debrief
On Friday, February 28 and Monday, March 3 we hosted webinars focused on Federal Resource updates and impacts. During our webinar we gave an overview of what’s going on, answered your questions, and gave updates on the federal threats, their impacts, and the importance of collectively working together in this moment.
We had over 140 people sign up for the webinar on Friday with less than 24 hours notice
On Monday March 3 we had over 300 people sign up.
Webinar Survey Stats (2/28 + 3/3)
- 350 attendees
- 286 organizations
- Almost every county represented
- 176,000+ families served
- $626 million+ in public funding
- $21 million+ currently owed
Fields represented included local governments, advocacy groups, healthcare agencies, homelessness service providers, Habitat affiliates, CDCs, universities, foundation partners, financial institutions, local reporters, women’s and children’s advocacy groups, faith-based organizations, and more.
We ended the webinar by answering questions and lifting up the importance of the following calls to action, especially with the impending funding deadline of March 14.
Calls to Action from Webinar
- For the next week – call Senator Ted Budd and Thom Thillis, and reach out to your Congressperson.
- You can find their contact information here.
- Then, reach out to 2-3 of your top supporters of your work or organization – and ask them to do the same.
- Let us know what you are seeing! We cannot rely solely on the national communications – tell us by filling out this brief form here.
Talking Points & Key Messages
- The decision to hold up federal funds and eliminate federal staff will cost people their homes.
- The problem wasn’t waste, fraud, and abuse, the problem was always NOT HAVING ENOUGH RESOURCES.
- Talk about the scale of the impact on your organization, but do not forget to make a direct connection to the impact on people and communities you serve.
Advocacy Letter Update
- We sent a letter to our congressional delegation on February 21, 2025 with over 400 signatures from individuals, organizations, and community groups across the state. With representation from all 100 counties.
- You can still sign on to the letter by clicking here.
REGISTER for Housing Day 2025 – April 9, 2025
- 2025 NC Housing Day | NC Housing Coalition, Habitat NC, & the NC Coalition to End Homelessness, Wednesday, April 9 at the NCGA in downtown Raleigh. Register here.
Federal Updates
- Senate Democrats Demand Answers on HUD’s “DOGE” Task Force and Potential Housing Cuts Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) are proposing to terminate at least half of all HUD employees, which translates to about 4,300 staff. According to a letter 25 Senate Democrats sent to HUD Secretary Scott, Turner, “initial reports suggest no program office would be spared, with staffing cuts ranging from 10 percent to 84 percent.” The Office of Community Planning and Development, which oversees the $1.4B CDBG-DR award HUD allocated to NC after Hurricane Helene, would be reduced from 936 to 150.
- [data tool] HUD Supports Affordable Housing Nationwide. Layoffs and Budget Cuts Will Undermine That Mission | Urban Institute
- Housing Organizations Lose HUD Contracts | Housing Finance
Last Wednesday, HUD notified several housing technical assistance providers that it intends to terminate technical assistance grants. They cited DEI content on websites and senior leadership LinkedIn profiles as the reason. This includes Enterprise, TAC, LISC, CSH, and others.
Congress has until March 14 (when the current Continuing Resolution expires) to pass a budget or pass another Continuing Resolution to avoid a government shutdown. The House and Senate both passed separate budget resolutions, but must now work through the reconciliation process to hopefully come to an agreement on the budget.
- Trump scraps Biden-era fair housing rule | POLITICO
Last week, Wednesday, HUD Secretary Scott Turner formally announced plans to end the Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing rule. He plans to replace it with a weakened interim rule that only asks housing providers to self-attest their commitment to fair housing. In response, our colleagues at NLIHC are working closely with fair housing advocates to fight for full implementation of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 to promote fair housing and inclusive communities.
State & Local Updates
NC General Assembly Updates
Meetings we are watching or tracking this week March 3, 2025 – March 7, 2025
- Tuesday March 4, 2025
- House Judiciary 1 Committee – 1:00PM – to consider HB222 – COOPER Act – Funding for the completion of recovery in Eastern North Carolina
- Various Joint Appropriations Committee Meetings on Tuesday March 4 and Wednesday March 5, that will likely include discussion about HB47, as well as other proposed bills with relief and funding for recovery.
- Thursday March 6, 2025
- Joint Legislative Commission on Governmental Operations, Subcommittee on Hurricane Response & Recovery at 9:00AM
2025-2026 Bill Tracker for NC General Assembly
So far, over 500 bills have been filed this session. To see which bills we are tracking check out our bill tracker for the 2025-2026 legislative session, click here.
Disaster Recovery
First Disaster Recovery Bill of 2025 Passes in the House
HB 47 passed in the House last Tuesday and is now in the Senate. The bill provides some much-needed relief; it falls short of Gov. Josh Stein’s request to the General Assembly last month for an additional $1.07B to meet immediate needs in WNC.
The bill directs the transfer of $275M from the State Emergency Response and Disaster Relief Fund (SERDF) to the Helene Fund. This brings the total amount of unappropriated funds in the Helene Fund to $500M (Legislation passed in December (SL 2024-57) left $225M unallocated). The bill then appropriates the $500M in the following ways:
- $125M – NC Commerce Division of Community Revitalization – Home Reconstruction & Repair Program
- $75M – NC Agriculture Division of Soil & Water Conservation – Agricultural restoration projects
- $75M – NC Agriculture – Hurricane Helene Agricultural Crop Loss Program
- $100M – NC Emergency Management – Repairing and replacing private roads and bridges
- $55M – NC Commerce – Small Business Infrastructure Grant Program
- $20M – Office of State Budget & Management – Debris cleanup
- $15M – Golden L.E.A.F. – Small Business Revitalization Grant Program
- $10M – NC Emergency Management – Grants to support Volunteer Organizations Active in Disaster Recovery (VOAD) member organizations doing work in WNC
- $10M – Office of the State Fire Marshal – Grants to support small and volunteer fire departments getting back online
- $10M – NC DHHS Division of Social Services – Rental assistance payments
- $5M – NC Commerce – Tourism marketing
The bill also amends SL 2024-57 to make $100M in loans to local governments forgivable.
Additional RUSH Funding from HUD
Last week, HUD announced an additional $1.9M allocation to the State of NC for the Rapid Unsheltered Survivor Housing (RUSH) Program. RUSH assists households experiencing or at risk of homelessness in the wake of disasters.
An initial allocation of $3M was deployed in October to meet immediate needs. This second round is intended to address the need for rental units for very low-income households and any additional unmet needs this population faces that are not met by other programs.
Local Updates
- WNC Affordable Housing Loan Fund | WKYK
- Winston-Salem group of businesses, religious leaders, community partners help fulfill dreams of homeownership | FOX8 WGHP
- Why Raleigh is now giving money to residents of a former homeless camp | Raleigh News & Observer
Events
- [webinar] Deteriorating Affordability: An Update on America’s Rental Housing 2024 | Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University, March 7, 1:30 pm
- [webinar] Improving America’s Housing 2025 | Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University, March 20, 2 pm.
- [In-Person Registration Full; Virtual Registration Available] National Low Income Housing Policy Forum March 24-27, 2025 in Washington, D.C.
Reports & Resources
- 2024 Investment and Impact Report | NC Housing Finance Agency
- Rising Property Insurance Costs: Opportunities for Federal Action | Bipartisan Policy Center
- Rising Costs of Homeownership Are a Growing Burden | Joint Center for Housing Studies
- Eviction Prevention Workshops Can Increase Tenants’ Understanding of Their Rights and Resources | National Low Income Housing Coalition