And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

via MarthaET
from Victor's pechanga.net

Cuomo Announces Native American and Economic Development Initiative to 
Improve Life on Reservations 

CHICAGO, March 30 /U.S. Newswire/ -- Housing and Urban Development 
Secretary Andrew Cuomo today unveiled a new Native American Housing 
and Economic Development Initiative to improve life on Indian 
reservations by creating more jobs, affordable housing and 
homeownership. 

Cuomo said the initiative will go far beyond most federal programs 
by enabling tribal governments to create non-profit groups that will 
be able to apply for a share of more than $1 billion in annual 
assistance under several major HUD programs. Because only local 
governments and non-profit groups are eligible for the funding, 
tribal governments have been unable to benefit from the programs -- 
even though Indian reservations have high poverty and unemployment 
rates, as well as great housing needs. 

The Secretary made the announcement in Chicago at a Summit on 
Native American Homeownership, Legal and Economic Development. Over 
700 representatives from dozens of tribes are at the Summit, which 
was organized by HUD's Office of Native American Programs. 

"This initiative will be a partnership between Indian Nations and 
the United States government to work together for the benefit of 
Native Americans," Cuomo said. "We will bring new opportunity to 
families on reservations by empowering them to build stronger 
economies, new homes and better lives. 

"For too long, the first Americans have been locked out of the 
American Dream," Cuomo added. "Prosperity should not stop at the 
reservation line." 

"Secretary Cuomo is taking strong steps that recognize the right 
of Indian Nations to find their own solutions to our housing and 
economic development problems, and the obligation of the United 
States government to help our efforts succeed," said Chester Carl, 
chair of the National American Indian Housing Council and Executive 
Director of the Navajo Housing Authority. 

To underscore HUD's strong commitment to Native Americans, Cuomo 
announced that HUD will sponsor a follow-up summit in late July and 
early August on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, home of 
the Oglala Lakota Tribe. The conference will be the first Native 
American housing conference to be held on a reservation. In addition, 
a Home Build will be held in which volunteers build or rehabilitate 
homes for 50 low-income Oglala families. 

Under the Native American Housing and Economic Development 
Initiative announced today, tribal non-profit groups will be eligible 
to apply for: 

-- Rural Economic Development grants, which leverage private and 
public dollars with federal funds for innovative efforts to create 
jobs, build affordable housing, and boost homeownership. Tribal 
non-profit groups will receive a special preference that will 
increase their chances of receiving a portion of the $27 million in 
funding under the program this year. 

-- Assistance to create and subsidize housing for low-income 
senior citizens and low-income people with disabilities, under HUD's 
Section 202 and Section 811 programs. 

-- Grants to provide homeless people with housing, job training, 
education, substance abuse treatment, mental health services, child 
care and other services to help them get permanent housing and jobs 
to become self-sufficient. 

-- Assistance under the Youthbuild program, which provides job 
training in homebuilding skills, along with educational 
opportunities, to unemployed high school drop-outs ages 16-24. This 
enables the young people to get good jobs in the construction 
industry. 

-- Grants for housing and support services for low-income people 
with HIV/AIDS and members of their households under the Housing 
Opportunities for Persons With AIDS program. 

-- Grants to non-profit groups under the Self-Help Homeownership 
Opportunity Program to buy home sites and improve the infrastructure 
needed to set the stage for sweat-equity and volunteer-based 
homeownership programs for low-income families. 

The Native American Housing and Economic Development Initiative 
will also increase Indian homeownership by making reduced-cost 
mortgages available through Ginnie Mae's Targeted Lending Initiative 
on tribal lands. Ginnie Mae is a government-owned corporation within 
HUD that increases the supply of affordable housing by guaranteeing 
securities issued by private lenders and backed by pools of 
residential mortgages insured or guaranteed by the U.S. government. 

The summer conference on the Pine Ridge Reservation announced 
today will be called the Shared Visions Summit, and will build on the 
summit being held in Chicago. It will focus on ways that tribes, the 
federal government, lenders, the homebuilding industry and other 
groups can work in partnership to solve the desperate shortage of 
affordable housing on many reservations, and on ways to increase 
Indian homeownership. 

The Home Build that will take place at the same time will bring 
together hundreds of volunteers to build or rehabilitate about 
50 homes, and will serve as a model for similar efforts on other 
reservations. Oglala families will buy the homes completed in the 
Home Build. 

The Shared Visions Summit and the Home Build are being supported 
by HUD, the Oglala Lakota Tribe, the National Congress of American 
Indians, the National American Indian Housing Council, Habitat for 
Humanity, the Mortgage Bankers Association of America, the National 
Association of Home Builders, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, the 
U.S. Department of Agriculture, the Interior Department's Bureau of 
Indian Affairs, and others. 

Cuomo said the Native American Housing and Economic Development 
Initiative also includes proposals recommended in a report by an 
Interagency Task Force to further help families on reservations more 
easily obtain home mortgages. Cuomo released the report today, as 
part of the process of consulting with tribes to get their views on 
the proposals. 

Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman, whose Department was on the 
Task Force, said: "USDA will be a key partner in a renewed effort to 
meet the growing need for improved housing and economic development 
on Native American reservations. USDA Rural Development programs will 
provide financial resources and technical assistance to Native 
Americans." 

The Task Force was chaired by HUD and the Treasury Department, and 
also included the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Department of 
Veterans Affairs, and other public and private organizations. The 
Task Force report details proposals to increase the rate of 
homeownership among Native Americans, including: 

-- Ensuring the protection of Indian Trust Lands so that defaults 
of mortgages insured by the federal government would not cost a tribe 
its land. If a homeowner defaults on a mortgage, the land would be 
held in trust until another tribal member is found to buy the home. 

-- Creating a financial intermediary to provide homebuyer 
counseling, loan education, loss mitigation, and liaison to the 
private housing sector to stimulate increased homeownership on 
reservations and to help coordinate the efforts of lenders, sellers 
and buyers. 

-- Streamlining lending procedures and coordinating the work of 
federal agencies that provide mortgages on reservations, as well as 
combining HUD's Native American loan programs into one program. For 
example, an interagency agreement will allow tribes to gain federal 
approval for tribal laws affecting homeownership through one federal 
agency's review process. In addition, federal agencies have agreed to 
coordinate lender and tribal training on federal mortgage insurance 
and assistance programs -- instead of holding separate seminars for 
each agency. 

Currently, homeownership is virtually non-existent on reservations 
because: 1) Lenders are often reluctant to approve mortgages for the 
purchase of homes on land held in trust by the federal government for 
tribes. 2) Federal regulations and paperwork slow down and complicate 
the process of obtaining a home mortgage. 3) Tribal families lack 
homeownership counseling to help them with financial planning, 
credit, down payments and other issues involved in the mortgage 
process. 

The shortage of affordable housing is at crisis levels on many 
reservations around the country. The National American Indian Housing 
Council estimates an immediate need for about 200,000 homes on tribal 
lands. Over 40 percent of the housing on tribal lands is considered 
substandard -- six times the rate of the rest of the country. In 
addition, 21 percent of homes on reservations are overcrowded -- 
nearly 10 times the proportion elsewhere. 

As part of today's activities in Chicago, Cuomo was adopted into 
the Tlingit Tribe of Southeast Alaska. In a naming ceremony to 
welcome him into the tribe, Tlingit Tribal Elder Paul Marks bestowed 
the name aan kadax tseen on Cuomo. The name means Where the Birds 
Come Together, and signifies Cuomo's role as a leader, referring to 
the leader of a flock of birds. 

The Tlingit were one of the Alaska Native tribes that Cuomo 
visited last summer, along with the Oglala and Lower Brule Lakota 
Tribes in South Dakota. In both states, Cuomo saw first-hand how many 
families live in extremely overcrowded and deteriorated housing and 
have very high unemployment and poverty rates. 

Jackie Johnson, director of HUD's Office of Native American 
Programs for the past two years, is a member of the Tlingit Tribe and 
is the first Native American to head the HUD office. 

In addition, Cuomo said that eight of HUD's new Community Builder 
Fellows -- experienced professionals who serve for two years at HUD 
and work to revitalize America's communities -- are Native Americans. 
The Community Builders and their tribes are: Melissa Robinson (Omaha 
and Chickahominy), Emma Iron Plume-Clifford (Oglala Lakota), John 
Johnston (Choctaw), Iris Friday (Tlingit-Haida), Curtis Harris (San 
Carlos Apache), William Miles (Pamunkey), Valerie Hayes (Cherokee), 
and Tony Looking Elk (Oneida). 

The new Native American Housing and Economic Development 
Initiative is in the spirit of the 1996 Native American Housing 
Assistance and Self-Determination Act, which gives tribes a much 
greater role in determining how federal funds are used on 
reservations. 

The Act allows tribes for the first time to receive funds directly 
from HUD instead of through the regional housing authorities. It also 
enables Native Americans to plan and create their own programs and 
initiatives that include new home construction, job training, housing 
rehabilitation, energy auditing, crime prevention, and safety 
activities. 

The three-day Summit on Native American Homeownership, Legal and 
Economic Development being held in Chicago is examining a number of 
legal, housing and economic development issues affecting Native 
Americans, including: 1) Key issues in rental housing. 2) How to 
create economic development programs. 3) Important tools for setting 
up and running a homeownership program. 4) Basic information for 
providing counseling and education to homebuyers. 5) Legal issues 
affecting Indian Country. 

-0- 
/U.S. Newswire/ 
03/30 11:00 
  

Copyright 1999, U.S. NewswireTo: National Desk 
Contact: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, 
Office of Public Affairs, 202-708-0685; 
Web site: http://www.hud.gov/news.html 
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
          Tsonkwadiyonrat (We are ONE Spirit)
                     Unenh onhwa' Awayaton
                  http://www.tdi.net/ishgooda/       
           &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
                             

Reply via email to