Food And Housing Aid Highlighted During Justice Briefing  

A new state fund will help feed West Virginians in times of great need, and the Homeowners Assistance Program is still offering aid. 

A new state fund will help feed West Virginians in times of great need, and the Homeowners Assistance Program is still offering aid. 

During his press briefing Wednesday morning, Gov. Jim Justice highlighted the Posey Perry Fund, an emergency food bank fund created in the 2024 state budget.

The governor declared that “nobody in West Virginia needs to be going hungry.”

“What it is, is $10 million of emergency assistance if something breaks through and we need an emergency level of assistance and for lots and lots and lots of our pantries and food banks,” Justice said. “Literally, we don’t need people going hungry in West Virginia.

He said the fund is named after his uncle, who worked at his local food pantry after his retirement from mining.

“He was the last survivor of my mom’s brothers and sisters,” Justice said. “Yet after he retired from the coal mines, Posie Perry made trip after trip almost on a daily basis to the food bank in Huff Creek. He worked it night and day.”

Housing Stability

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Justice also declared this April Housing Stabilization Awareness Month with the signing of a proclamation Wednesday. The recognition was a way to highlight the achievements of the West Virginia Homeowners Rescue Program over the past year.

The program is funded by the U.S. Department of the Treasury to assist West Virginia homeowners facing a financial hardship due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Justice was joined by Erica Boggess, the executive director of the state’s Housing Development fund. 

She said that despite the more than 4,200 West Virginia families helped in the past year, there are more people in need of assistance.

“We really want to encourage people to apply for this assistance,” Boggess said. “It’s important to apply sooner rather than later. You don’t want to wait till the day your utilities are going to be cut off to seek help – act now.”

Boggess said homeowners can get help paying for their mortgage, as well as real estate tax and insurance.

Federal Public Housing Grant Supports Multiple W.Va. Cities 

The funding is planned to help upgrade and modernize 30 public housing projects statewide, with each grant for each housing authority adding up to $17.6 million in total funding.

Federal funding from the Department of Housing and Urban Development is going to support public housing in the state.

The funding is planned to help upgrade and modernize 30 public housing projects statewide, with each grant for each housing authority adding up to $17.6 million in total funding. It comes from the agency’s Public Housing Capital Fund Formula Grant Program.

“Ensuring West Virginians have a roof over their head and a warm place to sleep at night continues to be one of my top priorities. Thousands of West Virginians and millions of Americans are currently experiencing homelessness, and we must work together to combat this devastating issue,” Sen. Joe Manchin said in a joint statement with Sen. Shelley Moore Capito announcing the funding.

Approximately 1,238 people in the state experienced homelessness in 2022, according to an HUD report.

Some of the largest awarded grants include more than $3 million dollars to the Charleston/Kanawha Housing Authority, more than $2 million to the Housing Authority of Huntington and $1.5 million to the Housing Authority of the City of Wheeling.

The full list includes:

  • $3,203,383 to the Charleston/Kanawha Housing Authority
  • $2,080,718 to the Housing Authority of the City of Huntington
  • $1,548,515 to the Housing Authority of the City of Wheeling
  • $917,453 to the Clarksburg/Harrison Housing Authority
  • $834,218 to the Housing Authority of the City of Martinsburg
  • $730,277 to the Housing Authority of the City of Williamson
  • $677,898 to the Housing Authority of the City of Beckley
  • $655,307 to the Housing Authority of the City of Moundsville
  • $587,038 to the Housing Authority of the City of Grafton
  • $484,533 to the Housing Authority of the City of Bluefield
  • $473,645 to the Housing Authority of the City of Parkersburg
  • $472,182 to the Housing Authority of the County of Jackson
  • $465,911 to the Housing Authority of Benwood and McMechen
  • $424,165 to the Fairmont/Morgantown Housing Authority
  • $419,561 to the Housing Authority of the City of Mount Hope
  • $410,445 to the Housing Authority of the City of Pt. Pleasant
  • $327,518 to the Housing Authority of the City of Spencer
  • $320,434 to the Housing Authority of the City of South Charleston
  • $297,897 to the Housing Authority of the City of Dunbar
  • $275,860 to the Housing Authority of the City of Weirton
  • $254,458 to the Housing Authority of the City of Piedmont
  • $244,592 to the Housing Authority of the City of Keyser
  • $238,128 to the Housing Authority of the City of St. Albans
  • $233,710 to the Housing Authority of the City of Buckhannon
  • $232,844 to the Housing Authority of Boone County
  • $206,771 to the Housing Authority of the City of Elkins
  • $190,858 to the Housing Authority of the City of Romney
  • $154,426 to the Housing Authority of Raleigh County
  • $138,668 to the Housing Authority of Mingo County
  • $132,187 to the Housing Authority of the City of Weston

The HUD’s Housing Choice Voucher Program Funding Assignment for Homeownership Fees Program, awarded to the Charleston/Kanawha Housing Authority, would also see $200 per household awarded to cover homeownership closing fees for families switching from renting.

Federal Funds Coming to W.Va. to Fight Homelessness

Several housing facilities across West Virginia are sharing nearly $1.4 million in federal funding.

Sens. Joe Manchin and Jay Rockefeller and Rep. Nick Rahall say the funding comes from the Continuum of Care Homeless Assistance program.
 
The federal program is designed to promote community wide commitment with the goal of ending homelessness.
 
The state programs receiving funding include the city of Charleston, the Charleston-Kanawha Housing Authority, the Cabell-Huntington Coalition for the Homeless, Bartlett House and Caritas House.
 
Rahall says the funds will help accelerate efforts to provide safe and secure housing for the homeless, including veterans.
 

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