Trump administration cannot alter homelessness funding conditions, US court rules

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A federal appeals court on Wednesday refused to ​allow US. President Donald Trump’s administration to impose new restrictions on billions of dollars in grant funding used to ‌provide permanent housing and other services to homeless people.A three-judge panel of the Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals declined, to put on hold a ruling by US. District Judge Mary McElroy in Providence, Rhode Island, that had blocked the US. Department of Housing and Urban Development from changing the criteria ​used to distribute grant funding from the Continuum of Care program.US Circuit Judge Julie Rikelman, who like the other appellate ​judges was appointed by Democratic President Joe Biden, said a ruling to the contrary would be “destabilizing and ⁠disastrous” for funding recipients, leading to the shuttering of housing organizations and people losing their housing.“In sum, the record paints a ​disturbing picture of the harms that would flow to the plaintiffs, their constituents, and the public from issuing a stay,” she wrote.​HUD did not immediately respond to a request for comment.The ruling stems from a lawsuit brought by Democratic officials in 20 states and Washington, D.C., local governments and nonprofit organizations.Lawyers for some of the plaintiffs said that if the administration had prevailed, more than $2 billion worth of grant funding supporting ​4,000 local housing coalitions could have become subject to HUD’s new rules.“Because the appeals court refused to grant the federal government’s motion ​to stay the injunction pending appeal, almost 200,000 people — many living with disabilities — will not be displaced from stable housing,” Jill Habig, the head ‌of the ⁠legal group the Public Rights Project, said in a statement.‘HOUSING-FIRST’ APPROACHAt issue was the Continuum of Care program, which has provided resources since 1987 for states, local governments and nonprofits to deliver support services to homeless people, with a focus on veterans, families, and people with disabilities.The program has long been based on a “housing-first” approach to combating homelessness, which prioritizes placing people into permanent housing without preconditions ​such as sobriety and employment. ​Along with housing, the grants ⁠fund childcare, job training, mental health counseling and transportation services.The Trump administration has criticized the housing-first approach, and HUD in November said it was overhauling the grant program to focus on transitional housing ​initiatives with work requirements and other conditions.McElroy in December concluded HUD’s efforts conflicted with the mandates ​of a federal ⁠law that provides money for homeless shelter programs. She cited Congress’ prioritization of providing funding for stable and permanent housing.After Congress passed a spending bill in February that mandated HUD renew Continuum of Care projects and issue new grant awards, the administration asked McElroy to set aside ⁠her injunction, ​allowing some of the roughly $4 billion for the program to become subject to ​HUD’s new rules.But McElroy declined to do so, citing the need to protect funding recipients from “upheaval and service gaps.” The administration then appealed, citing the new law, ​which the plaintiffs said never blessed HUD’s approach to grant funding.